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Beverly Copeland :: Good Morning Blues (1970)

With vox akin to Linda Perhacs, Beverly Copeland dropped this one in 1970. Soul deep, Copeland's vocals are sparsely accented by acoustic guitar and trumpet, riffing on the stirring black hound of depression that woefully does not abate with the morning sun.

Beverly Copeland :: Good Morning Blues

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Jazz Dispensary Presents: Soul Diesel (Volume II)

Jazz Dispensary returns with another crucial clutch of tracks, this time in the form of Soul Diesel Vol. 2, an organ-driven set of jammers being released, appropriately enough, on 4/21 for Record Store Day.

Like the original Soul Diesel comp, which the LA-based label released in 2016, Vol. 2 takes its name from Sour Diesel, a cannabis strain known for its energizing and . . .

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Art Bell :: 1945-2018

"I think -- no, I'm sure -- Coast to Coast wouldn't work with a daytime audience."

Art Bell died in his Pahrump home in the Nevada desert on Friday, April 13. No doubt, someone somewhere is already prepping to dispute the information provided by his pending autoposy, to allege that perhaps the "facts" should be questioned. Maybe something else has transpired. Incredulously, they will construct an alternate timeline and ask, "But what about [blank?]" As it should be.

Bell got his start as a rock deejay, but transitioned into talk radio in the late '70s. Talking about politics bored him, and he shifted discussion on his West Coast AM program to conspiracy theory. Renaming the show Coast to Coast AM in 1988, he found his calling, talking about the paranormal with listeners late at night. Whether you were a hardcore believer, a permissive skeptic, just there for kicks, or a combination of them all (as I find myself), Bell provided a singular radio experience. It wasn't about truly interrogative interviews -- Bell was happy to let a lot of suspect info slide right on by -- it was about his unparalleled mastery of atmosphere. Listeners tuned into C2C and its spinoff Dreamland for the far-out conversations about aliens, shadow people, other dimensions, Area 51, Roswell, shadowy government agencies, and  Mel's Hole, as well as interviews with free-thinking luminaries like Robert Anton Wilson  and Terrence McKenna, and rants from deeply problematic folks like  David Icke. But just as much, they tuned in for Bell himself and the curious radio theater he constructed, the way he made curiosity a virtue, made strange things seem possible, or perhaps even plausible. They came for hidden truths, but stayed, I suspect, because Bell created something remarkable through his innovative use of silence, AM's soft fuzz, and haunting music.

Bell continued hosting Coast to Coast until 2003, when he moved to weekend hosting gigs, which he continued until 2007, when he moved into occasional guest host spots. He formed two other short-lived shows: the evocatively named Midnight in the Desert and Dark Matter, both of which captured some elements of the classic show, but were beset by problems, including Bell's assertion that someone -- perhaps something -- was targeting him.

"I love all-night, and I would never leave it," Bell told Larry King in 1999. "I think there's something special about the night and nighttime people."   words / j woodbury  

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Damien Jurado :: Allocate

At the conclusion of the majestic Maraqopa trilogy, and four consecutive records with Richard Swift behind the boards, Damien Jurado returns to a previous form on his upcoming, self-produced lp,

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Dean Ween :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Here's how I first encountered Ween. I'm in junior high and in the lunch line at the school cafeteria, shuffling my tray along that metal railing, as my buddy, who as an adult would do some terrible things and spend some time up behind bars, tried to explain to me who Ween was. Or rather what Ween was.

He had a cassette copy of 12 Golden Country Greats in hand, the band's fifth album, featuring 10 C&W songs recorded with producer 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 518: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ OMNI - Sunset Preacher ++ Omni - Confessional ++ Wire - Strange   ++ Drinks - Real Outside ++ Shopping - The Hype ++ Kindness - Gee Up ++ Sonny & The Sunsets - Death Cream ++ The Babies - Get Lost   ++ The Almighty Defenders - I’m Coming Home ++ Harlem - South of France ++ King Khan And The Shrines - Le Fils Du Jaques Dutronc ++ Jaques . . .

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Orrin Evans :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

The movement of musicians into or out of a jazz ensemble isn’t the kind of news that draws much attention. They are so often juggling different projects and schedules that it doesn’t raise any eyebrows when there’s a fill-in for a gig or another player sits in for a recording session. But the announcement that pianist Ethan Iverson was stepping down as a member of the Bad Plus, the trio he co-founded in 2000, to be replaced by Orrin Evans, sent a small ripple of shock through the jazz world.

The music of the Bad Plus–an angular, fractured sound, incorporating the influences of modern classical, experimental electronic fare, and rock–was entirely dependent on the chemistry of Iverson and his longtime bandmates drummer Dave King and bassist Reid Anderson. Even when they welcomed other players into the fold for a spell, as they did with tenor saxophonist Joshua Redman (for the 2015 album The Bad Plus Joshua Redman) and vocalist Wendy Lewis (on 2008’s For All I Care), the trio remained the nucleus around which these charged particles swirled.

But as Iverson transitions into a new chapter of his musical life (he announced at the PDX Jazz Festival that he had just finished and submitted his first piano concerto), Anderson and King decided to not let their artistic connection fizzle out. Instead, they reached out to a friend and fellow musical wanderer Evans to complete their circle.

It’s a fitting pick, too. While Evans’ recordings as a bandleader are much more direct, bluesy, and often swinging than the Bad Plus’s work, his playing is so versatile and deeply considered that it can adjust to meet the challenges of King’s mathematical compositions and get into the swim Anderson’s more fluid songwriting.

That’s what’s apparent when listening to Never Stop II, the first album these three men have made together. The title is a nod both to the fact that it is the second Bad Plus album to feature only original work and to this new phase of the group’s trajectory. As this collection proves, the transition was clearly a smooth one, with Evans even adapting a pair of his own compositions–“Boffadem” and “Commitment,” both originally recorded for the 2000 project Seed–to blend in with the trio’s minimalist aesthetic.

Aquarium Drunkard reached Evans on the phone in his native Philadelphia to talk about joining the Bad Plus, and finding his place within this beloved musical institution.

Aquarium Drunkard: How did this come about, you joining The Bad Plus? Was this Reid and Dave coming to you directly?

Orrin Evans: Well, yeah. That’s the only way it’s gonna happen. Reid and I go way back. He was one of the people that exposed me to a lot of music. There’s only two years between us, maybe three, but somewhat of a big brother. I was finishing up high school and he was attending Curtis Institute. I needed a bass player for my sister’s graduation party back in 1991. The bass player I had originally called couldn’t make it. There’s an organization in Philadelphia called the Clef Club of Performing Arts, which came out of the Black Musicians Union. A gentleman by the name of Lovett Hines called me and said, “There’s a bass player who just got in town. You need to give him a call. His name is Reid Anderson.” And the rest is history as they say.

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Minami Deutsch :: With Dim Light

Behold With Dim Light, the excellent new album from Japanese psych-heads, Minami Deutsch.

As Kikagaku Moyo and Guruguru Brain honcho, Go Kurosawa, mentioned last year, the band’s self-titled debut was more or less different variations on the motorik beat. This is not that. “Concrete Ocean” opens into a nice zone that’s more fusion than krautrock, though there is a definite “One More Night” vibe in the air. After repeated listens, “Tangled Yarn” very much remains a 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 517: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Iceage - Catch It ++ Idles - Mother ++ Ought - Beautiful Blue Sky ++ Abe Vigoda - House ++ Disappears -   ++ Gone Completely ++ Crystal Stilts - Precarious Stair ++ Veronica Falls - Veronica Falls ++ Shopping - The Hype ++ Omni - Cold Vermouth ++ Parquet Courts - Alms For The Poor ++ The Soft Boys - I Got The Hots ++ Psychedelic Furs - Sister Europe ++ Wire - Used To . . .

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Colin Newman (Wire) :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

2018 looks to be a banner year for fans of the defiantly minimal Wire. Following 2017's Silver/Lead, a record that marked the band's 40th anniversary in the most inspiring way possible -- by demonstrating its continued vitality -- Pink Flag Records has readied a wealth of archival releases for this year. First up, the Nine Sevens box set, collecting nine 7" singles recorded between 1977-1980, which hits record stores on April 21, Record Store Day.  And then, May 18th will see the release of expanded, deluxe editions of the quartet's first three albums, Pink Flag (1977), Chairs Missing (1978), and 154 (1979). Documenting the group's initial creative burst, the reissues are designed as definitive editions.

"If you're going for completeness, you've got to be complete," says Wire leader Colin Newman via Skype.

Presented with remastered audio, demos, B-sides, alternate takes, unreleased material, an 80-page book, and a wealth of photos by photographer Annette Green, who shot the legendary Pink Flag  and Chairs Missing album covers as well,  the expanded editions are the result of Newman and his small team of collaborators raiding the EMI archives, creating combination reissue/contextual art project. While the core albums  will continue to be available via streaming outlets, the significant trove of bonus material will remain exclusive to these physical box sets.

Aquarium Drunkard caught up with Newman to explore the band's enduring legacy while he and the group prep for a trip to Marfa, Texas, to play the Marfa Myths  April 12-15 festival alongside Amen Dunes, Suzanne Ciani, Terry Allen, and many more. Sustaining his foundational artistic stance for more than four decades, Newman remains a sharp, funny presence.

Aquarium Drunkard:  You've never been a backward-looking band. Wire has always charged forward. What has the process of re-evaluating your work like this felt like?

Colin Newman: It does your head in. [Laughs] Not to put too fine a point on it. It's a very strange, slightly surreal experience. I think we've always very much lived in the present. It's about what's going on right now with the band and always has been. In that respect, it isn't any different than how it was in 1977. But on the other side, it was a different combination of people [founding guitarist Bruce Gilbert departed in 2006] and that's something I'm very aware of when dealing with material from that time. You know, like any group of people, each person has their own thing to bring to the mix.

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Seu Jorge And Almaz :: Everybody Loves The Sunshine

In 2010 LA's Now Again Records dropped a 12" of   Brazilian singer-songwriter Seu Jorge backed by the group Almaz, comprised of drummer Pupillo, guitarist Lucio Maia and rounded out by bassist and composer Antonio Pinto. Like the majority of the label's output, the collaboration felt both immediate and timeless, especially their rendering of Roy Ayers' "Everybody Loves The Sunshine", originally found on Ayers' 1976 lp of the same name.

The Almaz project, which initially began . . .

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Sitka Sun :: Yes Yes Forward

Sitka Sun, the self-titled album marking the inaugural release from The Long Road Society, introduces itself as an Afrobeat record – and in some ways this is true. But it’s also not, as the six genre-bending tracks contort the record into something else, something hard to categorize. And it's all the better for it.

While the flagship number “Yes Yes Forward” evokes lead musician Patrick Murphy’s inner Fela, it soon dissolves into a swaying, psychedelic vehicle breaking freely into looser, spacey-er jams that . . .

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