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Doug Paisley & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy :: Until I Find You

Doug Paisley and Bonnie “Prince” Billy are individually responsible for two of this year’s most sublime collections of folk rock, Strong Feelings and Singer's Grave A Sea of Tongues. In a gorgeous case of real recognizing real, the songwriters have teamed for “Until I Find You,” a new single available from the solid folks at No . . .

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Shut Up, Al Green :: The Art Of The Studio

There are those songs that come into the studio to be revamped, polished, and preened, and then there are those songs that enter, rough and tumble, and utilize the momentum. It’s there in the introductions mostly, this ability of a song to reveal itself as a production. You hear it taking place, pre-performance, and suddenly you’re in amidst the equipment and the mixing board. Everything’s a mess and everything’s about to come together. More importantly, you’re being reminded (sometimes intentionally, sometimes not) that, yes, this is recording, this is something being made for you . . .

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Dead Notes #9 :: (2/22/69 Vallejo, CA)

Welcome to Dead Notes #9. In early 1969 we find our bohemian freaks spaced out on STP and nitrous oxide, holed up behind a 16-track recording console working on their palindromic 3rd album, Aoxomoxoa. The sessions are described as "a little weird to very weird" and the blossoming partnership between Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter results in lyrics so obscure and far-out that the resulting album is split between fan favorites and inaccessible cuts that only the deepest heads could fully appreciate. In the middle of January the band are guests on Hugh Hefner’s short-lived, yet too-corny-to-be-cool, program Playboy After Dark. With their merry band of rogues in tow, including acid king and benefactor-cum-soundman Owsley Stanley - who made it his personal mission to dose Hugh Hefner’s Pepsi - the party goers loosen their ties and tops while Garcia strums the lysergic chords of “Mountains of the Moon”. Days later the band’s crew is stumbling up the steep stairs of the Avalon Ballroom, arms filled with equipment, to begin a month’s worth of recording for their seminal release Live/Dead.

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Hamilton Camp :: I Shall Be Released

From the wholly acoustic album, 1969’s Welcome Hamilton Camp, this deep and brooding Dylan cover resides amongst a small collection of musical meditations in the form of original songs and hypnotic covers ranging from Bob Dylan and Simon & Garfunkel to Leonard Cohen.

Coupled with the reverberations of harmonica accompaniment (sounding not unlike Neil Young's harp), Camp’s vocals transcend most folk singers and lend themselves to an operatic comparison which takes each song to new heights . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: November — A Medley

A sonic medley of oranges and browns, falling leaves and autumn tones. Embrace soulful western ballads, gentle whispers and cold and gritty tunes that demand the tempting warmth of your winter coat. Because it is almost time, but not quite yet.

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: November — A Medley

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Christian Bland & The Revelators :: Brian Wilson

Out on The Unseen Green Obscene lp via Reverberation Appreciation Society. Shot on Super 8 while driving around LA looking for Brian Wilson. The video is a throwback to the Pet Sounds promotional videos . . .

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Weyes Blood :: The Innocents

Weyes Blood is the project of Natalie Mering. On her latest lp, The Innocents, she has crafted a soundscape that is brighter, clearer, than the murkier, more lo-fi psychedelic outings of past. But that’s not to suggest that the music is any less haunting. After all, on “Hang On,” Mering wakes up in a tomb. This is gothic, elegiac folk — stately and majestic.   Her vocals are measured, solemn and deliberate, evoking a bygone . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (Halloween Edition)

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 362: Count Chocula Intro ++ The Tomko’s - The Spook ++The Blue Echoes - It’s Witchcraft ++ The Gories - Casting My Spell ++ The A-Bones - Mum’s The Word ++ Elvira - End of Side One ++ Screaming Lord Sutch - She’s Fallen In Love With A Monster Man ++ Baron Daemon & Vampires - Ghost Guitars ++ Frankenstein - This . . .

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Videodrome :: Phantom Of The Paradise

(Welcome to Videodrome. A monthly column plumbing the depths of vintage underground cinema – from cult, exploitation, trash and grindhouse to sci-fi, horror, noir and beyond.)

While Halloween goes hand in hand with horror, perhaps nothing captures the playfully gruesome spirit of the season quite like a musical horror comedy.

But blending laughter, tunes and good old-fashioned human slaughter is not an easy trick to pull off–nor are there many treats in this underserved genre. Beyond Sweeney Todd and the Rocky Horror Picture Show, fans face the prospect of quenching their music-horror cravings with tremendous schlock stupidity like Hillbillys in a Haunted House or Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter. Thankfully, a recent high definition update of Brian De Palma’s wild glam-goth spectacle Phantom of the Paradise makes a worthy addition to this exclusive category, and a fine choice for your haunted harvest viewing pleasure.

The plot focuses on Winslow Leach (William Finley) an idealistic but talented young composer who is hoodwinked by the shadowy music mogul Swan, framed for drug crimes and imprisoned, then maimed, disfigured and forgotten. Re-emerging as the Phantom, he stalks the nooks and crannies of Swan’s Paradise Theater sabotaging sets and offing those who defy his musical aesthetic, before being tricked into writing a magnum opus for his muse, the beautiful, vocally endowed Phoenix (played by Jessica Harper, later of Suspiria fame).

Subbing in rock ‘n roll and a scurrilous music industry backdrop, the film offers a remix on Phantom of the Opera, while stitching references from works such as Doctor Faustus and Psycho together with themes from classical Gothic horror and high show biz satire.

Culminating in a bloody, campy, cheap effects-driven cacophony of electric guitar haze, dancing, screaming and 70s fashion, Phantom cuts a visually arresting exploration of the corrupt and creepy, with a soundtrack that sticks in your head. It’s also early evidence of the budding talent and filmmaking passion of De Palma, who hints at some of his later, bloodier work (Scarface, Carrie) while demonstrating heart and a sense of humor.

Of course, as can be expected from a B-movie of this era, the acting is unremarkable. From a technical standpoint, the film’s low budget nature is evident throughout. But no matter. The real highlight is a bizarre and captivating mix of songs and performances that artfully aids and abets the Phantom’s mad, music-fueled quest for vengeance.

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The Velvet Underground :: Candy Says – Boston, Dec 12, 1968

In a few weeks, a six-disc box set celebrating the Velvet Underground’s self-titled third LP will hit shelves. The main draw is the inclusion of The Matrix Tapes – long-awaited, holy grail live recordings from 1969 which we covered a little while back. Somewhat disappointingly, however, is the lack of studio outtakes from The Velvet Underground sessions. Either they don’t exist or were deemed unworthy of release.

I’d always hoped that lurking . . .

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Radio Cramps :: The Purple Knif Show

Lux Interior: inter-dimensional, pan-sexual, time-traveling rock & roll alien. And radio host. As Halloween draws nigh we're revving up for our annual airing of The Purple Knif Show, the one-off radio program hosted by Lux in 1984 deep in the bowels of Hollywood. As master of ceremonies, Lux runs through his personal archives spinning the weird ranging from rockabilly and garage to early punk, campy novelty and exotica. His bag of tricks was the best. So go ahead, "get out your magic decoder rings, boys and girls..." Trick or treat.

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Elisa Ambrogio :: The Immoralist

“You can’t be wise and in love at the same time.” Bob Dylan said that. It’s probably not true. Not forever, at least. But for the rational – let’s say for the self-contained – the process of falling in love unexpectedly confronts years of hard-won habits and mindsets. Those opening moments, when the plane is off the ground and the windowshade is opened for the first time and the ground suddenly appears so far below, will give you vertigo. Never mind, for the moment, the destination or even the journey itself. Forget not looking back; don’t look down.

Or do. Elisa Ambrogio, frontwoman of Connecticut no-wavers Magik Markers, begins The Immoralist with a survey from the air. Over fluttering kickdrum and chiming major chords, she confesses a love that overwhelms her rationality. Love has her breaking wishbones and wishing on stars. “I don’t see ghosts/I don’t believe in thirteen,” she sings by way of apology, “But I get superstitious when it comes to you and me.”

It’s a precise, complex portrait, a demonstration of the singer’s realizing that she’s lost herself in another person. Whether the love is requited isn’t really the point here; recognizing that your identity has been subsumed into that of another is enough. It’s delivered from beneath a blanket of reverb and with an air of fear and melancholy, but what makes it great – what makes it almost perversely un-rock ‘n’ roll – is the way Ambrogio rolls up the ends of that chorus line, the resolution she puts on the “you and me,” and the major chords that are struck from the accompanying piano with a kind of pleased defiance. When she does it again in the next song, “Reservoir,” singing as she does of being arm-in-arm with her beloved and gently promising “I don’t want this with no one else,” it’s enough to make you stop what you’re doing and whistle in admiration.

And it’s not Ambrogio’s only trick. She carries her howling guitar over from Magik Markers, but here it’s subdued, pressed and molded into the gaps in her songs. She paints “Kyrie” with blobs of kickdrum and broad brushes of cello, then lets that guitar shatter the scene like dry and crackling paint. She drops her voice into a Kim Gordon pout in the propulsive “Stopped Clock,” then uses it to drawl out the opening lines of “Clarinet Queen,” where detail stands in for story (“Second chair clarinet queen/Touches her tongue to her reed”). Dusky melancholy moments like these fall on The Immoralist like a fine dust, but the shaking of Ambrogio’s guitar keeps it from gathering and obscuring the handiwork beneath.

That’s a bit florid. I know. But Ambrogio’s talent for subtlety, her patience with her own storytelling, is arresting. Love here is thoroughly alive and deeply gut-wrenching. Memories are mourned and celebrated in equal measure; harmony lives alongside dissonance. There’s no pixie dust or puppy sounds, no super-sweet sap. It’s refreshing and mildly threatening, and it’s the farther thing from twee: it’s the truth. words / m garner

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Thurston Moore :: The Best Day

Thurston Moore's solo records have always been an interesting barometer to his state of mind outside of Sonic Youth. Psychic Hearts, his solo debut, was the most Sonic Youth of any of his solo albums, but that was also 1995, a time when his main gig was riding some of its highest commercial presence. It may not have made sense to deviate too much from the norm, especially with videos on MTV.

But by the time he returned with another proper solo album, it was 2007 and . . .

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Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band :: Intensity Ghost

After releasing the masterful Solar Motel last year, guitarist Chris Forsyth put together a group to take the LP to the stage. Pretty quickly, it became clear that the Solar Motel Band was one of the most powerful ensembles out there, finding the fertile middle ground between the razor sharp dynamics of Television with the cosmic leanings of the Dead. Dig the Solar Live Record Store Day release from earlier this year for a demonstration of the group’s potent onstage chemistry.

The new . . .

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Modern Vices :: S/T

Modern Vices describe their sound as “dirty doo-wop,” but don’t get too confused. These Chicago-based rockers -- vocalist Alex Rebek, bassist Miles Kalchik, drummer Patrick Hennessey, and guitarists Peter Scoville and Thomas Peters — owe more to the heritage of the Modern Lovers and the Velvet Underground than the group harmonies of the Del-Vikings or the Flamingos. In the case of Modern Vices, the doo-wop tag is more an abstraction, a descriptive nod to the prevailing mood that dominates their self-titled debut for Autumn Tone. Even at . . .

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