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On The Road (Again) With J. Neas :: Pitchfork Fest, Chicago

Ahoy there, J. Neas here. AD is once again heading to the Pitchfork Fest at Union Park in Chicago later this week. I'll be posting daily recaps of the previous day's festivities here on AD as well as updating my personal Twitter account during the day. No promises that you won't have to read the occasional tweet about lines at port-o-johns, but for the most part it'll be live tweet reactions to the artists on stage and anything else awesome that goes down. Below are a handful of the bands I'm most looking forward to catching if you're looking to stalk and/or buy me beers.

Once again, the opening day of the festival changes its focus. This year the festival goes back to a more traditional opening day lineup with an earlier start on Friday (3:30 PM CST). No gimmicks this year (like last year's Write the Night fan requests or previous years' Don't Look Back-style complete album performances), but Friday does include a first: stand-up comedians. I'm especially looking forward to The Daily Show's Wyatt Cenac (6:30 PM), The State/Stella member Michael Showalter (7:15 PM) and the incomparable Eugene Mirman (8:00 PM). In the realm of music, Tallest Man on Earth (4:00 PM) gets the festival off to a great start early on, but he's sure to get some noise competition quickly as El-P (4:35 PM) takes his awesome show to the stage. It's been a number of years since I last saw El-Producto, but he was an amazing performer then and no doubt now. The always intriguing Liars (5:30 PM) go on to give a nice pre-dinner performance for people and, for dessert, Broken Social Scene (7:20 PM). The night's headliner is Modest Mouse (8:30 PM), a band that I have never seen live, so am greatly looking forward to finally catching.

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Thee Headcoatees :: Meet Jacqueline (Where The Boys Aren’t)

One more track from the garage off the (forthcoming) Where The Boys Aren't mixtape.   Holly Golightly and co. may not have written "Meet Jacqueline" (that would be the Troggs), but in terms of sheer attitude and swagger their version is without question the definitive. Powered by an ever present Bo Diddley . . .

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The Love Language :: Libraries

When a band comes rumbling out of nowhere with a sound that artfully evokes the past, it's typical to wait for the eventual downfall the second time around. Conventional wisdom goes that you have a whole lifetime to write your first album and maybe a year for the second. The Love Language's Libraries, however, is the antithesis of the sophomore slump. A radiant, glowing expansion of the sound of their self-titled debut . . .

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Loudon Wainwright III :: Attempted Mustache

By the time of Attempted Mustache's 1973 release Loudon Wainwright III had been kicking around for some time, releasing several critically acclaimed folk albums throughout the early 70s. One of Loudon's finest efforts, the LP is a loose, low key, affair with brutally honest lyrics coupled with a few shambolic, drunken performances that are highly entertaining. So while the playing and atmosphere is relaxed, this LP . . .

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The Rolling Stones :: Main Street Revisited, Mickboy Remasters

Any silence on my part per the recent reissue of the Stones Exile On Main Street has more to do with the fact that I've written about the album and its contents so much in the past that I have very little left to say on the subject (versus any implied lack . . .

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Conspiracy of Owls :: Ancient Robots

This is pre-destined to be your summer jam if you let it. Soaked in lethargic ennui, Conspiracy of Owls "Ancient Robots" milks 90s indie throwback in the very best way. Bobby from The Go's new-ish project; look for the LP out on Burger Records soon.

MP3: Conspiracy of Owls :: Ancient Robots
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The Beatle-ettes :: Only Seventeen (Where The Boys Aren’t)

A highlight from the seminal Girls In The Garage compilation, the Beatle-ettes "Only Seventeen" kicks off a twenty track, all girl-group, mixtape I crafted out of sand, spirit gum and some driftwood awhile back (entitled, wink wink, Where The Boys Aren't). I'll most likely get around to cleaning it up and posting it on here this summer, but in the meantime have been airing bits and pieces on Friday's radio programme. Here's a taste.

MP3: The . . .

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Mountain Man :: Made the Harbor

There's a rolling highland, green as it is unceasing, billowing like yeast in and out of a stand of sugar maple and yellow birch. The dense wood tapers to a thicket lining before a velvet grass thins it out. At the base of a quiet knoll, an indistinguishable one of many, sits a modest timber-frame cottage with mossy rocks stacked to its shingles on one side. Smoke is quickly swept from a chimney into a brisk air that scurries through the glen, and as the whistling wind passes, it makes the faintest call, transforming for a moment into . . .

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No Jacket Required :: This Friday – Wounded Lion, So Many Wizards, Woah Hunx @ the Grandstar, July 16th: Chinatown

No Jacket Required returns this Friday at the Grandstar in Chinatown with a triple bill of Wounded Lion, So many Wizards and Woah Hunx.   Come hang. I'm the DJ that night with a stack 'o new rekkids I'm looking forward to hearing over the PA. Bonus treats: there's free Firefly Vodka from 8 . . .

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AD Presents :: Roadside Graves/Futurebirds, New Orleans LA

New Orleans, this Friday night Aquarium Drunakrd presents a double bill of labelmates Roadside Graves and Futurebirds at One Eyed Jacks on Toulouse St. in the quarter. If you read the blog of the regular then you're well aware of my affection for both. Roadside are kicking off their North American tour and Futurebirds are presently on the road in support of Hampton's Lullaby, their debut, which . . .

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John Carpenter :: Fairy Tales Forgotten

The thing that makes John Carpenter’s music so easy to absorb is its ability to tap into more genres than you could ever imagine while still sounding like he’s a complete stranger to modern rock, pop and psych from the past five decades. I’m not sure how this happens, but the L.A. artist has an impressive aural resume (Bandcamp page) that offers several releases in demo, single and EP format. And while those are brilliant in their . . .

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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 149: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ Tune-Yards - Sunlight ++ No Age - It's Oh So Quiet (Bjork) ++ Bonnie "Prince" Billy - It's Expected I'm Gone ++ Arthur Russell - Make 1, 2 ++ David Bowie - Fashion ++ The Morning Benders - All Day Daylight ++ Fang Island - The Illinois ++ Magic Kids . . .

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Oscar Grant And A History of Violence In Song

(As subject material goes, violence, in songwriting, is about as seminal as they come. In light of the recent outcome of the Oscar Grant case J. Neas reflects on similar past events and the songs they inspired. Chime in below in the comments.)

Oscar Grant, a 22 year-old black man, was fatally shot on New Year's Day, 2009 during an altercation with the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) Police Department in Oakland, California. The United States has an unfortunately long history of questionable altercations between police and citizens where people wind up dead or injured. Whether it was the rioting that followed the 'not guilty' verdict in the case surrounding Arthur McDuffie's death in Miami in 1980, the similar riots that occurred in Los Angeles following the verdict in the Rodney King case in 1992, or the protests that have followed the 'involuntary manslaughter' ruling on July 8th in the case of Grant's death, public outcry, in various forms, is never far away.

By virtue of the fact that he was unarmed at the time he was shot, Grant's death has earned some uneasy comparisons to the deaths of Amadou Diallo and Patrick Dorismond who were shot to death by members of the New York City Police Department in 1999 and 2000 respectively. The officers involved in both cases were acquitted of all charges.

A mere three months after the officers in the Diallo case were exonerated, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band rolled into New York for a ten night stand at Madison Square Garden. It was here that they would play, for only the second time ever, a new song called "American Skin (41 Shots)." The song had been debuted at a show in Atlanta, Georgia right before the New York shows and it takes a mesmerizing and heartbreaking look at the Diallo case. The officers involved had fired 41 shots at the unarmed man and it's this phrase that becomes the repeated mantra for the song. The song is not, despite the protests that were mounted by police organizations, a blatantly anti-police song. It delves into the shades of grey of the case and even sympathetically portrays one of the officer's reactions immediately following the shooting. Ultimately Springsteen bemoans the fact that whatever American skin you wear, whether it's the officer's uniform or the immigrant's work clothes, it's possible that you could be killed for it. "We're baptized in these waters and in each other's blood...you get killed just for living in your American skin."

Continue Reading After The Jump....

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The Deadly Syndrome :: Aquarium Drunkard Session

Tomorrow, during the first hour of the AD show, we are airing the Deadly Syndrome's Aquarium Drunkard session. Highlighting yet another side of the Los Angeles based group, the three tracks are available for download below with the videos after the jump. Be sure to catch their contribution to L'Aventure as well.

MP3: The Deadly Syndrome - Wingwalker (AD Session)
MP3: The Deadly Syndrome - Deer Trail Place (AD Session)
MP3: The Deadly Syndrome - After Work (AD Session)
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The Deadly Syndrome - Wingwalker - Aquarium Drunkard Session from The Deadly Syndrome on Vimeo.

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Grizzly Bear :: Graceland (Paul Simon)

I nicked this Grizzly Bear cover of Paul Simon's "Graceland" several weeks ago from the gents over at IGIF. Here, in place of Simon's mid-80s Soweto fetish, we have Daniel Rossen's multi-tracked rendering that falls more in line with haunted Dixieland gothic than Manhattan world beat. Listening to this reminds me that while Grizzly Bear can wait, right now I'm ready for a new Department . . .

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