Tuesday, August 31, 2004

THE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION: CONVENTION NOTEBOOK DAY 1

A published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 31, 2004


NEW YORK _ Former New Mexico Gov. "Lonesome" Dave Cargo has always had a tenuous relationship with the more conservative elements of the Republican Party when he was in office in the late 1960s. And Cargo's move Monday won't do much to endear himself to GOP regulars.

Cargo has helped to launch a group of moderate Republicans called Back to the Mainstream, which urges the GOP to go back towards the center. The group purchased a full-page ad in the New York Times to greet Republican delegates on the first day of their convention.

"The Republicans have gone far enough to the right, they're going to fall off the cliff," Cargo said in a telephone interview.

"We've let the extreme right push us," he said. "It's time to push back."

Cargo isn't exactly lonesome in this endeavor. He's joined by about 20 other political figures. Trouble is, there are few, if any, contemporary GOP leaders. The biggest names were in power about the time that Cargo was governor.

Among those signing on are former Gov. William Milliken, a three-time Michigan governor; Daniel Evans, a former Washington governor and U.S. Senator; former New Hampshire Gov. Walter Peterson; former Virginia Gov. Linwood Holton; and two former Environmental Protection Agency chiefs Russell Train and William Ruckelshaus.

Cargo said he started the group with Larry Rockefeller, grandson of John D. Rockefeller.

Republicans should be better on civil rights and environmental issues, Cargo said. "Some of these important environmental laws we have were passed when Richard Nixon was president," he said.

But even though he is critical of the Bush administration Cargo said Back to the Mainstream as an organization isn't endorsing or threatening to endorse Democrat John Kerry.

"I'm not terribly enthusiastic about Kerry," he said.

Broadway Joe

New Mexico delegates who went to a Sunday night performance of The Phantom of the Opera at the Majestic Theatre were greeted by a few dozen protesters who heckled and held signs with anti-Bush and anti-war slogans.

"They wanted to yell at rich Republicans," said state Sen. Joe Carraro, R-Albuquerque, a delegates. "But most the Republicans there aren't the type who would be spending money on Broadway plays."

The New York convention host committee and The New York Times sprung for Broadway tickets for delegates Sunday night.

"Some of the delegates complained about the protesters being so loud," Carraro said. However, Carraro, a former resident of Manhattan, was undaunted. "I told them that's just New York. It's just loud here. They had to be loud to be heard at all."

Full disclosure on graft:

There were no Broadway tickets for reporters, but there was a gift bag for reporters registering at the Hotel Pennsylvania Monday morning.

The black canvas shoulder bag (with the logos of the Republican National Convention and "NYC 2004") was packed with goodies.

Among the swag: a copy of the Guide to New York City Landmarks, a children's book about a bunny on a bicycle called Miffy Loves New York City, a History Channel DVD about Ellis Island, a Con Edison pocket flashlight, a disposable camera, a tiny packet of Dunkin Donut coffee, a pack of red, white and blue M&Ms, a pack of Listerine strips, a Statue of Liberty tie pin with the AT&T logo and a "Limited Convention Edition" box of Kraft Macaroni & Cheese, featuring an elephant holding a sign reading "Republicans in 2004."

But no apple:

On the last day of the Democratic convention in Boston, a law enforcement officer working the press entrance to the Fleet Center confiscated my jar of Bill Richardson salsa, which the New Mexico delegation was giving away to promote the state. The Secret Service wasn't impressed by the promotional tool, saying it violated a rule against glass jars in the convention center.

On the first day of the Republican convention I had another contraband food item confiscated.

An apple.

This convention has a rule against round fruit, which apparently some fear could be easily hurled at politicians.

"No round fruit is allowed," the officer told me. "You should have brought a banana."

THE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION: SECURITY BLANKETS NYC

As published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 31, 2004

NEW YORK _ Anyone who thought security was intense during the Democratic National Convention last month ought to come to New York for the Republican convention.

Compared to New York, the security in Boston was Woodstock.

"It's a sign of the times," said U.S. Sen. Pete Domenici. "I've been to some conventions where there was almost no security."

Besides GOP conventioneers, New York this week has been a magnet for anti-war and anti-Bush protesters. Hundreds of thousands of people marched Sunday to demonstrate against the Republicans. Today has been designated as a day of civil disobedience by some protest organizers.

Domenici, who has been going to Republican conventions for more than 30 years, said that besides the post-Sept. 11 fear of terrorism, extra security is needed because of the intensify of bad feelings by many toward President Bush.

"Some people have been sold on the idea that the president is mean and hateful," Domenici said. "I know him well and I know that this just isn't true."

Delegate Joe Carraro, a state senator from Albuquerque, agreed. "There really is a lot of animosity over the issues of the war."

In the streets around Madison Square Garden, where the convention is taking place, there are police every few yards on the sidewalks and large clusters of police on the corners.

You literally can't even get away with jaywalking. There are barricades preventing pedestrians from crossing anywhere but at the intersections. At some intersections officers use orange plastic temporary gate material to keep pedestrians from crossing streets until the police say it's time to cross.

Entering Madison Square Garden, reporters must pass through not one but two checkpoints with metal detectors. This also is the case for delegates said Darren White, a delegate from Albuquerque.

Even the hotels where delegates are staying have far more severe security than convention goers saw in Boston.

Boston's Sheraton downtown, where New Mexico Democrats stayed, had a near carnival atmosphere with delegates, party officials and even radical protesters from the Lyndon LaRouche campaign milling about and merchants hawking humorous anti-Bush paraphernalia.

In contrast, only guests can go inside the Roosevelt Hotel, where the state's Republican delegation is staying. Five or six police officers guard the front door of the hotel.

And the police presence doesn't go away when the convention isn't in session. During the early morning hours Monday police presence was strong in the area. Many weary-looking uniformed officers took breaks in all-night coffee shops and delis, some chatting with their fellow cops, some sitting alone staring blankly into cups of coffee.

New Mexico Republicans said Monday they've never seen such a police show of force.

Carraro said he is still amazed that his party would chose New York City, and especially surprised that the location would be Madison Square Garden.

"I grew up here," Carraro said. "Madison Square Garden has to be the hardest place for security. There's subways running under it, There's an Amtrack running beneath it. I was surprised they'd chose this place."

White, who is Bernalillo County sheriff, said "This is the tightest security situation I've ever encountered."

White complimented the New York City Police -- the most visible of dozens of law enforcement agencies working around Madison Square Garden.

"They're performing spectacularly," White said. "The last thing you want to is to come here and not be able to have fun for fear of something going wrong."

A state tourism official in New York this week expressed frustration with the heightened security

"I was stunned at the level of security in Boston, but this is Boston to the nth degree," said Jon Hendry, director of marketing for the Tourism Department.

"I am totally screwed," Hendry said. "I'm driving a 34-foot motorhome and I've been hassled by city cops, state cops and cops I've never heard of."

Hendry said every time he enters Manhattan Island police search the large brightly painted motorhome. "I have to take everything out of it," he said.

He concedes that one thing that probably made it easier on him in Boston was the fact that Gov. Bill Richardson was the chairman of the Democratic Convention and had worked closely with the city of Boston. “We had some contacts there," he said.

Even native New Yorkers are amazed by the huge concentration of law enforcement.

Curtis Sliwa, who founded a citizen protection group called The Guardian Angels in the 1970s because he felt the subways and parks were unsafe now says New York City is "the safest place on Earth."

"That's because there's a cop every five inches," Sliwa -- wearing his trademark red beret and red Guardian Angels jacket quipped during an interview Monday at the Stage Door Delicatessen, across the street from the convention hall

Sliwa, who currently is a radio talk show host on the conservative WABC, said he went to the 1992 Democratic Convention at Madison Square Garden.

"There was almost no security there, he said. "Of course the city swept the area of all the hookers and pimps and homeless people right before the convention started."

Sunday, August 29, 2004

OFF TO NEW YORK

I'm flying to New York City today to cover the Republican National Convention for The Santa Fe New Mexican. I'll also be filing reports for KSFR, 90.7 FM.

I'll post most of my New Mexican coverage here on this blog, but also check the paper's Web site.

Here's the preview in this morning's paper:

As published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 29,2004



A month after the Democratic Party’s John Kerry love fest in Boston, Republican leaders from across the country will hold their own extravaganza to lavish praise on President Bush — and to officially nominate him and Vice President Dick Cheney for another term in the White House.

Like the Democrats, the Republican National Convention is expected to follow the three-Ps principle: Propaganda — pounding in the Republican message on television; Pep Rallies — getting the faithful charged up; and Parties — lavish receptions, dinners and other social events, courtesy of big corporations and other special interests that have found a fun-filled loophole in “soft-money” laws.

But, unlike the Democrats, a fourth “P” undoubtedly will be a significant part of the Republican convention story.

Protests.

While the protests in Boston last month seemed anemic and halfhearted, anti-war and anti-Bush activists have for months been planning for demonstrations and disruptions at the New York convention.

State Sen. Joe Carraro of Albuquerque, a convention delegation who served on the GOP Platform Committee, noted that several convention speakers — U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani — “have different positions on different issues.”

Carraro said this will be a great symbol of GOP unity.

But while some of the speakers will have more moderate opinions than Bush on social issues such as gay rights, abortion and stem-cell research, Carraro said there will be no disagreement on the podium on perhaps the biggest issue of the campaign — the war on Iraq. All will agree with Bush that the war was necessary.

“This will showcase what the president has done and answer some of his critics,” Carraro said. “The president has to show he’s got party unity. If he’s unable to show that, he’s got a problem.”

There is little doubt, however, that New York will be anything but a huge display of party unity.

New Mexico delegation

New Mexico’s Republican Party is sending 21 delegates and 21 alternates to New York. According to a news statement earlier this month, the state’s delegation is among the most diverse in the convention, with 43 percent of delegates members of minority groups.

Delegates include some of the top GOP leaders in the state — U.S. Sen. Pete Domenici, U.S. Reps. Heather Wilson and Steve Pearce, former Interior Secretary and U.S. Rep. Manuel Lujan, former gubernatorial candidate John Sanchez, state Sen. Joe Carraro, state Reps. Jeanette Wallace and Jane Powdrell-Culbert, Bernalillo County Sheriff Darren White and Public Regulation Commission candidate and former San Ildefonso Pueblo Gov. John Gonzales.

Before the Democratic Convention last month, much was made of the increased visibility the New Mexico delegation there would receive because Gov. Bill Richardson was convention chairman.

There hasn’t been quite the same attention paid to the state’s Republican delegation. Barbara Longeway of Albuquerque, the delegation’s coordinator, said in a recent telephone interview that the Republican delegation doesn’t have as many activities planned as their Democratic counterparts. “We don’t have Bill Richardson’s money,” she quipped.

But plenty will be offered to keep the delegation busy.

Like all delegations, New Mexico’s is invited to see a Broadway play tonight, courtesy of The New York City Host Committee and The New York Times. New Mexico delegates are invited to a performance of The Phantom of the Opera at The Majestic Theatre.

Also planned for the delegation is a tour of the Fox News studios Wednesday.

It’s not all fun and parties in New York for the delegation, however. Longeway said each state delegation has been asked to perform some type of community service in New York. New Mexico’s delegation has agreed to work for several hours at the Latino Pastoral Action Center in the Bronx. This is a Pentecostal group that has several programs including those dedicated to gang intervention, crisis counseling, an after-school academy and other activities.

Republican party time

Just like the Democratic Convention, the GOP will have plenty of breakfasts, receptions, fund-raisers for various candidates, luncheons, dinners, concerts and late-night parties — nearly all of which are sponsored by corporations and business groups.

According to politicalwatchdog groups such as the Alliance for Better Campaigns and the Center for Public Integrity, corporations, unions and other special interests are now using lavish parties at political conventions as a way to buy access and influence — skirting the new campaignfinance laws that prohibit “soft-money” donations to political parties.

Because of the restrictions, according to a report on the Center for Public Integrity’s Web site, “large quantities of cash have been pouring into host committee coffers and into hands of party planners, where lavishness is the name of the game.”

Domenici, who chairs the Senate Energy Committee, will be honored at several such events during the convention. On Monday, the American Petroleum Institute is sponsoring a reception honoring Domenici at the River CafĂ©. On Tuesday, Dow Chemical is sponsoring a breakfast honoring the state’s senior senator.

And Wednesday, the American Gas Association, Edison Electric Institute, the National Mining Association, The Nuclear Energy Institute and the National Electrical Manufacturers Association are sponsoring An Evening By the Lake Honoring Chairman Pete Domenici at The Loeb Boathouse at Central Park.

In Boston, New Mexico’s Democratic U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, a past chairman of the Energy Committee, was honored at special events including a harbor cruise paid for by the Interstate Natural Gas Association and a breakfast sponsored by Public Service Company of New Mexico.

According to a report by the Campaign Finance Institute, at least 38 companies that gave Republicans $80,000 or more each in soft money in the 2000 and 2002 election cycles also donated to the New York host committee to pay for the convention.

Fighting the man

Many have speculated that next week’s protests in New York could be the biggest at a convention since the 1968 convention in Chicago — which climaxed in what an official report labeled a “police riot,” where police clubbed and beat demonstrators.

Estimates of the number of anti-war and anti-Bush protesters expected to descend upon New York have been as high as 300,000.

Democratic Party Chairman Terry McAuliffe told The Associated Press on Friday that he was worried his party would be blamed if the demonstrations at the Republican Convention get out of hand. “I think they’re almost hoping for problems up here,” McAuliffe said of Republicans.

Demonstration organizer Jason Flores-Williams says he doesn’t care if the Democratic Party or John Kerry suffers because of the protests in New York. Flores-Williams is an activist, political writer for High Times magazine and a former freelancer for The New Mexican.

“It’s bigger than John Kerry or George Bush,” he said in a phone interview from New York on Friday. “We need an instillation of fear from the people to the people in power.

“In the end, I’m probably going to vote for John Kerry, but when you get down to it, Kerry’s just another Skull & Bones member.” The Skull & Bones Society is a secret organization at Yale University to which both Kerry and Bush belonged.

Rep. Joe Thompson, RAlbuquerque, an alternate delegate, said Friday that he thinks fears of protests are overblown. “I don’t expect there to be any effect whatsoever,” he said Friday. “They won’t disrupt our purpose for being there.”

Asked whether McAuliffe was correct that Republicans would benefit from violent protests, Thompson said, “Well, if we see Terry McAuliffe out there chucking eggs, that might help us.”

“There’s really a vibe here,” Flores-Williams said Friday. “The convention hasn’t even started yet, and already there’s been 90 arrests. Basically what’s happening now is there’s just a giant, constant protest.”

Shortly after Flores-Williams made that comment, another 200 people were arrested in a protest involving bicycles.

Today, 250,000 people are expected to march against the war in Iraq.

But Flores-Williams said Tuesday is the big day. “We’re calling it A-31, the day of direct action,” he said. “That’s the day we’re going to shut down Manhattan.” Sit-ins, marches and street theater are scheduled.

“If we don’t do something, we’re going to lose the American dream to the corporations,” Flores-Williams said. “We’ve got to fight the man!”

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has estimated the cost of security for the convention at $65 million. The federal government is expected to cover most of that.


Saturday, August 28, 2004

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAY LIST

Friday, August 27, 2004
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Now Webcasting
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays MDT
Host: Steve Terrell


(Before show started. Southwest Stages ended early)
Rebel Flag in Germany by Jason Ringenberg

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
My Baby's Gone by The Backsliders
Bonnie Blue by The Shiners
Take This Job and Shove It by Bobby Bare, Radney Foster, Buck Owens & Jeff Tweedy
Mystery by Simon Stokes
Motorcycle Man by The Riptones
Drunk By Noon by The Handsome Family
Deep Red Bells by Neko Case
You Shouldn't Have by Elizabeth McQueen

I Remember You by Steve Earle with Emmylou Harris
Baghdad Baghdad by Acie Cargill
Motel Time Again by Bobby Bare Jr.
Banned At the Bluebird by Betty Dylan
Fools Hall of Fame by Johnny Cash
Brilliant Disquise by Elvis Costello
North to Alaska by Johnny Horton
Mister Love by The Buckarettes
Can Man Christmas by Joe West

DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS SET

Puttin' People on the Moon
Sink Hole
Daddy's Cup
18 Wheels of Love
Outfit
Southern Thing

Come a Long Way by Kate & Anna McGariggle
Deep as Your Pocket by Tres Chicas
Whiskey Willie by Michael Hurley
Somebody's Husband, Somebody's Son by Tom Russell, Dave Alvin & Peter Case
Something to Thing About by Willie Nelson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots
Radio
list

Friday, August 27, 2004

MAUREEN DOWD IN SANTA FE

A version of this story was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
Aug. 27, 2004

Despite the title of her book, Bushworld: Enter at Your Own Risk, Maureen Dowd doesn’t want it to be lumped in with the avalanche of Bush-bashing works currently filling the nation’s bookstores.”

“I went to the book fair in Chicago and was just stunned by the number of Bush-bashing books,” the New York Times columnist said in a recent telephone nterview. “I had no idea there were so many. I mean you see books about Condi’s dog. The market was saturated.”

While working late one Friday, she said, she noticed “13 or 14 (anti-) Bush or Cheney books. They’re coming in faster than I can read them.”

Dowd will be in Santa Fe this weekend to sign copies of Bushworld, at Garcia Street Books, 376 Garcia St., at 4 p.m. Saturday.

So how is Bushworld different than the other George-must-go books?

Dowd’s book, which mainly consists of her columns, deals with the “father-son drama” of the current presidents and his father, who was in the White House from 1989 to 1993.

“I love the father-son drama in Hamlet and the father-daughter drama in King Lear How your parents shape your life, that’s the part that interests me,” Dowd said.

Indeed, one of the major recurring themes is how Bush the younger has moved to repudiate much of his father’s term.

As she wrote in the introduction of Bushworld, “With each passing day of the Bush restoration, it became clearer that we were entering the primal territory of ancient myth in which the son must define himself by vanquishing the father. While W. loved his dad and was close to him, he wanted out of his shadow … From the start, W. and Karl Rove used Bush pere as a reverse playbook; if they avoided his father’s missteps with the right, they could keep their base happy.”

Later in the book, Dowd wrote, “It must be galling for Bush pere to hear conservatives braying that the son has to finish the job in Iraq that the father wimped out on. ... His proudest legacy, after all, was painstakingly stitching together a global coalition to stand up for the principal that one country cannot simply invade another without provocation Now the son may blow off the coalition so he can invade a country without provocation.” (This is from a column originally published months before the Iraq invasion)

“… But W. has spent a life running from his father’s long shadow, trying to usurp Daddy’s preppy moderate Republicanism with good ol’ boy conservative Republicanism,” Dowd wrote.

A major difference between Dowd’s book and many of the partisan anti-Bush screeds is her friendly relationship with the first President Bush, who was in power when Dowd had the White House beat for the Times.

In the phone interview Dowd started to say, “how much I love” the senior Bush, but corrected herself to say “like.”

The former president described his relationship with Dowd as “a love-hate” relationship.

She later said, “I don’t think in terms of love or like. I don’t want to have dinner with or be friends with the people I write about because I might have to come down on them hard in my next column.”

But she maintains a correspondence with Bush Sr. She said he sends her “comic, wacky screeds” about The New York Times.“He reads the Times very carefully,” Dowd said. She contrasted this with the current President Bush’s statements that he never reads the papers.

The elder Bush has never told Dowd how he feels about her contention that some actions by the current President amount to a repudiation of his father’s administration.

“I think there’s a WASPy compartmentalization there,” she said. “It’s not like a Eugene O’Neill play where they thrash it out at the end. The father tries to focus on how proud he is of his son, how proud he is that he and his son are the only father and son elected president since the Adamses.

“He doesn’t focus on his son’s statements like ‘We’re not going to cut and run’ in Iraq or that he’s the heir of Ronald Reagan. I think that would be too painful for (the elder Bush.)

“They’re very thinned skinned, but I can relate to that,” she said. “I am too.”
Like her role as a journalist, Bushworld, Dowd said, is not about taking a partisan position, but about “tweaking those in power.”

After all, back in the late ‘90s, some Bill Clinton partisans considered her an enemy for the harsh way her columns treated the president during the Monica Lewinsky scandal Some Democrats assumed she was a Republican mouthpiece, even though in reality, Dowd was even more harsh on special prosecutor Ken Starr.

Although they are harder to find in the book than her complaints about Bush, there also are also some shots fired at Democrats.

John Kerry, she wrote, “has a tendency toward striped-trouser smugness.” She mocks Kerry “when he puts on that barn jacket over his expensive suit to look less lockjaw -- and says things like `Who among us doesn’t like NASCAR’ …”

Talking in the interview about the Bush-Gore debates in 2000, she compared the Democratic candidate to “a waxy orange candle.”

Dowd has been criticized for questioning political leaders on what kind of movies, television shows and music they like. She said she’s interested in the interplay of “personality and power,” insisting that much information about a politician can be found in asking these questions.

In Bushworld, Kerry listed “40- 50” movies. “It was almost like he was trying to get the right answer,” Dowd said in the interview. “Kerry was trying a little too hard.”

While it was obvious that Bush wasn’t as attuned to cultural matters - he named baseball as his favorite “cultural experience,” Dowd found him to be more real and down-to-earth. “That’s a quality that people found charming in 2000.”

“Washington looks like Troy, in a bad way,” she said. “There’s barricades around all the monuments. It makes me sad, because I was raised in Washington, D.C. But it’s a perfect metaphor on how politics is today.”

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: MORE SONGS OF THE SOUTH

As published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 27, 2004

Some critics have hailed The Drive-By Truckers as the second coming of Lynyrd Skynyrd, the undisputed heirs to the throne of Southern rock royalty.

I don’t think that gives the Truckers nearly enough credit.

Although they will never be a fraction as popular as the “Sweet Home Alabama” boys, the Truckers are 10 times deeper. And they rock just as powerful.

With their latest album The Dirty South, the DBTs have unleashed their third straight masterpiece of insightful -- and strong rocking -- observations of Southern life, Southern mythology, Southern pride, Southern shame and Southern horror. The new album continues in the same direction -- and I believe surpasses -- their previous works Decoration Day and Southern Rock Opera.

(Actually, it’s the fourth straight solid DBT album if you include their rollicking, often hilarious 2000 live CD Alabama Ass Whoopin’ .)

The Drive By Truckers, for those who have been denied their pleasure, features three singers and songwriters, OTs (original Truckers) Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley and Jason Isbell, who came aboard on last year’s Decoration Day.

(And credit should be given to an unofficial Trucker, artist Wes Freed, whose spooky cartoons full of big cars, full moons, twisty trees, sexy women and demonic creatures have added to the allure of the last three DBT records.)

Once again, the Truckers take us on a backroads tour of the Deep South, where they look with unflinching eyes at the lives of the people who live there, the heroes they look up to, their wisdom, their lies.

Some heroes you’ll recognize. There‘s some rock ‘n‘ roll history lessons in “Carl Perkins’ Cadillac, which is about the Sun Records heyday while “Danko / Manuel” is about the two late members of The Band.

Two songs, “Boys From Alabama” and “The Buford Stick” serve to deflate the legend of Sheriff Buford Pusser of Walking Tall fame. Between these two is “cottonseed,“ a minor-key acoustic tune by Cooley that doesn’t specifically mention Pusser. But -- with its talk of “greed and fixed elections, guns and drugs, whores and booze” -- might be part of a trilogy.

Isbell‘s “The Day John Henry Died” is more than a sad ode to the mythical steel drivin’ man. It’s a rage against an economy that uses human beings like machines before discarding them.

But the best stories are the ones about folks you’ve never heard of. In “Puttin’ People on the Moon,” (whose spiritual ancestor is Gil Scott Heron’s proto-rap tirade “Whitey’s on the Moon”)

The narrator’s an unemployed Alabama auto worker who’s bitter because the Ford plant shuts down “while over there in Huntsville, they puttin’ people on the moon.”

He scrapes by with running numbers and selling drugs. Meanwhile his wife gets cancer. By the end of the song she’s dead and he’s working at Wal-Mart, “and now over there in Huntsville, even NASA’s shut down too. By the end of the song, the guitars sound like they’re about to explode and Hood sounds as if he’s about to start throwing punches at politicians, preachers or anyone else who might get in his way.

There’s sentimentality in these stories, but none that’s not hard-won. Cooley has a couple of “Daddy” songs. In the opening cut “Where the Devil Don’t Stay,” the beloved father is a bootlegger -- but Mama turns him in.

But even better is “Daddy’s Cup,” which is centered around a racecar driver’s advice from his father, a former racer who had to quit after damaging his eyesight in a crash. From childhood he knows his true purpose in life is “Daddy’s second chance.“ After his pitiful first race, Daddy says, “If you quit now, son, it’s gonna haunt you all your life”

He doesn’t quit, but the driver’s still haunted. He races on with Daddy’s picture on the dashboard. “Since then I’ve wrecked a bunch of cars and I’ve broke a lot of bones …,” Cooley sings. “I lost more than I won but I ain’t gonna give up/Til they put me in the ground or Daddy’s name on that cup.”

Hood’s “Lookout Mountain” -- featuring raging guitars worthy of Crazy Horse -- is a man contemplating suicide. He’s wondering about the aftermath: “Who will end up with my records/Who will end up with my tapes?/Who will pay my credit card bills?/Who will pay for my mistakes?”

The arguments are strongly weighted against the singer throwing himself off the mountain. But somehow he still sounds undecided.

It’s hard to find rock ’n’ roll this tough, this serious any more.


Also recommended:

*Killers and Stars by Patterson Hood.
The Dirty South is a main-course album. But this one’s a nice appetizer. It’s a low-fi, home-recorded collection of 11 original songs and one cover (Tom T. Hall’s “Pay No Attention to Alice”) by the DBT singer. According to Hood’s liner notes, it was recorded when “I had just gotten divorced, was fighting with the band … and a good number of my friends. I was feeling pretty freaked out and isolated ...”

These are prime conditions for some twisted songwriting. And indeed there are some fine disturbing songs here. “The Assassin,” is the strange tale of a killer who’s lost his taste for his art. “Belinda Carlisle Diet” is a bluesy rage about “cocaine and milkshakes.”

But the most memorable tune is “Fire” a metaphor of a doomed love. Is it really about a house fire? If so, was it an act of arson by the singer?

While it’s interesting to hear these songs at an early stage, the above listed ones and several others leave me wanting to hear the full Drive-By Trucker treatment.

Meet the Truckers: No, not literally. But you can get a lot more familiar with their music Friday night on The Santa Fe Opry, KSFR, 90.7 F.M. Hear songs from The Dirty South and previous Drive By Truckers albums. Opry starts at 10 p.m., the Truckers set right after 11 pm.

Thursday, August 26, 2004

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: SWIFT BOATS & N.M. POLITICS

As published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
Aug. 26, 2004

Texas millionaire home-builder Bob Perry isn't just interested in John Kerry's military career. Perry also has used his checkbook to become involved in New Mexico politics.

Perry has been in the national news for being the major contributor to the controversial Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. In case you've been living in a distant dimension the past week or two, that's the Vietnam veterans group who have dominated much of the nation's political discussion due to their television ads and a book claiming the Democratic presidential candidate lied about his Vietnam experiences.

The New York Times and other publications have identified Perry as a close friend of President Bush's political director, Karl Rove, and a past contributor to Bush. Perry, a Houston resident, donated $200,000 to the anti-Kerry veterans.

According to the Center for Public Integrity, Perry also has contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to various conservative and Republican political action committees, such as U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay's Majority Issues Fund; former U.S. Rep. Dick Armey's Majority Leader's Fund; The Club for Growth, an influential PAC dedicated to lower taxes and smaller government; and the College Republican National Committee.

According to an Aug. 8 story in the Los Angeles Times, Perry has donated more than $1 million to the Texas Republican Party and at least $200,000 to Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a tort-reform advocacy group.

Perry also has jumped into New Mexico politics. In 2002, he was the biggest individual contributor to Republican gubernatorial candidate John Sanchez. According to the Washington D.C.-based Institute on Money in State Politics, Perry gave the Sanchez campaign $183,000, while Perry's wife Doylene gave another $55,000.

Combined, that's more than what the Perry family gave the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.

In May the Associated Press reported that Bob Perry was the top contributor to the Republican Party of New Mexico for that reporting period. Sometime between late 2003 and May he gave the party $37,500.

Contacted Wednesday, Sanchez, who is regional director of the Bush-Cheney campaign, said he wasn't aware that Perry was main contributor to the Swift Boat group.

"He was a good supporter of ours," Sanchez said. "I never met him (face-to-face) but I talked to him on the phone."

Sanchez took the official party line on the Swift Boat controversy: "That's an individual group entirely separate from the campaign."

Governor of where? Carmen Villa Prezelski, an Arizona delegate to the Democratic National Convention in Boston last month, wrote a column in the Tucson Citizen recently in which she expressed some bemused frustration at people mixing up her state with ours.

"Not being one to let my state take a back seat, I always corrected them, and believe me, they kept me busy, and New Mexico was especially prominent since its governor, Bill Richardson, was the chairman of the convention," she wrote.

Prezelski told of an encounter with a convention volunteer at Paul Revere Mall.

"'Geez,' he said, 'Did you get a load of that paint job on the RV that your governor has been riding around in?'

"Well, of course I had seen that RV. It was a sight to behold. It had a bright yellow background and had all sorts of glorious Western scenes painted on it.

"'Oh that,' I said. 'That belongs to the governor of New Mexico.'"

Richardson spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said Wednesday the yellow RV wasn't actually the governor's. It belonged to the state Tourism Department, which was in Boston promoting the state (New Mexico, not Arizona) and is expected to be in New York next week for the Republican convention.

Wednesday, August 25, 2004

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE FOUL-SMELLING WASTE THEY'VE TRIED TO PASS OFF AS MUSIC?

CLICK HERE

IS MY BROTHER TOO DANGEROUS?

I didn't realize it until this morning but The New Mexican web site has a poll concerning my brother, Jack Clift and the controversy he stirred when he played on The Plaza last month.

Click here for original story.

Click here for the poll. (You'll also find links to Jack's music.)

Here's the poll questions:

Is Jack too dangerous for Santa Fe?

A. very dangerous! detain them immediately and indefinitely
B. keep these tunes under strict surveillance
C. general light monitoring of activity advised
D. approachable
E. friendly and inviting
F. certified Plaza-safe

Remember, your vote counts. If you don't vote you have no right to complain.

Monday, August 23, 2004

CAMPAIGN MUSIC

Chuck the Duck alerted me to this story about music in the presidential race. Our friend Ed Pettersen is quoted there.

The story, by Newhouse News Service writer Delia M. Rios begins with a discussion of Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land," which was played in Boston as the Democratic National Convention.

Funny thing is, a couple of weeks ago at President Bush's appearance, they played a marching band version of "This Land is Your Land" as the president was exiting. I couldn't resist bugging a couple of my Republican friends. "Did you know they're playing a song by a known communist?"

They looked at me like I was crazy.


WACKY WEDNESDAY: Albums Named for Unappetizing Food

O.K., I'll admit this is a pretty dumb idea.  It came to me yesterday after I ran into my friend Dan during my afternoon walk along the ...