Transmissions Podcast :: Hiss Golden Messenger

"It's a strange, sweet kind of light/To be lost out in the darkness of the border."

On Hiss Golden Messenger's new album, Hallelujah Anyhow, songwriter M.C. Taylor stares down darkness, only to find it's simply "a different kind of light." It’s a record about chasing freedom and finding hope in unexpected places: among worn guitars, in clouds of smoke, and in the sound of wafting Caledonia soul music. The record continues Hiss’s evolution from solitary, lonesome folk to celebratory and loose country rock and soul. It’s “music for hope,” Taylor says, and though it doesn’t hide its concerns, stressed, or worries, it’s nonetheless a welcome moment of lightness in these heavy times.

For this episode of the Aquarium Drunkard Transmissions podcast, AD's Jason P. Woodbury spoke with Taylor in Oregon at the Pickathon music festival. The conversation -- like Hiss's songs -- is frank, earnest, and genuinely warm. It pairs well with Hiss Golden Messenger's Lagniappe Session, which found the group covering the Faces and Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys. Hiss Golden Messenger's Hallelujah Anyhow is available now via Merge Records.

Transmissions Podcast :: Hiss Golden Messenger

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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. This week during the second hour: Rich Elson of the Paris/London based reissue label Africa Seven sits in . . .

SIRIUS 496: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Gal Costa - Relance ++ David Byrne & Brian Eno - Regiment ++ The Fall - Marquis Cha Cha ++ Ryo Kawasaki - Hawaiian Caravan ++ Sinkane - Yacha (Peaking Lights Dub Mix) ++ Bob Chance - Jungle . . .

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Sonic Youth :: Peel Session, October 1988 (The Fall Covers)

Sonic Youth vs. The Fall. In October of 1988 Sonic Youth paid a visit to the  John Peel show on BBC Radio 1 a week before the release of Daydream Nation. Having recorded with Peel just two years prior, the group used the '88 session to pay tribute to UK post-punk godheads The Fall.

Kicking off with a jagged "My New House" (via The Fall's 1985 lp This Nation's Saving Grace), Sonic Youth imprint their . . .

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Peaking Lights: Head + Soup (A Mixtape)

Aquarium Drunkard presents Head + Soup, a 120 minute pan-global mî¶bius strip of sound spanning genre, tone, and era. Brewed by Peaking Lights, who  self-released the double lp The Fifth State of Consciousness in June, the following is something akin to aural hypnagogia. The in sound from way out.

Charles Webster - Sweet Butterfly
Lena Platonos - Aimatines skies apo apostasi
Silent Riders - I See You (Dennis Bovell . . .

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Bill MacKay & Ryley Walker :: Lonesome Traveler

The stellar Chicago duo of Ryley Walker and Bill MacKay return next month with SpiderBeetleBee, a collection of fluid acoustic freedom flights, floating from Britfolk excursions to hazy rambles into unclassifiable zones. Walker and MacKay have an easy, loose-limbed rapport throughout – no one's leading and no one's following; it's more like they're discovering these songs together. Get a taste of SpiderBeetleBee via "Lonesome Traveler," here accompanied by Kim Alpert's found footage collage, a perfect visual complement to the song's dusty, meditative musings.   words / t wilcox

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The Weather Station :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

On her fourth album under the Weather Station banner, Toronto-based songwriter and actor Tamara Lindeman steps into a new light. Though the self-titled LP is every bit as gorgeous and engrossing as  previous triumphs  like All Of It Was Mine and Loyalty, it's looser, more enraged, and far more  restless. "I had to get so ruthless, to cut right down to the quick," she sings on "Impossible," addressing  the intentionality  that drives the new record. Though the touchstones of her sound still linger here (the haunting lilt of Fairport Convention most especially),  new reference points emerge on nervy, lyrically dense songs like "Kept It All To Myself" and the stunning "Thirty," in  which Lindeman evokes punk poets like Patti Smith and Jim Carroll, wrangling observations both personally and political into musical formation. The Weather Station's  arrangements are less delicate and its melodies more sprawling, and it finds Lindeman tossing her voice into new context, singing over locked grooves and string arrangements she wrote for the record. At times, it's as hushed as ever, but often  the album blooms with a open-hearted swagger. It's a set of songs  about defining oneself, about recognizing the changing winds that swirl around us, and dedicated to poring over the words and ideas that bind us together. It's Lindeman's most accomplished and seems to reveal more brilliance with each listen.

Aquarium Drunkard reached Lindeman at her mother's house in  Aylmer, Ontario, to discuss the record's blustery sound and the role setting plays in her songs.
  Aquarium Drunkard: I've been enthralled with The Weather Station. Does this record feel for you -- for lack of a better term -- more "punk" that your other albums?
Tamara Lindeman: Yeah, totally. [Laughs] I mean, I don’t claim to know what punk means, because people are very opinionated about that word, but totally. It was born from this very different spirit than my other records. I felt like I didn’t have the luxury of being careful like I had before. If felt necessary to just move forward and create something…you know what I mean? [Laughs]

AD:  What were some of the conditions in your life that led to that different motivation?

Tamara Lindeman: I think being older. I’m in my 30s and being a musician is a strange thing to be when you’re a woman in your 30s. There are so many things. I feel like there are too many answers to that question. I just didn’t have time to be decorous. I was bored of certain ideas and sounds and also I was touring a lot. I didn’t have a lot of peaceful time. You know, touring is crazy. It’s awesome. [You are]  thrown headlong into the world. That definitely brought out a different thing in me. And I think that the way...the world is right now makes me feel angry and reckless. I was like, "I don’t have time to be nice."

AD: You wanted to make a record that reflected less niceness and more something else. Urgency, maybe?

Tamara Lindeman: Yeah, totally. For sure.

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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 495: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ The Fall - The Classical ++ Omni - Equestrian ++ Thee Oh Sees - Girls Who Smile ++ Omni - Afterlife ++ Wire - Feeling Called Love ++ Pylon - Cool ++ Pavement - Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era ++ Pavement - Perfume V ++ Pavement - Conduit For Sale! ++ The Art Museums - Oh Modern Girls ++ The Vaselines - Slushy ++ The Only Ones - The Whole Of The Law ++ Felt - Something Sends Me . . .

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Jean-Claude Vannier: Histoire De Melody Vannier / A Medley

Histoire De Melody Vannier: Sixty slices of rare, vintage Parisian prog and pop-psych from the musical mind of Jean-Claude Vannier. A name likely familiar to the cognoscere surrounding his work with Serge Gainsbourg's Histoire de Melody Nelson, the French composer Jean-Claude Vannier was paid a loving tribute in 2008 via Andy Votel's kaleidoscopic medley of the composer's varied work. Press play and prendre plaisir.

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Screamin’ Jay Hawkins :: Monkberry Moon Delight

I recently wrapped up reading Mark Binelli's 2016 tome Screamin' Jay Hawkins All-Time Greatest Hits. Part novel, part historical account, the book offered Binelli a chance to explore the enigmatic singer, and the excellent author dug  far deeper than his trademark 1956 hit "I Put a Spell on You." Over his many decades, Hawkins excelled at crafting a myth from his own life, employing theatrical absurdity and over the top humor to achieve transgressive power. He was . . .

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Jack Cooper :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

No stranger to the pages of Aquarium Drunkard, Ultimate Painting’s Jack Cooper and I were introduced several years back over a mutual love of the Grateful Dead. Earlier this year he sent me a brief email saying, ‘Hey, I am working on a solo album and here is a rough mix - would you listen to it and tell me what you think?’ Sure Jack, absolutely. And I did -- again and again. The album, released last month via Trouble In Mind Records, is the sparse yet hypnotic  Sandgrown, a record inspired by Cooper's coastal hometown of Blackpool, England.

Below, we catch up with Cooper discussing the album's origins and influences, the fate of Ultimate Painting and the greatness that is Relatively Clean Rivers. Oh, and if you haven't yet, be sure to check out his recent Lagniappe Session covering the likes of Scott Walker, Terry Allen, Sinatra, Woods and more.

Jack Cooper :: Sandgrown Part 2

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The Clientele :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Few returns in 2017 have been as welcome as that of London's the  Clientele. It feels like a couple lifetimes have passed since 2010's Minotaur, but Music For the Age of Miracles, released this week via Merge Records,  shows no discernible wear and tear on the band's unmistakable sound. Airy, autumnal, and possessing a twilight magic, the subtle "comeback" LP is the most adventurous outing yet from songwriter/guitar/vocalist Alasdair MacLean, drummer Mark Keen, and bassist James Hornsey. Alongside guests like harpist Mary Lattimore and Anthony Harmer, who plays a santur dulcimer, the trio gently expands on its jangle pop roots, incorporating cinematic strings, touches of Eastern classical music, thumping disco, and hypnotic psychedelia. It's a record about altered states; singing breathily, MacLean evokes the logic of stars and myth, his surrealist lyrics hovering in the space between sleeping and dreaming.

AD spoke with MacLean on the eve of a trip to Spain about reactivating the Clientele and finding unlikely beauty in our present moment.

Aquarium Drunkard: It’s been some time since we’ve heard from the Clientele. You started a family, so I imagine it’s been a busy couple of years for you personally.

Alasdair MacLean: The last two and a half years have been a write-off, really. There’s been a small child in the house; everything’s been turned upside down. [Laughs] [Over the last seven years] there’s been Clientele reissues and two Amor de Dias records as well. There’s been a certain amount of creative activity but you know, it kind of gets pushed to the side in a way.

AD: From the outside, it more or less seemed like the Clientele was done. Were you surprised to find yourself making another record under the name?

Alasdair MacLean: It absolutely felt as if it was done for me. We’d basically done everything we could do, I felt. But I remembered playing with this guy called Anthony Harmer, before the Clientele. I must have been 18 or 19. He was somebody who really challenged me as a musician and songwriter, to the extent that I couldn’t really handle it as an 18-year-old. We were both very bossy and went our separate ways.

A couple of years ago, I bumped into him on the street. It turned out we lived about three streets from each other. We hadn’t seen each other in about 20 years. He knew about the Clientele, strangely, but I asked him what he’d been doing and he’d been learning the santur, which is an Iranian dulcimer. Rather than making records or writing words, he really mastered this instrument. That really got me interested. I’m interested in Eastern scales and I know a bit about Eastern classical music. It was actually him who suggested we play together. So we did. The songs just started to sound like Clientele songs. I played them to the other guys and they said, “Let’s make a record.”

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Harry Dean Stanton :: Canciî³n Mixteca

Speaking with Esquire in 2009, the late Harry Dean Stanton said, "Everyone wants an answer. I think it was Gertrude Stein who wrote, 'There is no answer, there never was an answer, there'll never be an answer. That's the answer.' It's a hard sell, but that's the ultimate truth."

Stanton died last week on September 15th, at the age of 91, and his filmography bears witness to his vision of ultimate truth, hard sell as it may have been. Stanton was the kind of actor who spoke volumes, often with little or no words at all. His face told stories, bringing a soulful intensity to movies like Cool Hand Luke, Repo Man, Alien, The Last Temptation of Christ, his many collaborations with David Lynch, including Wild at Heart, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, The Straight Story, Inland Empire, and Twin Peaks: The Return, and one of his final films, John Carroll Lynch's elegiac Lucky.

In 1984, Stanton starred in Wim Wenders' and Sam Shepard's Paris, Texas, perhaps the clearest demonstration of Stanton's lonesome and elemental power. In 1997, he and his band performed "Canciî³n Mixteca," from Ry Cooder's score from the film, for the ABC series Access All Areas, at Philip Dane's Cigar Lounge, Beverly Hills. Unmistakable and haunted. Godspeed, HDS.

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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. You can download the Good Trip Peru: Vol. II mixtape, HERE . . .

SIRIUS 494: Jean Michel Bernard — Gén . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Dent May

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

It's one of the oldest tricks in the songbook, stringing a bummer sentiment to a buzzy melody, but on his charming new LP Across the Multiverse, Dent May utilizes it with a craftsman's skill. Buoyed by round synth tones, disco flourishes, and an abiding love for the Beach Boys, the album finds the Mississippi-raised Dent breezing through the same mythic Los Angeles vibe Harry Nilsson, Carole . . .

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Good Trip Peru, Vol II: A Mixtape

For the second edition in our series of Good Trip mixtapes -- a project that takes a closer look at our favorite sounds and rhythms from around the world -- we’re picking up where Volume I left off in Peru, but with special attention paid to the diverse instrumentation and psych-laden . . .

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