Jonathan Richman :: Los Angeles, December 8th @ The Mint

Jonathan Richman is doing a string of nights at the Mint December 8-10 (next week).   I have a pair of tickets for an AD reader for the night of the 8th. Leave a comment below with your name and email to enter. Also, separately, enter to win the Vapor Records Richman discography on CD or vinyl . . .

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Decade :: El-P, I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead (2007)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a chance to write about any and all of the albums they felt shaped the last decade.

From the beginning of October through the end of December, Monday through Thursday, AD will feature a post, or posts, from a particular writer detailing their favorite albums of the decade. On a given week there might be one album a writer talks about, there might be six, but they’ll get a chance to have their say on everything that comes to mind. Our hope for you, the reader, is that you’ll jump in with your comments on the album selections — tell us why you agree or disagree — and also be exposed to some albums that you may have missed over the last ten years. Now, as the decade starts to wind down, let’s celebrate.

Sonically the truest heir to the Bomb Squad's decade-defining production in the 80s, El-P and his Definitive Jux record label ran the tables on indie hip-hop in the 00s. El-P himself was behind the board for a lot of Def Jux's best moments, including the stone classic Cold Vein by Cannibal Ox and excellent work by Mr. Lif, Aesop Rock and the Perceptionists. But his own work on his two solo LPs, especially 2007's I'll Sleep When You're Dead, rank among the finest of the decade. It was here that the penchant for post-apocalyptic sounds and deconstructed beats was finally caught by his ability to craft incredibly infectious songs.

The chaotic, authoritarian environment of America during the Bush administration was a defining mood throughout the 00s. El-P's production and lyrical content captured the constant anger, frustration, unease and oddly pessimistic hope of this perfectly. The five years between his debut LP, Fantastic Damage, and this album only honed and sharpened the post-modern analysis on display from before. So much of El-P's perspective reflects some sort of dystopian vision of the world that didn't sound too far from the truth in the increasingly reality-reflecting-satire of the 00s. "We might have been born yesterday, friends / but we stayed up all night," he barbs in the chorus of "Up All Night," as if anticipating the sneering condescension of the old white men responsible for everything wrong while "Run the Numbers" evokes 1984 as he drones "and if the party tells me 5 fingers then 5 is what I'll say / No matter that the 4 displayed are waving in my face." Even Abu Ghraib (or Guantanamo) has its future told in the disturbing tale of human love in the face of human torture, "Habeas Corpses (Draconian Love)."

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Bear In Heaven :: Werewolf

Bear In Heaven's new LP, Beast Rest Forth Mouth, has been receiving a lot of atta-boys of late (and rightfully so), but unlike their debut it does not have an accompanying . . .

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Decade :: Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy/Matt Sweeney, Superwolf (2005)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a . . .

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AD Presents :: Grooms @ Silverlake Lounge, December 10th

Thursday night, December 10th, Aquarium Drunkard presents Grooms with The Northstar Session, Brydan Smith and Radio Moscow at ye olde Silverlake Lounge. We have three pairs of tickets to giveaway to AD readers. Wanna go? Leave the name you want tix under and a valid email address we can reach . . .

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Jens Carelius :: The Beat of The Travel

Depending on his mood Jens Carelius (provenance, Norway) incorporates a singing style somewhere between Bert Jansch and secular-era Cat Stevens. His sophomore album, The Beat of The Travel, released earlier this year, wavers between pastoral folk jams and ethereal brushes of If I Could Only Remember My Name era David . . .

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Decade :: Panda Bear, Person Pitch (2007)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a chance to write . . .

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Decade :: Sonic Youth, Murray Street (2002)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a chance to write . . .

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Surf City :: Autumn

Based on the strength of their 2008 self-titled EP, this was one of the few bands I missed at CMJ that I really wanted to check out live. Formerly known as Kill Surf City, New Zealand's Surf City are presently prepping for their 2010 debut full length -- stay tuned. Until then check out an mp3 of "Autumn" (below) off the band's new 7", and do grab their excellent six-song s/t EP via become a member or log in.

Decade :: Sleater-Kinney, The Woods (2005)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a chance to write . . .

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Map of Africa :: Bone (Revisited)

Posted this track several years ago. Great jam; like a Pink Mountaintops b-side. Throwback rock 'n roll.

For Heads, by heads. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support via our Patreon page. 

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Decade :: Iron & Wine, The Creek Drank the Cradle (2002)

What is it that makes us want to deconstruct art by units of time? Lists. We love making them. We love arguing over them. And here, on the verge of a new decade, we’re in a position to do the same again. What were the best albums of the past ten years?

Here at AD, we started talking it through and decided we weren’t going to add to the cacophony of lists being put out by various music pubs. There are enough of those. Rather, we elected to let our four main writers have a chance to write . . .

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Citay :: Careful With That Hat

Bob, the protagonist in Gus Van Sant's Drugstore Cowboy, lived by a simple code:   Never mention dogs ("to even mention a dog would have been a hex in itself").   Never look at the back of a mirror ("because you're looking at your inner self and you don't recognize it, because you've never seen it before"), and never, under no circumstances, should a hat ever be placed on a bed. Doing so would bring "fifteen years . . .

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Guadalcanal Diary :: Walking In The Shadow Of The Big Man

Think of them as REM’s quirky cousin. Or, don’t.   If you’re of a certain age and spent some time listening to college radio or watching late-night MTV in the ‘80s, you might remember Guadalcanal Diary’s brief incursions into the collective pop consciousness. First with 1984’s “Watusi Rodeo,” which made the cut for the music network’s “The Basement Tapes” (as selected by a panel that included members of INXS, Nick Lowe and...Ronnie James Dio) and later . . .

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Diversions :: Roadside Graves on Kris Kristofferson

(Diversions, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, catches up with our favorite artists as they wax on subjects other than recording and performing.)

Earlier this year I asked Roadside Graves' John Gleason and Jeremy Benson to wax a bit about one of their favorite songwriters, Roger Miller, as the Graves music is nothing if not story driven. In August, while the band was in L.A. doing one of their four gigs that week, Jeremy and I got to talking about the piece. I asked if their was anyone else they had in mind besides Miller. Only one, he said, and that was Kris Kristofferson. Below, John, Jeremy and Rich each discuss America's warrior-poet, and their relationship with his music. And if you missed it, be sure to read our interview with Kristofferson from earlier in the month.
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John on Kris: Let’s consider the name Kris Kristofferson. It sounds good, it looks good, it’s memorable, but it’s not constant. Probe your family this Thanksgiving and ask who is Kris Kristofferson and you are likely to find that they recognize the name but attach a different persona depending on their age and interests. To my mother he is the guy with his shirt off holding Barbara Streisand, to my brother he was the weapons expert in Blade, to my father he was the guy who sang about having beer for breakfast, and then there’s my own Kris Kristofferson. I hope I never meet him because my expectations are tremendous and unfair.

In high school I hung out with the kids who sat out for gym, the pale kids who sat on the top bleacher and listened to their Sony Walkman, yet I always changed for gym and ran laps. Sometimes I even sprinted and exceeded the required sit-ups despite the commentary from above. It’s human to be contradictory, to not fit expectations, to be accepted by one group and still free to piss them off. Or, in Kristofferson’s world, it would be to drink and write songs all night and then climb a mountain the next morning.

Kristofferson’s songs are confident and weary. They are intelligent songs that carefully detail the thin thread between personal relationships and the responsibilities of being human. There are traces of regret, piles of compassion, and hints and maps on how to live. You believe every word because it’s honest and direct and accessible. Play his first two records for anyone who declares they like all genres of music except country and you may persuade them otherwise.

Recently we were lucky to sit in the first row of his one-man show at McCarter Theater in Princeton, he blew his nose frequently, and looked at us and said, “You paid a lot of money to see and an old man blow his nose.”

MP3: Kris Kristofferson :: Darby’s Castle

This is a small gem. “It only took one night to bring it down, when Darby’s castle tumbled to the ground”. A story song about a man obsessed with building a grand home for his wife and himself. You fill yourself up with ambition to make sense of the world, to find your place, and hope to be remembered by what you do. Or quite frankly you write songs, you sing, you play shows and you consume most of your free time trying to fulfill this strange ambition but you can’t pretend or assume that everyone in your life is satisfied. Sadly, sometimes you find out too late. And without them, there is no ambition or will to create anything and you no longer have the luxury or the time.

MP3: Kris Kristofferson :: Sunday Morning Coming Down

This song has my father’s second favorite line, “Put on my cleanest dirty shirt” (Townes Van Zandt’s “Your breath as hard as kerosene”   was always the first).   My father was a real estate agent who wanted to be a professional gambler. He never wore dirty shirts, but he, like many, loved the idea of being a character. Like reading Charles Bukowski or Hunter S. Thompson, it’s easy to emulate the character they present, but beyond the intoxication really is the freedom. Kristofferson, or the character in this song, is completely free. He has the time to drink two beers before putting on clothes in the morning. It almost doesn’t matter that he regrets the decisions this particular Sunday is reminding him of, because it sounds so damn cool. Sober or hung-over it is a song to end the week. A day where expectations are low and nightlife is unwelcome, a day to reflect on the choices you’ve made. You should be lucky to have the time to hear the bells, or to watch something as mundane as a kid kicking a can. Except of course if you do this every day of the week, then it’s just a big waste of time.

+ Continue Reading: Jeremy and Rich on Kristofferson After The Jump...

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