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Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Cheap Trick needs precious little in the way of an introduction. Roaring out of Rockford in the early '70s, the band's stayed on a remarkably consistent career path for decades, hewing close to a muscular framework of guitar-driven  glam riffs and sturdy, pop-based song craft. Anthems like "I Want You To Want Me" and "Surrender" bridged arena rock bombast with power-pop melodicism, hard rock heft with a nearly punk intensity. The band's latest, Bang Zoom Crazy...Hello, is its first in seven years, but the 11 songs featured show little wear on the band's singular style. Even if drummer Ben E. Carlos is missed -- Daxx Nielsen mans the drums for the quartet these days -- songs like the over-the-top "Long Time No See Ya" and "Heart on the Line" are meaty and exuberant.

Chatty and quick with a Midwestern self-deprecating dig, Rick Nielsen spent some time with AD on the phone to discuss the new record, playing with John Lennon, and recording with the late George Martin. Below, edited excerpts from our conversation.

Aquarium Drunkard:  Congrats on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction. Have you guys been working on something cool for the ceremonies?

Rick Nielsen: Uh, no. [Laughs] I don’t think so. We’re a little new to it, so…

AD: Well, everyone’s new to it. You only get inducted the once.

Rick Nielsen: Well yeah. If we screw it up, it was the best we could do, and if we do good, it’s a fluke.

AD: Let’s talk about something you might have some more thoughts about, your new record, Bang Zoom Crazy...Hello.

Rick Nielsen: It was a lot of fun to make. We made it over a year and a half. [We did] about seven songs in L.A., and we went back and did eight more, and then we did eight songs in Nashville, and did seven more [in L.A.] It was kind of fun. Not everything sounds the same. Sometimes in the studio you get tunnel vision, but [this one felt] a bit fresher.

AD:  Cheap Trick spends a lot of time on the road. Compared to a lot of other bands who’ve been around as long as you, you tour an awful lot.

Rick Nielsen: I tell people if we waited around for a hit to go on tour, we’d never tour. I see other groups saying, “We’ve got this big tour lined up, we’re doing 60 shows.” I say, “60 shows? [Laughs] That’s just getting warmed up.”

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Toncho Pilatos :: La Ultima Danza

As everybody knows, the counterculture revolution of peace, love, and rock n’ roll, can be said to have died, grimly and without shelter, on a racetrack outside of San Francisco on December 6, 1969. Perhaps less well known, is that some two years later, a parallel movement south of the border–dubbed La Onda (“The Wave”)–was still cresting. Coincidentally, this revolution too reached something of a climax beside a racetrack (in a place historically known as “San Francisco del Valle de Temascaltepec,” no less). However, the become a member or log in.

Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America

While there's been no shortage of writing devoted to the Grateful Dead and its various subcultures, I don't think there's been one book that goes as deep as Jesse Jarnow's new, completely marvelous Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America. I'd say it's the best Dead tome ever written, but the Dead are only part of the overall picture. The narrative is nothing if not ambitious . . .

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Matthewdavid :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Matthew McQueen, known by most by his stage name, Matthewdavid, doesn't have any qualms with the term "New Age." While some  electronic composers might prefer the term "ambient," McQueen is attracted to the more metaphysical  label,  for its mystic  connotations as much as its musical ones. In McQueen's eyes, 2016 feels very much like part of a New Age; his new record, Matthewdavid's Mindflight,  Trust the Guide and Glide, reflects his blooming reality.

"I love the fact that things are always in . . .

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Bola Sete :: Ocean

“Bola Sete’s music comes from everywhere and nowhere. The subconscious really is universal. Bola Sete’s music is the best reminder of this that I have ever heard. He is a man of great spirit and great depth.”   John Fahey, Guitar Player, February 1976

The above inscription rests on the back cover of Brazilian guitarist Bola Sete’s Ocean, a record of solitary guitar recorded by and released on Fahey’s Takoma imprint via the Windham Hill label.

Sete’s previous . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Endless Boogie / April 5th

Endless, indeed. If you missed the band's last run through LA after the release of Long Island, now is your chance to make amends. Endless Boogie touch down at the Bootleg Theater along with Arctic and Loom on April 5th. Tickets are still available,

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Lionlimb :: Shoo

Shoo  is the debut album by Lionlimb, a duo comprised of singer-songwriter Stewart Bronaugh and drummer Joshua Jaeger. The band has a sleeper agent story: Bronaugh performed under the moniker back in 2010, bopped between Chicago and San Francisco, then linked up with Jaeger to record and tour with Angel Olsen for  Burn Your Fire For No Witness--all the while working on songs. The duo recorded  Shoo  with Robin Eaton while on break from Olsen's tour in 2015 . . .

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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 428: Jean-Michel Bernard - Générique Stéphane ++ Sun Ra - Springtime Is Here ++ Harlem River Drive - Idle Hands ++ Nina Simone - Be My Husband (Live, 1987) ++ Little Stevie Wonder - Soul Bongo ++ Red Garrison - Taboo ++ Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated - Early In The Morning ++ Quincy Jones - Hikky-Burr (Take 2) ++ The Headhunters - God . . .

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Walker Family Singers :: Panola County Spirit

In the mid-2000s producer Michael Reilly joined a group of friends -- most of whom worked as music supervisors for television and film -- on a trip to the South, guided by advice from the staff at the Alan Lomax Archive. One of those places visited was Como, Mississippi, near the heart of the Mississippi Delta. home to a thriving musical culture which Lomax himself documented in the '50s. The trip yielded more than Reilly ever expected. Since 2008, he's released gospel music recorded there via become a member or log in.

Harlem River Drive :: Idle Hands

Harlem River Drive were a short-lived but righteous group of musicians brought together in 1970-71 by Puerto Rican pianist and bandleader Eddie Palmieri. Veritable king of the Latin dance floors, by the end of the 1960s Palmieri was restless, out to top himself, and looking to push beyond the boundaries of the music he had been performing over the past decade.

More on Palmieri and Harlem River Drive can be found in the AD archives,

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Sidecar (Transmissions 1-16) — Podcast/Mixtapes

Freeform interstitial airwave debris transmitting somewhere off the coast of Los Angeles...

Sidecar Transmissions: A polyglot  bouillabaisse of black sand blues, green swamp fuzz and haunted radio wave detritus. Beginning in 2012, AD's ongoing (irregular) podcast is about to switch gears...and become a lot more regular. In the meantime, grab all the existing transmissions HERE...before they too exit into the ether . . .

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John Martyn: Rooted In The Country, But Aiming For The Cosmos

“Woodstock’s the best place I’ve found so far. I detest New York, but upstate it’s OK.” (John Martyn in Melody Maker, 1970)

By the end of 1968, future psych/folk-jazz icon John Martyn was at an impasse, creatively, personally and professionally. His first two albums - both very folky, largely solo, British-sounding affairs - had flopped, he was tired of London, and had yet to find his own voice. Changes would soon come, however, in the form of another young folk/blues singer named Beverley Kutner and a temporary relocation to Woodstock, NY, a hotbed of counterculture.

Martyn met Kutner, a protégé of producer Joe Boyd, at a shared gig that winter and the two soon fell in love. By the time Boyd had scheduled early summer 1969 sessions in New York for her first solo album, Kutner and Martyn had moved in together, gotten married, and written a batch of new songs. These new numbers were markedly different for Martyn, and were influenced by his current favorite album, the Band’s Music from Big Pink. For John, the Band’s very American, rural songs were a signpost to something else beyond the limitations of London’s incestuous folk community.

Serendipitously, Boyd had rented a house for the pair in Woodstock, the birthplace of Big Pink, for album rehearsals. Keyboardist and arranger Paul Harris, bassist Harvey Brooks, and drummers Billy Mundi (Zappa’s Mothers of Invention) and Herbie Lovell would fill out the band. Beverley insisted that John be a major part of the recording, and what was initially to be a solo album soon became a duo project. Though he had agreed to hire Martyn on as backing guitarist, Boyd was not enthusiastic about the prospect, having heard stories of Martyn’s oft-difficult personality. And the producer had reason to be cautious, for when it came time for recording in New York City, the headstrong Martyn (still only 20 years old at the time) and the more experienced Boyd reportedly clashed, creatively and otherwise.

John & Beverley Martyn :: John The Baptist

Conversely, the time spent woodshedding in Woodstock was idyllic and eye-opening for Martyn as the artist colony was buzzing with creativity. John and Beverley’s neighbors were the actor Lee Marvin’s girlfriend and Jimi Hendrix (“He used to arrive every Thursday in a purple helicopter, stay the weekend, and leave on the Monday. He was amazing…a good lad”, said Martyn). Bob Dylan lived down the road, and was recovering from his infamous motorcycle accident. The Martyns bumped into him at a benefit concert they were asked to perform at in Woodstock for Pete Seeger’s Hudson River Sloop Clearwater. According to Beverley in Lee Barry’s Martyn bio Grace and Danger, John flew into a jealous rage when he came upon Dylan and Beverly talking, though Martyn says in a Melody Maker article a few months later, “It was a treat to see him alive and well; he seemed really beautiful”.

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Miles Davis :: Vienna 1973

When listening to the electric work of Miles Davis and his bands in the 1970s, the thought that often goes through my mind is: "How the fuck are they making these sounds?" This high quality 1973 video of the band taking no prisoners in Vienna offers a few answers. Gear heads will dig the lingering shots of keyboards and amps; musos will study every frame devoted to the astonishing guitar attack of Pete Cosey and Reggie Lucas. And then there's Miles himself, the magnetic center of it all, reveling in the massive cloud of dark funk . . .

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