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Cyrus Erie :: Get The Message

In this Big Star worshiping world (a church of which I'm a card-carrying member),  Eric Carmen’s seminal power pop work with the Raspberries simply doesn’t get the respect it deserves. But that’s another story. Several years before the formation of that group, Eric Carmen and some future ‘berries laid down one of the greatest Who-influenced American 45 of the 1960s.

Cyrus Erie was formed in Cleveland in 1967, with Eric Carmen joining later in the year after being turned down as a member of . . .

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Vetiver/Wolf People/The Men/Woods :: Live From Pickathon

Just returned from Pickathon, the 18th annual "indie roots" celebration out in Happy Valley, Oregon. Held on Pendarvis Farm, this year's happening was, once again, fantastic, maintaining the feel of a jovial party in the forest more than the clustered and claustrophobic feel common at most outdoor festivals.

In between hosting music/interview sessions in the Lucky Barn and DJing on the Woods stage, I caught some exceptional music. Highlights: Wilco songwriter Jeff Tweedy cracking Trump jokes (and jokes about his Trump jokes later in the woods), organist Cory Henry blending the B3 soul of Booker T. Jones with the force of prime Parliament/Funkadelic on the Woods stage, Mount Moriah's fiery "Revolution Blues" cover, Sir Richard Bishop's discussion of "non theoretical" guitar playing, My Bubba inviting the legendary Michael Hurley to the stage, the blackened hardcore of VHî–L on the Treeline stage, and fantastic sets by Open Mike Eagle, Ultimate Painting, Kevin Morby, Julia Holter, Protomartyr, Hurray for the Riff Raff, Mac Demarco, and dozens more.

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Garcia Live :: Volume Six (1973) / Volume Seven (1976)

As the jolly Captain Trips once mused: ‘All goods things in all good time’. As such, Heads around the world tuned in and took notice when the GarciaLive series made it’s roaring return with the back to back flashbacks, volumes six and seven. Both elegantly recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson (aka Betty Boards) they capture Jerry . . .

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Lambchop :: The Hustle

Always a pleasure to wake up to a new song from Nashville's Lambchop, particularly an 18-minute plus epic like "The Hustle," the first single in advance of the group's forthcoming For Love Often Turns Us Still -- FLOTUS, for short -- which comes out November 4th on the esteemed Merge Records.

Evoking the minimalism of early electronic music, "The Hustle" pulses with warm reeds and horns, stately piano, and the low vocals of group leader Kurt Wagner. "I don't want . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: The Now Generation / A Mixtape

Enter The Now Generation. A gauzy 18 track ride through Portland record collectors Sam Huff and Meghan Wright's current crate. It is as it must be....man.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: The Now Generation / A Mixtape

Pot Party — Mike Curb & Bob Summers
I’m Five Years Ahead of My Time — The Third Bardo
Just Let Go — The Seeds
Candle Light — Benny Soebardja & Lizard
Mr. Moonshine — Fat Mattress
Stoned Woman — Ten Years After
Hole In His Hand — Doug Jerebine
Abba Zabba — Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band
Snowblind . . .

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Andy Shauf :: On the records behind The Party

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

He's been at awhile now, but there is a reason you are hearing the name Andy Shauf everywhere of late. It's The Party, Shauf's third long-player; his Anti Records debut which dropped in May. An ambitious endeavor, aesthetically indebted to the 70s smart pop of Jimmie Spheeris, Harry Nilsson and Carole King, the record is a meditative grower in the best kind of way. In an effort to get inside Shauf's headspace, we asked him to run through some of the works he was listening to, and inspired by, while in pre-production. Shauf, in his own words, below . . .

Chris Cohen - Overgrown Path: This is an album that I started listening to while I was about halfway through finishing my record. I was feeling lost with what I was trying to do, kind of exploring synthland and really forgetting what I intended to do when I started making the record. Chris’ album is really nice and song-focused. It reminded me that I'd originally set out to make an album centered around bass, drums and piano.

David Bowie - Hunky Dory: I was mostly writing songs on piano for The Party, so Hunky Dory was naturally a big inspiration for me. The arrangements are so good, the songs are very creative both lyrically and musically. The piano playing is a lot fancier than what I can manage, but I was really trying to improve on my piano skills for this album.

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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 442: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Sun Blossoms - Return Your Soul ++ Allah-Las - Strange Heat ++ White Fence - King of The Decade ++ Psychic Ills - Another Change ++ Spiritualized - Cool Waves ++ Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Into My Arms ++ Dirty Beaches - A Hundred Highways ++ Juands - White Waking (Les Rallizes Dénudés . . .

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Social Climbers :: Palm Springs

“Palm Springs", via Social Climbers’ 1980, self-titled, sole lp - the vehicle of Bloomington’s Mark Bingham. Though existing in the new wave world, the project stands as an outlier, in great thanks to Bingham’s further explorations into jazz, dance, disco, and funk.

In ways, it’s an early example of bedroom pop and a bright forebearer of modern DIY (“See “Chris and Debbie”). Having collaborated with fellow avant-garde musicians Glenn Branca and John Scofield, you . . .

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CAN :: Collected – Live & Beyond (1970-1972)

Can’s influence cannot be overstated. Highly impacted by the improvisational side of The Velvet Underground, Frank Zappa's Mothers and Sly Stone, the group incorporated repetitive grooves that brought to mind African percussion and American funk. Two eccentric vocalists (first Malcom Mooney, then, famously, Damo Suzuki) and a dash of modern classical music helped create a distinct vision that is often imitated, though never matched.

While Can continued to release records until 1979, it’s their period from 1968-1974 that serves as the foundation of the band’s legacy . . .

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Douala By Night: A Mixtape

Daniel T. returns with Douala By Night, a grab bag of   pan-African records presently lining his crate and beyond. His last AD import, Skateland, a deeply funky 16-track 70s roller skating compilation, is still alive and available, here.

Ali Bawa - Ki Man Wo
Fela Ransome . . .

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Rhyton :: Redshift

With a pedigree than includes stints with sonic adventurers like No-Neck Blues Band, Pigeons and Stygian Stride, and an arsenal that includes an array of Greek stringed instruments, you might expect something pretty esoteric from Rhyton. What you probably wouldn't expect is a totally killer Joe Walsh cover. But that's just what you get on the band's newest record, the absorbingly eclectic  become a member or log in.

Joanna Brouk :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Electronic composer Joanna Brouk takes very little credit for the trailblazing  sound poetry she recorded in the 1970s and '80s. It flowed through her, she says, unbothered by the metaphysical connotations such a  statement implies. She didn't write it so much as transcribe it, transmuting melodies from single repeated notes and from the spaces between them.

"If you want to know where my music came from, it was silence," Brouk says over the phone from her place in San Diego, synthesizer drones buzzing faintly in the background.

Her remarkable recordings can be heard on . . .

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Jenks Miller and Rose Cross N.C. :: Blues From WHAT

Over the past several years, Jenks Miller has been making a wide variety of noises in such esteemed bands as Mount Moriah and Horseback.  Blues From WHAT  is the first physical release under the Rose Cross N.C. moniker, and though there's a band that plays this stuff live, Miller is almost a one-man band . . .

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Psychic Ills :: Inner Journey Out

"Goin' through another change," sings Tres Warren on Psychic Ills' latest hazy trip,  Inner Journey Out. And to be sure, the album shakes things up for a band that seems to love shaking things up. Since 2003, they've traveled through a myriad of psychedelic landscapes, from extended drones to scuzzy garage rock. The . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Jet Lag – A Mixtape

(From 2012. The Jet Lag programme, hosted by Yoon Nam, ceased airing last year after an inspired decade-long run on Atlanta's 88.5 fm.)

Over the past couple of years I’ve been irregularly highlighting some of my favorite voices online (and beyond), inviting them to guest DJ my show on SIRIUS XMU. For those of you sans satellite radio we’ve been turning these sets into mixtapes, with sounds ranging from the blown-out psych bootcut of DJ Turquoise Wisdom, to the international taboo of Ponytone. Today we catch up with the host behind one of my favorite radio programs of the past year, Jet Lag.

Hosted by Yoon Nam, Jet Lag concentrates on vinyl recordings of international psych, prog, outsider folk, vintage soundtracks, library music, and other rare sounds from the 60s and 70s. It airs Sunday nights from 8 -10 pm on WRAS Atlanta, 88.5FM. Founded in 2006, Yoon traverses the globe weekly featuring a diverse mix ranging from PFM and Ejwuusl Wessahqqan, to Jean Le Fennec and Korean masters Jung Hyun Shin and Jung Mi Kim.

After the jump -- two hours of Jet Lag, broken up into two sets.

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