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Robyn Hitchcock :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

A conversation with Robyn Hitchcock can at times feel a lot his lyrics; just when things seem grounded, the skies open up and we're off in the clouds for a whimsical journey. A very affable fellow, there’s great humor spiced through his words, often moving quickly between the visceral and surreal. Following a conversation this past month in San Francisco, we caught up with Hitchcock to chat about his career, living in Nashville, and his excellent new self-titled album.

Aquarium Drunkard: At the show last month you mentioned how happy you are with the new record. What aspects pleased you with this one?

Robyn Hitchcock: Just everything worked at once. It was just a series of really good coincidences. I got a very good crop of songs. Brendan Benson, we'd been talking for a year or two about doing something. It turned out something meant producing a record.

AD: What all did he bring to the table as far as his production?

Robyn Hitchcock: He brought a few things. He brought, or helped bring, some of the musicians that I recorded with. The bass is Jon Estes  and the drummer Jon Radford. And his studio. It was quite a collaborative venture. He'd look at the songs and make suggestions, sometimes for the structure. He'd suggest chord changes which I then wouldn't use...you know, he's another musician and songwriter. He's my partner so he kind of stood up to me. Especially as you get older you can kind of call all the shots, and if you do that you never really surprise yourself. But I wasn't passive either, I wasn't the passenger. It wasn't like 'okay Brendan, bend me and shape me any way you want'. It was much more. Me and the guys would sort of work out moving parts, and the structure. The structures are pretty much mine, but a lot of the sort of mechanics of it were worked out. In regards to bass and drums, it was all looked at. It wasn't like, 'okay Robyn's got the chords, we'll just back along.' Which is how it sometimes goes, because I like getting new musicians when they're fresh and haven't too much time to live with the song. But these people lived with the songs almost instantly. They're really kind of tuned up. The record sounds like we've been playing together for years, but actually a lot of the players had only just heard the songs that evening.

Robyn Hitchcock :: Mad Shelley’s Letterbox

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Outro Tempo: Electronic And Contemporary Music From Brazil 1978-1992

Earlier this year Netherlands-based reissue outfit Music From Memory released the wonderful and exquisitely strange compilation, Outro Tempo: Electronic And Contemporary Music From Brazil 1978-1992. A collection of exotic, otherworldly futurism and electronics, born from the . . .

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House And Land :: S/T

Sarah Louise Henson's dazzling 2016 LP on VDSQ was one of the year's best examples of the ever-expanding 21st century guitar soli scene. She's followed it up this year with a similarly fantastic . . .

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Pop Makossa: The Invasive Dance Beat of Cameroon 1976-1984

Makossa, the infectious dance music of Cameroon, blended beautifully with funk, disco and pop in the late 70s and early 80s – and the Analog Africa label has gathered together some of the period's amazing highlights in this recommended compilation. Put together by deep crate digger and Analog Africa founder Samy Ben Redjeb and DJ and music producer Déni Shain, become a member or log in.

The Besnard Lakes :: You Make Loving Fun (Fleetwood Mac)

Enter the Besnard Lakes cover of the Mac classic “You Make Loving Fun". Back in January of 2013, UK magazine MOJO included a companion disc of Fleetwood Mac covers entitled,  Rumours Revisited: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac’s Classic 1977 Album. It features the group’s trademark guitar wash and wall-of-sound . . .

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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 487: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Omni - Afterlife ++ Medium Medium - Hungry, So Angry ++ Talking Heads - Seen And Not Seen ++ Vivienne Goldman - Private Armies Dub ++ Maximum Joy - Let It Take You There ++ Atlas Sound - Recent Bedroom ++ Brian Eno - No One Receiving ++ Cave - Arrow’s Myth ++ Fela Kuti - This Is Sad ++ Johnny Rotton/Sid Vicious interview ++ Steel Leg - Unlikely Pub ++ Serge Gainsbourg . . .

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Yoko Ono :: Mind Train

In the liner notes of 1971's Fly, Yoko Ono included a special note about Fluxus instrument maker Joe Jones: "I was always fascinated by the idea of making special instruments for special emotions -- instruments that lead us to emotions arrived by their own motives rather than by our control."

That idea, of implement informing expression, hovers over the three albums comprising Secretly Canadian and Chimera Music's second wave of Ono reissues: Fly, and 1973's Approximately Infinite Universe and Feeling . . .

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Jah Wobble :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

“Left to our own devices with this group, we’ll lean toward jazz, funk, Afrobeat,” bassist Jah Wobble says of his band, Invaders of the Heart.

Though best known for the noisy work he did on albums like First Issue and Metal Box with  Johnny Rotten's post Sex Pistols band Public Image Ltd, Wobble (real name John Wardle -- say it out loud) has been a restlessly creative player for nearly 40 years. A consummate collaborator, he's worked with Brian Eno, Sinead O'Connor, U2's The Edge, Holger Czukay and Jaki  . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Gold Star

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

This week's installment of the Lagniappe Sessions catches up with the Los Angeles-based Gold Star - the songwriting/performance vehicle of Marlon Rabenreither. Bathed in reverb, Rabenreither lays down a Billy Swan inspired take of the King's "Don't Be Cruel" along with the Springsteen . . .

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Transmissions Podcast :: Nick Lowe

Welcome to Aquarium Drunkard's Transmissions Podcast, a recurring series of conversations with songwriters, authors, and creators about what drives their art. We're proud to share an interview with Nick Lowe this week. AD's Jason P. Woodbury talked with the producer, songwriter, and performer, who's made records with Elvis Costello, the Damned, Squeeze, Johnny Cash, and dozens more, and penned classic songs like "What's So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding," "Cruel to Be Kind," "I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass," "The Beast in Me," and many others.

On Friday, July 14th, Yep Roc Records releases the first in a series of reissues documenting Lowe's '80s era, beginning with 1982's Nick the Knife and 1983's The Abominable Showman, with the rest of his catalog through 1990's Party of One coming throughout 2017. The period saw the British rocker expanding his stylistic palette, exploring the ties between skiffle and country music. While his edges softened some sonically, his lyrical focus remained sharp, and songs like "All Men Are Liars" and "My Heart Hurts" point to the kind of songs that would bolster his late career renaissance in the early 2000s and up to present day. We reached Lowe from Nashville to discuss those records, his marriage to Carlene Carter, pub rock, punk rock, hanging out with Lemmy's pre-Motî¶rhead band Hawkwind in the early days, and a lot more.

Transmissions Podcast :: Nick Lowe

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Mid-Century Sounds :: Deep Cuts from the Desert

Dedicated record heads will certainly recognize some of the names on the tracklist of Mid-Century Sounds: Deep Cuts From the Desert, a new 2xlp survey of southwestern sounds: country star Waylon Jennings, rockabilly king Sanford Clark, and Wrecking Crew guitarist Al Casey. But it's the name "Floyd Ramsey" that serves as a thread connecting the disparate sounds of the compilation, tying the western shuffle of Joe Montgomery's "Two Time Loser" to the loose R&B of Roosevelt Nettles' Chess single "Drifting Heart" and binding the raw garage rocker "What's Happening" by Phil and the Frantics to the strutting funk of Fat City. Ramsey owned Phoenix's Audio Recorders studio -- where Duane Eddy cut the famous "Rebel Rouser" with Lee Hazlewood and engineer Jack Miller -- and headed a series of record labels, including Liberty Bell, Ramco, MCI, and Rev, responsible for issuing much of the material collected here. In short, a significant stretch of Arizona's musical history is bound up in the personal history of Floyd Ramsey.

Shepherded by David Hilker and Jeff Freundlich of Phoenix's Fervor Records, Deep Cuts from the Desert documents the fertile period from 1957-1973. The collection offers a wide-angled snapshot of Phoenix's popular music scene from that time. Regional hits like Christopher Blue's soft-pop 1970 single "Happy Just to Be Alive" and Judy Linn's brass and string-laden 1961 lover's lament "Old Enough to Have a Broken Heart" sit alongside nationally recognized fare like Al Casey's "Cooking" and Ted Newman's "Plaything," which earned the singer a spot on the RCA Records roster in 1958. Featuring western ballads, sun-baked funk, garage rock, country, and sepia-toned pop, the album speaks to Ramsey's wide taste and interest in diverse sounds.

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Bomboclat! Island Soak 7 :: Jamaican Vintage (A Mixtape)

Island Soak Vol. 7 is back. Heavy on the rocksteady, twenty-three deep cuts highlighting the abundance of crooning talent and metronome-like rhythms that populated the era. Contact high approved . . .

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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 486: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++  Quincy Jones — Hummin’ ++ Harare — Give ++ Jingo — Keep Holding On (pt. 1) ++ Dwight Sykes — Bye ++ Alton Memela — The Things We Do In Soweto ++  Gene Boyd — Thought Of You Today ++ The Montgomery Express — The Montgomery Express ++ The 4th Coming — Cruising Down The Street ++ Trinidad . . .

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Lynn Castle :: Rose Colored Corner

At the height of the swinging '60s, Lynn Castle was a barber to the stars. Del Shannon, members of the The Monkees and the Byrds, Sonny and Cher, Neil Young, and more, Castle groomed them all, indulging in the cultural moment when the country embraced long locks on men and women alike. Nicknamed "The Lady Barber," she became a West Coast phenomenon from her station at Rogue Barber Shop in Los Angeles. The Washington Post wrote about her in 1967, calling her a "shapely blonde in blue jeans." Long hair was, "Not just for actors," Castle is quoted. "Even conservative doctors and lawyers look good with long hair."

But even as buzz crescendoed around her work as a stylist, Castle was living something of a double life. When she wasn't working at the salon or taking care of her two children, she was writing poignant, sepia-toned ballads. Though her songs were recorded by the Spinners ("Love's Prayer," which she wrote as a teenager) and the Monkees ("Teeny Tiny Gnome (Kicking Stones)," recorded during the More of the Monkees sessions), most never saw the light of day. Until now. The recordings she made with producers Jack Nitzsche and Lee Hazlewood are featured on a new collection from Light in the Attic, Rose Colored Corner, named for the song included here twice, as both a stark demo recording and an arranged, psychedelic version with Phoenix psych-band Last Friday's Fire.

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Golden Retriever / A Mixtape

Built on a foundation of altered/mutated bass clarinet and synthesizer, the sound of Portland's Golden Retriever evokes vast expanses. Though the core of the project remains Matt Carlson and Jonathan Sielaff, those expanses get even wider with Rotations, the duo's forthcoming album. Out July 28 via Thrill Jockey, it features a maximized approach, incorporating the playing of a full chamber ensemble, with strings, reeds, pipe organ, piano, and percussion in concert with the duo's cosmic drones. Built from edited and collaged . . .

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