Friday, April 29, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, April 29, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasti

ng!

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
Red Red Robin by Rosie Flores
See Willie Fly By by The Waco Brothers
Bone to Pick by Black-Eyed Vermillion
DWI Marijuana Blues by The Imperial Rooster
The End by Peter Case
Castanets by Alejandro Escovedo
Me and Rose Connelly by Rachel Brookes
Highway Patrol by Junior Brown

Yes Ma'am, He Found Me in a Honky Tonk by Gal Holiday
Dope Smokin' Song by Jesse Dayton
Waitin' on the Sky by Steve Earle
Three Bloodhounds Two Shepherds One Fila Brasileiro by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
When the Hammer Came Down by House of Freaks
Ruthie Lingle by 16 Horsepower
Meanest Jukebox In Town by Whitey Morgan
Broken Man by The Goddamn Gallows

ARHOOLIE SET
Brother Low Down by Jesse Fuller
Louisiana Rock by Clifton Chenier
I Knew You Didn't Want Me by K.C.Douglas
The Touch of God's Hand by Vern & Ray
Barushka by Howard Armstrong
Mean Boss Man by Mance Lipscomb
Pachuco Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys
Yeah, Lord! Jesus Is Able by Rev. Louis Overstreet
I Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag by Country Joe & The Fish

I Wish I Was A Single Girl Again by The Maddox Brothers & Rose
Lowdown Dirty Things by Skip James
Don't Forget Me Love by Toni Brown
Treasury Scandal by Atilla the Hun
The Dirty Dozen by Butch Cage & Willie B. Thomas
Come See by Bobby Neurwirth
Lawtell Two-Step by Pine Leaf Boys
Up on Telegraph Avenue by Lightnin' Hopkins
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, April 28, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Arhoolie Howls!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
April 29, 2011




American music would have been a lot poorer had German immigrant Chris Strachwitz not gotten the weird notion to make trips to Texas to record bluesmen Lightnin’ Hopkins and Mance Lipscomb a half century ago and start his own record company to make these treasures available to the public.

Over the years, Strachwitz’s Arhoolie label has given us music by some of the most important blues, hillbilly, folk, zydeco, Cajun, Tex-Mex and gospel musicians known (or unknown) to humanity. Arhoolie albums are like musical DNA, building blocks of a musical heritage most of us take for granted. Its catalog has branched out to include music from Mexico and the Caribbean, but it’s the sound of the rural South that is the core of Arhoolie.

In honor of Arhoolie’s 50th anniversary, the company has given us Hear Me Howling! Blues, Ballads and Beyond. The package consists of four CDs, plus a book detailing Arhoolie’s history.

Mississippi Fred McDowell with  Strachwitz 
Most of the music — four hours and 40 minutes worth — has never been released before, and many of those songs that previously have seen the light of day had only been on LP decades ago. All the music here was recorded in Strachwitz’s adopted hometown of San Francisco, some in the pre-Arhoolie ’50s. Tony Bennett might have left his heart there, but Hear Me Howling shows that other musicians just left a lot of great recordings there.

Some of the musicians lived in the land of Rice-A-Roni, but many were passing through and were captured live at festivals, coffee-house concerts, and even house parties. Mississippian Skip James, for instance, was recorded at Strachwitz’s home. Can you imagine how cool it must have been to have Skip James in your living room, playing your piano and moaning his ghostly blues?

James isn’t the only major dude to appear in this collection. There are San Fran bluesman Jesse Fuller, Sonny Terry (born Saunders Terrell, no relation), Bukka White, Lonnie Johnson, zydeco deity Clifton Chenier, Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton, Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Big Joe Williams and, of course, Hopkins and Lipscomb.

Some highlights of this collection include Hopkins’ “Up on Telegraph Avenue” — also recorded at Strachwitz’s house — which is a funny and lecherous encounter between the old blues codger and “a little hippie girl” in a miniskirt who offers herbal treats.

There are four Lipscomb songs here. This soft-spoken guitar picker is a Texan, but his music reminds me a lot of that of Mississippi John Hurt, especially the tune “Sugar Babe.”

Some of the most intense songs are by Big Joe Williams. His session was recorded shortly after he had been released from the psychiatric ward of the local jail. Thus he sings “Greystone (Alameda County Jail) Blues” with blood in his eye. And “Oakland Blues,” sung by his wife Mary Williams, sounds even more frightening.

There’s even a 1965 version of the anti-war classic “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag” by an early version of Country Joe & the Fish. This was a pre-electric Fish that sounded like the West Coast cousin of Jim Kweskin & The Jug Band. One thing I learned from the Howling book — Joe McDonald was named by his leftist parents for Joseph Stalin, whose nickname was “Country Joe.” Maybe this was a Communist plot!

Those musicians mentioned are just the ones you’re likely to have heard of. Some of the most amazing performances here are by those who are mainly known to Arhoolie devotees and other serious lunatics. For instance there’s the Rev. Louis Overstreet, a Southerner who ended up in Arizona, preaching at a church called St. Luke’s Powerhouse Church of God in Christ. Overstreet played electric guitar with his hands and played a bass drum with his feet, backed by his four sons on vocals.

There’s K.C. Douglas, a singing garbage man — I’m not making this up — who lived in Berkeley. There are four tracks by Douglas here including the title song. Most of his contributions are acoustic numbers — my favorite, “I Know You Didn’t Want Me” features a band, including sax and piano.

I had actually heard of Toni Brown before. She was in an old female-fronted hippie band called the Joy of Cooking that made several albums in the post-flower-power era. But I never realized until now what a great country singer she was. Hear Me Howling has three songs credited to Brown, all of them sweet, soulful acoustic hillbilly tunes in which she sings like a young Kitty Wells.

There’s also “Charles Guiteau,” a fun little assassination ballad by Crabgrass, an old-timey string band of which Brown was a member. And there’s an acoustic Joy of Cooking song, “Midnight Blues,” though I prefer Brown’s country stuff.

Santa Fe’s most prominent folkie, the late Rolf Cahn, isn’t on this album. But there are songs by two of the women he loved — Barbara Dane and Debbie Green, so Cahn is here, howling in spirit.

Country, blues, and folk tunes make up the bulk of this collection. But the fourth disc includes some jazz from the Bay Area by acts like the Now Creative Arts Jazz Ensemble, guitarist Jerry Hahn, drummer Smiley Winter, and saxman Huey “Sonny” Simmons. Interesting stuff, but Chenier’s “Louisiana Rock” and Big Mama’s “Ball and Chain” are the highlights of disc four for me.

Strachwitz is pushing 80 now, but Arhoolie isn’t showing its age. As a foreigner, Strachwitz found the music of America wild and magical. We should thank him and Arhoolie for letting us here these crazy sounds through fresh ears.

Check out www.steveterrell.blogspot.com. Arhoolie on the airwaves: Hear a special Arhoolie set on The Santa Fe Opry 10 p.m. Friday on KSFR-FM 101.1.

Blog bonus: Here's  my personal Top 10 favorite Arhoolie albums.


1 America’s Most Colorful Hillbilly Band Vol. 1 by Maddox Brothers & Rose: These southern immigrants to California had more fun than hillbillies ought to be allowed to have.


2 Pachuco Boogie: The lion’s share of the songs and indeed, the heart and soul of this CD belong to Edmundo Martínez Tostado, an El Paso native better known by his stage name: Don Tosti. Tosti — an accomplished jazzman who became a jump-blues icon of zoot-suit culture.

3 Louie Bluie Soundtrack: This is music from a quirky documentary made in the mid '80s  by Terry Zwigoff, who is more famous for Crumb. It stars fiddler/mandolinist Howard Armstrong, who plays blues, gospel and jazz tunes — not to mention a German waltz and a Polish tune. As he explains in the movie, Armstrong was fluent in several languages, including Italian and a little Chinese, which, he said, helped him get gigs when he moved from Tennessee to Chicago.

4 Live at the Powerhouse Church of God by Rev. Louis Overstreet. An electric guitar-picking, bass-drum-pounding preacher whose church was in Phoenix. Most of this album was recorded by Strachwitz during church services in 1962. But the CD version has some bonus tracks,  including several recorded at Overstreet's home in which the preacher plays acoustic guitar.

5 Big Mama Thornton with The Muddy Waters Band. Good basic Chicago blues, recorded in San Francisco. I’d have hated to have been the “hound dog” Big Mama sang about. But the “Black Rat” she lays in on this album sounds like he’s in worse trouble.

6 Good Morning Mr. Walker by Joseph Spence. Bahaman Spence was an amazing guitarist whose thick dialect made him sound like a wino from Mars when he sang his joyful tunes.

7 Sacred Steel. This style of gospel music began in the late 1930s in the House of God, an African- American Pentecostal denomination. Although the steel guitar became popular in House of God congregations that were not able to afford an organ or piano. Arhoolie has done several sacred steel compilations. The first one, release in 1997, features some of the giants of the genre including Willie Eason, The Cambell Brothers, Aubrey Ghent and Sonny Treadwell.

8 & 9 Calypsos From Trinidad: Politics, Intrigue and Violence in the 1930s; and The Roots of Narcocorrido.  These collections, although representing different countries and different styles of music, both are collections of songs, many of them controversial, dealing with politics and crime.

10 Old Time Black Southern String Band Music by Butch Cage & Willie B. Thomas,  Recorded back in 1960, but not released until five years ago,  this is nothing but party music, at least the way they used to have parties in the rural South. I was too young to have been invited to this party, but this is the next best thing.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Political Correctness As Fast as Lightning

A man at a seaside pub on the Isle of White was arrested -- arrested! -- on charges of "racially aggravated harassment" for performing the 1974 Carl Douglas hit "Kung Fu Fighting."

Read all about it HERE (Thanks to Rob for showing me this.)

Meanwhile, enjoy the video below .... WHILE YOU STILL CAN!





Tuesday, April 26, 2011

R.I.P. Poly Styrene, Phoebe Snow & Huey Meaux,

This morning I learned of the deaths of two very different singers whose music affected me in different ways at different times: Poly Styrene of The X-Ray Specs and Phoebe Snow, who is best remembered by folks my age for her 1975 hit "Poetry Man," though I remember her for a couple of other dark, smoky tunes from her first album, "It Must Be Sunday" and "I Don't Want the Night to End."

Also last week famed producer Huey Meaux, the Crazy Cajun died. He was the producer of Freddy Fender, The Sir Douglas Quintet, Roy Head and others.

Here's some videos to remember them by:






Sunday, April 24, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April, 24 2011
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
Live it Up by Nobunny
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues by Bob Dylan
Peter Cottontail by The Bubbadinos
Rambling Rose by Barrence Whitfield & Savages
Black Snake by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Preachin' At Traffic by The Legendary Shack Shakers
Do the Climb by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Dirty Kid by Hell Crab City
Laugh at Me by The Devil Dogs
Take A Bath by Charles Sims

Pontiac Flannigan by Churchwood
Luck by The Manxx
Born to Lose by Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers
Adictos Al Ye-Ye by Hollywood Sinners
You Broke My Mood Ring by Root Boy Slim & The Sex Change Band
I Wish You Would by The Fleshtones
New Orleans by The Plimsouls with The Fleshtones
Cornfed Dames by The Cramps

21 Days in Jail by Magic Sam
Dead End Street by The Monsters
Hey You by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
He's Doin' It by The Gories
I Would Die 4 U by The Rockin' Guys
Truck Stop Urinal by The Plainfield Butchers
El Sadistico by Deadbolt
Grifted by New Bomb Turks
Bennie & The Jets by The Hickoids

Heaven and Back by The Mekons
California Tuffy by Geraldine Fibbers
Tryin' by The King Khan & BBQ Show
You Make Your Own Heaven and Hell Right Here on Earth by The Tempations
The Sniper by The Black Angels
Moby Octopad by Yo La Tengo
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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The New Big Enchilada Podcast is Served

THE BIG ENCHILADA




Wilder, wilder, faster faster! It's a feral new episode of the Big Enchilada with uncivilized sounds by Roky Erikson & The Nervebreakers, Davilla 666, Mojo Nixon, King Salami, Guitar Wolf, plus The Ultimatemost High, Scorpion vs. Tarantula, Mark Steiner and many more.

Play it here:



DOWNLOAD | SUBSCRIBE| SUBSCRIBE TO ALL | FACEBOOK | ITUNES

Here's the playlist

(Background Music: Wild Track by Guitar Frank)
Wildest Cat in Town by Crazy Cavan & The Rhythm Rockers
Killer Wolf by The Ultimatemost High *
Bo Diddley's a Headhunter by Roky Erickson & The Nervebreakers
Rimbaud Diddley by Churchwood
The Dozens by Eddie "One String" Jones

(Background Music: Wild Trip by Flat Duo Jets)
Shake it Wild by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Short Leash by Scorpion vs. Tarantula *
Robacuna by Davila 666
She's So Predictable by Graceland
I Just Dropped in to See What Condition My Condition Was In by Mojo Nixon
Drunk by Mark Steiner & His Problems *

(Background Music: Jungle Call by The Gaynighters)
Wild Bikini Girl by Guitar Wolf
Glam Racket by The Fall
I've Got a Feelin' by Big Maybelle
Wilder Wilder Faster Faster by The Cramps

* These tunes are from the fantastic new GaragePunk Hideout compilation, It Came From the Hideout. Join the Hideout and get this and upcoming compilations for free! Otherwise download them at Amazon, eMusic, iTunes or Napster.

Friday, April 22, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, April 22, 2011
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
Where Do You Want It by Whitey Morgan & The 78s
That's What She Said Last Night by Billy Joe Shaver
Bad News by Johnny Cash
Jones on the Jukebox by Gal Holiday
The Selfishness in Man by George Jones
Cowboy Boots by Eddie Spaghetti
Love My Baby by Walker & The Texas Dangers
Hillbilly Blues by Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater with Los Straitjackets
The Silver Tongued Devil and I by Shooter Jennings

Jumpercable Blues by North Mississippi Allstars
(Give Me) One More Mile by Peter Case
God Has Left the Building by The Imperial Rooster
Rollergirl Gail by The Misery Jackals
EZ Ridin' Grumblers by Sanctified Grumblers
Mean Kind of Love by Rachel Brooke
Honky Tonk Gal by Carl Perkins
You Turned Your Back by Toni Brown
R.I.P. Hazel Dickens


Busted by Hazel Dickens
West Virginia My Home Hazel & Alice
Are They Going to Make Us Outlaws Again by Hazel Dickens

Hoboes Are My Heroes by Th' Legendary Shack Shakers
Molly O by Steve Earle
Truck Driver by Scott H. Biram
She's My Neighbor by Zeno Tornado & The BOney Google Brothers
Gentleman in Black by Tav Falco

Paperboy by Roy Orbison
I Should Have Married Marie by Cornell Hurd
It's 4:20 Somewhere by Chief Greenbud
Just a Girl I Used to Know by Bobby Osborne
Long Way to Hollywood by Steve Young
One Will Do For Now by Peter Stampfel & The Worm All Stars
United Brethren by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Treasures Untold by Doc Watson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

R.I.P. Hazel Dickens

I just learned about the death of one of the finest, most authentic and most under-rated country singers ever -- Hazel Dickens -- has died at the age of 75 in Washington, D.C. where she has lived for several years.

From The Washington Post:

Ms. Dickens grew up in dire poverty in West Virginia’s coal country and developed a raw, keening style of singing that was filled with the pain of her hardscrabble youth. She supported herself in day jobs for many years before she was heard on the soundtrack of the 1976 Oscar-winning documentary about coal mining, ”Harlan County, U.S.A.”
Her uncompromising songs about coal mining, such as “Black Lung” and “They Can’t Keep Us Down,” became anthems, and she was among the first to sing of the plight of women trying to get by in the working-class world.

I'll remember Hazel on The Santa Fe Opry tonight (10 p.m. Mountain Time on KSFR. Until then, here's a video of a Hazel song.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Cessna, Morgan & Spaghetti

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
April 22, 2011


Here’s an innovative Denver band that’s been around for years and years. I should have been listening to these musicians for years and years, but somehow they escaped my attention until a couple of months ago.

Slim Cessna’s Auto Club is often billed as a “country gothic” band (whatever that is). Led by Cessna, who shares vocal duties with sidekick Jay Munly, the Auto Club often takes the viewpoint of sinners in the hands of an angry God. But on its new album, Unentitled, which some critics say is the group’s most accessible, many songs are so upbeat and happy-sounding that I really don’t think the “gothic” label does the band justice.

True, Auto Club has that banjo-apocalypse vibe of fellow Coloradans 16 Horsepower going full force on the first song, “Three Bloodhounds Two Shepherds One Fila Brasileiro.” This is a terrifying tale that deals with bloodhounds being set loose on some hapless target, perhaps an escaped prisoner. It takes me back to House of Freaks’ “When the Hammer Came Down.” The narrator of that tune, running from bloodhounds — though we’re never told exactly why — could almost be the victim in Cessna’s song.

However, the next tune, “The Unballed Ballad of the New Folk Singer,” takes off with an eye-opening, frantic, almost ’90s ska-like beat. The music is fierce and thundering and, no, not very “country” (though I can imagine a band like the Legendary Shack Shakers doing something like this).

The following song, “Thy Will Be Done,” gets back to the banjo with an almost raga-like melody and some otherworldly whistle instrument I have yet to identify. I’m not quite sure why, but when I hear this song I want to mix in some Tuvan throat singers. Somehow they’d just fit in.

That old-time religion — backwoods hellfire style — is a major theme with the Auto Club. The first three minutes or so of “A Smashing Indictment of Character” has an upbeat- sanctified rhythm, the kind Paul Simon employed on songs like “Gone at Last.”

But some subsequent tunes get darker and spookier. The seven-minute “Hallelujah Anyway” is a twisted tale of an arranged wedding. But even better is the closing song, “United Brethren,” an emotional tune about a preacher losing his congregation to another church — just as his great-grandfather had experienced. It’s not a problem most of us will ever face, but as Munly pleads at the end of the song, “Lord have mercy upon us” in his lonesome tenor with just an autoharp behind him, only the most hard-hearted heathen would be unmoved.

“My people always been United Brethren. Cessnas always does as told,” Slim sings at the outset of the tune. This free-spirited record proves that’s probably not true.

So ya wanna talk about country rock ... also recommended:

*Whitey Morgan & the 78’s. Hands down, this record, released late last year, is the most “pure” country album Bloodshot Records has put out since ... well, since the latest Wayne Hancock album a couple of years ago.

Morgan, whose real name is Eric Allen, is a Flint, Michigan, native, but he’s got a voice that’s bound to remind you of a young Waylon Jennings, or — I almost hesitate to say it — Hank Williams Jr., back in the days when Bocephus was good, before he became such a caricature of himself.

I was hooked from the first track, “Bad News,” a John D. Loudermilk tune covered some 40 years ago by Johnny Cash and, believe it or not, former Los Angeles Ram Roosevelt Grier, who sang it on some TV variety show (I forget which one) in the late ’60s.

Whitey salutes his musical heroes like George Jones in “Turn Up the Bottle” (the rest of the refrain being, “and turn up the Jones”). And he does a rowdy cover of “Where Do Ya Want It?” — Dale Watson’s tale of Billy Joe Shaver’s Waco shooting incident.

While Morgan is good at doing other people’s songs (there are Johnny Paycheck and Hank Cochran songs here, too), he is a decent songwriter himself. “Buick City,” a fast-paced tune about his hometown’s economic woes, is a highlight. It’s a nice little illustration of how times have changed. In the early ’60s, Mel Tillis wrote and Bobby Bare sang “Detroit City,” about a lonesome Southerner who moves to Michigan for economic reasons. In “Buick City” Morgan yearns to go to greener pastures in the South — Austin, Texas, to be exact.

* Sundowner by Eddie Spaghetti. Unlike Morgan, nobody would be likely to mistake Mrs. Spaghetti’s baby boy for Waylon or Bocephus or David Allan Coe.

But Eddie, who’s best known as the lead singer of Supersuckers, has always had an special place in his heart for country music. You could sense a country/rockabilly vibe in some of Supersuckers’ records even before the group made a stab at country rock in Must’ve Been High in the late ’90s. And Eddie’s solo records, including this one, have been full of fun country tunes.

Here he sings Johnny Cash’s “What Do I Care?” Steve Earle’s “If You Fall in Love,” and a better-than-it-should-be take on “Always on My Mind.” (Willie Nelson had a hit with it, and Elvis sang it before Willie.)

And there’s some countrified punk rock here. Spaghetti versions of the Dwarves’ “Everybody’s Girl” and the Lee Harvey Oswald Band’s “Jesus Never Lived on Mars.”

My favorites on Sundowner are “Party Dolls and Wine” (a country-rock take on a Dean Martin tune) and Del Reeves’ twang-heavy truck-driver hit “Girl on the Billboard.”

The Whitey Morgan and the Eddie Spaghetti albums are from Bloodshot Records.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

FROGFEST 6


The Frogfest 6 lineup has been announced, and once again it's a great array of, mostly, New Mexico talent. Sadly I don't see Hundred Year or Goshen, but the rest of the lineup is solid. Most of the acts are associated with Santa Fe's Frogville Records.

It's going back to a two-day event after being just one day for the past few years. Mark your calendars for May 28-29 at the Santa Fe Brewing Company.

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 ...