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Chris Forsyth :: “The First Ten Minutes of Cocksucker Blues”

Even though Cocksucker Blues, Robert Frank's legendary film of the Rolling Stones circa 1972, is routinely referred to as a "documentary," that's not quite accurate. Frank himself tips his hand right in the opening moments: "Except for the musical numbers the events depicted in this are fictitious. No representation of actual persons and events is intended." Of course, this statement may be after-the-fact ass-covering, due to the various illegal activities taking place on-camera in Cocksucker Blues. But i . . .

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Neil Young & The Santa Monica Flyers :: Manchester, 1973

If we've learned anything from the music of Joy Division and The Smiths, it's that the good people of Manchester, England, can handle bleak, uncompromising music. They were certainly given a bracing shot of it on this autumn night in 1973, as Neil Young opened a seven-date tour of the UK. With the Eagles opening up, the crowd undoubtedly anticipated an evening of laid-back country rock a la Young's platinum Harvest, which had been released a year and a . . .

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Scratch The Surface :: The Last Of The True Believers

(Album artwork: Does it indeed affect our listening experience, and if so, how? Scratch the Surface takes a look at particularly interesting and/or exceptional cover art choices.)

I got into Nanci Griffith in high school, but I didn't talk about it with anyone much. Loving Nanci was kind of like my love for all those sitcoms from the 50s and 60s that I watched reruns of while growing up - it just wasn't that hip. Her music always seemed to emanate from some time-capsuled era where things were just a little bit simpler. What I didn't realize at the time was that Griffith hailed from the Austin, TX music scene of the 1970s - a hotbed of the country revivalist movement and the eventual alt-country community. A lot of the music from Austin in that era was reaching back to an earlier version of country and folk. It just happened that Griffith's music was on the sweeter, softer end of that spectrum.

Her fourth album, The Last of the True Believers, was released in 1986 and the album was her last for Philo/Rounder as it garnered enough critical and commercial support to get her a deal with MCA. It was also home to "Love at the Five and Dime" which would be taken to number three on the Billboard country charts that same year by Kathy Mattea and was also the foundation of the cover art of the album.

Woolworth's is the central setting of "Love at the Five and Dime" and the cover photo of The Last of the True Believers is taken outside of a Woolworth's store. The photo is set up like a triptych, with two couples on either side of Griffith in the center, and either side representing different eras outside of the same location. To the viewer's left is a man (John T. Davis, then a current music writer for the Austin American-Statesman) dressed in certifiable 80s garb (sport coat, tie and shirt, jeans) talking with a woman in red, sparkly heels, white socks, fishnet stockings, a black skirt and an Austin Moose Lodge jacket. The man and woman are re-enacting the rough story of "Lookin' for the Time (Workin' Girl)" from the album, a song told from the vantage point of a prostitute trying to ditch a john who's wasting her time while she's working the corner. Behind them, the Woolworth's store window displays its Christmas wares and the signage in window points to its 80s origins as well.

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Joseph Hein :: Blinded / Holy Hive EP

“We can do that one more time” someone faintly says in final third of “Blinded.” So is the imprecise nature of the entire Holy Hive EP. They’d be demos if there were anything to add; instead, any impreciseness is as welcome an addition as any of its inherent elements.

Joseph Hein doesn’t mince words. “Don’t abide by me, given my mind and the way I see.” He apologizes, but he knows his heart was in the right place. Now, it’s shards have been flung about . . .

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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 285: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ Alex Chilton - Boogie Shoes ++ Devo - Uncontrollable Urge ++ X - The Once Over Twice ++ Mikal Cronin - Apathy ++ Fuzz - This Time I Got A Reason ++ The Creation - How Does It Feel To Feel (US Version) ++ Mac DeMarco - Baby's Wearing Blue Jeans ++ Iggy And The Stooges - Gimme Danger ++ Canarios . . .

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Chris Stamey :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

It's hard to talk about North Carolina's musical legacy - or even indie rock in general - without mentioning Chris Stamey. As a founding member of the dB's, Stamey often played the chaotic, challenging flip-side to Peter Holsapple's shining pop and their music was all the better for it. After leaving the band following their second album, Stamey released a number of solo records in addition to working as a producer as well as eventually reuniting with the band to release last year's Falling Off the Sky. Last month, Stamey released his latest solo album, Lovesick Blues, on Yep Roc Records. Stamey guested on AD contributor J. Neas' weekly radio show on WQFS in Greensboro, NC this week ahead of a performance this Saturday in Winston-Salem. Below you can check out a partial transcript of the interview as Stamey discusses playing the new album live with a 20 piece orchestra, what it takes to get music out of your head and on to tape, his work with other North Carolina musicians and the origins of Yep Roc Records' name.
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Aquarium Drunkard: You've got a new album out called Lovesick Blues, but you're also playing this Saturday at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art as the seventh installment of their Crossroads series. I want to talk a little about that - it's kind of special. For people who have seen you live, this is a unique treat in that it's Chris Stamey and the Fellow Travelers which is a 20 piece chamber orchestra and rock band.

Chris Stamey: Well, I think about this like I shot a movie, and now we're putting on a play. We recorded this record with a bunch of the great players around Chapel Hill right now. They'd come in one by one and I'd already have a lot of the stuff notated, written out for them. Sometimes they'd just come in and let a guitar feedback for an hour and we'd pick our favorite parts. This is a pretty normal way to make a record; you invite your friends over, you write the music. But now that that's all done, we've written it out again for live performance. We're actually doing it with a lot of the textures that are actually on the record. The record has a lot of woodwinds, string, orchestral percussion, brass. It's not just the band, though there are a lot of guitars, too. We have a lot of string players - Lost in the Trees, if you're familiar with them. The Old Ceremony. There's a really great scene in Chapel Hill right now, and in all of North Carolina, really, of people who can improvise wildly and who can also read music. This will be the first time we've played the whole record live together, trying to come as close to the spirit of the orchestral textures on the recorded version.

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Clifton’s Corner :: Volume 18 – James Hunter / The Strypes

(Volume 18 of Clifton’s Corner. Every other week on the blog Clifton Weaver, aka DJ Soft Touch, shares some of his favorite spins, old and new, in the worlds of soul, r&b, funk, psych and beyond.)

It’s been a while since the last Clifton’s Corner post. I’m truly sorry for the long wait but as Dr. Winston O’Boogie once said, “Life is what happens while you’re busy making other plans”. Even though I’ve been distracted from writing, I have been keeping up on music and have a couple of things I’ve been dying to share.

The first is some new music by an old favorite of mine, James Hunter. I was first introduced to his music around the time People Gonna Talk was released. I was blown away by his vocals and arrangements and immediately purchased the album. In a previous Clifton’s Corner, I mentioned the renewed interest in late 50s/early 60s r&b sounds and James Hunter’s People Gonna Talk was one of the first times I’d heard a current act that really had a handle on that sound. As a massive fan of Daptone, I was overjoyed to hear that Hunter’s latest release, Minute By Minute, was recorded at Gabe Roth’s Daptone studios. “Chicken Switch” is a sample of what can be expected when the album is released on the 26th of February. Here are two from the People Gonna Talk record that initially blew me away and cemented my fandom.

MP3: James Hunter :: No Smoke Without Fire
MP3: James Hunter :: Don't Come Back

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Don Bikoff :: Celestial Explosion

The Tompkins Square label has been digging deep into the uncharted regions of the Takoma School for more than a decade now, emerging on a regular basis with previously impossible-to-find gems from such obscure guitarists as Harry Taussig, Mark Fosson and Peter Walker. At this late date, you might assume the bottom of the barrel for this particular genre had been reached -- but you'd be wrong. Tompkins Square's latest archival release, Don Bikoff's Celestial Explosion, is a stunner. While the 1968 LP will . . .

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Endless Boogie :: Long Island

In a recent interview with the Village Voice, Endless Boogie’s Paul Major credits the band’s former bassist with inventing the credo “When you get there, you gotta stay there.” Given their fifteen-year run of making good on their moniker, this slogan should be emblazoned on the Endless Boogie family crest. With the brand new double album Long Island

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Carnivores :: Pillow Talk (featuring Bradford Cox)

Latest dispatch from Atlanta's Carnivores, featuring Bradford Cox. Culled from the sessions from the band's forthcoming LP, Second Impulse, due out in June.
MP3: Carnivores :: Pillow Talk (featuring Bradford Cox . . .

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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 284: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ Father John Misty & Phosphorescent - I Would Love You ++ Phosphorescent - Song For Zula ++ Sandro Perri - Changes ++ Destroyer - Chinatown ++ Dirty Three (w/ Cat Power) - Great Waves ++ Jacco Gardner - Clear The Air ++ Mikal Cronin - Apathy ++ Alex Chilton - My Rival ++ Gary Numan - Airlane ++ Liquid Liquid - Optimo ++ Carnivores - Pillow Talk . . .

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Broadcast :: Black Session (La Maison de la Radio: Paris, France)

(We originally shared this session in January 2011 shortly after Trish Keenan's passing. I re-aired the set last month on the radio show. As promised, here it is, re-upped, after the jump.)

If you never had the pleasure of seeing Broadcast on tour, particularly in their early years with keyboardist Roj Stevens and guitarist Tim Felton, then this is for you. Actually, this is for everyone. It’s a dark and saddening time for fans of the band since the recent and sudden passing of singer/multi-instrumentalist Trish Keenan. But I can’t think of a better way to celebrate her life than to spread the group’s music around to as many people as possible. Broadcast’s Black Session from Paris, France — May 4th, 2000 is a perfect representation of their trademark electronic art-pop, Trish’s amazing voice and the band’s ability to transform experimental recordings into beautiful live performances.

This set features the original lineup that toured in support of their spectacular debut album, The Noise Made By People. It also includes all of those quirky electronic segues and dissonance between tracks, along with stellar renditions of early singles, albums cuts and B-sides like “Message From Home“, “Where Youth and Laughter Go“, “Echo’s Answer” and more. words/ s. mcdonald

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Martin Rev :: S/T (1980, Reissue)

How do you imprint a drum machine with your own personality? Martin Rev, one half of the groundbreaking NYC synth duo Suicide, knows the secret. From the very first few seconds of the instrumentalist's 1980 self-titled solo debut, you know it's him -- that slightly sinister Rhythm Ace snap-hiss is as distinctive as a Jimmy Page guitar riff.

Martin Rev, reissued this year on vinyl by Superior Viaduct, sounds as fresh and feisty as the day . . .

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Distant Correspondent :: Listen

There are plenty of problems with the modern era of music making, but technology can sometimes be a splendid thing. How else would a group of transatlantic talents from such far-flung locales as Colorado, Texas and the UK be able to come together to form Distant Correspondent? The aptly-named collective will undoubtedly gain attention as the new project of the great Drag City songwriter Edith Frost, whose last album appeared way back in 2005. But Frost fans may be a little surprised -- pleasantly -- by the sound, which owes . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: SXSW 2013 Boogie — Wednesday, March 13th

Uh huh, it's almost that time of year again, so let's do this. Our fiesta is going down Wednesday night, March 13th at Hype Hotel — 301 Brazos Street (3rd and San Jacinto). Come hang. Free booze.

DJ Sets: Mondo Boys -- Set times to come. See you in Texas.

Lineup: Jim James ++ Phosphorescent . . .

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