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Transmissions Podcast :: Jim James + Cornelia Murr/Talk Show: Robbie Simon

And we’re back. Welcome to the June edition of the Aquarium Drunkard Transmissions podcast, our monthly series of features, interviews, and audio esoterica. This month, we have two in-depth conversations. Up first, Jim James of My Morning Jacket and singer/songwriter Cornelia Murr. They've both got new records at the ready. On June 29, James releases Uniform Distortion, a collection of celebratory and clamorous rock & roll jams, via ATO Records. And on July 13th, Murr releases Lake Tear of the Clouds, a spooky set of songs produced by James, featuring guest vocals from Lola Kirke of Mozart in the Jungle and a stunning cover of Yoko Ono's feminist anthem  “I Have a Woman Inside My Soul.” Though the records sound vastly different, they also feel connected and of a piece. Together, the two had fascinating insights about the worlds of social media, David Lynch, and the act of creating -- and sustaining -- the proper mood on a long-player record.

Then, painter and photographer Robbie Simon. Our conversation was recorded live at Gold Diggers in East Hollywood as part of our new monthly series of conversations there called Talk Show, centered around the worlds of music, art, film and beyond. You’ve likely seen Simon’s work with the former Transmissions guests the Allah-Las, and their Reverberation Radio series. His images are bold – referencing the geometric shapes of Alexander Calder – but soft too, evocative of ‘60s West Coast pop art and jazz album illustrations.

Transmissions Podcast :: Jim James and Cornelia Murr/Robbie Simon

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

Get here, now. 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 527: Jean-Michel Bernard — Genérique Stéphane ++  Dr. Alimantado - Can't Conquer Natty Dreadlocks ++ MonoMono - Give A Beggar A Chance ++ Milton Henry - Gypsy Woman ++ Singers & Players - Thing Called Love ++ Starship Commander Woo Woo - Master Ship (excerpt) ++ Lee “Scratch” Perry - City Too Hot ++ Rikki Ililonga - Fire High ++ Luiz Melodia - Baby Rose ++  Earth . . .

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Charles Mingus :: Live at Montreux, 1975

These days, when Charles Mingus is remembered, it’s primarily for records like Mingus Ah Um, Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus or The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady. All great records, but Mingus kept recording and playing for another decade-plus -- indeed, he was recording almost up until his death from ALS in 1979.

Live in Montreux, released earlier this year by Eagle Rock as a two-CD set and as a standalone DVD, is a look at Mingus in his autumn years. He’s older and has less to prove, but he’s still full of fire and outrage. Who else would write a composition about Governor Rockefeller’s decision to send armed police into the Attica prison?

At this juncture, Mingus had been playing with the same core group for some time. Don Pullen was on piano, George Adams on reeds and Danny Richmond was on drums. All three had appeared live with him on the Carnegie Hall record, not to mention studio ones like Mingus Moves or Changes. As such, when they appeared live at the Montreux Jazz Festival on July 20, 1975, they were a solid unit.

The set opens with ‘Devil Blues,” where Adams shouts like a preacher and the band wails behind him. Set against a slow, plodding beat, the tune is downright dirty and bluesy, especially with a tasty trumpet solo by Jack Walrath, where he stretches out with a rich, full tone. From there, Pullen takes a nice solo, and Adams alternates between raging vocals and overblown saxophone. Anchoring it all is Mingus’ walking bass line and Richman’s steady beat.

On the next tune, which Mingus pointedly introduces as “Cell Block F Tis Nazi USA,” the band crashes into another later Mingus composition, but one which shows his talent for creating a distinctive melody — with a hook could have fit right into the Ellington songbook — before Adams launches into a twisting solo, where his sax sounds like it’s struggling against the amount of effort Adams is throwing into it.

Charles Mingus :: Cell Block F

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David Darling :: Cycles

Last year witnessed the opening of the hallowed digital vaults of the ECM label. Long a holdout from digital platforms, the Berlin based ECM (Edition of Contemporary Music) was founded in 1969 by Manfred Eicher in Munich, blurring the lines between contemporary jazz, classical and the avant-garde. Stay tuned for our own chap book dedicated to the label's on-going forward thinking output in the near future. But now, a look at David Darling's celestial become a member or log in.

Barry Walker Jr :: Diaspora Urkontinent

Given the chance, the sound of any instrument can conjure up the sensation of drifting. But few tools seem as equipped for the job as the pedal steel guitar. On Barry Walker Jr.'s marvelous new album Diaspora Urkontinent, the Corvallis, Oregon-based musician builds compositions around the subtly warping sound of his "tectonic pedal steel guitar," bass, and wooden tongue drum. A sideman who's accompanied Michael Hurley and Marisa Anderson, Walker's also a student of geology, who's dedicated himself to study and research on magma systems in the Western United States and South America. His time in the field informs the slow, patient tone of the lp. It's a record focused on underground layers, about the way the world constantly shifts underneath our feet. At times, these songs suggest the ambient country of Harold Budd's The Serpent (In Quicksilver), the mostly-imagined, pan-Polynesian sound of mid-century exotica, or the laidback licks of Red Rhodes, but on album closer "Llora Yavanna," he steps on the fuzz pedal, tapping into the same blasted serenity as Dead Man-era Neil Young. Released by the fine folks at Driftless Recordings, Diaspora Urkontinent sonically illustrates the concept of a great landmass sliding apart, but perhaps moving toward eventual unification some day far from now. words/j woodbury

Barry Walker Jr :: Accretion

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Dumb :: Barnyard

Holding down the down-and-dirty post-post-punk line in 2018. More Minutemen than contemporaries, Vancouver's Dumb aren't afraid to teeter on the edge of falling apart, or falling into syncopation. The catchiest moments on their new LP, Seeing Green, come when the band weaves in-and-out of fidelities - and the uncatchiest moments do just the same, as pleasingly. The album's brisk 33-minutes and 14-tracks zip by, with the  discomfort in not knowing which side things will land on making . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Michael Rault

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

On his new album for Daptone Records subsidiary Wick Records, New Day Tonight, singer/songwriter Michael Rault channels Todd Rundgren and George Harrison vibes into something freshly modern. He's not aiming for pastiche -- "I’m definitely not trying to come up with period pieces," he said in his Aquarium Drunkard interview with Ben Kramer, "...I don’t want to be a museum-guy off doing his ‘70s thing" -- but his values are classic values. Songcraft, arrangements, rhythm sections, these are things Rault holds dear, and his Lagniappe Session selections offer insights into what draws him to a song.

Michael Rault :: Give Me Another Chance (Big Star)

This tune is slightly hidden on the back end of Big Star's legendary debut album #1 Record, but it really stood out to me. The chords are really creative and the lyrics are great. I like that it's a sensitive song about being an angry guy in a moment of vulnerability. I always thought that was somewhat unique.

Michael Rault :: Winter Rose (Billy Nicholls)

A new favorite of mine. I was in the midst of working out the parts so my band could cover it live, so when this came up I thought I might as well take a shot at a bedroom-recorded one-man version. A rare cut from Nicholls' second album, it is chock full of great lyrics and great melodies. It was really fun trying to capture some of the vibe of the original as best I could.

Michael Rault :: Here Without You (The Byrds)

I've recently got really into Gene Clark as a songwriter and singer, and this tune jumped out at me on a compilation of his stuff, although it is actually originally off of the first Byrds record Mr. Tambourine Man. Strangely I've owned that album for a long time but never really paid much mind to this tune until hearing it recently on the comp. The two harmony parts throughout the entire song are almost Everly Brothers-esque, but I felt like they went some interesting places with the vocal arrangement within that template. Very fun to learn and attempt to sing.

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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 526: Jean-Michel Bernard — Genérique Stéphane ++ Mulatu Astatke - Emnete ++ Brian Eno / David Byrne - Regiment ++ African Head Charge - Shebeni’s Theme ++ Ebuk Ubong - Black Debtors ++ The Whitefield Brothers - Safari Strut ++ Sunwatchers - Ancestors (Aquarium Drunkard Session) ++ Dara Puspita - Tanah Airku ++ King Khan & The Shrines - Que Lindo Sueno ++ The Michaels - Beach Sleeper (Outtake) ++ The Beatles - Los . . .

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Tonight in Los Angeles: Talk Show / Aquarium Drunkard In Conversation With Robbie Simon

Los Angeles: Tonight, June 20th, Aquarium Drunkard presents TALK SHOW, an intimate series of conversations centered around the worlds of music, art, film and beyond.

Our second guest in the series is the Los Angeles based artist Robbie Simon, in conversation with Justin discussing background, inspiration, collaboration, music and more. 8pm. Records and revelry to follow. Prints available for sale.

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

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Gillian Welch :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Few songwriters cut to the core like Gillian Welch. Along with her musical partner David Rawlings, Welch pens songs that feel at once timeless and rooted in the deepest American musical traditions. For the Welch, traditional folk forms offer a language for approaching the human condition, a lens through which to view love, loss, death, and spirit. Emerging with 1996’s Revival, she's merged bluegrass, blues, and Appalachian music into a singular Americana sound. Her subsequent albums – including 2001’s Time (The Revelator) and 2011’s The Harrow & the Harvest – aren't only classics, but stand as some of the finest folk records of the new millennium.

Last month, Welch joined us on the Aquarium Drunkard Transmissions podcast in advance of her “An Evening With” tour dates with Rawlings, and the forthcoming vinyl reissue of her 2003 LP Soul Journey, due August 10th. We spoke to Welch via phone about her attention to the long player, album-length statement, and how it’s resulted in such fine lps. That conversation, minimally edited for clarity, is presented here.

Aquarium Drunkard: I want to start off by asking you about one of my favorite songs of yours, "Everything Is Free." When you wrote it, did you have any notion how prophetic that song would end up being? It certainly seems to speak to our current moment.

Gillian Welch: Sadly, it does speak to our current moment. It spoke to the moment I wrote it in. I wrote it in either very late 2000 or very early 2001, I can't quite remember. The whole Napster thing was really starting to have an impact and I just remember I was really, really sad. I just became very afraid that playing music wouldn't be a sustainable career, you know? I thought, "What are we gonna do?" That's kind of in that song. It became really clear to me that I would never stop playing music, but if it was not my career, I would have to do something else to make money. And so music would become something I did for myself, in the privacy of my home. I'm seeing that around me now. It's been really interesting, I have so many friends and acquaintances that are in their 20s and they really don't view music as a viable career. They're kind of giving up or they're not thinking about it in the same way that I did, really. So I don't know, I'm sorry that it's not better than it is now. I don't think it's always gonna stay this way, but it's an ongoing conundrum.

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Kassin :: Relax / Domenico Lancellotti :: Asas

The beat goes on. Alexandre Kassin and Domenico Lancellotti came up in the middle of the last decade as members of the +2s (along with Moreno Veloso, son of Caetano). The trio’s leadership rotated so that each artist got a solo album (“plus two”), and all three records that came of the enterprise are well worth tracking down.

Kassin :: Relax

Veloso returned with 2014’s overlooked Coisa Boa (which featured his +2 bandmates, as well as Rodrigo Amarante and Takako Minekawa), and after releasing solo records of their own in mid-aughts, Kassin and Lancellotti have both made their way back, too. Lancellotti released The Good is a Big God, a collection of sambas lightly dusted with electronic processing and occasionally rising into maelstroms of noise, on May 11, while Kassin’s disco-thumping carioca jammer Relax dropped the same day. Above, Kassin’s title track will take you through a hot Rio night, while Lancellotti’s “Asas” drags you out of town for the comedown. words / m garner

Domenico Lancellotti :: Asas

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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, cultural ephemera, and more. Sign up to receive our newsletter, here

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Azambuja & Cia :: Baiano & Os Novos Caetanos

As Mychal Denzel Smith recently wrote of Curtis Mayfield’s Superfly, “The worst political music sounds political.” Similarly, the worst comic music sounds comic. All due respect to Weird Al, the exception to every rule of taste and success, but funny music is rarely funny, and it’s rarely musical. The success of Flight of the Conchords and The Lonely Island is predicated upon this fact: Both of those groups viewed themselves as writers and creators working in a humorous mode; if their songs felt authentic – authenticity and believability being the key to comedic longevity – it’s because they were true fans of the music they were satirizing, and as a result they knew its contours intuitively. It’s not surprising, then, that funny songs about politics are practically nonexistent; the bar to clear is so high, and the air up there so rarified, that only Randy Newman seems to be able to breathe it with any regularity.

This is what Chico Anysio and Arnaud Rodrigues were up against in the middle of the 1970s in Brazil. The duo worked together on Anysio’s show Chico City, where he’d perform as Paulo Maurî­cio Azambuja, a down-on-his-luck conman who lacked the grace to pull off a real caper. Azambuja had company. With a hardened military dictatorship nearing the end of its first decade in power, Brazil was settling into its hardened new reality. Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil were back from their government-imposed exist in London, and along with Jorge Ben, Gal Costa, and Os Novos Baianos, were renovating Tropicî¡lia, expanding its hybridization of American and British psychedlia with rural Brazilian rhythms to include jazz, funk, and soul in a beguiling mix that usually sounded nothing like any of those genres. The albums being made in this era – Gil’s Expresso 2222 and Refazenda, Ben’s A Tabua de Esmaralda and îfrica Brasil, Os Novos Baianos’ FC – are among the very best ever recorded in Brazil or anywhere else.

Which meant, of course, that they were ripe for parody, so Anysio and Rodrigues teamed up with the excellent jazz-funk trio Azymuth for a pair of albums. 1975’s Azambuja & Cia is a musical chronicle of the titular detective interspersed with a pair of lengthy comedic monologues, while the previous year’s Baiano & Os Novos Caetanos is, as its title suggests, a good-natured take on the novos tropicî¡listas. Despite the intrusion of the former’s monologues and the novelty-ish goof of the latter’s opening track, both albums succeed on purely musical terms, and at times nearly approach the level of the artists they were parodying. Now, in an era calling both for dissent and for the occasional deflation of that dissent, Far Out Recordings is reissuing both records.

Azambuja & Cia’s lineage is more apparent. With Azymuth fleshing out their ideas, Anysio and Rodrigues move between genres like they’re segments of a variety show. They play heady, folk-derived psych-funk on opener “Nega Brecho,” then shift into a bossa-nova groove for “Ao Bililico,” where Jose Menezes’ Rhodes throws a cool-jazz shade over the proceedings. Later, on “Tema do Azambuja,” the eponymous detective struts through Rio over a low-key samba beat turned noir by a folding bassline; flecks of disco guitar spit by as he makes his way through the night. As the album progresses, the groove begins to fade, giving way to the gorgeous “Maristela,” a song that begins like an updated “Mas Que Nada” and quickly evolves into a plaintive, sax-led love song that flirts with a smoothness just beyond its reach.

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Itsuro Shimoda :: Everybody Anyone みんな誰でも (1973)

"Everybody Anyone", via Itsuro Shimoda's Love Songs And Lamentations, 1973. After a year of intent listening, framing what I imagined the haunted Japanese lyrical content to be, I did the unimaginable (no, obvious) and Googled it. And up came Youtube . . .

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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 525: Jean-Michel Bernard — Genérique Stéphane ++ The Rock*A*Teens - Don’t Destroy This Night ++   The Dirty Three - Great Waves ++ Amen Dunes - Green Eyes ++ Mr. Airplane Man - Jesus On The Mainline (Traditional) ++ Cat Power - Cross Bones Style ++ The Breeders - Metal Man ++ Bill Callahan - Drover ++ Case Studies - Secrets ++ Bonnie “Prince” Billy - My . . .

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