Heard Too Late 2023 :: Lee Gallagher And The Hallelujah :: The Falcon Ate The Flower

Welcome to Heard Too Late, a short series of posts where I highlight artists and albums I didn’t spend enough time with to put on my 2023 year-end list. However, with hindsight being what it is and all, it is safe to say that if I had heard these albums sooner, they would most definitely have made the cut.

First up is “The Falcon Ate The Flower” by Lee Gallagher And The Hallelujah. As you might ascertain from the name, Gallagher’s CA (by way of Ohio) cosmic country space rock taps in to the spiritual side of life without being preachy. Maybe we’ll call it existential rock? Anyways, having recorded with Victoria Williams and others after moving to CA, Gallagher has continued to expand his sound and scope. Reviewers and biographers are quick to point to Gram Parsons, Workingman’s Dead, Humble Pie, and, surprisingly enough Rod Stewart (that last one came up a few times!) and, of course; all of these apply, but only as touch-points.

Album opener “Planes” soars in perhaps the most psychedelic country jam the album reaches, but it sets a great opening bar. Though “The Falcon Ate The Flower” doesn’t quite reach those same heights throughout the rest of the album’s songs, we take a journey through ballads, and no review would be complete without mentioning the stellar performances by violin legend Scarlet Rivera (probably best known to this crowd by her appearances in the Rolling Thunder Revue. She here appears on the tracks “Something Better,” & “Can Anyone Hear Me?”, both of which are well worth your time.

Head out on a road trip. Blare this and then let’s talk.

Watch the official video for “Baby I’m There:”


Listen to “Something Better:”


Listen to Half Lit (The Future’s Ours):


  • Visit Lee Gallagher’s official site

  • Support Lee Gallagher at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Lee Gallagher’s music at Amazon


2023 :: Favorite Music

Welcome to the 2023 Holiday at the Sea year-end music list. There was a lot of great music in 2023, but I’ve narrowed it down to my favorite top 50, presented here in alphabetical order. I hope you see some of your favorites and find something new. I’d love to hear your thoughts. What has been your favorite music of 2023?

the 2023 Holiday at the Sea year-end music list:


  • Afro Futuristic Dreams by Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • A Trip To Bolgatanga by African Head Charge // BC // FB // Insta //Amzn //

  • Tony Allen JID018 by Tony Allen, Adrian Younge, & Ali Shaheed Muhammad (Jazz Is Dead) // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • New Blue Sun by André 3000 // site // Amzn //

  • My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni & The Johnsons // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • Love In Exile by Arooj Aftab, Vijay Iyer, Shahzad Ismaily // site // Amzn //

  • Black Duck by Black Duck // BC // Amzn //

  • Sun Arcs by Blue Lake // BC // Amzn //

  • Sahel by Bombino // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Keeping Secrets Will Destroy You by Bonnie “Prince” Billy // BC // Amzn //


  • Dimanche à Bamako by Bounaly // BC // Amzn //

  • the Record by boygenius // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((world war)) by jaimie branch // site // BC // Amzn //

  • Nocturnal Country by Sammy Brue // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Villagers by Califone // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • Chitinous Mandible by Chitinous Mandible // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Hostile Environment by Creation Rebel // BC // Amzn //

  • Shadow Kingdom by Bob Dylan // site // FB // Amzn //

  • & the Charm by Avalon Emerson // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Some Kinda Love Performing The Music Of the Velvet Underground by the Feelies // site // BC // Amzn //


  • A River Running To Your Heart by Fruit Bats // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Let the Moon Be a Planet by Steve Gunn & David Moore // BC // Amzn //

  • Philanthropy by Hauschka // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Days In The Desert by High Pulp // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Oh Me Oh My by Lonnie Holley // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • James and the Giants by James and the Giants // BC // Amzn //

  • Did You Know That There's A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd by Lana Del Rey // site // FB // Amzn //

  • New Future City Radio by Damon Locks & Rob Mazurek // BC // Amzn //

  • No Fixed Point In Space by Modern Nature // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • the Age of Pleasure by Janelle Monae // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • Since Time Is Gravity by Natural Information Society // site // BC // Amzn //

  • Travel by the Necks // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Jump On It by Bill Orcutt // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Switched-On by Pachyman // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • After the Magic by 파란노을 (Parannoul) // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • The Times by Phoenix Afrobeat Orchestra // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Drag On Girard by Purling Hiss // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • the Window by Ratboys // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Garden Party by Rose City Band // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Live at Third Man Records by Rich Ruth // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • Robed In Rareness by Shabazz Palaces // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Everything Is Alive by Slowdive // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Javelin by Sufjan Stevens // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Music Is Victory Over Time by Sunwatchers // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Secret Stratosphere by William Tyler And The Impossible Truth // BC // FB // Amzn //



King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard :: Live at Lowlands 2023

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard :: Live at Lowlands 2023.



Setlist:

  1. Gila Monster

  2. Converge

  3. Witchcraft

  4. Self-Immolate

  5. This Thing

  6. The Garden Goblin

  7. Hypertension

  8. Magma


  • Visit King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard’s website

  • Follow King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard on Twitter

  • Visit King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard at Facebook

  • Support King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard at Bandcamp

  • Purchase King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard’s music at Amazon


20 Songs That Make Me Happy

Many of you have probably seen the “Name 20 songs that make you happy” thing going around the social medias. Well, I took the time to make a quick playlist of 20 songs that make me happy. Listen/stream/download below.

Hope you enjoy.





  1. Manchester by Kishi Bashi

  2. I Know There’s Gonna Be (Good Time) by Jaimie xx

  3. Funky Kingston by Toots and the Maytals

  4. Love, Love, Love 2 (Reprise) by Akron/Family

  5. Mustt Mustt (Extended) by Kiran Ahluwalia

  6. Konkon by Oki Dub Ainu Band

  7. Scenario by A Tribe Called Quest

  8. Baba O’Riley by the Who

  9. Here Comes Sunshine by Grateful Dead

  10. Sweet Jane by the Velvet Underground

  11. Sun Hands by Local Natives

  12. Reality Used to be a Friend by P.M. Dawn

  13. Swerve . . . The reeping . . . by Shabazz Palaces

  14. Bam Bam by Sister Nancy

  15. Lalo Schifrin by Blue Scholars

  16. I Heard It Through the Grapevine by Creedence Clearwater Revival

  17. Baby Baby by the Vibrators

  18. Love of My Life Worldwide by Erykah Badu

  19. Boogie on Reggae Woman by Stevie Wonder

  20. Ooh La La by Faces


  • Download a PDF of some pretty bland CD artwork


Chitinous Mandible

When asked to describe his music in 3 words by Secret Eclectic, Tom Herman Jr. (aka Chitinous Mandible) responded with:

Enveloping surrealistic familiarity

That seems to be as good a description as any.

Prior to the Chitinous Mandible moniker, New Jersey’s Herman recorded as Old Smile, who Aquarium Drunkard described as “a wave of lo-fi, bedroom psych,” and of whom The Quietus said: “After countless recent waves of revivalist bands embracing jangly psych and sixties music - Temples, Tame Impala, Ty Segall, etc. - Old Smile is the best I've come across.” That’s high praise indeed! And as The Quietus points out: “And this dude managed to do it all himself at home!” Herman continues to ride tht independent spirit, saying of this new, self-titled project as Chitinous Mandible: “I wrote/performed/recorded/mixed everything on it aside from a couple tracks where my dad plays drums.”

Rolling in like a lo-fi swamp fog and wrapping you up in its shimmery swirls, this is music to get lost in or focus down on the details. Because there are layers if you’re willing to dig. And dig, I do. cosmic psychedelic blues for the laid-back set. Hints of Krautrock throb over Devo keyboards. More quirky non sequiturs for great music here.

I asked Hermon how his songwriting has progressed over the last few albums. He said:

“In Arches the sound was kind of slow and melancholy. The sound of Old Smile was more all over the place, there were a lot of detours. Chitinous Mandible is a bit all over the place too but it’s more concise.”

Chitinous Mandible is a bit all over the place, but more concise. That’s as good a description as any. Swampy music for sweaty afternoons. The best thing you can do is go listen for yourself. I highly recommend.

For those interested, Bandcamp reveals that "Pops plays drums on the songs "Time Design" and "Summertime Drive."


Watch “Summertime Drive:”


Watch “Connection In A Parking Lot”


  • RIYL: Rose City Band, Los Halos


  • Support Chitinous Mandible at Bandcamp

  • Follow Chitinous Mandible at Youtube

  • Follow Chitinous Mandible at Soundcloud

  • Follow Chitinous Mandible at Instagram

Oki Dub Ainu Band Live For KeenStream

From the Youtube page:

“Festival TV on KEENSTREAM, a YouTube program that started in April 2020, hoping that the day will come when we can enjoy the music and outdoor activities that we love. We welcome over 100 artists in total and liven up the program with MC George Williams.”



  • Visit the official Oki Ainu Dub Band website

  • Follow Oki Dub Ainu Band at Facebook

  • Purchase Oki Dub Ainu Band’s music at Amazon

  • Hear "マナウレラ - Matnaw Rera" by Oki Dub Ainu Band on Episode 06 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow

  • See other Holiday at the Sea Oki Ainu Dub Band posts


Harry Belafonte Live in Germany (1988)

Harry Belafonte live in Ravensburg, Germany, Nov 1988.







Setlist:

  1. Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)

  2. Kwela (Listen to the Man)

  3. Skin to Skin (with Sharon Brooks)

  4. Matilda, Martin Luther King

  5. Island in the Sun

  6. Try to Remember (with Ty Stephens)

  7. Jamaica Farewell

  8. Paradise in Gazankulu


  • Purchase Harry Belafonte’s music at Amazon


Meet Some Of My Friends (the Velvet Underground Edition) :: A Holiday At The Sea Playlist

Welcome to the first installment of what I hope will be an ongoing playlist series throughout 2023 where I introduce you to some of my favorite music. I often make playlists for my car and I thought I might as well share them here.

We kick off the series with the Velvet Underground. I tried to keep it to cuts from the studio albums, but I really like “I’m Beginning To See the Light” from 1969: The Velvet Underground Live. Whether you know them or not, I hope you enjoy this playlist.

Setlist:

  1. Who Loves The Sun

  2. Some Kinda Love

  3. Sweet Jane

  4. Sister Ray

  5. I'm Waiting For The Man

  6. Rock & Roll

  7. Beginning To See The Light

  8. Here She Comes Now

  9. I'm Set Free

  10. White Light/White Heat

  11. Run Run Run

  12. Oh! Sweet Nuthin'

  13. What Goes On

  14. There She Goes Again

  15. New Age


  • Download the cover art as a PDF

  • Visit the Velvet Underground’s website

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea playlists

  • Purchase Velvet Underground music at Amazon


Dogwood Tales :: 13 Summers 13 Falls

The days get shorter and the nights get longer. And colder. As the darkness settles in we wrap ourselves in Harmonies, heartbreak, and hope. The ashes of loss still contain the embers of hope.

Wilco, Son Volt, and Whiskeytown will be obvious touch-points for many, but Dogwood Tales have crafted their own voice (with killer harmonies).

Album opener circles the refrain:

“It’s hard to be in the right place
for the right thing all the time.
It’s hard to be anywhere when I got you on my mind.”

There’s a sense of being caught in a winter storm here sometimes. Our protagonists sometimes don’t quite sure where’ they’re going or even who they are. But there is a pervasive sense of hope throughout the EP. Pedal steel laces through the often forlorn lyrics ushering us in to moments of hope. Even though the nights are long, morning’s on its way. These songs explore love, loss, and heartbreak with clear-eyed honesty. Sometimes it’s hard and we’re not sure where we’re going or if we’ll make it, but the days will again wash in and the light will eventually return. Sometimes the best we can do is hold out for the hope of a better day to see us through the long winter nights.

“Hold You Again” doesn’t back down from the truth of lost chances and lonely new realities. “I know I may never feel it again,” they sing, but we get the sense that it was still worth it. The bright melody and washes of feedback are a sonic blanket against the cold reality. The push and pull; the give and take of life and love try to find their balance in these 5 songs. “It feels like a matter of time before the dark gets hold of me.”

“25” opens with the lines “I just want to wake up and feel like I’m alive because I’ve got some cousins that didn’t see 25.” There is a stark wrestling with reality. These lyrics don’t shy away from death and loss but they don’t swirl the pity party drain either. There’s a search throughout these songs; here’s the reality; we love, we lose, we die, and we try to make sense of it all. What’s it all about? What’s it’s all for? Is the power of love enough to see us through these long dark nights? Dogwood Tales think so and invite you into their sunbaked cosmic Americana world to see what you think. Whatever your conclusion, this is music for those long dark winter nights when we need to be reminded that the light will eventually return. “we’ve still got miles of road to go” they sing on the title track and there is a sense of surety that we’ll get there eventually.

Highly recommended

The Deets:

WH065
Dogwood Tales - 13 Summers 13 Falls

01. Hard To Be Anywhere
02. Hold You Again
03. 25
04. Since Yesterday
05. 13 Summers

credits

releases November 18, 2023 on WarHen Records

Kyle Grim - Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
Ben Ryan - Electric Guitar, Vocals
Stephen Kuester - Pedal Steel
Danny Gibney - Bass, Organ, Wurlitzer & Piano
Jake Golibart - Drums & Percussion

Produced by Erik Kase Romero
Recorded by Erik Kase Romero and Danny Gibney
All tracks Mixed by Danny Gibney except Hold You Again by Adrian Olsen
Mastered by Garrett Haines
Photograph by Kyle Grim


Check out a recent live session from earlier this year:


  • Visit Dogwood Tales’ website

  • Follow Dogwood Tales at Facebook

  • Support Dogwood Tales at Bandcamp

  • Support Dogwood Tales and WarHen Records at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Dogwood Tales’ music at Amazon


Wau Wau Collectif Return For Marriage

In 2018, my wife asked what I wanted for Father’s Day. Inspired by Joe Strummer’s London Calling radio series and Anthony Bourdain’s traveling curiosity, I said that I wanted to do a weekly 30-minute music podcast dedicated to fighting Xenophobia by exploring music from all around the world. So I created the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow. Each week, I posted a 30-minute show with songs from around the world, along with an interactive map. I discovered so much music from around the world that my ears have forever grown beyond the boundaries of my neighborhood.

Though I no longer regularly curate the podcast, I often find myself wanting to post special episodes when I come across music I wish everyone could hear. I had such an experience in 2021 upon hearing Wau Wau Collectif’s debut Yaral Sa Doom. In fact, that album was one of the main reasons I brought the project out of hiatus for a special 53rd episode. Yaral Sa Doom blurred borders and genres and held my attention for a very long time. In fact, I return to it quite a bit still (and just a side-note, you can always trust Sahel Sounds. If you see it on their label, buy it.)

Now the Collectif collective is back with their second album, “Marriage.” Wau Wau Collectif is a long distance collaboration from musicians in Senegal and Sweden’s Karl Jonas Winqvist. The must-read Pan-African-Music (PAM) interview describes the project:

“The outcome of an encounter between the Swedish musician-producer Karl Jonas Winqvist and musicians from the Toubab Dialaw village in Senegal, this collective recording, which evolved through jam sessions and WhatsApp exchanges, represents a strange vessel that traverses the Mediterranean soundscape.”

Both albums incorporate children vocalists and the effect is one that elicits child-like innocence and exploration; a world where we get to know others through music. Where Xenophobia is unthinkable because curiosity, respect and admiration win the day. Children are taught borders. Wau Wau Collectif wants to help us erase them. The music is not forceful; it draws you in. It is not in a hurry but it is persistent and it seems to constantly unite disparate elements. Deep, weary voices with a children’s refrain; floating flutes over insistent basslines; traditional and electronic instruments. This is music that brings it all together, because it all belongs together.

The group’s music is often light and airy. Pitchfork notes of the band’s 2021 debut: “It takes less than a minute for Yaral Sa Doom to begin levitating.” But this second album finds the collectif still levitating but grounded by thick bass (Baye Kate). The album draws from hip hop and electronics and once again, children.

Jesse Locke notes that some of the rhythms that laid the foundation for Marriage were actually recorded “during Winqvist's 2018 Senegal trip that ignited the project.” Winqvist told PAM: “We recorded so much material and me and Aruna sent overdubs, ideas and new songs to each other up till last week, so the songs on Yaral Sa Doom ended up on that album because they were ready first. But there were just as many other songs waiting and almost finished”

Marriage materializes with the floating instrumental “La Paix Du Senegal (Instrumental)” which ushers in the album with a sense of warmth and welcome, of mesmerizing rhythms and shuffles. The instrumentation builds and lets you know that this album may contain folk songs, it’s not a subdued “folk” album. As if there was any question, the deep bass and passionate rhymes of “Baye Kate” let us know that this is listening as exploration. This is music as joy, as protest, as life. The mix of electronic and traditional instrumentation continues throughout the album with the fierce flute of Mariage Forcé weaving in and around the vocals. The space jazz odyssey of Yay Balma skronky uses sax floating over grounded repetition while swirling psychedelic flutes hold on to our attention. The murky dub vibe of Yonou Natangue never gets so foggy that the light fails to shine through. Once again, floating flue melodies raise the ear to something higher . . . until the ethers coalesce . . . the space jazz odyssey of Yay Balma places skronky sax over grounded repetition and more floating flutes. There’s the driving Afrobeat rhythm of Nécessaire balanced by the etheral Pitchou Goudibi. This is music of movement, of emotion, and of life. There are ups and downs, reflective moments and moments to dance. For everything there is a time.

Swimming in deep grooves and folk flourishes, there is an urgency to this music. This is music connecting the spheres . . . bridging the here and now with the hope of what if . . . the urgency of why not now? And throughout both albums, the vocals cross the ages. Children are always near, whether in the playful nature of the music itself or their reappearing vocals; sometimes as accents, sometimes as the focus. This is music of community. Winqvist says: “Since our first album, ”Yaral sa doom” (means ”educate the young” in wolof) was a dedication and prayer to all the young ones growing up in this world now I felt the need to also bring them into our recordings.”

Marriage picks up where Yaral Sa Doom left off. And, though it is obvious that the genesis material often overlaps, the two albums stand as distinct explorations, each exploring similar territory but from different angles and with different questions and, quite often, finding different things. Wau Wau Collectif reminds us of the joy of music, and hopefully the joy of life that is worth fighting for. Here’s a good starting point for your soundtrack.


Listen to the lead single: “N​é​cessaire” courtesy of Sahel Sounds:



NOTE FROM THE PRESS RELEASE:

“Sadly, flute player Ousmane Bah passed away after the completion of the album. Wau Wau Collectif wishes to dedicate Mariage to his memory.”


  • Support Wau Wau Collectif at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Marriage at Bandcamp

  • Follow Wau Wau Collectif at Facebook

  • Visit the Sahel Sounds website

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp

  • Listen to Episdode 53 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow featuring “Yaral Sa Doom” by Wau Wau Collectif

  • Read Aquarium Drunkard’s 2021 review of Yaral Sa Doom


Brandee Younger & Dezron Douglas Live from Columbia

Brandee Younger, harp, and Dezron Douglas, bass, join together for an incredible evening of inspired jazz works.




Tracklisting

  1. * Rama Rama - Alice Coltrane *

  2. Foligno - Dezron Douglas *

  3. Unrest I & II - Brandee Younger *

  4. Equinox - John Coltrane *

  5. Mercy Mercy Me - Marvin Gaye Miller


Theatre’s celebrated (and free) Pop-Up Concerts continue with Live from Columbia, a new digital initiative offering audiences a virtual front-row seat to extraordinary performances filmed live in the Lantern—a stunning venue part of Columbia University's Manhattanville campus.

Co-presented with Columbia University School of the Arts Live from Columbia brings Columbia University to audiences around the world, showcasing the breadth of Miller's programming—from Bach to jazz to living composers—while highlighting the iconic beauty of the campus of Columbia University. Concerts are filmed live, and will premiere throughout the season, with on-demand streaming available immediately after. Learn more at: https://www.millertheatre.com/


Kikagaku Moyo :: Live at KEXP (2019)

In honor of Kikagaku Moyo’s break-up tour, here is a live 2019 for KEXP “live at The Triple Door as part of KEXP's VIP Club Concert series


Tracklist:

  1. Old Snow White Sun

  2. Cardigan Song

  3. Green Sugar

  4. Nazo Nazo

  5. Kodama Gatherings


The Deets:

Host: Morgan Audio Engineers: Eric Lemke & Julian Martlew Cameras: Jim Beckmann, Alaia D'Alessandro, Scott Holpianen & Luke Knecht Editor: Jim Beckmann



jaimie "breezy" branch forever :: Roulette, Brooklyn :: XXIII Vision Festival :: 05.28.18

As the recent Aquarium Drunkard e-mail says: jaimie "breezy" branch forever!

We are all deeply saddened by branch’s passing. Let’s visit some live breezy.

So far we’ve visited a solo set, a trio set and a two-part live show. Let’s round out the week with this quartet setup, live from 2018. This one includes a bit more information, including the players, which include branch on Trumpet, Anton Hatwich on Bass ,Lester St. Louis on Cello, Chad Taylor on Drums.

This was at: Roulette Intermedium, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn May 28th 2018


  • Visit branch’s website

  • Read Aquarium Drunkar'd’s 2019 interview with branch

  • Support branch at Bandcamp

  • Purchase branch’s music at Amazon


jaimie "breezy" branch forever :: First St. Green : Arts For Art :: Paris :: 09/29/19

As the recent Aquarium Drunkard e-mail says: jaimie "breezy" branch forever!

We are all deeply saddened by branch’s passing. Let’s visit some live breezy.

So far, we/ve visited a solo set and examined two of her songs with lyrics and another one Yesterday we covered a band set, and today is branch in a trio format. As with the other sets, not a lot of information or tracklisting here, but ti’s great nonetheless. This set features Branch on trumpet, Luke Stewart on bass, Mike Pride on drums.

OH, and apparently this was “on Roy Campbell & Steve Dalachinsky's birthday.”


  • Visit branch’s website

  • Read Aquarium Drunkar'd’s 2019 interview with branch

  • Support branch at Bandcamp

  • Purchase branch’s music at Amazon


jaimie "breezy" branch forever :: New Morning :: Paris :: 07/12/21

As the recent Aquarium Drunkard e-mail says: jaimie "breezy" branch forever!

We are all deeply saddened by branch’s passing. Let’s visit some live breezy.

Yesterday, we visited a solo set and examined one of her songs with lyrics and another one today. Here is branch with branch on trumpet, Lester St. Louis on cello, Jason Ajemian on bass, and Chad Taylor on drums.

As with the other one, not much information to go by here other than “Jaimie Branch - First Set (New Morning - Paris - July 12th 2021).” No setlist or anything, but you can figure it out if you really want to. I’m just grooving.

Set One:

Set Two:


  • Visit branch’s website

  • Read Aquarium Drunkar'd’s 2019 interview with branch

  • Support branch at Bandcamp

  • Purchase branch’s music at Amazon


jaimie "breezy" branch forever :: Solo Set (2022)

As the recent Aquarium Drunkard e-mail says: jaimie "breezy" branch forever!

We are all deeply saddened by branch’s passing. Let’s visit some live breezy.

First up is a solo set from “Record Shop - July 2 2022.”

Not much else information about this one, but it’s well worth your time.


  • Visit branch’s website

  • Read Aquarium Drunkar'd’s 2019 interview with branch

  • Support branch at Bandcamp

  • Purchase branch’s music at Amazon


Derek Piotr's Top 5 Hits From Fieldwork Archive :: So Far

Derek Piotr made one of my favorite albums of 2021. If you missed it, I profiled it here. For that album, Piotr mined some pieces from historical folklore while also including original pieces and instrumentation. This sparked a passion in Piotr to focus on archiving vocal recordings. He began archiving vocal recordings in 2020. Like many archivists, Piotr captures poetry, songs, interviews and the like. But what sets this collection apart, Piotr notes, is the “focus of this collection is on the "non-singer"; in other words, someone with no background in musical performance but who can still relate a song or folkloric memory.”

I recently touched base with Piotr about the project and he was kind enough to highlight five recordings which have really stood out to him so far.

01) :: #208 - Helen Barnes-Rielly performing "Le Carillon de Vendôme"

I had gone to Todd, NC, for the 2-year anniversary of the burning of the Todd General Store, and there was a little local T.V. spot going on with the owner, who is feistily trying to rebuild the site right now. Pretty much the only other thing in Todd is this little bakery, run by Helen. I asked her what I ask everyone, if her grandparents or parents sang anything, and she remembered this little bit of a song, which she called "Chapels of France". It stayed in my head for months, so I called her up one day and asked for it again, on tape this time. Turns out it's a children's song from the 1400's that her mother learned in Cincinnati, OH, from some nuns, who have probably been singing it unbroken these 500+ years.

  • Performed by Helen Barnes-Rielly.

  • Recorded July 27, 2022 in Todd, North Carolina.

  • Telephone recording. Fragment. Learned from her mother, Carolyn Mader, of Cincinnati, Ohio.


2: #103 - Jim Prentice performing "The German Clock Winder"

A rare example of Connecticut folk singing! I had gone out to West Cornwall to visit Jane Prentice, an Old-Time fiddle player, and she recalled one little tiny song for me that her grandmother sang, but mostly played her fiddle for me. Jim came in towards the end of our visit, and, though slightly hoarse from work, sang me a couple of songs right there and then, with no notice, including this one. It seems to have come to America from the British settlers; I have found several traditional versions from the UK.

  • Performed by Jim Prentice.

  • Recorded March 8, 2022 in West Cornwall, Connecticut.


3: #79 - Ian Patterson performing "The Virgin Mary Had a Baby Boy"

As I walked home one evening from where I was staying in York last summer, I noticed an elderly gentleman supervising construction on his roof. I intuited he might have folklore knowledge and this hunch paid off in spades—Ian's mother was a colleague of Edric Connor's who had traveled to the West Indies when Ian was small to do some field collecting. They collected this song, among many others, and published these songs in a small book. "The Virgin Mary..." in particular found its way into the Cambridge Hymnal, and the rest is history. It was very much a surreal experience to meet the son of the woman who had bridged this carol into broad accessiblity, purely by chance.

  • Performed by Ian Patterson.

  • Recorded September 9, 2021 in York, North Yorkshire, UK.

  • Fragment. Mr. Patterson's mother was a colleague of Edric Connor.


4: #207 - Sandra Noble performing "I've Worked Eight Hours This Day"

I had left a small advertisement in The Dalesman before I left Yorkshire last autumn, and roughly six months later, I got an email from Sandra, who insisted on singing this song (twice!) down WhatsApp for me. "He was a sea-captain, born 1876", she said of her grandfather. "He probably knew more risqué songs than that, but that's the one I remember. I came to live with my granny and grandad when I was 3 or 4." Bonus points for their hometown's name: Robin Hood's Bay! Spry listeners may also note some of Sandra's variation: Johnny Hooligan becomes Patsy Dooligan, and Donegal whiskers become "galigan".







  • Performed by Sandra Noble.

  • Recorded July 13, 2022 in Robin Hood's Bay, North Yorkshire, UK.

  • Telephone recording. One verse. Learned from her grandfather, Robert Watson (b. 1876).


5: #210 - Judy Arrowood performing "Don't Sell Daddy Anymore Whiskey"

Judy is related to the Bares and Turbyfills several times over; she was the last informant I visited In North Carolina this year and lived literally at the intersection of Elk Park Highway and Turbyfill Road. I spent several hours with Judy, who initially could recall Lena Turbyfill vividly, but nothing specifically musical; it was only when we got on the subject of Lena's sister-in-law Ethel Bare Turbyfill that Judy remembered Ethel's children, Shirley and Evelyn singing this song.

  • Performed by Judy Arrowwood.

  • Recorded August 4, 2022 in Smoky Straight, Newland, North Carolina.

  • Fragment. Learned from Shirley and Evelyn Bare.


  • Visit Derek Piotr’s official website

  • Visit the Fieldwork Archive page

  • Watch the EPK for the new album

  • Follow Derek Piotr on Twitter

  • Follow Derek Piotr at Facebook

  • Purchase Derek Piotr’s music at Amazon

  • Purchase Derek Piotr’s music at Bandcamp


Dehd :: Live at KEXP (2022)

“Dehd performing live in the KEXP studio. Recorded May 6, 2022.”


Setlist:

  1. Control

  2. Bad Love

  3. Stars

  4. Window


Players:

  • Jason Balla - Guitar / Vocals

  • Emily Kempf - Bass / Vocals

  • Eric McGrady - Drums



Staraya Derevnya :: Boulder Blues

Staraya Derevnya is a psychedelic/kraut-folk collective based in London and Tel Aviv. Active since 1994, the group’s newest album Boulder Blues will be out August 5th on Ramble Records. Recorded between 2020 - 2022 in Israel and the UK, the album percolates and bubbles with creativity. A collective of varying size and members, this iteration consists of 11 people, and album credits include “cries and whispers,” silent cello (which apparently is a very real thing, though somehow it would still make sense even if it wasn’t), “objects,” and a marching band kazoo.

How does one make sense of such music? Maybe that’s not the point, but if we need landmarks to help find our way; then maybe the meditative groovy bass foundations of Oren Ambarchi / Johan Berthling / Andreas Werliin and Natural Information Society or some of the murkier moments from Animal Collective or Paavoharju come to mind, but only as touchpoints. They are the friendly neighbors you meet on the path to Staraya Derev. Like the cover artwork, one is left with more questions than answers, and sometimes that’s the point.

My son calls it “spooky alien music but in a good way.” Krautrock grooves underpin an ever evolving sound collage. Instruments, voices, and noises sometimes float by barely notices and sometimes shock you back into the groove. Concrete Islands uses the phrase “murmurations from unknown tongues” to describe the bands music, and that seems about as apt as any description we’re likely to conjure.

The title track emerges from primordial squigglings over an ever-reliably-chugging bassline and builds upon a repeated phrase dervishly swirling and repeating and building and repeating and building and swirling. The piece doesn’t so much resolve as exhaust itself in experimental ecstasy. ‘Tangled Hands’s fleeting fog swirls through the atmosphere punctuated by skronks and ambient waves.

The album’s centerpiece, the nearly 21-minute ‘Bubbling Pelt’ was recorded live at TUSK Festival 2020. The piece bubbles and swirls over minimal but hypnotic bass rumblings. Percussion skitters back and forth until becoming one with the ether. As the bass returns, wind instruments and electronic squiggles reveal themselves from the fog, forming a nice relaxed groove which gives home to all sorts of vocalizations.

Though heavy on krautrock repetition, this is not background music. Though it requires your attention, it grooves in unexpected ways.

Boulder Blues is out August 05th on Ramble Records and is highly recommended.


Watch ‘Bubbling Pelt’ performed live at TUSK Festival 2020 here:



Sons of Kemet :: Live From The Basement

Many thanks to Harvey G. Cohen for pointing out this fantastic live set on Twitter. Harvey says:

“Earlier this year, Sons of Kemet, quite possibly the best band in jazz today, announced they are disbanding by the end of the year. Terrible news. But here is a newly filmed concert of theirs, live in London. Awesome. And not just because they have a tuba:”


Setlist:

  1. Pick Up Your Burning Cross

  2. Think Of Home

  3. In Remembrance Of Those Fallen

  4. Throughout The Madness, Stay Strong


  • Read about the session, including an interview with Lucy Bourton

  • Visit the official Shabaka Hutchings website

  • Follow Sons of Kemet at Facebook

  • Support Sons of Kemet at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Sons of Kemet’s music at Amazon

  • Browse all Shabaka Hutchings posts here at Holiday at the Sea