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Clifton’s Corner :: Volume 14

(Volume 14 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 . . .

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Bob Welch :: (August 31, 1945 — June 7, 2012)

"I don't know if you've been to Paris, but this song was written in Paris in the midst of 1970, which was a bad year for just about everything," Bob Welch said into the microphone, breaking up a dreamy instrumental passage of Fleetwood Mac's "Future Games." The band was playing a set for radio broadcast at the Record Plant in Sausalito, and Welch was looking through the glass of the booth at his former bandmate Bob "Boob" Weston, who'd been relieved of guitar . . .

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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 248: Jean Michel Bernard — Generique Stephane ++ The Soft Pack - Fences ++ Zig Zags - Scavenger ++ The Bellys - Chow Chow ++ Lantern - Bleed Me Dry ++ The Orwells - Under The Flowers ++ Fidlar - Wait For The Man ++ The Black Lips - Katrina ++ The Almighty Defenders - Bow Down And Die ++ Alex Chilton - Jumpin' Jack Flash ++ The Dirtbombs - If You Can . . .

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The Staple Singers :: Wade In The Water (Live, 1968)

First families of American music? While a number come immediately to mind, none more so than the Carter Family and Staples Singers. Truly lasting pillars did they build. I spent part of Sunday night in an ocean of Staples related videos and performances, but it's this one, the group doing "Wade In The Water" live in 1968, that I kept coming back to again and again . . .

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Kukumbas :: Respect

I was hipped to this a few years back via a compilation released under the name Psych-Funk 101: 1968-1975 A Global Psychedelic Funk Curriculum. It immediately reminded me of latter-era Meters, had the Meters hailed from Lagos, Nigeria instead of Louisiana. Funky, indeed.

MP3: Kukumbas :: Respect

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Alejandro Escovedo :: The AD Interview

Alejandro Escovedo. In addition to having a serious wealth of music knowledge and songwriting chops, the one-time No Depression Artist of the Decade is also one of the most approachable, friendly and laid-back interviews we've had the pleasure of conducting. Having just released his newest record, Big Station, he spoke with Aquarium Drunkard via phone about the new album, working yet again with Chuck Prophet and Tony Visconti, the new record's outward look and how knowing Ian Hunter personally doesn't make you any less of a Mott the Hoople fanboy.

Aquarium Drunkard: The last time you and I talked was when you had put out Real Animal, which was your first full record co-writing with Chuck Prophet and using Tony Visconti as your producer. Now, four years later, the new album is your third working with that pairing. So I was wondering what has inspired you to keep working with them and how that working relationship has developed over the years.

Alejandro Escovedo: Well, obviously for me, when I realized Chuck and I had such a strong relationship and we were producing great songs and having a great time doing, it became nothing less than a pleasure to spend time with Chuck and write with him. And it's developed to a point where we can work under any condition and come up with some really great stuff. Like you said, this is our third project and I love the songs we've come up with and they're very different than what we've done in the past, so I'm very happy with the result.

The same thing applies to Tony [Visconti]. Tony was fresh on Real Animal and that relationship turned out so well that it just seemed natural for us to do another record together. We did Street Songs of Love and I thought that was a great sounding record. I loved the way he produced it and the way he accepted the band and everything that we had done in order to prepare for that record. And with this one, Big Station, I really needed him to be the Tony Visconti producer that I'd known in the past with [David] Bowie - especially with Bowie, that type of production. So I think it was a very artistic production. He mixed it in a really beautiful way. We had tracks that had 70 overdubs or tracks on them, so there was a lot of mixing to do and I thought he did an amazing job. I love the way the record sounds and how he crafted it. I would love to make more records with Tony.

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Witch :: We Intend To Cause Havoc (Boxset) – Now Again Records

File under: Zambia’s 70s “Zamrock.”   Now-Again Records ongoing African reissue series continues. In the Fall of 2010 the label released Witch’s Introduction, the band's self-produced nine track debut - a fuzz-laden garage vamp equal parts imported psych-rock and American r&b, all draped under a thick blanket of local flavor. This month the label digs deeper with the release of become a member or log in.

Japandroids :: Celebration Rock

Allow me to add my hoarse and obscure voice to the hosannas: Celebration Rock, the second full-length by Vancouver’s Japandroids, is an instant classic, full of prickly angst and unbridled joy and primal screams that splash onto everything in between. It is destined to be replayed endlessly, to enjoy multiple pressings, to be purchased several times over by the people whose bones it rattles. And--if my impression of those people, of we people, is correct--it’ll even have the exceedingly . . .

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The Walkmen :: Heaven

It’s getting to where the appearance of a new Walkmen record is a quiet, intimate event. Heaven, like Lisbon and You & Me before it, has shown up like a best man on an airplane, radiating fraternal excitement and deep commitment and positive nostalgia. Since graduating themselves from the early-aughts New York scene, The Walkmen have seemed to exist outside of the common world, unaware of or apathetic towards the kind of artistic competition that has become attendant with what we think of as . . .

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Sevens :: Jeremy Benson, The Ones You Love

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

When recommending an album, or even just trying to describe one, people often tend to offer up a single, maybe direct others to a title track if there is one — whatever seems to best represent the record, where “represents” is defined as “sounds like.” But sometimes an album’s most representative track is its most distinct, where the song . . .

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Part Time Punks: Shoegaze Festival, Los Angeles

Sunday June 24, Part Time Punks will host L.A.'s first-ever music festival showcasing artists that defined, contributed to or were inspired by a short-lived sub-genre explosion of alternative rock dubbed “Shoegaze”. The general etymology and use of the word “Shoegaze” evokes eye-rolling, drunken debates and loads of cheerful nostalgia in equal measures -- depending on who you ask, and most certainly how old you were when bands like RIDE, My Bloody Valentine and Lush were all radio playlist staples on both KROQ and KXLU (imagine that). No matter what your thoughts are on the genre and the always-debatable collection of bands that were lumped into this category, their influence has remained undoubtedly massive and far-reaching to this day, and that’s why this festival is necessary.

Mark Gardener, formerly of UK noise-pop luminaries RIDE, headlines the day-long festival with L.A.’s own Sky Parade (who will also play their own set) as his backing band. Along with Gardener’s solo material, both acts will be playing a large amount of RIDE material in celebration of the band’s 20th anniversary of its sophomore release, Going Blank Again, but I bet you three Vaughn Oliver prints that we’ll probably hear some tracks from Nowhere too.

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WEEN :: 1984-2012 – RIP Boognish

The poopship has been destroyed. Ween are dead: long live Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo.

Though they collaborated frequently, employing the brilliant drummer Claude Coleman and, more famously, a crackerjack team of Nashville studio stars they dubbed The Shitcreek Boys, Ween was always the project, outpouring, and identity of its founding duo. Freeman and Melchiondo (who went by the noms de rock Gene and Dean Ween, respectively) wrote deeply weird pop music that didn’t defy categorization so much as render all discussion about genre obsolete.

While they’ll always be best-remembered for their weirdo experiments--the Scotchgard-fueled mayhem of The Pod; the guest appearance in the It’s Pat! movie; the jingle they wrote for Pizza Hut’s Insider pizza that was ultimately rejected (“Where’d the Cheese Go,” which the band called “one of the best tunes we wrote all last year”); their one moment of crossover success (1992’s “Push Th’ Little Daisies”); their on-stage eagerness to deconstruct their own songs into a rotten, brown mess--the jokes never eclipsed the fact that Gener and Deaner were and are extraordinarily gifted pop songwriters, polyglots able to mimic britpop, hardcore, sea chanty, space-rock, and Mexican balladry without losing hold of the melodic ribbon that runs through their best work. Even The Pod’s phased-out, DAT-backed “Pork Roll Egg and Cheese” sounds nearly as much like a lost Lennon demo as it does a giddy song about a breakfast sandwich.

While the true followers of the Boognish (if you don’t know by now, it’s probably too late) mostly point to 1997’s excellent The Mollusk as Ween’s magnum opus, the group are truly at their best on White Pepper. Released in May of 2000 (and woefully neglected when we put together our Decade list a couple of years back), the album shifts gracefully between power-pop (“Even If You Don’t”), Motî¶rhead and Jimmy Buffett pastiche (“Stroker Ace,” “Bananas and Blow”), and free-floating dreamscape (“Ice Castles”). But the album also catches Ween at their most affecting: twelve years later, songs like the aching “Exactly Where I’m At,” country-rocker “Stay Forever,” and especially “Flutes of the Chi” still sound the depths.

It took Freeman and Melchiondo three years to follow up White Pepper with Quebec, and four more passed before they released what is now their swan song, La Cucaracha. That title suddenly feels ironic and planned, and maybe it was; for a minute there, it looked like a band as obnoxious and outlandish as Ween might actually go the distance. But then someone threw the lights on. words/ m garner

MP3: Ween :: Reggaejunkiejew

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Diversions :: King Tuff – Five Albums

(Diversions, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, catches up with our favorite artists as they wax on subjects other than recording and performing.)

Fans of King Tuff's 2008 debut, Was Dead, rejoice this week as Kyle Thomas returns with his s/t follow-up via Sub Pop. Garage-boogie-marc-bolan vibes intact, we asked Kyle to hit us with some records he's been leaning on of late. New jams below, Tuff's picks after the jump...

MP3: King Tuff :: Bad Thing
MP3: King Tuff :: Keep On Movin'

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The Blue Things :: La-Do-Dada (Dale Hawkins)

1965 cover of Dale Hawkins' "La-Do-Dada" via the Hays, Kansas garage outfit The Blue Things. Sped up, the band plays it relatively straight (tempo aside) sounding more British invasion than middle America.

MP3: Dale Hawkins :: La-Do-Dada
MP3:
The Blue Things :: La-Do . . .

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