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Sabu Martinez :: Afro Temple (1973)

His final effort as a bandleader, Afro-Cuban conguero wizard Sabu Martinez cemented his legacy with 1973's Afro Temple. Recorded in Sweden and released six years before his death, the album is a swirling, spiritual, and psychedelic bouillabaisse of sound riffing on, and augmenting, many of the sonic traditions Martinez had worked throughout his career.

At times haunting, the polyrhythmic and propulsive title track immediately locks into a humid, humid groove -- one the group relentlessly ride . . .

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McCoy Tyner :: Makin’ Out (1974)

Via the pianist's 1974 live album, Atlantis, this track is an absolute monster. Notably backed by co-conspirators, saxophonist Azar Lawrence, bassist Juini Booth, percussionist Guilherme Francothe and drummer Wilby Flethcer, the piece's  formidable tone is immediately set, moving along under its own estimable weight for the next 13 minutes. Tyner drives the quintet from the onset, and along with Francothe, paints the walls of the club with broad swathes of color and atmosphere. Menacing, muscular and free, it's quite the ride.

McCoy Tyner :: Makin' Out

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Tropical Valley 307 :: Meditation (In Tribute)

Here's one we played on the radio show this past Wednesday that a number of you were asking about. I picked it up in Tokyo a few months back, via the Japanese  compilation Tropical Valley 307, compiled and mixed by Daisuke Kuroda. Like the majority of the selector compiled CDs I gripped while traveling, the 21 track comp is sans playlist, but . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Jess Williamson (Second Session)

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

Following the 2015 release of her debut lp, Native State, we showcased (then) newcomer Jess Williamson's Lagniappe Session with her take on Leonard Cohen, Nina Simone and Bob Dylan. That session is still available, become a member or log in.

Michael Nau :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Michael Nau opens his new album, Michael Nau & the Mighty Thread, with a Wall of Sound ode to thinking you might know, but knowing you might not. "Now in the middle summer/I'm thinking about the universe," Nau sings, his husky baritone floating over shimmering guitars. "I think I know how it works/But I'm a bit less than positive."

It's in that liminal space, between getting it and totally not, that Nau's best songs live. You might not pick up on the dissonance at first, as the 11 tunes that make up the album are all shades of "chill." "No Faraway Star" shimmies like Phil Spector invented dream pop; "Funny Work" shuffles like Bobby Charles; "Can't Take One" sounds beamed over from Planet Hazlewood. The pervasive warmness that defined Nau's work with Cotton Jones and Page France is still here, but listening closer, it becomes clear how often beautiful complications bubble to the surface. "There’s no second-guessing the real," Nau sings on "Funny In Real Life," before shading the resoluteness with a little doubt: "I don’t ever know how I feel.”

Recorded in collaborator Benny Yurco’s apartment studio in Burlington, Vermont, over the course of "four or five days," Michael Nau & the Mighty Thread is Nau's most "band-oriented" solo outing. Most of the songs were cut live. First or second takes ended up on the finished album. Much of Nau's solo work has been exactly that – assembled on his own – but the new record gave him the chance to lean on a wide cast of other players, as well as digging into his songbooks for songs and ideas that had been long abandoned. "Just having other people to play them with you, to do their thing, it just feels more like I’m a singer of a song," Nau says. "It just feels like I can step outside of it a little easier, instead of hearing 50 of me in the same song.

Michael Nau & The Mighty Thread by Michael Nau & The Mighty Thread

We caught up with Nau to discuss building this record live, how that immediacy shaped the songs, and how doubts fuel his seemingly carefree jams.

Aquarium Drunkard: This is a very natural sounding record. Most everyone I know has a low-grade anxiety going at all times now; we live in perilous seeming times. But this record feels like a respite from that, something that accentuates some peace. Does music provide that sort of space for you, somewhere to decompress?

Michael Nau: Absolutely. Playing music is that for me, hanging out with that group of guys. We can just sit in a room and give ourselves a task and work together on something. For those few days, I was there doing that. I can’t go back to it for that sort of peace, but while it was happening, I felt that in my world for a minute.

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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 532: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Basa Basa - African Soul Power (excerpt) ++ Shintaro Sakamoto - From The Dead ++ Sinkane - Yacha ++ Muro – 追跡大作戦 Theme From Chase ++ Muro –「ハードトレーニング」より新しい世界への旅立ち ++ Muro — Conduct: A Library Research ++ The Whitefield Brothers - Safari Strut ++ Daisuke Kuroda - Tropical Valley 307 ++ Gabor Szabo - Caravan ++ Serge Gainsbourg - Requiem pour un con ++ Jack Wilkins - Red Clay ++ Alice Coltrane . . .

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James Booker: The Lost Paramount Tapes / Los Angeles, August 15th

In 1973, New Orleans piano wunderkind James Booker cut a session after a gig while in Los Angeles. Which was promptly lost and, much later, found. You can read our piece on the session (and its forthcoming reissue), here. But...if you . . .

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The Aquarium Drunkard Guide To ECM Records

Founded by Manfred Eicher in Germany in 1969, ECM Records (Editions of Contemporary Music) has spent nearly 50 years assembling one of the strongest catalogs in musical history. Marked by an attention to sonic space and a distinct visual aesthetic, ECM has released a wide variety of jazz, fusion, modern classical, early music, and world music. “I wanted to approach the recording in a different way, to record jazz in some kind of chamber music mode, like you might a string quartet, for example,” Eicher told the Irish Examiner in 2017. “There was something missing in the recordings I was hearing: a certain air in the music, a sense of space. For me the technical side was not as important as the idea of creating an aura or atmosphere, of finding poetry in the music.”

Last year, the label's massive output finally made its way to streaming services. Though CDs and vinyl remain "preferred mediums," both for the label and the crew at AD, access to the sprawling discography sent more than a few of us here down the ECM rabbit hole. From the label's earliest releases to brand new favorites like the Shinya Fukumori Trio's For 2 Akis, the ECM catalog upholds Eicher's standard of quality.  Here, a rough guide to some of the sounds that have drawn us in, 22 recordings exhibiting that "poetry in the music," Eicher spoke about. Or, to borrow and modify ECM's famous tagline, 22 of "The Most Beautiful Sound(s) Next to Silence."

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Will Sheff / The Rock*A*Teens :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

The Rock*A*Teens were my favorite rock and roll band of the 1990s, a group that disguised heroic artistic ambitions behind a murky, mysterious, reverb-laden take on early rock and roll. I’ve heard echoes of their sweeping grandiosity in the indie-anthemic bands of the mid-2000s and echoes of their weird swampy cool in today’s crop of unpretentious garage-rockers, but I’m never sure whether they were ever being overtly imitated or had just been picking up signals in the air a decade too soon. Those who love them are obsessed with them, but too many are unfamiliar with them and that just kills me because there’s this whole intoxicating universe hidden in these records.

Lopez’s band sprung up like a weed out of the rich soil of Atlanta’s Cabbagetown neighborhood — which in the late 1980s and early ‘90s had become a scrappy community of rockabilly dropouts, gender-bending performance artists, drug adventurers and ambitious post-punks — and there’s something humid and sweltering and essentially southern about their music. Lopez writes high melodrama but with an ironic remove, and his lyrics feel informed by southern currents in literature and photography and folk art, by detective fiction, and by Hollywood epics and forgotten pulp trash. Onstage and on record, his band delivers these songs with a wild and frayed urgency that makes you worry for them.

Each Rock*A*Teens record, in its way, is perfect. Their self-titled debut — like the band itself — was birthed in the immediate aftermath of several tragic accidents and overdoses that traumatized the Cabbagetown scene, and it’s a raw wail of pain and betrayal and wonder. The following year’s Cry saw frontman and songwriter Chris Lopez take a considerable leap forward in his writing while the group refined and strengthened their arrangements; 1998’s Baby, A Little Rain Must Fall was an early masterpiece; on the following year’s Golden Time Lopez grew more narratively ambitious, and then the band packed it in right as the 1990s were coming to a close with Sweet Bird of Youth, their most psychedelic and romantic and sprawling record, which in retrospect felt almost like the band’s epitaph.

Except they’re back, eighteen years later, with Sixth House, recorded after a fun little run the band did a couple years back that slowly turned into something more serious. Sixth House is a worthy addition to the R*A*Ts catalogue because it feels like a rewarding step into adulthood and into the present moment. The band is as frenzied as ever, but they’ve washed away the sonic mud that might have kept away less adventurous potential listeners of the past, they’ve turned down the reverb knob, and Lopez’s focus has widened to something much wider and more global. Beneath the joyous racket, these songs are serious and thoughtful, and they ponder power, mortality, morality, and the state of the soul.

Sometimes when you’re as crazy of a fan as I am of this band you end up getting a chance to meet your heroes as long as you can be cool enough about it, and I’m lucky to have gotten to know Chris Lopez over the years. I gave him a call on a sweltering July afternoon. He was in Atlanta carrying his baby daughter in from the car and I was in Woodstock walking my friend’s dog. - Will Sheff (Okkervil River)

Will Sheff: Sweet Bird Of Youth, the last record, felt like it was a kind of culmination, so it’s interesting that now here you are with this record that feels like a surprise new chapter. So I’m wondering if you can tell me where all this came out of.

Chris Lopez: We were just kinda fired up. We really enjoying playing music in a band, and I certainly felt like there was more to do. Well, I’m always doing something — it’s just a part of my own sustainment system, fooling around with music. It’s just a part of my life and always has been and always will be, whether it’s in an organized fashion or not.

So, we kinda got together and were just like, “Yeah, let’s work on new songs, I got this and I got that, let’s try this and let’s try that.” I mean, it started innocently enough — doing it just to do it — but then it just kinda snowballed and then it was like a real strong feeling like, “Yes we must finish. We’ve started; we have to finish.”

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Enter the Saccharine :: Yacht & Beyond

The summer keeps dragging on, but luckily we've had these extremely smooth sounds keeping us floating at Aquarium Drunkard HQ. Sail on over to our Spotify page to spin this massive (330 songs!) playlist of essential yacht, AOR, blue-eyed soul, and beyond. First access to this playlist was just one of the exclusive treats included in our bi-weekly Sidecar newsletter, presented by Gold Diggers, so if you haven't subscribed now to receive each issue directly in your inbox . . .

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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. Justin Sullivan is Night Shop. Tune in as he guests during the first hour.

SIRIUS 531: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Marc Bolan - Pain And Love (demo) ++ Damien Jurado - Allocate ++ Night Shop - The One I Love ++ Billie Holiday - I’ll Look Around ++ Santo & . . .

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Mattson 2 Play ‘A Love Supreme’ :: The AD Interview

John Coltrane's vaunted A Love Supreme is a record with baggage. And while almost none of it is negative, the price of absolute reverence can be untouchability, or worse, mass appeal. And while the record may be Starter Pack worthy, underneath fifty-three-years of slow-burn into the popular consciousness  is still a musicality and composition that wows first-time listeners and to-this-day informs creators and philosophers alike.

But the album has never been untouchable. Artists have tried recreation and exploration, all with varied results. Yet it is still bold for the Mattson 2 to attempt a rendering of the esteemed Classic. Judged as a whole, the Mattson twins' take on Coltrane's opus is part worthy homage, part contribution to the ever-ongoing dialogue around the piece. Their version feels fresh, unique, and technically incredible.

Aquarium Drunkard: Did your dive into A Love Supreme start from a place of recitation and trying to get it down pat, or was there a creative undercurrent or burst right from the start?

Jared Mattson: It wasn’t an initial burst - what we wanted to do was pay reverence to the piece as far as the foundation and the theory of it - really get that dialed in the classic jazz manner. We had all the elements available in our head when we got to recording, and with all these elements, were able to create and add our own, unique voice to it. We didn’t want to repeat the lines that we had learned but we wanted those lines to be there just in case we wanted to quote from the original in a more referential sort of way.

Jonathan Mattson: I think that also highlights a really important point about jazz in general — half of jazz,   musicians say, is covers of older stuff, paying reverence to the past, and the other half is doing more original stuff. And what Jared and I did was, we did our homework and learned the piece and learned all the stuff around it, even the musicology aspects of it, we took that and used our own original approach to it. And we applied our own background, our own original sound, and made it our own, leaving the integrity of the piece, so you could still tell that its Coltrane.

There are certain [versions of the record by other artists] that just sound too much like the original, why not just listen to the Coltrane album? I’d rather just do that. You’re getting so close to it, and Coltrane does it so much better. And then there’s the other school, which I love, and they do a completely different take on it. Like Alice Coltrane, she does “A Love Supreme” in an amazing way, but it’s so different, you could almost give it another name. Any jazz musician could really sit down and delve into Coltrane and learn the technique, but what we brought to it and made it ours was our backgrounds and our compositional style. And also our telepathy as twin brothers, our ability to jam and improvise together as twins.

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Cornelia Murr

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

The Lagniappe Sessions return with Cornelia Murr whose debut lp, Lake Tear of the Clouds, dropped earlier this month. Produced by Jim James of My Morning Jacket

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Sidecar :: Aquarium Drunkard’s Bi-Monthly Newsletter

Every two weeks, Aquarium Drunkard delivered straight to your inbox. Audio esoterica, interviews, mixtapes, playlists, exclusive content, and more. Check out this week's issue, featuring our recommendation of the meditative "Albatross" megamix, and don't delay, subscribe now

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Network 77 :: Escalator to the Stars

Near the end of "Escalator to the Stars," the first episode of the new comedy series  Network 77, Robyn Hitchcock and Emma Swift, as hosts of a star sign-themed segment about pop music called Astrology Domine, speculate what about Bob Dylan "really encapsulates that Gemini spirit." "He constantly disappoints his fans," Hitchcock deadpans. "That's why they keep coming back for more." The joke sprawls out from there, into improvised riffs about Dylan's dating life and Iowa City's two Starbucks locations. By the time the credits roll, featuring the charging French new wave of Edith Nylon, you may find yourself wondering what exactly you just watched. Network 77 feels a little like being let in on a secret.

Quietly released onto the internet last month, the show features an all-star indie rock cast, including Swift, Hitchcock, Ted Leo, Jon Wurster of Superchunk and The Best Show, Pat Sansone of Wilco and The Autumn Defense, and more. The conceit is simple, built around a number of individual segments, including Pulse 77, a mock news report about the rise of "new wavers," Parade of Strange, which features a look at the "disappearance" of country singer Dottie Carroll, a Rockpalast-styled music program called "Muziekpop," featuring a performance by modern Nashville band Creamer, though you'd never guess it from the Raspberries meets Todd Rundgren sound. Along with these and other diverse clips, Network 77 provides the sensation of flipping through channels sometime in the late '70s or early '80s, complete with period-appropriate graphics and text, time checks, commercials, and bumpers for programs yet to air – including "The Judee Sill Show," a parallel universe variety show hosted by the late, and legendarily reclusive, singer/songwriter.

Created, written, and directed by Rachel Lichtman, who wrote and directed the Boyce & Hart documentary, The Guys Who Wrote 'Em, Network 77 was born from a desire to create as “dense and beautiful a world as I could.” Calling in favors from friends, including graphic designer Jeff T. Owens and editor David Shamban, Lichtman turned to her massive library of vintage production tools – including a "super OG, groovy production music library" – to create something that feels as funny as classic SCTV and as retro-accurate as recent shows like IFC's   Documentary Now! and Netflix's GLOW.

“I knew there was an audience for this particular kind of vibe," Lichtman says. After all, it's what she wanted to see on the screen herself. “I have a fascination with lost art, lost graphics, fonts, or things that would never even make it to the 21st century," Lichtman says.

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