The True Topography: The Paradise of Bachelors’ Guide to Science Fiction and Fantasy Fiction

Since the early 2010s, we've been enamored with  the  output of Paradise of Bachelors.

Founded by Brendan Greaves and Christopher Smith, the label's aim of  "documenting, curating, and releasing under-recognized musics of the American vernacular, historical and contemporary alike" has led to releases by modern acts like AD favorites Michael Chapman,  Hiss Golden Messenger, Weather Station,  Steve Gunn, Itasca, Nathan Bowles,  and more, as well as illuminating reissue projects by Terry Allen, Mike Cooper, Lavender Country, and  more.

Greaves and Smith are not only connoisseurs of sound; they similarly invested in  art, cooking, and chiefly, reading. After a few fascinating  conversations with them, we asked them to assemble something of a "Paradise of Bachelors Reader," focused on the fields of science and fantasy fiction. The boys did not disappoint, assembling a list as deeply considered as their discography. - j woodbury

“Learn the true topography: the monstrous and wonderful archetypes are not inside you, not inside your consciousness; you are inside them, trapped and howling to get out.”

— R.A. Lafferty, The Devil Is Dead (1971)

As a record label comprised of old friends with largely aligned, often weirdly telepathic, curatorial interests–decidedly not the same thing as taste, which is a bourgeois ruse, but don’t get me started on that–Paradise of Bachelors has long nurtured a vexed relationship with genre. It fulfills certain pragmatic needs, of course, to discuss expressive culture, and music in particular, by classifying and categorizing it. But it’s such a sloppy, politicized business, often more related to the identity of the listener, and the perceived identity of the artist–race, class, geography, faith, etc.–than to actual emic cultural values, auditory information, or slippery musicological signifiers like “style,” that we tend to avoid it when possible, at least amongst ourselves. We live in a fractious, fearful world that requires no further divisions, aesthetic or otherwise. (“World music” and “folk music” are perhaps the most egregious and noxious examples of the diluted meaninglessness of musical genres, but they all collapse upon close inspection.)

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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 457: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ The Mekons - Where Were You? ++ Ought - Pleasant Heart ++ Wire - Pink Flag ++ Fugazi - Reclamation ++ Liliput - Die Matrosen ++ Josef K - Drone ++ The Fall - Frenz ++ Mission of Burma - New Disco ++ Flipper - Ever ++ The Soft Boys - Like A Real Smoothie ++ Patti Smith - Redondo Beach ++ Lou Reed . . .

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse: : US Tour, November 1976

Neil Young took Crazy Horse out of the barn 40 years ago this month for a coast-to-coast US tour. Here's the semi-official account, via Jimmy McDonough's Shakey:

Joel Bernstein was shocked to discover that the audience was just as wasted as the band. “It was just a bunch of kids drunk and on reds for the first time. Not just beer and pot — it was reds and vodka, tons of beer. You’d look over at people who were vomiting on the red velvet seats. I think Neil was too fucked up to notice.” Bernstein was equally appalled by the crudity of the new Horse ensemble, believing it lacked the rhythmic finesse of the original lineup. “I’d marvel at the degree to which the band succeeded in bringing down Neil’s every attempt to soar,” he said.

Sounds like a trainwreck, right? I wasn’t there, of course, but the tapes tell a different tale. The November ‘76 tour is filled with incredible, raw performances. Crude? Sure, but who doesn’t love crude Crazy Horse. This is a trainwreck you want to be a part of.

Neil’s opening acoustic sets are fantastic, with a big helping of then-new or unreleased tunes like “Pocahontas,” “Campaigner,” “Give Me Strength,” and “No One Seems To Know.” For the best representation of Neil solo in late ‘76, go straight to Joel Bernstein’s own compilation, The Bernstein Tapes, which have been bootlegged for decades now, and feature some wild monologues in addition to the music. The ghost of Judy Garland shows up in Fort Worth.

There are also plenty of full shows - varying in terms of sound quality, but all pretty thrilling - especially when Crazy Horse joins Neil.  Check out the Berkeley show, with a definitive electric  “Peace of Mind.” Or  the Madison gig, which includes an insane 17-minute “Like A Hurricane,” during which Neil puts down his guitar and starts pounding on the piano.  Neil’s 31st birthday at Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre  gets very loose. “I’m like Baskin Robbins now,” Neil says, already sounding fairly toasted in the opening acoustic set. There’s plenty of howling at the moon going on here. A few days later, the gang hit NYC, sending “Cortez” dancing across the water and dragging out a truly wasted  “Helpless.”

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Daniel Bachman :: Watermelon Slices On A Blue Bordered Plate

While some of his neo-Takoma School peers have plugged in and/or headed in more straightforward singer-songwriter directions, Daniel Bachman's focus remains firmly on the acoustic guitar. And that's a very good thing. Bachman's new self-titled effort on Three Lobed Records is a . . .

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Folkal Point :: S/T 1971

In 1971 the British folk group Folkal Point released their haunting self-titled debut bearing the angelic voice of Cherie Musialik. The album opens with “Twelve Gates Into The City” - a traditional piece describing a Holy City surrounded by a great and high wall, with twelve gates symbolizing the twelve tribes of Israel guarding the city from destruction. Though talk of a wall may seem a bit too familiar this political season, the inspirational line "We’ll climb that hill, no matter how steep" from 'You Ain’t Going Nowhere' provides . . .

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Michael Chapman :: Sometimes You Just Drive

Veteran British songwriter and guitar-slinger Michael Chapman has reason to celebrate. 50, his forthcoming LP for Paradise of Bachelors commemorates five decades of recording and touring.   Set for release mere days before his 76th birthday, age has proved meaningless in the altogether radical output of Chapman’s career. On his first self-professed “American Record” to date, Chapman is routinely unpredictable, combining re-imaginations of deep cuts from albums past alongside new compositions.

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Address Los Angeles: Suite 819 / Pryor’s Love

Address Los Angeles, a new recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, explores the lesser-to-unknown corners of LA: be it an address, an artist, or a fleeting thought.

Of Libra III’s handful of releases, none compares to “Good Thing Going.” Credited to “Pryor’s Love” (whose only appearance, aside from this 7”, is credit on the smoother soul cut “Sailor on the Ghetto Sea” from J. Evans), it’s catchy and funky and, to boot, executes a great 17-note synth solo. “We gonna laugh while the others cry / gonna groove as time goes by / cause we . . .

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Gabor Szabo :: Macho (1975)

It's 1975, Gabor Szabo tags up with keyboard titan Bob James -- the results culminate in the super-funked up, Macho. Rounding out the fold, in part, are players Harvey Mason (drums) and Louis Johnson (bass), along with percussionists Idris Muhammad and Ralph MacDonald. The results are wholly nocturnal - some kind of muscular serpentine. Macho, indeed.

Gabor Szabo :: Macho

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Jeff Parker :: Cliche

In the midst of strange times, guitarist Jeff Parker's solo album The New Breed has proven a constant companion. A soulful distillation of funk, hip-hop, and jazz, it's a family affair, featuring Parker's father Ernie on the cover and the voice of his daughter, Ruby, on the album's closing song, "Cliche." Today, we're sharing the new video for that song, directed by filmmaker Lee Anne Schmitt.

"He told 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 be heard twice every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST. Daniel T and Panamajack are my guests during the first hour, find their Heat Wave mix, here.

SIRIUS . . .

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Aircrafting :: Dreamers

Transcending late night watering holes and still smoldering backyard ashtrays, Aircrafting’s debut, Dreamers, cuts a swath through the hazy din of Cosmic Americana. A lo-fi country folk collection of dusted Young-isms, the group began as a DIY recording project between friends John Tehel and Daniel Jacobs. As a whole, the group crested in 2015 with the addition of Nicole Lawrence, Pat Floyd and Lee Bones joining the duo live, adding heavy resonance with lush vocal harmonies, searing guitar and pummeling rhythm.

Recorded live in-studio over a period . . .

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Yoko Ono :: Two Virgins, Life With the Lions, Plastic Ono Band

I’ll never forget the exasperated look on the guy's face, standing behind the counter, holding up the copy of Yoko Ono’s Plastic Ono Band  I was attempting to purchase.

“This is the Yoko version of the record,” he said, repeating it for the second time.

Pointing with his index figure at the album cover, at the figures reclining against a tree in the grass, he continued. “You can tell, because on the John version of the record, Yoko’s against the tree; on this one, John’s against the tree. So, I mean, just so you know, this is the Yoko version of the record. You want the John version of the record. John Lennon, Plastic Ono Band.”

If I'm being charitable, perhaps he thought I wasn't ready for Yoko's debut studio album, released in conjunction with John Lennon’s solo debut Plastic Ono Band in 1970. Maybe  he thought I wouldn't be able to wrap my head around the record's raw, transcendent spirit. But more than likely, he was another dude simply dismissing Yoko, trying to negate or brush away her innovative career as modern artist and musical explorer, helping to introduce the conceptual approach of Fluxus to the world of pop music. In the heads of many like this dude at the record store, the conversation starts and ends with "Yoko broke up the Beatles" or "Yoko can't sing."

This week, Plastic Ono Band  is reissued on vinyl alongside 1968’s Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins and 1969’s Unfinished Music No. 2: Life with the Lions. The records signal the start of a joint archival partnership between Indiana label Secretly Canadian and Ono’s Chimera Music to reissue 11 of Ono’s records, exploring her work from 1968-1985. Remastered and combined with photos, posters, and art objects (including reproductions of Ono’s “A Hole To See the Sky Through” card printed download codes to access bonus material), these editions represent the label's intention to create "definitive" versions of these records. They are so thoughtfully presented they might even change the minds of a few Yoko deniers. Listening deeply to them, it feels impossible to argue against Ono's adventurous spirit and the emotional content of these collaborations between her and Lennon, each one a  daring expression of love between two people.

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Eric Bachmann & Jon Rauhouse

There's a lot of downtime on a tour. You drive, you load in, you wait to take the stage. There's a lot of sitting, a lot of time to occupy yourself. It was during those moments waiting the new collaborative album by Eric Bachmann and Jon Rauhouse was born. The pair tours as part of Neko Case's band, and while on the road with her last year, they found themselves tossing song ideas back and forth.

"I'd always play stuff I was working on and he'd chime in; he'd play stuff and I'd chime in on his," Rauhouse says.

"We'd always do that," Bachmann says. "So I brought it up to Jon. 'We have these little things we noodle around with. You wanna try and actually organize them and make a record?'"

Rauhouse was game. After a few woodshedding sessions at Rauhouse's place in Lilliwaup, Washington, they headed to Fivethirteen Recording in Tempe, Arizona and cut Eric Bachmann & Jon Rauhouse. Comprising 11 instrumental songs, the record features Rauhouse on pedal steel and guitar, Bachmann on piano and guitar, and a cast of local players on strings and horns.

It's a mellow, thoroughly gentle listen. Opener "Liliwaup" recalls the American Primitivism of John Fahey or Leo Kottke. On "Asthmatic Gypsy," Rauhouse's pedal steel floats over shuffling piano chording. Songs like "JoJo Blanco" and "Scorpion" evoke dusty frontiers, while "Sea House" and "Drunk in Bilbao" drift casually in pools of Western Swing romanticism.

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AD Presents: Kevin Morby – Nov 13 – Berlin, Germany

Aquarium Drunkard returns to Berlin presenting Kevin Morby with Meg Baird at the Columbia Theater on Sunday night, November 13th. We’re giving away tickets to local AD readers…leave a comment below to enter — winners notified at the end of the week.

Related: Catching . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Heat Wave – A Mixtape

Heat Wave - a 14 track medley of international funk from the 70s and 80s spanning Trinidad to Japan.

Taeko Ohnuki -  ãã™ã‚Šã‚’たくさん - Japan
Bro. Valentino - Stay Up Zimbabwe - Trinidad
Esin AfÅŸar - Zühtü - Turkey
Caroline Loeb - Paresseuse Dub - France
Ahmed Fakroun - Nisyan - Libya
May East - Maraka - Brazil
Ryo Kawasaki - Hawaiian Caravan - Japan
Bobby Ellis - Tension - Jamaica
Barbara Marchand - I Whisper Role Over - Italy
Bianca - Vai Chegar O Dia - Brazil
Jivaro - What Next (Dub Mix) - South Africa
Sandra -  Gebrauchtmann - Germany
Lucio Battisti - Con Il Nastro Rosa - Italy
Yasuaki . . .

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