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Sic Alps :: S/T

The first Sic Alps studio endeavor following four scrappier albums and some even scrappier singles is also the first to make good on the promise of the band’s superb live shows, and a defining statement by one of the most exciting bands of the new millennium. In an age of short attention spans, the self-titled Sic Alps is the . . .

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Chris Cohen :: The AD Interview

“Modern timelessness, without a speck of bullshit.” Those were the words employed by my good friend John describing Chris Cohen’s "Heartbeat", a standout cut from the excellent Overgrown Path LP on Captured Tracks.

Timeless and sans bullshit nails it. Cohen’s LP, recorded in rural Vermont where the songwriter moved following the dissolution of his band Cryptacize and a lifetime spent on the West Coast performing with Deerhoof, Danielson, Cass McCombs, and a brief-stint with Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, is a charming slice of rustic AM gold.

The record shares a winding quality with the names on Cohen’s resume, but most recalls his Curtains project, which recorded a series of great albums for Asthmatic Kitty in the early-to-mid-aughts. Those records touched on themes that fully mature on Overgrown Path: soft psych guitars, pastoral lift, exquisite jangle, and jazzy pop motifs. Free roaming and rambling, the record sounds something like an imagined Byrds record produced by Todd Rundgren.

“I think the record reflects my speed as a person,” Cohen says over the phone from Vermont, taking time away from prepping a European tour to discuss Overgrown Path with AD.
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Aquarium Drunkard: Were the songs of Overgrown Path written over the past couple years, or did they develop as you settled into Vermont?

Chris Cohen: I started writing them a few years ago. Some of them were going to be Cryptacize songs, which I started writing in 2008 or 2009. One of the songs was co-written with Nedelle [Torrisi, one-half of Cryptacize]. I think I spent two years writing, pretty much getting myself psyched up to start recording again. After Cryptacize ended, I wasn’t really sure...I didn’t have any specific plans, I was just writing because I enjoyed it. I didn’t start actually recording until 2011. I started recording it in Los Angeles, before I moved out here. I ended up re-recording a lot of songs when I got to Vermont, where I basically spent 3 years recording it.

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Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy :: Christmas Eve Can Kill You (Everly’s)

'Tis the season and pass the egg nog. As a warm-up to their forthcoming 2013 full-length paying tribute to the Everly Brothers, Bonnie 'Prince' Billy and Dawn McCarthy just released their take on the Everly's "Christmas Eve Can Kill You".

You can pick it both digitally and via 7", here, and catch the video after the jump. Glory glory, hallelujah, indeed.

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Blood Meridian For Electric Drone Guitar: 6xCDR Box Set

Nashville’s Across Tundras have been quietly producing albums of postmodern meta-metal for nearly a decade, amassing an impressively large body of work despite a frustrating paucity of critical attention. Revolving around guitarist/vocalist T.G. Olson, Across Tundras dutifully invokes Crazy Horse’s mammoth stoner bucolia and doom metal’s drone-as-incantation practices, but refreshingly injects healthy doses of peace-punk ethics and prelapsarian idealism to its distinctive Badlands boogie. Olson’s voice is a confident snarl, frequently recalling the vaguely ecclesiastical drawls of Michael Gira or David . . .

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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, I aired the latest AD podcasts: Transmissions seven and eight . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: Sidecar (Transmission 8) — Podcast / Mixtape

More freeform interstitial airwave debris transmitting somewhere off the coast of Los Angeles. Seven tracks, five countries, twenty-eight minutes. For Terry Callier, RIP.

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

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Tamaryn :: Tender New Signs

As year-end lists begin to bubble up among the Internet, Tamaryn will continue to be sidelined as a shoegaze line item, a band that puts its sound and mystery between themselves and the listener. But that's not entirely true. Tender New Signs outlines -- very clearly -- that Tamaryn is more intimate and sonically busier than their outstanding debut full-length, The Waves. Producer and guitarist Rex . . .

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Esther Phillips :: Alone Again, Naturally (1972) / Use Me

Check the players: Ron Carter on bass, Maceo Parker on Tenor Sax, George Benson and Cornell Dupree on Guitars, and Billy Cobham and Bernard Purdie on drums. Damn. Via Esther Phillips 1972 LP, Alone Again, Naturally.

MP3: Esther Phillips :: Use Me (Bill Wilthers . . .

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Max Roach With The J.C. White Singers :: Motherless Child (1971)

I suppose descriptors such as "scarce" and "rare" are pretty subjective in 2012, and for most of us, bar the most hardcore of collector-masochists, that is a good thing. But there was a time, and not so long ago, I remember looking high and low for a decent copy of this record, Max Roach With The J.C. White Singers' Lift Every . . .

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The Modern Lovers :: Stonehenge Club – Ipswich, MA, 1970/1971

Aside from the essential Precise Modern Lovers, live documents of Jonathan Richman's first musical forays are few and far between. But this recording surfaced just a few years back, capturing Jonathan Richman, Jerry Harrison, David Robinson and Ernie Brooks playing two full sets at the Stonehenge Club in Ipswich, MA, sometime in 1970 or ‘71. The band would've been a ways away from making the demos that made up their posthumous debut, but the Lovers are more or less fully formed, with Richman's odes to New England, complicated college girls and the highway when . . .

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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.

Notes: Yoon Nam, of Jet Lag Radio, in my guest selector this week. You can download her DJ set,

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George Cromarty :: Grassroots Guitar

George Cromarty had already experienced a weird brush with fame before he recorded his debut album in 1973. As co-writer of the song "Plastic Jesus," he and collaborator Ed Rush are probably the only people to be covered by both Paul Newman (in the film Cool Hand Luke) and the Flaming Lips. But Cromarty had left that type of novelty folk song long behind by the time he created . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Jet Lag – A Mixtape

Over the past couple of years I’ve been irregularly highlighting some of my favorite voices online (and beyond), inviting them to guest DJ my show on SIRIUS XMU. For those of you sans satellite radio we’ve been turning these sets into mixtapes, with sounds ranging from the blown-out psych bootcut of DJ Turquoise Wisdom, to the international taboo of Ponytone. Today we catch up with the host behind one of my favorite radio programs of the past year, Jet Lag.

Hosted by Yoon Nam, Jet Lag concentrates on vinyl recordings of international psych, prog, outsider folk, vintage soundtracks, library music, and other rare sounds from the 60s and 70s. It airs Sunday nights from 8 -10 pm on WRAS Atlanta, 88.5FM. Founded in 2006, Yoon traverses the globe weekly featuring a diverse mix ranging from PFM and Ejwuusl Wessahqqan, to Jean Le Fennec and Korean masters Jung Hyun Shin and Jung Mi Kim.

After the jump -- two hours of Jet Lag, broken up into two sets.

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Aquarium Drunkard: Sidecar (Transmission 7) — Podcast / Mixtape

Alluvial plain blues to save yr soul. 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 six transmissions can be found and downloaded, here. Imagery courtesy of d . . .

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The Velvet Underground :: The Boston Tea Party – January, 1969

More often than not, most of what you read concerning the Velvet Underground will inevitably note how woefully underappreciated the group were during its brief lifespan. But the VU were superstars -- and not just in the Warholian sense -- in certain parts of the U.S., including Boston. This quintessential New York City band made Boston its home away from home for much of the late 60s, playing dozens of sold-out shows at the Boston Tea Party to a devoted cult of followers. And what kind of people attended these shows? Let's hand the mic to

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