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Bobby Hutcherson :: NTU

The spirit was upon the room last night at Little Tokyo's Blue Whale during the LA record release show for Jeff Parker's solo debut, The New Breed. Working out material off the lp, the quintet slid into a take on Bobby Hutcherson's "Visions". Hearing them channel Hutcherson, I was hoping they'd interpret "NTU" later in the night. Maybe next time . . .

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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 441: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ 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 . . .

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The Lounge Lizards :: “Voice of Chunk” Live on Night Music 1989

Been spending a lot of time diving into the archives of Sunday Night/Night Music on YouTube, NBC's short-lived but excellent showcase of eclectic music, which aired in 1989 and 1990. Hosted at first by Jools Holland and later by David Sanborn, the program featured incredible performances by Sun Ra, Sonic Youth, Lou Reed and John Cale, become a member or log in.

Deepest Bison :: Six Tiny Strokes

Deepest Bison, the Minneapolis based one-man recording project of Kyle Imes, returns. Six Tiny Strokes, is another entry into an ongoing meditation on raga/reverb-ed folk.

Deepest Bison :: A Lifetime of Fitness

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Eric Bachmann :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

The name Eric Bachmann is well-known to indie-rock devotees, but not because it has graced the covers of records that often. Chiefly known as a member of Archers of Loaf and the main force behind Crooked Fingers, Bachmann only just released the third album under his own name earlier this year. This latest self-titled album has been met well critically, and following a full-band tour earlier this year, Bachmann is about to set off on a series of living room concerts in support of it. We caught up with Bachmann via phone to discuss the new album, the potential end of the Crooked Fingers name, how one promotes a tour like this, and how giving a 46 year-old-man some dignity is a good thing.

Aquarium Drunkard: The new album has been out since March. How has the response been thus far?

Eric Bachmann: I think, relatively speaking, it's done well. It's had a good response. It hasn't done as well as, say, Kanye West does or anything. [laughs] But I feel good about how it's going. My world isn't going to change or anything. I did a bunch of touring in April, May and June and that all went really well. And I'm going to start doing these living room shows, which is a new thing for me, and I have other things happening this year for me. But as much as I'm happy it went well, I'm always kind of moving forward. I haven't forgotten about it or anything, but I've just kind of let it go.

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On Bowie :: By Rob Sheffield

Rob Sheffield's On Bowie  begins plainly: "Planet Earth is a lot bluer without David Bowie, the greatest rock star who ever fell to this or any other world."  I read those words early Wednesday morning and turned them over in my head a few times, preparing myself for a book that more or less held that sustained, mournful  note: sad and  undeniable. If anyone . . .

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Pylon :: A Sonic Reminiscence Of 1980s Athens, GA

Growing up an hour from Athens, GA, in Atlanta in the 80s/90s, Pylon were akin to something like the home team. Sometime around 1991, via R.E.M.'s regular endorsement, I picked up a cassette copy of Pylon's Hits, and that was it. Twenty five years later I placed their song "Cool" in a Lexus commercial. Time flies.

And . . .

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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 440: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Yellow Fever - Katcatcher ++ The Raincoats - Lola ++ Ultimate Painting - Bills ++ Omni - Afterlife ++ Art School Jocks - Nina ++ Thurston Moore - Ono Soul ++ Suicide - Dream Baby Dream ++ Ty Segall - The Slider
++ Lou Reed — Perfect Day (demo) ++ Mac DeMarco — Rock And Roll Night Club ++ Alan Vega — Jukebox Babe ++ Calvin . . .

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75 Dollar Bill :: Wood / Metal / Plastic / Pattern / Rhythm / Rock

It's hard not to slip into ridiculous hyperbole when it comes to 75 Dollar Bill. Best band in New York City? Best band in the USA? Best band in the universe? Whatever conclusion you come to personally, you're gonna love the instrumental duo of guitarist Che Chen and percussionist Rick Brown. They've definitely nailed down a thrillingly original sound, centered around Chen's specially designed quarter-tone guitar -- something about his tone cuts right to the quick, with North African riffs blending into juke-joint boogies into more avant territory. Brown's impressively minimalist setup (he mostly . . .

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Omni :: Deluxe

Four decades since the dawn of seminal post-punk bands Wire, Television, Pylon, Social Climbers, B-52s and Devo, that stripped down, raw minimalism remains a vastly rich mine - with no group currently striking more gold than Atlanta’s OMNI, via their debut lp, Deluxe. Made up of Carnivores’ Philip Frobos and Billy Mitchell, with Frankie Broyles of Deerhunter, we previously featured the trio’s lead single “Wire,” and now return for closer inspection.

On album opener “Afterlife” and the aforementioned “Wire,” OMNI light a fuse of angular melodies, pulsing guitars, and solemn vocals delivered through a conversational . . .

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Transmissions Podcast :: Damien Jurado / William Bell

Welcome to the fifth episode of AD's re-booted Transmissions podcast, our recurring series of in-depth conversations and unexpected sounds. As we did with our last episode, we're halving the show, speaking with two disparate, enigmatic artists.

Up first, we sat down with singer/songwriter Damien Jurado. Starting off in the Seattle hardcore scene, Jurado evolved with moody albums . . .

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Sonny & the Sunsets :: Moods Baby Moods

“Death and transformation are the coolest shit to write about. When you look at life from a mystical point of view, we’re all going through changes all the time.”

So said Sonny Smith when we interviewed him last year ahead of his Sonny & the Sunsets LP Talent Night at the Ashram. Smith returns with Moods Baby Moods, the latest record in the Sunsets’ canon. For over a decade now, Smith has been crafting his own sort of universe, influenced by neighbors orbiting it: Heidi Alexander’s Earth Girl Helen Brown, his collaborations with The Sandwitches, and his 100 Records project. It’s an exaggerated reflection of our existence -- a kind of deadpan cynical vision of a not too distant future.

Sonically, he has explored and expanded upon his own brew of garage-inflected art-rock, adding forms of country, new wave and spaced-out proto-punk. Take Longtime Companion, an earnest record of forlorn country and Smith’s most genre-specific offering.

On Mood Baby Moods, those otherworldly sounds and influences — the musicians; Smith’s recurring cast of characters, strange freaks, rejects and aliens among them; the mysterious void explored -- brilliantly coalesce into what might be Smith’s defining record and inarguably his funkiest.

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Betty Davis :: The Columbia Years, 1968-1969

Rumors had floated around for years about a Miles Davis/Teo Macero-produced session of late 1960s Betty Davis recordings -- and now, finally, they've been uncovered and released by the good people at Light in the Attic Records  (along with two even earlier tunes). Is this collection a lost classic? Not quite. For . . .

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Your Favorite Band Is Killing Me :: The AD Interview / Steven Hyden

Rock rivalries inhabit a weird part of rock and roll's unruly history. At times as much the creation of commercially driven record labels and promotion people as it is the artists themselves, they make for an interesting study of the culture, but maybe even more so of ourselves. That's part of the thesis behind Steven Hyden's new book Your Favorite Band Is Killing Me: What Pop Music Rivalries Reveal About The Meaning of Life. Hyden has spent a decade and a half writing for sites like The A.V. Club, the defunct Grantland, and now his newest gig at Uproxx. And since Aquarium Drunkard is cited in the book (see page 75), we talked with Hyden via phone about pop culture rivalries, how a lot of things can change during writing a book, the demise of Grantland, and the ever changing definition of classic rock.

Aquarium Drunkard: I have followed your writing pretty closely for a while now, and I really enjoy it, which makes it all the tougher for me to start off by telling you how wrong you are about Oasis and Blur. [laughs] I laugh because when I was reading your previews for the book, you talked about that essay in particular and how people would be upset about your opinions about it. For people in our rough generation bracket and of a certain music geekiness, Oasis vs. Blur really was a pretty big thing. I always came down on the side of Blur. I actually refused to listen to Oasis for a long time the way you did with Blur. Was that particular pairing a catalyst for your idea for the book?

Steven Hyden: I'm not sure exactly why this came to mind. The boring part of the story is that I had an agent approach me, and he asked me if I had any ideas for a book. I didn't at the time, but I started brainstorming and this idea popped up early on. What attracted me to it was that on the one hand it seemed like a simple idea you could describe to someone in a sentence or two, which is always a good thing to have for a book you want to sell. No one had ever done a book on these rivalries before, so that was good. The inherent drama of conflict is always interesting to people, but I also liked how open ended it was. I knew from the beginning that I didn't want to write just a straightforward music book. I wanted it to be a little bit broader and touch on other things.

With rivalries, it seemed to open itself up to a wider discussion. If you're going to talk about the Beatles and Stones, maybe that can be a starting point to talk about other things. As far as Oasis and Blur, it just made sense to me in terms of sequencing the essays. It was one of the big rivalries of my youth and the most extreme example for me of actually caring about a rivalry, almost to the point of unreasonableness or being irrational about it. I felt like my story could apply to anyone. I felt everyone has their Oasis - everyone has their thing that they loved so much when they were 17. It felt like a good way to open the book. If you read the book, the essays have an arc where it starts from me being a younger person who's really into rivalries and drawing lines in the sand and arguments and all that, and you get to the end of the book, and I'm an older person and I'm not as interested in that anymore. I've learned to see the silliness of that, and I'm more interested now in trying to find the connections between people instead of the separations.

Most of the chapters aren't really taking a side - I wasn't interested in doing that. It's more about exploring the dynamics between the artists and what existed in the public's imagination about these artists. In the Oasis vs. Blur thing, I'm obviously an Oasis fan and I'm arguing on their behalf, but I feel like the point of that chapter was to show that I was a crazy person. It's also talking about fandom in a way - the rationalization made as a fan about why to love something and to not love something. So even if you read the chapter and think I'm wrong about Oasis, then there's something in there you can relate to as a fan - something you've felt at some point in your life about an artist you really love.

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Brother Ah and the Sounds of Awareness :: Sound Awareness, Move Ever Onward, Key to Nowhere

"The music and images came to me during deep meditation. As I was transcending, I felt as though I was leaving my body. I began to hear celestial ascending soft music...I began to hear loud voices, powerful rhythms, and birds. I felt as though I was being asked profound questions. I began to confess to the ancestors my lack of faith in accepting my musical spiritual journey."

So writes Robert Northern, under the name "Brother Ah," in the liner notes to the new reissue of Sound Awareness, his debut solo . . .

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