Aquarium Drunkard Presents: September — A Medley

Summer fade / Autumn entrance. Get mellow with the following breeze of  acoustic folk and singer/songwriter hoodoo primed to banish the humidity and usher in the Fall.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: September — A Medley

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Frank Sinatra Jr. :: Black Night

This is not his father’s song.

Thanks to its appearance as the theme song of director Rick Alverson’s latest film, Entertainment, it may be time for a complete reappraisal of Frank Sinatra Jr., based on one song alone.

“Black Night” comes courtesy of the film’s star, Gregg Turkington (who plays a thinly veiled version of his Neil Hamburger character in Entertainment), the world’s foremost Frank Jr. expert, and his biggest fan. Taken from his 1971 album Spice, the song was written by Sinatra Jr. himself . . .

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Sonic Youth :: Brixton Academy, London – December 14, 1992

Pavement played one hell of a show at London's Brixton Academy on December 14, 1992. We know this because the BBC taped and broadcast the set -- a set that was subsequently included on the classic Stray Slack bootleg, officially released as part of the 10th anniversary Slanted and Enchanted reissue, and finally put to wax last month on the Secret History comp.

Of course, Pavement was just one part of the bill on that December night. Malkmus & co. were opening for Sonic Youth, then touring in support of their second major label effort, Dirty. Fortunately, the BBC's tapes were still rolling, preserving (most of) SY's glorious, explosive set for us to check out all these years later. They lean heavily on Dirty numbers here (even including the choice Lee Ranaldo b-side "Genetic"), but there are welcome trips into the back catalogue, including a ferocious "Kool Thing" and "Tom Violence," appropriately dedicated to Richard Hell. This is Sonic Youth at their tightest (and most tightly wound), with Thurston Moore and Ranaldo's guitars crunching and squalling around Kim Gordon's inimitable snarl.

MVP of the evening, however, has to go to drummer Steve Shelley, who here comes across as the Alternative Nation's very own Keith Moon, propelling his band to one beautiful plateau after another. Dig the stormy crescendos he summons on "Theresa's Sound World" and bow down. words / t wilcoxDownload: Sonic Youth :: Brixton Academy, London, December 14, 1992 (external link)

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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 403: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Alton Ellis — Joy In The Morning ++ Della Humphrey — Dreamland ++ Susan Cadogan — Hurt So Good ++ Vince Guaraldi & Bola Sete — Ginza Samba ++ Gal Costa — Paî­s Topical ++ Gilberto Gil —  Nîªga ++ Caetano Veloso — You Don’t Know Me ++ Francis Bebey — Tiers Monde ++ Can . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Ultimate Painting / Second Session

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

Ultimate Painting is the collaborative pairing of James Hoare (of Veronica Falls) and Jack Cooper (of Mazes). On the heels of the August release of their sophomore lp, Green Lanes, the pair return with their second Lagniappe Session for AD. While the first session found Hoare and Cooper paying tribute to artists as disparate as Fugazi and Sheryl Crow, here UP garner inspiration via rockabilly pioneer Eddie Cochran -- covering "Three Steps To Heaven", a tune Bowie himself nicked for "Queen Bitch" -- and the Texas-sized troubadour that is Townes Van Zandt. The artists, in their own words, below.

Ultimate Painting :: Tecumseh Valley (Townes Van Zandt)

It's fun recording covers. With our last album we put time restrictions on ourselves and overthought the whole thing initially. It was nice getting back to doing something for the hell of it and that's how it should be. I picked "Tecumseh Valley" by Townes Van Zandt. The arrangement is a little closer to his original recording rather than how the song evolved. Less verses. It's a beautiful but very sad song and it never fails to knock me out every time I hear him sing it. We tried to give it a sort Dion "My Back Yard" feel, but it just ended up sounding like us.

Ultimate Painting :: Three Steps To Heaven (Eddie Cochran)

I wanted to cover either a Buddy Holly or Eddie Cochran track as they're both musicians I hold close to the heart and have grown up listening too. "Three Steps To Heaven" was the last song Eddie recorded before he was killed in a car crash. It's a beautiful melody and his lyrics are eerily prophetic  (he was convinced he would die young and never got over the death of his good friend Holly a year previously). We added a new section to the song and gave it a Tommy James early 70s feel. I think Eddie would've approved.

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Doris Allen :: I’ll Just Keep On Lovin’ You

You’ll find scant information regarding Doris Allen on the World Wide Web: a downright shame considering the knock-the-wind-out-of-you power of her vocal delivery. You can hear a number of her staggering cuts, including “A Shell of A Woman," “Kiss Yourself for Me” and "Treat Me Like A Woman," all of which were produced by Finley Duncan at Playground Recording Studio in Valparaiso, FL and released on the associated Minaret Label. The imprint was also home to Big John Hamilton (Allen's duet partner) and is well documented on the fantastic compilation The South Side . . .

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It’s That Beat: A Vintage Saskatchewan Mixtape (Covers Edition)

Folk standards and searching tributes to country heroes. Ramshackle family bands and haunting elementary school ensembles. Landlocked surf and off-kilter rural rock. And a devastating take on the requisite Joni song. Privately pressed and filtered through a prairie lens, it's another trip to Saskatchewan. All covers edition.

This is the third installment in our Vintage Saskatchewan series. Find parts one,  Multis E Gentibus Vires,   here, and two, Prairie To Pine, here.

It's That Beat: A Vintage Saskatchewan Mixtape

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Tess Parks And Anton Newcombe :: I Declare Nothing

Enter: Toronto based Tess Parks and the now Berlin residing Anton Newbombe's new collaboration, the low key drone I Declare Nothing.

Tess Parks And Anton Newcombe :: Wehmut
Tess Parks And Anton Newcombe :: Friendlies

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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 402: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Sun Ra - We’re Living In The Space Age ++ Honeyboy Martin & The Voices - Dreader Than Dread ++ Johnny & The Attractions - I'm Moving On ++ Andersons All Stars - Intensified Girls ++ King Sporty - DJ Special ++ Freddie Mackay - When I'm Gray ++ Hopeton Lewis - Sound . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents :: Late August Light – A Mixtape

Waves and oscillations transcending era and global in scope. A companion to last year's Blue August Moon, the following medley slides right in before the Fall. All Gates Open.

Late August Light - A Mixtape (stream / download)

Playlist after the jump. . .

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The Meters :: 05/30/80 / New Orleans, LA – Saenger Theatre

To quote George Clinton, 'funk is its own reward'. And,  really, there is nothing funkier (in every sense of the word) than New Orleans -- specifically, The Meters. The above video document is a blessing -- a 30 minute film capturing the band live at the Saenger Theatre on Canal Street, interspersed with individual interviews with the fellas. Look-Ka Py Py.

Related: Grant Green :: Ease Back (The Meters)

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Yo La Tengo :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Yo La Tengo is unmistakable. Over the last 31 years, the Hoboken band has created a signature style, one that’s comprised of identifiable building blocks: Georgia Hubley’s hushed, husky voice and drumming, which balances a jazzy lilt and garage rock minimalism; James McNew’s insistently driving and melodic bass; Ira Kaplan’s cooing voice and rangy guitar work. Sometimes the songs are noisy and laden in feedback, sometimes they are feather light, but the trio always sounds like itself, even when performing selections from a seemingly bottomless repertoire of pop, soul, and rock & roll covers. Yo La Tengo always sounds like Yo La Tengo, but consistently finds new ways to manipulate foundational elements, to fold in new sweetness and magic.

Yo La Tengo :: The Ballad of Red Buckets

The band’s latest, Stuff Like That There, was envisioned as a sequel to 1990’s Fakebook, and like that 25 year old album, it features a selection of covers alongside re-imaginings of familiar songs and new material. Recorded by Gene Holder, the trio is joined by former guitarist Dave Schramm on the new album, who adds gorgeous, electric guitar to a sparse framework of acoustic guitar, brushed drums, and upright bass — an instrument McNew had never played before, but took on as a challenge and homage to Allen Greller, whose double bass work appeared on Fakebook.

“It just seemed like something we wouldn’t do…that seemed really appealing. Like, why not?” McNew says of the idea of crafting a sequel to a former record. “It would be super weird and perverse in the way that we operate to do something like that.” “Yeah, I think there’s something crass about it,” laughs Kaplan. “We kind of thought, ‘Let’s be those guys. Let’s cash in.’”

Stuff Like That There does not sound like a lark. Songs by Darlene McCrea, The Cure, Hank Williams, Antietam, Great Plains, the Loving Spoonful, pre-P-Funk band the Parliaments, the Cosmic Rays (a Sun Ra-produced doo wop combo), and Special Pillow are treated with the band’s characteristic warmth and good humor. As a massive Spotify playlist of songs Yo La Tengo has covered suggests, McNew says that the band’s sprawling taste and willingness to dive into covers “comes from who we are” as music fans.

“We just listen to music and think about music all the time, and not just our own,” McNew says. “I think we’ve been that way our whole lives. I think a lot of times it boils down to ‘I have this song stuck in my head, I love this song, what are the chords?’ Sometimes we can hear a song and think that it would translate nicely into our universe. ‘Friday I’m In Love’ is a song both me and Ira thought, ‘Man, I’d love to hear Georgia sing that song, why don’t we do that one?’ Of course Georgia was like ‘That song has too many words in it, it’s too hard to sing.’ But we begged enough to convince her to do it.”

“Once our brains have decided we’re going to do it, things just start popping up, coming into mind, including a whole bunch of songs we had never played or thought of playing,” Kaplan says. “All of the sudden we’re either practicing or thinking about getting together and we’ll think, ‘It’d sound really great if Georgia sang “My Heart’s Not In It”’…we just try out a bunch of [songs] and some stick, some don’t.”

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Zachary Cale :: Duskland

Due to the prominence of acoustic guitar, Zachary Cale's records have regularly been slotted into the folky category. And while the categorization is not entirely off the mark (the dude can fingerpick with the best of them), it's only part of the story the Brooklyn-based songwriter is telling. Cale's work has always been cannily crafted in the studio, as he finds interesting and alluring ways to present his songs.

His latest LP, the stellar Duskland, sees Cale indulging a bit more in widescreen production techniques, expanding the . . .

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Norma Tanega :: You’re Dead

The recent inclusion of "You're Dead" via last year's What We Do In The Shadows has risen the profile of Norma Tanega's 1966 debut (Walkin' My Cat Named Dog) of late. And while the album was never digitized in the CD era, vinyl copies are still readily available. Pick it up.

Moving on: now where is that rumored "lost" album Tanega cut with Dusty Springfield?

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Mark-Almond :: The City

In 1969, John Mayall was looking to put the Bluesbreakers to rest. Gravitating towards the scene out in LA (his last album had been titled Blues from Laurel Canyon), Mayall was looking for a sound that was less amp-ed up, less quintessentially ‘blues-rock’. The sound that he minted on The Turning Point, recorded live at the Fillmore East, was therefore rootsier, gentler, more acoustic. Shockingly drummer-less, these extended jams veered away from rock and towards a become a member or log in.