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Ghana 45 Mix :: Highlife and Afro Blues 1969-‘76


Following the release of last year's Pat Thomas & Kwashibu Area Band, Strut Records returns with Coming Home, a career retrospective compilation for the Ghanaian highlife master and " Golden Voice Of Africa”, spanning his late ‘60s big band highlife recordings to the “burger highlife” movement of the early ‘80s. As such, we asked the collection's compiler, Duncan Brooker, to spin some of his favorite records of the era. Brooker's notes, below.

This mix started with Pat Thomas at its core, featuring three tracks from my latest Strut compilation,  Coming Home. I wanted to showcase some of the sounds that were happening across Ghana during the early to mid 70's, selecting music that features some of Pat’s friends and associates, as well as some of the other contemporary highlife groups of the era. I included everything from guitar bands to the post-big band collectives that were around during this time. There are some of the more well known bands from this period, like The Boom Talents and then there is the more bluesier guitar highlife sound, like the F. Micah’s Band track, which was just as popular domestically at that time.  Guitar highlife remained popular throughout this period and remained so after the demise of the larger highlife bands — guitar groups were a more manageable size and format.

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Junior Parker :: Tomorrow Never Knows / Beatles

Sip on this narcoleptic soul brew - Junior Parker's psychedelic molasses rendition of the Beatles "Tomorrow Never Knows." One of three Beatles covers found on his 1971 LP, Love ain't Nothin' But A Business Goin' On, Parker died of a brain tumor the year of its release just shy of his fortieth birthday.

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Abstract Truths: An Evolving Jazz Compendium — Volume Two

Volume two of Abstract Truths, An Evolving Jazz Compendium. If unfamiliar with the series, please first read here about the its genesis and intention. As promised, this installment is courtesy of dj/record collector Carlos Nino. Per his selections, Niî±o notes "I was thinking about Bobby Hutcherson and my Father Pablo Niî±o who had just transitioned . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: No Jacket Required: — October 13th — Rough Trade, NYC

Our annual east coast party returns to NYC, October 13th. Aquarium Drunkard: No Jacket Required. Once again at Rough Trade in Brooklyn. Tickets available, here.

OMNI ++ MUUY BIIEN ++ EZTV ++ GOLDEN DAZE ++ THE SHIFTING SANDS

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The Music of Shangri-La Suite: A Tale Of Three “Hurts”

October 28th sees the release of my first feature film, Shangri-La Suite. It tells the story of two lovers-on-the-run during the summer of 1974. Their names: Jack Blueblood and Karen Bird. Their aim: to kill Elvis Presley. It stars Emily Browning, Luke Grimes, Avan Jogia and Ron Livingston (as the King). Burt Reynolds narrates. The trailer can be seen here. Justin Gage, the man behind Aquarium Drunkard (and my good friend), served as the project’s music supervisor. Justin . . .

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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. Danger Mouse is the selector, sitting in with Justin, DJing the full two hours of the AD show this week.

SIRIUS 450: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Curtis Knight w/ Jimi Hendrix - Happy Birthday ++ Indian Jewelry - Hello Africa ++ John Cale - Gideon . . .

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Okkervil River :: Live At National Sawdust

September 9th saw the return of Okkervil River via their first LP in three years, Away, a record principal Will Sheff has described as "me taking my life back to zero and starting to add it all back up again."

Below, we are screening the group's performance at Brooklyn's National Sawdust recorded this past July. "I wanted to get together with a lot of the musicians who recorded

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Kraftwerk :: Live In Soest, 1970 (First Concert)

Kraftwerk just wrapped up their American tour earlier this month in Los Angeles at the Hollywood Bowl. The group's next performances begin early next month in Europe, via an eight night residency at the Guggenheim museum in Bilbao, Spain. Each evening's performance will be dedicated to a singular album, beginning with Autobahn (1974) on October 7th and ending with become a member or log in.

Transmissions Podcast :: Daniel Lanois

As a producer, Daniel Lanois has been instrumental in crafting definitive records by U2, the Neville Brothers, Bob Dylan, Peter Gabriel, Willie Nelson, Emmylou Harris, Neil Young, and more. His productions have a trademark quality—swampy and percussive, psychedelic but as earthy as the dubs of his noted influence Lee "Scratch" Perry—that he also brings to his records as a songwriter and composer. His latest, become a member or log in.

Dylan & The Hawks :: Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues (Liverpool, 1966)

After a few months of rumors, Sony has finally announced another massive Bob Dylan box set --  The 1966 Live Recordings. Weighing in at 36 (!) discs, it collects every known recording of Dylan's confrontational 1966 tour of Australia and the UK  (along with a handful of audience tapes from the US)  with the Hawks, who were soon to morph into The Band. Overkill? Sure. But obsessives (guilty as charged) will . . .

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Drive-By Truckers :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

This Friday, September 30th will see the release of the eleventh studio album by the Drive-by Truckers. American Band is a tight, dark album comprised of the type of songwriting that Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley have excelled at for years - specific stories that explore and reverberate through universal ideas. While the band has often examined political and social ideas freely via individual songs, American Band marks the first time  Drive-by Truckers have explored and documented these ideas an album length statement. Aquarium Drunkard talked with Hood and Cooley separately by phone about the new album, what it means to make an entire record like this, the troubles of getting an album on to a single LP, and why we just need to love each other, motherfuckers.

Aquarium Drunkard: One of the biggest notes about this album ahead of time is that American Band is a pretty explicitly political record. You guys have written political songs before - "Putting People On the Moon" for instance - but it's never dominated an album the way they do here. Was there any hesitation on your part in approaching a record in that capacity?

Patterson Hood: I've always thought of our music and our songs as political. I was kind of taken aback by how many people seem shocked by the political nature of this record because I've always felt that way about our music. Especially "Putting People On the Moon." At the time that came out, it really polarized a lot of people. When we were touring behind The Dirty South - which was at the height of the 2004 Bush-Kerry election - there were people really irate about that song every night. Every single night we had people shooting us birds and yelling shit at us when we played that song. And then it just went away. We kept playing the song and people stopped reacting that way. I don't know if those people just left, or just got used to it, or if the election was over and they moved on. I don't know. I never even questioned it. I just noticed it.

Mike Cooley: I wasn't too worried about it. I figured we'd lose a few people, but I've never been worried about getting Dixie Chick'd. We never had a huge country radio, right wing audience anyway. And the threatening comments that are bound to come, I'm not worried about those either, but you can't write those songs, you can't pay enough attention to that subject matter without knowing how people might feel about it.

PH: And there's always been that aspect. "The Living Bubba" - even though the lyrics say "I've never had much use for politics" - I've always considered that to be a political song. The fact that people were still dying of AIDS in 1996, 15 years into the crisis and 20 years into the disease itself - people were still dying; especially people who didn't have the money for the best health care. I've always considered all of that part of what we do.

I guess the big difference with this record isn't how political it is, but the lens it's shot through, to put it in movie terms. I'm always using the parallel to the movie Chinatown which is one of my all-time favorite films. It was such a product of its time. It was all about the social and political mores of the early-to-mid 70s and yet it was set in the 30s. We've always done that with our work - we've done a lot of period pieces, which has never been en vogue in rock and roll, yet we've always delved into that. "Putting People On the Moon" which we put out 12 years ago was set in the 80s, even though I considered it more than timely in 2004 during that presidential season. That song talked about Reagan, it talked about political decisions made in the Reagan era that were still affecting people in 2004 and 2016. Likewise, Southern Rock Opera, which was set in the time of my coming of age - in the 70s against the backdrop of the rise-and-fall of arena rock and Watergate and [George] Wallace and the post-Civil Rights South - to me, that was still relevant when we wrote it which was now 20 years ago. That record and this record have a lot in common even though they're musically world's apart to be from the same band. There's a lot we were talking about on that record that we're still talking about with this album, just maybe in a more grown-up way.

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Family Atlantica :: Cosmic Unity

“High vibrations … Transformations … Let’s go higher.” These are among the opening words of Family Atlantica’s Soundways release Cosmic Unity, the second such offering from the London-based ensemble with roots in Africa and Venezuela. Such is the group’s nature: a heady and eclectic brew of latin funk, calypso, African highlife, and even Ethiopian jazz (the Mulatu Astatke-vibes on “Enjera” are unmistakable, and come as no surprise, as the man himself appeared on the group’s . . .

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The John Coltrane Quartet :: Naima – Paris, 1962

John Coltrane would've turned 90 today, and even though he passed on all the way back in 1967, the music he made still reverberates with a power and clarity that refuses to be dimmed by age. His work has been pored over endlessly by listeners and scholars, but there are still countless gems to be found or re-discovered. Case in point, this hazy 1962 rendition of "Naima," performed with his mighty quartet (McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones, Jimmy Garrison) in Paris. The recording is pretty far . . .

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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 449: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Dorothy Ashby - Soul Vibrations ++ Pharoah Sanders — Love Is Everywhere (excerpt)   ++ Eddie Gale — The Rain ++ Steve Reid — Lions Of Juda ++ Carsten Meinert Kvartet — Blues To Someone ++ Cecil Mcbee — Voice Of 7th Angel ++ Ornette Coleman — All My Life ++ Don Cherry — Marimba, Goddess Of Music ++ Sun . . .

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Diversions :: Holy Sons – Paying Tribute To The B-side

Diversions, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, catches up with our favorite artists as they wax on subjects other than recording and performing.

Holy Sons, the nom-de-tune of Emil Amos, is set to release In The Garden via Partisan Records on October 21st. For this installment of Diversions, Amos tackles the art of the b-side, touching on British psych, stadium rock solo projects, American funk and more. Amos, in his own words, below.

When it gets around midnight and I can officially release myself from the deadlines and stress of the workday, the whiskey glass comes out again and I reach for that stack of records that also represents being a slave to no one. Budgets and matters of capitalism have always controlled most of what we're delivered as music fans... but there's always been a trench off the beaten path where artists disregard these constraints, plug straight into the 4-track with barely any preparation (literally what McCartney did on his first solo record) and fly the freak flag with no regard for anyone outside of that small room. This is the natural domain of the B side.

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