Posts

Heart of Snake :: S/T

From the same folks who brought you Krano's lost gem Requiescat In Plavem, comes another otherworldly taste of Italian psychedelia: Heart of Snake. Released earlier this year by Maple Death Records, Heart of Snake finds Vincenzo Marando (a Krano contributor) and Alberto Danzi crafting buzzy, gorgeous folk drones. Their compositions, each filling a side of a limited-edition cassette, shift from sustained, droning viola into sprightly . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Abstract Truths: An Evolving Jazz Compendium – Volume Six

Volume Six of Abstract Truths, An Evolving Jazz Compendium. If unfamiliar with the series, please first read here per its genesis and intention. We return with Los Angeles selector Phil Cho, who can most readily be found in the real world playing around the city via his ongoing night, Floating, at the Melody Lounge in Chinatown, and/or hosting the Third Place listening parties. Cho . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

The Lagniappe Sessions :: Robert Walter’s 20th Congress (Second Session)

Lagniappe (la·gniappe) noun ˈlan-ˌyap,’ – 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

Hammond B3 composer and bandleader Robert Walter sees the release of his next full-length, Spacesuit, out next month, September 21st. An album influenced by early Fusion, Krautrock, Dub Reggae, the films of Alejandro Jodorowsky and Stanley Kubrick, and the imagery of Chris Foss, Moebius and H.R. Giger, Spacesuit finds Walter and co. exploring and improvising on a new palette of both sound and texture.

Walter's 2013 Lagniappe Session remains a favorite in the series, and here the artist follows it up with another genre-bending set of covers, kicking off with a dubbed out version of Roxy Music's "Avalon" and culminating with a take on the McCartney II enigma that is "Temporary Secretary". Walter on the selections, below . . .

Robert Walter’s 20th Congress :: Avalon (Version) (Roxy Music)

80's Roxy Music. I remember watching the video for this song on MTV as a kid. I was confused and fascinated by its weird romanticism. Shawn Everett was talking about the album a lot while we were recording Mike Gordon's OGOGO last year. I bought a copy and got really into it, and Greyboy Allstars guitarist Elgin Park suggested doing a dub/reggae version. *

Robert Walter’s 20th Congress :: My Little Red Book (Burt Bacharach)

I love Burt Bacharach/Hal David songs. My dad used to play this version from the first Love record for me when I was a kid. The opening riff supposedly influenced Syd Barrett to write "Interstellar Overdrive." It's a fun way to jam on a major 7 chord in a completely non-jazz way. This is an outtake from the Spacesuit recording sessions. **

Robert Walter’s 20th Congress :: Down In The Park (Gary Numan)

Gary Numan's dystopian synth-pop was a big influence on my writing for Spacesuit. He creates so much atmosphere and drama with relatively simple ideas. The eerie futurism feels relevant to me.  *

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Sandy Denny (Richard & Linda Thompson): Live In London, 1972

If there were justice in this world, there would be at least three albums full of Linda Thompson / Sandy Denny duets (under the Crazy Ladies moniker, perhaps?). But no! There are only a few examples of these two incredible singers harmonizing together. On this dusty 35-year-old audience tape you can hear a few of them — Sandy's “Crazy Lady Blues” and the Everly’s “When Will I Be Loved.” Both are great. The recording (including Richard Thompson on countrified lead guitar) is not hi-fi by any stretch, but every note Sandy sings and every . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

The Lagniappe Sessions :: RF Shannon

Lagniappe (la·gniappe) noun ˈlan-ˌyap,’ – 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

RF Shannon's Trickster Blues, from May of this year, is a slice of hazy country-psych that creates a gorgeous and hypnotic mood over its just shy of 30 minute run-time. In a year in which every bit of escape is its own welcome respite, the album just such an oasis. For this installment of the Lagniappe Sessions, RF Shannon's main songwriter, Shane Renfro, takes on a pair of country chestnuts in the form of Jerry Jeff Walker's "About Her Eyes" and Gram Parson's "Luxury Liner" -- a cover that does the opposite of Emmy Lou Harris' own notable 70s version, slowing the song down just a notch from its original take by the International Submarine Band. Both of these songs were tracked on a rainy summer afternoon in Austin, Texas. Shane's thoughts on his selections, below.

RF Shannon :: About Her Eyes (Jerry Jeff Walker)

I grew up listening to Jerry Jeff Walker, but "About Her Eyes" slipped by my radar until about two years ago. I've been obsessed with it ever since. It's so lo-fi and mellow so I thought running it through a slightly more modern lens would be interesting. We definitely tried to stay true to the mellow vibe though; we tracked it live and it's just about the most fun song I've ever recorded.

RF Shannon :: Luxury Liner (International Submarine Band)

"Luxury Liner" was sort of an experiment and a fun challenge. I have a very soft spoken voice and hazy vibe and have always shied away from chugging country music, even though I'm in love with that vibe. Years ago, my brother and friends would blast this song and wish we could pull it off. So we went for it, and for better or worse it just felt good to give in to the tempo and energy of this song. I feel a kinship with Gram Parsons, the way he wove in between genres, so it was fun to get inside his head on this one.

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (7pm PST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard every Wednesday at 7pm PST with an encore broadcasts on-demand via the SIRIUS/XM app.

SIRIUS 533: Jean Michel Bernard – Générique Stephane ++ Billy Nicholls -  It Brings Me Down ++ The Superimposers w/ Andrew Gold - The Beach ++ Cornelius - Fantasma ++ The Morning Benders - Sleeping In ++ The High Llamas - The Goat ++ The Ruby Suns - Remember ++ Baby Lemonade - Ocean Blue ++ Besnard Lakes - Specter ++ The Apples In Stereo - Morning Breaks (And Roosters Complain) ++ Dukes of . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Tonight in Los Angeles: Talk Show / Aquarium Drunkard In Conversation With Chris Swanson

Los Angeles: Tonight (Wednesday) Aquarium Drunkard presents TALK SHOW, an intimate series of conversations centered around the worlds of music, art, film and beyond. Our guest this month is muso Chris Swanson of the Secretly Group, in conversation with Justin discussing his past 20 years working in music, inspiration and much more. 8pm. Records and revelry to follow.

Free and open to the public at Gold Diggers in East Hollywood. 5632 Santa Monica Blvd . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Glenn Jones :: The Giant Who Ate Himself

Glenn Jones continues his unbroken winning streak of sublime solo guitar LPs with his latest effort for Thrill Jockey. Jones' intricate playing has perhaps never sounded better, recorded by Laura Baird with a richness that makes the listener feel as though he or she is getting a private performance from the guitarist. And the compositions on The Giant Who Ate Himself are gorgeous . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Mondo Hollywood (A Documentary, 1967)

Counter-Culture. Enter Mondo Hollywood -- the definitive underground celluloid guide to late sixties Los Angeles. As sprawling and bizarre as the city itself, the two hour documentary swings and skews, highlighting all manner of coastal freak -- from the acid proselytizer to the politician, from surf culture to street culture. Directed by Robert Carl Cohen, and shot between 1966-67, this incredibly non-linear doc is a series of vignettes soundtracked by the Mugwumps and Davy Allen & the Arrows. But it's really all about the imagery...so do what we do, mute it and project it during . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Kitsos Harisiadis :: Lament in a Deep Style, 1929-1931

In his new/highly recommended book, Lament From Epirus: An Odyssey Into Europe's Oldest Surviving Folk Music, Christopher C. King delivers a lot of great descriptions of the Epirotic sound, but I think this is my favorite: "[T]he music sounds like women weeping at a grave, like birds crying as they fall from heaven, like the earth is ending . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

The Myrrors :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

If you're listening for musical borders in Borderlands, the latest from Tucson, Arizona-based psychedelic unit the Myrrors, good luck. In the record's collected extended jams and briefer numbers, whatever lines exist to separate kosmische, drone, folk, minimalism, and free jazz blur, bend and then vanish entirely. Yet however borderless the sound here may be, songwriter Nik Rayne and his crew have walls, and division, on the mind. The band's situated mere miles from the line that divides the United States and Mexico, and their meditation on how we keep out – and keep in – couldn't feel more timely, as the horrors of family seperations and abuse on our borders makes clear the real, violent effects of othering those who cross lines defined by powerful forces outside themselves. But timely records can sometimes feel timeless too, and Borderlands is that kind of record. Its meditative intensity, and "Call For Unity," suggests not only specific struggles in our time, but the struggles of people throughout history. "Tell me do you see it/the history in view/fooled us into thinking/it couldn't happen here," Rayne sings on the Amon Düül-referencing "The Blood That Runs the Border," the "here", gravely, could be anywhere.

I caught up with Rayne, whose music I've followed for more than a decade, to dig into the themes of the record, talk borders, and explore how record store culture has informed the band's sound. Borderlands is available everywhere today on Beyond Beyond is Beyond Records.

Borderlands by The Myrrors

Aquarium Drunkard: Coming from Tucson, how has your own perception of the "border" between the US and Mexico changed over the years? Is the record an attempt to comment on the concept of borders more generally, in terms of the definitions we come up with to divide our art, politics, and beliefs in daily life?

Nik Rayne: The title and themes behind Borderlands emerged pretty naturally during the process of working on the album. Living in Tucson really puts you at the front line of a lot of what has been going on regarding the border patrol, federal immigration policies, and abuses, institutionalized racism, the complexities of heterogeneous regional histories, all that...to the point where these issues really become an inescapable part of daily life. I had been thinking about trying to steer the next record in a more conceptual direction anyways, and when "The Blood That Runs the Border" became one of the first tracks cut for the session it more or less guided me into the rest.

That being said, domestic border concerns were just the starting point; the album speaks towards border conflict on a global scale, as well as what happens in that dead grey zone in between the "walls" that people construct, whether those are physical, social, or psychological. Another real historical border that played a large part in the ideas behind the album is the Durand Line, the frontier-point between Afghanistan (where my father is from) and Pakistan drawn by the British empire for political reasons which separated the Pashtun homeland and has caused endless problems over the years...many of which might sound familiar to people from, say, the Tohono O'odham Nation in the Sonoran Desert, whose land and whose families were also divided by foreign interest between two countries in a seemingly perpetual state of conflict.

As the saying goes, "we didn't cross the border, the border crossed us."

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Industrial Estate Blues :: A Gwenifer Raymond Mixtape

On her debut lp You Never Were Much Of A Dancer, guitarist Gwenifer Raymond emerges as a new voice in the American Primitive lineage. Playing acoustic guitar and banjo, the Brighton-via-Cardiff musician's compositions are steeped in blues history, but her use of familiar raw materials results in something surprising and vital. Though it may not be immediately apparent listening to delicate songs like "Sweep It Up" or the majestic "Sometimes There's Blood," Raymond spent her teenage years playing in punk bands, and there exists for her a psychic connection between ancient blues and three-chord ragers. In her mixtape of ole time numbers and punk classics, decades seem to collapse between each song, and a raw, unifying spirit emerges. Raymond, in her own words, explains:

Early American blues and mountain music and punk are separated by many of the most rapidly changing decades of human history. 

Early American blues and mountain music and punk are separated by many of the most rapidly changing decades of human history. Despite this they’ve got a lot in common; sonically, lyrically, and in their general ethos and attitudes. The musicality of the players is usually quite raw (although that is not to say not technically masterful, but rather, unpolished) and at times unhinged; the vocals are classically unsophisticated but they’re unmannered and relatable. It’s those rough edges that really make those sounds as affecting as they are, with the humanity at the other side of the record exposed like an open wound. Lyrically there’re a lot of common themes and many songs have content not suitable for polite company; joking about sex and talking frankly about drinking and using drugs, and living that ‘low’-life. Even though there’s rarely a sense that these lifestyles are being glamorized, there is often a celebratory quality; call it nihilistic joy or making the best of what you’ve got. It’s people giving raw accounts of their own private lives, from gambling and sniffing cocaine in battered jug-joint in Mississippi, to knocking back cheap cider on the cold fringes of a Manchester industrial estate. There’s a DIY ethos to all of the songs on this playlist; people picking up instruments and putting to tune what they were feeling at the time; whatever was important to them and on their mind, or even just joyful sonic explosions that would not be contained. They take songwriting as an everyday part of life, and not something to be mythologized.

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Country Joe McDonald :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

49 years ago, on the second day of the Woodstock Music & Art Fair, Country Joe McDonald took to the stage to kill some time while Santana readied their set. While McDonald and his band the Fish are often associated with psychedelic rock, a named rattled in conjunction with the Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix, or the Jefferson Airplane, McDonald was cut from a folk cloth. And on stage that day in upstate New York, his acoustic version of "The 'Fish' Cheer/I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die Rag" became something of a folk standard, traded between counterculture heads and Vietnam soldiers and vets alike.

Early in 2018, Craft Recordings released a deluxe box set edition of the Fish's The Wave of Electrical Sound, featuring mono and stereo versions of their first two albums, I-Feel-Like-I-Am-Fixin'-To-Die and Electric Music for the Mind and Body, along with an unreleased protest film, and a slew of archival materials. The set captures Joe's charged spirit, and we sat down with him to discuss his recordings, Woodstock, and the politically harried times that surrounded him, along with his artistic connections to Janis Joplin, Grace Slick, and everyone’s favorite anti-hippie John Fahey.

Aquarium Drunkard: Hey Joe! I’m going to keep it pretty loose. I've got a handful of questions for you, but I'd rather just kind of see where you take it. I don't want to hit you over the head and make you answer a bunch of questions you've already been asked before.

Country Joe McDonald: Well if I don't like it, I won't answer it. [Laughs]

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (7pm PST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard every Wednesday at 7pm PST with an encore broadcasts on-demand via the SIRIUS/XM app.

SIRIUS 533: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++  Brian Eno - Another Green World ++ Gonzales - Gogol ++ Joni Mitchell - Harlem In Havana ++ Dustin O’Halloran - Opus #12 ++ Gonzales - DOT ++ Mikael Tariverdiev - Summer Blues ++ Julian Lynch - Terra ++ Robert Wyatt - Yolanda ++ Julian Lynch - A Day At The Racetrack ++ Carsten Meinert Kvartet - One For Alice ++ Nina Simone - Be Mu Husband (Live, 1987 . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.