Anthony Lamont :: Benny The Skinny Man

Sticking with the early--raw--R&B for a minute, here's a side that pops up on eBay every once in awhile if you're into collecting 45s. Recently comped on a sampler entitled Mr Hot Shot R&B, Anthony Lamont's "Benny The Skinny Man" kicks the door in with the opening riff before launching into a nasty, propulsive, shuffle that lasts throughout the tracks two and half minutes. They don't . . .

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Simon & The Piemen :: Cut It Out

Should you ever happen upon it, there's a great underground, oft-bootlegged, raw soul, r&b and trash compilation floating around called Pass The Soul. At twenty-five tracks the collection kicks off with Simon & The Piemen's "Cut It Out," a filthy dirty (mostly) instrumental banger from 1963 that sounds something like a twisted "Tighten Up" summoned from the darkside. With production quality on par . . .

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Mississippi Fred McDowell :: I Wish I Was In Heaven Sitting Down

A bittersweet love letter to the city of new Orleans post-Katrina, season two of David Simon's Treme continues to boast inspired music supervision. If you tuned in this past Sunday you may have caught the inclusion of Delta bluesman Mississippi Fred McDowell's "I Wish I Was In Heaven Sitting Down." If you know the track via McDowell's album Good Morning Little School Girl . . .

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Arthur Alexander :: Anna (Go To Him)

Just wrapped a music consulting gig downtown and included this bit; a favorite early soul ballad culled from an old soul an old r&b mixtape I put together years ago of tracks the Beatles covered. One of the great voices of his time, Alexander's honey vocals and delivery are perfectly matched by the track's drums and ivory run. While I love the Fabs rendition, it comes off somewhat tepid in comparison.

MP3: Arthur Alexander :: Anna (Go To Him)
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Stephin Merritt’s Obscurities: Forever And A Day

Merge Records just announced they will be releasing a collection of hard to find and previously unreleased tracks by the Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt. Entitled Obscurities, the set will feature songs during the bands run on the label from 1994-99. Look for it August 23rd. Here is the first taste, "Forever And A Da

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Monster Rally :: Surf Erie

If you keep up with our Mondo Boys stuff (pt. 3 of our Weird Summer mixtape series is on the horizon) than you're familiar with the stylings of Monster Rally. Like a self-contained surf & sand b-movie from the sixties, "Surf Erie" (premiered via IGIF last week) is a surreal instrumental slice of bedroom . . .

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AD Presents :: White Denim @ The Echo, May 25

Wednesday night, May 25th, Aquarium Drunkard welcomes back White Denim to Los Angeles at The Echo. I've said as much numerous times on these pages in the past, but if you've yet to see this band live than you're truly missing out on one of the best shows going today. Also, the band is sure to debut a bunch of material from their forthcoming LP, D . . .

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Big Sambo & The House Wreckers :: The Rains Came

Spun this joint today on the radio show. You may be familiar with Doug Sahm and his band's cover, but this, the original, is seriously where it's at. Fronted by vocalist/saxman James Young, Big Sambo & The House Wreckers hailed from the gulf coast of Texas, laying down "The Rains Came" for Eric Records in 1961. I'm sure if you're diligent you could track the 45 down somewhere, but I was personally hipped to the track several years back via the . . .

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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 194: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Howard Nishioka - Carnivourous Dogaramus ++ Michael Kiwanuka - Tell Me A Tale ++ Big Sambo & The House Wreckers - The Rains Came ++ Bill Withers - Better Off Dead ++ Amanaz - Khala My Friend ++ Wendell Stuart & The Downbeaters - Hey Jude ++ Santa Nguessan :: Manny Nia ++ Os Mutantes - A Minha Menina ++ Henri . . .

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Tom Waits :: Clap Hands (The Big Time Theatrical Concert)

I enjoy a good magic trick, a bit of slight of hand. I enjoy an entertainer--a changeling, a shapeshifter, a master of ceremonies. While there are fewer and fewer artists tapping into the primordial, the supernatural, we thankfully still have the self-made myth that is Tom Waits.

Captured in 1987 during the the tour for Frank's Wild Years, you could do much worse than spend a night nipping on your favorite bottle of whatever and this tourfilm . . .

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Mount Moriah :: Only Way Out

You wouldn't be wrong to categorize North Carolina's Mount Moriah as "Country Rock," but might I suggest the term "Southern" be used instead. While the songs are often set in motion by electric guitars that lead down country roads, Mount Moriah garnishes their sound with a faithful declaration of spirit. Be it Heather McEntire's sorrowful psalms, the haunting organ on "Lament" or the weeping violin on "Old Gowns," theirs is a requiem with a palpable sense of place. It's the sound of a . . .

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Cure For Pain: The Mark Sandman Story (The AD Interview)

Compared to his contemporaries, Morphine's Mark Sandman came off like more of an out-of-place beat poet than the zeitgeist's 'slacker' guitar sound of the day. With a presence tapped in to the lineage of Tom Waits and Bukowski, Morphine worked the noir and worked it hard. They dubbed their sound "low rock." No one else sounded anything like them at the time...no one else sounds anything like them today.

Below is my conversation with the filmmakers behind the new Morphine documentary, Cure For Pain: The Mark Sandman Story.   Jeff Broadway, Dave Ferino and Rob Bralver discuss the documentary, the process behind it and the case for Morphine in 2011.

Aquarium Drunkard: Why Morphine, why now?

Jeff Broadway: When I was maybe 10 or 11, I was introduced to Mark’s music by my mom and her sisters because Mark was a second cousin of theirs. I thought it was awesome that I had some rockstar of an extended cousin and started listening to a lot of Morphine as a teenager. As I got older and more into Mark’s music and the idea of family, I began considering how a film, most likely a doc, could be developed from his life story. When we started really getting serious about the project in 2008, it was like, okay, so OG Morphine fans are in their 30s and 40s and have seen a decade of music go by without hearing a sound quite like Morphine’s. They miss it. We wanted to remind them of that nostalgia and introduce the music to a new generation of listeners.

AD: Now a decade-plus since Sandman's death, the music feels as timeless and out of step as ever. Your film feels like what could be the beginning of getting the Morphine conversation started again.

Jeff Broadway: I agree. I think enough time has gone by since he passed that people will see the film and immediately reconnect with the music — above all. They’ll go download it. Talk with friends about it. Introduce friends to it. And Morphine will become appropriately relevant again. But beyond the film re-catalyzing the Morphine conversation, I think people will walk away from the film with a deeper appreciation of the evolution and breadth of an artist who left too soon.

AD: What's the temperature like out there? Are young people beginning to discover the band's music?

Jeff Broadway: I think so, but I also think it’s a bit early to say definitively. The film’s been seen by maybe a couple thousand people and needs more time in circulation before we can determine what sort of bump in sales the Morphine catalog might receive as a result of our film. I am confident, though, that the doc will only increase the appreciation of Mark’s and Morphine’s global cult stardom.

AD: Tell me a bit about accruing the doc's footage. Had Mark died in 2009, instead of 1999, I imagine there would have been near-infinite droves of media to delve through due to the advent of camera phones, etc.

Rob Bralver: There was definitely a limited amount of material to work with, and we just had to make do with what we could. The movie is a pretty big grab bag of footage - basically anything we could get our hands on. As you say, Mark was popular before the days of entire audiences filming shows in HD on their phones, so what we had to work with was mostly dusty, distorted VHS tapes we found in the basement of Mark's old studio, Hi-N-Dry, combined with 8mm family footage, plus our own present day interviews. Most of the archival stuff in the movie was shot on analog cameras ten to thirty years ago and then digitized, so while it was limiting in terms of what we were able to use to tell our story, it also gives the movie some of that period feel.

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Wendell Stuart & The Downbeaters

Nick at Ghost Capital must have read my mind as he just shared Wendell Stuart & The Downbeaters, a Bahamian soul LP I've been searching for the past two months having caught a track on the recent Trans Air Records West Indies Funk compilation. Below is their obligatory, yet excellent, take on the Beatles, plus a cover of . . .

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