My Morning Jacket :: WFPK 91.9; 12.21.01

So, are you the type of person to buy holiday wrapping paper on December 26th?   How about winter coats and wool sweaters in May?   No?   Me neither, but if you count yourself as an early My Morning Jacket fan I would strongly recommend going against habit and downloading the following holiday set from 2001.   Recorded December 21st at WFPK 91.9, in the band's hometown of Louisville, KY, the session originally aired Christmas day of 2001. Go ahead, file the set away and unpack it eight . . .

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AD Presents :: The Henry Clay People, April Residency @ Spaceland – Every Monday, Free

The Henry Clay People are back in town having just wrapped up a six week U.S. tour.   Consider their April residency at Spaceland their homecoming.   Every Monday this month the band takes the stage, for free, with their friends beginning April 6th.

Tonight, April 13th, the band is joined by L.A. friends The Broken West, The World Record . . .

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Lake Inferior :: S/T EP

As rock & roll gets older - really as any medium of art gets older - the questions start amassing about where there is left to explore once more and more corners of a once dimly lit room are illuminated. What once seemed unlimited is now boxed neatly with walls - sturdy, supportive and finite.   What's a good decorator to do? One option is to create the illusion of more space, and one of the easiest ways to do this is to place broad mirrors at the end of a room. They provide the illusion of depth and space, making the room . . .

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Dead Confederate :: AD Session, February 2009

Prior to SXSW, while Dead Confederate were in Los Angeles, the band stopped by Wavaflow studios in Los Feliz and recorded a few tracks for our Friday show on SIRIUS/XM.   Both tracks can be found on their 2008 LP Wrecking Ball.   Video and MP3s from the session below.

Download:
MP3:

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SIRIUS/XM Radio :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XM, channel 26 (SIRIUS), and channel 43 (XM), can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 90: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Condo Fucks - Gudbuy T'Jane ++ Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Some Loud Thunder ++ Talking Heads - Warning Sign ++ Grizzly Bear - Cheerleader ++ Foreign Born - Blood Oranges ++ Venice Is Sinking - Ryan's Song ++ Dirty Projectors - What I See ++ Sonic . . .

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Long Shots :: Justin Townes Earle & Jason Isbell

(Long Shots, a new feature on Aquarium Drunkard, asks some of our favorite artists to interview one another. Think of it as listening in on a good conversation.)

Jason Isbell: How's the tour going, Justin?

Justin Townes Earle: It's going pretty good I think.

JI: How did you like sitting in a van for 24 hours this week?

JTE: It was actually one of the most relaxing times I’ve had in the past two years of touring. Nobody could call me because my phone died and I just sat there watched the Simpsons all day.

JI: That sounds pretty nice; we should've followed you guys.

JTE: How was your Oklahoma City?

JI: You know it was pretty good. I just slept in Oklahoma City, but then on the way back here we stopped at a casino in New Mexico in Albuquerque and I won about $350 bucks playing cards. I was pretty happy

JTE: You can’t beat that.

JI: Yeah it was a good thing. So yeah, alright the tours going well... I wrote some questions down; you want me to ask you one of them?

JTE: Sure go for it.

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C86 :: A Moment, A Movement

It doesn't happen that often - and now in the winter of the album format, it could happen even less - but occasionally a song compilation can give shape to something unique and nameless. It has to pull together strains of music that are emerging or are bubbling below the surface and give it a narrative thread. Put together, the songs show a similar focus or sound, similar lyrical themes or vocal delivery, some series of events that lock onto one another. Movements are born this way; moments are documented.

In the thick of 1986, the become a member or log in.

The Hold Steady :: A Positive Rage (Live)

It’s not terribly clear why The Hold Steady have decided to release A Positive Rage at this point in their history.   Both the CD and DVD are taken from the American leg of the Boys . . .

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George Harrison :: Wah Wah, Live NYC 1971

The Concert for Bangladesh - August 1, 1971 - Madison Square Garden, New York City.

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Yo La Tengo :: Fakebook (1990)

Last month we discussed Fuckbook, but first there was Fakebook.   As full albums go Fakebook is arguably one of, if not, the most enjoyable of Yo La Tengo's releases to sit down and . . .

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Nicolai Dunger :: Tranquil Isolation

A few weeks ago while in Austin, a group of us were discussing Bonnie "Prince" Billy's new LP Beware -- a conversation that soon shifted to Will Oldham related side-projects. Among other titles discussed was Swedish singer/songwriter Nicolai Dunger's 2003 album become a member or log in.

David Bowie :: Station To Station (Live, Tokyo ’78)

Ever seen a grown man attack a guitar? Watch Adrian Belew on tour with Bowie in '78.

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Superchunk :: Foolish (Merge Records 1994)

Even with the most nebulously named of genres, there are still artists that leap to mind as vanguards and progenitors of the sound and image of that style. When it comes to the muddled mess of 'indie,' Superchunk is a band whose name is a constant - not only because of their steamroller, power-pop-punk sound, but also because of being the very definition of 'indie' - starting their own, successful record label and putting out album after album of uncompromising music.

Every band has an album that . . .

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Akron/Family :: The AD Interview

Coming off the heels of numerous shows at SXSW (one of which had all of team Drunkard in awe) Akron/Family is primed for the release of their fourth record, Set 'Em Wild, Set 'Em Free (out May 5th on Dead Oceans). AD spoke with Seth Olinsky, guitarist and vocalist with the group during some downtime between tours. Among other things, Olinsky discussed the re-formating of Akron/Family as a three piece, live performance spontaneity, the abundance of ideas that led to their new record, and the groups growing confidence.

Aquarium Drunkard: When Love Is Simple, your last record, was released both you and Miles said that you felt like it was "the end of an era." Do you think that happened, and, if so, what is the new era shaping up to be?

Seth Olinsky: The thing I was referring to… well, Ryan left the band. Ryan was with us since the first record on, and he decided to leave after Love Is Simple, pretty much right after it came out. From then on we started touring as a seven-piece, a six-piece and then eventually as a three-piece. So in a way, he kind of jump-started our process of reinvention and change and forming new ideas.

Why I was originally saying that, before he left the band: we had made the first record (self-titled) and the split LP (with Angels of Light) and Meek Warrior, and with Love Is Simple we felt we’d made something that touched on the things we had made before and incorporated them into one spot. Each of the first three things felt like they went off into different directions, kind of unrelated to each other. And with that record, it felt like we had gotten to the point where we could finally, cohesively, meddle together.

It was the first time we were able to bring all these things together, but also, now that we’ve brought them together we’re gonna have to go out and explore new ideas — that’s a bit of how the record felt. With Ryan leaving, it jumpstarted that whole process of really changing the things of how we wrote songs together, and how we approached recording together. So I do think, in some ways, that Love is Simple was the end of an era and this record in some ways is more a beginning of a new phase.

AD: Do you see Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free as a cohesive effort, a culmination of sorts, or that of a number of songs put together?

SO: I think that when we went in to making the record, in some ways there wasn’t a cohesive perspective on what the band sounded like, cause like I said, with Love, without becoming formulaic we had a formula in the four-piece of how we made songs, developed them, recorded them and I think for this one we threw that out the window.

We went into the studio with different material, some slow, some fast, some that we had been playing live as a trio, some that we hadn’t played before at all. And we kinda just started working on everything and trying it different ways so I think the record is the closest to a live show we get because of the way that we’re learning to play together, as three people. I think there’s a reflection of the live show on the record that really is the best we’ve captured yet.

In other ways the record became a grounds for us all to experiment and create together — similar in some ways to our first record. Kind of… creating a blueprint for us to go out and explore as a three-piece, as a new thing.

AD: You have spoken before about how the live experience cultivates your sound, shapes songs and warps them. How much did the transition in a live setting to three pieces transform the way you had to go about changing a song, until it reached it's more final form?

SO: Obviously, for us, the three-piece has been complicated in various ways. We really like our music to have this sonic fullness to it, with a three-piece it tends to be a much more stripped-down sound. And then us learning how to use the space of a three-piece but then also try to use little bits of samplers and drum machines or keyboards or extra instruments so we can create this larger sonic picture.

In some ways, from the beginning as a three-piece, using things like samplers and drum machines or whatever, those things kind of show up in the recording a little bit. I think in a lot of ways, the recording… it’s not like we went out as a three-piece, performed songs and were ready to record them and went to record them. I think the recording ended up us working on working with each other as a three-piece and learning about what kind of sounds we could make together.

For example, Dana (Janssen) plays drums, but he’s also a great singer, great bass player, great guitar player, all these things. In the recording world, we can take advantage of all these things. We spent a lot of time during the recording experimenting and trying out ideas which I think, as opposed to trying out ideas live and then saying it’s a record, we tried things and those are now things we are getting to take advantage of now that we’re touring again.

AD: You’re an admitted Grateful Dead fan, and many see a jamband influence in Akron/Family. How would you describe the journey a song goes through during a show? Is it within very strict confines; is there much room to explore? Are there moments where you plan to stretch it out?

SO: On the overall, I think that certain songs have more space than other songs for opening up into improvisation. I don’t think we totally organize things the way the Dead, or any other modern jambands do, but certain songs we can open up to percussion and can go into different places. Usually I compare it to having a roadmap, and on different nights we can take different routes to get from one place to another.

And some nights, when we’re feeling it, we might make up a whole new… trail blaze a new route and that feels like improvisation. Some nights when, for whatever reason, the crowd’s not feeling it or we’re not linked up… a setlist can be a more stripped version of those songs with less playing around — within the song or from song to song or just the moments that are more open.

We leave ourselves a lot of room and openness within the songs, and how we get from song to song, but there’s not a lot of time where we’re just “jamming” and we have no idea where we’re going and we’re just trying to “jam.” Some nights new things happen and sometimes they don’t.   Especially at the beginning of this tour, we were playing new material and these new transitions, so from night to night it would be radically different. One night we would a drone, the next we’d do a percussive thing. We became more familiar with it as the shows went on and the set took shape. By the end of the tour it was more composed.

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SIRIUS/XM Radio :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XM, channel 26 (SIRIUS), and channel 43 (XM), can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 90: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Condo Fucks - Gudbuy T'Jane ++ Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Some Loud Thunder ++ Talking Heads - Warning Sign ++ Grizzly Bear - Cheerleader ++ Foreign Born - Blood Oranges ++ Venice Is Sinking - Ryan's Song ++ Dirty Projectors - What I See ++ Sonic . . .

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