Dead Notes #13 :: Cornell, May 8, 1977

If you've been lucky, you've found yourself in some college dorm, surrounded by DayGlo tapestries, Nag Champa wafting in the air, stinging your eyes. Your singularly nicknamed but gracious hosts and their friends argue. It's always the same argument: over the so-called greatest Grateful Dead show ever. More often than not, they were arguing about the merits or flaws of Cornell. May 8, 1977.

Or maybe it was at a record store. The store's owner was "there" but can’t remember a damn thing, minus the “One More Saturday Night” encore on a Sunday night. Oh wait, there was the infamous “Take a Step Back” and that "Dew." The Dew.

Last week, the recordings saw release as part of the box set, May 77: Get Shown the Light, and as a stand-alone set, Cornell 5/8/77, in honor of the show's 40th anniversary. I've witnessed grown men argue about Cornell until they were carnelian red in the face, later apologizing as they rambled, "The Dead are like pizza, man. Some shows are better than others. But it’s still pizza and pizza rules."

Myself? Cornell came in the same batch of tapes as Buffalo, the night after, and the Live/Dead Fillmore West run of 1969. Buffalo has the opening “Help > Slip > Franklin’s” triptych that's a mind-meld when you're 15, just being hipped to the whole thing. It only took one listen of Cornell before I was like, "Well you know, Buffalo is just a little bit…"

Grateful Dead :: Dancing in the Street [Betty Board]
Grateful Dead :: Dancing in the Street [Jerry Moore recording]

Cornell is mythical though, and for good reason. The tapes and name are ubiquitous to every collection and discussion about the band. The venue only held 8,500 attendees, but four times that amount will tell you they were there. Some will tell you it was a CIA experiment that never happened. Some say you're not a true fan if it's your favorite show. There's a stigma associated with being a Cornell apologist.

But why be unapologetic when it's right there on the tape? It smokes. A spirited first set is capped by a never-ending version of Martha and The Vandellas’ soul hit “Dancing in The Streets,” offering the audience a sneak peek into the wrinkle in time they are about to experience “30 minutes” later. The second set's near flawless. The band conjures up the spirits of Ivy League drop-outs who jumped in busses a decade before and headed west to change and find the new world. Someone said to me recently we're lucky to live in the same millennium Jerry and the Dead existed. Pizza is pizza, sure, but wouldn't it be boring without pepperoni and cheese?

Below, my friend Charlie C. -- you might remember him from the last Dead Notes column -- waxes a bit about his journey to Cornell and the years after. Charlie was supposed to go to Cornell for Poli-Sci, but he went to SUNY Oneonta instead — though he'll tell you he studied plenty of political science on long midnight roads and in crowded parking lots between Dead shows. I encourage you to listen to not only just the new official Betty Board release of “Dancing In The Street” but also infamous Dead taper Jerry Moore’s recording, captured 10 feet from the stage, which circulated nearly a decade before Betty’s recording surfaced. When I finally heard Jerry’s recording several years back, I became an instant Cornell apologist or whatever you want to call it when you love a band — infamous warts and all. words/d norsen

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Jaimie Branch :: Fly Or Die

Blending jazz, folk, drone, and electronic music in an improvisational fashion, Branch and her group -- which includes drummer Chad Taylor, bassist Jason Ajemian, cellist Tomeka Reid, and guests -- operate with avant-garde curiosity and thrilling, spontaneous energy . . .

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Joan Shelley :: S/T

The songs of Kentucky singer/songwriter Joan Shelley have always centered on the beauty of subtle recognition, her lyrics filled with scents, changes in temperature, bird song, and slight rustlings. On her eponymous fourth album, Shelley sings mostly about about people and about their desires in relation to others. It's Shelley's most revelatory LP, an album designed to be listened to away from the noise of the world, or to provide that kind of space itself.

It . . .

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Chuck Johnson :: Balsams / Riga Black

Witness: the greatly-anticipated "ambient pedal steel" album from Chuck Johnson. Due June 2 via VDSQ, Balsams is the follow-up to last year’s Velvet Arc, a record we praised for its “widescreen vision of Americana” and “shimmering electric guitar blending with gorgeous pedal steel and folky fiddles fading into mesmerizing minimalist pulses.” In that vein, if Johnson’s previous lp travels across spacious terrestrial grounds both rough-hewn and freshly paved, then his new endeavor, which Johnson describes as “the most filmic . . .

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Wooden Wand :: Clipper Ship

James Jackson Toth (AKA Wooden Wand) gets plenty of praise for his eccentrically evocative lyrics. But on Clipper Ship, his latest album for the mighty Three Lobed Records, it's the sound that draws you in.

Toth has gathered a stellar lineup of collaborators here, resulting in one of the most sonically pleasing efforts of his wide-ranging oeuvre. Guitarist become a member or log in.

Oister :: Pre-Dwight Twilley Band (1973-74)

Before the Dwight Twilley Band, there was Oister. Featuring Twilley and his musical partner Phil Seymour, the duo was a precursor to the Twilley Band, the outfit in which the two young Tulsa musicians cut their teeth and began shaping their melodic pop sound. "My partner Phil Seymour and I, when we were kids…we were kind of Simon and Garfunkel guys," Twilley remarked when we spoke with him in 2014. "We had these pretty little songs and pretty little harmonies. We lived in . . .

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Robyn Hitchcock :: S/T

After nearly four decades of consistently inspired/inspiring songwriting, Robyn Hitchcock has very little left to prove. But happily, he sounds absolutely energized on his new self-titled LP, his 21st solo album. It's his most electric and electrifying effort in quite some time, filled with Hitchcock's unmistakable six-string leads, Byrdsian harmonies and plenty of weird and wonderful lyrics.

Recorded in Nashville with producer Brendan Benson,  become a member or log in.

AD Presents: Kikagaku Moyo – Rough Trade, NYC – May 4th

This Thursday night, May 4th, Aquarium Drunkard presents Kikagaku Moyo at Rough Trade in Brooklyn, along with special guests Mountain Movers and Jason Spacin' Killinger. Tickets: HERE. Do not miss this band live. You'll thank us later.

Related: Kikagaku Moyo :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

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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 478: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Dorothy Ashby — Soul Vibrations ++ Pharoah Sanders — Love Is Everywhere (excerpt)   ++ Eddie Gale — The Rain ++ Steve Reid — Lions Of Juda ++ Carsten Meinert Kvartet — Blues To Someone ++ Cecil Mcbee — Voice Of 7th Angel ++ Ornette Coleman — All My Life ++ Don Cherry — Marimba, Goddess Of Music ++ Sun . . .

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The New Year :: Snow

The music of brothers Matt and Bubba Kadane has always played with the concept of time: stretching, elongating, and suspending it. The quality defined Bedhead, the Dallas indie rock band they formed at the start of the ‘90s, and it’s continued to develop over the intervening years. On Snow, their fourth album as the New Year, they've matured this kind of temporal suspension. The duo's trademark qualities are all on display – gently over-driven, interlocked guitars, plaintive vocals, sparse drums, and slow-building crescendos – but the songwriters’ growth over the decades is plainly evident. Like their forebearers Galaxie 500 and Spaceman 3 and peers Low, Codeine, and American Music Club, the Kadanes' songs have always rewarded patient, close listening, but on Snow, the listener never needs to strain for the melodic charm of their songs.

The New Year :: Recent History

The New Year has never been a hurried band. Part of that's because, like Bedhead was, the band's a long distance project. Matt lives in New York, where he teaches history; Bubba in Texas, where he composes music for film and television. But even if the brothers are known for taking their time, the long gap dividing the new LP and its predecessor, 2008’s self-titled The New Year, wasn’t intentional.

“We expected to put the record out a long time ago,” Matt Kadane says with a low chuckle. “We went into the studio about five or six years ago, maybe even seven even, to record some songs thinking, ‘If do this, the rest of the album will quickly follow.’”

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Transmissions Podcast :: Eileen Myles

Welcome to Aquarium Drunkard’s recurring Transmissions podcast. Today, we continue our mini-series in collaboration with the folks at Mexican Summer. Last month, AD’s Jason P. Woodbury headed out to Marfa Texas to attend Mexican Summer’s Marfa Myths Festival, a four-day, multi-disciplinary celebration of art and music in West Texas, which resulted in his essay, “There’s No Such Thing As Nowhere.”

For this episode, Woodbury down with poet and novelist Eileen Myles. The writer came up in the '70s, at the St. Mark's Poetry Project in New York. In 2015, Myles' 1994 novel Chelsea Girls was reissued; 2016 saw the release of a collection of poems written between 1975 and 2014 called I Must Be Living Twice. In this episode, Myles discusses her process and her next book, Afterglow, and along the way we'll hear some selections of Myles' poetry, pulled from the live album Aloha/Irish Trees, paired with recordings by Marfa Myths performers Pharoah Sanders and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith. Photo by Peggy O'brien.

Transmission Podcast :: Eileen Myles

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Neil Young: Songwriting & Old Men (Live & At Home, 1971)

Absolute homegrown ephemera gold courtesy of a 1972 Germany documentary which finds Neil Young in a honey slide haze on his fabled Broken Arrow Ranch, work-shopping  “Out on the Weekend” (endearingly amused by his own lyrics), and hanging with Elliot Roberts, the fellas, the dogs, and the cows. The clip also finds Young musing on the imagery of his songwriting, before gorgeously blending a live performance of “Old Man” from only a few weeks prior with footage of the titular muse and Young sharing a smile. More barn, indeed. words /become a member or log in.

Kelly Lee Owens :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

On her self-titled debut, English electronic producer Kelly Lee Owens carefully weaves lyrical threads through her avant-pop club songs. Owens came from an indie rock background, but years working in record stores opened her up to the sounds of drum and bass, Krautrock, minimalism, and dream pop, all of which factor into the palette of her enveloping new album. On the record, Owens' vocals hover over shuffling beats and spacey washes of synth, alternately sounding rapturous and spooky. Her rhythms are insistent, often blooming into hard grooves, and while the songs cross-skip across genre, they're held together by Owens' songwriter instincts and an abiding electronic warmth.

“I kind of gravitate to bass quite a lot, this underwater, immersive kind of hug that it gives you,” Owens says from her management's offices in Camden.

If her time working in record shops informed her musical ideology, it was her time working as an auxiliary nurse in a cancer treatment hospital that suggested a holistic aim for her songs. With her recordings, Owens hopes to offer "immersive, sound healing," the kind of music that serves the needs of the contemplative as well as those looking to escape on the dance floor.

Aquarium Drunkard spoke with Owens about building her sound from the ground up, matters of femininity and masculinity, and, with the help of a psychic, we explored the role musical innovator Arthur Russell has played in her career. This interview has been edited and condensed.

Aquarium Drunkard: You worked in a hospital specializing in cancer treatment. Did the notion of creating music with therapeutic properties kind of take root there?

Kelly Lee Owens: It’s funny, I thought my work as a nurse was a completely separate thing from my music, but it isn’t and realizing that while discussing the album has been nice. Working in the hospital, it was all drug-based therapies, which are necessary for the most part. But I really felt like something was missing. There wasn’t a focus on the whole spectrum of well-being. I feel like creativity and music is so healing, it’s part of that, and I wondered how I could bring those two worlds together. I didn’t think it was possible, but the more I’ve looked into the science of sound, the more I realized they’re shattering cancer cells with resonant frequencies. At that time, I was going to a lot of gong sound baths. It was an experience of letting the music wash over you. You let go, ultimately, of control. I’m used to controlling sounds in a certain way. It was a new experience for me to just kind of let it be. It was quite a profound thing. I think [album closer] “8” brought that out in my own music, just letting something be and expand. It's all connecting slowly, I think.

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Vic Chesnutt :: What Doesn’t Kill Me (A Documentary)

As we mentioned last month, New West Records is in the midst of a massive reissue campaign of the late Vic Chesnutt's discography, beginning with his 1990 debut (the Michael Stipe produced Little), on through 2005's Ghetto Bells -- his final LP for the label prior to moving to Constellation Records in 2007.

Which brings us to What Doesn't Kill Me

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

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

SIRIUS 477:  JJean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Kevin Morby — Wild Side (Oh The Places You’ll Go) ++ B.F. Trike — Be Free ++ Dinosaurs — Sinister Purpose ++ Flaming Groovies — Golden Clouds ++ The Ramones — Oh Oh I Love Her So ++ The Nerves — Stand Back And Take A Good Look (Demo . . .

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