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The Replacements :: Live @ Grant Park, Chicago, July 4, 1991

The 4th of July has a lot of connotations, but in my own world, I always remember that it's the day the Replacements broke up. On July 4th, 1991, the Replacements played a show in Grant Park in Chicago. At this point, the version of the band that shambled into the park were half of what they used to be. Founding member Bob Stinson had been given the boot in 1986 and drummer Chris Mars, after being scarcely used on the Replacements' 1990 album All Shook Down, had taken off as well. So the Replacements were half-full of, well, replacements. Slim Dunlap had taken over as lead guitarist on tour for 1987's Pleased to Meet Me and the late Steve Foley had taken over as tour drummer following Mars' departure. So it would seem that what turned out to be their final show wouldn't be much of a thing to document.

That's the thing. I'll be honest. I became a Replacements fan in high school and was always sort of luke warm about All Shook Down. There's a reason, of course. Even though I didn't totally know at the time, the album has a grand total of one song that features all four members of the band. It has become, in a lot of ways, to be referred to as Paul Westerberg's first solo record. That's not totally off the mark, but the record has grown on me a lot over the years. The biggest reason is because of the bootleg sent to me on cassette in the mid 90s.

When I started my first internet email account in the mid 90s - at Hotmail, naturally - I wanted the email address "matsfan - at - hotmail dot com." When I tried to get it, it was taken. I cursed myself silently, but then realized that if it was taken, then most likely, it was taken by a fan of the Replacements. So after establishing another email address taken from another favorite band of mine (redacted), I sent an email to 'matsfan' to see if, in fact, they were a fan of the 'Mats.

Turns out they were. A man in his early 30s at the time who seemed truly excited that someone so young was into the Replacements. He asked for my address and said he'd send me a few bootlegs and mix tapes of the band to help me in my nascent fandom. He didn't lie. A few weeks later came tapes of the famous '86 bootleg of the Hoboken, New Jersey show from the Tim tour - a blisteringly awesome show that is still worth hunting down if you're a fan - a mix tape of rarities and a show from Massachuttsetts of their infamous turn in '89 opening for Tom Petty, and a bootleg of the '91 final show in Chicago. While all of these tapes were fantastic (and if 'matsfan at hotmail' is out there and remembers sending a teenage kid in North Carolina these tapes, please email me so I can say thank you), it was the final show that ending up having the biggest impact on me.

Why? Simple. The band was on fire. Yes, one-half of the band's founding members were missing. Yes, the show was comprised mostly of songs from All Shook Down and very few of the classics. But it didn't matter. The songs from All Shook Down lept to life in a way that I would have never expected. "Bent out of Shape," "Happy Town," "One Wink at a Time," "Someone Take the Wheel" and others all took on a propulsive, raucous energy that had been lacking in the studio takes. That studio album has grown on me over time as I've aged and mellowed, but I have no doubt that I might not have given it those important second listens if it hadn't been for this bootleg. The defeated, sarcastic and harsh banter of Westerberg and Tommy Stinson during the set only adds to the loose, 'couldn't care less' tone of the energetic set.

By the time their usual live cover of the Only Ones' "Another Girl, Another Planet" kicks in, the set is about to break apart. From there on, All Shook Down gives way to Hank Williams Sr. ("Hey Good Lookin'"), Don't Tell a Soul, Pleased to Meet Me and Hootenanny. This last album is where the bootleg gets its name - "It Ain't Over 'Til The Fat Roadies Play." The last song of the set was the band's ramshackle opening and title track from 1983's Hootenanny. Much as the band had done in Blackberry Way studio in Minneapolis, Minnesota - when separated from the sight of the producer, the band had switched instruments and played the title track with what can generously be described as inept competence - the band members, one by one, departed the stage and let their respective roadies replace them on stage. And that, as they say, was that.

For fans of the band, the last show is a tremendously sharp and outstanding way to go out. Yes, it's missing some certifiable classics - no "Bastards of Young" or "Left of the Dial," let alone "Alex Chilton" or "Unsatisfied" - but it's still a remarkably together band going through its paces one last time. That alone is worth a listen. words/ j neas

Download: The Replacements :: Live @ Grant Park, Chicago July 4, 1991

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Searching For Sugar Man: Downtown Independent – July 9th (Tickets Giveaway/Afterparty)

Next Monday, July 9th, Aquarium Drunkard presents Searching For Sugar Man, the Malik  Bendjelloul documentary on the life, and mystery, surrounding 70s psych-folk musician, Rodriguez. We saw it last month at the LA Film Fest and it boasts a narrative that goes way beyond typical rock-doc. No small feat.

We're making the night a party giving away 40 pairs of tickets with an afterparty following the screening starting at 9pm (free booze! food . . .

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Bomboclat! Island Soak 3 :: A Vintage Rocksteady Mixtape

Just in time for your holiday fade out - Bomboclat! Island Soak 3. Like last summer, the mix is mainly reggae and rocksteady...most of it culled from the late 60's, largely sourced directly from 45s via our pal John from his days spent in Kingston.

This is the third volume in our vintage Jamaican music series. You can still find the first volume, 2010's Bomboclat! Island Soak (dub/reggae), here, and last summer's Bomboclat! Island Soak 2 (rocksteady), here. Download and tracklisting after the jump. Bottoms up...

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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 251: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Carlos & The Bandidos - Mexicali Baby ++ The Babies - Meet Me In The City ++ The Fresh & Onlys - Grey-Eyed Girl ++ Family Portrait - Mega Secrets ++ The Walkmen - Canadian Girl ++ White Hinterland - Requiem Pour Un Con ++ Tav Falco's Panther Burns - Snake Drive ++ Dogme 95 - Summon My Baptist . . .

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Beachwood Sparks :: By Your Side (Sade Cover)

It's really good to have these guys back. Last week while watching the 'Beachwood All-Stars' set at the Fleetwood Mac tribute in LA, I was reminded of how the band really knows its way around a cover - specifically their left field re-imagining of Sade's "By Your Side", a . . .

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A Place To Bury Strangers :: Worship

Within the first ten seconds of “Alone” we’re greeted with dive-bombing guitar noise, grenades, mortar shells, and what could be the sound of exploding furniture. These well-placed, beautiful mishaps could easily be focus-group working titles of a few prototype distortion pedals that A Place to Bury Strangers has already tested in front of several lucky Golden Ticket winners during the recording process of their new full-length, and first for Dead Oceans,

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Donnie & Joe Emerson :: Dreamin’ Wild

If you're the type that haunts used record stores, it's very likely you've come across the album art for Donnie & Joe Emerson's teenage dream and sole release, 1979's Dreamin' Wild.   A curio hanging on a store's wall, perhaps you, like me, incorrectly assumed it was, oh I dunno, a long lost Argentinean psych album...or maybe you thought it was the true-life . . .

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The Staple Singers :: Slippery People (Talking Heads, 1985)

Uh huh, it's gonna be that kind of party: Staple Stingers '85 rundown of Talking Heads' "Slippery People" -- the club mix. While Pops is obviously the man here - his vocals leading the call and response - it's Mavis, particularly her scat at 4:59 that will likely leave you . . .

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Fela Kuti In Performance / Ginger Baker Footage (1971)

Netflix is currently streaming Ginger Baker In Africa, an incredibly loose documentary surrounding the British percussion wizard's trip from Algeria to Lagos, Nigeria in November of 1971. And by 'loose' I mean 53 minutes of (ostensibly) amateur footage that oscillates between off-the-cuff jam sessions, animated beat-poetry narration, along with scattered "on the road" vignettes. If you're into this sort of trip (we are) it's great - if not, don't bother. The headiest of travelogues.

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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.

Today, during the second hour, the STRUT Records crew guest dj's from the UK.

SIRIUS 250:  Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ The Almighty Defenders - I'm Coming Home ++ Andre Williams - Agile, Mobile & Hostile ++ The Gories - There But For The Grace . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents :: Lower Dens / Los Angeles & NOLA

Lower Dens is on the move. This month we're presenting both the Los Angeles gig (June 30) at the Troubadour and this weekend's date deep in the humidity belt, at One Eyed Jacks in New Orleans (June 23). We have eight pairs of tickets to give away to AD readers. To land a pair, leave your name, a working email in the address field we can reach you at and whether you . . .

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The Shadows :: Scotch On The Socks

"Scotch On The Socks" - 1966 b-side to UK rocknrollers, The Shadows' "The Dreams I Dream". One part instrumental booze party with a dash of grunts and hashish, all underwritten by  John Rostill's bassline.

MP3: The Shadows :: Scotch On The Socks

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Della Humphrey :: Don’t Make The Good Girls Go Bad

Della Humphrey’s voice is powerful and deliberate. Tastefully simple vocal runs blossom into wavering vibratos. She can launch into a full-on belt from not much more than a whisper. The command she has over her voice belies the fact that she was 12 years old when she recorded her only well known song, “Don’t Make the Good Girls Go Bad.” Perhaps it was her youth that made for her that spunky, snot-nosed swagger that got her vocals the perfect amount of grit and soul. There’s almost no information about the singer anywhere to be found . . .

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Songs We Taught The Gories

In a sea of near constant reunions, the Gories 2010 North American run continues to remain one of the most fulfilling of the bunch. More of that, please. Which brings us to the following: Songs We Taught The Gories - a 2009 WFMU compilation comprised of tracks the band sourced for covers over the years, both familiar and obscure (the original disco/funk version of "There But For The . . .

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The Almighty Defenders :: I’m Coming Home

Revisiting this joint has been manna the past few weeks. If you missed it the first time around, Almighty Defenders is the unholy union of King Khan, Mark Sultan and the Black Lips. A different sort of gospel.

MP3: The Almighty Defenders :: I'm Coming Home

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