On The Turntable

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    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet

    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet :: Mondays at The Enfield Tennis Academy

    Mondays at the Enfield Tennis Academy offers up four sidelong pieces recorded live in Los Angeles over the past few years. Here, we get to eavesdrop on Parker, bassist Anna Buttterss, drummer Jay Bellerose and saxophonist Josh Johnson in full freedom flight. It’s an uncommonly intimate live recording — the players seem to be extremely at ease in this small club setting.

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    Nicola Alesini & Pier Luigi Andreoni

    Nicola Alesini & Pier Luigi Andreoni :: Marco Polo

    Nicola Alesini & Pier Luigi Andreoni’s 1996 ‘ambient-word record’ Marco Polo. Vine-like, lush and minimal, layered and discreet, with assists from Japan’s David Sylvian (vocals), Pierrot Lunaire’s Arturo Stalteri (bouzouki, harmonium), Roger Eno (keyboards, percussion, vocals), David Torn (guitar), and Harold Budd (percussion). Fourth world, indeed.

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    Joropop: Psych Pop & Folk in Venezuela, 1968-1976

    Joropop: Psych Pop & Folk in Venezuela, 1968-1976 ::

    The Madrid-based Munster Records and its sister label Vampisoul have become house favorites over the last few years. The latter released one of our favorite reissues of the year in Cartao Postal, the 1971 MPB masterclass from Brazilian singer Evinha, and Munster Records is keeping that momentum strong with Joropop: Psych Pop & Folk in Venezuela, 1968-1976, a compilation that hasn’t strayed far from the speakers since its summer release.

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    Sun Ra

    Sun Ra :: On Jupiter / Sleeping Beauty

    Between 1978 and 1982 Sun Ra parked his roving musical spacecraft at New York’s Variety Arts Studios for a series of rigorous and inspired marathon sessions between frequent gigs in the city. On the heels of their stellar Lanquidity reissue, Strut continues their deep dive into this phase of Ra’s career with the twin 1979 masterpieces On Jupiter and Sleeping Beauty, offering a fresh glimpse at some of the most revered and beautifully spacious music the Arkestra ever cut.

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    Makaya McCraven

    Makaya McCraven :: Off the Record

    On his first proper offering since 2022’s career highlight In These Times, jazz drummer and composer Makaya McCraven compiles a set of four new EPs into one for Off the Record. Hence the package’s namesake, each set of songs takes the organic improvisation from various previous live recordings. There’s an aural alchemy in McCraven’s post-production wizardry, the fervent compositions feeling like fresh studio iterations as much as previous live experiences culled from the archives; each set uniquely featuring a different live lineup with plenty of the musician’s collaborators and International Anthem labelmates.

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    Oren Ambarchi / Johan Berthling / Andreas Werliin

    Oren Ambarchi / Johan Berthling / Andreas Werliin :: Ghosted III

    On their third album, the trio of Oren Ambarchi, Johan Berthling and Andreas Werliin continue to condense and refine their approach, with the rhythms as mesmeric, the riffs as repetitive and the tones as mysterious as ever. But Ghosted III also breaks up the pattern, with more songs, shorter tracks and delicate shifts in approach. Minimal jazz, avant-rock, experimental groove, modal funk — whatever you want to call it, it’s mutating before our very ears, and growing stranger and more powerful with every installment.

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    Shrunken Elvis

    Shrunken Elvis :: S/T

    Shrunken Elvis—the Nashville based trio of Spencer Cullum, Sean Thompson, and Rich Ruth—ignite a mind-meld of pedal steel, synths, and guitars on their self-titled debut, a slyly adventurous and immersive album that fuses languid soundscapes and kosmische vistas with elements of krautrock, spiritual jazz, and ambient & electronic music. Embracing touchstones such as Harmonia, Alice Coltrane, Pat Metheny, and Ashra, to name a few, the trio embark on sonic excursions that move through pastoral, tropical, and celestial realms.

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    Animal, Surrender!

    Animal, Surrender! :: A Boot For Every Bane

    Not sure how many eight-string bass / pipe organ / drums trios there are out there, but I’m going to go ahead and declare the Brooklyn-based Animal, Surrender! as the very best of them all. On their second LP, A Boot For Every Bane, bassist Peter Kerlin (Sunwatchers, Solar Motel Band), organist Curt Sydnor (Greg Saunier, Yonatan Gat) and drummer Rob Smith (Gray/Smith, Rhyton, Pigeons) make this unusual configuration sound as natural as can be.

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Terry Riley :: Shri Camel (Holland Festival, 1977)

The Netherlands, 1977. American iconoclast composer and musician Terry Riley touches down in Holland to appear on Dutch television. The near hour-long performance (buttressed by an introductory contextual primer) finds Riley performing “Shri Camel,” a piece that would not appear in an official capacity until 1980.

Transmissions :: DM Hotep (Sun Ra Arkestra)

This week on the show, we sit down with Sun Ra Arkestra guitarist DM Hotep, who, under the leadership of 101-year-old saxophonist Marshall Allen, continues the work of Ra. When the Arkestra was called overseas in 2022, Allen was advised by doctors not to accompany the group. But music is a way of life and though he was required to stay stateside, Allen still wanted to play. So DM Hotep, aka David Middleton, reached out to the Philadelphia-based arts org Ars Nova Workshop to stage a series of concerts in Philadelphia. In May of 2025, a collection of these live performances from Solar Myth was released under the title⁠ Marshall Allen’s Ghost Horizons,⁠ which finds the saxophonist joined by Hotep and guests like Wolf Eyes, James Brandon Lewis, Yo La Tengo’s James McNew, and others. Including both Ra classics and new material, Ghost Horizons demonstrates how the currents of Ra’s philosophy and artistic ethic continue to the present day, pointing toward uncertain futures. 

Hüsker Dü :: 1985: The Miracle Year    

Hüsker Dü’s miracle year came at the mid-point of the 1980s when, in the span of 12 months, the band released three monumental albums: Zen Arcade in the summer of 1984, New Day Rising at the very beginning of 1985 and Flip Your Wig in September of the same year. This box set from Numero documents the power and fury of that pivotal period with 43 paint-stripping live performances, 24 from an album release show in Minneapolis on January 30, 1985, the remainder from various stops in America and overseas on their unrelenting tour.

Pink Floyd at the LA Sports Arena (4.26.75): The Millard Master

It’s taken a half century for a Mike Millard recording to be officially sanctioned and released, though fittingly, his professional debut is a jewel: Pink Floyd at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, 4.26.75. Included in the band’s forthcoming Wish You Were Here 50th Anniversary Deluxe Set, Millard’s tape captures Floyd at its most gigantic: included in its 2.5-hour runtime is a complete runthrough of Dark Side of the Moon, the then-unreleased Wish You Were Here previewed in full (oddly, minus its FM rock staple title cut), a healthy slice of the Animals LP nearly two years before it hit shelves, and a wicked “Echoes” encore meltdown.

SML :: How You Been

SML rattles and clatters, following slap-dash, stutter-and-roll rhythms through rave-glowing forests of incandescent synths. The personnel comes from jazz, more or less, but you can hear bits of ambient chill-out, early aughts EDM, hip hop, house and free improvisation. Slashing, bumping, “Take Out the Trash” runs on a noir-ish bassline, a bit of David Axelrod’s cinematics or Death in Vegas’ ominous dance grooves in its cowbell clanging, horn-bursting swagger.

Ram On LA: A Los Angeles Music Sampler (2009 Redux)

Originally released in 2009, the AD-curated Ram On LA compilation brought together a dozen Los Angeles artists paying homage to Paul & Linda McCartney’s 1971 masterpiece Ram. Having recently witnessed retrospective publications and documentaries dissecting bgone ’90s and 2000s-era music scenes in cities like NYC and Athens, Georgia, the comp represents a snapshot of a particular LA indie scene (one in which no defining sound represented the overall zeitgeist). Retrospectively, a look back on those halcyon days of both the music scene and that era’s internet musical landscape make the compilation well worth a reappraisal and a fresh discovery for new ears.

Sean Pratt :: Prairie Whistle Call

The unbroken horizon of the American steppe reigns over Sean Pratt’s Prairie Whistle Call. Over the course of its nine cuts, the songwriter distills desolation and grandiose into a deeply personal and downright gorgeous ode to the golden roads and rolling fields he sings of. We’re presented with an Americana that stands on its own; a far cry from the derivative indie-folk that the moniker tends to carry today. In hushed tones imbued with hues of melancholy and self-discovery, Pratt brings us into his corner, commanding a restrained attention.

All Hallows’ Aquarium Drunkard II

Check your candy bars for razor blades, kids, it’s once again time for All Hallows’ Aquarium Drunkard. The damned souls around here are coming to take possession of your sound system and there aren’t enough exorcisms in the world to get them out of your house. Might as well enjoy the monster mash dub, spectral free jazz, pagan folk, creature-feature punk, and cult TV soundtrack grooves they are spewing up for the spooky season. It’s like Shakespeare said, Hell is empty and all the devils are here . . .

Transmissions :: Emmylou Harris

Welcome back to Transmissions, a weekly interview podcast created and curated by Los Angeles online music magazine Aquarium Drunkard. This week on the show, host Jason P. Woodbury speaks with a living legend, and one of our all-time favorite vocalists and songsmiths: Emmylou Harris. 

Nicola Alesini & Pier Luigi Andreoni :: Marco Polo

Nicola Alesini & Pier Luigi Andreoni’s 1996 ‘ambient-word record’ Marco Polo. Vine-like, lush and minimal, layered and discreet, with assists from Japan’s David Sylvian (vocals), Pierrot Lunaire’s Arturo Stalteri (bouzouki, harmonium), Roger Eno (keyboards, percussion, vocals), David Torn (guitar), and Harold Budd (percussion). Fourth world, indeed.

Makaya McCraven :: Off the Record

On his first proper offering since 2022’s career highlight In These Times, jazz drummer and composer Makaya McCraven compiles a set of four new EPs into one for Off the Record. Hence the package’s namesake, each set of songs takes the organic improvisation from various previous live recordings. There’s an aural alchemy in McCraven’s post-production wizardry, the fervent compositions feeling like fresh studio iterations as much as previous live experiences culled from the archives; each set uniquely featuring a different live lineup with plenty of the musician’s collaborators and International Anthem labelmates.

Videodrome :: And Soon the Darkness (1970)

An underappreciated British horror gem with a Hitchcockian flair, And Soon The Darkness (1970) ushers in the “tourist-paranoia” and “daylight-horror” subgenres in a lean 94 minutes of suspense and mystery. It’s a film ripe for rediscovery this Halloween season — or any season you may find it.