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Win Butler/Mac McCaughan :: The AD Interviews

Arcade Fire and Superchunk just played the Obama rally in North Carolina. Aquarium Drunkard was there. Below, J. Neas speaks with both Arcade Fire's Win Butler and Superchunk/Merge Records founder Mac McCaughan about the show, the campaign, politics and the music.

Aquarium Drunkard:
I wanted to ask how the Arcade Fire got involved with the . . .

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Off The Record :: The Everybodyfields (Tennessee)

Off The Record is a recurring feature, here on the Drunkard, that marries two of my greatest interests; music and travel. Having a locals perspective when visiting a new locale is the difference between experiencing it through the lens of a tourist and of that of a native.

Off The Record gathers some of my favorite artists, asks them to reflect on their city of residence, and choose a handful of places they could not live without, be them bookstores, bars, restaurants or vistas.

Today’s installment of OTR catches up with

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A Cassette Valediction: Part Two of Two

Like Thurston Moore and Rob Sheffield before him, AD contributor j. neas reflects on, and laments, the art of the (actual) mixtape. Now, raise your hand if you’ve created a muxtape (yes, I’m guilty). Part two . . .

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SIRIUS Radio :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS, channel 26 Left Of Center, can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST and then an encore broadcast at Midnight EST. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 46: DJ Shadow - Best Foot Forward ++ Darondo — Let My People Go ++ Sister Nancy - Bam Bam ++ The Meters — A Message From The Meters ++ Shuggie Otis — Inspiration Information . . .

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Citified :: The Meeting After the Meeting

There's something to be said for brevity - albums that know when to quit and don't stick around too long. All too often I'm subjected to albums that have just too many songs, or even EPs with lackluster filler surrounding one or two solid entries. When albums come out that are honestly fantastic from stem to stern, it's worth noting.

Greensboro, North Carolina's Citified released their first album back in 2005, but its follow-up, The Meeting After the Meeting, has been worth the . . .

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Car Jamming, Pt 4 :: Levon Helm – Short Film

(note: i’m on the cross-country road trip for six weeks doing research on a book about memphis and the delta blues trail. car jamming is recurring feature that documents random curios along the way)

Yesterday morning, after leaving the Shack Up Inn, we crossed over the Mississippi river into Helena, Arkansas, the once bustling port-town that was at one time home to Sonny Boy Williamson, the become a member or log in.

Off The Record :: Sun Kil Moon (San Francisco, CA)

Off The Record is a recurring feature, here on the Drunkard, that marries two of my greatest interests; music and travel. Having a locals perspective when visiting a new locale is the difference between experiencing it through the lens of a tourist and of that of a native.

Off The Record gathers some of my favorite artists, asks them to reflect on their city of residence, and choose a handful of places they could not live without, be them bookstores, bars, restaurants or vistas.

Today's OTR catches up with become a member or log in.

Car Jamming, Pt 3 :: Po’ Monkey’s Lounge

(note: i'm on the cross-country road trip for six weeks doing research on a book about memphis and the delta blues trail. car jamming is recurring feature that documents random curios along the way)

"I would hate to have lived my whole life and never been to Po' Monkey's." - myself to Mrs AD after thirty minutes - and three beers - inside...

While I would love to post on every juke joint and ramshackle blues room around the Mississippi Delta, I . . .

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Bonnie “Prince” Billy :: Lie Down in the Light

Will Oldham fanatics (raises hand) can expect the new Bonnie "Prince" Billy album, Lie Down in the Light, out next month via the Drag City label. While there is no firm trackist yet, it looks like the album drops stateside May 20th.

Excerpt from product description (amazon.com . . .

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SIRIUS Radio :: Aquarium Drunkard Show

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS, channel 26 Left Of Center, can now be heard twice, every Friday - Noon EST and then an encore broadcast at Midnight EST. Below is this week’s playlist.

SIRIUS 45: Phosphorescent - A Picture of Our Torn Up Praise ++ Sandro Perri - Everybody’s Talkin’ ++ Bon Iver - For Emma ++ J. Tillman - Steel On Steel ++ Megafaun - Find Your . . .

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AD/NOLA :: Parliament/Funkadelic @ Republic

Heading to the second weekend of Jazzfest in New Orleans? If so, head to Republic Friday night, May 2nd, as Aquarium Drunkard presents George Clinton/Parliament/Funkadelic. The combination of George Clinton and 'Fest should be insane.

We have ten pairs of tickets to give away to AD readers. To land . . .

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Dale Hawkins :: LA, Memphis & Tyler, Texas

Been traveling around the Mississippi Delta (presently in Greenwood, MS) for over a week now, doing juke joint research and eating all manner of fried food, soul food, crawfish, et al (speaking of, might I recommend Lusco's restaurant in Greenwood, MS).

Look for the next installment of Car Jamming soon-ish. Right now though, we're going to literally tackle the phrase as it pertains to road music, and

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Amnion :: aTONn

Good things tend to beget good things. Here's a recent example of this: A few months ago I was turned on the the Amnion album by one of my favorite L.A. artists of the past year, Frankel. Thanks to his recommendation Amnion's LP from last year, AmenNAmO 9rghmxs, has quickly worked its way into heavy rotation in my car (driving cross-country), and is steadily . . .

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The Raconteurs :: Consolers of The Lonely

There's something to be said for guerrilla marketing. The Raconteurs, the super-group that's only a super-group if you're a hard-nosed indie-rock person to begin with, announced the release of their sophomore album only one week before its street date. I liked that. It's gutsy and, in an age when record companies worry about pirates and stuff, it's one way to get ahead of the game - just don't give anyone time to leak the album. The stunt calls attention to the album . . .

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Kathleen Edwards :: The AD Interview

Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards' debut, 2003's Failer, made our top ten list of that year. Five years and three albums later, Edwards, on tour in support of her new album Asking For Flowers, sat down with AD to discuss the new album, and what she's been up to since '05s Back To Me.

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Aquarium Drunkard: The break between your last record and this new record was actually a little bit longer than the time period between your first two records. What were you doing in between 2005 with Back to Me and 2008 and the release of Asking for Flowers?

Kathleen Edwards: Well, I toured a lot for Back to Me in 2005 and 2006, and then in the spring of 2006 I was pretty burned out and, you know, it's just one of those things. Since almost 2001, 2002 I've been in this crazy whirlwind of activity and I've moved five times and I've toured non-stop and I'd lost a little bit of my sense of being in one place for a period of time. I think you really become sort of disconnected from people and from living a normal life, whatever that means. I really just needed to stay in one place for awhile.

AD: Did that have any affect on the themes and the tone of the new album?

KE: Yeah, I think it did. I sort of set out on this record going I want to write songs that aren't just about me and love lost and love gained and some of the stuff that in my early 20s was the stuff I was writing. I wanted to bite off a bigger chunk this time and be a little more invested in some of the content on my songs and I wanted them to be songs about people I knew and lives that I know and people that are real to me and try to honestly and with integrity write these songs for people.

AD: Can you give us a bit of insight into the title track and where that and the album title came from?

KE: Yeah. "Asking for Flowers" was a song I wrote for one of my really close friends. She actually, during this time off I had, was going through a really tough time and has struggled for years with physical and emotional problems. I went to see her at probably one of her hardest times and she told me that her life had been like asking for flowers with some of the judgments and feelings of inadequacy that she had lived with all these years. That the idea of giving somebody compassion and giving them their time without judgment, living a life of asking for flowers. I asked her what that meant and she said being with somebody who just wants to bring them to you and you shouldn't have to ask for them. Someone should want to just bring them to you.

AD: You talked about wanting to write more songs about people that you knew or lives that you felt you were interested in - an external thing. And I think that comes across, especially in two songs that pair together well - "Alicia Ross" and "Oh Canada." Living in the States, a lot of people may not know who she was, and correct me if I'm wrong, but Alicia Ross is to Canada what Natalie Holloway was to the States, in that it was this girl who went missing and no one was sure what happened to her. But her case was eventually solved, correct?

KE: Yeah, her case was solved. Alicia Ross was a young woman in Toronto who lived at home still and was in her early 20s and she sort of never walked in the door one night after her boyfriend had dropped her off. Her mother began a very public campaign and search for her child. It's one of those things; you see it in the press and sometimes you're not moved. I just mean that honestly. Sometimes you don't connect with the story or the person. You can turn off the station and it's not your problem or it's not your friend. And in this case, and maybe it's an age thing, I suddenly realized 'what would it take my mother to get out of bed every morning knowing that I might be dead somewhere? And how do you reconcile that and how do you move on and not sort of live under a rock the rest of your life?' I just kind of felt like that could have been my mother and I saw that and felt it and I think maybe that is an age thing. I realized there are so many things in my life that have gone unsaid between my mother and I and I think that's where that song came from; acknowledging that moment where that person died and thinking they probably wished their mother was with them. It's pretty heavy and dark, but it also happens.

CONTINUE READING AFTER THE JUMP...

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