Amen Dunes :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Over and over again on Amen Dunes' fifth album Freedom, songwriter Damon McMahon punctuates lyrics with the word "man." "We play religious music/I don't think you'd understand man." "I really gotta go/yeah man." "Pride destroyed me, man." The word peppers his sentences in conversation, too. It's this and that "man," repeatedly. Even while describing the guiding principles of feminist New Mexican artist Agnes Martin, whose creative principle -- "I don't have any ideas myself; I have a vacant mind" -- is quoted at the start of the record, McMahon employs a masculine pronoun: "She's my boy, my kind of artist."

But McMahon's relationship to masculinity isn't one-sided, and it's rarely celebratory. Like his last record, the sprawling and destined for classic status  Love, the new lp opts to grapple with huge themes. McMahon didn't go in with a design to write about mythical maleness, ego, his parents, and about the process of "relinquishing...various definitions of self," but that's what he ended up with, employing a wide cast of characters to set his scenes. Small-time crooks and dealers show up; so does Jesus Christ; so does awesome  asshole Miki Dora, the surfer who, after being featured in films like The Endless Summer, hightailed it out of the US to avoid getting busted for fraud.

McMahon finds no small share of ugliness and beauty in these complicated character sketches. The sounds he pairs with them are just as thorny. Working with collaborators like drummer Parker Kindred, guitarist Delicate Steve, Nick Zinner of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and others, McMahon blends spiky guitar pop with electronic textures, shifting from motorik pulses to bass-heavy boogies. The spectral folk of previous records is still there, but its augmented with post-punk melodies and funky lift. It's always been tough to describe the sound of Amen Dunes records, even with names like Skip Spence and Lou Reed at the ready, but Freedom's the toughest to pin down yet. Conceptually and sonically, it's an auteurist step forward.

Speaking over the phone from New York, McMahon detailed the way it often feels like he's channeling his songs as much as writing them. "There's no use in being close-hearted," he sings in "Skipping School," and speaking with the artist, it's clear he's out to free himself of any notions -- masculine or otherwise -- that would keep him from staying all the way open. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Aquarium Drunkard: You've made a couple of classic  albums as Amen Dunes, but Freedom  sounds effortless in a way that illustrates how hard you must have worked to make it. How does this one feel different than the others?

Damon McMahon: I've never focused so hard on crafting music before. I gave myself time to revise and re-approach all kinds of things. I mean, even just the songs themselves. The writing of the songs on an acoustic guitar took me at least a year of consistent writing. It was an endless iteration of each song, and then once we got to the recording process, that's a whole other stretch of time, and then vocals, lyrics, and mixing, I mean...it was extensive.

AD: At one point you had recorded a version of this record, but then scrapped it. Why?

Damon McMahon: Well, it just didn't sound inspired, man. There wasn't that divine spark in it, and that led it to sounding bad and the takes not being good and a little limp. It just didn't have the energy, and I don't think I was ready at the time. Also, it wasn't as heavy-duty of a recording scenario as we ended up getting, so I think that affected it, too.

AD: When you go to a place like Electric Lady, as a music listener and fan, what does it feel like to make music in a space like that?

Damon McMahon:  Electric Lady was a real gift. Man, that place.

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Luiz Melodia :: Maravilhas Contemporî¢neas

"We weren't people that simply obeyed. You could say that we sidestepped all the house rules, the recording studio; we simply broke away from situations that weren't convenient. I have always believed in what I do." L.M.

Born Luî­s Carlos dos Santos, Brazil's Luiz Melodia died last summer at the age of 66. Singer, songwriter, player and actor, Melodia's professional career as a musician began in 1963 and continued until his death, working within and around various permutations of samba, soul and become a member or log in.

Nap Eyes :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Over and over again on Nap Eyes' third lp I'm Bad Now, songwriter Nigel Chapman owns himself. In album opener "Every Time the Feeling," he's a "space case," a "loser in a meaningless place." It's worse in "I'm Bad," where he's a "hated son," "a disappointment" who's "so dumb." In "Dull Me Line," he's "bored and lazy." It would seem Chapman is hard on himself. But here's the rub: the new record, which follows 2015's excellent Whine of the Mystic and 2016's   Thought Rock Fish Scale, is the band's warmest and kindest yet. Not only does Chapman write with more interrogative passion about his inner life than many songwriters twice his age, here he expands outward, unpacking religious themes on "White Disciple," pondering connection to others on "You Like to Joke Around With Me," and wondering what becomes of all our big ideas on the beatific "Sage."

The lyrical growth is matched by the group's expanded musical sensibility. Over the shuffling rhythm section of bassist Josh Salter and drummer Seamus Dalton, Chapman and guitarist Brad Loughead  trade shimmering chords and striking melodies. Reliable comparisons to the Velvet Underground and the Modern Lovers don't fail this go-round either, but more than ever before the band's instrumental interplay feels like its own thing: restrained, considered, and riveting. "Please don't ask me to throw my work away," Chapman sings over Salter's rolling bass on album highlight "Judgement," and it's clear why. Nap Eyes is doing the best work of its career with I'm Bad Now.

Recently, Aquarium Drunkard called Chapman up from his place in Halifax, to discuss the spiritual themes of the record, dissect slang terms, and the relative values of turning inward and outward. The conversation has been edited for clarity and cohesion.

Aquarium Drunkard:  I love that the record is called I'm Bad Now.  It's a great contrast to imply. To say "I'm bad now" means, "I was previously not bad. Now I am."

Nigel Chapman: People tend to see things in binary terms often.   With dichotomies in general, with binaries in general, and then specifically [in regards to] badness and morality. That's something I've felt pretty viscerally at the core-of-my-being. I either feel like a good person, like a kind person or a sincere person, or I feel like a totally false or selfish or phony person.  I think having a tongue-in-cheek  acknowledgment of that tendency is a good way to step back from it a bit and look at yourself. And also not expect yourself to be some kind of non-human, you know? A perfect being. Everybody has badness. As you're growing up, there are a lot of things you need to learn. But you're a flawed human being, and once you've learned [those lessons] you don't have to hate yourself for it [or get caught] in that pattern of thinking. The title reinforces that, for me anyway. But Seamus [Dalton], our drummer, is actually the one who created that title.

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P.P. Arnold :: The Turning Tide

The story behind soul singer P.P. Arnold’s “lost” 1971 album The Turning Tide is, much like the tale of P.P Arnold herself, woven through with twists, turns, serendipity and historic music figures. Born into a family of gospel singers in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, she was singing in the church by age 4. By age 19, she’d find herself in the thick of London’s swinging 60s music scene, in the company of artists like Jagger, Hendrix, The Small Faces and, on these recently-surfaced recordings, Barry Gibb, Eric Clapton and a nascent Derek and the Dominos.

A music career was never her intention. An unplanned teen pregnancy forced the young Patricia Arnold into a bad marriage. One day in 1964, a friend and two other girls were booked to audition as backing singers for Ike and Tina Turner’s Revue. When one of them dropped out, the friend begged Arnold to fill in at the last minute. At the audition, Tina told them they’d got the gig, leaving Arnold in a tricky spot. Arriving home late, only to face another confrontation with her abusive husband, Arnold decided to put her trust in divine intervention and take the opportunity to get out. Soon she was touring Europe as an Ikette and opening for The Rolling Stones.

Mick Jagger became a fan, suggesting she go solo. She could stay in London, he said, and he would get her a deal with Immediate Records, the label started by Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham. She agreed, and “The First Lady of Immediate” was born.

Among her early recordings was the original version of “The First Cut Is The Deepest” (penned by Cat Stevens, who would record his own version later that year) and “Angel of the Morning”. The latter, a hit for Merrilee Rush in the US, very much belonged to Arnold in the UK, where her’s remains the definitive version. She would become a mod icon via her affiliation with Immediate and her collaborations and tours with The Small Faces (they wrote and played on her single “(If You Think You’re) Groovy”, while she sang on several Small Faces tracks, including “Tin Soldier”, and she also dated frontman Steve Marriott for a time). Her main backing band, featuring Keith Emerson on keyboards, would go on to become The Nice. Later, and much to her surprise, she was embraced by the Northern Soul scene in the 70s when several of her early tracks--in particular 1967 single “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright”--became staples at all-nighters across England.

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Hailu Mergia :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview (2018)

Hailu Mergia wants you to know: He was always ready to return the spotlight. He was just waiting for someone to ask.

And now that they have -- now that a series of people have, actually -- the 71-year-old keyboardist’s return is ready to evolve from rediscovered curiosity to full-blown real-life comeback, highlighted by the release of Lala Belu, Mergia’s first album of new material in two decades.

To fully appreciate this stage of his career, though, you have to know Mergia’s story. It’s now relatively well-known: He spent the first half of his life in his native Ethiopia, playing keyboard in the Wailas Band, a popular Addis Ababa-based jazz and funk ensemble that, in 1981, became the first modern Ethiopian band to tour America. During that tour, Mergia and three of his band mates decided to remain stateside rather than return to Ethiopia, then wracked by famine and ruled by the Derg dictatorship. Mergia settled in the Washington D.C. area, started driving a taxi and stopped playing music professionally, choosing instead to cart around his keyboard in the trunk of his cab and practice when passengers were scarce.

That’s where Mergia’s musical story seemed to end, until a few years ago when he heard from Brian Shimkovitz, an American who carved himself a niche online by highlighting obscure African music on his website, Awesome Tapes from Africa. Shimkovitz had converted his hobby into a record label and wanted to reissue Mergia’s 1985 one-man-band classic Shemonmuanaye. Reissued as Hailu Mergia & His Classical Instrument: Shemonmuanaye, the album finds its namesake in exploratory mode, fusing accordion, Rhodes piano and modern synthesizers with traditional melodies of Ethiopia. The result is a set of songs that are warm and woozy, relaxed, low-key funky and strangely beautiful.

The release sparked wider interest in Mergia’s music, prompting the artist to start playing out again, most often with D.C. drummer Tony Buck and bassist Mike Majkowski. Awesome Tapes has since reissued two more archival releases: the 1977 Wailas Band album Tche Belew and Mergia’s 1978 collaboration with the Dahlak Band called Wede Harer Guzo.

Which brings us back to Lala Belu, a six-track album featuring three traditional Ethiopian songs, three Mergia originals and a jazzier, more upbeat sound than Shemonmuanaye, thanks largely to the rhythm section of Buck and Majkowski. But the album still sizzles with Mergia’s inspired, roaming sound. AD caught up with Mergia at his Fort Washington, Maryland home, where he spoke by phone about Lala Belu, driving a taxi and keeping his musical skills sharp.

Lala Belu by Hailu Mergia

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Trevor Nikrant / The Medium

The trees are blooming in Nashville, TN, and the daylight is hanging around a bit longer. Meaning it’s the perfect time to poke around the Music City's psychedelic underbelly. Start your adventure with Trevor Nikrant’s “Spring Vision.” The easygoing highlight from his overlooked 2017 debut, Living in the Kingdom, finds Nikrant’s vocals floating along a pontoon-wake groove amidst barroom keys, hazy guitars, and divine harmonies. When sideman Charles Kay’s warm tenor saxophone drifts into the frame midway through, cast your fishing rod into a tree and let the gloam wash over you.

Trevor Nikrant :: Spring Vision

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Abstract Truths: An Evolving Jazz Compendium — Volume Five

Volume five of Abstract Truths. If unfamiliar with the series, please first read here about the its genesis and intention. Bringing us this look at the contemporary Chicago jazz scene is Scottie McNiece, head of the essential International Anthem Recording Co.

"For over 100 years, Chicago has been ground zero for many of the major innovations and . . .

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Open Field :: O.F. II

With very little accompanying hype, Kenneth Stephenson (formerly of the underrated NC band The Kingsbury Manx) has been releasing music on Bandcamp under the Open Field moniker for a few years now. But these fully realized, downright masterful records deserve a lot more hype! Dive into O.F. II . . .

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Gérard Manset :: Animal On Est Mal

Painter, photographer, writer, musician: Parisian omnivore Gérard Manset is a man of many talents. Virtually unknown in America, the multi-instrumentalist is most renowned for his musical output in France. His debut album, Gérard Manset 1968, is an underrated gem of mod leaning psychedelic pop, featuring vocals often run through a Leslie speaker accompanied by big orchestral arrangements. The record should have been a bigger hit, but the 1968 French Revolution had other plans preventing larger sales . . .

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Gumba Fire: Bubblegum Soul & Synth Boogie / 1980s South Africa

The latest excursion from Soundway Records finds the label beaming out eighteen glittering and never-before-heard tracks of 80s bubblegum soul and electro-dance. It’s a revelatory listen, crossing a wide range of sounds, all of them bursting with an eagerness to be heard. Songs from groups like The Survivals and Hot Soul Singers are glowing technicolor disco with an analog minimalism that glimmers and grooves in its roots to earlier forms of afrobeat and highlife.

The compilation’s title is, according to Soundway, “derived from ‘gumba gumba’, the term given to the booming speakers of the old . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Kevin Morby / Second Session

Lagniappe (la ·gniappe) noun ‘lan-ˌyap,’ — 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

Kevin Morby returns this week with his second installment for our ongoing cover series, the Lagniappe Sessions. In 2015, Morby paid tribute to 'Nashville' Dylan, American Water-era Silver Jews and offered an inspired transfiguration of the Germs . . .

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Minami Deutsch / 南ドイツ :: With Dim Light

When we spoke with Kikagaku Moyo’s Go Kurosawa at Chatei Hatou in Shibuya last February, he tipped us off to Minami Deutsch. The band were his roommates at the time, and KM's label, Guruguru Brain, had released MD’s self-titled debut, on which, Go said, “they only do a motorik Neu! beat.” OK. We immediately checked it out and can attest after countless listens that the . . .

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Hans Chew :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Late last year, Hans Chew quietly released his fourth album, Open Sea. He's known for his work with Endless Boogie, Jack Rose, Steve Gunn, Hiss Golden Messenger, and others, and the record caught our ears in a big way at Aquarium Drunkard. "While digging into Open Sea, Hans Chew’s latest/greatest LP, your imagination may conjure up some dream rock combos," Tyler Wilcox wrote in his review of the  record. "Leon Russell hiring Television to be his backing band in ’77? Joe Boyd producing the Allmans? JJ Cale jamming with Crazy Horse?"

It's a record that feels lived in, by a guy who's lived an awful lot. Backed by the Rhyton rhythm section, Chew provides boogying piano and guitar along with lead guitarist Dave Cavallo, bearing his heart over a set of deep grooves. "Who am I/to forget it?" he pleads at the start of "Who Am Your Love," singing like a man with a lot on his mind, summarizing, "The one who cares will not be spared/from the tender."

That sense of tenderness and care was evident as we called Chew up in New York to discuss the record and the long road he took getting to it. The conversation's been edited and condensed for clarity.

Hans Chew :: Give Up The Ghost

Aquarium Drunkard: There's always a big question when it comes to music that engages rootsy textures like yours about "authenticity." Open Sea blends and mutates a lot of styles, but what ultimately makes it yours? What does authenticity mean in the context of your music?

Hans Chew: A big part of my entire life has been sorting out and kind of finding my way in the world, growing and maturing…I really don't feel like I got my act together until I was in my late 20s. I was probably about 28. I went down a dark road for a while…I guess what I'm trying to say is it's always been a question for me of, you know, when people say "just be yourself." It seemed like such a simple statement and I got what it meant. I understood the gist of it, but for the life of me, that was–that's always been the question, I mean still, to this day, to a large extent, I still ask myself, "What does that mean to 'just be yourself?'"

I mean, there's all these other people out there. I would love to be like that person and that person. [You ask] what kind of singing voice should I try to have? What kind of style should I try to do? And then I guess I got to a point where I realized, I could try to scream into a pillow every night and try to get a voice like Tom Waits, or I could try to do some kind of Nick Cave/David Yow/Iggy Pop impersonation, you know, swallow the microphone, but then I was like, you know the limitless well of inspiration that I have is my own uniqueness of a human being. I know we're all humans, and we're all 99.9% the same. But everybody is also unique. There's nobody else who's had my exact existence, as far as I know. Maybe the anti-matter Hans or something in some parallel universe.

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Abstract Truths: An Evolving Jazz Compendium — Volume Four

Volume four of Abstract Truths. If unfamiliar with the series, please first read here about the its genesis and intention. For this installment we tapped bay area record collector/muso David Katznelson.

Katznelson likens the genre to a "wild animal...a cuddle by a fire place; it pushes up against it and provides a respite from the daily grind. Great Jazz fills a room with colors, gives it . . .

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