Transmissions

Aquarium Drunkard
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Sep 18, 2023 • 1h 8min

Sunburned Hand of the Man Episode 6: Heavy Rescue

We open with our focus on the role that music has played in the band members’ individual lives and how a shared love of music brought them all together. This morphs into a consideration of the band’s many artistic influences, with a close look at the impact of the Wu-Tang Clan on Sunburned. We hear about the complicated and often difficult backgrounds of many of the Sunburned musicians and how jamming with the band can often serve as a type of group therapy.This is the Quietus interview where Rob Thomas talks about the influence of the Wu-Tang Clan on Sunburned. Here’s a mid-period live set from Sunburned at the Abbey Lounge in (I think) Somerville, MA. The set is interspersed with clips from a conversation with Rob Thomas reflecting on the band. Sarah mentioned the People of God’s Love, we did some digging and found this WaybackMachine archived page for a group with that name founded (like Sarah said) in Ohio. Check out Sunburned Hand of the Man’s Instagram profile for more pictures related to this episode!Sunburned’s Bandcamp Sunburned’s WebsiteSongs heard in this episode:No Magic Man - No Magic ManTake 5 - Mylar Tantrum Part IITake 6 - Mylar Tantrum Part IIYer Own Eyes and the Number None - No Magic ManSerpent’s Wish - No Magic ManHeavy Rescue - When the Shit Hits the JazzOr Check out this Spotify playlist with all the songs heard in this and previous week’s episodes!You can email or go here for Kelly.Allison Hussey is here and on Twitter.Go here for more Aquarium Drunkard or Talkhouse Podcast Network.
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Sep 13, 2023 • 56min

Transmissions :: Floating Points

This week on the show, we’re joined by Sam Shepherd, AKA Floating Points. His discography is full of beautiful and strange electronic music—bubbling Buchalas, skittering beats, washes of synthesized sound, and even moody, spacious post-rock. But underneath it all, his love of jazz is clear. In 2021, he teamed with an actual jazz legend: the late Pharoah Sanders, as well as the London Symphony Orchestra for Promises, a single 46-minute composition broken into nine movements. Though the artists were separated by decades in age, their approach is simpatico. Just as Shepherd has moved between genres and styles, so did Pharoah. His early work with John and Alice Coltrane established him as a dynamic, sometimes frighteningly intense sideman, and his first run of records, including 1969’s Karma, featuring “The Creator Has a Master Plan,” helped set the stage for what we now call “spiritual jazz.” But Sanders, who passed away in 2022 at the age of 81, cared very little about what genre you filed his records under. “I just play whatever I feel like playing,” he told The New Yorker. Sanders stayed restless and creative—listen to his playing on Sonny Sharrock’s masterful Ask the Ages or his works with Bill Laswell, and you’ll hear what we mean. In 1977, he waded into deeply personal waters with the self-titled Pharoah, which will be reissued by Luaka Bop on September 15th. Exploring new age adjacent sounds, funk, and passionate ballads, it’s a radical departure from his early work, but perfectly in keeping with Sanders’ unpredictable ethos. Likewise, Promises is hardly the “back to basics” late career album you might expect an 80-year-old artist to make. It’s its own thing, a meditative sojourn that relies on silence as much as sound. And next week, on September 20th, Floating Points will be joined by past Transmissions guest Shabaka Hutchings, as well as Caribou, Four Tet, the Sun Ra Arkestra, and others for the first-ever staging of Promises live at the Hollywood Bowl. Ahead of that show, Shepherd joined us from his studio to discuss his his years collecting records, making Promises—and we even got him to reveal Pharoah’s favorite place to eat in LA. Transmissions is a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Visit the Talkhouse for more interviews, fascinating reads, and podcasts, like Drifter’s Sympathy, with Emil Amos of Grails, Om, Holy Sons, who will be our guest next week on Transmissions. And of course No Way Out: An Oral History of Sunburned Hand of the Man, curated and produced by J Kelly Davis and presented by Aquarium Drunkard and Talkhouse. Back soon. Next week on the show, Jarvis Taveniere of Woods.
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Sep 11, 2023 • 1h 9min

Sunburned Hand of the Man Episode 5: Loft at Sea

We hear about the personal impact of the band’s non-stop touring and the eventual burnout that ground things to a halt. Moloney and Thomas then describe how this was followed by several “wilderness years” where the band was just there but they weren’t really doing anything with it. Overlapping with this period there was a migration from Boston out to western Massachusetts. This brings us up to the modern era and ends the chronological review of the band’s history. In the second half of this episode, we explore some of the band’s many artistic collaborators, including NNCK, Ira Cohen, Circle, and Four Tet. Finally, we hear about the visual arts aspects of the band – both cover artists and a bit about the individual practice of Phil Franklin. If you want to see some of the cover art discussed in this episode, check out the songs linked below. Several of the songs used in this episode came from these same albums.More live Sunburned: Heavy “performance” set - France 2007 (part 2)Recent show in AmsterdamLive in Austin TX (maybe at SXSW)Philly show during tour with FourtetSunburned with Ira Cohen - 2006Playing live in late 2022Check out Sunburned Hand of the Man’s Instagram profile for more pictures related to this episode!Sunburned’s Bandcamp Sunburned’s WebsiteSongs heard in this episode:Loft at Sea - ASmokescreen - Weekend at Burnie’sThe Parakeet Beat - Fire EscapeClowns in Jail - Clowns in JailThree Lobed Festival 2022 (excerpt) - Archive DiveVariksenpelatin - Sunburned CircleUntitled 2 - The Tingle of Casual DangerDefacing the Facts - ComplexionGather ‘Round - No Magic ManOr Check out this Spotify playlist with all the songs heard in this and previous week’s episodes!You can email or go here for Kelly.Allison Hussey is here and on Twitter.Go here for more Aquarium Drunkard or Talkhouse Podcast Network.
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Sep 6, 2023 • 56min

Tranmissions :: Emil Amos (Drifter's Sympathy)

Welcome back, thanks for being here with us. Emil Amos of the Drifter's Sympathy podcast is with us today on Transmissions. Perhaps you know his work with OM, Grails, Holy Sons, or the records he releases under his own name, like Zone Black, his latest record of library style sounds, synthy 80s soundtracks, hip-hop beats, and ambient music.It evokes a mythic ‘70s—an area we linger in this conversation. You might also know Emil from his many appearances on The Duncan Trussell Family Hour, a podcast I really enjoy and listen to often. We lean a little into that spacey, open format in this episode. On September 22, Emil’s band Grails releases their brand new album, Anches En Maat. Ahead of the album’s release, we caught up to discuss a life in music, the virtue of doing it your own way, and much more in this conversation.Transmissions is a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Visit the Talkhouse for more interviews, fascinating reads, and podcasts, like Drifter’s Sympathy, with Emil Amos of Grails, Om, Holy Sons, who will be our guest next week on Transmissions. And of course No Way Out: An Oral History of Sunburned Hand of the Man, curated and produced by J Kelly Davis and presented by Aquarium Drunkard and Talkhouse. Back soon. Next week on the show, Jarvis Taveniere of Woods.
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Sep 4, 2023 • 1h 6min

Sunburned Hand of the Man Episode 4: Tent City Roller

At this point in our story, Sunburned Hand of the Man morphs into a many-headed hydra with varying manifestations in the loft and on each tour. To get through this vague period of 5-8 years, we focus on the band’s tour stories. We learn how a years-long period of heavy touring was kicked off with a family-band excursion to play a wedding in Alaska. After a conjunction of high-profile press coverage, Sunburned suddenly found themselves in high demand on the international festival circuit. So we focus on stories of their extended tour of Europe and the UK in 2003. Our story gets blurry after that first European tour, so we step back and focus first on stories of Sunburned’s many North American tours – including the 2004 cross-country trek out to Arthur Fest and back where they picked up the “no way out” rallying cry. Finally, we hear a conglomeration of stories from the band’s later European tours.So many links to share for this episode! We’ll start with the New Weird America cover story on The Wire. Here’s the Pitchfork reviews for the Trickle Down Theory of Lord Knows What and some Arthur Magazine pieces about Sunburned. This is a digital brochure and schedule of the 2003 Kill Your Timid Notion Festival. Check out this wild poster and these photos from Arthurfest. This was an announcement for a No Way Out tour posted by Arthur Magazine (which is different from the tour out to Arthurfest, where the band picked up the No Way Out motto).Some video evidence of Sunburned playing live:Sunburned live in Newcastle - 2006 (shot by van driver Gozzy) (and another set in Cambridge)No Way Out tour (to Arthurfest) - Live in Missoula, MT - 2005An ecstatic moment from Sunburned’s Arthurfest setLive in Lisbon - 2006Playlist for live Paris set - 2006 (this might be where Rob got hit by a kumquat)Check out Sunburned Hand of the Man’s Instagram profile for more pictures related to this episode!Sunburned’s Bandcamp Sunburned’s WebsiteSongs heard in this episode:Tent City Roller - WedlockSalmon Sez - WedlockBlow the Whistle – Earth Do Eagles DoRivershine – Trickle Down Theory of Lord Knows WhatFly Me Home - A Taste of Never (from the VPRO show in Amsterdam)Vaguely Aware - London Zero (from their O2 Arena show opening for Fourtet/Burial)Or Check out this Spotify playlist with all the songs heard in this and previous week’s episodes!You can email or go here for Kelly.Allison Hussey is here and on Twitter.Go here for more Aquarium Drunkard or Talkhouse Podcast Network.
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Aug 30, 2023 • 1h 17min

Transmissions :: Will Sheff (Okkervil River)

Welcome back to Aquarium Drunkard Transmissions, so glad to have you here once again. Our guest this week is Will Sheff, known for his solo work and years with the indie rock band Okkervil River. In this conversation, Sheff and host Jason P. Woodbury cover a wide stretch, examining how the indie rock landscape has changed and evolved over decades, exploring the spiritual core at the heart of his music, and hearing stories about his interactions with luminaries like Roky Erickson and Jason Molina.Transmissions is a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Visit the Talkhouse for more interviews, fascinating reads, and podcasts, like Drifter’s Sympathy, with Emil Amos of Grails, Om, Holy Sons, who will be our guest next week on Transmissions, and of course, No Way Out: An Oral History of Sunburned Hand of the Man, curated and produced by J Kelly Davis and presented by Aquarium Drunkard and Talkhouse. Support Aquarium Drunkard Transmissions on Patreon.
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Aug 28, 2023 • 56min

Sunburned Hand of the Man Episode 3: Leaving the Nest

We learn that, after jamming namelessly for a year and a half, the band finally started using the Sunburned moniker. Then we tune in to learn about their earliest excursions playing outside the Charlestown loft, including their first show as Sunburned as part of an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. We hear how the interplay between these new locations and contexts provoked new modes of performance and artistic connections. They describe how an invitation to join a tour opening for No-Neck Blues Band (who were opening for John Fahey) prompted them to assemble their first CD – Mind of a Brother. After this tour story, we meet the rest of the band members interviewed for this podcast. Finally, we examine the chain of events that ultimately catapulted the band onto the international stage.This is Julian Cope’s Album of the Month write up of Sunburned Hand of the Man. You can read the full liner notes that Rob Thomas wrote for the Mind of a Brother reissue. If you want to know more about The No-Neck Blues Band, then check out the (More) Letters from the Earth feature on Aquarium Drunkard. Here’s the band playing a set at P.A.’s Lounge.Check out Sunburned Hand of the Man’s Instagram profile for more pictures related to this episode!Sunburned’s Bandcamp Sunburned’s WebsiteSongs heard in this episode:Jaybird - JaybirdFranklin’s Mint - Show Me the Way - Tir Na NogToo High To Fly No More - JaybirdBuried Pleasure - Rare WoodWild Animal 3 - Wild AnimalOr Check out this Spotify playlist with all the songs heard in this and previous week’s episodes!You can email or go here for Kelly.Allison Hussey is here and on Twitter.Go here for more Aquarium Drunkard or Talkhouse Podcast Network.
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Aug 23, 2023 • 1h 19min

Transmissions :: Laura Snapes

Laura Snapes, deputy music editor of The Guardian, discusses the psychology of songs, the impact of climate on outdoor music festivals, and recent music releases. They also delve into the occult roots of Aphex Twin and the importance of naming musical genres. They reflect on communal spaces, their experience with Twitter, and connections made through online tools. They explore discovering and featuring artists, the connection between music and place, and the tragic backstory behind a record.
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Aug 21, 2023 • 58min

Sunburned Hand of the Man Episode 2: Loveletter to Complicated Dreams

We rewind way back to before the band started and hear how some of the founding members first met one another. We learn how Sunburned’s precursor band – Shit Spangled Banner – formed, released a tape, and broke up. Thurston Moore provides narrative exposition about the wider music scene that partially informed Sunburned’s formation. We get a third-eye tour of the band’s incubator – an illegal loft space in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston. Finally, we hear about several early band members and how all their eccentricities ultimately drove the band’s jamming.Here’s an amazing and extremely early glimpse of Sunburned playing live in late 1997. You can see many of the musicians described in this episode! You can check out Shit Spangled Banner’s Ass Run release here, and this is the discogs entry for the “other” version. Click through the images to see the accompanying note from Byron Coley. Also, here’s Byron’s piece remembering Marc Orleans published in The Wire. And this is an album by Marc Orleans’s band Juneau. We were wondering if Lothlorien – the Tolkein-themed space in southern Indiana was real. Here’s a fascinating article about it. Check out Sunburned Hand of the Man’s Instagram profile for more pictures related to this episode!Sunburned’s Bandcamp Sunburned’s WebsiteSongs heard in this episode:Loveletter to Complicated Dreams - Mind of a Brother (excerpts heard throughout the episode)Birth of Dearth - Mind of a BrotherShit Spangled Banner - Smallplant Fields - No Dolby/No DBXSSB - Heaven Often Manifests as SilenceThe If With the Golden Qualm - Mind of a BrotherThe Brother of All Shakes - Mind of a BrotherOr Check out this Spotify playlist with all the songs heard in this and previous week’s episodes!You can email or go here for Kelly.Allison Hussey is here and on Twitter.Go here for more Aquarium Drunkard or Talkhouse Podcast Network.
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Aug 16, 2023 • 1h 3min

Transmissions :: Darren Jessee

Our guest this week is Darren Jessee, a singer/songwriter and drummer. In the '90s, he played drums in Ben Folds Five, and he’s worked with a number of previous Transmissions guests, including Sharon Van Etten and Hiss Golden Messenger, as well as others like The War on Drugs, Josh Rouse, and Chris Stamey. In 2004, he founded a band called Hotel Lights, and in 2018, he began releasing music under his own name. His latest is called Central Bridge, released earlier this year. On this episode of Transmissions, Darren joins us for a freewheeling talk about influences, lyrics, creative process, and his time on the road with Ben Folds Five. We discuss a wide range of artists—Tom Waits, Joni Mitchell, Judee Sill, Gordon Lightfoot, and spend a lot of time reflecting on Neil Young, who Ben Folds Five toured with in the 1990s. Along the way, we inspect the notion of how songs change and shape our views, the tenor of the culture wars back in the ‘90s, and the value of occasionally overdoing it. Transmissions is part of the Talkhouse Podcast network, check out Talkhouse for more great reading and listening. Next week on Transmissions? Music journalist and editor Laura Snapes joins us to discuss regionalism, transcendent moments listening to music, the value of names, varying definitions of “Americana,” Aphex Twin, Cornwall, and much more. Join us then. Be well in the meantime, this Transmission is concluded. 

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