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Shirley Collins Tributes :: Emily Sundblad & Matt Sweeney

Though she retired from regular public performance decades ago, Shirley Collins' influence on today's musical landscape seems to grow with every year. That's a very good thing. Her classic LPs, either alone, or with Davy Graham, her sister Dolly, and Ashley Hutchings, among others, are master classes in traditional English folk forms (with plenty of trips into other folk forms as well). They're also just fantastic records, with Collins' unmistakeable vocals and pristine delivery bringing age-old songs to miraculous life. She's one of our great voices.
That voice and legacy is paid well-deserved tribute . . .

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Ohioan

The music of Tucson’s Ohioan, led by songwriter O Ryne Warner, is about many things, but chiefly, it is music about the concept of “place.”

“From Roscoe Holcomb and the ‘mountain minor’ players to the Berber banjoists of Marrakech, Tinariwen's Tuareg guitar tradition, and the electric reverberation of country music throughout the Sonoran desert: we are bringing these far-flung influences together to reconcile where we come from, where are, and where we're headed,” Warner writes of his upcoming album, Empty/Every MT, out early next year via Gold Robot Records . . .

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Sam Dees :: Soul Sister (1969)

Dig that ominous, hypnotic, and downright menacing groove. When Sam’s vocal begins, it’s all over.

From Birmingham, AL, Sam Dees journeyed to Nashville as a young man to begin recording in the late '60s. Even though records such as this and the mighty "Lonely For You Baby" are the type of 45s that make soul collectors weak in the knees, these devastating records sold next to nothing upon their initial release. However, considering how whipped my personal copies of these records are, they were undoubtedly loved and partied with by their former owners. Fortunately, Sam Dees saw success . . .

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Elyse Weinberg :: Greasepaint Smile

Elyse Weinberg is a longtime favorite of Aquarium Drunkard, whose husky voice was introduced to many via folk rockers Vetiver. In 2001, her long lost debut, 1968’s Elyse was reissued by Orange Twin Records, a swooning, mystic effort bolstered considerably by bonus track “Houses,” a laidback but insistent groover featuring searing lead guitar by Neil Young. Now, thanks to Numero Group . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: Decade – Celebrating Ten Years Floating In The Ether – Los Angeles, August 1st

Time flies. Saturday night, August 1st, we're celebrating a decade of Aquarium Drunkard at the Teragram Ballroom in Los Angeles with The Allah-Las, The Tyde and Drug Cabin. Grip your tickets, here, and join us.

We've giving away some pairs to AD readers. To . . .

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The Raiders :: Just Seventeen (1970)

Between 1965 and '67 Seattle’s Paul Revere & The Raiders were a non-stop hit machine...but by 1970 they were viewed as passé bubblegum by the rock cognoscenti and had been relatively hitless for three years. While the group may have been overexposed (thanks to the several daily afternoon TV shows   that they hosted), they had far too much substance and talent to completely fade away into obscurity. The band - effectively led by singer Mark Lindsay at this point - tried in vain to reinvent themselves as hip ’n’ heavy, going so far as to promote their 1969 . . .

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Manu Dibango :: Dikalo (1973)

Manu Dibango will forever be known as the artist behind the 1972 worldwide smash "Soul Makossa", but his career spans much deeper than that one immortal track. This Cameroon-born sax man has released nearly 60 albums and 80 singles since 1961, and only a handful of those have seen US release. Throughout his career, Dibango has performed traditional Cameroonian music, jazz, and his own unique fusion of afro-beat and funk -- a bouillabaisse that not only . . .

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Marc Bolan: The Final Word ( BBC documentary, 2007)

Streaming in full, and narrated by Suzi Quatro, the BBC 's 2007 documentary chronicling Marc Bolan. Born Marc Feld in 1947, the film documents the artist's life beginning in post-War East London, before diving into nascent T. Rex and the beyond. Press play -- "One and a-two, and a-buckle my shoe~ahh".

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Bobby Patterson — I Got More Soul :: Pickathon / Galaxy Barn

Welcome to the eighth installment of an ongoing series with Pickathon, showcasing footage from the Galaxy Barn located at Pendarvis Farm in Oregon: Bobby Patterson — "I Got More Soul . . .

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The Velvet Underground :: The Freeman Tape Sampler, Max’s Kansas City, NYC, August, 1970

With the official release of (most of) the Matrix Tapes last year, there is very little unheard Velvet Underground live material left in the vaults. But there is a still-unreleased tape that should be heard, capturing the band during its last stand with Lou Reed at Max's Kansas City, 45 years ago this summer.

The details: Way back in 1999, a guy named Joseph Freeman showed up on a Velvet Underground online forum and posted . . .

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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 396:  Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Los Holy’s — Campo de Vampiros ++ Oliver Nelson & His Orchestra — Skull Session ++ Leon Ware — Tamed To Be Wild ++ Ramsey Lewis — Kufanya Mapenzi (Making Love) ++ Fela Ransome-Kuti & Africa ’70 — Let’s Start (Live) ++ Nina Simone — Funkier Than a Mosquito’s . . .

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Chuck Johnson :: Blood Moon Boulder

Chuck Johnson's 2013 long player Crows in the Basilica was one of the finest guitar soli excursions in recent memory. His latest release, Blood Moon Boulder, might just be even better. Gorgeously recorded by Trans Am's Phil Manley, the half-dozen tracks here showcase Johnson's powerful six-string mastery, as the guitarist rolls out one breathtaking composition after the next.

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Irvin Freese & Daughter Jacqueline :: Shell Lake Disaster

Shell Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada. Early morning, August 15, 1967. Recently released from a mental hospital, 21 year-old Victor Hoffman randomly enters a sleeping farmhouse armed with a .22-calibre rifle. In what still stands as one of Canada’s worst mass murders, he shoots and kills nine members of the family inside (seven of them children), sparing just one four-year-old girl.

Learning of the tragedy, Manitoba country musician Irvin Freese immediately writes and records “Shell Lake Disaster” and a single (backed with a fine and faithful version of Wilf Carter’s “Fate of Old Strawberry Roan”) is . . .

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Leon Russell in A Poem Is A Naked Person

As one of the programmers of the annual DKTR Film and Music Festival, which is now in it’s 12th year, I have watched countless films on musicians, bands, regional music scenes, record stores, and significant characters who have been involved with music. One common denominator of these films is that the subject matter rarely stands alone. The fans, the places where they came from, the people who surround and work with them are all a very significant part of their stories and their music.

In Les Blank’s A Poem is a Naked Person, a film commissioned by and documenting Leon Russell’s making of his 1973 album Hank Wilson’s Back, we not only get to experience intimate recording sessions with the powerful piano genius Leon Russell, we also experience his fans, his interactions with fans, his friends, his fellow musicians and life in northeast Oklahoma in 1973. The film is as every bit as rambling, gritty, and passionate as our subject. There are very few staged interviews, the camera is left to capture all moments raw and objectively, from George Jones singing in the studio, to local residents catching catfish in the river. While there is an excitement every time you see Leon or one of the guest stars (Willie Nelson, George Jones, Mama Cass all make appearances) by the end of the film you find that the secondary characters are all just as impressionable.

While I've been a Leon Russell fan longer than I can remember, the film compelled me to really ruminate on who and what Russell’s music exactly is. An Oklahoma native there is no doubt that Russell’s music is deeply steeped in country and blues, but even in this film, where he is recording covers of country classics, you still wouldn’t really categorize him with the likes of country piano players or even that of blues or boogie woogie. Leon’s music is all of these things and more. While the argument has been made that rock ‘n’ roll stole from country and blues, it’s almost as if Leon has done the reverse, keeping his feet firmly planted in an authentic southern sound with the added swagger and momentum of rock ‘n’ roll, an approach that makes it all completely uniquely Leon.

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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.

The Lagniappe Session with Ought can be downloaded, here

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