Revisiting :: Prince, Sign ‘O’ the Times

There are few words to describe the transgressive beauty, power, and innovation of Prince. With the terrible news of his passing making the rounds, we're resharing this 2009 reflection on his 1987 masterpiece, Sign 'O' The Times . . .

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Trish Keenan’s Mind Bending Motorway Mix

Shortly before her tragic and untimely death in January 2011, Broadcast's Trish Keenan compiled an exploratory  mix CD for a friend, and it immediately became a de facto tribute after hitting the Internet in the wake of the inimitable  musician's passing.

Trish Keenan's Mind Bending Motorway Mix is mainly comprised of underheard 60s/70s pop psych, but includes international excursions, loads of effects, and a number of haunting and hypnotic instrumentals. A testament . . .

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Ambient Japan 1980s: Mariah / Yasuaki Shimizu / Midori Takada

Last year’s Palto Flats reissue of the 1983 lp Mariah — Utakata No Hibi (the final record under that moniker, originally released on the super-cool Better Days label), has spawned a renewed interest in the Japanese composer and bandleader Yasuaki Shimizu -- and for good reason.

Shimizu, the brains behind the Mariah records, was looking way beyond . . .

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Wake Up You :: Aquarium Drunkard Interviews Uchenna Ikonne

Following the intense and bloody Nigerian Civil War, a vibrant musical revolution bloomed in the country, with emerging groups and performers creating a fusion which blended  funk, R&B, and hard rock. The beginnings and end of this fertile scene is documented incredibly by a new two-volume collection out on  Now Again Records, Wake Up You Vol. 1 and 2: The Rise and Fall of Nigerian Rock, 1972-1972.  

Featuring artists like  Ify Jerry Krusade, the Strangers, the Hyykers, OFO the Black Company, the Funkees, War Head  Constriction,  and dozens more, the collections illustrate the heavier side of Nigeria's counter culture. While the music itself is enough to warrant diving in, the accompanying books by scholar Uchenna Ikonne -- the producer behind many key releases, including the recent collection, Who is William Onyeabor --   feature  insightful details and illuminating quotes from many of the artists themselves.

"About nine years ago, I teamed up with Uchenna Ikonne, when he was starting to work on his William Onyeabor anthology for Luaka Bop," says Now Again main-man  Eothen "Egon" Alapatt. "I'd been trying to get in touch with the remaining members of the Nigerian rock scene to try to figure out how the fuck such an incredible scene could have sprung up there in the early 1970s. I'd seen Ginger Baker in Africa, so I'd seen the footage of the bands getting down and I knew about the Biafran Civil War…. But the idea that a bona fide Nigerian rock scene could come into existence right after the death and destruction of the Civil War was almost unfathomable to me: America's Flower Power hippies were shouting peace and love many thousands of miles from the jungles of Vietnam: were Nigerian hippies really doing the same thing….as combat raged in their back yards?"

Egon says that he ripped off by "middle man after middle man" trying to reissue music from this era, so he turned to Ikonne. "He knew more than anyone, was more pissed than I was about his own countrymen robbing not only these musicians — but their brethren of this untold story, of this forgotten scene." Egon says. "He had this Onyeabor idea that he wanted to try out, and he said if I helped fund his trip he would do it right. And he did. He spent a year there, and he found every band we were interested in, and we licensed the music we wanted directly from them, got their stories down pat, and started to put together the direction for an anthology."

War Head Constriction :: Graceful Bird

AD caught up with Ikonne to discuss the compiling of the albums and the personal connections that fueled his work in illuminating and preserving it.

Aquarium Drunkard: This collection is fantastic, and your notes are deep and fascinating. You were born in the States but lived in Nigeria as a young man. In the notes of Wake Up You, you describe a lot of the music featured therein as lost for forgotten. How did you first discover it?

Uchenna Ikonne:  I was peripherally aware of much of it when I was a kid in the 1980s. You could still find a lot of old copies of these records in shops then. Cultural revival trends tend to work on a two-decade cycle–it usually takes around twenty years for old stuff to come back around and become cool again. So when I was coming up, these records were around ten years old and definitely were not cool. They were quaint, corny things that took up precious shelf space in the record store and frustrated you by slowing your access to the new Shalamar and Musical Youth LPs.

It was much later, around 1999 or 2000 that I was developing a movie set in early 1970s Nigeria that I started to research music for the soundtrack and I started rediscovering this stuff, realizing how incredible this music really was. And serendipitously, at this very moment record companies in the West like Soundway and Strut had started exploring this music too. So that just gave me more impetus to dive into it.

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Videodrome :: In Appreciation of Quest for Fire

(Welcome to Videodrome. A monthly column plumbing the depths of vintage underground cinema – from cult, exploitation, trash and grindhouse to sci-fi, horror, noir and beyond.)

Every so often, I go back to Quest for Fire. Whether it’s to ground me in visceral reminder of man’s wild natural state, or to put modern technology into perspective, or most commonly, just to enjoy its savage charms as a standalone piece of art, I return to watch it again. Usually late at night, almost always alone. Since my first viewing in 1988 (six years after its American debut), I’ve reveled in the scope of this film and its capacity to inspire awe and curiosity.

I once heard someone describe Director Jean-Jacques Annaud as the world’s best director of films in which no one speaks. It’s a fair characterization, as his works also include famously quiet films such as The Bear and Seven Years in Tibet. But upon deeper consideration, this isn’t just a snarky criticism–there is a distinct skillfulness required to tell a moving story with little or no language. It’s a feat that demands the capture of raw emotion and intellect through context. And Annaud has mastered the art.

It should be said of prehistoric films that the genre itself is a bit of an outlier. Sitting somewhere between sci-fi and historical non-fiction, Quest for Fire also has the element of fantasy going for it. After all, with no empirical record to fact check for accuracy, who can call out a filmmaker for depicting a colorful arena of mythical megafauna, cannibalistic troglodytes, and environmental hazards of the fairy tale variety?

On a surface level, that is what this movie is about. A fantasy adventure in the style of the great epics of the big screen, with sweeping landscapes and orchestral crescendos. It’s the saga of three cavemen who are forced by necessity to trek into the wilderness in search of their tribe’s only salvation, fire.

Transcending their primal utterances and ape-like gestures, the main characters gradually become enjoyable to watch and easy to root for. On this familiar hero’s journey, like so many action yarns, they find danger, treasure, loss and love. And symbolically, we feel a shared pride in their redemption, as theirs is the story of us.

But it’s so much more than that.

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Plates of Cake :: Becoming Double

Since we've been on a bit of a Soft Boys kick lately, it's become apparent that very few groups have managed to approximate that band's sparkling guitar sound. Plates of Cake come close -- and if you go back a bit, they even tackled "Underwater Moonlight" on a previous LP. The Brooklyn band's latest LP, Becoming Double, is packed with sharp . . .

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Chuck Johnson :: Velvet Arc

Bay Area guitarist extraordinaire Chuck Johnson's recent (mostly) solo acoustic LPs have proven him to be one of the most reliable players on the new-Takoma School scene. His new album, the utterly fantastic Velvet Arc, shows that Johnson is just as masterful in a more fleshed out band setting. The album's seven songs offer shimmering electric guitar blending with gorgeous pedal steel and folky fiddles fading . . .

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Flamin’ Groovies :: Crazy Macy b/w Let Me Rock

Dig it. In celebration of their 50th(!) Anniversary, San Francisco’s legendary Flamin’ Groovies have released their first tracks since 1992’s Rock Juice. And in a move that rings full circle, from a band that inspired numerous nascent punk rockers and power poppers, the record is being released via the guys carrying the torch at Burger Records.

The A-side finds "Crazy Macy" -- a track deeply rooted in British Invasion sounds, with a  charming accompanying video channeling the vibe of a Hard Day’s Night. The echo-heavy production is straight out of the band’s magnum opus, the immortal 1976 lp Shake Some Action. 2nd Generation vocalist Chris Wilson (who replaced original vocalist Roy Loney in 1971), belts out a soulful lead in between the accompanying harmonies.

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Les Olivensteins :: Fier De Ne Rien Faire

Ah yes, to prefer the demo or the finished product. Where I typically have a firm opinion on such matters, the below, Les Olivensteins' "Fier De Ne Rien Faire", is an example of...not having one. I dig each, individually, in a way that the two feel unrelated. Anyhow, that's just a longwinded way to entice you to explore these Frenchman, via their 1979 ep, as I always receive emails when I spin either version on the SIRIUS show. So -- dig in if you have yet to engage. Voilî 

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Earthlings: Billy Cobham & George Duke Band at Hempstead, 1976

It’s 1976. Beer comes in pull-tab cans and Miles Davis has taken a leave of absence. People don’t really know it, but jazz fusion is nearing the end of it’s creative streak: Mahavishnu Orchestra has burned through two lineups and Weather Report has just enlisted Jaco Pastorius, who’ll help propel the band into the stratosphere and towards glossy, slick jazz-pop.

For most of this year, Billy Cobham, George Duke and Alfonso Johnson toured together. They had impressive resumes: Cobham played with Davis and Mahavishnu, creating a reputation as a furious yet accurate drummer, while . . .

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Sebastian Speaks: A Mixtape

Nashville guitar journeyman William Tyler is set to release Modern Country June 3rd via Merge Records. His fourth full-length, the record is self-described as "a love letter to what we’re losing in America, to what we’ve already lost." Tyler guests on my SIRIUS show this Friday, his set presented here as Sebastian Speaks - A Mixtape. The artists, in his own words, below . . .

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Anton Newcombe :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

The Brian Jonestown Massacre may have just celebrated a 25th anniversary, but it's little surprise that there wasn't a big to-do, as Anton Newcombe has always believed in pushing forward and not looking back. We caught up with Newcombe via Skype last week, from his home in Berlin, to discuss (among other things) his thought on recording, the music industry and...war.

Aquarium Drunkard: So, you’re in the middle of recording a new record...

Anton Newcombe: Well, several of them, yeah.

AD: And the Jonestown one, since you’ve been posting a lot of the previews online via twitter and such, it looks like it’s the first time that the touring members of the BJM have been in the studio with you in a while. And you've got Tess Parks.

Anton Newcombe:  Well, all kinds of things are happening.  I just write. The band happened to be here to track after we played Manchester, so they did some stuff. Now Tess is here doing some stuff helping me out.

AD: Just this morning you shared "Fingertips" with Tess on vocals and it sounds great. You brought out a side of her voice that I’d never heard before -- she’s singing in a higher register, which made me think about how you’ve worked with so many different people on various projects and how you bring out unique things in them. How do you feel about that?

Anton Newcombe:  Well, I don’t know. You know that’s up to the song inspiring. She felt the same thing. I mean, we were just talking a minute ago and she said, ‘Oh, I can hit those high notes, I just don’t.’ (laughs)

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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 430: Jean-Michel Bernard — Générique Stéphane ++ The Cleaners From Venus - Clara Bow (Back Wages version) ++   Felt - Something Sends Me To Sleep ++ Parquet Courts - Paraphrased ++ Stomu Yamash'ta's Red Buddha Theatre - Awa Odori ++ Faust - It’s A Bit of A Pain ++ Stomu Yamash'ta's East Wind - Rian . . .

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Parquet Courts :: Captive Of The Sun

The New York City-based Texans of Parquet Courts have been responsible for some of the best post-punk rock & roll of the last half-decade. Coupling Wire and Silver Jews-style riffs with Reed and Richman cadences,  songwriters Andrew Savage and Austin Brown are among the  wittiest  observationalists  working in the indie rock landscape.

They've also proved themselves an ambitious bunch. Starting with  their excellent debut,  Light Up Gold,  the band's stayed on an artistically restless tear: Sunbathing Animal  found ways to sweat more soul out of their  taut framework; Content Nausea found Brown and Savage getting loose;  Monastic Living  was wild and improvisational.

The band's latest, Human Performance,  is their boldest, most confident record yet. It's a big record, tackling big themes and employing big sounds,  but specific too. Forgive the hyperbole, but it's like the band's London Calling or Green or Double Nickels on the Dime, the  sound of a young band challenging itself, opening up, and creating the most personal record it could, cracking the format open and  solidifying what makes the band tick.

Recorded over multiple sessions, at  Sonelab in Western Massachusetts, at the Wilco Loft in Chicago, and at the Dreamland Studios in upstate New York, a former Pentecostal church which doubled as the band's lodging while recording, Human Performance  is the result of more time, editing, and creative pushing than anything the band has ever put to tape.

“This was a different process by design," Brown says over the phone from Marfa, Texas, where the band played the Marfa Myths  festival alongside experimental composer  William Basinski, Fred and Toody of Dead Moon, Heron Oblivion, and other heady peers. "We wanted to get different results. Just all around, we wanted to make it as different as we could.”

The band succeeded. "Berlin Got Blurry" incorporates a newfound  cowpunk twang, "I Was Just Here" lurches with punk funk swagger, and the title track is the most affecting thing the group's ever released. But the song most out of left field is "Captive of the Sun," incorporating hip-hop influences and dense, layered production.

For Brown, the song represented something crucial. Though he  wrote it as a "typical" Parquet Courts song, a "fast, screaming" punk rock thing, he wasn't satisfied by it. In fact, the song upset him. He kept thinking, "I don’t hear any of myself in this song." The thought persisted: "I’m not getting anything out of this."

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Woods :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Pinning down Woods has proved increasingly elusive over their ten year run. While  encapsulating and predicating the twisting currents of folk and rock, they've morphed calmly yet sharply from lo-fi to hi-fi. Their newest release,  Sun City Sun Eater in the River of Light, represents . . .

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