Monday, October 12, 2009

LIVE MEKONS SHOW


It's been about five years since I've seen The Mekons live, so maybe this is the next best thing. I found this on the Live Music Archive.

It was recorded just last July in San Francisco. (I just noticed Tom Greenhalgh is missing! Still a good show though.)

There's a new song called "Space in Your Face," performed in public here for the first time.

Langford keeps breaking strings.

Enjoy.



Here's the playlist:

Thee Olde Trip To Jerusalem
Millionaire
Wild And Blue
Give Us Wine Or Money
Tina
Abernant 1984/85
Oblivion
Diamonds
Cockermouth
Corporal Chalkie
Fantastic Voyage
Dickie
Chalkie, And Nobby
Beaten And Broken
Ghosts Of American Astronauts
Space In Your Face
Big Zombie
Last Dance
Hard To Be Human
Hole In The Ground
Memphis, Egypt

Sunday, October 11, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, October 11, 2009
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

Webcasting!
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Run and Hide by The Bomboras
Circus Freak by The Electric Prunes
Merkin Surfin'/Baby's Got Kinks by Purple Merkins
War All the Time by Dan Melchior and Das Menace
The Midnight Creep by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Fortunate Son by The Kilimanjaro Yak Attack
Peanut Butter by The Marathons
Sonic Reducer by The Dead Boys
Pachuco Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys

Get it On by Grinderman
Mr. Orange by Dengue Fever
Passion by Fuzzy Control
Lice Cots and Rabies Shots by Troy Gregory with Bantam Rooster
Not to Touch the Earth by The Doors
Sleepwalkers by Modey Lemon
Two Headed Dog (Red Temple Prayer) by Roky Erikson
Haunted House by Jumpin' Gene Simmons

The Ghost With the Most by The Allmighty Defenders
He Knocks Me Out by The Del Moroccos
The Lovers Curse by The A-Bones
Debbie Gibson is Pregnant With My Two-Headed Love Child by Mojo Nixon
Rare as the Yeti by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds
Mojo Workout by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Bikini by The Bikinis
200 Years Old by Frank Zappa & Captain Beefheart
Mother's Lamemt by Cream

Teacher by The Polkaholics
Zeroes and Ones by The Mekons
Big Sombrero (Love Theme) by Pere Ubu
All Beauty Taken From You by Chris Whitley
Monsters of the ID by Stan Ridgway
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Saturday, October 10, 2009

MOJO NIXON GOES NUTS: OFFERS FREE DOWNLOADS OF HIS ENTIRE CATALOGUE


It's true. Mojo Nixon, singer of "Elvis is Everywhere" and father of Debbie Gibson's two-headed love child is offering free downloads of all his albums, plus a few scattered "singles" on Amazon.com.

Put a Louisiana Liplock on that!

Nixon explained in a press release I've seen on a couple of places on the Web:

"Can't wait for Washington to fix the economy. We must take bold action now. If I make the new album free and my entire catalog free it will stimulate the economy. It might even over-stimulate the economy. History has shown than when people listen to my music, money tends to flow to bartenders, race tracks, late night greasy spoons, bail bondsman, go kart tracks, tractor pulls, football games, peep shows and several black market vices. My music causes itches that it usually takes some money to scratch."


Among the weird treasures here are two Nixon songs recorded with The World Famous Bluejays for the Rig Rock Truckstop compilation -- a cover of Roger Miller's "Chug a Lug" and "UFOs, Big Rigs and BBQ."

Unfortunately, The Pleasure Barons album, Live in Las Vegas, which features Mojo, Dave Alvin and Country Dick Montana, isn't included in the freebies. But, what the heck. Download a bunch of free Mojo and buy the goddamn Pleasure Barons.

Hurry. Apparently this is only good for three weeks.

(Thanks to Chuck, my Washington correspondent, for alerting me to this.)

Friday, October 09, 2009

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, October 9, 2009
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Redneck Vixen From Outerspace by Captain Clegg And The Night Creatures
Mr. Spaceman by The Byrds
Hogtied Over You by Billy Bacon & The Forbidden Pigs with Candye Cane
Engine Engine Number 9 by Southern Culture on the Skids
Hard Headed Me by Roger Miller
Boogie Woogie Dance by Devil in a Woodpile
Qualudes Again by Bobby Bare
The Church of Saturday Night by Artie Hill & The Long Gone Daddies
Hangover Heart by Hank Thompson
Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond of Each Other by Willie Nelson
Pardon Me I've Got Someone to Kill by Andre Williams & The Sadies

Mamma Possums by Mojo Nixon & Skid Roper
Dixie Fried by Carl Perkins
It's Not Enough by The Waco Brothers
Who's Gonna Take Your Garbage Out by Rosie Flores & The Pine Valley Cosmonauts
Poor Me by Big Al Anderson
Shanghai Rooster Yodel by Cliff Carlisle
I've Taken All I'm Gonna Take From You by Spade Cooley
32.20 by The Flamin' Groovies
You're a Loser by Young Edward

CHARLIE POOLE SET

High, Wide and Handsome by Loudon Wainwright III
If The River Was Whiskey by Charlie Poole
Hesitation Blues by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
The Deal By Loudon Wainwright III
My Wife Went Away and She Left Me by Charlie Poole
All Go Hungry Hash House by Norman Blake
I'm The Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World by Loudon Wainwright III

East of Woodstock, West of Viet Nam by Tom Russell
Ghost of Stephen Foster by Squirrel Nut Zipper
Cocktails by Robbie Fulks
In the Good Old Days When Times Were Bad by Dolly Parton
Won't it Be Wonderful There by The Delmore Brothers
Presently in the Past by Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
Crawdad Hole by Gus Cannon
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Thursday, October 08, 2009

TERRELL'S TUNEUP:THE MAN WHO RODE THE MULE AROUND THE WORLD

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 9, 2009


Loudon Wainwright III’s High Wide & Handsome: The Charlie Poole Project is not your typical tribute album.

In the liner notes, Wainwright says that this double-disc set is a “sonic bio-pic” about Charlie Poole, a man he has long fantasized about portraying in the movies — a hard-living, ramblin’, gamblin’, singing moonshiner who was a big influence on him as well as on countless country, folk, and bluegrass singers and probably on more rock ’n’ rollers than you might imagine.

Wainwright, accompanied by his trusty musical family (including some of his offspring) plays lots of songs associated with Poole (who didn’t write his own music) and tunes about the man.

Poole, described by a bellowing drunk at his funeral in 1931 as a “banjo-playing son of a bitch,” was a traveling North Carolina songster who, despite his tragically short career (he died at the age of 39 after a 13-week drinking binge) helped build the foundation for what later became known as country music.

His love of the bottle, scrapes with the law, and funny, sometimes violent, interactions with his audience can be seen as early examples of rock-star excess. As Wainwright sings in “Charlie’s Last Song,” (co-written by Wainwright and Dick Connette), “Old Charlie would fight, once he hit a policeman/They throwed him in jail ’cause that’s wrong/And when he broke out, the cops took him on home/And Old Charlie he played them a song.”

Born in 1892 in Eden, North Carolina, Poole worked in a mill and as a bootlegger and a baseball player. But music was his passion — and his ticket out of hard labor and drudgery. He began playing a homemade banjo at 8. He eventually was able to afford a store-bought instrument with his illicit profits from bootlegging whiskey.

In the early 20s, Poole’s band, The North Carolina Ramblers, lived up to its name. The musicians rambled out west to Montana and as far north as Canada.

Poole and company traveled to New York to record with Columbia Records in 1925 — two years before the Bristol sessions, in which producer Ralph Peer of the Victor Talking Machine Company introduced the world to the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers; many identify these sessions as marking the “birth” of country music.

From his New York session, Poole cut his first 78 rpm hit: “Don’t Let Your Deal Go Down Blues,” backed with “Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight, Mister.”

Wainwright sings about this in “Way Up in NYC” and refers to Columbia A & R man Frank Walker. “In September, Frank released ‘The Deal’ and yes it was a hit/We never got another penny, just enough to make you wanna quit/If you’ve ever been bamboozled you know how I feel/From now on the new name of that song is ‘The Raw Deal.’ ”

It’s worth noting that Wainwright, early in his career in the 1970s, was under contract with Columbia. Poole wasn’t the last musician to feel bamboozled by the record industry.

There are other parallels between the careers and, to a certain extent, the personas of Poole and Wainwright. When Wainwright sings Poole’s “Goodbye Booze,” I hear echoes of his own songs like “Wine With Dinner,” “Drinking Song,” “Down Drinking at the Bar,” and “Heaven and Mud” (“We fell off the wagon, you should have heard the thud.”).

Another common Poole theme — mama — has been well covered by Wainwright. Listening to Wainwright sing Poole’s sentimental (some might say maudlin) tunes honoring his dear old gray-haired mother — “My Mother & My Sweetheart,” “Mother’s Last Farewell Kiss,” and “Where the Whippoorwill Is Whispering Goodnight” — I’m reminded of Wainwright’s 2001 album Last Man on Earth.

The thick booklet included in the Poole package includes an essay by first-generation rock critic Greil Marcus, who sums up the appropriateness of Wainwright “putting on the dead man’s clothes” to celebrate Poole.

“I didn’t know who was luckier,” Marcus writes. “Poole might have been waiting all these years for someone to talk back to him so completely in his own language; Wainwright might have been waiting since he first heard Charlie Poole to get up his nerve to do it.”

A back-road detour with Marcus: As much as I’ve loved his writing, especially the book Mystery Train, sometimes the mighty Greil tends to, well, overthink things.

Here he ponders Wainwright’s biggest hit, the classic novelty song “Dead Skunk.” Says Marcus, “The more you heard ‘Dead Skunk,’ the funnier it got, but out of the blood and guts on the back road where someone five minutes or five hours before you had hit the thing, you could feel an undertow, a self-loathing, a wish to disappear and never come back, to lose even your own name.”

Undertow? Self-loathing? Whaaaaa?

Back to the project: The songs I like the best here are the funny ones.

“Moving Day” tells about a guy who’s about to be evicted trying to pay his rent with chickens he just stole from the landlord. “If I Lose” is about Spanish-American War veterans (“The peas was so greasy, the meat was so fat/The boys were fighting the Spaniards, while I was fighting that.”).

“I’m the Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World” is downright cosmic in its kookiness (“Oh, she’s my daisy, she’s black-eyed and she’s crazy/The prettiest girl I thought I ever saw/Now her breath smells sweet, but I’d rather smell her feet.”).

Wainwright sums up Poole’s life — and much more, I believe — in the title song, which opens and closes the project:

“High, wide and handsome, you can’t take it with you/High, wide and handsome, that’s one way to go/Let’s live it up, might as well, we’re all dying/High, wide and handsome, let’s put on a show.”
Good show, Loudon.

Jump in the (Charlie) Poole: I’ll be doing a radio tribute to the North Carolina rambler tonight on The Santa Fe Opry — playing tracks from Wainwright’s tribute, tunes by the master himself, and covers of Poole songs by Norman Blake, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and others. The Opry, as always, starts at 10 p.m. on KSFR FM 101.1 and on the Web at www.ksfr.org

Monday, October 05, 2009

BIG SHOW TONITE!



In celebration of Tom Trusnovic's impending 40th birthday there's a big bash tonight at Corazon. For the first time in 15 years 27 Devils Joking rears its ugly head. Plus other Trusnovic bands like Monkeyshines, The Floors and The Blood-Drained Cows (featuring ex-Angry Samoan Greg Turner) as well as Two Ton Strap and Lenny Hoffman.

And yes, if I can remember how to play guitar by 9 p.m., I'm going to sing a couple of songs myself.

That's 9 pm at Corazon, 401 S. Guadalupe St. $5 Cover

Sunday, October 04, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, October 4, 2009
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Bing Bong There's a Party Goin' On by The A-Bones
Kissing Tree by Barrence Whitfield
I Want Your Body by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Skanky Puddin' by The Soldedad Brothers
Hallucination Generation by The Fuzztones
Monster Blues by Dexter Romweber
I Found a Peanut by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds
Love Special Delivery by Thee Midnighters
Muchos Burritos by The Come n' Go
Good Cabbage by Victoria Spivey

Spreading the Love Vibration by 27 Devils Joking
Get Your Kicks on Route 666 by Monkeyshines
The Kingdom of My Mind by The Mistaken
The Man in Your Bed by The Hormonauts
Little Tease by Goshen
Snuff Time by Willie Weems & The Outlaws
Talkin' Trash by The Marathons


March of Greed/Less Said the Better by Pere Ubu
It's a Gas by Alfred E. Neuman
Back in Hell by Rev. Beat-Man & The Un-Believers
Big Mouth Mickey by The Gulty Hearts
Red Wine by The Juke Joint Pimps
Your Woman by Andre Williams & The New Orleans Hellhounds
I'm Not Like Everyone Else by The Rockin' Guys
Do the Funky Walk by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Mad Dog On My Tail by Paul "Wine" Jones

Nudist Camp by Ross Johnson
Living For the City by The Dirtbombs
If I Ever Kiss It, He Can Kiss It Goodbye by Swamp Dogg
Messed Up World by Wiley & The Checkmates
Sapphire by Big Danny Oliver
El Pescador Nadador by Los Lobos
Precious Lord Hold My Hand by Sister Rosetta Tharpe
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

eMUSIC OCTOBER


* Introducing Wiley & The Checkmates I sought this one out after recently being turned on to Wiley's latest album, We Call it Soul, which I reviewed in my Tuneup column a few weeks ago. (This album also is available on eMusic.)

The band is fronted by Herbert Wiley is a veteran journeyman soul singer whose career goes back to the 1960s — although he also had a day job for a few decades, operating a cobbler shop in Oxford, Miss. (My favorite biographical tidbit was Wiley says that, as a child, he used to work on William Faulkner's shoes.)

While I prefer We Call It Soul, (9 times out of 10, I'm going to prefer any album that includes a cover of "Ode to Billy Joe"), Introducing is a fine effort full of good funky Southern soul that recalls the good old Stax/Volt era without sounding precious or retro. I love the horn duel in "Dog Tired" and the Blaxploitation strings, congas and screaming guitar in "Messed Up World." And when Wiley sings that he's in "deep shit" in the song of that title (over a bass-heavy musical backdrop that might remind you of psychedelic-era Temptations), he sounds like he knows what he's talking about.

In addition to this album, I also downloaded a Wiley & The Checkmates single, "Milk Chicken". It's good, but I have to admit I was a little disappointed to find out it's an instrumental and not a continuation of Wiley's chicken phobia he sang about on "I Don't Want No Funky Chicken" on We Call It Soul.


* Dracula Boots by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds. Now here's a musician with a pedigree. Brian Tristan, better known as Kid Congo Powers has been a member of The Cramps as well as Nick Cave's Bad Seeds and The Gun Club.

This record, however doesn't sound much like any of those. It's pretty darn impressive though. There's lots of instrumentals with Kid Congo laying down cool basic psychedelic guitar riffs as the bass rumbles, the drums send coded messages from the jungle and electronic effects sizzle in the background. Sometimes there's New Wavey keyboards adding some science-fiction zing to the mix.

Where there are vocals, they are mostly spoken by Powers. He can sound sinister in songs like "La Llorona" (yes, that's my favorite tune here) or goofy, like "Found a Peanut," a cover of a Thee Midnighters tune.


* Raw, Raw Rough by Barrence Whitfield. Barrence still is a savage!

Released earlier this year, Raw is his first solo album in years. But he's still got that early rock 'n' roll/crazed R&B spirit that was so refreshing when he burst out of Boston with his band The Savages in the mid-80s.

Here he plays with a basic stripped down band -- guitar, bass, drums a sax. I'm not sure who the group is, but they stomp and wail. And Barrence shouts with such abandon he makes Screamin' Jay Hawkins look downright shy.

There's lots of original -- or at least obscure enough to be original -- tunes here including shouters like "Early Times," "Kissing Tree" and the opener "Geronimo." Also, Whitfield pays tribute to not one but two classic Pacific Northwest garage bands, covering "Strychnine" by The Sonics and a near-forgotten classic by The Kingsmen, "Long Green." (This also was a minor hit for New Mexico's Fireballs back in the '60s.)

Though the shouters are his main strength, Whitfield also shows he can handle some "slow dances." "I Wouldn't Want to Be in Your Shoes" and "One More Time" are nice and purdy in an Otis Redding kind of way.


* Talkin' Trash by The Marathons and Friends. They call it trash, but I treasure this stuff. This is a collection of 26 R&B obscurities from the '50s by seven vocal groups.

The Marathons, The Olympics, The Danliers , The Lions, The Lexingtons, The Boulevards and The Robins.

I have to confess, the latter group is the only one of these with which I was even halfway familiar. They're best known for Leiber & Stoller tunes "Riot in Cell Block #9" and "Smokey Joe's Cafe." (neither of which are here) and for spawning The Coasters, which became known as the funniest R&B group in the '50s.

But even though they weren't nearly as well known, The Marathons, who have 11 songs on this collection, could give The Coasters a run for their money. They did novelty tunes like "Peanut Butter" and "Tight Sweater" (written by Sonny Bono!), and funny story tunes like "Chicken Spaceman" (did this insoire the Don Knotts movie The Reluctant Astronaut?) and "C. Mercy Percy of Scotland Yard."

But the craziest -- and most addictive -- song on this album is the title song by The Marathons. It features a girl who responds to the singer's advances with the craziest laugh ever recorded.

Plus:

* 11 Tracks from Live at the Double Door 1/16/2004 by Robbie Fulks. I downloaded most of this album years ago when I first joined eMusic. At the time I just downloaded songs that I didn't have on other Fulks album. (A lot of those would later appear on Fulks' album Georgia Hard.) Thanks to eMusic's new policy of offering complete albums for the cost of 12 tracks, I was able to pick these up for just a couple of track credits. And I'm glad I did. Among the ones I just downloaded are fine versions of Fulks standbys "Dirty Mouth Flo," "I Push Right Over" (though I still prefer Rosie Flores' cover), "She Took a Lot of Pills (And Died)," "Parallel Bars" (with the under-rated Donna Fulks singing Kelly Willis' part) and "Knot Hole."

Taking advantage of the eMusic album-price policy, I also picked up six tracks I skipped from another live album I downloaded years ago, The Handsome Family Live at Schuba's, a December 2000 show. True, all these tracks were between-song patter and most were only a few seconds long. But what the heck, they were free.


* 8 tracks from A Country Legacy 1930-1939: CD B by Cliff Carlisle. Cliff was born in Kentucky in 1904. My grandfather's name was "Clift" and he was born in Kentucky in 1903.

Coincidence?

Carlisle, who began recording in the '30s, might be described as Jimmie Rodgers with a dirty mind. Lots of his songs. He had the Singing Brakeman's yodel, but he had Blowfly in his soul. His tunes were full of hell-raising, barnyard humor and sex. I believe he was the only white guy included on the Dirty Blues Licks compilation, which I downloaded last month. (He also did some occasional powerful religious material, perhaps to atone for his rough and raunchy ways.)

My favorites from this batch I downloaded include "That Nasty Swing" -- yes, it's about what you think -- which 60-some years later was covered by Blue Mountain, as well as "Shanghai Rooster Yodel," a precursor to Howlin' Wolf's "Little Red Rooster."

I downloaded the first disc from this collection years ago. I can't wait to download the rest of Disc B when my account refreshes this week.

Friday, October 02, 2009

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, October 2, 2009
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

CALL AND PLEDGE FOR THE KSFR FUND DRIVE !!!!
505-428-1393 Toll-free 1-800-907-5737

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Get Up and Go by David Bromberg
Penny Instead by Charlie Pickett
Feel Good Again by Charlie Feathers
Don's Bop by Artie Hill & The Long Gone Daddies
Girl Called Trouble by The Watzloves
The Taker by Waylon Jennings
Fools Fall in Love by Katy Moffatt
Swing Troubador by Christine Albert

Took My Gal Out Walkin' by Loudon Wainwright III with Martha Wainwright
Ramblin' Blues by Charlie Poole
Chatanooga Sugar Babe by Norman Blake
That Nasty Swing by Cliff Carlisle
Three Times Seven by Doc & Merle Watson
See That Coon in a Hickory Tree by The Delmore Borthers
I'm a Rattlesnakin' Daddy by Blind Boy Fuller
The Sad Milkman by The Handsome Family

See Willie Fly By by The Waco Brothers
Power of the 45 by Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys
Got Me a Woman by Andy Anderson
Fruit of the Vine by Nancy Apple
Honky Tonk Heroes by Billy Joe Shaver
Man in Black by Johnny Cash
Dolores by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
Drinkin' and Smokin' Cigarettes by Rev. Horton Heat
I Got Your Bath Water On by Butterbeans & Susie

The Gypsy by Cornell Hurd
Wild Bill Jones by Jim Dickinson
Everybody's Clown by Skeeter Davis & NRBQ
Opportunity to Cry by Wilie Nelson
The Highwayman by Zeno Tornado
Tumblin' Tumbleweeds by Sally Timms
Surface of the Sun by Exene Cervenka
Potter's Field by Dave Alvin & The Guilt Women featuring Christy McWilson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Thursday, October 01, 2009

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: PERE UBU LIVES UP TO ITS NAME

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 2, 2009



I’ve loved Pere Ubu — the avant-weirdo band originally from Cleveland — for years, but I was ready to be put off by the group’s latest album, Long Live Père Ubu!, because of some of the statements in the project’s press material.

The album is a musical adaptation of Ubu Roi, an 1896 play by Alfred Jarry, whose work influenced the Surrealist and Dada movements and later the Theater of the Absurd. The band took its name from the play’s protagonist.

Long Live Père Ubu! is not background music. It’s not ‘fun’ music,” the press release says. “It’s an intellectual and conceptual challenge and as viciously satirical as Jarry’s original.”

Then it quotes David Thomas, the band’s frontman: “If you’re not going to listen to this with the same effort you’d devote to a literary novel, you’re wasting your time. ... It’s long past time for rock music to grow up and move past the simpering platitudes or Tom Joad cant that passes for serious thought. All hail the survival of the Unfit!”

Thomas also claims that Long Live Père Ubu! is “the only punk record that’s been made in the last 30 years.”

First of all, as an Okie, I resent that disparaging remark about the hero of The Grapes of Wrath. But even more troubling is all the highfalutin art talk. What is this, Emerson, Lake & Palmer? It sounds like the condescending gibberish spouted by ivory-tower culture critics who bestow artistic legitimacy upon Sgt. Pepper and haughtily dismiss Beatles ’65.

But then again, Thomas probably delights in provoking the primitivists. In fact, I’m pretty sure he’s mocking the high-art culture vultures.

Flashback to 1896: When Ubu Roi had its premiere in Paris, riots broke out from the very first word of the play — merdre, a variation on the French word for "shit." (Didn’t the French also riot at the opening of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring? What is it with them?)

Set in Poland, Ubu Roi is the tale of the hideous Père Ubu and his shrewish wife who urges him to seize power by murdering the king. After the crime is committed, Ubu becomes a cruel tyrant and is eventually overthrown himself. On one level, the play is a parody of Macbeth, but it also satirizes the politics of the nation-states of Europe that culminated in World War I.

Ubu is not just a terrible dictator. He is repulsive beyond belief — cruel, loutish, petty, venal, gluttonous, coarse, and pompous; Jabba the Hutt and Idi Amin have nothing on him. He was also the protagonist of two sequels, Ubu Cocu (Ubu Cuckolded) and Ubu Enchaîné (Ubu Enchained), neither of which was performed during the playwright’s lifetime.

Ubu does Ubu: While Thomas took Pere Ubu as the name of his band in the 1970s, he had never attempted to perform Jarry’s work until last year’s adaptation in London of Ubu Roi, called Bring Me the Head of Ubu Roi. Thomas starred as the title character, with singer Sarah Jane Morris, from a band called The Communards, as his wife. The bickering couple portrayed by Thomas and Morris were two parts Mr. and Mrs. Macbeth and one part Jiggs and Maggie. The first half of a radio adaptation of this is available as a series of free podcasts.

The album starts off with the word that sparked the 1896 riot, growled by Thomas. When I first heard it, I thought he was saying “murderer.” Considering that the King of Poland doesn’t have long to live, “murderer” isn’t an inappropriate word to set the mood.

With the additions of Morris and electronic whiz Gagarin, the ever-changing Ubu band here is the same group that played on the previous Ubu album, 2006’s excellent and underrated Why I Hate Women.

Like any Pere Ubu album, this record is filled with electronic bells, whistles, squeaks, and squawks that hark back to Plan 9 From Outer Space and Thomas’ yelps, warbles, and tasty guitar licks (the one on “Watching the Pigeons” is right out of the Jesus Christ Superstar overture).

There is also some belching. The song “Less Said the Better” is almost as funny as a it is disgusting. It’s the best use of burping in a rock song since Alfred E. Neuman’s “It’s a Gas.”

Because it is a dramatic presentation, there is a lot of spoken-word dialogue (as well as some that’s sung), most of which is fascinating. My favorite is the conversation between Mère and Père Ubu on “The Story So Far.” He’s in a hallucinatory daze while she tries to convince him that she’s a supernatural natural spirit — an angel, to be exact. But even in his delirious stupor, Père Ubu knows she’s no angel.

“Long Live Père Ubu!” is a compelling and dark album, if not an all-out rocker. The press material is right — it’s not background music. It certainly isn’t easy listening. But if you’re twisted enough, it’s a lot of fun, no matter what the press release says.

Blog bonus: Check this animated Brothers Quay video of “Song of the Grocery Police” below



And there's another one HERE, but embedding has been disabled. Probably for some highfalutin artistic reason.

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 14, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terre...