Saturday, May 10, 2008

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, May 9, 2008
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


Now Simulcasting 90.7 FM, and our new, stronger signal, 101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
White Trash Girl by Candye Kane
Wanted Man by Johnny Cash
Hey Little Dreamboat by Rose Maddox
I Push Right Over by Rosie Flores
Qualudes Again by Bobby Bare
Friday Night on a Dollar Bill by Huelyn Duvall
Have Love Will Travel by Big Sandy
High and Wild by Ray Condo & His Ricochets
Tiny Blue Transistor Radio by Connie Smith
Tore Up Junction by Arty Hill & The Long Gone Daddies
The Palace Roses by Todd Andrews

Bleeding Willow by Bone Orchard
Blue Diamond Mines by Kathy Mattea
Reprimand by The Santa Fe All Stars
Nobody Eats at Linebaugh's Anymore by John Hartford
Johny Can't Dance by Mama Rosin
Merchants Lunch by The Austin Lounge Lizards

THE COMBINATION PLATEMY DINNER
Guacamole by The Texas Tornados
Martha's Tacos by Billy Bacon & The Forbidden Pigs
Tamale Baby by Joe "King" Carasco y Las Coronas
Cook yer Enchiladas by Stephen W. Terrell
Pink Burrito by R. Crumb & His Cheap Suit Serenaders
Big Chorizo by Manic Hispanic
Hot Burrito #1 by The Flying Burrito Brothers

Red Hot by Billy Lee Riley
Whatcha Gonna Do Now by Tommy Collins
Junior by Simon Stokes

New Song of Freedom by Chip Taylor
A Girl in a House on Felony Flats by Richmond Fontaine
Davey Took a Gun and Killed His Wife/Sittin' on a Jury: The Verdict/Sittin' on a Jury: Epilogue by The Wilders
Weakness in a Man by Waylon Jennings
Old Flames Can't Hold a Candle to You by Dolly Parton
Iowa City by Eleni Mandell
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Friday, May 09, 2008

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: FIREWATER SEEKS ITS OWN LEVEL

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 9, 2008


Back in the late ’80s to mid-’90s, singer Tod A was in an “industrial” band called Cop Shoot Cop. Remember industrial music? It was kind of like heavy metal played by evil robots.

The main thing I remember about Cop Shoot Cop was a little ditty called “Surprise, Surprise,” from the 1993 album Ask Questions Later, which featured the refrain, “Surprise, surprise! The government lies!” (The album was released just a few weeks before the Branch Davidian tragedy in Waco, Texas. Surely a coincidence.)

Tod’s latest band, Firewater, can hardly be considered industrial. In fact, its new album, The Golden Hour, which was recorded in India, Pakistan, Turkey, and Israel, has an international rock sound influenced by the music of those nations as well as Balkan music and even some Latin and Caribbean styles.

But Mr. A still has some of that Cop Shoot Cop spirit in him. He might not sound like an evil robot anymore, but he’s still repulsed by government lies.

The Golden Hour has the feel of a political exile’s diary. Disgusted with the paranoid climate in the U.S. — and having just split with his wife — a frustrated and depressed Tod left the country with a guitar and a laptop, recording local musicians in the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, and Southwest Asia.

Khyber Pass interlude. Tod kept a written diary, available on his blog, . One of my favorite posts is from Aug. 1, 2006. Scroll down to “Sick Days, Sufi Nights, Drugs, Guns, and Transvestites,” which concerns his decision to abort his plan to cross the Khyber Pass, which links Pakistan and Afghanistan, because of the danger of kidnapping.

“I learned a lot about football: locked in an Amritsar hotel room with only the World Cup and the shits to stave off the interminable boredom; I escaped being drugged and robbed in Jaisalmer; I entertained thinly veiled marriage proposals from Punjabi farm girls; I ate opium and jammed with Thar desert gypsies; I slept alone under the stars; I danced with transvestites among the graves of Sufi saints; I took many pictures; I stood in the rain with crowds of ecstatic people as the first rains of the monsoon erupted from the sky; I made a healthy start on a novel; I recorded six music groups, gathering enough rhythm tracks for the next Firewater album; I was robbed only once (a cellphone), but otherwise managed to hang on to my computer and other pricey recording gear. I made some new friends. Weighed with these measures the trip was a success.”

Back to the music. “Borneo,” a cool jungle stomp that reminds me a lot of Los Lobos’ version of “I Wanna Be Like You (The Monkey Song),” sets the stage for The Golden Hour: “Well, I ain’t gonna live in your world no more (Hey, Borneo!)/Feelin’ like a flunky for a two-bit whore (Here I come, Borneo!)/You got a monkey for a president (Hey, Borneo!)/And a head all filled up with cement (Look out, Borneo!)”

Tod is more pensive on the next track, “This Is My Life,” on which he is backed up with ents, and what the liner notes describe as “cannibal drums” played by (Tamir Muskat of Balkan Beat Box). “I’ve never cared for authority/I’ve never felt part of the majority/I lost my home, I lost my wife/This is no joke — this is my life.”

Each song is a weird little foreign adventure — bouncy Bollywood reggae in “Banghra Bros”; a sad tango with a crazy guitar solo in “Paradise”; some circus music, complete with trombone and banjo in “Hey Clown” (which might be another George W. Bush “tribute”); and “Electric City,” which sounds like the soundtrack for a spy movie.

Though The Golden Hour is charged with political anger (“We’re gonna burn your flag and piss on your parade,” Tod rasps on “Hey Clown”), his feelings of melancholy are the most striking element of the album. This mood reaches a climax in “Feels Like the End of the World.”

Though the music, recorded partly in Istanbul, is up-tempo — lots of that James Bond guitar and impressive percussion — Tod’s lyrics speak of emotional crisis. “And I probably should shave/And dig myself out of this grave/But I can’t go, no, not just yet ... So tonight in the bar/Of this hotel bizarre/I’ll write some postcards and throw them away.”

The traveler returns in “Weird to Be Back,” Fishbone-like ska with a little flamenco guitar. “So I just dropped in today/To check up on my old obsessions/Everything’s the same/Or maybe just a little worse.”

And by the last song, “Three Legged Dog,” Tod’s back on the prowl, his self-effacing humor at full strength. “You know my father thinks I’m crazy ’cause I ain’t got no career/And my mother thinks I’m crazy and my sister thinks I’m queer/Ah, but if you think it’s easy, man, you just ain’t got no idea/I’m a three-legged dog on the roam.” Backed by a “Sympathy-for-the-Devil” woo-woo chorus (and Uri Kinrot — also of Balkan Beat Box — on electric banjo), this tune gives us hope that Tod A’s going to be roaming for a long songs from The Golden Hour.

Also recommended:
* Dances of Resistance by Babylon Circus. This is a French band that specializes in ska and reggae. But this latest album shows the group has a good awareness of other sounds, too.

“De la Musique et du Bruit,” for instance, is a little jazzy, a little poppy, and a lot crazy. You can hear a Mideastern influence and maybe even a little Mr. Bungle as the tempo picks up.

The Bungle comparison is even more apt in “Mr. Clown” and “Musical Terrorism Act.”

Meanwhile “Warlord” could be described as science-fiction reggae, while “Sailor’s Wife” is ska with hillbilly-twang guitar and strange clarinets. And you have to love the little circus-music instrumental interludes that pop up between songs.

Babylon Circus makes me miss another great French band, Les Négresses Vertes; their 1988 debut album Mlah was a world-punk milestone.

UPDATE: Several hours after the initial post, I repaired some computer-induced gibberish in the Firewater review.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: FUN WITH ENDORSEMENTS

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 8, 2008


Gov. Bill Richardson has had his problems with the state Senate in recent sessions of the Legislature — not infrequently with senators who are, like Richardson, members of the Democratic Party.

But that’s not stopping the governor from helping several incumbent Democratic senators facing tough primary challengers.

And at least a couple of his state endorsements are bound to be unpopular with the Democratic Party’s progressive wing.

Stopped in the Roundhouse hall immediately after his appearance on Larry King Live on Monday night, the governor said he has endorsed several incumbent senators, including James Taylor and Shannon Robinson (both representing Albuquerque districts) as well as Carlos Cisneros of Questa. “I’m mainly helping with fundraising,” he said.

Why these candidates? “They seem to have the most contested primaries,” Richardson said.

The Cisneros primary hasn’t grabbed much statewide attention. The six-term Cisneros is being challenged by Archie Velarde and Erminio Martinez.

Taylor and Robinson have been targeted by liberal reformers who say the two are too conservative. Their challengers — Eric Griego and Tim Keller, respectively — have been endorsed by the Albuquerque-based Democracy for New Mexico blog as well as Conservation Voters New Mexico and several labor unions.
Sen. James Taylor
Taylor, a former majority whip in the House, was appointed to his seat by Richardson in 2004 to fill out the term of Manny Aragon, who left the Senate to become president of New Mexico Highlands University. At the time of the appointment, Richardson called Taylor “one of the best natural politicians in New Mexico.”

But Taylor is being challenged by someone who also has been appointed by Richardson to state office, former Albuquerque City Councilor Griego. In 2005, Richardson named Griego as assistant secretary of the state Economic Development Department. He worked there until last year, when he became executive director for New Mexico Voices for Children, an advocacy group that sometimes has been at odds with Richardson’s economic policies.
Sen. Shannon Robinson
Robinson and Richardson have crossed swords before. During the 2007 session, Robinson angrily withdrew as a sponsor of a Richardson-backed bill to create a new Media Arts and Entertainment Department. Robinson was upset because the governor had appointed former Secretary of State Rebecca Vigil-Giron as head of the state Film Museum. The bill withered and died, and Richardson eventually withdrew Vigil-Giron’s appointment.

But that’s apparently celluloid under the bridge. Recently Richardson appeared with Robinson at Highland High School in Albuquerque at a news conference about traffic safety.
Is that YOU, Richard?
Revenge of the Invisible Man: But one old Richardson legislative ally has decided to endorse Keller over Robinson. Former state Senate President Pro-tem Richard Romero said in a news release this week: “We need to send a true Democrat like Tim to the Roundhouse. I know where Tim stands — he’s ethical and competent.”

Romero never said anything like that about Robinson. In 2001, Romero’s first year in his leadership post after ousting Aragon from the pro-tem position, Robinson made a point of denouncing Romero nearly every day in overheated speeches on the Senate floor. Robinson mocked Romero as “The Invisible Man.”

The Heldmeyer endorsement: Former City Councilor Karen Heldmeyer might have left office in March, but she keeps her old constituents — and apparently reporters — updated on her activities with occasional mass e-mails. On Wednesday, she announced her support for Ben Ray Luján for the Third Congressional District Democratic primary.

“On the (Public Regulation Commission), he has worked for better consumer protection and increased use of alternative energies, work that has earned him the endorsement of the Sierra Club and the Conservation Voters of New Mexico,” Heldmeyer wrote. “Additionally, I have been impressed that he has bucked the old-time Democratic establishment on issues such as coal-fired electric plants and truly universal health care.”

But what was more interesting was Heldmeyer’s blistering rejection of Luján’s rival in the Democratic primary, Don Wiviott.
Don Wiviott, Dem
“Since Don has never been elected to office, the only thing I have to judge him on is his record as a businessman and a developer,” said Heldmeyer, who often voted against development projects while on the council.

“I have to say that I have frequently been appalled by the tactics he has used to push his developments through the city process,” Heldmeyer continued. “He is the master of misrepresentation, last minute bait-and-switch tactics, and manipulation. ... Don is among the worst of the worst. ‘Green development,’ for him, seems to be a business tactic that comes and goes depending on market forces, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s not exactly an unwavering philosophy. The tactics he uses in business cause me to call into question the sincerity of all the statements he is making to put forward his candidacy.”

Heldmeyer didn’t share her opinions on Benny Shendo Jr., Harry Montoya or the other CD 3 candidates.

Wiviott’s campaign responded Wednesday, saying the candidate has worked for more than a decade in Santa Fe trying to improve the quality of life here. “Wiviott has made it a priority to work closely with community members and has redesigned his projects in response to neighborhood concerns. Wiviott is a firm believer in maintaining a constructive approach when it comes to problem solving and never believes in resorting to baseless personal attacks that slow progress. In Congress, Wiviott will bring people together, even those who disagree with him.”

But I’m guessing if Heldmeyer ever runs for office again, she won’t get a campaign contribution from Wiviott — unlike another former councilor, David Pfeffer. Wiviott’s $2,100 contribution to Pfeffer’s 2006 U.S. Senate race is still raising eyebrows among some Democrats, because Pfeffer was running as a Republican.

Monday, May 05, 2008

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 4, 2008
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

Now Simulcasting 90.7 FM, and our new, stronger signal, 101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Eddie Are You Kidding? by Frank Zappa
Tobacco Road by The Blues Magoos
Streaks and Flashes by The Chesterfield Kings
The Quartermass Phenomenon by Man or Astroman?
Voodoo Doll by The Gore Gore Girls
Sexx Laws by Beck
Nothing But a Heartache by The Detroit Cobras
Explosion by April March & The Makers
I Couldn't Spell !!*@! by Roy Loney & The Young Fresh Fellows
No, I'm Ironman by The Butthole Surfers

Whoa Mule (Shine) by Bo Diddley
Whistlin' Past the Graveyard by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Jivin' Around by Andre Williams
Better Watch Your Step by Koko Taylor
Bloody Mary by Barence Whitfield & The Savages
To the Left, To the Right by T-Model Ford
The Monkey by The Great Gaylord
Feelin' Good by Jessie Mae Hemphill

MISSION OF BURMA SET
All songs by Mission of Burma except where noted
Academy Fight Song
The Ballad of Johnny Burma
Tremelo
Peking Spring
That's When I Reach For My Revolver
Throw Your Voice by Kustomized
Max Ernst's Dream
Spider's Web
Lou's Got the Flu by Roger Miller

Hey Clown by Firewater
La Caravane by Babylon Circus
Frankie and Johnny by Kazik Staszewski
Mystic Eyes by Them
Hola Coca Cola by Joe King Carrasco y Los Coronas
Ever Lovin' Man by The Dirtbombs
Let There Be Peace on Earth by Candye Kane

CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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 ...