David Earle Johnson / Jan Hammer :: Time Is Free

Drums. Synths. Space. In 1977, four years following the dissolution of Mahavishnu Orchestra, Jan Hammer teamed with percussionist David Earle Johnson for Time Is Free - the first of a pair of collaborative albums. Having carved out his own solo career beginning with 1975's The First Seven Days

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Steve Wynn (The Dream Syndicate) :: The AD Interview

The Paisley Underground is the kind of scene that makes for a good verbal secret handshake. While its myriad branches snaked into the mainstream eventually thanks to Mazzy Star, the band that most transcended its range was The Dream Syndicate. While their 1982 debut full length The Days of Wine and Roses seems to owe its debt to the noisier end of psychedelia, the subsequent three albums took off across a range of American and European rock traditions. It had seemed like 1988's Ghost Stories was going to be the final word, but now, 29 years later, comes How Did I Find Myself Here?, due out September 18th. Founding member and vocalist Steve Wynn sat down with Aquarium Drunkard to discuss the band's reformation, the new album, the LP's Aquarium Drunkard connection, and why hearing Kendra Smith's vocal track was like Christmas morning.

Aquarium Drunkard: I found an interview you did back in 2013 with Slicing Up Eyeballs - back when the Dream Syndicate reunion, reformation or whatever you want to call it first happened. You said that your goal for making a new record was that you always thought there should've been an album between The Days of Wine and Roses and Medicine Show and that you wanted to try and tap into how the band was evolving during that period. Was that an idea that stayed with you during the making of this album? Did that end up coming true to some extent?

Steve Wynn: No, but that was a definite, solid idea I had back then because I always wished there had been a record between the two. Just because those records are so different and the progression from The Days of Wine and Roses to Medicine Show was actually pretty logical, if you lived it in real time like we did. For a lot of people, they didn't see all the steps in between. So I thought about that for a long time, and when we reformed the band and people would ask about a new record, that was kind of in the back of my mind.

But in the years since - like you said, that was 4 years ago - this particular lineup really evolved from show to show, tour to tour. We did about 50 shows before making the record. It is the Dream Syndicate, very much in the spirit and history of the Dream Syndicate. It's got me and Dennis [Duck; drummer] who were there from the start, and Mark [Walton; bass] who almost goes back to the start and Jason [Victor; guitar] who is probably the leading living scholar on the Dream Syndicate in some ways [laughs], who really understands what we're all about, knows our music and keeps us on the straight and narrow about who we were. It's a reunion, but it's the Dream Syndicate. But as time went on, I realized this is just a really good incarnation, tradition-bearing version of the Dream Syndicate, so the motivation changed to where I really just wanted to document this band.

I sort of feel after awhile when we'd tour and talk to people about the band, people would ask 'let me get this straight, who are the original members and where did this person come from' and those are all reasonable questions. I'm the kind of person who reads Aquarium Drunkard and likes archival material and cares about the history of music and the details. But also this is the band right now. Every time we'd play a show, people would leave saying this is a really good band. That became the motivation for making a record - just to be able to say, this is who we are right now and we think you're going to dig it. On top of that, I wanted to keep playing shows and touring, but didn't want to be confined by being a nostalgia act and only playing old songs. All that was kind of in the back of my mind, more than that original and very real but forgotten concept. [laughs] We'll do that one next time.

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Robert Wyatt :: Yolanda

Beyond Soft Machine. Cut in August of 1984 via Rough Trade, "Yolanda" was originally released via the ever-evolving English musician Robert Wyatt's four track ep, Work In Progress. One of two Spanish language tracks, the ep is also notable for Wyatt's re-working of Peter Gabriel's 1980 anti-apartheid protest song, "Biko . . .

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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 490: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++   Pierre Henry - Machine Danse ++ Cluster - Caramel ++ Robert Wyatt - Yolanda ++ Hermanos Calatrava - Space Oddity ++ Lee “Scratch” Perry - Double Six ++ Thee Oh Sees - Palace Doctor ++ Damo Suzuki / Kraftwerk - Transistor ++ David Lee Jr. - Cosmic Vision ++ Thee Oh Sees - Palace Doctor ++ Shintaro Nakamoto - Dancing With The Pain ++  David Earle Johnson w/ Jan Hammer - Juice Harp ++ Unique Madoo . . .

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Pierre Henry :: Machine Danse / 1973

That this unruly  electronic French bîªte was unleashed in 1973 only makes it that much sweeter, the title track off musique concrî¨te maverick Pierre Henry's 17th album.

Pierre Henry :: Machine Danse

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Sam Shepard :: Where Does A Hero Live?

Through bragging, a lot of early-day American heroes sprang up. Paul Bunyan, Pecos Bill, all those mythic guys emerged from the fantastic "tall tales," mostly based on macho bravado and superhuman strength. Pecos Bill dug the Rio Grande with his bare hands. Paul Bunyan uprooted mighty trees and drank whole lakes in a single sitting. But these guys were totally fictitious. Then there were the real live ones like Jesse James, Billy the Kid, Mickey Free, Buffalo Bill. Tales grew around them mostly out of a giant communications gap between the stolid intellectual East Coast and the wide-open . . .

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Terrors :: Ensorcell Qori

If avoiding the spotlight were an artform, Baltimore’s Elijah Forrest, who performs as Terrors, is expert in its craft. His recordings are spread throughout limited edition split cassette tape releases, usually with strange phonetic titles difficult to define or comprehend. And in terms of priorities, his heart seems more invested in his other project, Lolly Gesserit (he even recommends this project in the Ensorcell Qori liner notes). But while Gesserit is more a dissonant, droning kind of thing, Terrors could be described . . .

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Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed: David Bowie 1966-2016

Folk / glitter / spaceman / plastic soul / mainstream pop icon and beyond,  David Bowie transcended - no matter the genre or medium. The following collage is comprised of an hour’s worth of oddities and curios spanning a half century, unwashed and somewhat slightly dazed.

Peter And The Wolf
Chant Of The Ever Circling Skeletal Family
When I'm Five
I'm A Hog For You Baby
After All
Segue - Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette)Waiata
African Night Flight
Don't Sit Down
It's No Game (part 1)
We Are Hungry Men
The King Of Stamford . . .

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Théorî¨me :: L’appel Du Midi î  Midi Pile

Transmitting to us via Paris is the one-woman band Théorî¨me. Imagine 60s Yé-yé cryogenically frozen, thawed into 80s industrial no-wave, frosted again, and now set loose into the wild as something wholly new. This is some shit to get on terms with. Her debut lp, L’appel Du Midi î  Midi Pile, was released late last year via Bruit Direct Disques, and needs to be heard to be believed. words /

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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 489: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Brian Eno - No One Receiving ++ Talking Heads - I Zimbra ++ Arthur Russell - Make 1, 2 ++ 6ix - I’m Just Like You ++ Can - Vernal Equinox ++ Placebo - Balek ++ Tom Tom Club - L'î‰léphant ++ Brenda Ray / Jingo - Keep Holding On ++ Dwight Sykes - Bye   ++ Johnny Walker - Love . . .

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Michael Nau :: Some Twist

Michael Nau’s latest long player, Some Twist, finds the Maryland native following the breezy, off-kilter charm of last year’s Mowing, his solo debut. And that is to say it’s great. Album opener “Good Thing” bursts with the gleaming originality that has come to define Nau and his wife Whitney McGraw’s collective work as Cotton Jones, namely the  albums Paranoid Cocoon and Tall . . .

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Stardust – Joni Mitchell 1982-2007

While there may not be quite as many highs as from her California days, there's still much to be gleaned from Joni Mitchell's often overlooked post-Mingus period. Even her more forgettable albums from the 1980s offer something to behold, while the mid-1990s volley of Turbulent Indigo and Taming The Tiger  have . . .

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