On The Turntable

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    Fela Kuti

    Fela Kuti :: Live in Detroit 1986

    There are records that feel like documents and there are records that feel like contraband. Live in Detroit 1986 sits firmly in the latter… a tape smuggled out of the room, dubbed and redubbed into soft focus until the hiss becomes a third rhythm section. Captured less than a year after Fela Kuti’s release from prison, at Detroit’s Fox Theatre during his first U.S. tour, the set lands with a charged, itinerant electricity: part exorcism, part declaration.

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    Masayoshi Takanaka

    Masayoshi Takanaka :: All of Me

    Masayoshi Takanaka’s All of Me, originally issued in 1979, gathers material from the guitarist’s early solo run into a remarkably fluid sequence. Reissued for 2026 Japan Record Store Day and newly remastered at Abbey Road, the collection still moves with startling ease: polished AOR, tropical fusion, bossa drift, and instrumental pop unfolding in long, sunlit lines.

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    Lifetones

    Lifetones :: For A Reason

    South London, early 1983. On For a Reason, Charles Bullen and Julius Cornelius Samuel pull away from the tightly wound scaffolding of This Heat into something slower, heavier, and more open-ended. Basslines circulate, rhythms drift, and dub space begins to overtake the frame. Forty years later, the record still feels uncannily present after dark.

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    Cedric IM Brooks & The Light of Saba

    Cedric IM Brooks & The Light of Saba ::

    Recorded in 1974, the album is the nexus of the musical and spiritual philosophies of Jamaica’s own heavyweight saxophone colossus, Cedric IM Brooks. Over the course of his career, Brooks divined a sound that combined Jamaican musical traditions and jazz that stood on its own ground amid the full bloom of reggae and dub in the 1970s, while also traveling a parallel route alongside the kindred ensembles of Fela Kuti and Sun Ra.

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    This Heat

    This Heat :: Made Available: John Peel Sessions

    For 37 years, John Peel worked as a conduit, pulling unheard voices out of the static and setting them loose across the BBC dial. In 1977, one of those voices was This Heat, formed just a year earlier in a Camberwell rehearsal space. Frayed at the edges, with clipped rhythms pushed straight to broadcast, they didn’t sound like a band adapting to a Maida Vale studio so much as one ignoring the usual expectations of a radio session.

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    White Fence

    White Fence :: Orange

    Like an unwavering sonic horizon, Orange delivers a vibrant and jangly collection of songs that weren’t just merely worth the wait, but feel like just the right amalgamation of musician Tim Presley’s prolific career to date. The first White Fence record in over seven years, the chiming guitars and Ty Segall back behind the drum kit and console convey a warbly and mysteriously optimistic guiding light. Hence the record’s namesake, the record offers a clear-eyed and bullish vibrancy in contrast to the downright foggy greys and blues of yesteryear.

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    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet

    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet :: Happy Today

    If The Way Out of Easy marked the emergence of the ETA IVtet as an entity separate from the site of the band’s origins, Happy Today serves as another milestone: It’s the first ETA IVtet record taped somewhere other than Enfield Tennis Academy. Capturing a 2025 set at the much-larger Lodge Room, the third album from guitarist Jeff Parker, saxophonist Josh Johnson, bassist Anna Butterss and drummer Jay Bellerose shows a band with more room to move and more space to listen.

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    Setting

    Setting :: S/T

    Three years and as many live albums have passed since Setting’s debut album. In that time, the trio of Nathan Bowles, Jaime Fennelly, and Joe Westerlund have sharply fine-tuned their form of exploratory electronic Appalachian drone music, and their new, self-titled album finds them on a heightened plane. The chemistry built between these three players over the last few years comes alive here in an even richer hue of their cosmic arboreal vision.

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Dust-to-Digital :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

April and Lance Ledbetter of Atlanta’s Dust-to-Digital join us for a discussion about the label’s new radio app, Dust-to-Digital Radio, and the art of sharing archival music in the digital age: “The technology is amazing. I couldn’t have imagined it 20 years ago. I mean, maybe Nikola Tesla or some science fiction writers could have, but it’s changing so fast.”

Wax Machine :: The Sky Unfurls, The Dance Goes On

Enveloping and unhurried, Lau Ro’s Wax Machine drifts between jazz, funk, bossa nova, rock and folk traditions, wrapped in a soft psychedelic sheen. These songs settle deep into the pocket, rewarding attention without ever demanding it. It’s music that invites immersion rather than insistence.

Brenda Ray :: D’Ya Hear Me! – Naffi Years 1979–1983

Paste-up scrapbook transmission. D’Ya Hear Me!: Naffi Years 1979–1983 moves through a corner of British post-punk where homemade electronics, dub atmospherics and soft-focus pop dissolve into one another. Domestic and nocturnal, drum machines pulse beneath elastic basslines, guitars blur into tape haze, melodies appear only to evaporate. Reggae permeates everything, not as influence or quotation but as environment.

Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears :: Inner Principles

Across Nashville sessions, kosmische excursions, and off-center country-rock detours, Sean Thompson has quietly become one of the city’s most versatile guitarists. On the new Weird Ears instrumental LP Inner Principles, he pulls those threads into a fluid, atmospheric set that moves between ECM-style spaciousness, late-night boogie, and warmly exploratory ensemble interplay.

Boris with Michio Kurihara :: Rainbow 2

Originally released in 2006, Rainbow remains one of Boris’ most transportive recordings: heavy but unforced, suspended somewhere between slow-motion psychedelia and late-night amplifier glow. Nearly twenty years later, the newly released Rainbow 2 extends the world of the original with two side-long pieces drawn from the long out-of-print Rainbow box set, pushing further into spacious drone, low-end pulse, and hazy dual guitar interplay.

Stolen Moments From A Life Well-Lived :: Sonny Rollins, 1930-2026

From Birdland broadcasts and bridge-side practice sessions to late-night television, Leonard Cohen collaborations, and a final summit meeting with Ornette Coleman, Sonny Rollins spent nearly seven decades treating improvisation as a form of spiritual inquiry. In the wake of his passing at 95, we revisit a handful of essential films, broadcasts, and performances that capture the humor, velocity, deep concentration, and eternal forward motion of a musician who never stopped searching for the unknown.

The Beach Boys at Big Sur Folk Festival (1970)

On the heels of the majestic Sunflower and a carefully managed image rehabilitation campaign, The Beach Boys’ appearance at 1970’s Big Sur Folk Festival was a calculated effort to align themselves with the counterculture. Sans Dennis Wilson, off filming Two-Lane Blacktop, California’s native sons delivered an excellent set drawn largely from Pet Sounds onward — a quiet corrective to their infamous withdrawal from 1967’s Monterey Pop Festival. Despite years of archival excavations from the band’s vaults, the performance remains officially unreleased.

All One Song :: Zachary Cale on “Ambulance Blues”

We have got a doozy of a Neil Young song to talk about today — “⁠Ambulance Blues⁠.” First appearing as the closing track on Neil’s 1974 masterpiece On the Beach, this is one of the man’s major works, a long, dark dirge that surveys the surreal mid-1970s landscape, from Patty Hearst to Richard Nixon, all accompanied by a brilliantly skeletal musical backdrop. Here to help us decode the mysteries and metaphors of “Ambulance Blues” today is NYC-based singer-songwriter ⁠Zachary Cale⁠.

Pink Floyd :: Live in Saint Tropez, France 1970

Shot for French television in Saint-Tropez during the summer of 1970, this broadcast captures Pink Floyd before the lore and iconography fully set in: no inflatable pigs, no circular screens, no stadium-scale spectacle, just four guys on a small stage dragging enormous sound through the Riviera night.

Basic / Chris Forsyth’s WHAT IS NOW :: Both/And

For the past two decades, Chris Forsyth has quietly built one of the most distinctive catalogs in contemporary underground music, balancing technical precision with deep feel, repetition, and exploratory instinct. On two new releases — Basic’s self-titled LP with Douglas McCombs and Mikel Patrick Avery, and the sprawling improvisational debut from WHAT IS NOW — Forsyth stretches outward in different directions, moving from hypnotic groove and motorik interplay to thornier, open-ended collective improvisation that rewards patience, curiosity, and total immersion.

Magic Tuber Stringband :: Heavy Water

Set against the poisoned beauty of South Carolina’s Savannah River watershed, Heavy Water finds Magic Tuber Stringband threading old-time Appalachian forms through drone, field recordings, ecological ruin and Southern psychic residue. Inspired by Courtney Werner’s research into radioactive birdlife near the abandoned nuclear zone of “Atomic City,” the trio’s ninth full-length moves between haunted fiddle laments, free-form string dissonance and environmental unease

Lifetones :: For A Reason

Outside. South London, early 1983. On For a Reason, Charles Bullen and Julius Cornelius Samuel pull away from the tightly wound scaffolding of This Heat into something slower, heavier, and more open-ended. Basslines circulate, rhythms drift, and dub space begins to overtake the frame. Forty years later, the record still feels uncannily present after dark.