Stephen Malkmus And The Jicks :: Mirror Traffic

  It's interesting to see an artist well known for their role in a particular band reach the point in their solo career when they eventually release as many albums independently as with the former group. Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks' latest, Mirror Traffic, is the fifth post-Pavement album for SM and the first release following a year spent touring with his erstwhile Pavement cohorts. As such . . .

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Mondo Boys :: Weird Summer 3, Desert Island (A Mixtape)

Mondo Boys are back with Weird Summer 3, Desert Island, to help you sweat out these final days of Summer. Best served before 9.21.2011. Mucho take it easy — MB

01 TAKESHI TERAUCHI - WHAT HAVE THEY DONE / VENICE - 30TH CENTURY
02 BEATLE-ETTES - ONLY SEVENTEEN
03 ARIF SAG - SU SANSUNUN EVLERI
04 NICK WATERHOUSE - SOME PLACE
05 PEAKING LIGHTS - HEY SPARROW
06 SONNY & THE SUNSETS - DONT ACT DUMB (ON THE TRACKS)
07 BUDDY HOLLY - DEAREST (VERSION 1 . . .

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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 207: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Bleached - Dazed ++ The Damned - New Rose ++ The Starlets - You Don't Love Me ++ Dum Dum Girls - Those Eyes (Vagrants Cover) ++ Unknown Mortal Orchestra - Jello And Juggernauts ++ Portugal. The Man - So American ++ Yellow Ostrich - Left Behind (Beat Happening) ++ Lower Dens - A Dog's Dick . . .

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Tinariwen :: Tenere Taqqim Tossam

For years, whenever friends would ask what they should grab with their remaining end-of-the-month eMusic credits, my go-to download recommendation was consistently "anything by Tinariwen". I no longer use eMusic, but if Tinariwen's music is still part of their catalog that recommendation stands. You'll thank me later. This month sees the release of Tassili, the Tuareg musicians fifth LP since the release of 2001's

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The Rolling Stones :: Metamorphosis

For reasons unexplained, officially-sanctioned outtakes from the Rolling Stones’ Decca Records (a.k.a. London) period remain as rare as rocking-horse manure. Although to date no fewer than 23 compilations of their ’63-’70 material have been issued worldwide, the number of cuts on these which were not used on the scheduled studio releases can be approximately counted on the fingers of one hand -- with one notable, noble exception.

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents :: Obits @ The Satellite, 8.24

Next Wednesday, August 24th, Aquarium Drunkard presents Obits at the Satellite in Silver Lake with Disappears and Beaters. Obits are touring behind this years LP, Moody, Standard And Poor; released last Spring. Disappears also . . .

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The War On Drugs :: Slave Ambient

There’s a stage being set for an empty infield on the cover of Slave Ambient, the latest from phased-out Philly kit The War on Drugs. Behind the shifting marbles of red and blue and white, a solitary guy in a baseball cap is captured in motion. But the guy isn’t the point; he just happens to be standing at the center of the thing.

The War on Drugs–primarily singer and . . .

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The Parvarim :: Sing Simon & Garfunkel (In Hebrew) 1972

Bookmark this one for Autumn; Ghost Capital's vinyl rip of The Parvarim's 1972 album of Simon & Garfunkel covers sung entirely in Hebrew. Their take on "Scarborough Fair" somehow manages to inhabit a feel even more forlorn than the original.

MP3: The Parvarim :: Scarborough Fair
MP3: The Parvarim :: America
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_____________________________________________________________________________________ . . .

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Yellow Ostrich :: Left Behind (Beat Happening)

Among other things, a great tribute often leads to a revisiting of the source material and in the case of Yellow Ostrich's cover of Beat Happening's "Left Behind," that would be Dreamy, the 1991 album the original was pulled from. Yellow Ostrich's debut, The Mistress, is being re-released this week via Barsuk Records.

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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 206: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ The War On Drugs - Baby Missiles ++ Kurt Vile - Freeway ++ Woods - Find Them Empty ++ Cotton Jones - Gotta Cheer Up ++ Portugal. The Man - So American ++ Unknown Mortal Orchestra - Thought Ballune ++ White Denim - Burnished ++ White Denim - At The Farm ++ Map Of Africa - Bone ++ Akron/Family - So It Goes ++ Little Joy - The Next Time Around ++ Real Estate - Out Of Tune ++ Dum Dum Girls - Oh Those Eyes (The . . .

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Dirty Beaches :: Lone Runner

On Alex Zhang Hungtai’s stirring debut, Badlands, the artist embraced dark and forgotten roads through lo-fi drum loops and grainy guitars. "Lone Runner" guides us through the same deserted path. Beginning with a clapping, dry rhythm that unveils an ambient and surreal cloud of guitar strumming, Hungtai’s trademark sermon drags us into the dust storm. His voice is actually clearer than on previous recordings as Hungtai declares, “I can see him dancin’/Going . . .

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Henry Rollins :: The AD Interview

This October Henry Rollins adds yet another feather to an already impressive professional cap, that of photographer. The musician/writer/actor and DJ's new photo-essay book, Occupants, spans eight years of the artist's lens from various points of the globe including Ireland, South Africa, the Middle East and Asia. We caught up with Rollins last week to discuss his passion for photography, his new gig hosting Nat Geo's Animal Underworld and why radio still matters.

AD: While you've long been involved in various forms of media/art, from music, spoken word and radio to your books and acting, your upcoming project, Occupants, a photo/essay collection breaks new ground for you. What itch is photography now scratching?

Henry Rollins: There are, to me, things that a photograph can capture that words, at least when I use them, cannot. So, I started carrying a camera. As the years went on, I would upgrade the camera as I wanted to do more. I learned a lot by just going out for several hours a day, with a basic understanding   of light, exposure and f-stop. I got some good tips and as soon as I had a better understanding of how all the factors can be moved around, I started to get the photographs to speak the way I wanted them to, to tell the stories that I could not.

AD: How was the learning curve?

Henry Rollins: Steep at first but things are evening out slightly. Digital allows one to learn quickly as you can evaluate your work quickly.

AD: The book spans the course of eight years and twice as many countries. What did you see out there?

Henry Rollins: I look for humans and how they deal with their lot in life. From Africa to Asia to the Middle East and beyond, I see humans being incredibly adaptive and buoyant in conditions that would make many people from the west freak out. I see what globalization really looks like. It’s nothing good. I see what wars look like years later, nothing good there either. They keep going long after they’re over. There’s lots of places you can see bones and bullets in the dirt. A lot of the world has mine fields and limited access to water. A lot of these people will not make it.

AD:
Would you say there is a unifying theme, subconsciously or not, running throughout?

Henry Rollins: To the book? To humanity? As to the latter, I think people will always move towards peace, dignity, saftey for their children, sustainable environments and some version of security. They are willing to lose a lot to retain what they see as theirs. Humans are also, perhaps one of the most ill suited species to live on the planet.

AD: Among other locales, Occupants documents your travels within Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Lebanon. As an American with a long history of traveling abroad, how has U.S. foreign policy in the 21st century played into your experience?

Henry Rollins: Whenever there’s a Republican president, foreign press is always more cynical than when there’s a democratic president. Traveling to places like Iran and Syria during Bush’s time in office was at times a delicate matter. Things are hugely different with president Obama in office. Some Americans don’t like him but outside of America, he’s quite popular. I think people are able to separate a person from the government of his or her country. I had to count on that many times. America’s destruction of the Middle East doesn’t go down well. People there have very, very long memories and have seen everything before. A place like Afghanistan, the people there know more about how America will do there than the Americans do, that’s for sure.

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Stephen Malkmus :: Black Book

August 23rd marks the release of Mirror Traffic, Stephen Malkmus's fifth 'solo' album since the dissolution of Pavement in 1999. Produced by Beck, the LP is being described as his some of his (and the Jicks) tightest work since his pop-leaning self-titled debut a decade ago. That album remains . . .

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Merl Saunders & Jerry Garcia :: Positively 4th Street (Bob Dylan)

I don't know if it's the weather, an act of habit or a touch of both but I often find myself returning to Merl Saunders & Jerry Garcia's Live At The Keystone discs this time of year. A truly soulful pairing, I once heard their union described as something akin to "going to church," and it made sense. The fruits of the jam session that make up the Keystone discs were fleshed out by John Kahn on bass and Bill Vitt on drums. As a whole, the group just effortlessly . . .

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