Dungen :: Franks Kaktus

Swedish psych-journeymen Dungen return with their seventh lp, Allas Sak, via Mexican Summer. A sweeping and highly musical journey from start to finish, the instrumental “Franks Kaktus” has stayed on repeat. Driven by jazz flute, tribal percussion and washes of eastern-leaning guitar, the song vibes on some serious mystical 70’s prog, and that’s before the electric starts ripping away. All the elements culminate together only to quiet down for a flute solo bridge, evoking the Swedish mountainside; a serene and holistic . . .

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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 406: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ 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 & Tobago Steel . . .

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Videodrome :: Sorcerer (1977, William Friedkin)

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

Watching Sorcerer, William Friedkin’s once forgotten 1977 psycho-jungle thriller, it’s tempting to suspect that at any moment the film could take a sharp turn toward supernatural horror. Everything feels ripe for the kind of evil mysticism and lo-fi gore that only the gonzo terror flicks of the late 70s seemed capable of producing.

All the familiar elements are in play. A black magic title promising wizardry. Dream-like sequences that make you question what’s real and what’s imagined. Visuals of animist deities carved into ancient stone. Factor in the primeval setting and ghostly score–synthesized by Krautrock kings Tangerine Dream–and the result is a suffocating creepiness.

Then there’s the director, Friedkin, helming his long-awaited follow up to two consecutive genre triumphs (The French Connection and The Exorcist), going toe to toe with Star Wars for summer’s biggest blockbuster. Just a few years removed from peak demonry in The Excorcist, which sent a generation of witless bystanders home with night terrors, he was in just the right place to serve up a crowd-pleasing creature feature.

But he didn’t. The beautiful thing about Sorcerer is that the expected turn toward the paranormal never happens. It doesn’t need to. Because the film is really about the opposite. It’s about life and reality, and the inherent cruelty therein.

If that sounds dark, it is. But that shouldn’t dissuade you from two hours of immersion in this remastered HD jewel released in 2014. Sorcerer is a cynical allegory on the unpredictability of real life, and a testament to detail-oriented movie making. Friedkin himself has called it his favorite film and the one closest in execution to his original vision.

Based on the 1950 French novel Le Salaire de la Peur (AKA The Wages of Fear), and the 1953 celebrated Henri-Georges Clouzot film of the same name, Sorcerer follows four strangers from the far corners of the earth to a squalid South American pueblo called Porvenir (the word for future en Espaî±ol). Brought together in a drawing of fate reminiscent of ensemble classics such as House on Haunted Hill and Enter the Dragon, this unsavory quartet–an American stickup artist, French banking fraudster, terrorist Palestinian, and Mexican assassin–is given a lucrative offer to drive two truckloads of volatile nitroglycerin across 200 miles of dense tropical forest.

Taking the job is an act of desperation. Surrounded by poverty and filth, the protagonists work for a greedy American oil company pilfering the local economy, propping up a crooked generalissimo and keeping its colonial boot firmly on the neck of the village populace. With each of the characters longing to escape this banana republic backwater, a stack of pesos offered in exchange for a suicide mission sounds like a bargain.

But the dire symbolism of their quest is clear. No matter how skilled or careful their navigation across these desolate lands, the threat of sudden explosion shadows them like an Andean condor. Having been introduced in a series of vignettes to jumpstart the film, each of the men is running from a sordid past back home, and with every passing mile of green hell we feel the constriction of impending judgment.

What gives Sorcerer a cult status is not so much its offbeat and unpopular subject matter, though that plays a part–examples include morally repellent heroes and gratuitous Latin American exploitation. Rather, it’s the film’s utter failure and dismissal upon initial release and subsequent rebirth in underground circles in recent years. Critically it was panned as a cinematic overreach by a hubristic director riding too high on fame and fortune. Commercially it was crushed by Luke Skywalker and Han Solo.

The criticisms are not without merit. Dialogue is so sparse as to be almost unimportant, mere backdrop to the visual feast of exotic locations and Friedkin’s legendary camerawork, which includes shaky cam decades ahead of its time. More damningly, the characters come off wooden at times, positioned more as grimacing pawns in a convoluted play on the cruelty of fate.

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Six Organs of Admittance / William Tyler :: Parallelogram

For a decade-and-a-half, Cory Rayborn's Three Lobed label has been a reliable trademark of quality when it comes to adventurous underground sounds. From the blown speaker glory of Bardo Pond to the Takoma School stylings of Daniel Bachman, from the amazing Gunn-Truscinski Duo LPs to the stoney grooves of Matt Valentine & Erika Elder ... if it has that Three Lobed insignia emblazoned on it, you know you're in very trusted hands.

To celebrate 15 years in the biz, Rayborn has somehow outdone himself. The Parallelogram series of split LPs brings together some of the leading lights of today's scene: we're talking about (deep breath) Kurt Vile, Steve Gunn, Six Organs of Admittance, William Tyler, Bardo Pond, Yo La Tengo, Thurston Moore/John Maloney, Bill Orcutt/Chris Corsano/Alan Bishop, Hiss Golden Messenger, Michael Chapman ... an embarrassment of riches, to say the least. While it's impossible to pick a favorite, the William Tyler / Six Organs of Admittance disc is a good place to start exploring Parallelogram's angles. We asked Tyler and Six Organs mastermind Ben Chasny to give us the scoop ...

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The City :: Now That Everything’s Been Said

Following her stint as one of the most successful pop songwriters of the ‘60s but before her emergence as a defining singer/songwriter in the ‘70s, Carole King briefly fronted a folk rock outfit, The City, and issued one album with the group, 1968’s Now That Everything’s Been Said. Long out-of-print and reduced to a something of a footnote in her career, the album sees re-release this week by Light in the Attic.

In the late ‘60s, King’s marriage to . . .

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Benny Joy :: Nowhere

Rarely does Tampa appear in the annals of early rock history. It was there bluesman Hudson Whittaker, aka Tampa Red, worked up his slide chops before making his career in Chicago, and Ray Charles lived in town for a while, playing with Charlie Brantley’s Honey Dippers and cutting some of his own early sides. But Benny Joy was the Bay Area’s first homegrown rocker. Throughout the late ‘50s, young Joy was the prince of the dancehall circuit in central Florida. He had a raw sound that combined country & western with rhythm & blues -- one that he claimed to have developed before ever hearing Elvis. Plus, he wrote most of his own material: hormonal boppers with titles like “Spin the Bottle” and “Crash the Party.” Accompanied by Big John Taylor’s raunchy electric guitar, Joy’s peninsular gestation begat an uninhibited, youthful style that led to an audition with Sam Phillips and Jack Clement at Sun Records.

Benny Joy :: Nowhere

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SK Kakraba :: Songs of Paapieye

Awesome Tapes From Africa has been a prolific source for reissued African sounds for a few years now, but the label’s not devoted exclusively to the past. October 2nd sees the release of a brand new album, Songs of Paapieye by SK Kakraba. Currently located in Highland Park in Los Angeles, Kakraba hails from Lobi country in the Upper West Region, Ghana. He plays the gyil, a wooden xylophone suspended over spider-webbed gourds, which resonate and buzz back a deep, rattling sound. Kakraba is singularly devoted to the instrument; when not . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: A Decade Floating In The Ether / The Shirt

Time flies. Ten years of genre-bending, freeform interstitial airwave debris - black sand blues, green swamp fuzz, psych, soul, garage, funk, jazz and beyond. 2005-2015.

Decade — Celebrating Ten Years Floating In The Ether

Transmitting somewhere off the coast of Los Angeles, this is the t-shirt. Get yours. here.

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K. Leimer :: Savant

In the Pacific Northwest of the late ‘70s, electronic composer K. Leimer dedicated himself to enveloping, minimal soundscapes, but in the early ‘80s, he launched Savant, an ambitious studio project involving a large cast of players – including Marc Barreca, Op Magazine publisher John Foster, and members of Seattle power pop band the New Flamingos – to explore a new jittery, stitched-together sound featuring elements of post-punk, industrial, progressive rock, and funk. “Some guys I knew, some I didn’t know. [They] seemed to be willing to give some time to it and work in a non-traditional way,” Leimer says, reflecting on the release of Artificial Dance, a newly released collection of music drawing from Savant’s 1983 album The Neo Realist (At Rest), 12” singles, and unreleased tracks.

The compilation is his second archival release for RVNG Intl., following the sublime ambient collection A Period Review: Original Recordings: 1975 — 1983. Leimer has continued making music, running the Palace of Lights imprint, and developing new approaches to art and sound. He discussed the Savant era with Aquarium Drunkard via phone from Hawaii, where he now resides.

Aquarium Drunkard: What inspired you to start working in this unique fashion, bringing in musicians to play and editing those performances together into new things?

K. Leimer: In a way, it was a lot easier. There’s something about sitting in a studio at that time with a click track and a couple of instruments and working your way through things…it can be very tedious and frustrating. The stuff I did for [RVNG Intl. collection] A Period of Review when I was first starting obviously wasn’t interested in rock or any kind of beat [driven] stuff really, but that’s also kind of fun. It’s such a saturated presence in culture, then and now, that it seemed like it would be interesting to take the ideas that I had been exploring on my own and apply them to a different set of circumstances.

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Ought :: Sun Coming Down

Montreal post-punkers Ought returned last week with Sun Coming Down, their second full length following several eps beginning in 2012. And while shades of Talking Heads, Television, the Fall and the Feelies still abound, here, that potent, frenetic, cabal of influence is even headier. The four piece (once again in cahoots with Constellation Records) use/access the aforementioned influence, yet never devolve into undue pastiche. This is here, this music is now.

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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 405: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Jon Spencer Blues Explosion - My War (Black Flag) ++ Pylon - Cool ++ Deerhunter - Snakeskin ++ Deerhunter - Dr. Glass ++ Beach House - Sparks ++ The Feelies - Crazy Rhythms ++ Josef K - 16 Years ++ Fire Engines - Meat Whiplash ++ Ought - Men For Miles ++ The Fall - What You Need ++ The Clash - The Call . . .

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Bob Dylan w/ Robbie Robertson: I Can’t Leave Her Behind

Rumors were flying all summer about a massive Bootleg Series covering Bob Dylan's unbelievable, earth-shaking 1965-66 period. And hey, the rumors were true. The Cutting Edge (available in 2-, 6- and 18-(!!!) disc versions) draws back the curtain on Dylan's studio sessions for Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde On Blonde, three of the best albums made by anyone, ever.

I know what you're thinking -- "Do I really need 18 discs of false starts . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Calvin Love

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 record is entitled Super Future -- Calvin Love's follow-up to 2012's New Radar. Like Radar -- a record whose focused, slender arrangements were populated by thin guitars, electronic drums . . .

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Miles Davis w/ John Coltrane: “Walkin'” / Cafe Bohemia, 1958

John Coltrane would've turned 89 today. While it's a fun parlor game to imagine the twists and turns the saxophonist's music might've taken if he'd lived just another decade longer, in the end we're lucky to have had him as long we did -- and that he left behind such a wealth of sounds to explore. WKCR's annual, all-day Coltrane birthday tribute is always . . .

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