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Eef Barzelay :: Two Tickets To Paradise (Cover)

About a year ago I caught the reunited Clem Snide at a club show here in L.A. The band was touring behind the release of Hungry Bird, which while recorded in 2006, prior to the band's split, was not released until 2009. Eef Barzelay has always had a way with a cover. Oddly distinctive and immediately identifiable, Barzelay's voice that night lit into a languid rendition of Eddie Money's "Two Tickets To . . .

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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. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 126: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ White Denim - All Consolation Revised ++ Dum Dum Girls - Jail La La ++ No Age - Sleeper Hold ++ Japandroids - The Boys Are Leaving Town ++ TV On The Radio - New Health Rock ++ Yeasayer - Sunrise ++ The Ruby Suns - Cranberry . . .

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Talking Heads :: Saratoga Performing Arts Center, NY August 1983

1983 was was an incredibly fertile year for Talking Heads. The companion album to Jonathan Demme's Stop Making Sense made an effort at capturing the band's live mojo, but due to its length (neutered at nine tracks) failed to paint a complete picture. Thankfully there are a number of high-quality boots in circulation. The below show, a soundboard recorded in August of '83 in . . .

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The Wall Re-Built :: Papercuts/The Amazing Cover Pink Floyd

The Wall. Bloated and self-indulgent, yet near perfect in its execution. Though I was only 4 years old when Pink Floyd first executed its extensive stage show in 1980, the concept album's legacy began to pervade my consciousness as soon as the beginning of middle school.

It was then that I first began noticing the Wall's bricks carefully stenciled on the notebooks of the upper classmen; the album's nightmarish iconography emblazoned on t-shirts, stickers and half-sewn jacket patches---and of course the cardboard CD jewel cases (remember those?) that clung to the inside of rusting metal locker doors. These middle school upperclassmen, which to clarify meant 8th and 9th graders, seemed to be tapped into something...some otherness, something called Pink Floyd.

With the Wall, came the first sense of rebellion…escapism. A break from the suburban norm of Atlanta. Sure it was a band from another generation but what it signified was a good deal more interesting than the top 40 of Madonna and Wang Chung. And really, thinking back it wasn't even so much about the music (as I'm sure I barely grasped the majority of the content of Roger Waters lyrics), but the promise of an, err, less conservative worldview.

A gateway, this was a world of beers salvaged from basement refrigerators and cigarettes pilfered from your friends mother's pocketbook, both consumed behind the school parking lot and/or in the woods behind a church or shopping center. This was a world where marijuana was smoked out of bent coca-cola cans and makeshift tin-foil bowls. This was the beginning of sneaking out of the house at midnight and returning home before dawn. Heady stuff for a thirteen year old. Whatever this middle school subculture was, I wanted in. Far removed from Pop Warner football, this, the Wall, as I understood it at the time, was a glimpse of something else. Something far removed from the suburban drudgery of being thirteen in 1989.

And then I discovered Black Flag and Minor Threat. But that's a story for another time.

That was 20 years ago. I have since gone through many phases of Pink Floyd fandom, from utterly denouncing them and their ilk (see Black Flag reference above), to championing founder Syd Barrett and everything in between. If you haven't seen it yet, Mojo has taken another look at the Wall's uncompromising 1980-81 live show revealing everything that went into making it a reality. In addition to interviews with its creator, Roger Waters, the magazine goes behind the scenes talking to the production crew, stage band, hangers on, etc. To commemorate the issue the magazine has curated a two-disc compilation, The Wall Re-Built, inviting contemporary musicians to each cover a track from the Walll. Sample a couple of tracks below. Sweden's the Amazing slow the raucous "Young Lust" down to a piano-driven dirge, while Gnomonsong's Papercuts employs fuzz and dreamy dissonance on "The Thin Ice."

In 2010, I wonder if this album still grabs the imagination of thirteen year old boys the way it did in the days before the Internet. The days before endless "free" music, movies, etc.

MP3: Papercuts :: The Thin Ice
MP3: The Amazing :: Young Lust
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Caribou :: Odessa

The Ruby Suns, The Tallest Man On Earth...and now Caribou (née Dan Snaith). So far, not even a month into 2010, a number of artists I consider favorites have been dropping mp3 nuggets from their forthcoming records. Caribou's "Odessa," the first taste off the upcoming Swim . . .

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The Tallest Man On Earth :: King of Spain

Kristian Matsson, provenance Sweden, is The Tallest Man On Earth. Being that his debut, 2008's Shallow Grave, was one of the strongest folk records of that year, I have been anxiously awaiting its follow-up. That wait appears to be over as Matsson's new label, Dead Oceans, has announced The Wild Hunt will be released on April 13th (April 12th in the UK). Check out "King of Spain," the first . . .

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Blair :: Die Young

Die Young is an intimidating title for a debut full-length. It casts a lot of weight about its small frame - a twelve song package of deceptively airy and sprightly vocals spun around a churning, rhythmic and engaging set of pop that takes its cues from a host of 90s indie and classic rock and roll signatures. Blair's . . .

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The Quick :: Mondo Deco (Reissued)

I was first turned on to the Quick several years ago when Dave Newton and I had radio shows back to back at the now defunct Little Radio loft studios in the warehouse district of downtown L.A. Dave's show was immediately after mine and he would usually pop in 15 to 20 minutes early to chat, drink beer, and generally nerd around about records (good times, Dave). For the most part he solely spun tracks . . .

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AD Presents :: Girls/Magic Kids/Smith Westerns, NOLA Feb 2nd

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Books of Moses (Skip Spence Cover)

If you have an Internet connection you've heard about Beck's ongoing Record Club. We featured the first installment (Beck and assorted friends covering The Velvet Underground & Nico) back in August. I love that album---there's no telling how many times I've spun its sides over the years, but I can't say I've found myself revisiting that set of covers since they initially appeared online six months ago. And that's not meant to be a slight, as the participants aim is made very clear from the outset: "There is no intention to 'add to' the original work or attempt to recreate the power of the original recording. Only to play music and document what happens." No, this has more to do with my having heard one too many covers off the VU's debut over the years, beginning with my very introduction to the Velvets via R.E.M.'s take on "Femme Fatale." But really, it's a classic album---it's bound to happen. Fast forward to part three.

Now this, the third installment of Record Club (Leonard Cohen was second up), is an altogether different beast. Here, Beck and his ever-rotating group of musicians tackle the often brilliant oddity that is Alexander "Skip" Spence's only solo album, OAR. Spence, most notably, cut his teeth with Moby Grape and Jefferson Airplane before going his own way, eventually forging a path more in line with Gary Higgins than Jorma Kaukonen. That path led to OAR; a strange, primitive, unsettling, earthy cosmic weirding. It's also great. But OAR is another post for another time, as it certainly deserves it.

Here, under Beck's instruction, "Books of Moses," off OAR, is transformed from a two and half minute folk ramble into a seven-plus minute funk banger equal parts Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder and Shuggie Otis. If that last sentence doesn't make you want to press play, you're on the wrong blog. Amidst a fatback steady backbeat and nasty percussive synths, vocals are handled by British soul singer Jamie Lidell who shucks and jives like a Mississippi juke joint. This track just sweats.

photo: autumn de wilde

MP3: Beck's Record Club :: Books of Moses
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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. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 125: Jean Michel Bernard - Generique Stephane ++ The Bicycles - B-B-Bicycles ++ Knight School - Pregnant Again ++ Real Estate - Fake Blues ++ Surfer Blood - Catholic Pagans ++ Surf City - Autumn ++ Vivian Girls - Blind Spot ++ Pet Politics - The Ghost of Mary And Her Friends ++ James . . .

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Diversions :: Wolf People: A Musical Cultural Exchange, A Medley

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

I know it's impossible to keep up with everything posted on Aquarium Drunkard, but I implore you to not miss this installment of Diversions. Why? Because the guys behind the UK's Wolf People have assembled an eleven track '60s/'70s psych-rock medley that you absolutely need in your life. Skip your other blog reads for the day if you have to, but do check this out. To celebrate being signed to an American label (Jagjaguwar) despite never having visited the states, the band chose 5 songs from the US and 5 (+1) from the UK. They’re mostly psych-rock. They’re all great. We begin with the UK...
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Edgar Broughton Band - House of Turnabout(from Edgar Broughton Band on Harvest Records)

Here is an English band with heavy Beefheart influences so it’s little wonder that they’re a favourite of ours. They represent something quintessentially English; a sturdy, no-nonsense antidote to the more whimsical and theatrical psychedelia that was rife around that time. They were from Coventry but moved to Notting Hill and became involved with the underground scene that spawned a lot of great and often underrated bands like Mighty Baby (see below), Quintessence, Hawkwind, Pink Fairies and Deviants.

This track from their 1971 self titled album (the one with all the meat on the cover) never fails to knock me out. It seems to me that when America turned towards introspective singer songwriters at the turn of the decade, Britain was on the verge of something more gritty and politically aware which would eventually mutate into punk, and this to me is a great example of psychedelic rock with a proto-punk tinge to it.

Edgar Broughton Band were a festival staple in the early 70’s and most freaks from the time will have fond memories of their epic “out demons, out” set closer, something I wish I could have seen in the flesh.

MP3: Edgar Broughton Band - House of Turnabout

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The Rising Storm :: Calm Before…

Hardcore fans of unknown '60s psych and garage all search for that taste of magic once committed to rare grooves of vinyl, a glimpse into an era when any rock combo with a few fans could get enough studio time to immortalize a set of their wildest sounds, and with Calm Before.., you get the full dosage.

If you have an original copy . . .

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Owen Pallett :: Paris 1919

MP3: Owen Pallett :: Paris 1919 (John Cale cover)
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