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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Transmissions Podcast :: Psychic Temple / Hiss Golden Messenger on Bright Phoebus

Welcome to latest installment of Aquarium Drunkard's Transmissions podcast, a recurring series of discussions with the creators responsible for some of our favorite art. On this episode, we sit down with Chris Schlarb of Psychic Temple to discuss Psychic Temple IV, a melange of West Coast pop magic, sophisticated textures, and exploratory rock & roll. It's a record that finds Schlarb commanding a vast ensemble of players -- including Max Bennett (Joni Mitchell, Frank Zappa, the Wrecking Crew), Terry Reid, current and former members of Cherry Glazerr, the Philip Glass Ensemble,  Cryptacize, the  Dirty Projectors, and many more. Schlarb is a true journeyman, whose work spans country, gospel, gangsta rap, avant-garde, and jazz, and here he discusses it all, elucidating his unique approach to music making.

Then, M.C. Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger  explains why 1972's Bright Phoebus: The Songs of Mike and Lal Waterson  is one of his favorite LPs. Recently reissued by Domino Records, the album's blend of country, rock, folk, and psychedelia, has served as a sort of emotional compass for Taylor, whose new album, Hallelujah Anyhow, due out from Merge on September 22, will be the topic of our next episode.

Transmissions Podcast :: Psychic Temple / Hiss Golden Messenger on Bright Phoebus

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Neil Young :: A Hitchhiker On The Road

Hitchhiker, Neil Young's latest archival release, is an absolutely essential addition to the songwriter's canon, capturing a skeletal mid-1976 solo acoustic session. It's also our first chance to hear the original version of the LP's title track, a tune with an extremely tangled history. Let's do a little un-tangling.

According to Neil, he wrote the song just a few days before the Hitchhiker session, proudly playing it for Bob Dylan at Shangri La, The Band's Malibu studio. "That's an honest song," Dylan responded. And as usual, he's right – "Hitchhiker" is an intense "autobiography in drugs," following Young's path through hash, amphetamines, cocaine and beyond. “If it was a TV show, it would be called ‘The Drug Chronicles, T.M.I.,’” he told the New York Times in 2010. Young may have penned the ultimate anti-drug anthem in "Needle & the Damage Done," but here he owns up to his own abuses ... and sounds fairly unrepentant along the way (Young admitted that the Hitchhiker session was fueled by weed, beer and coke– and its safe to assume he's not talking about soda). Was "Hitchhiker" too honest? Maybe – Neil left it unreleased and never played it live during the 1970s.

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Studio One: Version Dread (Dub Specialist) / Vinyl Reissue

Speaking of the latest excavation of the famed Studio One vaults . . .

Pre-dating what became known as dub there was the version. Out-of-print for over a decade, the label recently announced a forthcoming vinyl issue of Version Dread, a 2006 compilation featuring some of the most sought after B-sides in Studio One's history. Spanning 1966 to . . .

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Auf Wiedersehen to Can co-founder Holger Czukay

Auf Wiedersehen to  Can co-founder Holger Czukay, one of the primary architects of the krautrock sound, a sampling pioneer and a fearless sonic adventurer. Surrounded by virtuoso instrumentalists in Can, Czukay responded on bass with a hypnotically minimalist pulse, ensuring that no matter how free flowing things got, the groove remained paramount – check out this live 1970 rave-up of the ur-motorik masterpiece "Mother Sky" for proof. "Music is a Miracle" proclaimed the title of one of Holger's latter day works; spend a little time with the man's catalog – whether it's his impossibly gorgeous "Persian Love" or the ferocious future funk of "Yoo Doo Right" – and he'll make a believer out of you. words / t wilcox

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Daniel Norgren :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Daniel Norgren grew up in Sweden driven by an idea of America, a composite of our country built on the films he saw and records he played. You can hear it in his music, a lonesome blend of blues and folk, in which synthesized  Americana sounds mingle with a naturalistic Scandinavian aesthetic.

I first heard Norgren at the Pickathon festival a few years back, where he played his springy  guitar on the lush Woods stage. But soon folks all over the country will get their . . .

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Mythic Sunship :: Land Between Rivers

Mythic Sunship's second lp, Land Between Rivers, was quietly released earlier this year via Danish label El Paraiso Records. Like its predecessor, the three track soundscape finds the the instrumental Copenhagen quartet stretching skyward with tracks eclipsing the fifteen minute mark. The overall stratosphere the group continues to mine rides the line between heavy, fuzzed out, guitar psychedelia and exploratory kosmische musik. At times a cacophony of thunderous pandemonium, it's fitting their name is lifted from an amalgamation of . . .

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Patrick Cowley :: Afternooners

Patrick Cowley initially made his mark as one of the pioneering sound architects of the Hi-NRG San Francisco disco sound,  crafting hits with  Sylvester, famously remixing Donna Summers' "I Feel Love," and founding his own imprint, Megatone Records, to release jammers like "Megatron Man" and "Menergy," an unabashed celebration of gay club culture. Cowley was an early student of the synthesizer,  founding  the Electronic Music Lab at City College of San Francisco, and he drew on his electronic expertise in the late '70s and early '80s, crafting soundtracks for Los Angeles . . .

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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 493: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ The Black Beats - The Mod Trade ++ The Velvet Underground - Sister Ray (AD edit) ++ Usha Khanna - Hotel Incidental Music ++ David Lee Jr. - Second Line March ++ Ersen - Gonese Don Cicegim ++ Shin Joong Hyun - I've Got Nothing To Say ++ Kalyanji Anandji - Somebody to Love ++ Crazy Elephant - Dark Part of My Mind ++ David Byrne & Brian Eno - Regiment . . .

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Itasca :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Last year, Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter Kayla Cohen released Open to Chance under her Itasca banner. In his review for Aquarium Drunkard, Tyler Wilcox admitted the temptation to call the album's slow burning, psychedelically-tinged folk rock "the perfect autumn soundtrack," noting the album would sound just as good in the spring or summer. And he's been proven right. As the seasons have passed, Open to Chance has continued to reveal and offer new beauty.

On the occasion of her current tour with Dylan Golden Aycock and Lake Mary, we caught up with Cohen to discuss the dreamlike nature of her songs, and the current cultural moment that finds young artists synthesizing disparate influences into a cohesive, subtle new whole.

Itasca :: Buddy

Aquarium Drunkard: Open to Chance was one of my favorite albums of 2016. Have you started working on a new record?

Kayla Cohen: I’ll get totally into [the process] and get pretty far, and then take a couple of weeks off, and basically start over. That’s happened a few different times. It’s been slow, but I don’t think there’s any rush with anything.

AD: You worked with a full band on Open to Chance. Are you planning to do that again?

Kayla Cohen: I’ll record with a full band, but [for now] I’ve been working on it by myself.

AD: On Open to Chance, the word “dream” appears often. Is dream logic something you seek out in your own music?

Kayla Cohen: I think it’s part of music for me, just in general. The dream world is where you can access symbols that don’t necessarily make linear sense, but that can be really evocative. Lyrically, that’s perfect. That’s what you want. When I was working on that record, I feel like the dream world was more of a thing I was working with in a way that’s more hazy and mirage-like than I’ve been thinking about it now. I’ve been reading a lot of poetry centered on dreams. For example, this one poet, William Ferguson: the way he uses the dream vocabulary is more straightforward, serious, and concrete. That’s something I’m discovering now. But dreaming...that’s super fertile ground. And it’s easy too: you can just be like, “I have a night, now I’m going to drink some weird tea and go to sleep and see what happens.”

AD: I like that idea of dreams as a laboratory for songs. Do you have pretty vivid dreams?

Kayla Cohen: [Laughs] Yeah. I have phases where they are and they aren’t. But if the waking world isn’t providing you with the kind of inspiration you want, you can go to bed and see what happens, too.

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Jack Cooper

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

Earlier this year Ultimate Painting's Jack Cooper slid us an early version of his new solo album, Sandgrown. At nine tracks we were immediately drawn to its sparse, tranquil, yet personal offerings inspired by his hometown of Blackpool off the coast of England. The effort finds Cooper waxing nostalgic about his time growing up on the Fylde Coast and the cast of characters that come with living and working in a seasonal resort town. Often compared to the Velvets, Sandgrown finds Cooper acknowledging other influences including Terry Allen and The Grateful Dead, mixing them with the experimental textures of John Cale and Robert Wyatt. More on that, from the artist, below.

Jack Cooper :: Blood Dries Darker (Woods)

Woods have a special place in my heart because my wife and I are both big fans and we always listen to them together. I first saw them in 2008 in Manchester and it's been a pleasure seeing them so many times since then. This is my favourite song of theirs and although they never really play it, Jarvis dedicated it to my wife and I last time they played London. It's a pretty perfect song.

Jack Cooper :: Lubbock Woman (Terry Allen)

Terry Allen's Lubbock (On Everything) was a big influence in this solo album of mine. The framework of writing about a town or place opens up a world of possibilities. I've been writing about Blackpool since I lived there but the idea to do something centered on that was really inspired by this record and Watertown by Frank Sinatra. The words and the delivery is all about Terry, so it felt weird singing them. I scrapped the idea 4 or 5 times, before thinking 'fuck it'... it's a great song.

Jack Cooper :: For A While (Frank Sinatra)

Frank Sinatra's Watertown is just the most melancholic, downbeat, comforting record I've ever heard. It's his best album and his finest acting performance. Again...the delivery and words are all about him but I gave it a good shot. My friend Phil Anderson recorded some piano for me...it's blown out and weird.

Jack Cooper :: Black Peter (Grateful Dead)

I'm not too sure why I chose this apart from being a huge fan of the Grateful Dead. Robert Hunter was on fire around this time...such rich, interesting imagery and narratives. I really can't think of a better lyricist, and around this time in particular.

Jack Cooper :: Big Louise (Scott Walker)

Most of these songs I'll class as misses, in that they're all so hard to do justice too. The vocalists are way too singular and this one in particular I've included just for the hell of it. The phrasing and way he sings is so incredibly complicated. I couldn't even begin to get right. I've listened back to all of these at some point and become to self conscious about even submitting them (laughs). I guess there's something liberating about taking a shot at something and just going with it.

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Kacy & Clayton :: The Siren’s Song

Continuing to effortlessly distill the sounds and traditions of Southern Appalachia, the British Isles, and the rolling ranch land of their rural Saskatchewan home, second cousins Kacy Anderson and Clayton Linthicum return with The Siren’s Song. Their fourth long-player and second with a backing band - this time comprised of their touring outfit, Shuyler Jansen (bass) and Mike Silverman (drums) - production of the album was helmed by Jeff Tweedy and recorded in Chicago at Wilco’s Loft studio.

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