Laddio Bolocko :: Live and Unreleased 1997-2000

They didn't last long -- just about four years -- but Laddio Bolocko made a hell of a noise for a little while there. This excellent compilation (two CDs or three LPs, plus a bonus DVD) from No Quarter adds considerably to their legacy. The band (members of which would go on to play in Psychic Paramount and Mars Volta) emerged from a very different Brooklyn than the one we know today. As Oneida's Kid Millions writes in his thoughtful liners, "in . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions: Ryley Walker

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

The Lagniappe Sessions return in 2016 with Ryley Walker, whose sophomore lp, Primrose Green, was one of our favorites records of 2015. Here, Walker reimagines and reworks four disparate tracks, ranging from jazzists (and fellow Chicagoans) Isotope 217 to contemporaries Cass McCombs, Amen . . .

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Charles Mingus :: I’ll Remember April – Antibes Jazz Festival

When giants walked the earth! Mingus, Eric Dolphy, Booker Ervin, Ted Curson, Dannie Richmond, and Bud Powell all on one stage together, spitting fire, speaking in tongues. Charles Mingus died today in 1979 at age 56. t wilcox

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Joan Armatrading :: Woncha Come On Home

Joan Armatrading reached newfound commercial heights with the release of her 1976 self-titled album; her third lp at that time and first working with producer Glyn Johns. The record featured Armatrading’s sole Top 10 single, the soaring and majestic "Love and Affection" - a track that firmly planted her as a pop star, albeit one who could blend that loose term with soul, folk, jazz and r&b. Armatrading could get high and she could get low, and preferred to be known first and foremost as a songwriter. On the epic album opener “become a member or log in.

Josh Rosenthal :: Record Store Of The Mind

“How do you know what you’re looking for?”

That’s the question author Josh Rosenthal’s daughter Emma asks him as he  browses the bins at On the Corner Records. The conversation is recounted in the introduction to his first book, The Record Store of The Mind. Rosenthal’s spent his life in record stores and on the radio, which led to him working in the music industry, first for major labels like Columbia and Sony, before going rogue and founding Tompkins Square, which has released essential records in the fields of American Primitive guitar, gospel, hillbilly, and Americana since 2005. In the book, he details his decades in the business, inventories his massive record collection, and pens loving thoughts on his favorites: Tia Blake, Charlie Louvin, Alex Chilton, Bill Fay, Harvey Mandel (the book contains  an appreciation and call to support Mandel originally published here on Aquarium Drunkard), and dozens more.

Rosenthal possesses an archivist’s attention to detail – T. Bone Burnett refers to him as “a record man’s record man” on the back cover – but also a fan’s wild-eyed glee, and like a truly great record store, I found  gems filed in unexpected sections throughout the book: wry humor and in the “Start a Label If…” chapter; thoughtful discussions of race in the chapter dedicated to Louvin; patient eschatology in the chapter exploring Fay and his landmark record Time of the Last Persecution.

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Zen Buddhist Cowboy Songs :: Robbie Basho & His Disciples

It’s a good time for fans of Robbie Basho’s wondrous work. The late guitarist-songwriter-composer’s pioneering albums, once painfully difficult to find, are being reissued with regularity (primarily by the Minnesota-based label Grass-Tops Recording). Live recordings — also once very tricky to track down — are in abundance. And there’s even a feature documentary, Voice of the Eagle: The Enigma of Robbie Basho, making the . . .

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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 416: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++  Quincy Jones - Hummin’ ++ Harare — Give ++ Jingo — Keep Holding On (pt. 1) ++ Dwight Sykes — Bye ++ Alton Memela — The Things We Do In Soweto ++  Gene Boyd — Thought Of You Today ++ The Montgomery Express — The Montgomery Express ++ The 4th Coming — Cruising Down The Street ++ Trinidad . . .

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Sing California: Buddy Emmons in Los Angeles, 1968-1974

2015 marked the passing of pedal steel guitar legend Buddy Emmons, a man described by one contemporary as the “Picasso or Michelangelo” of his instrument. Over the span of his nearly seven-decade-long career Emmons logged innumerable sessions and released more than a dozen albums as a bandleader or solo artist. In addition, as a founding partner in the Sho-Bud and Emmons Guitar companies he designed and manufactured the instruments that he and many other top pedal steel guitarists played. But before he achieved . . .

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Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy :: I Wonder If I Care As Much

This month often finds Bonnie 'Prince' Billy and Dawn McCarthy’s warm and luminous cover of the Everly Brothers’ “Christmas Eve Can Kill You” on steady repeat. It’s perfectly cozy and bittersweet (Christmas in a nutshell) and, similar to the pair’s 2013 full-length album of Everly Brothers covers, fairly catholic to the original.

However, back . . .

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Willie Thrasher :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

It was a cold Christmas night when Inuit songwriter Willie Thrasher first found his musical path. He’d just finished a set with his band the Cordells, drumming at a Christmas dance, performing its normal setlist of Beatles songs and other rock & roll standards, when an old man approached their table after the show.

Thrasher doesn’t remember his name, but he remembers what he said, how he gently prodded him and his young Aboriginal bandmates. “He said, ‘Why don’t you write about your Inuit culture, about your traditional ways? About how you used to live a long time ago, how you used to live off the land?’” Thrasher says. At the time, he didn’t feel a connection to his roots, which had been taken from him as a five-year-old, when he was enrolled in a missionary school in Aklavik, in the Northwest Territories in 1953. At the school, his culture was erased from his mind. He was forbidden from speaking his native language or dance his people’s dances, and as he grew into maturity, his connection to his youth in the bush, whaling, and hunting, drifted from his mind. “I didn’t even know about my culture,” Thrasher said “The missionaries did a good job on me, taking all my culture away.”

That night, the old man told his youthful charges about their people. “So he told us, how we used to build our igloos, hunt caribou, polar bear, seals, Arctic char. The only thing we had to keep us warm was seal oil, and to light our lamps. That’s how my mom and dad’s parents used to live.” The man’s message started Thrasher down a path of reconnection. He began reading about his heritage, “watching videos” about his people’s traditions, speaking with elders. Slowly, he began to piece together history, and his studies informed his songs. The Cordells soon broke up. He decided to quit lugging his drums around and focus on guitar. He asked his bandmates to teach him, but they dismissed his requests. “They said ‘No, you’re going to take the girls away from me.’ [Laughs] They wouldn’t teach me so I learned on my own.”

He moved to Ottawa in 1970, and began writing the songs which would make up his debut album, Spirit Child. Blending traditional melodies with folk rock, it was released by the Canadian Broadcast Company in 1981 and propelled Thrasher’s career playing universities and festivals. He cites his inspirations in those days, Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Rolling Stones, the Moody Blues, Neil Young, Neil Diamond, Buffy Sainte-Marie, and Gordon Lightfoot, some of whom he shared stages with. But the promotion of Spirit Child was short lived, fizzling out after a year and a half. “Spirit Child came out and went really well for awhile then it died out,” Thrasher says.

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Aquarium Drunkard :: 2015 Year In Review

Here it is. Our obligatory year-end review. The following is an unranked list of albums that caught, and kept, our attention in 2015 . . .

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Ryan Sambol :: Now Ritual

Many moons ago, Ryan Sambol fronted the fantastic Austin band The Strange Boys. They disbanded in 2012 after 3 albums. Sambol begat the The Strange Boys at a young age, and the group was praised for its prodigious ability to synthesize all forms of roots, rock, and R&B. So much so, talk about the band became a vortex of genre names and touchstones--garage rock, Dylan, country, Doug Sahm,  Nuggets...  Apt comparisons, but what made The Strange Boys a great band was their loose, masterful evocation of all those vibes at once--they were . . .

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A Christmas Gift For You…From Phil Spector

If you have a window near, go ahead and look outside. Chances are, there are some Christmas lights up somewhere within view. In the coming weeks, you’ll probably frantically brave mall crowds and horrific parking lot jams for last-minute gifts, wondering why it is that you avoid the mall for an entire year only to finally cave when it’s impossibly chaotic, deafeningly loud and smells something like garland draped across a junior-high locker room. Nearly 50 percent of you have already seen It’s A Wonderful Life this month, and roughly 92 percent . . .

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Spacin’ :: Total Freedom

Philly’s Spacin’ are set to coast into 2016 with their long delinquent second album -  Total Freedom. Recorded deep in the depths of the Chillinger Community Center, the fuzzed out choogle they hang their no shirt, no shoes, no problem mantra on is transmitted blaringly loud on the opening cut “Over Uneasy . . .

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Cass McCombs :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

"Most of my albums are a simple collection of songs that have nothing to do with each other except that they were written around the same time and, perhaps, have some recurring themes,” songwriter Cass McCombs told Relix in 2013. His new collection, A Folk Set Apart: Rarities, B-Sides & Space Junk, ETC., is the result of taking away the shared time frame, a collection of songs written between 2003 and 2014, with little regard for genre -- the comp encompasses Velvets-style drones, experimental cowboy poetry, mellow folk pop, and protest ballads — and disparate themes. If McCombs’ albums are normally scattered, A Folk Set Apart is even more so. “All my records are kind of like collections, but this one being the most obvious,” McCombs tells Aquarium Drunkard via the phone. But like his best work, it hangs together in a curiously coherent way, tied together not formally, but emotionally.

Cass McCombs :: Evangeline

“I don’t know if it has flow, but it’s a weird journey and you can see the mutation of the music, of my voice even, and the people I play with…it’s definitely not commercial music,” McCombs says.

Over the last 15 years he’s worked with a number of collaborators, including guitarist Chris Cohen, drummer Joe Russo of Furthur, Mike Gordon of Phish, Tim Dewit of Gang Gang Dance, all of whom shade and color his songs and appear on the new collection. “I love playing with people who know their craft, who have a voice, something to say,” McCombs says. “You give them full reign to do whatever the fuck they want to do, they embrace that and do something with that.”

The collection is a testament to McCombs’ trust in his colleagues, but also his omnivorous musical tastes. He reels from garage punk on “I Cannot Lie” to gentle roots pop on “Three Men Sitting on a Hollow Log,” from ass shaking riff rock like “An Other” to the “hillbilly bop” of “Catacombs Cow Cow Boogie,” a “mutation of Duane Eddy, Link Wray, the Ventures -- that kind of [music was a] transition from hillbilly to rockabilly to surf and something even more randy,” McCombs says. Many of the songs featured were released on split singles with artists like the Meat Puppets, Michael Hurley, and White Magic, sharing McCombs’ love of their music and their singular approaches.

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