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Jamaican Snapshots :: Noel Simms – Mr. Foundation

Welcome to Jamaican Snapshots - the first installment of a recurring column illuminating Jamaican artists whose music largely flew under the radar outside genre enthusiasts. The column's intent is to both highlight some of the immense talent produced on the tiny island and to create a rabbit hole leading to further artist exploration should a track strike the right nerve. If you've followed our ongoing Bomboclat: Island Soak series of mixtapes, then this is for you.

Noel Simms had many a . . .

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Lead Belly: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection

Huddie Ledbetter, widely known as Lead Belly, is one of the most important figures in the history of American music. His recordings popularized songs that would become parts of the folk and blues canon, and Lead Belly: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection, a new remarkable new box set, showcases his full range, featuring blues, gospel, folk, popular songs, and novelties.

Co-producer and Smithsonian archivist Jeff Place says the collection in an effort to “create . . .

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Jake Xerxes Fussell :: S/T

Via Paradise of Bachelors, the self-titled debut long player from North Carolina singer and guitarist, Jake Xerxes Fussell — a lively and wholehearted gem of folk, country and bluegrass.

Immersed in old world Americana, Fussell’s debut finds him accompanied by William Tyler on production and guitar, as well as Chris Scruggs on steel guitar, bass and mandolin, Brian Kotzur on drums and Hoot Hester . . .

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John Fahey :: The Zabriskie Point Tapes

For his 1970 counterculture headtrip epic, Zabriskie Point, Italian auteur Michelangelo Antonioni had an inspired idea. He'd hire American Primitive pioneer John Fahey to supply (at least part of) the soundtrack. Things didn't quite work out according to plan, however.

Here's the scoop from Fahey himself, from an interview with Byron Coley at Perfect Sound Forever.

“Antonioni says, ‘What I want . . .

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Leonard Nimoy :: Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love To Town

Beyond Spock, beyond his photography, beyond even In Search Of…: the late Leonard Nimoy, music maker. Best known for his novelty hit “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins,” there are deeper, more affecting cuts. See 1970’s The New World of Leonard Nimoy. Over stark country soul arrangements, Nimoy’s voice is worn-in on songs like “I Walk the Line,” “Put a Little Love in Your Heart,” and “Everybody’s Talkin’.” Particularly haunted is his reading of Mel Tillis’ “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love To Town . . .

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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 379: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Pappy’s Haunted House — Dude ++ Jimmy Thomas — Springtime ++ The Paragons — Abba ++ Big Star — Back Of A Car ++ The Soul Inc. — Love Me When I’m Down ++ Billy Lamont — Sweet Thang ++ Donn Shinn & The Soul Agents — A Minor Explosion ++ T.L. Barrett And Youth . . .

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Father Yod & The Spirit of ’76 :: Kohoutek / Ya Ho Wa 13

High atop the mountain of New Age and psychedelic reissues resides a throne for a man not quite of this earth. Hirsute with a colossal presence that was equal parts yoga master, health food prophet and hippie Santa Claus - Father Yod (later Yahowha) is the granddaddy of spiritual-private-press-cum-cult-esque music. However, before his spiritual enlightenment Father was born James Edward Baker in 1922 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He later earned the Silver Star as a United States Marine in World War II and became an expert in Jujitsu. Desiring to become Hollywood stuntman his efforts were derailed when he became enamored by the Nature Boys, a Los Angeles-based group of a beatniks who lived “according to Nature’s Laws.” His time was soon all spent studying philosophy, religion and esoteric spiritual teachings before becoming a follower of Yogi Bhajan, a Sikh spiritual leader and teacher of Kundalini Yoga. Disenchanted when Bhajan declared he was not god, Baker decided to assume the mantle. In 1969, Baker gathered a group of followers dubbed The Source Family and opened a health food restaurant, The Aware Inn, in the Laurel Canyon section of Hollywood. Now christening himself, Father Yod, Baker adopted a credo based on kindness to animals, a fruit diet, the wearing of cotton clothes and, finally, sex without orgasm. Amongst those who worked in The Aware Inn were a number of budding musicians and Father formed the psychedelic free rock band Ya Ho Wha 13 around their talents in 1973.

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Eternal Tapestry :: Wild Strawberries

Eternal Tapestry is putting the space back in space rock. The Portland, OR collective's latest opus, Wild Strawberries, sets its sights on wide open, pastoral vibrations.  The album title may allude to a classic Ingmar Bergman flick, but you're more likely going to be reminded of Popol Vuh's majestic Werner Herzog soundtracks, or perhaps even some of the post-Syd/pre-Dark Side Pink Floyd's more meditative explorations.

Naturally, it's a double LP, with several slo-mo jams . . .

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Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers :: Seasonal Hire

Having released one of 2014's finest albums just a few months back, you might think Steve Gunn would rest on his laurels just a bit. But the singer-songwriter-guitarist is keeping very busy this year, with plenty of tour dates, a collaborative LP with Kurt Vile slated for summer and this fantastic, just-released session with avant-Appalachia masters, the Black Twig Pickers. Gunn and the Pickers go way back; multi-instrumentalist Nathan Bowles is in Gunn's touring band and don't miss  Melodies For A Savage Fix, a duo effort with . . .

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Vetiver :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Much has been made surrounding the origins of the 'freak-folk' movement, for which Vetiver - the songwriting vessel of Bay-Area native Andy Cabic - has often been accredited. And while certainly an important snapshot in time, to look upon Cabic's body of work solely through that narrow lens serves the listener a disservice. On Complete Strangers, his sixth studio album since 2004, it's obvious Cabic has grown immensely attuned to his own capabilities. These, like so many Vetiver songs, have a long-lasting fortitude to them - they are old friends, the comforts of home and sound better with age.

Speaking with Cabic is much akin to his music. His voice is mellow, inviting, imbued with a righteous confidence. Ahead of his first release for new label-home Easy Sound, we caught up with Cabic while preparing for the onset of the first full-band Vetiver tour in a couple of years.

Aquarium Drunkard: The last tour found you playing solo alongside old friend Devendra Banhart. Tell me about that string of shows.

Andy Cabic: Those were all around northern California. A lot of places I hadn't been before, let alone played before...some really nice venues. It was promoted and arranged by Folk Yeah who do a lot of shows in cool spots around Northern California. They were small intimate shows, short drives. It was an idea that we had a few years ago to book some short tours in places that are really beautiful that we'd want to spend some time in and not be hurried along with a show every night at some breakneck pace. Spots we could really enjoy being on tour.

In 2012 we did this for the first time in Japan and then we did it just this last fall in California. We're about to go to Spain in May to do it once again. It's great…we just kind of get on stage together and are there the whole time just playing songs of both of ours, back and forth. One of Devendra's and then a Vetiver Tune.

AD: Having known Devendra for so long, does being around/playing with him bring out anything in you creatively or otherwise?

Andy Cabic: Yeah...I don't get to perform my songs in that style of arrangement very often. I'm happiest when I have a stage full of friends playing off each other. To just do songs with two guitars isn't something I do often and the songs that sound best that way tend to be old ones. So here I am on stage playing with Devendra playing the songs we used to do a decade ago and it does bring me back. There's a fragile sturdiness to doing songs that way. I don't get to tap into that often. He's super fun to travel with...a goofball who doesn’t take things too seriously. We got to see a lot of friends. It was familiar.

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Jeff Bridges :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

"The world is filled with too many restless people in need of rest–that's why I filled my sleeping tapes with intriguing sounds, noises and other things to help you get a good night's rest…Sit back, close your eyes, and nod off."

That’s how Jeff Bridges, the Dude himself, pitches Sleeping Tapes on Dreaming With Jeff, the site dedicated to the musical project which unites the actor/musician/activist with Keefus Ciancia, a composer known for his work on True Detective and Nashville. Ostensibly, the idea is to create an atmosphere for relaxation, but in true Dude form, it’s more peculiar than that. Sure, Bridges’ stories, word paintings, and gentle murmurs are soothing and warm, but the recordings that accompany his voice are often haunting, veering into strange and uncanny territory.

Bridges was keen to discuss the project with AD by phone, as well as the national No Kid Hungry campaign. Proceeds from Sleeping Tapes downloads, vinyl, and cassette sales benefit the organization, which is dedicated to fighting hunger.

Aquarium Drunkard: Sleeping Tapes is a really enjoyable album. Your affirmations, conversations, and musings are indeed very soothing.

Jeff Bridges: Alright, good! [Laughs]

AD: That’s what you were going for, after all.

Jeff Bridges: Sure! [Laughs] Ah, I kind of didn’t really know what I was going for. I sort of let it do itself, you know? I was given that assignment, to make these “sleeping tapes,” and I was encouraged by the ad agency Wieden+Kennedy and Squarespace to kind of do my thing, you know? I got very excited by the absurdity of it and the openness of it, about the idea of engaging my friends, Keefus Ciancia and my buddy Lou Beach, who wrote some of those stories and designed the cover. I looked at it as a fun creative project, and I had just a ball doing it.

AD: You’ve made a few records now and really started performing a lot of music in conjunction with Crazy Heart, but I imagine that this projected presented an opportunity to experiment much more.

Jeff Bridges: One of the exciting things about it was that it really kind of created a new genre for me. It was opening the “genre” box. In the opening, the introduction, I talk about how the word “sleeping” implies “waking up,” and of course sleeping implies “dreaming,” and those three words kind of imply the whole kit and caboodle. You can put anything into those things -- write lullabies, and stories, and all kinds of different things. It just set my imagination going. It was really freeing that way, and I’m hoping to continue with the website and make different installments to this thing, more albums with the same team and same kind of ideas.

AD: At various points I’ve listened to records or sounds to fall asleep, and while this definitely shares some commonality with the ambient or new age things I’ve employed as sleeping aids, Ciancia came up with things that are more intriguing sounding than I’m used to falling asleep to. It’s not all major key stuff. There’s some dissonance, even some eerie or spooky sounds on this record.

Jeff Bridges: [Laughs] Well, like I said, it’s such a broad spectrum. I say in the introduction “everything implies everything else,” which is a psychedelic thing, but sleeping, you know, you got good dreams, you got bad dreams. It kind of opens the whole thing up about bad dreams. We go to scary movies. We like that kinda shit, you know? It makes it interesting. I love to make and watch movies that are surprising, where you don’t know what’s gonna happen next, and that’s what we were happy to see was happening with this album.

AD: I’ve listened a number of times, but last night I decided to put it to the test and listen to it while going to sleep, and I found myself a little too drawn in -- it sort of required an active listen for me. But you acknowledge that with the closing song, “Goodnight (We’re All In This Together),” when you say, “You’re not asleep yet? Well hell, fire this thing up again.” You can just give it another go and maybe fall asleep that time.

Jeff Bridges: Yeah! And I don’t know if this is how you did it, but the best way to listen is to download it and burn it to a CD in iTunes, so you can set it to burn with no space between songs. We really designed it to be seamless. I’ve noticed with the website between each track is a small little space. You can get the record, or the cassette -- those would be seamless too, I imagine, [but] for that seamless listening, you have to go through that process.

AD: Some very interesting things happen listening to this in that state between being awake and asleep, that hypnogogic space. It was enjoyable, even if I didn’t fall straight asleep.

Jeff Bridges: You mention that last track, which is the most important really. All of the sales from the downloads of the album go toward Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hungry campaign. I’ve been the national spokesperson for them for about five years now. That’s really important to me that that’s being funded. And it’s been funded to the extent of something like $200,000 dollars with the sales from this project. As you know, that’s all donations. People can pick it up for free, but the fact that people are inspired by what it’s really for and what it’s championing, that’s a great sign that our hearts are in the right place.

AD: You open with the statement “Everything implies everything,” and close with the statement “We’re all in this together.” It really brings things around, and speaks to the interesting relationship with this project and the No Kid Hungry campaign.

Jeff Bridges: I’ve been involved in ending hunger for about 30 years now. It started out being concerned about world hunger, and we formed an organization called the End Hunger Network, which was made up of folks in the entertainment industry and folks that were involved in the media. Once I learned that what was keeping hunger in place wasn’t that we didn’t have enough food or money or not even that we didn’t know how to end it — everybody knows how to end it — but what’s missing is the political will to do it. Making it a priority.

In democratic societies our politicians are supposed to represent us, the individuals so it finally gets down to “What am I willing to do?” Now that I know the facts, am I going to ignore those and just go about my business, or am I gonna look into my own life and see what part I might play in turning that around? [I wanted to do that] rather than just making a gesture, like giving a few bucks to something and scratching my guilt itch, you know? That could actually be part of the problem, because the individual feels like they’re off the hook now, they’ve done their part, and the problem persists.

So I wondered, “What could I do that I could keep doing until the problem is solved?” The most natural thing seemed to be doing something like what I’m doing with you now, spreading the word. That’s what I do making movies: tell stories and spread the word about those stories.

Then about 20 years ago the End Hunger Network shifted its focus from world hunger to hunger here in the United States, because some of the programs that were [combating hunger] weren’t being properly funded. We couldn’t be telling other countries how to do it when we have one in five of our kids struggling with hunger. Then about five years ago I got in cahoots with Share Our Strength and their No Kid Hungry campaign.

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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 378: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Landline - Wire ++ Fugazi - Lusty Scripps ++ Disappears - Gone Completely ++ The Damned - Neat Neat Neat ++ The Fall - A Lot of Wind ++ England’s Glory - Shattered Illusions ++ Parquet Courts - You’ve Got Me Wondering’ Now ++ Wire - Ex Lion Tamer ++ The Mekons - Where Were You? ++ Ultimate Painting - Talking . . .

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Geronimo Getty :: Devil’s Theft

Following   up 2012's Darkness Hides ep, LA's Geronimo Getty returns in April with Greyhound Blues. After the jump, check out the first taste off the lp - the Bryan Kramer directed "Devil's Theft".

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