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Music From The Films Of Jim Jarmusch

(Next year Jim Jarmusch will once again take direct part in a soundtrack to one of his films, working with lutist Jozef van Wissem for the vampire romance Only Lovers Left Alive. The following piece looks back at how music has shaped the auteurs world and work to date.)

“One thing about commercial films is…doesn’t the music almost always really suck? Isn’t it always the same shit? I’ve seen good movies, or maybe they would be good, just destroyed by the same crap, you know?” So says director Jim Jarmusch. “I get a lot of inspiration from music, probably more than any other form…”

Jarmusch’s films don’t suffer from bad music, and they rarely feature “the same shit.” Each film acts as a sort of mixtape from the enigmatic director — from the music of noted collaborators John Lurie and Tom Waits, to characters imbued with Jarmusch’s own idiosyncratic tastes. In his world, backwoods hillbillies don’t listen to Pantera or Nickelback, they crank Sleep’s epic doom metal masterpiece “Dopesmoker.” As such, Jarmusch's films have always incorporated soundtracks that act like parts of the supporting cast. His characters argue about music, they define themselves by it, and his languid tales of cross-cultural exchanges and existential wanderings have attracted the likes of musicians Iggy Pop, The White Stripes, Neil Young, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, Wu-Tang Clan, Joe Strummer and more.

Listen: 1980-89 - “Was That a Gun?” “Probably. This is America.”

Emerging from the post-punk NYC underground (he played in The Del-Byzanteens), Jarmusch’s early films exude DIY grit. His 1980 debut, Permanent Vacation, not only sets up themes the director would explore over the course of his career, but also his musical approach. Scored by jazz maverick John Lurie, the film oozes post-modern cool.   Lurie — not a trained actor (an approach Jarmusch continues to favor) next starred in Jarmusch’s follow up, 1984’s Stranger Than Paradise. The film features Lurie as shady “hipster” Willie, former Sonic Youth drummer Richard Edson as Eddie, and Eszter Balint as Willie’s cousin from Hungary, Eva.   In addition to the kind of warped jazz Lurie created with his No Wave jazz combo The Lounge Lizards, the soundtrack features the Screamin’ Jay Hawkin’s voodoo blues vamp “I Put a Spell on You.” The song manifests as the sound of Eva’s imagined America -- a wild, untamed place she can’t wait to explore.

1986’s Down By Law features even more exploration of America’s cultural tableau through sound. Lurie stars as Jack, a pimp, along side Tom Waits as former WYLD deejay, Zack. The two wind up in prison with Bob, played by the beguiling Roberto Benigni, whose vision of America is summed up by the jingle “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream.” Here we get to hear Tom Waits’ ace deejay voice (calling himself Lee “Baby” Sims), as well as selections from Waits’ Rain Dogs clattering alongside Lurie’s stark jazz.

Screamin’ Jay Hawkins himself makes an appearance in Jarmusch’s next film -- his ode to Memphis, 1989’s Mystery Train. It’s a triptych of stories each featuring foreigners on Memphis soil. The ghost of Elvis Presley haunts the film — the Japanese couple searching for the Sun Records sound, an Italian widow taking her husband’s body back home, and Joe Strummer — who is drunk with a gun. “Blue Moon” ties the disparate stories together, it’s haunting, reverberating sound drifting from the radio (along with the voice of Tom Waits, presumably Lee “Baby” Sims, hiding out in Memphis). In Jarmusch’s America, the sounds of the past drift over the present, and America’s country, rockabilly, and R&B traditions are more than pop trends; they’re sacred languages.

----> 1990 - 2012 after the jump. . .

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Marcos Valle :: Dez Leis (1970 / Reissues)

In 2013 Light In The Attic Records is set to reissue four of  Marcos Valle‘s 70s studio albums; now available for the first time in North America. Complimented by legendary Brazilian backing band Som Imaginî¡rio, the records span the realms of samba, bossa nova, and baiî£o (rhythmic beat from the rural northeast of Brazil), to American soul, r&b and rock & roll. Extensive liner notes via . . .

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Talking Heads :: Live In Rome, 1980

Stop Making Sense may have the Big Suit, but if you're looking for the pinnacle of live Talking Heads footage, I'd point you in the direction of this unbelievable show from Rome, 1980. Completing the Heads' journey from minimalist to maximalist, it features the expanded, ten-piece lineup blazing through tunes from the just-released masterwork Remain In Light, as well as dynamically re-inventing choice selections from the back catalogue. They still sound like the band of the future . . .

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You See Me Laughin’ :: The Last of the Hill Country Bluesmen

I linked to this via AD's twitter and Facebook accounts over the weekend, but for those of you who missed it the 2002 documentary You See Me Laughin' is presently streaming (in its entirety, in four parts) via Youtube. The film documents the fading hill country blues community with emphasis on North Mississippi bluesmen Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, T. Model Ford, CeDell Davis and, notably, Fat Possum Records efforts to capture their music. It . . .

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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 272: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ Talking Heads - Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On) ++ Roxy Music - All I Want Is You ++ Brian Eno - Skysaw ++ Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Thunder Road ++ Sonic Youth - The Empty Page ++ Pavement - Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era ++ Cat Power - Nude As The News ++ The Breeders - Don't . . .

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Talking Heads :: Stardust Ballroom – Los Angeles, Sept. 28, 1979

By the close of the 1970s, Talking Heads had come a long way in a shockingly short period of time. After emerging as a minimalist three-piece at CBGBs in '75 centered around the nervous presence of David Byrne, the band expanded their sonic palette in ways that had to have seemed unimaginable to anyone who caught them on the Bowery early on. With the addition of former Modern Lover Jerry Harrison and the innovative production skills . . .

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Sevens :: Nick Cave – There She Goes, My Beautiful World

(Sevens, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, pays tribute to the art of the individual song.)

There is no taxiing towards the sky here. It begins with the click of landing gear retracting, then accelerates immediately into a litany of wildflowers and trees: “The wintergreen, the juniper/The cornflower and the chicory.”

They teach you in creative writing programs not to write about writing, because writing about writing, and writing about writer’s block especially, is inherently boring, the acme of navel-gazing. (Here’s holding out hope for . . .

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Bill Fay :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Singer-songwriter Bill Fay has enjoyed a long and legendary career in obscurity. The British musician first raised eyebrows among listeners back in 1970 with his startlingly unique, baroque debut record Bill Fay, which despite a poor commercial impact quickly became a cult classic and garnered comparisons to other unusual and uncelebrated songwriters, such as Nick Drake and Alexander “Skip” Spence. His follow up was arguably even better: 1971's dark, angular masterpiece Time of the Last Persecution, which featured a rawer, electric-rock sound and a stark cover photo of a somber, bearded Fay which eventually contributed to its eventual labeling as a lost, “outsider folk” classic.

Over the years Fay's artistic legacy has been quietly celebrated by contemporary musicians as varied as Wilco's Jeff Tweedy and Current 93's David Tibet. Despite his post-Persecution releases receiving even less attention than their predecessors, he has managed to keep a rather informal career afloat, re-releasing old records and putting out collections of unreleased demos and outtakes on independent labels Coptic Cat and Wooden Hill.   This year, however, Fay truly returned to the scene with his first proper studio album in several decades. Life Is People was released in August on Dead Oceans Records to an overwhelming amount of critical attention, and has finally helped bring Fay out of the proverbial shadows.

AD spoke with Fay just prior to the record's release, and found him to be a warm, amiable man far removed from the dark and twisted mythological figure that has been built up around him since the release of Time of the Last Persecution. Misinformation seems to be the name of the game when it comes to discussing Fay's career, and before the interview began, he remarked that he had a bone to pick with some of the music press' coverage of his career:

“Just recently the music press are kind of referring to [Life Is People] as the first studio album in forty years and that doesn't come across as too fair to me, or to the fact that it should be thirty years, because I worked with a group of musicians called the Acme Quartet for about for or fives years which culminated in a studio album called Tomorrow Tomorrow, and Tomorrow. Although they included demos in the middle of the album, it was a finished album, and I sent about twelve cassettes out to twelve companies at the time, about thirty years ago. So to me it stands alongside the first two albums and this one, really. It's not fair to them that they could read these things and think “oh, we were there a long time and then we release the album and it kind of doesn't count”.

Aquarium Drunkard: So on that note how would you feel about Still Some Light?

Bill Fay: I'm okay with it because it's not a studio album, so I'm okay with that not counting. And I'm okay with Grandfather Clock, which was a collection of demos and different things. I'm okay with that not counting. The fact that we did put in a lot of work in the late seventies and early eighties and achieved Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow — that's the main one. It doesn't read good, in one sense. It should be first studio album for thirty years, although we weren't affiliated to a company. You know, we didn't have a label, we were just kind of recording anyways. So in that sense, this is the first “label” album in forty years, but it's not the first studio album.

AD: Your music has a unique and individualistic sound. I was wondering what some of your first influences were and what led you to develop the sound that you have.

Bill Fay: I think the influence probably comes from all kinds of quarters. I don't there was was any main influence. The piano itself was the biggest influence. It kind of taught me things, like I discovered chords and different things over a certain period of time from the piano itself. So musically I would put the piano as the biggest influence, musically. And then you touch on all sorts of moods, you've heard all sorts of moods from the writing or whatever. But in terms of the Decca records, then — well, if you take the second album first, then the contributions from Ray Russell, Alan Rushton, Darryl Runswick, who played together before I ever linked up with them. Ray played electric guitar on the first album but he had his own music ensemble, so to speak, the urgency of which was totally compatible with the songs that were on the second album. Then the first album, the songs obviously had the arranger Mike Gibbs and I didn't have any say in the kinds of arrangements. But then once again what mike did arrangement wise was very compatible with the songs. I wouldn't say there was a predominate influence in the early years, they're kind of things that you find and they can touch on different moods.

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Aquarium Drunkard: Sidecar (Transmission 9) — Podcast / Mixtape

More freeform interstitial airwave debris transmitting somewhere off the coast of Los Angeles.

Direct download, below; subscribe to future transmissions via iTunes and/or through the RSS, here. The first eight transmissions can be found and downloaded, here. Imagery courtesy of d norsen . . .

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Marc Bolan :: T. Rexmas

We're not sure who the mysterious folks behind the Bolan Boogie Bandcamp are, and even less sure how we missed the  4-track T.Rexmas!  EP they uploaded last December, but here it is.

T.Rexmas! is mainly built around the stomping woulda-been hit "Christmas Bop," recorded in 1975 for an aborted single that would have been paired . . .

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Charles Bradley :: I’ll Slip Away (Rodriguez Cover)

Light In The Attic Records' 10 year anniversary 7" series continues with Charles Bradley & The Menahan Street Band taking on Rodriguez's "I'll Slip Away". Pressed to colored vinyl, the A-side houses the cover, (a soul burn exorcism in Bradley's hands), with the original, remastered, on the flip -- Rodriguez's 1967 45 single, released three years prior to his opus long-player, Cold Fact. Have a taste, after the jump...

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Simon Joyner :: Ghosts

There is something squarely stubborn about releasing a vinyl-only double record in 2012. In an industry currently dominated by mixtapes and playlists, modern music consumers increasingly lack the attention span required to sit through one whole side of a vinyl record, let alone four. With so much content vying for our attention, an 87-minute album would seem to require a substantial commitment on the part of even the most voracious music fan. Simon Joyner’s new album, Ghosts, funded via Kickstarter and released on his . . .

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Liars :: WIXIW

Like all of their records, Liars’  sixth, WIXIW, is a departure from the one that came before it. And while Angus Andrew, Aaron Hemphill, and Julian Gross have gone way, way out in the past--did anyone see the tribal nightmare of Drum’s Not Dead coming in the aftermath of They Were Wrong, So We Drowned?--with WIXIW, the group . . .

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The Beatles :: Christmas Singles Club, 1963-1969

From 1963 to 1969 the Beatles issued limited edition Christmas fan-club singles on 7 inch flexi-discs. All very relaxed and off the cuff, it's interesting to note how the cover art changed, along with the music, as the sixties rolled along. Download and details after the jump....

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Can :: University of Essex – Colchester, England, May 17, 1975

There are those among us who will shudder when I say this, but let's face facts: Can was a jam band. Indeed, jamming was at the heart of pretty much everything the legendary krautrockers did. Rather than a group centered around a songwriter, Can was a collective of improvisers whose primary modus operandi in the studio was -- not unlike Miles Davis' and Teo Macero's approach in the 1970s -- to play freely as the tape rolled, and then, later, edit the . . .

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