Posts

Yo La Tengo :: Nowhere Near (Black Sessions, 1993)

At this point, it's hard to imagine a world without Yo La Tengo. The band celebrates their 30th anniversary this week with a series of east coast shows, and yesterday released a deluxe reissue of their 1993 masterpiece Painful packed to the gills with bonus material: demos, live recordings and unreleased nuggets (not to mention a new edition of the . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Symarip :: These Boots Are Made For Stomping

Picture a dance club with sweaty, young adults losing their minds in New Orleans. The scene is the Saturn Bar. It’s freezing outside and everyone wants to be inside dancing, if only to survive the winter. The perfect tune pops on the system and everyone starts shaking it like they’ve forgotten everything else. It’s a primitive response. And just when you thought it was just a cover, it became more than a cover.

Symarip hails from the UK and operated during the late 1960s. Most of . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

The Lagniappe Sessions :: Ultimate Painting (Cover Fugazi, Times New Viking, Sheryl Crow & More…)

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

Ultimate Painting is the collaborative pairing of James Hoare (of Veronica Falls) and Jack Cooper (of Mazes). A beautifully languid pairing at that. This week's installment of the Lagniappe Sessions finds . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: December — A Medley

Traverse wet and snow-covered ground, escape the cold winds of December and dig in to this all vinyl mix of warm-blooded soul and wintry folk ballads.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: December — A Medley

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Blaze Foley :: Clay Pigeons

Blaze Foley did not have it easy.

An Arkansas-born, Texas-raised country artist who was revered by the likes of Townes Van Zandt and Merle Haggard, Foley lived and died in obscurity. The man had it all: a penchant for writing simple but achingly poignant songs of heartbreak and struggle and a deep, unadorned and gruff voice — the kind that exudes a reality of hard earned wisdom. Country singer “Lost John” Casner, a friend of Foley’s, said about him, “"There is an uncompromising honesty…There's . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Lit Up Like A Christmas Tree: A Vintage Holiday Mixtape

Each December, Brian Reese at Big Rock Candy Mountain deals out a month’s worth of holiday esoterica from the far corners of vintage twang, fuzz, scuzz, r&b, blues, country, garage, lounge and beyond. Keeping it loose, he trims his tree with Red Simpson and Mae West, then tops it off with The Sonics, Hank Snow and Champion Jack Dupree. It’s a heady brew. Go ahead, deck them halls.

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: An Evening With Laura Marling

Thursday night, December 4th, Aquarium Drunkard Presents: An Evening With Laura Marling at Community in Los Angeles. DJ sets by Turquoise Wisdom. We will be recording an Aquarium Drunkard session.

Limited space available. RSVP at marlingadq at gmail.com. Confirmation replies with additional information will be sent to selected entrants . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

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 366:  Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Bill Callahan - Diamond Dancer ++ Songs: Ohia - Farewell Transmission ++ Magnolia Electric Co. - The Night Shift Lullaby ++ Phosphorescent - Can I Sleep In Your Arms ++ Yo La Tengo - Leaving Home ++ Phil Cook - The Jensons ++ Steve Gunn - Way Out Weather ++ ++ Espers - Mansfield & Cyclops ++ Harlan T. Bobo . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

The Band :: Genuine Bootleg Series 4: Crossing The Great Divide

Happy Thanksgiving – The Band’s Genuine Bootleg Series 4: Crossing The Great Divide.

“3 CD The Band bootleg released in 1997, not to be confused with the official Across the Great Divide box set. This is the third release in The Genuine Bootleg Series, for some reason sub-titled Take 4. The two first bootleg boxes, The Genuine Bootleg Series, and The Genuine Bootleg Series, Take 2, were mainly filled with Dylan material. Take 4 only has a small amount of Dylan content that is available elsewhere. A Take 3 CD set, all Dylan content, was . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Happy Thanksgiving :: Doug Sahm And Friends — Austin, TX 1972

Tradition runs rampant around Thanksgiving: generations of old recipes, football, Alice’s Restaurant, The Last Waltz, and, of course, a parade of balloons shutting down NYC. What else do you need? If you thought you were covered in the Thanksgiving tradition department, we did too…until a few years ago, when someone blew the dust off a long lost tape – Doug Sahm’s Thanksgiving Jam.

Thanksgiving weekend, 1972: the Grateful . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Contemplative Music: Ariel Kalma, Jordan De La Sierra, Robbie Basho

As a term, “new age music” is slippery, an attempt to group a wide swath of sounds, encompassing strands of ambient, electronic music, jazz, worship, and world music into a definable, classifiable genre. Three new reissues and collections document the many wild threads that existed in the field before new age music codified as a genre, demonstrating both its diversity and accentuating its underappreciated value.

Ariel Kalma, An Evolutionary Music (Original Recordings: 1972 — 1979)

Released by RVNG Int. -- a label responsible for essential collections of music by Sensations’ Fix, K. Leimer, and Craig Leon -- An Evolutionary Music features unreleased recordings from the archives of French-born Ariel Kalma. The artist mingled with trumpeter Don Cherry and joined the spiritual collective Arica in New York in 1976, and the songs take root in free jazz and mysticism, explored via ambient and early electronic means. Kalma blends layered saxophone, spoken word, and drum machines to create avant garde music as personal as folk songs, more spiritual than academic. Songs like “Chase Me Now” and “Rainy Day” are as thrilling and jolting as compositions like “Ecstasy Musical Mind Yoga” and “Echorgan” are contemplative and mindful.

Jordan De La Sierra, Gymnosphere: Song of the Rose

Jordan De La Sierra was a student of minimalist composer Terry Riley, and his Gymnosphere suite, “music for the well-tuned piano,” was released in truncated form in 1977 by a small Bay Area label called Unity. A new edition from the Numero Group and Stephen Hill of space music program Hearts in Space actualizes De La Sierra’s original vision for the suite, spread across two LPs. A student of the avant garde, De La Sierra’s vision is worshipful and cosmological, and Gymnosphere’s aim, he writes in the detailed liner notes of this edition, was to establish “a vibratory connection between the bio-rhythmic cycles of our bodies and the ambience of nature.”

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

Barbara Dane :: When I Was A Young Girl

It makes perfect sense to stumble upon “When I Was A Young Girl,” now, as the nights grow longer and colder and the leaves pile up around the thick trunks of bare Oak trees. Barbara Dane’s voice–“Bessie Smith in Stereo,” one critic described it–is the solemn sort that owes to a childhood lived in Detroit during the Great Depression. A quick read of Dane’s bio shows that the prolific artist never backed down from a political issue. Her sparse take on this woeful traditional song was most likely recorded with the plight of those less . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.

AD Presents: Chances With Wolves 3: High Places / A Mixtape

Our east coast compatriots, NYC’s Chances With Wolves return with their third serving for Aquarium Drunkard: High Places / A Mixtape. As always, it’s a heady/essential brew.

"we wanted this one to sound like a daydream on an empty beach in Autumn, but somewhere along the way it became something else; it's like the songs react to one another and take us in the direction they want to go. Enjoy."

become a member or log in.

Nathan Bowles :: Nansemond

For good or ill, the banjo has become the ultimate signifier of old timey Americana. You want to sprinkle a little down home "authenticity" into a song? Put a banjo on it. To bring anything free of cliche to the table it takes a seriously skilled and imaginative musician.
Nathan Bowles is definitely that musician. As a versatile multi-instrumentalist, he's been on the scene a while now, contributing regularly to the Pelt/Black Twigs Pickers universe, and playing with such talents as Jack Rose, Hiss Golden Messenger, Daniel Bachman and Steve Gunn. Bowles put out his first solo album, the excellent A Bottle, A Buckeye, on Soft Abuse in 2012.

Nansemond, his new LP on Paradise of Bachelors (a label that has been batting a thousand since launching a few years back), is a stunner from start to finish. It's a transporting collection of sounds that fuses age-old Appalachian traditions with cosmic drones, in the process creating something that sounds fresh and vital to these ears.

Some friends drop in to help; a highlight is "Chuckatuck," the majestic duet between Bowles and experimental guitarist Tom Carter. But Bowles does amazing things mostly with just the four strings of his banjo. The long, deep solo rambles that take up a good portion of the record are beautiful excursions that conjure up strange and spectral southern landscapes. Nansemond is mostly instrumental, but Bowles is nothing if not a storyteller, taking you on an evocative, transfixing journey. Listen up. words / t wilcox
Nathan Bowles :: Chuckatuck

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

To continue reading, become a member or log in.