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Cloakroom :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

On Indiana power trio Cloakroom's new album Time Well, the band weds shoegaze's blurry impressionism to post-rock heaviness and a rootsy framework. It's a heavy record, but its heft is due to more than the thick layers of guitar. On songs like "Seedless Star" and "Concrete Gallery," singer Doyle Martin conjures a particular atmosphere with his airy vocals; listen closely, and the influence of country rock and blues emerges, woven deeply into the band's dream rock aesthetic. But that influence can also be heard explicitly -- see the band's cover of Songs: Ohia's "Steve Albini's Blues," in which the band inhabits the song of another heavy metal-leaning Indiana boy -- and Time Well's "Hymnal," which finds the band reworking the 19th century American spiritual "Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)," imbuing the traditional song with space rock textures.

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amiina and Lee Hazlewood :: Hilli (At The Top Of The World)

Earlier this month marked the 10th anniversary of the departure of Lee Hazlewood from our plane, on August 4, 2007. In the decade since his passing, Hazlewood's music has been the source of no small amount of fascination. The focused attention on his work feels as strong as ever, bolstered by a series of reissues and  retrospectives from Light in the Attic, the tremendous personal biography Lee, Myself, and I: Inside the Very Special World of Lee Hazlewood by Wyndham Wallace, and numerous covers and interpretations of his work.

But the final word, it seems, always belongs to Lee himself. Released shortly after his death, "Hilli (At the Top of the World)" remains a fitting tribute to Hazlewood. Recorded with Icelandic quartet amiina, known predominately for their work with Sigur Ros, the song featured Hazlewood reading lyrics written by Wallace, capturing a spirit of environmental wonder and beauty.

At the top of the world there’s an island
A place where the sun never shines
But the people don’t care
Because the snow over there
Is so bright that the sun’s in their mind.

The song was recently reissued digitally and as a limited 12" record in honor of its 10th anniversary, and precedes the reissue of amiina’s kurr. Haunting and quizzical, "Hilli (At the Top of the World") serves as a reminder of Hazlewood's playful spirit and singular voice. words/j woodbury

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Leonard Cohen :: Montreux Jazz Festival, June 25, 1976

There’s no shortage of Leonard Cohen live albums from over the years, but there's never been an official release from the man’s 1976 summer tour of Europe. This masterful two-hour Montreux set would do the trick nicely — backed by a versatile band, Cohen leans into his hits with a swagger worthy of Sinatra and offers up a handful of less-traveled tracks. You don’t really think of his music as particularly funky, but hey, it was ‘76 and disco was in the air; “Lover Lover Lover” and “There Is A War” are darkly comic boogies . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (Noon EST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can be heard twice every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 491: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Gil Scott-Heron - Message To The Messengers ++ Sinkane - U’Huh ++ Gal Costa - Relance ++ Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy w/ Tortoise - Cravo î‰ Canela ++ Yoko Ono - Mind Train (AD edit) ++ Lizzy Mercier Descloux - Wawa ++ Yabby U - Conquering Dub (excerpt) ++ Serge Gainsbourg - Javanaise Remake ++ Brian Eno - No One Receiving ++ Faust - Just A Second (Starts Like That!) [excerpt] ++ Bitchin Bajas - Bajas . . .

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Pierre Cavalli :: Un Soir Chez Norris

Composed by jazz guitarist Pierre Cavalli, swirling widescreen French psychedelia lifted from the short-lived 1971 television drama Un Soir Chez Norris.

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Sonny Sharrock :: Once Upon A Time

Reflecting on the ebb and flow of his career, three years prior to his death in 1994, Sonny Sharrock noted "the last five years have been pretty strange for me, because I went twelve years without making a record at all, and then in the last five, I've made seven records under my own name." Or more simply put, an artist in his fifth decade unquestionably hitting his stride.

As a final curtain call, Ask The Ages is exemplary. Released in . . .

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Gal Costa :: Índia

This Friday Mr Bongo Records is set to reissue Gal Costa’s fourth album, 1973’s îndia. A record heralded for its brave experimentation, it's a bold and cohesive work the label deems a “post-Tropicalia masterpiece.” We wouldn't argue.

India is a subtle yet revolutionary statement, one in which Costa stands her ground by remaining her uncompromising self. Brave, generous, and genuine, the nine performances marvel across . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Sinkane – A Sudanese Mixtape

Ahmed Gallab is Sinkane. The Sudanese-American multi-instrumentalist, who to date has released six genre bending albums of rhythmic poly-global funk, pop and electronica, returned earlier this year with Life & Livin' It. That record, like much of his discography, roots freely; a borderless aural cross-pollination of soulful pan-African and Jamaican sounds stirred into a bouillabaisse of American pop, rock, r&b and beyond. It's an intoxicating . . .

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Never The Same :: Hiss Golden Messenger On Bright Phoebus

Ask the most dedicated followers of British folk rock about the most sought after lost classic of the canon, and you'll likely hear 1972's Bright Phoebus: The Songs of Mike and Lal Waterson cited as a holy grail. The work of two siblings, it followed the dissolution of their family band the Watersons. Mike and Lal assembled a massive cast to record the album, including sister Norma Waterson, Ashley Hutchings, much of the lineup of Steeleye Span, Martin Carthy, Richard Thompson and Dave Mattacks of Fairport Convention, and more. But it was released to little fanfare. Due to a manufacturing error, only 1,000 copies ever found their way into the hands of folk fans, many of whom were confused by the band's peculiar mix of avant-garde, country, folk, and psychedelia, and bewildered by the disillusioned and wounded lyrical sensibility.

But dedicated listeners kept Bright Phoebus alive, passing the album along around as a bootleg. It gained high profile fans like Stephen Malkmus, Billy Bragg, Arcade Fire, and Jarvis Cocker and Richard Hawley. Though the Lal and Mike both passed away (in 1998 and 2011, respectively) the album continued to grow in esteem. Recently, it was finally reissued by Domino Records, with great great taken to enhance its fidelity and expand its context (the new edition features demos and longform notes by scholar Pete Paphides).

One of the album's most vocal admirers is M.C. Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger. It's one of Taylor's favorites, and it's not hard to hear a similar play between the elements of light and shadow in the songs of his forthcoming album, Hallelujah Anyhow, due out September 22 via Merge Records. AD spoke to Taylor at his hotel room outside of Portland, Oregon, where he was prepping for a set at Pickathon. Below, his thoughts on the haunting longevity of Bright Phoebus.

Mike and Lal Waterson :: Scarecrow"

M.C. Taylor: I got quite into British folk music in the early 2000s through a friend of mine named Michael Talbot who, he was younger than me, but he just had an encyclopedic knowledge, particularly of British folk music. I really liked the Watersons...you gotta be in it totally...you gotta have a dedication [to listen]...you've got to wanna be there at that place. That music speaks to me, their particular voices, there was something about them that I really felt compelling.

There was something that felt timeless about it, it was sort of biblical in that way. Then of course...I heard about Bright Phoebus, probably in 2005, I would say. I tracked a copy down. I actually have an original Topic pressing. I didn't realize until really recently that only 1,000 copies of that record actually made it out, because there were manufacturing issues and stuff with that record. I found a copy back then and there's something about that record that sort of put it in the same space that all of my favorite records exist in, which is that I didn't get it on first listen -- or even the first 10 listens -- but there was something that compelled me to keep going back to it.

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Manu Dibango :: Electric Africa

The vinyl reissue front just got a little funkier. Next month Tidal Waves Music presents Manu Dibango's Electric Africa. Recorded in Paris in 1985, the project was produced by Bill Laswell and filled out by American heavyweights Herbie Hancock, Bernie Worrell and Nicky Skopelitis, along with Senegalese drummer Aiyb Dieng and synth-guru Waliou Jacques Badarou. Look for it September 22, worldwide. Until then, "L'Arbre A Palabres".

Manu Dibango :: L'Arbre A Palabres

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Arnold Dreyblatt and The Orchestra Of Excited Strings :: Propellers In Love

Earlier this year, the fine folks at Superior Viaduct reissued renegade composer Arnold Dreyblatt's 1986 LP Propellers In Love, a work of intonated minimalism performed with his Orchestra of Excited Strings. Seeing William Tyler perform  with Megafaun last weekend at Pickathon put me in a Dreyblatt mood -- the band's 2013 collaboration with . . .

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David Earle Johnson / Jan Hammer :: Time Is Free

Drums. Synths. Space. In 1977, four years following the dissolution of Mahavishnu Orchestra, Jan Hammer teamed with percussionist David Earle Johnson for Time Is Free - the first of a pair of collaborative albums. Having carved out his own solo career beginning with 1975's The First Seven Days

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Steve Wynn (The Dream Syndicate) :: The AD Interview

The Paisley Underground is the kind of scene that makes for a good verbal secret handshake. While its myriad branches snaked into the mainstream eventually thanks to Mazzy Star, the band that most transcended its range was The Dream Syndicate. While their 1982 debut full length The Days of Wine and Roses seems to owe its debt to the noisier end of psychedelia, the subsequent three albums took off across a range of American and European rock traditions. It had seemed like 1988's Ghost Stories was going to be the final word, but now, 29 years later, comes How Did I Find Myself Here?, due out September 18th. Founding member and vocalist Steve Wynn sat down with Aquarium Drunkard to discuss the band's reformation, the new album, the LP's Aquarium Drunkard connection, and why hearing Kendra Smith's vocal track was like Christmas morning.

Aquarium Drunkard: I found an interview you did back in 2013 with Slicing Up Eyeballs - back when the Dream Syndicate reunion, reformation or whatever you want to call it first happened. You said that your goal for making a new record was that you always thought there should've been an album between The Days of Wine and Roses and Medicine Show and that you wanted to try and tap into how the band was evolving during that period. Was that an idea that stayed with you during the making of this album? Did that end up coming true to some extent?

Steve Wynn: No, but that was a definite, solid idea I had back then because I always wished there had been a record between the two. Just because those records are so different and the progression from The Days of Wine and Roses to Medicine Show was actually pretty logical, if you lived it in real time like we did. For a lot of people, they didn't see all the steps in between. So I thought about that for a long time, and when we reformed the band and people would ask about a new record, that was kind of in the back of my mind.

But in the years since - like you said, that was 4 years ago - this particular lineup really evolved from show to show, tour to tour. We did about 50 shows before making the record. It is the Dream Syndicate, very much in the spirit and history of the Dream Syndicate. It's got me and Dennis [Duck; drummer] who were there from the start, and Mark [Walton; bass] who almost goes back to the start and Jason [Victor; guitar] who is probably the leading living scholar on the Dream Syndicate in some ways [laughs], who really understands what we're all about, knows our music and keeps us on the straight and narrow about who we were. It's a reunion, but it's the Dream Syndicate. But as time went on, I realized this is just a really good incarnation, tradition-bearing version of the Dream Syndicate, so the motivation changed to where I really just wanted to document this band.

I sort of feel after awhile when we'd tour and talk to people about the band, people would ask 'let me get this straight, who are the original members and where did this person come from' and those are all reasonable questions. I'm the kind of person who reads Aquarium Drunkard and likes archival material and cares about the history of music and the details. But also this is the band right now. Every time we'd play a show, people would leave saying this is a really good band. That became the motivation for making a record - just to be able to say, this is who we are right now and we think you're going to dig it. On top of that, I wanted to keep playing shows and touring, but didn't want to be confined by being a nostalgia act and only playing old songs. All that was kind of in the back of my mind, more than that original and very real but forgotten concept. [laughs] We'll do that one next time.

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Robert Wyatt :: Yolanda

Beyond Soft Machine. Cut in August of 1984 via Rough Trade, "Yolanda" was originally released via the ever-evolving English musician Robert Wyatt's four track ep, Work In Progress. One of two Spanish language tracks, the ep is also notable for Wyatt's re-working of Peter Gabriel's 1980 anti-apartheid protest song, "Biko . . .

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