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Alan Vega :: Jukebox Babe

Part of the beauty of iTunes (or, rather, any computer based audio software) is the meta data found within each of the tracks file tags. In this case it was Alan Vega. Spurred by a DJ spinning Suicide last week I ripped a CD, and while monkeying around inside the data fields, was reminded of the composer: Vega. While I rarely dig out my Suicide records these days, this reminder of Vega's, early 80s, rockabilly inspired . . .

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The Attack :: Go Your Way

Here's one from ye olde AD home office mailbag. I played this jam for a longtime listener/reader on the SIRIUS show last week. Of the myriad of bands that were coming out of the UK, in the mid-sixties, The Attack may not have become a household name in the way, say, the Animals did, but like The Creation, when they blazed they were white-hot. Check out the sub-machine gun . . .

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Menomena :: The AD Interview

Coming off the heels of the much delayed, but well-received, Mines, Meonema's Danny Seim spoke with AD before their recent Los Angeles show. Touching on subjects from the band's rumored and documented tribulations to the pressure from within and the pressure from without, Seim spoke at length on the recording, touring, and all that pesky time in between the two.

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Aquarium Drunkard: Can you describe the process of going from a disparate recording process to a live setting? You’re a band that works very differently from others in terms of recording — how do you prepare the material for it live?

Danny Seim: That’s been the bain of my existence for the past two months. It’s hard — we write and record simultaneously — there’s never any moment, until we have to prepare for the tour, where we have any idea how we’re going to pull these songs off. In the past, with the first few records, we had it more in mind that what we recorded we would have to pull off or redo on stage and try not to go to over the top. Plus, we didn’t feel very comfortable during the recording process itself, so we weren’t trying to go crazy with the layers, just keep it simple. We got more carried away, especially because of the uncomfortably of the recording and didn’t think about it at all. It’s a struggle — we added a fourth member to the band, Joe Haege, a dear friend, who is also opening this tour as Tu Fawning. We’ve known him for years and years, he’s one of my favorite singers and guitar players — it was kind of a no brainer to add him to the mix. Adding him helped the transition from the recording to the live thing; it’s an extra pair of hands and vocal chords on stage. Whereas before we were wondering if we’d get to the point where we’d have to play the tracks or do the karaoke thing. I don’t want to do that! Brent (Knopf) and Justin (Harris) are such multitaskers — trying to play bass pedals and sax and keyboards and sing simultaneously, having Joe involved takes away a little of that burden. This is the funny part of the process, we become a live band, we have to try to recreate these sounds, and I think most of the songs are at least recognizable — it’s always the hardest part of the process and also the most fun. After being in isolation with our headphones in front of the computer for years, as it became, to finally actually be playing for people again… it makes us feel validated again, as a band; we’re not just a bunch of studio nerds.

AD: As you alluded to, quite a bit has been made about the rough recording process — talk even of breakups and hostility. Do you feel that bringing this music to a live setting, having to work together, be together in a single instant in a way other than recording, has helped to alleviate that tension?

DS: Oh, totally. Once we get in this little van together, wake up at 8AM, drive six hours, it becomes more of a, to sound dorky, brotherhood kind of vibe where we realize that we’re not the same monsters that destroyed each others masterpieces six months ago. Once this record was finished it was a major sigh of relief, it just took so long. If you’d asked us six months ago when this record was going to come out, we had no idea, we had no deadlines. We didn’t have studio budgets or label pressure — this could have really never gotten finished. Once it was done, we could put that portion of our life behind us and get to know each other again, reconnecting as people who want to make the best live presentation of ourselves possible, which is much more of a communal effort.

CONTINUE READING AFTER THE JUMP......

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Don Covay :: The House of Blue Lights

Released in 1969, The House of Blue Lights was Don Covay's bold, adventurous attempt to reach an underground audience. Here Covay is backed by the white-hot Jefferson Lemon Blues Band, credited on the album jacket. Prior to this LP Don Covay released two of the finest soul/pop albums of the 60's, Mercy! and See-Saw.

The . . .

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Jet Harris & Tony Meehan :: Wild One (Real Wild Child)

The studied cool and devil-may-care attitude that simmers just beneath Jet Harris's "Wild One (Real Wild Child)" propel the tune as much as the very instruments. The swagger that emanates from the speakers reminds us they just don't write and record them like they used to. You've most likely heard other versions riffing on this song, but this is the best.

MP3: Jet Harris & Tony Meehan :: Wild One (Real . . .

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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 160: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Jet Harris & Tony Meehan - Wild One (Real Wild Child) ++The Attack - Go Your Way ++ The Olivia Tremor Control - Jumping Fences ++ The Kinks - Arthur ++ The Beach Boys - Passing By ++ Relatively Clean Rivers - Easy Ride ++ Black Lips - It Feels Alright ++ Dirt . . .

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AD Presents :: Portugal. The Man – Fall Tour 2010

AD is set to present the entirety of the Portugal. The Man tour this Fall. Those of you who have seen this band live need no further explanation, but for those who have yet to catch them, their live show is, in a word, an experience. Maybe that's two words, I don't know...point is, they go off. Throughout the next month look for ticket giveaways, guest posts (a rumored follow-up to John's last Diversions on Sci-Fi in the Alaskan wilds), videos, radio sessions and more. Tour dates + ticket giveaway information after the jump.....

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The Walkmen :: The AD Interview, 2010

The Walkmen’s latest record, Lisbon, is another set of glossy black-and-white drama from the New York quintet.   Like You & Me before it, Lisbon paints its portraits of drawn-out relationships with wiry guitars and off-center drums.   Aquarium Drunkard caught up with vocalist Hamilton Leithauser a few days before Lisbon’s release.
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Aquarium Drunkard: How are things going on the road, how are the new tracks working out?

Hamilton: We’ve only done two shows, but they’ve both been really fun.

AD: I guess at this point in the game, since the record comes out on Tuesday, everyone’s heard all the songs already.

Hamilton: People sorta know it. We opened last night for the National, so most people were there to see them. They seemed to know the old stuff a little better. But then we played our own show in Seattle the other night, and they knew all of them. It was like they’d been listening to it for a while.

AD: I noticed on the forum on your website, the lyrics were posted like two months ago.

Hamilton: Yeah, that’s pretty telling.

AD: You said in 2008 that you wanted to branch out with You and Me. What was the approach for Lisbon?

Hamilton: It’s sort of what you’re always trying to do. In all the steps, we’re trying to make something that you want to keep making. It’s only fun if it feels new and different to you. But it’s also a process. As soon as we finished You and Me we started writing Lisbon–before You and Me was even out. That’s the whole point of it, is to keep trying to do something, to keep it as different as you can.

AD: Did you close the door on You and Me and say, “Okay, now we’re going to start the new record,” or do you just keep writing?

Hamilton: It’s a tough moment when you finish. We’ve been writing new songs, actually. It’s just a process where you keep going, and at some point you say that you’ve got a record and you have to figure out which tracks to use. When you’ve done that, it’s like a landmark, but in your head you keep going and you’ve got this record you can refer back to and say, “Okay, I don’t want to sound like that anymore.”

CONTINUE READING AFTER THE JUMP...

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Women :: Public Strain

On Public Strain, I constantly feel like I’m staring at an unrecognizable and clawed-at photo. It looks familiar. Like a friend or a place that I know well yet can’t firmly identify. I continue to pull the photo closer and begin to enjoy the imperfections (faded color, ripped edges and wrinkled integrity) and no longer feel or desire any relation to the subject. By no means . . .

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Tony Owens :: I Got Soul

Some records have the ability to get under your skin and change the entire trajectory of your listening habits. A couple of months ago, I Got Soul, by New Orleans' Tony Owens, is one such album. A gritty, no frills, southern soul monster from the late 60s and early 70s, the collection, released by Grapevine Records, has had me reaching for little else than my old soul and r&b platters. Good records are like that. Check the title track below, and if you . . .

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Brian Wilson :: L.A. Smog (Spoken Word)

The first track on last month's Still Burnt (LA Burnout pt. 2) is a meandering Brian Wilson vocal rap taken from an old 70s interview. His 'thoughts' on the Los Angeles smog problem are placed over a bed of music (the High Llamas). Here is the original, sans music, for those interested. Brian, ya better get back in bed, brother.

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Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones (1972 Concert Film)

Fellow Stones freaks have no doubt crawled youtube and the net for gems like the video (after the jump) of the band ripping "Happy" during the 1972 Exile On Main Street tour. I wasn't born yet, so catching Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones last week at Regal Cinemas in downtown L.A. was about as close as one can get without having been there. Capturing the band in the midst of the Exile tour, the film is a raucous document of the band at the top of their live game (and a must-see on the big screen if showing in your town).

The film will be released on DVD/Blu-Ray on October 12, 2010. Supplements to the concert footage will include your rehearsal footage from Montreux, a 1972 Old Grey Whistle Test interview with Mick Jagger, and a 2010 interview with Jagger.

The above photo, of Charlie Watts, was taken in the basement of Villa Nellcî´te recording drums for Exile in 1971. Great collection of Dominique Tarlé's images from Nellcî´te at the Stones website.

Previously: The Rolling Stones :: Main Street Revisited, Mickboy Remasters

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Wonderland :: 1977 Dutch L.A. Documentary, Chapter1

Speaking of L.A. Burnout, the above video is part one of a1977 Dutch produced documentary covering the, then, up and coming Los Angeles music scene featuring Warren Zevon, Linda Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt & Jackson Browne.

Links: Warren Zevon at Griffith Observatory, Linda Ronstadt in studio “Tracks Of My Tears” alternative studio . . .

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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.

You can download today's session with Roadside Graves here...

SIRIUS 159: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ J. Tillman :: Tonight’s the Night ++ Roadside Graves :: Anthony's . . .

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