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Talking Heads :: Capitol Theatre – November, 1980 – Passaic, NJ

This is making the rounds...and for good reason. Talking Heads performing live at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, NJ, Fall of 1980, in support of the just released Remain In Light.

Related: Talking Heads :: Live In Rome, 1980 (Full Concert)

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Terry Allen :: Juarez

Terry Allen’s 1975 debut, Jaurez, is a story of a Texican Badman. It’s a western pastoral told through timeless songs and gentle orchestrations covered in dusty ragweed and a thurderstorm here and there.   Here, Allen weaves a finely woven tapestry of American outlaw adventure, sex and violence, with characters ranging from sailors and prostitutes to mad-men and rock-riders. Very few concept albums drum up and maintain the sincerity and reverence that Juarez encapsulates.

In addition to . . .

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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 372: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++  Fugazi - Lusty Scripps ++ Mission Of Burma - New Disco ++ 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 Wonderin’ Now ++ Wire - Ex Lion Tamer ++ Ultimate Painting - Talking Central . . .

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The Music of Tim Sutton’s ‘Memphis’ :: Willis Earl Beal, Shirley Ann Lee and Bobby “Blue” Bland

“Like a waking dream...located somewhere between blue midnight and grey dawn”

While the above quote describes Willis Earl Beal’s self-released 2014 collection, Experiments in Time, it can easily be applied to Beal’s latest vehicle as well -- the minimalist film Memphis, written and directed by Tim Sutton. Shot on a low budget and quietly released in 2014, the semi-autobiographical Memphis is a beautifully vivid experiment in naturalistic observation.

Filmed on location,

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John Lurie :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

It feels like John Lurie has done it all. As leader of the Lounge Lizards, he dominated New York’s underground music scene with punk-inflected jazz from the early ‘80s until the early 2000s. As an actor, he defined director Jim Jarmusch’s early films -- Stranger Than Paradise and Down By Law -- cutting a striking figure in black and white, as well as providing scores for those films and Jarmusch’s Memphis epic Mystery Train. He played roles in The Last Temptation of Christ, Oz, and Paris, Texas, co-wrote the theme for Late Night With Conan O’Brien, earned a Grammy nomination for his Get Shorty score, crafted a mythic blues figure called Marvin Pontiac (enlisting Beck, Michael Stipe, David Bowie, and Leonard Cohen to help further his ruse) and created a beautifully absurd fishing show, Fishing With John.

These days, Lurie focuses on painting. Complications from advanced Lyme disease prevent him from playing saxophone, but with his art he taps into the same creative energy that supplied his music with its manic jolt. Occasionally, the two worlds dovetail: Last year, Amulet Records released The Invention of Animals, a collection of ‘90s recordings by the John Lurie National Orchestra. His painting of the same name is featured on the cover.

Last November, Lurie launched a late night live podcast, VICE After Dark with John Lurie, in conjunction with VICE. The offbeat, often hilarious show is currently on hiatus, but its three episodes serve as peek into Lurie’s headspace. Intrigued, I asked him for an interview. Lurie agreed and we emailed back and forth over the holidays. See more of John’s art at his official site and on Twitter, and enjoy our conversation.

Aquarium Drunkard: I've really been enjoying your internet radio show, VICE After Dark with John Lurie. Have you enjoyed doing it so far?

John Lurie: Yes and no. I think it could be something kind of great, but to be honest the first three were pretty stressful. It is, of course, difficult to do a live radio show, but I think I could get used to that part. But there were technical problems that had me kind of flustered.

AD: Is the VICE show on hiatus?

John Lurie: Hiatus for sure. Maybe it’s done, but I hope not. But VICE has to get behind it a bit.

AD: The interviews with Flea, your brother Evan Lurie, and Steve Buscemi were great. Had you talked to other folks about calling in?

John Lurie:  The great thing about those three is that they are all so real. Finding people who are known and can be real is not so easy. I had a list of 10 people that I contacted for the third episode that I thought would be good, but three were in plays, one had a death in the family, three were in Europe and three didn’t get back to me. And then I had no one. But I don’t think the show needs a guest to work.

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England’s Glory :: Shattered Illusions

England's Glory: early 70s pre-Only Ones band fronted by Peter Perrettt. Very similar to later era VU, but recorded before Lou Reed cut the Transformer LP. As there were only 25 or so copies of the LP pressed in winter of 1971, perhaps a copy made it into the hands of Mick Ronson & Bowie...who were looking for ideas for the Transformer template & Lou's reinvention. Oh, speculation.

Hozac . . .

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Fairport Convention :: Philadelphia Folk Festival, August 29, 1970

By the time Fairport Convention took the stage at the 1970 Philadelphia Folk Festival, they had already been through more lineup changes than most bands experience in decades. Since forming in early 1967, talents such as Judy Dyble, Sandy Denny, Ashley Hutchings and Iain Matthews (not to mention drummer Martin Lamble, who died in a tragic 1969 car crash) had all passed through Fairport's revolving doors . . .

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Ryley Walker :: Primrose Green

Ryley Walker returns this spring with his second long-player, and Dead Oceans debut, Primrose Green. Last year's All Kinds Of You made our 2014 Year In Review, and this one somehow bests it. High praise, indeed. Below is the title track, and first taste off the LP.

Video after the jump.

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Can :: Midnight Sky / The Empress and the Ukraine King

1968 free-jazz, psychedelic, art rock-funk. Sure, and from who else but Can. Culled from the still vital Lost Tapes compilation, “Midnight Sky” is one of the group’s earliest rarities, featuring their first vocalist, the New York City-based singer (and sculptor) Malcolm Mooney. As the band builds a tense, driving rhythm, Mooney riffs and scats, announcing, “This is just how I feel today, my man,” before launching into a feverish rant about getting . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Jess Williamson

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

The Lagniappe Sessions return in 2015 with Austin, TX based singer-songwriter Jess Williamson. "Blood Song” off Williamson's debut from last year, Native State, is what initially turned us on -- seeing her live (three times) thereafter is what kept us coming back. Here, Williamson and her bandmates (Jesse Kees, Shane Renfro, and Andrew Stevens) interpret Nina Simone, Leonard . . .

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Videodrome: Day Of The Outlaw (1959, André De Toth)

(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.)

Sometime around college, I heard a quote attributed to Leo Tolstoy that holds “all great literature is one of two stories; a man goes on a journey or a stranger comes to town.” The maxim stuck with me, and is particularly apt when describing  André de Toth’s massively underrated 1959 western film Day of the Outlaw. Starring Robert Ryan and an against-type Burl Ives (he’s the stranger), de Toth’s film ranks as one of the finest psychological westerns ever committed to celluloid.

Our hero is Ryan’s Blaise Starrett, who we find in the film’s opening positively seething with rage towards local rancher Hal Crane, who has erected a barbed wire fence on the open range. Starrett is no white-hatted keeper of ranch virtue, though, as we quickly learn that his real motivations lie with Crane’s wife Helen (a stunning Tina Louise half a decade before the world would know her as Gilligan’s Ginger). “A wire fence is a poor excuse to make a widow out of Crane’s wife,” says Starrett’s drunkard partner Dan in this opening exchange, laying plain the steel-hard tension that dominates the film’s first act.

This opening sequence, and most all of the film’s exteriors, are set against a stark and breathtaking backdrop of crippling snow across a western mountain range. In fact, in a film chock full of ambivalent heroes and villains, the one incontrovertible nemesis in de Toth’s world might well be this relentless winter--one that’s “colder and harder than most,” as one saloon denizen puts it. The hopeless and ominous tone is heightened throughout by Alexander Courage’s booming score, driven as it is by belching lower-register horns and icy woodwinds.

Just as tensions hit a breaking point (with guns drawn, no less) in the old fashioned love triangle of Starrett, Crane, and Helen, de Toth changes course abruptly and introduces the stranger– Burl Ives’ Jack Bruhn, a disgraced army captain with a band of bottom-rung misfits in tow. Braun and his gang are on the run from the Calvary, and he makes it known immediately that his is the law of the land--wherever he is and for however long he chooses to be there. In his best stentorian balladeer bellow, Ives introduces his band of dead-eyed marauders thusly:

“Ace here – he derives pleasure out of hurting people. Tex – rile him and you’re gonna hear some screaming in this town today. Denver – half Cheyenne. He hate white man, but he doesn’t feel half so badly about white women. Boss – bones covered with dirty skin, but even half-drunk he’s the fastest draw in Wyoming territory.”

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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.

Jonathan Rado, of Foxygen, is my guest this week.

SIRIUS 371: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++  Jan Hammer Group - Don’t You Know ++ The Move — Chinatown ++ Todd Rundgren — Healing Part III ++ Smokey Robinson & The Miracles — The Tracks of My Tears . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: January — A Medley

Sidle up and dig in to this all-vinyl medley of unicorn dreams, flittering romances, rusty country cuts. Start your year with this mix and maybe you’ll follow Mike Wilhelm’s lead when he bellows “Startin’ next week I’m gonna get myself together".

Aquarium Drunkard Presents: January — A Medley

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Françoise Hardy :: Till the Morning Comes (Neil Young, 1972)

You did check these out, right? Hello, Mr. Soul :: Neil Young Covers, 1967-1978

Françoise Hardy :: Till the Morning Comes

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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. Download Ultimate Painting’s lagniappe session, here….

SIRIUS 370:  Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Cate Le Bon — I Can’t Help You ++ Ultimate Painting — Talking . . .

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