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The End Is At Hand Pt.1 & 2 :: A Homemade Psych Compilation

This is so good. A couple of weeks back the guys at Crescere shot me an email hipping me to their latest creation; a two part compilation of super-obscure, often private press, outsider psychedelic guitar and folk music from the 60s and 70s...all with the underlying theme of the Jesus People's Movement. From what I can tell a lot of this stuff has yet to be comped (though I'm sure it's only a matter of time) making this collection all that much more interesting.

I fixed some of the tags in the set with track numbers, the comp's name, etc and re-upped both at mediafire. Get both after the jump, and be sure to keep and eye on Doug and Josh at Crescere.

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The Rolling Stones :: Brussels Affair 1973

What year is it, again? Within the last twelve months I have picked up the reissue of Exile on Main Street, the Keith biography, Life, and went downtown for a screening of the 1972 concert film Ladies & Gentlemen The Rolling Stones, documenting the American leg of the Exile tour. All worth it, and the Keith bio itself re-sparked my interest in the band's Goat's Head era, notably the Brussels Affair bootleg.

Allegedly a near-miss official Stones release documenting . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 26 (SIRIUS), and channel 43 (XM), can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 169: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Richard Swift & Damien Jurado - Be Not So Fearful ++ Bonnie "Prince" Billy & Tortoise - Thunder Road ++ Morphine - In Spite of Me ++ Horse Feathers - Drain You ++ Silver Jews - Suffering Jukebox ++ Kurt Vile - He's Alright ++ Jim Schoenfield - Before ++ Gary Higgins - Thicker . . .

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Swamp Dogg :: Total Destruction To Your Mind

One of the best underground/unsung soul albums I know of. Prior to Total Destruction To Your Mind, Swamp Dogg had been recording music and releasing 45s since the 50s, under the name Jerry Williams (or Little Jerry Williams). Frustrated by the lack of commercial success, Williams changed his name and persona and in 1970, unleashed Total Destruction . . .

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Happy Thanksgiving :: Alice’s Restaurant

ALICE MAY BROCK, born in Brooklyn, New York, on February 28, 1941. A Pisces ... Grew from a difficult child to a juvenile delinquent to a regular (irregular) person ... Spent a few years in high school .... reform school ... fancy school .... Moved to the Lower East Side, then to the green greener Berkshires ... Married crazy Ray D. Brock (picked up in old Cedar Street Tavern) ... Worked as a librarian at the Stockbridge School ... Bought a church ... sang songs ... Fooled around ... Cooked good good food with a smile and other expressions ... Bought a crummy diner .... Turned it into a crazy-yummy-cozy restaurant ... Got tired ... Got divorced ... Got famed by Arlo Guthrie, an old friend who wrote the song "Alice's Restaurant," which inspired Arthur Penn to direct the movie Alice's Restaurant--about Alice and Ray and Arlo and the Scene ... now in the past. Thru it all Alice is a real live human bean--Still foolin' around and still cookin' ...

Around here, Alice's Restaurant is as much a part of Thanksgiving as turkey, stuffing and pants that used to fit just 24 hours prior. "Alice's Restaurant" could mean any number of things, though. It could mean Arlo Guthrie's debut record, released in 1967 when he was just 20 years old. It could be the epic 18-minute comedic folk-monologue "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" that encompasses the entire A-side of that record. It could be the 1969 film Alice's Restaurant, adapted from the song. Or it could be "Alice's Restaurant Cookbook," by Alice Mae Brock, the woman from whom all of the previous was more or less inspired, and whose author's bio you read above, taken from the back book jacket of a real, live copy.

Arlo Guthrie :: Alice's Restaurant Massacree

By now, most of you are probably familiar with the song "Alice's Restaurant Massacree," a satirical protest ballad that revolves around a Thanksgiving in 1965, a church-cum-flophouse, littering and all that you can and should do to avoid a war draft that receives its fair share of humiliation along the way. It's written in the sort of carefree countercultural voice of the mid-'60s, before mounting frustration (and drug use) created a noticeably edgier, grittier anti-war movement just a few short years later. It's a lighthearted, though meaningful, rendition that contrasts the elder Guthrie's more pointed, sometimes serious social critiques of decades past.

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Smoke :: Heaven On A Popsicle Stick (Atlanta Series Continued)

"Without my guitar I would most likely have ended up in a cult wearing my brand new Nike high-tops waiting for UFOs" - Benjamin

Prior to my buying into the heathen bargain that is Los Angeles, ye olde Drunkard grew up in the wooded enclave that is Atlanta, GA. Recently, through the magic of eMusic, bit torrent and the like, I have been revisiting albums by ATL artists that I long sold off in the mid-late 90s in an effort to pay off various and sundry bartabs, gambling debts, etc.

Earlier this . . .

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Diversions :: Patterson Hood on Darkness On The Edge of Town

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

At the bottom of the page you will Patterson Hood’s live tribute to Darkness On The Edge Of Town recorded in 2007, by Sloan Simpson, at the 40 Watt club in Athens, GA.   Last week, on the eve of the Darkness reissue, The Promise, I asked Patterson to share his thoughts on the original LP. He did just that. Below is his transmission from  the Netherlands, thinking about Darkness, while touring with Drive-By Truckers.   Look for the new DBT record, Go-Go Boots, out February 2011.

I was fourteen, had just moved, was about to enter high school, puberty and all that shit. I was hanging out at the record store (as I did every Saturday) and my friend Jay, behind the counter, told me to buy this record. He probably didn't tell me it would save my life, but he might has well have. I think it got me at track 3 ("Something in the Night", still gives me chills). Somewhere around the time that everything dropped out, leaving only the voice and the kick   drum, playing the most simple of things as he crooned about being caught at the state line and having their car burned that I knew this was some special kind of Rock and Roll Record.

I grew up, the son of musician, reading Rolling Stone and Musician and Creem and even Billboard (Dad had those all laying around) as well as National Lampoon and MAD (and whatever pornography I could find hidden under the bed) so I grew up steeped in Rock and Roll folklore as if that was my Grimm's Fairy Tales and or by that age, Bible.

Rockers had been singing about their cars since before Chuck Berry and no one had ever done it as well as him. Jan and Dean wrecked their car on Dead Man's Curve (followed shortly by the real thing) but they didn't have their car set fire too. I didn't know what it all meant, but I was blown away by it. I was already writing songs by that time and probably set fire to all the cars in my songs for the next year or two.

Then "Candy's Room" came on and what the hell was that all about? Those drums came in, just impossibly fast. I already knew about Punk Rock, as I saw that thing on TV (A show on NBC called Weekend did a segment on this new 'horrible' phenomenon and I was hooked). I began hitting up my friend Jay for these bands with cool names like the Sex Pistols and especially the Clash. Those records were hard to find in my Alabama hometown, but Bruce Springsteen was borderline mainstream, I mean even WQLT played "Born To Run." The fact that Springsteen seemed to be embracing Punk Rock was of astronomical importance to me in 1978.

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Joe Strummer’s London Calling :: BBC Radio 1998-2001

Clash fans, should you find yourself traveling for Thanksgiving, might I suggest loading the following on your iPod for the trip. Between 1998 and 2001 Joe Strummer hosted his London Calling radio show for the BBC spinning his favorites old and new. Strummer described his show as the following: ‘My pick of music for the show reflects the music that I listen to all year round. I am constantly trawling through music and . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 26 (SIRIUS), and channel 43 (XM), can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

Download the Aquarium Drunkard session with Lissie HERE....

SIRIUS 168: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Deerhunter - Desire Lines ++ Thurston Moore - The Shape Is In A Trance ++ Warpaint - Ashes . . .

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Harry Nilsson Does The Beatles

A few summers ago, at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood, I caught a limited screening of Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talkin' About Him). It took a few years, but the documentary finally landed a DVD distribution deal and is   available to stream digitally via Netflix. Nilsson fans, you need to see this.

More than any other contemporary pop group, the Beatles played an important role in the Nilsson story, both artistically and personally. The band practically launched the singer's career, at a . . .

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Jim Schoenfeld :: Before

Last May Lockett Pundt (Deerhunter/Lotus Plaza) guest DJ'd my satellite radio show. Afterwards we compiled his track selection into a mixtape which can be downloaded here. Lockett opened the set with the mercurial folk of Jim Schoenfeld's "Before," a track that caught its second wind last year via the Numero Group's Wayfaring . . .

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Frank Frost :: My Back Scratcher

I first came across Frank Frost via author Robert Palmer's seminal blues doc Deep Blues: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads. Years later, just prior to beginning research on my guidebook to the Delta Blues Trail, I was reintroduced to the blues harp player . . .

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Gene Parsons :: Kindling

Sometimes it’s the less visible members of a great band who turn out to be the most interesting. Gene Parsons was the drummer with the Byrds from 1968 to 1972. If you’ve ever even heard his name, there’s a fair chance that you’ll confuse him with his near namesake who was with the same band less than a year and achieved a disproportionate notoriety. It’s indicative of Gene’s character that when Chris Hillman quit the Byrds to form the . . .

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