Friday, June 09, 2006

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: GRASSROOTS ROCK

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 9, 2006



I’m a writer, not a gardener. So I had to look up the word Zoysia, the title of the new Bottle Rockets album. It’s a type of grass used in suburban lawns. I thought it was a breakaway Soviet republic.

But the image of suburban lawns is at the metaphorical center of this album by Brian Henneman and his trusty band of blue-collar rockers. “But in the meantime, life just goes on/We pay our bills, we mow our lawns.”

Zoysia can be seen as a loose-knit concept album about yearning for normalcy and moderation — yearnings not normally associated with rock ’n’ roll. Sure, artists like John Hiatt have been here before, but Henneman is one of the first rockers who came of age in the ’90s to deal with middle age, middle-class values, and trying to maintain middle ground in divisive political times.

One of the songs here is even called “Middle Man,” which has Henneman grousing, “If I could be a little bit happier/If I could be a little more cranky/If I could be a little more Dixie/If I could be a little more Yankee ...” (Henneman is from Missouri, a Civil War border state).

In “Align Yourself,” Henneman mocks those who give up their individuality to groups and movements. Singing through an electronic filter that almost sounds like a bullhorn, he recites an alphabet soup of various special interests, religions, political parties, and football conferences. “NRA, KKK, Adventists Seventh Day ... FFA, PLO, choose your partner there you go/NAMBLA, PETA, People’s Temple.”

While members of Future Farmers of America might resent being lumped in with the North American Man/Boy Love Association, the message of the song is in the refrain: “Align yourself, define yourself/When you don’t know who you are, you can remind yourself.”

On “Blind,” a slow, twangy tune (complete with mandolin and slide guitar played by Rockets string man John Horton), Henneman sermonizes about the pitfalls of judging people by race and appearance and takes a cheap shot at the American Idol/Britney Spears pop universe. “If we all were blind/would we be surprised at who’d become important in our eyes?”

The most moving track is the title song, which comes at the end of the album. “In my neck of the woods, the town where I live/It’s out in the sticks and conservative/Got lots of churches, we’ve got lots of bars/And the kids ’round here, they fight our wars.”

The lyrics of the bridge remind me of driving through Santa Fe neighborhoods during election season: “Out on the lawns we got campaign signs/We always know when it’s election time/The guy next door, his signs are not like mine/But he’s all right/We get along fine.”

Then there’s that image of the grass, a metaphor of interconnection among people who live close to one another: “If your neighbor gets the zoysia grass, buddy you get zoysia too/And maybe if you hurt yourself, he’ll mow the lawn for you.”

Musically, Zoysia shows the Rockets doing what they do best. They roar like Southern-rock warriors on “Better Than Broken” and “Mountain to Climb” and burn on the Neil Youngish “Happy Anniversary.” They’re also perfectly capable of good-time country, as in “Blind” and “Feeling Down.”

The biggest musical surprise here — and by a landslide the prettiest song on the album — is “Where I’m From,” a slow, mainly acoustic song with trippy chord changes that recall The Grateful Dead’s Aoxomoxoa.

While not breaking much new ground — and not likely to set the commercial woods on fire — Zoysia shows Henneman and The Bottle Rockets living up to that self-description in “Middle Man”: invisible and reliable.

Also recommended:
En Este Momento
by Cordero: Fans of Los Lobos and Calexico definitely should check out Cordero. This is a four-piece band (guitar, bass, drums, and trumpet) that specializes in minimalist, Mexicano-influenced rock.

Singer Ani Cordero, who also wrote all the songs, is from Brooklyn by way of Georgia, where she played drums for a side project of the old space/surf group Man or Astro-man? She has also spent time in Arizona, where she got some recording help from Giant Sand man Howe Gelb.

Cordero’s warm vocals are the main draw here; she sings mainly in Spanish. But trumpeter Omar Little and drummer Chris Verene (Cordero’s husband) are indispensable. Verene shows his stuff on percussion-heavy songs like “Come on Dear” and “María Elisa.”

My favorite songs here include “Don’t Let Them Destroy You,” which has an early-’60s girl-group feel (Shangri-Las go south of the border?); “Matadora,” which would have fit in on the first Los Super Seven album; “La Piedra,” a quiet, acoustic waltz that threatens to explode in thunder; the upbeat “Don Julio,” which Al Hurricane should cover; and “Mamá Ven a Buscarme,” which could almost be part of an Ennio Morricone soundtrack.

For more information on Cordero and The Bottle Rockets, check out www.bloodshotrecords.com.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: STARTLING E-MAIL

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 8, 2006


During a primary campaign, a reporter receives tons of e-mails and news releases — most of them predictable self-serving drivel.

But a campaign e-mail I got late last Friday afternoon was downright startling.
The subject line read as follows:

“Press Release — J.R. Damron Quits”

Lots of thoughts raced through my head as I clicked to open the e-mail. Was something wrong with the Republican gubernatorial candidate? (I’d just seen Damron a few days before at a Michael Martin Murphey concert, and he seemed to be in good health and spirits. I even snapped his picture backstage with a celebrity, as shown at the right.)


Had GOP kingmakers, perhaps frustrated by Gov. Bill Richardson’s ridiculously huge campaign-fund advantage, forced him out of the race to replace him with some better-known candidate (whoever that might be)?

Had Richardson’s opposition-research operatives unearthed something shocking and nasty?

Had George Bailey’s quixotic write-in campaign suddenly picked up steam?

But when I read the actual message, it was nothing of the kind. Damron had quit his medical practice. He saw his last patient Friday. At first, it seemed like a pretty misleading subject line. But it sure got my attention fast.

(For the record, Damron beat Bailey in the primary by a margin of 99.3 to .7 percent.)

Inside the e-mail: Damron said he was quitting his practice to devote full time to his campaign. He said he’d also be a full-time governor, calling the frequently traveling Richardson an “absentee governor.”

“Richardson planned to be an absentee governor from the start,” the statement said.

Then came something I’d never heard before.

“Almost as soon as Richardson was inaugurated as governor, he had the state Legislature change the number of days allotted for the governor to be out of state from 30 to 180,” the statement said. “Richardson knew from the start he planned to be out of state half a year.”

Something bothered me about that. If that had happened and somehow everyone in the press missed it, I can think of at least six Republicans who would have been calling the next day to make sure someone noticed.

Raul Burciaga of the Legislative Council Service said Wednesday that he could find no such legislation.

“In 1999, the Legislature changed the compensation of the lieutenant governor (for days served as acting governor),” Burciaga said. The lieutentant guv gets an extra $250 a day every time the governor leaves the state.

Richardson became governor in 2003.

Richardson spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said Wednesday that Richardson never asked for — and never received — any such legislation.

In 2002 — the last year of Gov. Gary Johnson’s administration — the Department of Finance and Administration created a “dedicated source” (that’s DFA-speak for a reserve fund) to pay the lieutenant governor for those days, Gallegos said. This took effect in fiscal year 2003.

The fund was originally $26,700, allowing for 106.8 days. “It was based on past history,” Gallegos said. Subsequently, the fund was cut to $20,000, allowing for 80 days, he said. He said Richardson hadn’t exceeded that amount.

Even if this shot was a misfire, Richardson’s travel is bound to be an issue in the upcoming campaign.

Wen Ho who? Speaking of potential campaign bombshells, chances of the Wen Ho Lee case blowing up on Richardson during the campaign were lessened greatly last week when the former Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist settled his privacy lawsuit with the government and five news organizations.

The case had turned into a battle over reporters’ confidential sources. Lee accused the Energy and Justice departments of violating his privacy by leaking the fact he was under investigation as a spy for China. Five reporters were held in contempt of court for refusing to disclose their sources.

Last year, federal Appeals Judge David Sentelle singled out the names of Richardson — who was secretary of Energy — and two other Department of Energy officials as being the probable sources of the leaks.

In a sworn deposition for Lee’s lawsuit, Richardson testified he didn’t remember making some statements about the Lee firing attributed to him in various newspapers.

So it looks like Lee got $1.6 million. And maybe the governor got off the hook.

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

POST-ELECTION STRESS

Three of the four races I was covering for The New Mexican last night turned out to be nail biters.

Only Lucky Varela's legislative race turned out to be a blowout.

In the Democratic race for state land commissioner, Jim Baca held on to his lead, surviving Ray Powell's good showing in Albuquerque. The final unoffical result, posted on the Secretary of State's Web site show Baca with 52.6 percent to Powell's 47.4.

Even more frustrating were the two Rio Arriba County races I was watching.

At 8 a.m., with 43 of 43 precincts reporting, it looks like Debbie Rodella won with 51.1 percent to Moises Morales' 48.9 percent.

And it looks like Tommy Rodella took the magistrate judge's race with 24 percent. Marlo Martinez came in second with 21 percent.

Antonio Manzanares, who was leading when the paper went to bed last night, fell into 4th place.

What to watch now is what Gov. Richardson does about the vacancy in the judge's seat.

Normally a governor appoints the winner of the primary to fill a vacancy. However, several months ago Richardson told a room full of reporters and editors that he would not appoint Rodella.

If he keeps to that, he'll either have to appoint a temporary judge who will serve until the end of the year or keep the position empty for another 6 months. It's been vacant since Rodella resigned last July.

Somehow, my land commission story didn't make it on The New Mexican's Web site. I'll reprint it here:

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 7, 2006


The two candidates in the Democratic primary for state land commissioner were locked in a tight race Tuesday night with the contest too close to call.

As midnight approached, Jim Baca had 51 percent of the vote and Ray Powell Jr. 49 percent with 90 precincts reporting, but neither candidate was ready to declare victory or concede.

Even before election day, Powell and Baca — both former land commissioners — were making nice with each other in a campaign that, in contrast to some primary contests, avoided personal nastiness and overheated criticisms of each other.

In fact, both Democrats made public statements indicating party unity.

“My hat is off to my opponent, Ray Powell, for running a positive campaign,” Baca wrote on his personal blog Monday. “If he vanquishes me, I will be fully supporting him in the general election.”

“Whoever wins, there’s going to be a united Democratic effort to take back the Land Office,” Powell said Tuesday.

This means, at least in this race, that the Democrats won’t be saddled with leftover primary bitterness in a contest where the incumbent has a staggering financial edge.

According to campaign-finance reports filed with the state last week, Lyons, who faced no primary opponent, had more than $469,000 in contributions for his race.

By comparison, Baca had only $769 in the bank June 1 and more than $11,000 in unpaid campaign debts, while Powell had about $50,000 and some $45,000 in unpaid campaign debts.

Lyons already has spent about $200,000 in his campaign during the past year.

The contest between Powell and Baca centered on differences between the candidates’ management styles and temperaments.

Baca portrayed himself as aggressive and unafraid of confrontation with big-money interests and the federal government to protect the land. Powell emphasized consensus building and diplomacy.

Both were highly critical of Lyons, whom they portrayed as being more interested in helping big business than protecting the land.

Earlier this year, Baca blasted Lyons for producing television spots at state expense that featured Lyons. The state paid television stations to run these as commercials. Both Democrats criticized Lyons for using campaign funds to buy a pickup registered in his name.

Some of the criticism has put Lyons on the defensive. He stopped the commercials and sold the truck.

This week, his office released a statement pointing out that so far during his tenure, Lyons has spent $5 million on 144 land-management projects on nearly 17,000 acres of state trust land.
The statement says Lyons has hired an additional biologist, an environmental specialist and a land-management analyst.

UPDATE: Well, actually this story is on the New Mexican site. I'll leave it here anyway.

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

MUSIC IN THE AIR

In the last couple of days I've gotten press releases on two free (!) outdoor summer music programs in Santa Fe: The Santa Fe Bandstand series on the Plaza (hey! I don't see my brother's band!) and the new Music on the Hill at St. John’s College series.

The schedules are posted below.

Also, even though they're not free, don't forget Fan Man's Santa Fe Community picnic concert ( Ozomatli plus Ryan McGarvey, Sol Fire and Hundred Year Flood, July 2 at Fort Marcy); Frogfest (James McMurtry plus Frogville faves at Santa Fe Brewing Company, August 19 and 20); The Santa Fe Traditional & Bluegrass Music Festival (Bluegrass Patriots, Sweet Sunny South and more August 25-27 at the Santa Fe Rodeo Grounds); and The Thirsty Ear Festival (Dave Alvin, Honeyboy Edwards, Patty Griffin, Be Good Tanyas and others at Eaves Ranch, Labor Day Weekend).

2006 Santa Fe Bandstand Schedule

EVENINGS 6-8:30pm

Wed July 5 Opening Night

Albert & Gage Christine Albert & Chris Gage--High energy country-folk

Brother E. Clayton & the Mighty Soul Deacons Classic soul

Thurs. July 6 International Folk Art Market Night

Round Mountain Enchanting mix of Middle Eastern, Balkan, Celtic and Folk

Los Pinguos Putumayo Recording Artists --Argentine folk groove band


Mon. July 10 Bill Hearne Living legend acoustic country folk artist

South by Southwest Premier southwestern swing and country band

Tues. July 11 Jono Manson Santa Fe Legend returns with his rootsy rock 'n roll

Alex Maryol Band Original rock 'n roll and blues music

Wed July 12 Don Lovato Group Latin smooth jazz and pop

Caldo Tlalpeno Classic Mexican Music from Cuidad Juarez

Thurs. July 13 New Mexico Music Commission Night

Red Earth Award winning Native funk, ska, rock, blues, jazz

Brother E & The Blue Rhythm Kings Award winning NM Soul and R&B Band

Mon. July 17 The Twobers w/ One Foundation Live hip-hop and a twist of funk & reggae

Key Frances Original Psychedelic Funk

Tues. July 18 Just Friends Straight ahead classical jazz
Busy McCarroll and the Ambassadors of Pleasure Power jazz pop noir

Wed. July 19 Mariachi Buenaventura New Mexico’s first all female mariachi

Johnny Hernandez & Crossroads Tejano recording artist

Thurs. July 20 Stephanie Sieberth New Orleans' Jazz vocalist
Ron Helman Jazz Ensemble Jazz music of the 50’s and 60’s

Mon. July 24 Y. Que Latino rock world fusion

Jaka Afro pop funk fusion


Tues. July 25 Joe West Way out west honky-tonk and originals
Shannon McNally New Orleans' soulful singer and entrancing songwriter

Wed. July 26 Spanish Market Night

Santa Fe Suzuki Institute Young students playing strings and flute

Manzanares Nuevo Flamenco meets Latin Rock

Thurs. July 27 Ken Valdez Rock with Blues and Latin influence
The Motet Touring Colorado afro-beat groove band

Mon. July 31 The Rifters Southwestern Americana
The Pleasure Pilots Rhythm 'n blues, jump and swing

Tues. Aug. 1 Public Safety Night

Hillary Smith & Hip Pocket Old school funkiness, R&B and power house blues
The Jimmy Stadler Band High energy rock--NM Mic Award for Best CD of 2006

Wed. Aug. 2 Cherry Tempo Indie rock

Sol Fire Rock pop with a Latin edge

Thurs. Aug. 3 Night Train Roadhouse blues and R&B
Teri Lee Browning Heart felt beat driven pop


Mon. Aug. 7 Boris McCutcheon Psychedelic desert rat music

Hundred Year Flood Rockin' Americana

Tues. Aug. 8 Sean Helean Band Western rock
HooDoos Bluzrok

Wed. Aug. 9 Native Spirits Contemporary and traditional Native American music
Bermudez/ Valentine Quartet Nuevo Santa Fe

Thurs. Aug. 10 Samba Fe The beat of Santa Fe
Wagogo World beat—Memphis to Mozambique to Mexico

Mon. Aug. 14 Toast Original roots rock

The Hollis Wake Infectious Pop that seriously rocks

Tues. Aug. 15 Ruben Romero with band--virtuoso Spanish and flamenco guitarist

Prince Diabate with band --master kora player from Guinea, West Africa

Wed. Aug. 16 Latina Night

Nacha Mendez, Gioia Tama, Busy McCarroll de Alsaro, Karmela Gonzales, Bobbi Jo Marquez and Lisa Martinez

Thurs. Aug. 17 Indian Market Night

Iyah Reggae soul
Native Roots Native reggae

Mon. Aug. 21 Santa Fe Traditional & Bluegrass Music Festival Night

Atomic Grass Traditional bluegrass

Elliot’s Ramblers Great old bluegrass in a brand new way

Tues. Aug. 22 Taarka A synergy of sounds that blends bluegrass, folk, gypsy and jazz

Georgie Angel Blues Band featuring Junior Brown Feel good blues

Wed. Aug. 23 Los Wise Guys Variety of golden oldies and Beatle covers

Buena Suerte Cumbias, polkas, country, rock and oldies

Thurs. Aug. 25 The Swank Jam funk blues roots band
Julie Stewart & The Motor Kings High energy rockin' blues

AFTERNOONS Noon to 1:30

Thurs. July 6 Velarde Trio Traditional New Mexican old time music

Tues. July 11 The Watermelon Mountain Jug Band Eclectic mix of country and bluegrass

Thurs. July 13 Fiddlin' Doc Gonzales Classic country swing

Tues. July 18 The Hot Club of Santa Fe Hot swing, gypsy Jazz and Bluegrass

Thurs., July 20 Straight Up Be-bop jazz quintet

Tues. July 25 Don and Victoria Armstrong Southwest folk and original favorites

Thurs. July 27 Laurianne Fiorentino Powerful original acoustic music

Tues. Aug. 1 Mike Owens & Sister Mary Evans Acoustic Jazz and Pop

Thurs. Aug. 3 Jaime Michaels Original singer songwriter

Tues. Aug. 8 Larry & Leslie Latour Folk rock jazz blues

Thurs. Aug. 10 Justin Bransford & Jetpack Rental Groove-based improv trio

Tues. Aug. 15 Trio Los Musicanos Northern New Mexico traditional and modern music

Thurs. Aug. 17 Terry Diers & Sweet Sister Sweet R&B

Tues. Aug. 22 Love Buzzards A reunion of old friends who love traditional folk music

Thurs. Aug. 24 Trillium Marimba Marimba and guitar family band


Music on the Hill at St. John’s College

June 14 Jazz with Chris Calloway

June 21 Jazz with Ron Helman

June 28 Latin Jazz with Terra Plena

July 12 Folk Blues with Chris Dracup Trio

July 19 Jazz with Cathy McGill w/ Bert Dalton Trio

July 26 Calypso with Frank Leto

Monday, June 05, 2006

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 4, 2006
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Samisen Boogiewoogie by Umekichi
Turn Into by Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Blues From an Airplane by Jefferson Airplane
Death Sound Blues by Country Joe & The Fish
Drunk by Johnny Dowd
My Mind is Ramblin' by The Black Keys
Sailor Man by The Mighty Sparrow

Son of Shaft/Feel It by The Bar-Kays
Porry by Sorry Bamba
Get on the Boat by Prince
Firewater by Big Chief Monk Bordreaux & The Golden Eagles

FIERY FURNACES SET
Teach Me Sweetheart
Single Again
Guns Under the Counter
The Vietnamese Telephone Ministry
I'm Leaving
Birdy Brain
Whistle Rhapsody

Lay Down Burden by Brian Wilson
Kingdom of Cold by Hundred Year Flood
The Great Pagoda of Funn by Donald Fagen
Fall Awake by The Ditty Bops
Shaken, Rattled and Rolled by T-Bone Burnett
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Sunday, June 04, 2006

GOP SENATE RACE GOES NEGATIVE


The three Republicans seeking the nomination to run against incumbent Democrat Jeff Bingaman for U.S. Senate seemed to turn on each other last week -- just before Tuesday's primary.


HERE'S my story in today's New Mexican.


And, speaking of last-minute campaign coverage, HERE'S a quick look at the Rio Arriba magistrate judge race.

Saturday, June 03, 2006

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, June 2, 2006
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
The Ballad of Thunder Road by Robert Mitchum
True Religion by Hot Tuna
Lion in Winter by Hoyt Axton
Action Packed by Ronnie Dee
Whole Lotta Things by Southern Culture on the Skids
Pill Bug Blues by The Gourds
Payday Blues by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Sho-Jo-Ji/The Hungry Racoon by Petty Booka

Dirty Old Town by Frank Black
Milly's Cafe by Fred Eaglesmith
Byrd From West Virginia by I See Hawks in L.A.
Mystery Mountain by Porter Wagoner
The Virginian by Neko Case
Hunter Green by The Handsome Family
You Better Stop Drinking Shine by Rev. I.B. Ware, Wife & Son

Sunbonnet Sue by The Fort Worth Doughboys
Liberty by Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys
Ida Red by Merle Haggard
Saving My Love by The Stumbleweeds
Funky Tunk by Moby Grape
Highway Patrol by Junior Brown
Cold Canadian Love by Joe West
Pop a Top by Jim Ed Brown
Maybe You Heard by Todd Snyder
Chuckie Cheese Hell by Tim Wilson

Cowboy Logic by Michael Martin Murphey
Dancing With the Women in the Bar by Whiskeytown
Don't Let Them Destroy You by Cordero
Where I'm From by The Bottle Rockets
Just a Dream by Eleni Mandell
When Two Worlds Collide by Roger Miller
Country Bumpkin by Cal Smith
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Friday, June 02, 2006

DEAF EARS


I guess the governor didn't listen to my suggestion about voluntarily ceasing his fundraising activities and donating most of his treasury to charity.

His re-election campaign raised more than a half million last month. CLICK HERE for the AP story.

ALso, here's a link to my story about campaign finance reports for local legislative candidates.

And here's my story about problems with the reports showing up on the Secretary of State's Web Site.

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: BURN ON FURNACES!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 2, 2006


The brother-and-sister team known as The Fiery Furnaces continues to amaze, delight, and occasionally confound unsuspecting listeners on its latest musical adventure, Bitter Tea.

Bitter Tea is an opportunity for writer/multi-instrumentalist/mad-genius-boy Matthew Friedberger to toss in everything plus a few kitchen sinks, while sister Eleanor Friedberger, the main Furnace singer, captivates and allures. Eleanor’s voice — sweet, clear, sometimes even a little prim — seems like an earthly anchor for a ship tossed along a stormy, unpredictable musical sea. (Strangely enough, the album was released on Fat Possum, once known as a hard-core blues label. Despite some wicked slide guitar in the song “Police Sweater Blood Vow,” I don’t think R.L Burnside done it this a way.)

The music changes from song to song — and often several times within a song. Electronic madness bounces off an old-timey tack piano.

While the Furnaces don’t really sound like anyone else, you could spend an afternoon trying to trace the influences.

“Waiting to Know You” could be doo-wop as filtered through The Flaming Lips. When “Oh Sweet Woods” gets going, it sounds like a mutated noir take on Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean.” You might hear distant echoes of Brian Wilson’s Smile smirking here and there. There’s sugar-pie-honey-bunch Motown hooks beneath the electronic insanity of “Benton Harbor Blues” (though my favorite touch here is the Garth-Hudson-on-Pluto, roller-rinky organ sound that also colors the backdrop). Bouncy, Beatlesque touches abound — and tell me you don’t hear the spirit of Plastic Ono Band-era John Lennon in “Police Sweater Blood Vow.” And somewhere in the cosmos, Spike Jones smiles knowingly.

In interviews, the Furnaces have said that Bitter Tea is a companion piece to last year’s album, Rehearsing My Choir, a strange family-album kind of album featuring narration by the Friedbergers’ grandmother. While Choir dealt with the memories of an old woman, Bitter Tea is from the perspective of a young girl.

There are lyrical threads here dealing with innocence and its inevitable loss, temptation, sexual curiosity, and danger.

On the title song, the music is built around a faux-Oriental melody — think Madame Butterfly on angel dust. After a frantic synth introduction lasting about a minute, Eleanor pipes in, announcing: “I’ve got a special category business down by the Multifunctional Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Rollerblade Rink ...” After being tempted to drink the “bitter tea,” the music reverts back to a slow, rinky-tinkly version of the original melodic theme, as the Friedbergers sing, “I am a crazy crane/I lost my true love in the rain.”

This song melts into the next track, “Teach Me Sweetheart,” which begins with strange squiggly noises arising over a thumping bass line. Eleanor sounds downright sultry as she sings, “Come away, teach me sweetheart.” But the song swings from sensual to severe as the subject turns to her in-laws:

“My mother-in-law was standing by the stove/hissing like a snake, hissing like a snake ... She gave orders to spill my blood ...”

On “The Vietnamese Telephone Ministry,” the narrator seems to be aching for purity. She seeks solace in a wide variety of churches — and she lists them by name (and address!) :

“I went to the Right Road Ministry at 4801 S. Normandie. I went to the Armenian Brotherhood Bible Church at 5556 Harold Way ... the Iglesia Evangelica Rey de Reyes y Señor y Señores ... the Brotherhood of the Cross and Star and Kingdom of God in Faith at 3810 W. Slauson and I drove around listening to the Greater Bethany Tape Ministry ...”

(This song ends with Eleanor singing a series of telephone numbers. In a forum on a Furnaces fans’ Web site, someone called “todd” apparently called one of the numbers. He posted: “I called and a woman answered with a weak sounding ‘hello?’ and then i proceeded to ask if this was in fact the vietnamese telephone ministry, but she replied with ‘espanol!’ and i switched to my spanish asked her if she knew the fiery furnaces, and she said no ...”)

Sometimes the tempo and melody changes within a song are a little too abrupt for comfort and some of the studio trickery gets a little thick. (Maybe not so much backward vocals next time, OK guys?)

But overall, Bitter Tea confirms that the dreamlike sound of the Fiery Furnaces is some of the most interesting and strangely satisfying music being made these days.
(www.thefieryfurnaces.com)

Also Recommended:

Show Your Bones
by Yeah Yeah Yeahs. “Sometimes I think that I’m bigger than the sound,” Karen O shouts repeatedly as the refrain to the song “Cheated Hearts.” Is this a self-critical examination, a chastisement for putting her ego ahead of her band? Or is it a self-affirmation, a way to say that holding onto her real identity is more important than any rock ’n’ roll facade? As her voice rises, it seems more a realization than a question. She’s bigger than the sound!

But that sound is pretty big, too, and here on YYY’s second album, it’s gotten even bigger. This little trio from Brooklyn (since moved to Los Angeles) is making a noise that’s just as loud as before, but broader — more accessible and pop-conscious without losing the ragged appeal that made us love them in the first place.

Such a move is a gamble that some bands can’t survive. (Why am I having these sad visions of Big Brother & The Holding Company?) On the single “Gold Lion,” which opens the album, Karen sings about taking “our hands out of control.” It takes a worried gal to sing a worried song.

But I’m optimistic about Yeah Yeah Yeahs.The music is even more irresistible than ever. And even when they get all anthemy on the last song, “Turn Into,” guitarist Nick Zinner channels Joe Meek and cuts loose with a craze, strangled solo that references The Tornadoes’ “Telstar.”

Thursday, June 01, 2006

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 1, 2006



There’s a nifty little shindig going on next Tuesday. I’m helping pay for it.
But I’m not invited to join in the fun.

I’m talking, of course, about the 2006 primary, where Democrats and Republicans will be allowed to choose their nominees for the November election.


But I’m not a Democrat or Republican. I’m a proud member of the DTS classification. (That stands for “Declined to State,” not “Dedicated to Satan.”)

Many of us still use the word “independent.”

According to statistics on the Secretary of State’s Web site, 15 percent of New Mexico voters registered under DTS, while members of minor parties account for another 2 percent of the state’s registered voters.

In Santa Fe County, it’s 17 percent DTS, 3 percent minor parties.

That means that in this county a full 20 percent of registered voters are not allowed to participate in Tuesday’s election to help select candidates for the November general-election ballot.

Except to help pay for it.

State Election Bureau Director Ernest Marquez said Wednesday that the last primary cost taxpayers between $400,000 and $500,000.

The Founding Fathers had a catchy little phrase for such an arrangement: “taxation without representation.”

Doesn’t this smell like a lawsuit waiting to happen?

What to do?: One solution would be to let the parties run and pay for their own primaries. The state Democratic Party managed to pull off a similar operation in 2004 with their presidential-preference caucus.

Another approach would be an “open primary” in which voters of any affiliation could chose to vote in whichever party’s primary they chose. In other words, if you were enthralled by one of the three Republican Senate candidates, you could choose to vote in the GOP primary, no matter how you’re registered with regard to party affiliation. Or if you have a keen interest in the three Dems running for attorney general, you could choose to vote in the Democratic primary.

Twenty-one states do it this way.

The fear, of course, is mischief by the opposing party — Democrats voting for a Republican crook or goofball and vice versa — to assure a weak opponent in the general election. I guess that’s a possibility, though both sides have to realize such tactics could backfire.

(And even states with closed primaries have been known to elect crooks and goofballs from time to time.)

But don’t worry, fellow DTSers. Even though all the campaigns are ignoring you now, in a few months, all of them are going to want to be your friend. At least the ones who survive the primaries.

Campaign finance: The latest round of campaign-finance reports are due today. A day before the deadline, at least one candidate already was touting his numbers.

Democrat Moises Morales, trying to unseat Rep. Debbie Rodella in District 41, said Wednesday that he has doubled his treasury in the last month. He’ll be reporting he has collected a total of about $8,000 for his campaign.

Rodella has collected more. As of last month, she still had more than $17,000 cash on hand. That number is likely to rise today.

Morales has made an issue of Rodella’s contributor list, noting a large share of her cash came from out-of-state corporations. A spokeswoman for Morales said he only has two contributions from outside New Mexico — both from farmers in Wyoming. The larger of those two contributions is $200.

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