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Wooden Wand Interviews Steve Gunn

Among certain critics and cultural trainspotters, there exists a colloquialism — ‘gamechanger’ — to denote a brazen, unexpected creative leap by an already respected and established artist. The risk of potentially alienating a listenership that increasingly has more choices than patience is a perilous one, but to take such a gamble and succeed can earn an artist irreproachable status henceforth. Some examples of historical gamechangers are Talk Talk’s Spirit of Eden, Radiohead’s Kid A, and Scott Walker’s Tilt. We may soon be adding to this list the new album by New York-based guitarist Steve Gunn, whose Time Off, released June 18th on Paradise of Bachelors, finds the formerly ubiquitous psychedelic journeyman exploring traditional songwriting through a prism of airy blues, ambling jazz-folk, and subtle but virtuosic guitar dreamweaving. For starters, imagine the Dead’s “Bird Song” performed by guys who know all the Sun City Girls records by heart. Not so much an about-face as a panoramic zooming-out, Time Off should introduce Gunn’s beguiling music to an entire new audience even as it retains the spirit and the logic of his earliest and most experimental work. I got to talk to Steve about Time Off, declining lucrative record deals, and how legends like Jack Rose and Michael Chapman have influenced his life as much as his music.

James Jackson Toth: This may seem like mundane way to start, but despite the fact that you’ve been around a while, there seems to be a relative dearth of biographical information about you out there. Let’s start with your roots in the hardcore scene. Is that when you started playing music, or were you already playing by then?

Steve Gunn: I was definitely playing before I got into hardcore. When I got my first instrument I was borrowing music from my older sister, like Misfits tapes, and stuff like that, and I was also listening to rap. It was kinda all over the place. A few years later, in high school I started getting into punk and hardcore. Around then I started playing with other people, going over to people’s houses and playing in their basements and things.

JJT: And was this in Philly?

Steve Gunn: Yeah. I lived out in the suburbs of Philly, and then during my freshman year of high school I started going to the city, and going to shows - punk shows and all other kinds of different shows. And this is when I started hitting up record stores.

JJT: This was before you met Jack (Rose) and Bardo Pond and all those Philly folks, right?

Steve Gunn: Oh, yeah. I actually convinced my parents to let me go on a small tour the summer between my freshman and sophomore year of high school. I played in this really terrible hardcore band — we were doing Chain of Strength covers and stuff. We even played a couple shows with that band Mouthpiece. And I somehow convinced my parents to let me go. I basically cried, and they were finally nice enough to give me the OK.

JJT: Skipping ahead a bit: the first time I met you, I think you were playing with GHQ. For those who don’t know, GHQ is a long-running band that, at one time, included Helen Rush of Tower Recordings and Metal Mountains, but was a trio of Pete Nolan and Marcia Bassett when you joined. How did this collaboration come about? Were you aware of Un at this point?

Steve Gunn: I was definitely a big Un fan. When I was in college, I moved into a house with these older guys, and they had all these records, and it kinda opened up my world. That’s when I got turned on to all those Siltbreeze bands, and I got to see most of them [play live]. And I definitely became a fan of Un and saw them a bunch of times and I became friends with Grant [Acker] and Marcia. When I moved to New York, I was still keeping in touch with Marcia, and I started playing around and doing these sort of pick up jams with her and whoever she was playing with. Another person who I knew from back then in Philly was Patrick Best, who was in Pelt. He was living in Brooklyn at the time — around 2001 — and so this first incarnation of GHQ was me, Patrick, Helen and Marcia. We never played many proper gigs, though we did a few recordings that never saw the light of day. That’s kinda how it started, and we just kept it going. And then Pete [Nolan, of Magik Markers, Spectre Folk, Vanishing Voice, et al] moved to New York, we hooked up with him, and that’s when we started actually playing gigs and compiling recordings.

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King Khan :: It’s A Lie

King Khan's next release, with the Shrines, Idle No More, is tee'd up for a September release - this time via Merge Records. Says Khan of the new project: "The Shrines was my pirate ship and we sailed many a turbulent sea, spreading our music ‘like peanut butter’ all over the world....The dream was to make something reminiscent of Sun Ra, James Brown, and Otis Redding with a hint of The Velvet Underground . . .

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The Non Travellin’ Band :: Two Hands Full Of Fingers

Madison, Wisconsin. Recorded live to tape, Moon Glyph just released Never Prayed Once, The Non Travellin' Band's debut -- a fleshed out rendering of the group's faded psych-folk beginnings from last year. Tuned up and turned on.

MP3: The Non Travellin' Band :: Two Hands Full of Fingers . . .

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Chuck Berry On The Rocks – A Mixtape

Chuck Berry On The Rocks: A choice selection of sixties garage rock. Our long-time-coming collaboration with Gothenburg, Sweden DJ/record collector Peer Schouten.

1 We All Love Peanut Butter - The One Way Streets2 Tiki Twist - The Vistas3 I Love You - The Worlocks4 You're On My Mind - The Barons5 I'll Be There - Bedlam's Offspring6 Come Back - The Belles7 I've Had Enough - Unknown8 I'm Looking In The Universe . . .

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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 295: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Jack Nitzsche - The Last Race ++ The Non Travellin' Band - Two Hands Full of Fingers ++ Allah-Las - Busman's Holiday ++  King Khan & The Shrines - Que Lindo Sueî±o ++ The Bellys - Chow Chow ++ Woods - Size Meets The Sound ++ Thee Oh Sees - Mincing Around The . . .

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Africa :: Music From “Lil Brown” (1968)

Known to J Dilla disciples for his sampling of "Light My Fire" on Donuts, it was Lil Brown's title and artwork - an obvious nod to Music From Big Pink - that initially caught my ear a few years back. I suppose all roads do lead to Rome.

Aside . . .

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Howard Nishioka :: Carnivourous Dogaramus (Street Songs, 1979)

Still waiting for that reissue. Private press Hawaiian psych monster - Howard Nishioka's Street Songs, 1979.

MP3: Howard Nishioka :: Carnivourous Dogaramus

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Link Wray :: Be What You Want To

The annals of rock & roll are littered with various and sundry odes to doing yer own thang. This here is Link Wray's take. All open-road and windows rolled wayyy the fuck down, "Be What You Want To", released in 1973, is the title track to Wray's 8th long player.

Tracked in San Francisco with a host of the local musical zeitgeist lending a hand (Thomas Jefferson Kaye, Jerry Garcia, Commander Cody) it's very much post gunslinger Wray -- a thick stew of boogie rock, country funk and soul. Coming off the gritty . . .

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Irma Thomas :: In Between Tears (Reissue)

Jerry “Swamp Dogg” Williams isn’t one to mince words -- see the AD interview with the man for further proof — so when he says that the New Orleans-born Irma Thomas is “just as good or better” as Aretha Franklin, Etta James, Alicia Keys, Adele and “a host of others,” it’s worth paying attention. Dogg’s lone full-length collaboration with Thomas, In Between Tears, bears his assertion out. The record was recorded as something of a comeback effort, following a string of . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: The Handsome Family

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

Welcome to installment 21 of The Lagniappe Sessions, a recurring series in which we invite artists to cut exclusive covers paying tribute to  their favorite songs. The Handsome Family's Brett and Rennie Sparks last checked in with AD in 2009, become a member or log in.

The Red Rippers :: Over There…and Over Here

You think ‘Viking metal’ and ‘post-Takoma guitar soli’ are niche markets? Let’s talk about Ed Bankston, a veteran of the US Navy and former combat pilot who, in 1983, wrote, recorded and released a record about his experiences in Vietnam and sold it via an ad placed in the perennially batshit mercenary magazine Soldier of Fortune. No distros, no reviews, no name-check on the Nurse With Wound list, just a transmission sent from one combat survivor to his brethren and the handful of one-percenters and sympathizers constituting said magazine’s readership. Reissued earlier this year by Paradise of Bachelors, Over There…and Over Here, the lone release by Bankston’s Red Rippers, merits a place at the top of a short list of crucial reissues of 2013.

Superficial listeners may not, at first, hear anything especially unusual about some of the album’s country-boogie churns. Bankston’s robust, full-throated singing style owes a considerable debt to Waylon Jennings, and many of the full band arrangements here stick fairly close to the outlaw country playbook. But listen close and the myriad peculiarities of Over There…and Over Here reveal themselves. For one thing, the overarching mood of the album is far more melancholy than macho, more wistful than warlike. Bankston is a sensitive and astute writer, as comfortable with irony and ambiguity as he is with bellicose boasts. He’s as likely to criticize the unscrupulous government that sentenced him to die as he is to lament the loss of his girl to a ‘hippie’ while away at war. Like William Devane’s character in the 1977 film Rolling Thunder, Bankston’s protagonists arrive home to a hero’s unwelcome and a grim immersion back into a civilian life they no longer understand or relate to. While there is no shortage of rock and roll peaceniks from Phil Ochs to Neil Young to Thom Yorke lamenting the futility and horror of war, Bankston’s eyewitness accounts make those appeals to peace seem facile — even tacky — in comparison.

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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 Sidecar: Transmission 12 ---> HERE

SIRIUS 294: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ X - The . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: Sidecar (Transmission 12) — Podcast/Mixtape

Astral blues. More freeform interstitial airwave debris transmitting somewhere off the coast of Los Angeles. Haunted radio wave detritus. This is transmission twelve.

Direct download, below. Subscribe to future transmissions via iTunes and/or through the RSS, here. The first eleven transmissions can be found and downloaded, here.

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Sevens: Alice Coltrane – Transfiguration (Live, 1976)

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

It’s been noted that 1976's "Transfiguration" is a culmination, and a sort of completion of the body of work Alice Coltrane had been building since 1967. The title track from the eponymous live album (not released until 1978) was purposely titled to mark the beginning of Coltrane’s spiritual based . . .

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