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Van Morrison :: The Authorized Bang Collection

Rather than introduce a bevy of unearthed material or special-features, The Authorized Bang Collection retells a chapter of Van Morrison’s career in a reframed light using existing material. Famously, Morrison did not approve of 1967’s Blowin’ Your Mind, nor the collection of outtakes and half-serious sessions that followed it. The time preceding 1968’s groundbreaking Astral Weeks has come to be seen as a false start in Morrison’s solo career, and the artistic shift post-Bang as a kind of unshackling.

Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the 3-CD collection comes in the form of Morrison’s own essay, which starts off the collection’s booklet. In it, Bang founder Bert Berns decision to release Blowin’ Your Mind is recalled of thusly:

“I thought the recordings were going to be issued as four singles, at least that’s what I was told. But after the first single, ‘Brown Eyed Girl', hit Top 10 that summer, Bang issued the eight songs as an album… At the time, the whole ‘concept album’ was coming in and singles were going out. The whole concept of an album completely changed then… If I had thought it was an album, I would have approached it a whole different way.”

Berns is painted after that as a man consumed with his work, too busy for Van but also serving as an early kindred spirit, with Morrison complimenting Berns’ songwriting throughout the essay.   Morrison later states that the second set of sessions with Bang were limp because of the Berns-picked musicians inability to “gel” with what Van was bringing to the table.

The third disc of the set, the aptly titled “Contractual Obligation Session,” is wholly uninspired, and showcases an angry, cheeky and hurried Morrison. But where there are more than a dozen tracks that feel like salvos, a ditty like “You Say France And I Whistle” shows that Morrison was at least pulling from some creative place while he clanged away on an acoustic guitar, desperate to get out of the room.

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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 483: Jean-Michel Bernard — Générique Stéphane ++ Pierre Cavalli - Un Soir Chez Norris ++ Françoise Hardy - Je N'Attends Plus Personne ++ The New Creation - Countdown To Revolution (excerpt) ++ Bob Desper - The World Is Crying For Love ++ Re-Creation - Music ++ John Scoggins - For You ++ Wilco - More ++ Caetano Veloso - You Don’t . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Joan Shelley

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

One of our favorite albums of the year, the self-titled Joan Shelley is not only the artist’s best record to date, but her most necessary. High praise considering the impact of her previous become a member or log in.

Sam Amidon :: The Following Mountain

Sam Amidon possesses the traits of an archetypal American songster: fiddle and banjo mastery, as well as a lifetime spent among his repertoire of deeply rooted folksongs. His interpretations of traditional tunes and ballads are often expansive reworks that set his singular voice and deft accompaniment amidst a frontier of harmonically rich orchestrations or a chatter of burbling jazz. He radiates a wondrous enthusiasm like John Hartford, and channels the tuneful grit of Bruce Molsky.  Just as with those charismatic song-collector/performers before him, Amidon's most compelling and definitive instrument is his singing. His unmistakable voice makes a bald coo, delivered with composure, sans vibrato. It's akin to the high and lonesome sound, but with none of that idiom's aloof distance. Amidon sounds disarmingly present.   That quality is, perhaps, at the core of his art: the ability to transform something timeless into something present, to alchemize a well-worn melody into a beautiful, mysterious sound.

This idea extends to the formation of his personal canon. His repertoire of "folk" music is remarkable in that it extends to contemporary pop songs and can move convincingly from the traditional "Short Life of Trouble" to Tim McGraw’s "My Old Friend" to R. Kelly’s “Relief.” Any distinction of authenticity between a communal folk song and a pop star's hit is eclipsed by Amidon's ability to pluck the essential sentiment and beauty out of his selection and send it billowing into the air, like making a wish with dandelion.

The Following Mountain  marks a departure for Amidon, however. It is his first record to focus on original material rather than interpretations of folk songs. Traditional songs had been the peaks from which Amidon surveyed the aesthetic expanse of his musical world.  The Following Mountain  is a new summit. It was largely improvised, the songs culled from an epic jam session with an eclectic cohort of players: free-jazz legend Milford Graves, percussionist Juma Sultan, saxophonist Sam Gendel, as well as Amidon's most frequent collaborator and mainstay of the NY improv scene, Shazad Ismaily.

In line with the folk ethos, Amidon has always been keenly collaborative. Most notably, the composer Nico Muhly has conjured ebullient arrangements for many Amidon renditions. On his most recent studio album,  Lily-O, Amidon worked with the guitarist Bill Frisell, the gentlest, prettiest player in the often-fiery free-jazz set. Both collaborations elicited a profound, harmonically complex Americana in the vein of Copland's mythic rodeo.  The old-time tunes--these well known traditional forms--are jumping off points for Amidon and his pals, but also sturdy, well-worn vessels to be filled with (new) contemporary meaning. This is important cultural work! It allows the artist to speak with and build upon a shared song that is transpersonal and transhistorical. But where Amidon's articulations of folk songs come alive are in his inspired nuance: a cracking warble in his voice, a slippery trill of his fiddle, a candid remark in the studio that sticks to the record. It is this ephemeral, improvisational sinew, however, makes up the  kernel of  The Following Mountain.  Amidon bypasses known forms (folk song/pop song) to conjure an "original" form through improvisation: the closest act to pure creation, to our mystical urge, to our divinity... It's a bit contradictory, but so is the nature of human existence.

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Allen Ginsberg :: Complete Songs Of Innocence And Experience

Between 1969 and 1971, Beat poet Allen Ginsberg took the poems of William Blake and set them to music - with musicians as diverse as Don Cherry, Elvin Jones, and Arthur Russell - Ginsberg recorded (with himself on lead vocals) dozens of these songs, some of which leaked out via an album on MGM in 1970 (making him label mates with the Velvet Underground). However, none of them have been properly issued on CD until now - and many have never been released in any form.

On behalf of the Ginsberg Estate, Omnivore Recordings releases a 2-CD set titled  The Complete Songs of Innocence and Experience by William Blake, Tuned by Allen Ginsberg on June 23.

The Ginsberg Estate has supplied Aquarium Drunkard with an exclusive animated video of one of the songs - which is a feast for the eyes and ears - plus an excerpt of reissue producer Pat Thomas' liner notes to give you a taste of the wealth of influence. Everyone from Van Morrison to the Beatles to Jimmy Page was a fan of Ginsberg!

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John Mulaney:: The AD Interview

"I enjoy when people aren’t that into Steely Dan. I enjoy that almost as much as I enjoy talking to other Steely Dan fans . . .

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Iggy Pop In The East Village / Gimme Danger Soundtrack

2016 saw the return of filmmaker Jim Jarmusch on two separate fronts with the release of Patterson and his Stooges documentary, Gimme Danger. The latter is now on Netflix, so go ahead and queue it up.

In the meantime: if you haven't caught the above Iggy Pop curio before, carve out fifteen minutes and do so. In short, having moved to . . .

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Jason Molina :: Riding With The Ghost

In her new book, Riding With the Ghost, writer Erin Osmon accomplishes a tricky feat regarding the late Jason Molina, the songwriter and leader of Songs: Ohia and Magnolia Electric Co. She presents  Molina, whose work can so often mythic, as if carved from  ancient stone, fully as a person, with faults, desires, humors, and failings. She doesn't strip his songs of their mystery or allure, but rather illustrates the idiosyncratic and personal details that led to his remarkable words and melodies. In doing so, she . . .

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Hayden Pedigo :: Greetings From Amarillo

"Our native soil draws all of us, by I know not what sweetness, and never allows us to forget," wrote the poet Ovid, in exile from his native Rome in 8 A.D. The concept of "home" defines, molds and shapes us. On his third album, Greetings From Amarillo, Texas guitarist Hayden Pedigo writes about his hometown -- tapping into the peculiarity that defines northernmost Texas, reflecting its flatness and its stark beauty.

"Amarillo is one of the strangest cities on the face of the Earth..." become a member or log in.

Giorgio Moroder & Roger Miller :: They Won’t Get Me

It came from 1983 - "They Won't Get Me" - the unlikely union of Italian electronic music pioneer Giorgio Moroder and Oklahoman honky-tonk hero, Roger Miller. No stranger to soundtrack work, Moroder was tasked with injecting some of his signature stile into the third installment of the Superman film series...you know, the one with Richard Pryor. The results are a delightfully bizarre mesh of electro-animatronic country & western that feels about a half a step away from The Rock-afire Explosion itself . . .

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79rs Gang :: Dead and Gone / Wrong Part of Town

2015’s Fire on the Bayou was the debut album from 79rs Gang, the musical partnership between former rivals Big Chief Jermaine Bossier of the 7th Ward Creole Hunters and Big Chief Romeo Bougere of the 9th Ward Hunters. The Sinking City-released LP was an invigorating return to the early musical forms of the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indians, closer to the field recordings of Alan Lomax and Les Blank than the fully-formed 1970s releases from seminal groups like the Wild Tchoupitoulas or the Wild Magnolias. (Which is not to say those records are any less . . .

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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. All 90s this week.

SIRIUS 482: Mazzy Star - So Tonight That I Mights See ++ The Amps - Tipp City ++ The Breeders - Safari ++ Sonic Youth - 100% ++ Yo La Tengo - Decora ++ Pavement - Grounded ++ The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion - Bellbottoms ++ The Folk Implosion - Natural One ++ Beck - Fume ++ Boss Hog - I Dig You ++ Luna - Bonnie & Clyde ++ Morphine . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Good Trip Peru, Vol I – A Mixtape

Welcome to our sixth collaboration with Portland, OR based record collector Sam Huff following his recent trip to Peru. The below is an exploration in sound migration over three-hundred years, tracking elements west from Europe and Africa through the Caribbean and jungles of Colombia, down the Atlantic coastline of South America until the terminus of our journey: Peru, the spiritual epicenter of South America.

Follow us through groves of tropical beats, waves of reverb-heavy guitars and the rise and descent of traditional . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Wooden Wand / 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.

Earlier this month we caught up with James Jackson Toth whose long-running Wooden Wand project had just released its first new material in several years - the Clipper Ship lp. Following up his Lagniappe session from 2012 (covering Jonathan Richman and Born Against), Wooden Wand returns for this installment of the series paying tribute to late-sixties Elvis, late-eighties Wire and a re-imagining of the Specials' breezy "Do Nothing". Toth on his selections - in his own words - below . . .

Wooden Wand :: Do Nothing (The Specials)

This tune, from the very great This Are Two Tone compilation, is my favorite Specials song. I approve of its anti-materialist stance, and also appreciate its (likely unintended) subtext of total nihilism. My goal with this cover was to avoid, at all costs, the conspicuous ‘upstroke’ on the 1 and 3 associated with ska, which was far more difficult than I expected. The true trainspotters among you will probably immediately recognize where I nicked the drum sample from. Dedicated to the memory of Rico Rodriguez and John Bradbury.

Wooden Wand :: This Is The Story (Elvis Presley)

I could be described, if such a thing exists, as a casual Elvis fan. There are a couple of his records I like a whole lot, but I’ve never really taken the oath. My mother, on the other hand, was a big enough fan that she considered naming me Elvis, until dad came to the rescue and talked her out if it. Their compromise? Name me after James Taylor, instead. Sigh. Anyway, I tried to imagine this tune as something Neil might have covered circa Zuma. Of course, it ends up sounding nothing like that.

Wooden Wand :: Kidney Bingos (Wire)

This latter-day Wire song from 1988’s fantastically-titled and somewhat underrated A Bell Is a Cup…Until It Is Struck could easily have been a big hit, had the mischievous contrarians who wrote it hadn’t made it about…nothing. Well, not nothing: by privileging the sound of the words over their meaning, Wire creates a sort of postmodern tableaux that places this song on a continuum that includes both Finnegan’s Wake and “Country Feedback.” Whether viewed as impish art prank or a statement about the possibilities of language in pop music, “Kidney Bingos” is a singular achievement, the likes of which I have not heard elsewhere: an earworm with lyrics that are almost impossible to memorize.

Previously: The Lagniappe Sessions :: Wooden Wand / First Session

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Pearls Before Swine :: Island Lady

“Island Lady”, via Pearls Before Swine’s 1971 album Beautiful Lies You Could Live In, was described by its author, über-hippie turned civil rights lawyer Tom Rapp as “starkly bleak” in the liner notes to a later live collection (The Wizard of Is.) Yet, in starkness, even in bleakness, there can sometimes be beauty. Though it’s a far cry from romantic songs such as its almost-namesake Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “Lady of the Island,” it shares that song’s quiet gentleness . . .

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