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Hiss Golden Messenger :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

“I had a little bit of a crisis,” songwriter M.C. Taylor jokes.

Arriving in Asheville, North Carolina, where Taylor performed earlier this month with members of Songs: Ohia and Magnolia Electric Co. as a tribute to his departed friend Jason Molina, he realized that his denim jacket wouldn’t cut it against the Southern January chill. He asked if we could delay our conversation, and when he called back, warmer wear acquired, he was ready to discuss his performances with Songs: Molina (you can — and should — hear recordings of that union at Archive.org) and Bad Debt, the 2010 LP he recorded at his kitchen table, while his newborn son slept.

The story of Bad Debt comes with its own crises: Originally released in limited quantities by Taylor himself, the album’s initial CD run was almost completely destroyed during the London riots of 2011, when a Sony warehouse burned. Its songs found new lives on subsequent Hiss Golden Messenger LPs, 2012’s Poor Moon and 2013’s Haw, but the album remained the skeleton key in Taylor’s discography, marking the point at which the former Ex-Ignota and Court & Spark member bloomed into his own, when Hiss Golden Messenger’s country soul crystallized.

On January 14, 2014, Bad Debt finally saw proper release via Taylor’s friends at Paradise of Bachelors. The latest edition is the definitive one, featuring for the first time Taylor’s intended track list. It’s a tremendous record. Taylor’s sturdy croon and acoustic guitar, augmented with layers of echo and foot stomps, sonically suggests Pink Moon, Nebraska, or The Creek Drank the Cradle, but Taylor’s ecclesiastic visions are all his own. “The record is about my God: that is, whether I have one, and whether there is a place for me in this world,” Taylor writes. “I don’t go to church, and I am not saved. I can party too. I can do a saxophone now and again, bang the drum. Bad Debt was my revelation, and there are many for whom I’ll never make a record better than this one.”

Crisis averted, new jacket secured, Taylor discussed the record and the daunting task of stepping into Jason Molina’s shoes.

Aquarium Drunkard: Right now you’re doing the Magnolia Electric Co./Songs: Ohia shows, right?

M.C. Taylor: Yes, right now I’m with those guys. We played in Durham, NC last night and drove to Asheville today.

AD: I heard last night was pretty crazy. Sold out, stuff like that.

M.C. Taylor: It was a little intense. I mean, it was intense for a lot of reasons. One, it’s just such a small club and that many bodies in there kind of freaks me out a little bit. The more obvious reason is I’m learning this friend of mine’s -- this friend of ours -- music. Maybe I avoided thinking of the sort of gravity or implications of doing that [because] the relationships that people have to his music because it might become a distraction to me. So, the whole process of learning this music, I just sat down and was very methodical about trying to honor his songs, but at the same time make it feel like a genuine performance by me. I’m not trying to cop every single lick that he does, just get the spirit there.

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Portishead Recreate Third :: Live / Parts 1- 4 (2008)

Promotional video, for Third, upon its original 2008 release. With a near 35 minute runtime, the footage captures Portishead running through the live arrangements worked up for the Third tour. Alright, now to revisit that Beth Gibbons/Paul Webb record.

After the jump, audio (ripped from the above video) in four parts. . .

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Beachwood Sparks :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

As El Nino rolled into Southern California in the summer of 1997 it pushed two friends, Brent Rademaker and Chris Gunst, to escape Los Angeles. Frequent trips to Joshua Tree were coupled with crashes at Gunst's parents home to float in their pool and stare at the desert's night skies. In the midst of this extreme climate change, a mixtape of 'West Coast country rock' was being passed around amongst friends inspiring Rademaker to transform his indie rock group, Further, into a new psychedelic country and western outfit - Beachwood Sparks. Loose jam sessions took place, and as the summer slid into autumn the group adopted a vibe that was reminiscent of Crazy Horse - part soulful country, part reckless rock 'n' roll, all with a tinge of mid-90's Glasgow indie rock.

As the jam sessions gave away to recording in a cramped shed, they laid to tape Desert Skies - their recently released 'lost' first album. What sets this album apart from their 2000 Sub Pop debut, is that it presents a perfect portrait of the group in its infancy, finding their feet in light of the dissolution and influence of their previous incarnation. Recorded prior to the full spit and shine of the lush Laurel Canyon aesthetic they would   soon become known for, cuts like "Canyon Ride" and "Desert Skies" pack an extra, unexpected, punch.

Beachwood Sparks :: Canyon Ride

We caught up with Rademaker to discuss the beginnings of the group, their influences and if Beachwood Sparks could have been a band anywhere else but California.

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Lucinda Williams :: S/T Reissue

When Lucinda Williams released her self-titled lp in 1988, it was the third album she'd ever released, only her second made up of completely original material and her first in eight years. Her first two albums, Ramblin' and Happy Woman Blues, were released in relatively quick succession in 1979 and 1980. Then, for certainly not the last time in her career, she went dark. But when the self-titled album emerged those eight years later, it was, in a lot of ways, the true coming out party for Lucinda Williams the artist. Over the next fifteen years, she would put out five albums that would prove her as a truly remarkable songwriter.

But it's 1988's Lucinda Williams that gives us the first fleshed out vision of the artist to come. It's appropriate the album is self-titled - as if Williams herself knew what she had on her hands. Self-titled records usually mark some sort of statement of purpose or intent - bands will sometimes self-title an album deep into their career to mark some sort of rebirth of focus. Here, after eight years away - an eternity in commercial music - it's as if Williams is reintroducing herself to the world. And while elements of those first two records still spring up throughout, it's unquestionably a more confident Lucinda Williams that recorded this album.

Over the years, there's been endless speculation about her perfectionist tendencies when it comes to her records, and for awhile the massive gaps between albums seemed to bear that out. (Compare 19 years between her first five studio LPs and the ten between her last five.) But whatever was going on in the eight years between Happy Woman Blues and Lucinda Williams, it was something important. In performance alone, Williams seemed to have found the first real fix on her voice. To listen to her first two records is to hear an artist still getting a feel for who she is performance wise. All of that hesitancy is gone by 1988. "I Just Wanted To See You So Bad" opens the album with the kind of driving, pleading, plaintive ode to a lover that Williams would become increasingly adept at in the coming years. "Changed the Locks" would become one of her defining moments with its pounding bluesy cadence and righteous indignation of the lyrics - not to mention one of her strongest vocal performances in delivering that emotion. "Crescent City" and "Side of the Road" should have been radio hits, but country music has always been a hard business to break in to - especially if your obvious lyrical touchstones aren't always so much Hag and Hank as Zimmerman and O'Connor.

Lucinda Williams :: I Just Wanted To See You So Bad

And then there is "Passionate Kisses." Granted, Mary Chapin Carpenter's version - the one that would go to number four on the country charts in 1992 - is actually really well done and is heavily styled after Williams' original recording. But why a song that good would languish on a record - well, I suppose you may as well ask why Big Star never had big hits or - for a more accurate comparison - why everyone else but Nanci Griffith seemed to hit it big with her songs. The commercial music universe is a fickle and inscrutable beast. Regardless, "Passionate Kisses" is among Williams' finest pop distillations - a superbly focused song that hits every right note and strum, every right word. It may also be the only song in the world where someone uses the word "stuff" as a noun and I don't think it's an immature lyrical move. It works - don't ask me how exactly, but it does.

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Ray Stinnett :: January 18th @ The Mint, Los Angeles

Ray Stinnett, the man behind one of our favorite 2012 reissues, A Fire Somewhere, will be performing  in Los Angeles at The Mint this Saturday night. A special engagement, it's a rare opportunity to catch Stinnett in action. Aquarium Drunkard and Light In The Attic present.

Tickets can be purchased directly, here . . .

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Turquoise Wisdom: Angels In The Abstract / A Mixtape

Our compadre Zach Cowie, aka Turquoise Wisdom, returns to AD with some mellow sounds to begin 2014. Last year Cowie posted a tune every weekday from his record collection — all of which can be found and downloaded at Play It As It Lathes. Cowie guests on the Aquarium Drunkard show, this Friday, on SIRIUS XMU.

Cocteau Twins - Cherry Coloured Funk - Otherness - Fontana*Olivia Newton John - Love Song - If Not For . . .

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AD Presents :: Jessica Pratt – Berlin, Germany / January 20th

We’re in Berlin for six months. Next up — AD presents Jessica Pratt, January 20th, at Monarch. We’re giving away a few pairs of tickets to AD readers. To enter, leave a comment below with your name and a valid email we can reach you at. Advance tickets, here. 10 EUR at the door.

Monarch -- Skalitzer Str. 134 10999 Berlin . . .

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I Heard The Angels Singing: A Conversation With Mike McGonigal

Back in December of 2011, Mike McGonigal, publisher of the excellent cultural journal YETI and producer of two collections of blazing gospel music, Fire in My Bones and This May Be My Last Time Singing, told Aquarium Drunkard that his next project for the Tompkins Square label would be a collection of music from the Nashboro label.

“It will blow a lot of people away, just how truly solidly mind-blowing this music was,” McGonigal said.

True to his word, the resulting collection, I Heard the Angels Singing: Electrifying Black Gospel from the Nashboro Label 1951-1983, released in December 2013, indeed blew minds. Featuring recordings from former jukebox operator, record store owner, and producer Ernest L. Young’s Nashboro label, its four discs chart gospel’s incorporation of rock & roll and soul sounds, bathed in reverb and sanctified intent, featuring cuts from Swanee Quintet, Brother Joe May, the Consolers, the Fairfield Four, and many, many more. We again caught up with McGonigal, who took some time to explain how the project came about.

The Radio Four :: How Much I Owe You

Aquarium Drunkard: It seems like Ernie Young knew exactly what he was doing with Nashboro: He had a store to sell the records in, a radio station to broadcast the platters via, and a studio to record his acts.

Mike McGonigal: By all accounts, Ernie Young was an incredible mensch. He’d always pay his artists, never stole anyone’s publishing, would frequently advance money if people needed it. He got started as a jukebox operator who then began to sell record players and then records to a primarily black clientele.

I have a real affinity for the lightly-reverbed, clear sound of his recordings. He did have other producers work with him but apparently the majority of Nashboro recordings were manned by Young himself in a small, basic studio located in the same building as his record shop.

AD: How much was Young interested in fostering the "Nashboro/Excello" sound? Some things I’ve read suggest he recorded the acts with little fanfare — just sort of point the mics and hit “record.”

Mike McGonigal: Dude was no Sam Phillips. But like I said, the sound he got? I like it a lot. It’s more than just a straight field type recording — there’s a lot of reverb on those Radio Four and Hightower and Consoler sides! A lot, but not too much — not for me, anyway.

AD: You've assembled two other gospel collections for Tompkins Square, which have drawn from various labels. What about Nashboro specifically spoke to you?

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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 326: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ Arthur Lee - Everybody's Gotta Live ++ Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons - You're A Song That I Can't Sing ++ Billy Nicholls - Girl From New York ++ The Beach Boys - Over The Waves ++ Dion - Baby Let's Stay Together ++ Atlas Sound - So Sad (To Watch Good . . .

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Irma Thomas :: Ruler of My Heart

Soul singer Irma Thomas recorded “Ruler of My Heart” with Allen Toussaint in 1963 for the New Orleans based Minit label. Otis Redding struck a hit with it two years later, renaming it “Pain in My Heart,” and it’s his version that gets most of the love. But the original cuts deep in its own right. It’s a more understated performance; Irma’s singing is restrained, while the instruments come through in a muted, yet affecting, arrangement. Piano flutters eerily, while the backing vocals hauntingly coo across . . .

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Sandy Denny & Linda Thompson :: When Will I Be Loved (Everly Brothers)

If the death of Phil Everly has reminded us of anything, it's that there's nothing quite like an Everly Brothers recording. Noble attempts at capturing the magic, such as Bonnie Prince Billy and Dawn McCarthy's recent Everly LP (or even the Norah Jones/Billy Joe album), are fine and good, but they usually just send me back to the original recordings. There's one Everly cover that I love unreservedly, however: Sandy Denny . . .

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Vic Chesnutt :: Everything I Say / Saskatchewan, November 2009

This is the strangest rock club I've ever played in, you know? I was wondering where the graffiti with dicks on the wall was. Well, now I know where they are, because I left a few on the wall in there. So the next band here will feel more at home. And now we play. - Vic Chesnutt

If reading the year 2014 feels like you're living in the future, you're not alone. Vic Chesnutt died four years ago last . . .

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AD Presents: Scottie Diablo’s Timeless Trash, VOL 1 – A Mixtape

It's been four years since we last caught up with Scottie Diablo. That was The Crap Out, a two part mix chronicling the burgeoning 90s underground garage rock circuit. Memphis…London…Detroit (and beyond). This is Timeless Trash, Volume One - a thirty track selection, spanning five decades of primal mojo, from Lux Interior and Charlie Feathers to Tav Falco, Dion and Adrian Lloyd. Go ahead, get rhythm.

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Benjamin Smoke :: The Jem Cohen Documentary

The talking head on CNN just used the term 'polar vortex' to describe the freezing temperatures presently gripping much of the continental US. Sounds like a CAN outtake, no? Anyway, I was back in Atlanta during the holidays, where it's presently 7 degrees, driving around the old neighborhood and remembered this nugget: filmmaker Jem Cohen's Benjamin Smoke documentary from 2000 -- a project that spanned a decade in the making.

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