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Bali High :: Soundtrack / Reissue

1981: With an initial bootleg soundtrack touting hits from The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd and Bob Marley, director Stephen Spaulding would later require an original score if he wished to see his underground surf film, Bali High, screened in theaters and sold legally. Turning to Kauai based producer/composer phenom Michael Sena for its 1984 re-release, Sena, without trouble and almost entirely single-handedly managed to sweep the boldness of the existing soundtrack into a seamless, cross-genre body of work perhaps even more invigorating than the original.

Speaking with Sena during a rare moment of downtime ahead of the first Bali High OST issue for Anthology Recordings, it’s clear he has a deep love and respect for surf film and culture, as well as the many opportunities the score brought his way. Check out how it all came together via our conversation below.

Michael Sena :: Bali High

AD: Were you surprised when you got the call from Anthology about doing a vinyl pressing of the Bali High OST?

Michael Sena: I really was. I had kind of gotten an inclination that people were interested in the soundtrack when someone sent me a link to another website. This was about three years ago. The fellow who runs the website, he had interest in punk music, I think, and there are a couple of tracks on the soundtrack that are a little punk-ish. The conversation had started like… I really like this one song, I wish I knew all the words and can I get a copy of it? When the link was sent to me I jumped online and said yeah I know what song you’re talking about and I gave him the words. I actually said here’s my email, I’ll send you a link to the song and I sent him the lyrics.

Then other people chimed in. They said oh, this is a great soundtrack who are the other bands you used on this stuff? There are no other bands…it’s just me. There’s one track where I had gone down to a local bar called Club Jetty..it’s gone now. This is on Kauai. It was destroyed by the hurricane. I had gone down to the bar and these guys were really good players and I said hey I own a studio would you guys like to come in and do some tracks and they said sure. I brought them down to the studio and I re-wrote a cue from one of my other songs to accommodate the band and so on that track, I think it’s called ‘Cannonade’…I just made the word up, they played on it. Pretty much I’m doing all the rest of it. I brought in a fellow who sings really well and we just kind of jammed and placed lyrics over the top of another track but for the most part it’s just all me.

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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 386:  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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Bill Fay :: Who Is The Sender?

One of Bill Fay’s favorite lyrical tricks begins with him describing a pastoral scene. In “Underneath the Sun,” the fourth track on his fourth record, he follows along as “Rain falls down and waters the ground/Where the cherry tree is forming buds/For the blossoms to come.” Fay sings with great delicacy; his voice traces the melody as it carries the droplets from cloud to ground and up again through roots. He carries on this way, subbing scene-setting for storytelling, for two drifting minutes. Then, halfway through a line, just when you’ve begun to overlook the . . .

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Death And Vanilla :: To Where The Wild Things Are

Traversing the same retro-futurist dreamscapes that the late, lamented Broadcast first explored, Swedish trio Death And Vanilla dig into some lovely sounds on their sophomore effort, To Where The Wild Things Are. Thanks to the group's arsenal of vintage microphones and equipment -- Moogs and mellotrons abound -- aficionados will have a field day playing spot-the-influence as the album's 10 tracks unfold. Silver Apples, the United States of America and the BBC's Radiophonic Workshop are perhaps the most obvious touchstones . . .

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Tim Foljahn :: Fucking Love Songs

Read the title of Tim Foljahn’s latest LP, Fucking Love Songs, however you want: as a sarcastic sneer, a wounded sentiment, or somewhere in between. Foljahn’s enjoyed a storied career as a sideman, playing guitar with Townes Van Zandt, Cat Power, Brokeback, Thurston Moore, Half Japanese and more, and appearing on Netflix’s Orange Is the New Black as a member of the bar rocking band Sideboob. But he’s written songs along the way, too, leading the country-tinged Two Dollar Guitar with Sonic . . .

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Brian Wilson :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Brian Wilson opens his new album No Pier Pressure with a quietly profound lyric: “Life goes on and on, like your favorite song.” Wilson has written many people’s favorite songs over the last five decades — the rollicking surf rock of “Little Deuce Coup,” “teenage symphonies to God” like “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and “God Only Knows,” profound psychedelic laments like “’Till I Die,” from 1971’s Surf’s Up -- and over the last decade he’s enjoyed a healthy surge of activity, finishing old Beach Boys business with Smile, exploring nostalgic territory with That Lucky Old Sun and collections of George Gershwin and Disney songs.

No Pier Pressure began as a follow up to the Beach Boys’ 2012 reunion album, That’s Why God Made the Radio and that band’s triumphant 50th anniversary tour. Not surprisingly, the album’s best moments feature former Beach Boys Al Jardine, Blondie Chaplin, and David Marks and evoke Wilson’s classic West Coast pop. But it also charts new territory for Wilson, with producer Don Was assembling a roster of artists like Zooey Deschanel and M. Ward of She & Him, Kacey Musgraves, Nate Ruess of fun., and Sebu Simonian of Capital Cities to add modern touches.

Though not the most even effort — Wilson doesn’t always sound natural with his guests — the record’s highlights are warm and sweet, with songs like “Whatever Happened,” “The Right Time,” “Guess You Had to Be There,” and “Half Moon Bay” showcasing Wilson’s writing at its sunny best.

Notoriously terse in interviews, Wilson was nonetheless enthusiastic discussing the record with Aquarium Drunkard, as well as his role in The Wrecking Crew, a new documentary about the cast of Los Angeles session players that helped create Pet Sounds, and Bill Pohlad’s biopic Love and Mercy, starring Paul Dano and John Cusack as Wilson.

Aquarium Drunkard: There are a lot of different sounds on No Pier Pressure — some dance elements, some pop songs, and lots of Beach Boys-evoking moments.

Brian Wilson: We wanted to make some good harmonies, like the 1960s Beach Boys harmonies. We wanted to make some good harmonies, you know, so people could enjoy it.

AD: “Runaway Dancer” has almost a disco sound. Did you listen to disco at all in the ‘70s?

Brian Wilson: Yeah, I did. It does have a little bit of that kind of a feel to it, it does. I wanted to try something different and new. What we did was we’d take a song, we’d write the chord pattern, then we’d write the melody, then we would write the words. And when it’s done it’s time to produce it, so I’d go in…I produced Nate Ruess, you know from a group called fun. and Zooey Deschanel on a song called “On the Island.”

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The Lagniappe Sessions: Little Wings covers Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen & Beyond

Lagniappe (la ·gniappe) noun ‘lan-ˌyap,’ — 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

Bruce Springsteen. Billy Idol. Lil' Wayne. Van Morrison. A diffuse bouillabaisse of sound and influence as experienced through the lens of Kyle Field's perennial Little Wings. This week's installment of the Lagniappe Sessions finds us with Field and co. in Topanga Canyon, one month out from Little . . .

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Richard Thompson :: Beatnik Walking

Like any artist who has been making records for close to five decades, Richard Thompson has tried out various modes and methods in the studio. He's worked with a variety of producers, from the legendary Joe Boyd in the 1960s to Mitchell Froom in the 1990s to Buddy Miller on 2013's invigorating Electric.

After all these years, probably the best approach for anyone working with Thompson is to just step out of the way and make it easy for the man do his thing -- that . . .

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Next Stop Soweto Vol. 4: Zulu Rock, Afro-Disco 1975-1985

After a five year hiatus Strut Records Next Stop Soweto series returned last month with volume four, Next Stop Soweto: Zulu Rock, Afro-Disco and Mbanqanga 1975-1985. Compiled by Duncan Brooker, the fifteen track compilation finds itself in the wake of the series second installment, highlighting a wide range of lesser known South African artists working under apartheid - an amalgamation of psych, funk, disco and beyond . . .

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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 385:  Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane   ++ Talking Heads - I Get Wild/Wild Gravity ++ The Clash - The Call Up ++The Aggrovators - Dub Is Shining ++ Talking Heads - Born Unto Punches (The Heat Goes On) ++ Los Holy's - Campo de Vampiros ++ Ben E. King - Don’t Let Me Down ++ Los . . .

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Smokey :: How Far Will You Go? – The S&M Recordings, 1973-81

Via Chapter Music this June, the first-ever reissue of 1970s LA pre-punk gay icons Smokey: >How Far Will You Go?: The S&M Recordings, 1973-81. The collection features cameos from James Williamson of the Stooges, Randy Rhoads and members of the Motels, King Crimson, Suburban Lawns and Bowie’s Tin Machine. First taste (with Williamson sitting in), below . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Mikal Cronin (Second Session)

Lagniappe (la ·gniappe) noun ‘lan-ˌyap,’ — 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

Mikal Cronin returns with his second  Lagniappe Session for Aquarium Drunkard, reinterpreting Neutral Milk Hotel and The Walkmen "in all their 8-bitty sine wave synth glory". Cronin's 2013 ukelele-inspired session is still available, here. Mikal, in his own words . . .

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Rolling Stones :: STONEDEDED

I grew up in Atlanta, and there was a trail through the woods that led to the back of a shopping center housing a grocery store, named Big Star, that I would soon find employment in bagging groceries at 15. As such, I took this trail a lot, having no idea the store was the namesake of a band that I would later obsess over, but that's a story for another time.

This is a tale of 'stonededed.' As you exited the woods, the makeshift trail dipped through a hole in a fence spilling . . .

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Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra :: They Say I Look Like God

"They Say I Look Like God" - via 1962's The Real Ambassadors - Louis Armstrong's collaboration with Iola and Dave Brubeck addressing the civil rights movement. Recorded in the Fall of 1961 at New York's Columbia studios, an abridged version of the set  was performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival the following September.

Arguably Armstrong's most haunting performance, during the Monterrey set, his vocal group

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