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  • April 18, 2011 11:26 am
    Lou Reed’s Street Hassle; A phenomenal LP!
aquariumdrunkard:

latest SCRATCH THE SURFACE on…
Lou Reed, Street Hassle

    Lou Reed’s Street Hassle; A phenomenal LP!

    aquariumdrunkard:

    latest SCRATCH THE SURFACE on…

    Lou Reed, Street Hassle

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  • April 18, 2011 10:50 am
    My post on Presley’s “Stranger In My Own Home Town” is now live on Aquarium Drunkard. If you haven’t heard this song, you need to go grab it.
aquariumdrunkard:

Elvis Presley :: Stranger In My Own Town (1970 Rehearsal)

    My post on Presley’s “Stranger In My Own Home Town” is now live on Aquarium Drunkard. If you haven’t heard this song, you need to go grab it.

    aquariumdrunkard:

    Elvis Presley :: Stranger In My Own Town (1970 Rehearsal)

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  • March 10, 2011 1:29 pm
    Phil Cook & His Feat - Hungry Mother Blues  Megafaun’s Phil Cook has had another run in with nature. During the recording of his 2009 eponymous debut he battled a violent thunderstorm. This time around, “Mother Nature” has locked him in a room and asked him for more. With guitar, banjo, and dobro in hand, Phil Cook and His Feat offer up Hungry Mother Blues. But before the first note is heard there’s the matter of the collage style cover art created by Catherine Edgerton of Midtown Dickens. It’s one of eroded images, worn out single paper dreams, and layers of a bit of one’s soul. Earth toned elements, taped and pasted together, re-figure and recycle creating something new; something beautiful. It’s a fine example of what good album art should do, one that accentuates the intimate, vulnerable and personal journey that embodies Cook’s Hungry Mother Blues. Although recorded in a back room during a rare North Carolina ice storm, the album, conversely, acts as the perfect front porch summertime soundtrack. Providing us with unaltered instrumentals, Cook creates a score that invokes a polite nod to John Fahey, Elizabeth Cotton, and the finger-picking, slide stylings of early 20th century country and blues. Following an initial listen I wrote down three words in my notebook: birth / re-birth / and new beginnings. Those are the themes, or characters, I kept returning to as one song lead into the next. With each song, Cook allows his instruments to become alive, not in an effort to create perfection, but to justify their soul. He doesn’t play by the book; he plays from the heart. That’s what makes this record so real. As a song-cycle, each of Hungry Mother Blues tracks are dedicated to someone in Cook’s life, be it a friend, a bandmate, or more importantly, Cook’s unborn child. Each one of these songs seems to be a chapter, or celebration, of those in his life. They play out so naturally and with ease, that you honestly feel the album is just for him. You’re welcome to pull up a stool, but whether you’re there or not, these songs are going to be played. The most accessible, longest and possibly the most refined track on the album is “Ballad Of A Hungry Mother.” An elegant mix of sharp slide work and deft fingerpicking, it may be the most visually inspiring song on the record. Dried creek beds, loose dressing gowns and red clay stained feet—dawning skies that break over pristine, dew laden fields—terrain sliced by the bare feet of a sacrificial mother. Another standout lies with the last cut on the album, the slower paced calming that is “The Jensens.” Unlike anything else on the record, it is the “end of the show” track.  The slide work is haunting as it saws the strings ever so eloquently. The chorus subtlety traces the lines left behind by “Lament and Lullabye.” It’s Cook’s El Dorado; His own “Tired Eyes”. The lanterns are dimmed and once again Cook tips his hat to the past. Sunset themes as the journey concludes. But does it? As the sun nips the horizon and the ice cover melts, there’s a sense this isn’t the end. Tomorrow’s a new day, a new beginning. The forces of nature will rear their heads once again, and thankfully Phil Cook will be there waiting for them. Written by Matt HayhurstOriginally Published May 9, 2011 on Aquarium Drunkard Phil Cook & His Feat  LP to be released by Trekky Records in a 3-part packaging, featuring a vinyl record, CD and MP3 download. MP3: Phil Cook & His Feat - Ballad Of A Hungry Mother

    Phil Cook & His Feat - Hungry Mother Blues

    Megafaun’s Phil Cook has had another run in with nature. During the recording of his 2009 eponymous debut he battled a violent thunderstorm. This time around, “Mother Nature” has locked him in a room and asked him for more. With guitar, banjo, and dobro in hand, Phil Cook and His Feat offer up Hungry Mother Blues.

    But before the first note is heard there’s the matter of the collage style cover art created by Catherine Edgerton of Midtown Dickens. It’s one of eroded images, worn out single paper dreams, and layers of a bit of one’s soul. Earth toned elements, taped and pasted together, re-figure and recycle creating something new; something beautiful. It’s a fine example of what good album art should do, one that accentuates the intimate, vulnerable and personal journey that embodies Cook’s Hungry Mother Blues.

    Although recorded in a back room during a rare North Carolina ice storm, the album, conversely, acts as the perfect front porch summertime soundtrack. Providing us with unaltered instrumentals, Cook creates a score that invokes a polite nod to John Fahey, Elizabeth Cotton, and the finger-picking, slide stylings of early 20th century country and blues. Following an initial listen I wrote down three words in my notebook: birth / re-birth / and new beginnings. Those are the themes, or characters, I kept returning to as one song lead into the next. With each song, Cook allows his instruments to become alive, not in an effort to create perfection, but to justify their soul. He doesn’t play by the book; he plays from the heart. That’s what makes this record so real.

    As a song-cycle, each of Hungry Mother Blues tracks are dedicated to someone in Cook’s life, be it a friend, a bandmate, or more importantly, Cook’s unborn child. Each one of these songs seems to be a chapter, or celebration, of those in his life. They play out so naturally and with ease, that you honestly feel the album is just for him. You’re welcome to pull up a stool, but whether you’re there or not, these songs are going to be played. The most accessible, longest and possibly the most refined track on the album is “Ballad Of A Hungry Mother.” An elegant mix of sharp slide work and deft fingerpicking, it may be the most visually inspiring song on the record. Dried creek beds, loose dressing gowns and red clay stained feet—dawning skies that break over pristine, dew laden fields—terrain sliced by the bare feet of a sacrificial mother.

    Another standout lies with the last cut on the album, the slower paced calming that is “The Jensens.” Unlike anything else on the record, it is the “end of the show” track. The slide work is haunting as it saws the strings ever so eloquently. The chorus subtlety traces the lines left behind by “Lament and Lullabye.” It’s Cook’s El Dorado; His own “Tired Eyes”. The lanterns are dimmed and once again Cook tips his hat to the past. Sunset themes as the journey concludes. But does it? As the sun nips the horizon and the ice cover melts, there’s a sense this isn’t the end. Tomorrow’s a new day, a new beginning. The forces of nature will rear their heads once again, and thankfully Phil Cook will be there waiting for them.

    Written by Matt Hayhurst

    Originally Published May 9, 2011 on Aquarium Drunkard

    Phil Cook & His Feat LP to be released by Trekky Records in a 3-part packaging, featuring a vinyl record, CD and MP3 download.

    MP3: Phil Cook & His Feat - Ballad Of A Hungry Mother

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  • December 30, 2010 11:54 pm
    A Familyre Christmas - Volume 3

    A Familyre Christmas - Volume 3

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  • October 11, 2010 8:40 am
    MFR: MIX: OTR 17 - San Francisco

    Great new selection of music from MFR! Always good…

    minneapolisfuckingrocks:



    I’m heading back to Minneapolis from San Francisco today, and in turn, a mix needed to be made. There’s been a lot of great new music in the last few weeks, so this edition of “On The Road” features primarily the new material that I’ve really been enjoying.

    *MP3: Twin Sister - “Meet The…

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  • October 1, 2010 3:16 pm

    GAYNGS

    Eau Claire 10/1/2010

    GAYNGS - By Your Side (Sade cover) via 

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