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

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

John Cale is the selector - sitting in with Justin during the second hour - guest-hosting and playing records culled from his days in the Velvet Underground, solo, and beyond. You can read our interview with Cale . . .

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Hand Habits :: Flower Glass

It is not uncommon to see mouths agape at a Kevin Morby concert. A primary reason being the dynamic lead guitar work of multi-instrumentalist Meg Duffy. The way-out solo on "I Have Been To The Mountain" serves as proof enough. Having spent the better part of two years on the road with Morby and Seattle’s Mega Bog, the Upstate New York native has announced her long-awaited solo LP as Hand Habits.  become a member or log in.

A Christmas Gift For You…From Phil Spector

If you have a window near, go ahead and look outside. Chances are, there are some Christmas lights up somewhere within view. In the coming weeks, you’ll probably frantically brave mall crowds and horrific parking lot jams for last-minute gifts, wondering why it is that you avoid the mall for an entire year only to finally cave when it’s impossibly chaotic, deafeningly loud and smells something like garland draped across a junior-high locker room. Nearly 50 percent of you have already seen It’s A Wonderful Life this month, and roughly 92 percent of . . .

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Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas :: Soundtrack (1977)

It’s the third week of December. The egg nog is spiked, the Christmas tree is trimmed, and if you grew up in the 80s, Jim Henson’s 1977 holiday epic, Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas, really needs no further explanation. Unsanctioned soundtrack and video, below. Welcome to Frogtown Hollow.Download: Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas :: Soundtrack (1977)

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Tom Waits :: Christmas Card From A Hooker In Minneapolis

In December of 1978, Tom Waits recorded an episode of Austin City Limits. The now-mainstay music program was in its relative infancy - only its fourth season - and had built a solid fanbase of Americana music enthusiasts. As the ACL website notes:

"...the show came in through the back door, so to speak. Terry Lickona, who became producer in Season 4, was trying to book singer Leon Redbone. Redbone and Waits shared a manager, who promptly requested that Terry book his other client as well. In order to make sure the Redbone show happened, Terry agreed, even though he was nervous that the roots-oriented audience ACL had already built in its previous three seasons might think that Waits’ avant-garde gutter poetry was too radical for the show."

The rest is history. Waits put on a stellar performance mixing songs from his then recently released Blue Valentine, some older material, and debuted "On the Nickle" which wouldn't see a proper release until 1980's Heartattack and Vine. If you've never seen the full televised performance, it's worth seeking out.

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Lit Up Like A Christmas Tree: Vol I & II (A Vintage Holiday Mixtape)

"Haul out the holly!! Put up the tree before my spirit falls aga..." Nope, just kidding, none of that here. Conversely, Lit Up Like A Christmas celebrates the, er, other side of seasonal tidings -- holiday esoterica from the far corners of vintage twang, fuzz, scuzz, r&b, blues, country, garage, lounge and beyond. So, in the spirit of the season (!!) both volumes have been re-upped. Stuff your stockings, after the jump.

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Marc Bolan :: T. Rexmas

We're not sure who the mysterious folks behind the Bolan Boogie Bandcamp are, and even less sure how we missed the 4-track T.Rexmas! EP they uploaded last December, but here it is.

T.Rexmas! is mainly built around the stomping woulda-been hit "Christmas Bop," recorded in 1975 for an aborted single that would have been . . .

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The Beatles :: Christmas Singles Club, 1963-1969

From 1963 to 1969 the Beatles issued limited edition Christmas fan-club singles on 7 inch flexi-discs. All very relaxed and off the cuff, it's interesting to note how the cover art changed, along with the music, as the sixties rolled along. Details after the jump....

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

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

SIRIUS 459: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Deerhunter - Ad Astra ++ Gary Numan - Are Friends Electric? ++ Deerhunter — Snakeskin ++ Deerhunter — Dr. Glass ++ Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Into My Arms ++ The Feelies — Crazy Rhythms ++ Josef K — Drone ++ Fire Engines — Meat Whiplash ++ Ought — Beautiful Blue Sky ++ The Fall — What You Need ++ The . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents :: Muuy Biien / Los Angeles, Dec 8th

A week from tonight, December 8th, AD presents Muuy Biien at the Satellite in LA with Green Gerry and Sons of the Bitch. Tickets: HERE

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Mazzy Star :: I’ve Been Let Down

Country charm downer via Mazzy Star’s oft-overlooked 1996 lp, Among My Swan - the third and final chapter of the band’s singular ‘90s run. While the record itself does not stray far from the gentle, twinkling shoegaze and desert highway blues of the band’s first two records, “I’ve Been Let Down” works as a gorgeous and infectious outlier of forlorn freight train blues. Lightly accompanied by acoustic guitar, harmonica, and an ever so subtle drum beat, Hope Sandoval sings of a stubborn resilience to heartbreak . . .

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Frank Zappa :: Little Dots (A Sequel To 2005’s Imaginary Diseases)

In Frank Zappa lore, 1972 is often shortchanged. The year before he toured with Flo and Eddie, witnessed a venue in Montreux burn to the ground during a gig, and closed out the year by being pushed off a London stage. In 1973 he enlisted George Duke, Napoleon Murphy Brock and Ruth Underwood to record his highest-grossing album, toured the world and shot a concert film at LA’s Roxy nightclub.

But what of 1972 itself? It was a typically busy for Zappa: he released two records and worked on a few more, toured across Europe and North America with two different bands and recorded three live albums. But for decades most of this work remained commercially unknown. Aside from a handful of bootlegs there was scarce documentation of these live shows, just chatter about how they were unlike anything he’d done before — or would do after. Horn-drenched arrangements, long blues-based jams...songs he’d debut on this tour, never to play again.

Though in recent years that has changed. About a decade ago the Zappa Family Trust released Imaginary Diseases, a snapshot of this so-called Petit Wazoo Orchestra. And now, earlier this month, UME and the ZFT issued Little Dots, something of a sequel to Diseases. Like its predecessor, the material on Dots is culled from several dates throughout the tour focusing on loose, bluesy jams which is something this group did a lot and did well. With a horn section including Bruce Fowler and Malcolm McNab and a rhythm section featuring Jim Gordon and Dave Parlato, the group goes off in all directions. “Rollo,” for example, begins as an orchestrated march morphing into a loose, funky groove.

But the set’s real treat is when the ten-piece band stretches out on Zappa’s open-ended compositions. The first half of “Little Dots” opens with an orchestrated section before everything drops away for an extended bass and drum jam, with Zappa moving in for a lengthy guitar solo. While his playing on this may not be at the same level as it would get later in the decade, it’s more adventurous than anything he committed to a studio record around this time.

Frank Zappa :: Cosmik Debris

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Pere Ubu :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Over forty years in the game and Pere Ubu is still a work in progress. When Aquarium Drunkard spoke with founding member David Thomas this past week, that much was clear. "I work ten years ahead of time," Thomas says at one point during our talk, which is why it's surprising, on some level, to see Pere Ubu out on the road to promote two recent retrospective box sets: Elitism For The People: 1975-1978 and Architecture Of Language: 1979-1982. They'll be hitting the West Coast of the U.S. with shows starting December 2nd and a December 9th stop at The Echo in Los Angeles, all featuring music solely from the two collected sets. Why would a band still focused on its next artistic statement spend time in its past? Thomas spoke about that as well as his finely honed compartmentalizing, baseball as a metaphor for loners in art, how culture doesn't exist, and his humbleness before an irrelevant audience. Trust us. You'll want to dig into this.

Aquarium Drunkard: Pere Ubu is getting set to do the West Coast leg of its Coed Jail! tour promoting the two new box sets. What was the logic behind the grouping of the box sets? [The first contains early singles through Dub Housing, the second New Picnic Time through Song of the Bailing Man and other material.] The personnel was different between the sets of years...was there another logic behind breaking the albums into those groups?

David Thomas: Well, because they were two distinct groups. I'm not really sure how to explain it any simpler than that. It was never desirable to release all the box sets as one 30 album package. That was never going to happen. You have to divide things up. So I decided to divide them up according to - I don't know how to explain it. They're linked albums. The first box set is Hearpen [Records singles], The Modern Dance and Dub Housing - that was all one thematic line for the band. At the end of Dub Housing it's generally accepted that we were off on the next adventure, you know, the next theme, the next project. That encompassed New Picinic Time through to ...Bailing Man.

All the boxes are thematically linked. I've often been asked 'is this a conceptual album?' And I say 'no, our entire damn career is a conceptual career.' I work ten years ahead of time; I work to a plan. It used to be a five year plan and it soon developed into a ten year plan because things got more ambitious. The next box is from Ray Gun Suitcase through to St. Arkansas. Those three albums were conceived - for want of a better word - as a trilogy. I determined I was going to write the great American novel and that's what that was. The next set of boxes is also thematically linked together and the Fontana box [albums released during the band's tenure on Fontana records] - which the rights have been secured for release, so it's beginning to be put together and all that nonsense - that, too, is inextricably linked. They're a package.

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Rob Noyes :: The Feudal Spirit

We may be used to seeing Raymond Pettibon's unmistakeable artwork on SST albums from the 1980s, but Rob Noyes' debut -- an absorbing  guitar soli gem -- is a world away from Black Flag. Not that it's lacking in intensity. At times, Noyes' dextrous 12-string clusters develop into dense thickets of ringing sound; it's a beautiful, heady space to get lost in. And yeah, occasionally kind of intense! Over the course

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Unknown Familiarity :: Composers Shawn Parke & Kim Henninger On Embers

Recently, Portland-based composers Shawn Parke and Kim Henninger released the original soundtrack for Embers, director Claire Carré's science fiction film starring  Jason Ritter,  Iva Gocheva, and  Greta Fernî¡ndez.   Currently streaming on Netflix, the film makes masterful use of the duo's compositions, utilizing their enveloping sound as it explores the concept of "memory."

Aquarium Drunkard asked the duo to run down some of their cinematic music inspirations, and rather than a mere list of likeminded composers, the duo took the opportunity to deeply probe the methods and techniques that inform their work.

In February of 2014 writer/director Claire Carré and writer/producer Charles Spano asked us to write the original score for their first feature Embers. The science fiction film is about memory and forgetting and asks big questions: What role does memory play in who we are? Is there sometimes redemption in forgetting? What do we lose or gain if the collective cataloging of culture disappears? Who are we if stripped of everything but our instincts?

We began work on the score before a frame had been shot — and these questions informed our work. When we were asked to reflect on soundtracks that had inspired and influenced our work we were, at first, taken aback. We had no particular past works in mind as we proceeded through the process of writing the experimental/orchestral score. After giving it some thought it became clear to us that a number of scores -- and more so the techniques employed in their creation -- had woven themselves into our unconscious as we created the music we wrote. The soundtracks and techniques below were woven into our process of creation without us being aware of it — much as the score for Embers weaves itself into the very fabric of the film.

Kimberly Henninger & Shawn Parke :: Now Is Now

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