Happy Thanksgiving :: Alice’s Restaurant

ALICE MAY BROCK, born in Brooklyn, New York, on February 28, 1941. A Pisces ... Grew from a difficult child to a juvenile delinquent to a regular (irregular) person ... Spent a few years in high school .... reform school ... fancy school .... Moved to the Lower East Side, then to the green greener Berkshires ... Married crazy Ray D. Brock (picked up in old Cedar Street Tavern) ... Worked as a librarian at the Stockbridge School ... Bought a church ... sang songs ... Fooled around ... Cooked good good food with a smile and other expressions ... Bought a crummy diner .... Turned it into a crazy-yummy-cozy restaurant ... Got tired ... Got divorced ... Got famed by Arlo Guthrie, an old friend who wrote the song "Alice's Restaurant," which inspired Arthur Penn to direct the movie Alice's Restaurant--about Alice and Ray and Arlo and the Scene ... now in the past. Thru it all Alice is a real live human bean--Still foolin' around and still cookin' ...

Around here, Alice's Restaurant is as much a part of Thanksgiving as turkey, stuffing and pants that used to fit just 24 hours prior. "Alice's Restaurant" could mean any number of things, though. It could mean Arlo Guthrie's debut record, released in 1967 when he was just 20 years old. It could be the epic 18-minute comedic folk-monologue "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" that encompasses the entire A-side of that record. It could be the 1969 film Alice's Restaurant, adapted from the song. Or it could be "Alice's Restaurant Cookbook," by Alice Mae Brock, the woman from whom all of the previous was more or less inspired, and whose author's bio you read above, taken from the back book jacket of a real, live copy.

Arlo Guthrie :: Alice's Restaurant Massacree

By now, most of you are probably familiar with the song "Alice's Restaurant Massacree," a satirical protest ballad that revolves around a Thanksgiving in 1965, a church-cum-flophouse, littering and all that you can and should do to avoid a war draft that receives its fair share of humiliation along the way. It's written in the sort of carefree counter-cultural voice of the mid-'60s, before mounting frustration (and drug use) created a noticeably edgier, grittier anti-war movement just a few short years later. It's a lighthearted, though meaningful, rendition that contrasts the elder Guthrie's more pointed, sometimes serious social critiques of decades past.

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The Impressions :: This Is My Country

People Get Ready” was a vessel for the zeitgeist of the Civil Rights Movement. The Impressions’ earnest, glowing harmonizer made a perfect anthem, thanks to a sing-a-long chorus and a positive, be-gospeled message: a fair shake is on it’s way because there’s a train a-comin’. A simple, powerful, beautiful song.

Curtis Mayfield wrote that song in 1964, but as the decade progressed, his songwriting grew more focused and aggressive… less a prayer, more a message. The richly textured, “vocal group” sound . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

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 220: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Ramones - 53rd & 3rd ++ Mission Of Burma - New Disco ++ Guided By Voices - Captain's Dead ++ The Jesus & Mary Chain - Taste The Floor ++ Joy Division - Day Of The Lords ++ Iggy Pop - Sister Midnight ++ Pure X - Twisted Mirror ++ The Cure - Screw ++ Fugazi - Lusty Scripps ++ Ty Segall . . .

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Grateful Dead :: Hard To Handle (Also, AD + Rhinofy)

It had been many years, but a couple of weeks back upon (re)hearing the 'jam' section, i.e. the latter 3/4, of the Dead's 1971 live interpretation of Otis Redding's infallible R&B staple "Hard To Handle", my reaction was something akin to 'fucckkkk' or 'holy shit!' Eloquent? No, but emotion rarely is in my experience. And that's music for you.

Anyway, speaking of the Dead, I just partnered with Rhino Records -- in short I . . .

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Bob Dylan :: Every Grain Of Sand

"That was an inspired song that came to me. I felt like I was just putting down words that were coming from somewhere else, and I just suck it out." Dylan of the genesis of "Every Grain Of Sand"

"'Every Grain of Sand' is the most Leonard Cohen song Bob Dylan ever wrote." My friend John made that statement yesterday and, if forced to compare the two artists work, I'd have to agree. Among other notables the track holds the dubious honor of acting as a sort of saving grace (dig that . . .

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Clifton’s Corner :: Volume Six (British R&B And Back Again)

(Welcome to the sixth installment of Clifton’s Corner. Every other week on the blog Clifton Weaver, aka DJ Soft Touch, will be sharing some of his favorite spins, old and new, in the worlds of soul, r&b, funk, psych and beyond. — AD)

A couple of weeks ago, a review ofbecome a member or log in.

My Bloody Valentine :: Loveless (20th Anniversary)

(Released in November of 1991, My Bloody Valentine's Loveless turns 20 this month. Below Scott McDonald reflects on his enduring relationship with the classic record. - AD)

Remember your first concert? I do, and I have some slight hearing loss in my left ear because of it. An old and very close friend of mine and I had the opportunity to see My Bloody Valentine during the early winter of 1992 as the band toured for become a member or log in.

Deerhunter :: Cool (Pylon Cover)

I played this cover the other night while DJing the Real Estate show here in LA. As the crowd was (mostly) early-mid twenties I was not surprised when a number of folks inquired as to the song's origin (Bradford Cox's voice and vocal tics are immediately recognizable to the converted). What did surprise me were the blank looks I received when they learned it was a Pylon cover (Pylon?), especially in light of the recent DFA reissues. In hindsight . . .

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The Winged Beatle :: The Movie

"I buried Paul"....yada, yada. The lengths of which fans have gone in regard to Paul McCartney's supposed 1966 death and replacement (Billy Shears, anyone?) have long bordered on the obsessive. Here we have the the most recent entry, The Winged Beatle -- an hour long look into the alleged cover-up/conspiracy. Good fun for Macca fans and/or regular Coast To Coast AM listeners.

The documentary, in its entirety, after the jump.

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

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 219: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ Fugazi - Lusty Scripps ++ The Soft Moon - Total Decay ++ Gary Numan - Metal ++ Portishead - Machine Gun ++ Deerhunter - Cool (Pylon Cover) ++ Atlas Sound - Amplifiers ++ Broadcast - Long Was The Year ++ My Bloody Valentine - Loomer ++ No Joy - Heedless ++ Tamaryn - Sandstone ++ Weekend - Sweet Sixteen ++ Abe Vigoda - Dream Of My love (Chasing . . .

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Emerald Web :: Dragon Wings And Wizard Tales

Emerald Web was the wind-playing electronic duo of Kat Epple and Bob Stohl. Although they'd become better known for their work scoring nature documentaries (including many collaborations with Carl Sagan), Emerald Web's 1979 debut was a milestone in electronic psychedelia rooted in the prog of the mid 70s, foreshadowing much of what would come in the early 80s.

Dragon Wings and Wizard Tales . . .

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The Twin Peaks Archives :: Volumes I & II

With a solid twenty years under its belt, various art installations, DVD releases, and the widespread availability of the series via Netflix streaming, the cult that is Twin Peaks fandom has never been larger -- or louder. It would be an understatement to say this is a very different landscape from the days of shoddy, dubbed, VHS copies and the Geocities-esque fansites in . . .

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Sevens :: Guided By Voices – The Unsinkable Fats Domino

(Sevens, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, pays tribute to the art of the individual song.)

I’m not sure who you trust, but I hope it’s not a musician. Chalk Robert Pollard’s Guided By Voices up as the latest group to renege on their promise not to reunite, not to tour, and not to record as their original (or, in the case of GBV, “classic”) lineup.

But if this is what being lied to sounds like, then by all means, keep . . .

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Broadcast :: Echo’s Answer

The word 'perfect' gets totted around all too frequently when discussing music, pop or otherwise, but in the world of Broadcast I would say "Echo's Answer" is just about there. Culled from group's 1999 debut lp, The Noise Made by People, it's also one of my favorite Trish Keenan vocals. Utilizing a spartan, minimalist approach the track, now twelve years old, remains as timeless . . .

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