SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (7pm PST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard every Wednesday at 7pm PST with an encore broadcasts on-demand via the SIRIUS/XM app.

SIRIUS 514: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Basa Basa - African Soul Power ++ Missus Beastly — Geisha   ++ Sinkane - Jeeper Creeper ++ William Onyeabor - Better Change Your Mind ++ Seu Jorge and Almaz - Everybody Loves The Sunshine ++ Paint - Heaven In Farsi ++ Khruangbin - Maria Tambien ++ Makaya McCraven - Above & Beyond ++ Digable Planets - Pacifics ++ Ed Thigpen - Danish Drive ++ Jack Wilkins - Red Clay ++ Idris . . .

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Total Jazz :: Blutch

In the preface of Total Jazz, Fantagraphics’ new collection of jazz comic strips by Christian “Blutch” Hincker, the author is tasked with providing an introduction to the book. Imagining himself as a young Native American brave, Blutch confesses to a stoic tribal leader: “Jazz makes me sick…It turns my stomach.”

It’s a hinky way to start a book dedicated to illustrating the culture of jazz, and not only because of the stereotypical racial tones. Total Jazz collects comics Blutch began wrote and drew for the French magazine Jazzman, stark black-and-white panels that pulse with feverish energy, melancholy and haunting beauty. They aim to “translate the untranslatable” about jazz, and often they actually achieve this seemingly unattainable goal. So why the sudden case of jazzy nausea? “At first, I felt invincible” the author explains in character in the intro. “But after many moons and almost 1,000 stories, I’m down on my knees on the path.” Illustrating the music that moved him made him obsessive – a dreaded “nerd” – and even worse, all those records and CDs began to function as a mirror. If you stare at anything long enough, you begin to see yourself. No one should have to see themselves so much. Blutch suggests.

But that reflection is what makes Total Jazz such an exceptional read. Sometimes, Blutch’s strips are about jazz, the ephemeral concept and deep blue spirit of the art form itself, but most often they are about jazz musicians, meaning they are really about people. Sex, violence, confusion, fear of obsolescence – these familiar human concerns show up just as often in these comics as rough, squiggly lines from the bells of saxophones and trumpets. Like the music that engages him, Blutch quickly shifts in mood and style. His strip about a grouchy couple unimpressed by just about every element of a jazz festival is jotted out in loose, impressionistic lines, while stories like “The Sound,” about tenor saxophonist Stan Getz forcefully willing his signature sound into existence, employ heavy shadows and intricate line work.

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Basa Basa :: Homowo

In some parts of West Africa, the appearance of twins is considered a harbinger of blessings to come. And when Fela Kuti, who had already installed statues of twins on the altar at the Shrine, met the brothers Joe and John Nyaku, he may have sensed the glow of their own future pulsing backwards through time. Or maybe he was simply being a good host when he bowed and declared, “Dear twins! We are honored to welcome . . .

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David Gedge (The Wedding Present) :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

If Barry Manilow writes the songs that make the whole world sing, David Gedge pens the songs that make the world drunk dial their ex’s after punching a hole in the wall.

For over three decades Gedge has been crafting compelling and bruising songs about heartbreak, desire, infidelity, and personal frustrations as the frontman for The Wedding Present. He’s the eternal fixed center of the band, whose lineup and sound shifts from album to album. Emerging in 1985 from Leeds, England, The Wedding Present were initially lumped in with the lo-fi “C86” twee-pop scene due to their wiry, chiming guitar sound and Gedge’s unpolished vocals. They quickly outgrew that C86 label, morphing into a band that could pull off dreamy soundscapes and noisy squalls as capably as any shoegaze band. And with Cinerama, his other band, Gedge embraced a more lush, orchestral pop sound.

While The Wedding Present have continued to advance their sound over the course of their discography, they’ve also gone back to their roots for a series of anniversary tours where they’ve played beloved albums like George Best, Bizarro, and Seamonsters in their entirety. Gedge and company are about to embark on another sweeping tour of the U.S. this month. One of their reasons for hitting the road is to help spread the word about director Andrew Jezard’s upcoming documentary, Something Left Behind, which chronicles the making of their seminal debut album, George Best.

Considering the emotional intensity of his lyrics and music, one could assume that Gedge might be dour or withdrawn in conversation. To the contrary, speaking to the cult songwriter via phone, he comes off as warm and affable. He may be the English poet laureate of romantic angst, but he isn’t afraid to laugh at himself or chuckle about the absurdities that come with living a creative life.

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Jack Adkins :: American Sunset

Settle in with this one. With a kinship to Bobby Brown, this is private-press psych folk at its most private, perhaps never intended for anyone but its author. Jack Adkins’ 1984 lp American Sunset breathes a poetic mystery through its singular groove — an electronic tinged bummed out acid folk that feels borne of Lee Hazlewood and prescient of Daughn Gibson. A genuine rarity, Adkins’ prophetic cosmic musings and transfixing fusion of sounds makes a perfect . . .

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Tim Heidecker :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

There's a pretty good chance that the person you think of when you think of Tim Heidecker isn't the real Tim Heidecker.

Since emerging in the early 2000s with Adult Swim's Tom Goes to the Mayor, Heidecker has consistently and deliberately blurred the lines between reality and fiction on shows like Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!, Decker,  and  Tim & Eric's Bedtime Stories.  Even more disorienting is his long-running  movie review show  On Cinema, where he plays a character named Tim Heidecker alongside Gregg Turkington (best known for his own creation,  Neil Hamburger). It's both a labyrinthian blend of meta-commentary and a hyper-detailed fictional universe, one that's found the alternate reality Heidecker struggling with family life, substance abuse, and most recently, going to trial for his involvement in the deaths of 20 festivalgoers at the Electric Sun Desert Music Festival. Unless you're really paying attention to the layered intricacies, it can seem like the guy's actual life is a chaotic saga, rather than the stable, domestic existence Heidecker documents on his 2016 LP, In Glendale.  On that record, he reveals perhaps the closest representation of his actual self to fans, but  he's not restricted to thematic territory musically: his most recent album, Too Dumb for Suicide, wraps up grim observations about President Donald Trump and the emergence of the alt-right in sunny, West Coast folk-pop.

This Sunday, March 4, Heidecker and Turkington host their annual Oscars special, streaming live on Adult Swim. We spoke to Heidecker  at the very end of November 2017 from his offices in Los Angeles, and broadcast our talk on the January 2018 episode of the Transmissions Podcast. To prep you for the upcoming live special, here's our conversation, transcribed, edited and condensed for clarity. It may not make the real Heidecker completely clear, but it certainly digs into what makes his comedic illusions work.

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Les Bibliothécaires :: A Library Music Collection (1967-1982)

Don't sleep on this expansive labor of love – a 12+-hour mix of strange and entrancing Library Music, compiled for your listening enjoyment over on the ever-reliable Musicophilia blog. This so-called "stock" music from the 60s, 70s and 80s is a universe unto itself, full of uncanny soundscapes and environments . . .

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Oneida :: It Was Me

It's been a minute, but Oneida is back. On March 9th, Joyful Noise releases Romance, following the long-running New York combo's 2016 collaboration with Rhys Chatham and A List of the Burning Mountains, released way back in 2012, which practically feels like decades ago in this hyper-accelerated timeline we've stumbled into. But the new record doesn't sound rusty, finding drummer Kid Millions, organist Bobby Matador, and guitarist Shahin Moita tearing through a set of songs that oscillate between lurching fury, flickering electronics, and spinning textures. It's a scattered outing, but Matador says there's never been one single, set way for Oneida to make a record, and in that way, Romance's varied offerings feel of a piece with the band's discography.

"I’m not sure Oneida would agree that in our case there’s such a thing as a standard formula for making a record," Matador says. "That may be true in a broader sense for other bands, but our process has always varied widely and been approached without preconception. Sure, Romance was a product of Mally’s tacos and posole and Peruana Woodhaven chicken and plantains, as well as one of the most insane paellas ever presented to a band staying on a Catalan horse farm — literally cooked by a little old lady! — but it’s not as if the Polish Platters that fueled Secret Wars, or the whole salmon we poached during Come On Everybody Let’s Rock, or the Radagast weisswursts and pretzel rolls of Rated O are any more 'standard,' you know? You can go all the way back to 1997 and the desperate Guytina’s wings and Silver House dumplings that fueled A Place Called El Shaddai’s and not find a pattern or a recipe for Oneida’s music -- except obviously sopes and tamales for breakfast at Grand Morelos, and that shit is no different for Romance. And we like it that way."

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Transmissions Podcast :: Laraaji’s Celestrana/Itasca/Maggie Smith & Jerry David DeCicca

Welcome to the February (just under the wire) installment of Aquarium Drunkard’s recurring Transmissions podcast, a series of interviews and audio esoterica from Aquarium Drunkard. We’ve got an introspective episode for you. First, we sit down with Kayla Cohen of Itasca, to discuss her new mini-album, Morning Flower. It’s a collaboration with writer and artist Gunnar Tchida, and it focuses especially on Cohen’s lyrical guitar work. Which makes sense: in April, Cohen plays the Thousand Incarnations of the Rose festival, a celebration of the American primitive guitar tradition. I asked Cohen how she made her way into solo guitar music, and explored how the music of Robbie Basho, whose composition the festival is named for as well as a forthcoming compilation via Craft Recordings.

Then, we have a series of poems from Maggie Smith. You might have come across her poem "Good Bones," for which her
latest book is named,
but there’s a lot more to her work than that. For the Transmissions podcast, Smith’s readings are paired with instrumental recordings from Jerry David DeCicca’s new album of spacey Texan folk, Time the Teacher. It’s an album that “feels true,” Smith says in her accompanying notes, so it was a pleasure of ours to combine the truth of Smith’s words with the truth of DeCicca and his band’s sounds.

Finally, we close out the show with words from new age/cosmic composer Laraaji, discussing Celestrana, his mid-80s experiment in public access television. Part meditation, part surreal comedy routine, and part ecstatic vision, the show introduced Laraaji to a whole new audience of viewers, many of whom weren’t even aware of his work with Brian Eno or albums like the recently reissued Vision Songs. Select episodes of Celestrana are streaming now on Numero Group’s YouTube channel; Laraaji was kind enough to pull back the curtain with us and explain how he found himself in front of the camera...with puppets.

Transmissions Podcast :: Laraaji's Celestrana/Itasca/Maggie Smith & Jerry David DeCicca

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Azar Lawrence: Plays ‘Bridge Into The New Age’ / Thursday Night

Thursday night, Aquarium Drunkard presents an evening with spiritual jazz giant Azar Lawrence as he performs his 1974 masterwork Bridge Into A New Age in its entirety + Elementals. Pre and post DJ sets by Daniel T, Pheel and Tasty Wavs. Tickets available HERE.

Hit up the comments . . .

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Jimi Hendrix & Curtis Knight :: July 17, 1967 / PPX Studio Session

July 17, 1967 - After making the decision to quit (after only seven dates) as the opening act for the Monkees on their U.S. tour, Jimi Hendrix got together with his old bandmate and friend, Curtis Knight, ostensibly to jam “off the record” at Ed Chalpin’s PPX Studios. This decision would prove to be both fateful and controversial, since he was in the middle of a lawsuit filed against him by Chalpin at the time. The basis of the lawsuit stemmed from a three year contract Hendrix signed prior to his success with the Experience, covering October 1965 to October 1968. Signed while still just a session player, it offered only a 1% royalty. When Chas Chandler, bassist of The Animals, decided to manage Jimi, one of his first orders of business was to buy out all of his existing contracts. Unfortunately, Jimi neglected to tell him about the contract signed with PPX. In 1967, when Chalpin discovered Hendrix was suddenly a major recording star following the success of his first single, "Hey Joe", multiple lawsuits were filed in an attempt to cash in on this newfound success. In Chalpin’s mind, which he would contend for decades, he had given Hendrix an opportunity to develop his sound. Responding to the lawsuit, Hendrix’s management contended that PPX were trying to market older recordings as new releases. But in jamming with Knight at PPX studios with mics recording, PPX subsequently could make the claim that they in fact were in possession of new recordings with the artists’ full knowledge and approval. Even further, Hendrix would go back to PPX and record AGAIN in August of 1967, much to the dismay of his lawyers and management.

Jimi Hendrix & Curtis Knight :: July 17, 1967 / PPX Studio Session

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The Music of Shangri-La Suite (Mondo Boys) Performed Live: Los Angeles, February 26th

Tonight in Los Angeles: Aquarium Drunkard presents the music of Shangri-La Suite. Join us tonight as Mondo Boys perform their original score to the film alongside special guests and collaborators at Gold Diggers in East Hollywood. Evening kicks off with a conversation with filmmaker Eddie O'keefe and the composers. Following the live score, mucho records and revelry. It's free, but get there early. 5632 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, Calif . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (Noon EST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can be heard twice every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 513: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Ty Segall - Every 1's A Winner ++ Omni - Wire ++ Wire - Feeling Called Love ++ Parquet Courts - Careers In Combat ++ Pavement - Baptist Blacktick ++ Ought - New Calm Pt. 2 ++ The Fall - The Classical ++  Ought - Disgraced In America ++ Main - Black Moon ++ Loma - Black Willow ++ Art School Jocks - Nina ++ Girls Names - I Lose ++ Spiritualized - Cool Waves ++ Omni - Cold Vermouth . . .

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Hollow Hand :: A World Outside

So many records, so little time. Here's one from 2017 we weren't hip to until the tail end of the year, Hollow Hand's "A World Outside". Recorded in mono straight to a Tascam 4-track in their home studio in Brighton, England, Hollow Hand deals out sunny psych-pop in the vein of contemporaries Jacco Gardner and Ultimate Painting, with a reverent nod to Billy Nicholls, Roy Wood and Emitt Rhodes. Highly recc'd.

Hollow Hand :: A World Outside

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Songs By Pat Ament :: Grapefruit Records Reissue

Despite a notoriously terrible memory, I’m really good at remembering hearing things for the first time, and I have always been able to associate my initial encounters with certain records with times, places, and people.

When I go on tour with other musicians, I rarely bring music from my own collection, preferring instead to expose myself to the various CDs and playlists of my traveling companions. Over the years, I’ve discovered a lot of music this way, and I often return home from such trips with notebook pages full of new records to seek out. Sometimes if I hear something in the van I really like, I’ll ask about it, but more often I prefer to play it cool. To be overly inquisitive in such situations can be a buzzkill, like commenting on how and why a just-told joke was funny instead of just laughing.

Because I am sensitive to this fragile dynamic of the shared band-space, I’ll often use discretion, making a little note of a song lyric that stands out, with plans to identify the song later via Google. (I’m not a smartphone guy, so Shazam is not an option).

The first time I heard Pat Ament was during a tour with Simon Joyner and his band. I was sitting in the back seat of the van with Kevin and Megan, with Simon at the wheel and David Nance riding shotgun. Someone selected from their iPod an album I’d never heard before, and I liked it immediately. It reminded me, in mood, of certain private press Doors worshipers like Gyp Fox and Faction, but with a much stronger emphasis on songwriting. The songs were great.

“What is this?” I finally asked. “Paddamin,” answered David. Hmm. Into the notebook. P-A-D-D-A-M-I-N.

A few songs later, I had to know more. “Has this been reissued anywhere?” I was told it hadn’t been, with Simon adding, mysteriously: “This is kind of an Omaha secret.” Omaha, I remember thinking. Paddamin from Omaha. Probably early 70s, from the sound of it. This shouldn’t be too hard to find. I didn’t think about it again until I was home a few weeks later.

It took a while to discover that “Paddamin” was actually “Pat Ament,” and he hailed not from Omaha but from Colorado. The album had only been sold on Discogs once–for the princely sum of $150.00. I checked my other usual online sources to try to locate the record, and turned up nothing. This rarely happens; there’s always at least the opportunity to buy a desired record, even if that record is out of my price range. But this Pat Ament album didn’t seem to exist outside of our tour van and a lone Discogs entry that didn’t even include a photo of the album sleeve. My most creative Googling only provided info on some rock climbing dude (see interview below), with no results for ‘“Pat Ament” and “private press” and “music” and “LP,”’ or any variation thereof.

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