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Father John Misty :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Josh Tillman has been writing, recording and releasing albums for a decade now. Like Captain Beefheart and Bonnie 'Prince' Billy before him, it was announced last month that future Tillman output would be released under the guise of Father John Misty. A new beginning? Indeed. If past Tillman releases mined the intricacies of greys and blues, then Fear Fun - his forthcoming record due out in May via Sub Pop - embraces the . . .

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Mary Weiss & Reigning Sound :: Don’t Come Back

A bunch of us drove from L.A. to Long Beach last month for night two of Reigning Sound's two night run at Alex's Bar. To say it was exactly the kind of sonic punch in gut we were looking for would be an understatement. I've since been   revisiting   Dangerous Game - the Reigning Sound-backed Mary Weiss album that become a member or log in.

Beach Boys :: Unknown Harmony – 1968, A Capella

Looped a capella track (reportedly) culled from a 1968 studio session known in fan circles as "Unknown Harmony." I copped this five or so years ago via the fan-made compilation You're Welcome: A Beach Boys Sequel to SMiLE. From what I gather, the source material is thought to be clipped from the isolated vocal track of the Beach Boys "Break Away."

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Marc Bolan :: BBC Documentary

Born Marc Feld in 1947, this hour long BBC documentary traces Marc Bolan's life and career from his London mod beginnings to his death in 1977, two weeks shy of his 30th birthday. Have a watch, then go listen to Unicorn

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard twice, every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 231:  Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Bosques - Heya ++ Screaming Lord Sutch - Flashing Lights ++ The Girls - Chico's Girl ++ Eddie Beram - Riot In Thunder Alley ++ Lou Reed - Gimmie Some Good Times ++ Alex Chilton - Jumpin' Jack Flash ++ Michael Kiwanuka - Tell Me A Tale . . .

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A Place to Bury Strangers :: Onwards to the Wall

What do we expect from our beloved artists who are so deeply rooted with a singular, albeit explosive, sound? At this point in their career A Place to Bury Strangers are unbeatable at creating the most devastating psychedelic rock out there. I mean, who really wants these guys to transition into a lighter version of themselves? What makes them great is their recklessness, the chaos that ensues on stage and their simple approach to making music; be louder than everyone, but always catchy.

So many reviews can be based solely on the idea that a band’s merit, or quality of output, rests in their creative malleability, which will hopefully result in a “career.” But music’s not always about "progress" - or whatever that even means in this decade. A new album or single can demonstrate an escalation - a memorable and moving song with simple melodies, basic guitar chords and rhythms that we’ve all heard a million times. APTBS re-arrange the basic elements of Noise-Pop by destroying whatever preconceived notion you had towards the genre. Instruments are merely tools used to test the limits and knowledge of what sonic exploration really means, and Onwards to the Wall resembles the Home Depot at times.

Case in point: Oliver Ackerman operates the amazing Death By Audio effect pedals and custom stomp box brand. Most of these pedals sound like shock-and-awe devices detonating entire cities. Onwards to the Wall demonstrates that magnitude and range of power in a single guitar strum or click of a distortion box. On the other hand, it also succeeds by offering songs with cleaner passages, putting vocals first and allowing other instruments and new sounds a chance to lead the platoon into battle. It’s a nice look for a band that has already mastered both the loud-quiet-loud and LOUD-LOUD-LOUD formulas without ditching any of the inventiveness and sheer noise-making freak-outs that defines the group’s persona.

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Tracking the Cover :: We’ve Got To Get Ourselves Together

Delaney & Bonnie had a lot of friends. So there’s no surprise that an early D&B album cut entered the repertoire of both The Staple Singers and The Flying Burrito Brothers before the duo commercially released their own recording.   “Get Ourselves Together” was never anyone’s single, but there was something about this song that transcends genre and immediately yielded two distinct and powerful interpretations.

The D&B version doesn’t feature the Steve Cropper helmed Stax-Volt house band, but The Staple Singers’ version does. Released in late 1968, the Staples’ first . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard: SXSW Day Party – March 15th (Final Artist Lineup)

Final artist lineup for our day party. Our (unofficial) fiesta is happening Thursday March 15th at Hype Hotel - 504 Trinity Street. Free booze. RSVP details below. Artist lineup, below. See you in Texas.

RSVP: HERE
Nick Waterhouse & the Tarots - 1:00
Lee Fields and The Expressions   — 2:00
Bass . . .

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The Aping of Bob Dylan :: Mouse / A Public Execution

It was somewhere in New Mexico, while out in the desert on a road trip listening the old Nuggets compilation, that a bunch of us got to listing our favorite Dylan homages/ripoffs. Specifically the track "A Public Execution" by the sixties garage rock band, Mouse, from Tyler, TX. Of course Stealers Wheel came up - their "Stuck In The Middle With You" Dylan  aping from 1972; so did the Beatles "You've Got To Hide Your Love Away," various Donovan tracks, etc, etc.

MP3: Mouse :: A Public Execution

So. Without running down a list of some of the more obvious (and less so) tracks we came up with, I'm curious as to which songs immediately come to mind, re: Dylan aping. Hit us up in the comments. The more blatant the better. Oh, and I'm well aware that Dylan borrowed/stole from many before him, so no need to get into/rehash all that.

Related: After the jump, stream Bob Dylan's epic 1978 film, 'Renaldo & Clara," in its entirety. This version is the best quality I've seen yet. Filmed in 1975, during Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue tour, it was originally released in 1978 with a running time of nearly four hours. Epic, indeed.

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Clifton’s Corner :: Volume Nine — Blues Heaven (Pt. 2)

(Volume nine 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. — AD)

What's commonly considered to be "blues" tends to be pretty cliche'd. Unfortunately, the forces of commerce and mass . . .

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Randy Newman :: WPLJ FM Radio Session / New York City – August, 1971

Twenty-three track radio session Randy Newman cut while in New York City, August 1971, for WPLJ FM. Stripped down, solo piano. The session highlights material culled from Newman's first two albums, and showcases tracks from his next full-length, 1972's Sail Away.

Download: Randy Newman: WPLJ FM - New York, NY, 1971

01. Lover's Prayer02. Yellow Man03. Sail Away04. Living Without You05. Mama Told Me Not To Come06. Rosemary07. Last Night I Had A Dream08. Let Me Go09. Lucinda10. I . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard twice, every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 230: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Destroyer - Leave Me Alone (New Order) ++ Trailer Trash Tracys - Candy Girl ++ White Hinterland - Requiem Pour Un Con ++  The Beach Boys - Unknown Harmony ++ Atlas Sound - Recent Bedroom ++ Galaxie 500 - Ceremony (New Order) ++ No Joy - Heedless ++ Girls . . .

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Cass McCombs :: I Went To The Hospital

Before Wit's End, before Catacombs and before the near universal 'year-end list' acclaim, Cass McCombs quietly released A in 2004 via the Monitor label. I've been reintroducing the album piecemeal into my radio show over the past few months. Revisit  A's opening pair of tracks below.

MP3: Cass McCombs :: I Went To The Hospital
MP3: Cass McCombs . . .

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Bill Fay :: Time of the Last Persecution

Bill Fay is a name that has crept back into the underground consciousness in recent years due to some unexpected word-of-mouth publicity culminating in a series of commendable reissues of the artist’s work. Going into Time of the Last Persecution, however, I was unaware of such recent windfalls.

Initially I was a bit uncertain as to Fay’s . . .

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The Dirty Three w/ Chan Marshall :: Great Waves

As I mentioned earlier in the month, the Dirty Three have a new LP dropping in February. My copy has been on repeat, but revisiting the Melbourne trio's last output - 2005's Cinder - I was reminded how I used to imagine what the album's cornerstone track, "Great Waves," would sound like with Will Oldham handling the vocals in place of Chan Marshall (yes, I think about this sort of thing). Aesthetically the fit seems perfect.

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