Monday, October 08, 2007

THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS

THE SUN ABOUT TO SET ON TMBG

As always, the two Johns & band provided a fun show, even though we missed the first couple of songs. For some reason I thought the show started at 7. Imagine my panic at about 6:30 p.m. when I looked at my tickets and discovered the show started at 6. (Yes, despite my job as a music columnist, I actually buy tickets for most shows I'm not covering. So no, I can't get you on "the list" for upcoming shows) "Not to worry," I told my son. "There's an opening act."

Guess again. Walking up to the Brewing Company we heard the distinct sounds of "Put a Little Birdhouse in Your Soul."

Oh well. We missed less than my daughter and I did at the George Jones show a couple of years ago when I missed the turn off to Isletta Pueblo. The one time George starts a show on time, and I was late!

But like I say, the Giants were fun, even though I bet that's the last outside show at the Brewing Company this year. Starting to get chilly.

I think my favorite tune last night was "Particle Man," mainly because they tack on the chorus of the weird old Bob Lind folk-rock hit "Bright Elusive Butterfly of Love" at the end of the tune. Was I the only one in the audience old enough to remember that tune?

They also did a great version of "Istanbul" with a delightfully strange organ solo by John L. and an impressive classical guitar intro by Dan Miller. And I was happy to hear a complete version of "Fingertips" including a nice extended overwrought "Darkened Corridors." These days I'm mainly used to "Fingertips" in its various 20-second or so segments popping up in inaappropriate times on my iPod shuffle mode.

I'm not satisfied with the photos I got, but you can see a few of them HERE.

Turns out I could have made it the station on time for my show, but since Noah was already planning to sub (thanks Noah!) I just let him do it.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, October 5, 2007
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

Now Simulcasting 90.7 FM, and our new, stronger signal, 101.1 FM

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Hello World by Horace Heller
2000 Man by The Gourds
New Lee Highway Blues by David Bromberg
Don't You Wish It Was True by John Fogerty
The Girl on Death Row by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
The Crossing by Ray Campi
Shell of a Man by Johnny Bush & Justin Trevino
La Mula Bronca by Al Hurricane

In the Highways by The Peasall Sisters
John Law Done Burned Down the Liquor Sto' by Chris Thomas King
Fishing Blues by Taj Mahall
Hitchhiker by Blue Velvet Band
Big Rock Candy Mountain by John Hartford
He's Coming to us Dead by Ralph Stanley
Coffee Blues by John Sebastion & David Grisman
One Cut, One Kill by Bone Orchard
Ashes of Love by Rose Maddox

Don't Look and It Won't Hurt by Richmond Fontaine
Cut the Cards by Chris Whitley & The Bastard Club
The Ballad of Terri McGovern by Joe West
Gambling Charlie by Michael Hurley
I'd Rather Be Your Enemy by Lee Hazlewood
Waking Dream by Trailer Bride
Colorado by Chevy Chase
Scattin' the Blues by Les Primitifs du Futur

Study War No More by Michelle Shocked
Evening Gown by Jerry Lee Lewis with Mick Jagger & Ronnie Wood
Angel of the Morning by Chip Taylor & Carrie Rodriguez
Old Friends by Roger Miller, Willie Nelson & Ray Price
Big in Vegas by The Derailers
Whispering Pines by The Band
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Friday, October 05, 2007

FAMILY BINNUS

In my music column this week I plugged Taj Mahall's recent recording at Frogville with Hundred Year Flood and Boris & The Saltlicks.

I also should mention my brother Jack Clift's recent recording project. He's been in Kentucky and Tennessee lately doing a recording project with John Carter Cash. Recently they've recorded Ralph Stanley and The Peasall Sisters (remember them from O Brother Where Art Thou?).

Not sure what the album is going to be, but I have a feeling it's going to be a strange combination of American hillbilly music and Uzbeki sounds.

Here's a couple of photos:
(Left to right: Stanley's guitarist James Shelton, Dr. Ralph, Jack, John Carter Cash)

(I don't know the Peasall's names, but that's them with Jack and John Carter Cash.)

WHAT A WEEK!


I'm a political junkie, but with all the stuff going on these past few days I feel like I'm about to OD.

And now Julia's accusing me of hagiography. At least it's not child hagiography.

Besides all the scrambling for Pete Domenici's seat (Heather in, Udall out, Pearce pondering, Lyons leaning, Richardson closing the door), the latest story is about state Sen. John Grubesic's announcement he's not running for re-election. Here's an early Web version of the story. But check The New Mexican tomorrow. There's much more, including a possible surprise candidate.

My favorite part of Heather's announcement press conference today was seeing Al Hurricane there and getting to yack with him for the first time in at least a couple of years. Al's a long-time Wilson supporter. But whatever your politics, he's a great New Mexican musician. I'll play a song of his on the Santa Fe Opry tonight.

No politics for me this weekend. I'm taking my son to see They Might Be Giants at the Santa Fe Brewing Company Sunday. If you see me there do me a favor and don't try to talk politics. back in 1992 or so I took my daughter to see TMBG in Albuquerque and I had to threaten to strangle this guy WHO WAS ON ACID and wanting to talk politics (!!!!) during the concert.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: MICHELLE & JUDEE

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
OCtober 5, 2007


In introducing Michelle Shocked at the outset of her new live album ToHeavenURide, an announcer says “We’ve always enjoyed what she’s brought to us. It’s different every time.”
That it is. Through the years Shocked has released folky campfire music, big-band swing, sensitive chicky singer-songwriter stuff, an album of Disney songs, and she even took a stab at East Los Angeles R & B.

But in recent years, Shocked seems most grounded in the world of gospel music. She’s not just a spectator when it comes to gospel. She attends services and sings in the choir at a Church of God in Christ in Los Angeles. My favorite Shocked album (except for the periods in which I prefer the country rootsy Arkansas Traveler) is 2002’s gospel-propelled Deep Natural.

ToHeavenURide was recorded at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival in 2003 and almost seems like an extension of the earlier album. It features a band centered around the Dancy family from the New Greater Circle Mission Church in South L.A. The title of the album is a play on one supposed root of Telluride’s name, “to hell you ride.”

There are only two Deep Natural songs here — the reggae-infused “Can’t Take My Joy” and “Good News,” a rocking tune inspired by an environmentalist struggle led by church folks against a polluting company in a Louisiana town.

ToHeavenURide starts off with a slow, eight-minute groove on a classic song by Sister Rosetta Tharpe, “Strange Things Happening Every Day.” Here, Shocked talks about “the ministry of Sister Rosetta,” who she says is considered by some to be the “father” (that’s what she says!) of rockabilly, a “church lady playing electric guitar and wearin’ a blonde wig.” People didn’t understand her ministry, Shocked says, “’cause she wouldn’t just play in the churches. She would play in the nightclubs, she would play in the bars, she would play wherever anyone needed to hear the Word.”

My personal favorites here are “Good News,” another Shocked original called “The Quality of Mercy” (originally on the Dead Man Walking soundtrack compilation), and the much-covered classic “Uncloudy Day” in which Shocked is accompanied only by background singers and a tremolo guitar. Try not to think about Pops Staples during this one.

Also recommended:
*Live In London: The BBC Recordings 1972-1973
by Judee Sill. Just a few years ago it seemed that all traces of the late singer/songwriter Judee Sill had been completely wiped out of the collective memory of the human race. You couldn’t find much of anything about her on the Internet. There even was a dispute about when she died. (It was 1979, at the age of 35, of a heroin overdose. )

But since Rhino Handmade rereleased her (only) two albums — Judee Sill and the immortal Heart Food — a few years ago, more and more people are being initiated into the strange and alluring world of Sill’s music. (In case you haven’t guessed, Heart Food is one of my favorite albums in the history of civilization.)

Lasr, Warner released both the albums and various outtakes and alternate versions as Complete Asylum Recordings (also called Abracadabra: The Asylum Years). The year before, the independent Water Records released Dreams Come True, consisting of recordings for her never-completed third album, plus other stray demos and live tapes.

Now comes a live album, also released by Water. These stripped-down solo versions of songs from her two official studio albums were recorded during a British tour. You can hear Sill talking between songs about her music and her career, including how she learned to play gospel piano in reform school. She talks about the religious mysticism that haunts her songs. But her reflections are jarring knowing that with the commercial failure of Heart Food, her career would soon fizzle, and she would drop out of sight and be dead in just a few years.

If you haven’t heard the studio albums, get them first to hear these songs as God — or at least Judee — intended them to be remembered. But if you are already a Sill fan, you’ll need this record. While I prefer Heart Food’s full-blown version of “The Donor,” the solo version here also will infest your soul.

Local recording notes: Frogville Records recently scored a coup when it snagged bluesman Taj Mahal — in town for a Sept. 21 show at the Santa Fe Brewing Company — to record harmonica and guitar tracks for upcoming releases by Hundred Year Flood and Boris & The Saltlicks.

Frogville supreme commander and president-for-life John Treadwell explained it this way: “We had less than an hour and a half with Taj in the studio before we had to rocket him back to the hotel to change clothes, but it was just perfect. We got just what we needed. He is such a professional.” Treadwell said he and producer Andy Kravitz stuck around in the hotel parking lot to make sure Taj Mahal got a ride to the show. This was fortunate because the musician’s ride never came. Treadwell and Kravitz got him to the Brewing Company “with about two or three minutes to spare.”

Taj Mahal is the second nationally known performer to record on the ongoing Flood sessions. Country rocker Shannon McNally was rounded up to sing on the upcoming album when she was in Santa Fe for an August bandstand show on the Plaza.

Speaking of Boris & The Saltlicks, kudos to the group for winning in the country/folk/singer-songwriter category at New Mexico’s State Fair Talent Showcase last month.

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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