Thursday, June 30, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: It's Mighty Savage

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 1, 2011



BARRENCE WHITFIELD & THE SAVAGES
Peter Greenberg with Barrence Whitfield
in Santa Fe last year

After a quarter decade, East Coast R & B and soul shouter Barrence Whitfield has reunited with the core of his original band, The Savages, and recorded a mighty new album. It’s called Savage Kings. It’s available in Europe and is scheduled for American release next week on Shake It Records, a Cincinnati label.

Although Whitfield is from Boston and the record was recorded in Cincinnati, there’s a strong New Mexico connection here. Original Savages guitarist Peter Greenberg moved to Taos a couple of years ago.

Greenberg, who once played with Boston garage warriors Lyres (and now plays with Taos band Manby’s Head), instigated the reunion with Whitfield and original bassist Phil Lenker. In fact, their first live gigs together in 25 years or so were last year in Taos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque.

This is the European cover
of Savage Kings
A history of the Savages, in a nutshell (as related to me in an interview with Whitfield last year): Whitfield was formerly a drummer in a funk band. While working in a record store and studying journalism at Boston University in the early ’80s, he hooked up with Greenberg, who was fresh out of Lyres and looking to start a more R & B oriented band. They recorded a couple of albums together before the original Savages, including Greenberg, began drifting away.

Whitfield pressed on, forming another Savages band and making more albums, including a couple of country-flavored efforts with Tom Russell in the mid-’90s. A confessed vinyl addict, he still works in a record store.

Savage Kings kicks off with “(Your Love Is Like a) Ramblin’ Rose.” No, it’s not the Nat King Cole song or the Grateful Dead’s “Ramble on Rose.” This is an MC5 classic. And Whitfield uses his best falsetto scream to deliver it. It’s followed by a punchy rocker called “Just Moved In” that features a honking sax solo by new Savage Tom Quartulli.

One of the coolest songs here was written by Greenberg and fellow Manby’s Header Mike Mooney. It’s called “Willie Meehan,” and it’s about an old boxer in the early part of the 20th century who actually beat Jack Dempsey a couple of times. Battling Willie, according to the song: “Never did no training / He ate his way to heavyweight.” The opening riffs remind me of The Sonics’ “Strychnine,” which Whitfield also covered a few years ago. Like Meehan himself, this tune is a chunky slugger.

“Shot Down” basically hits that murky borderline between R & B and ’60s garage music. Meanwhile, “Who’s Gonna Rock My Baby,” an obscure old rockabilly tune by Jerry Woodard, sounds as if it were written especially for Whitfield. “Well, I got my call from my draft board today,” the song begins. “Two years might not be that long, but I got to leave my baby at home.”

Whitfield and the band mix things up a bit. The minor-key “You Told a Lie” is basically contemporary blues. You can almost imagine Albert Collins or Robert Cray or maybe even Buddy Guy doing this one. “Bad Girl” is a good old-fashioned riveting soul meltdown; it starts out with a spoken-word introduction and ends with falsetto pleas for mercy.

Since I first listened to this album, my favorite song has been an old Lightnin’ Slim dirty blues classic called “It’s Mighty Crazy.” Captain Beefheart covered this also, at least in his live shows, although he called it “Keep on Rubbing.” (I’ve got it on a live bootleg Beefheart album called Crazy Little Things.) Whitfield’s version is closer to Lightnin’ Slim’s, except he’s got a sax instead of a harmonica.

Whitfield and the boys are touring Europe this fall. I hope the tour is a big success and inspires the Savages to record more.

Also recommended:
* Barrence Whitfield & The Savages. In anticipation of Savage Kings, Whitfield re-released his self-titled long out-of-print first CD, from the early ’80s, complete with a bunch of bonus tracks — outtakes, live recordings, etc. — from that era.

It starts out with “Bip Bop Bip,” a rocker written by soulman Don Covay. It’s got Whitfield’s original version of “Mama Get the Hammer” (the hammer is needed because there’s flies on the baby’s head.”). The song came from a ’50s R & B band, the Bobby Peterson Quintet. But it has become something of a signature tune for Whitfield.

Other must-hears are “Georgia Slop,” a Big Al Dowling tune (written by Jimmy McCracklin), which was later covered by Los Lobos, and “Whistle Bait,” which is a Collins Kids song, originally sung by the pre-teen Larry Collins. Whitfield sings it like an adult — a lust-crazed adult. Greenberg’s big moment here is the breakneck romper “Whiskey Wagon,” a fiery rockabilly slammer.
BARRENCE WHITFIELD & THE SAVAGES

Among the bonus tracks is a nice slow soulful “Pain in My Heart,” a Naomi Neville tune that is best known for the version by Otis Redding. Whitfield fakes crying at the end of the song. Maybe some real tears were shed in that audience.

This CD has only been released in Great Britain by Ace Records. The good news is you can pick it up for a reasonable price at Amazon and other outlets. It’s worth having the CD because of the fine booklet with extensive liner notes by John Swenson and photos. It’s a savage treat.

BLOG BONUS:

Here's a Marvel Team-Up for you: Barrence meets King Salami! Live in Norway. (It takes about a minute and a half before the music starts.)


It'll Take More Than a Devastating Fire and Mass Evacuation to Stop Russ Gordon!

Russ Gordon, who has presented free concerts in Los Alamos every summer since before they invented the A-Bomb (ok, that's a slight exaggeration) just informed me that the show will go on.

Even though his city has been evacuated due to the fire near Los Alamos, Gordon says the Friday night show has been been moved to the Espanola Plaza.

This week's headliner is James Hyland the former lead singer for South Austin Jug Band. The music starts at 7 p.m.

I haven't heard Hyland, but it would be cool if a big crowd showed up in support. Like all Gordon shows, it's free. Check out his web site HERE

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

R.I.P. JERRY ROSEN: MY UNCLE

You might not have ever heard of Jerry Rosen. But he was a serious and respected musician.

He was a composer, a founding member of the Department of Music at UC Davis -- " the face of UC Davis Music for a half-century" -- and a member of the faculty of the University of California between his appointment in 1952 and his retirement in 1988.

And he was married to my my father's sister, Sylvia. Jerry always was one of the people I looked forward to talking to at Terrell family gatherings. A few years ago he sent me a CD of an opera he wrote about The Emperor Norton.

Here's a little bit about his music from his obit in The Davis Enterprise.

As a composer, Rosen left some 60 works of solo and chamber music, often including clarinet or saxophone, as well as works for voice and those of symphonic and operatic scope. His large-scale works for saxophone, including a Concerto of 1957 and a Quintet for Saxophone and Strings, 1974, attracted considerable attention, especially in Europe. His two operas, “Calisto and Melibea,” to a libretto by Edwin Honig (1979), and “Emperor Norton of the USA,” to a libretto by James Schevill (1999), were produced in the Main Theatre at UC Davis.


His major song cycle to a volume by the UC Davis poet Karl Shapiro, “White-Haired Lover,” was premiered in 1979; additionally he set poetry of Celeste Turner Wright, including “Campus Doorways,” composed for the inauguration of what is now the Pavilion of the Activities & Recreation Center (ARC), 1978; this was played again for the dedication of Celeste Turner Wright Hall in 1997. For the 75th anniversary of the campus in 1984, Rosen composed the University Fanfare that continues to be heard at the start of each commencement ceremony.

Rest in peace, Uncle Jerry.

Conchas Fire Takes KSFR Tower

I'll probably be doing Internet only versions of The Santa Fe Opry and Terrell's Sound World this week -- and probably for some weeks to come.

The raging Conchas fire near Los Alamos, which reportedly has grown to 60,000 acres, has stopped the power of KSFR's transmission tower on Pajarito Mountain.

"KSFR's tower was in the path of the fire last night and may have been lost," says the web site of Santa Fe Public Radio. It's not clear how much damage was done.

KSFR still is streaming. You can hear it HERE. Jerry Becker's jazz show is coming in loud and clear on my computer speakers.

The New Mexican has it's fire coverage on a handy single page now. This includes the live blog.

Happy Update: Right around noon KSFR went back on the air. None of the station honchos know exactly why, but that obviously means the tower and transmitter didn't burn up. The Conchas fire is still uncontained, so of course there's the danger it'll go off again. But as they say in the radio biz, stay tuned!

Sunday, June 26, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 26, 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Who Do You Love? by Bo Diddley
Stay Away by Mondo Topless
Eat For Me by The Juke Joint Pimps
Shakey Shake #7 by Shouting Thomas & The Torments
I'm a Wicked One by The Hives
On the Move by Pierced Arrows
I Heard Her Call My Name by Velvet Underground
Rockabilly Monkey-Faced Girl by Ross Johnson
Hard Water by The Laundronauts

The World's Greatest Sinner by The A-Bones
Squid Lord by The Fall
Wine-O Baby by by Big Joe Turner
Who's Gonna Rock My Baby by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Miss Sue by Don And Dewey
I Hear Sirens by The Dirtbombs
Nunca la Quise by Wau y Los Arrrghs!!
Muchos Burritos by The Come n Go

Whizz Kid by The Hickoids
Space in Your Face by The Mekons
Raspberry Beret by Hindu Love Gods
Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White by The Standells
Dumpster Dive by Black Lips
Courtroom Blues by Johnny Otis
Anala by King Khan & BBQ Show
Mountain Oysters by Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis w/The Bill Doggett Trio

Lovers Never Say Goodbye by The Flamigos
Since I Met You Baby by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
The Wild West is Where I Want to Be by Tom Lehrer
Rickity Tickity Tin by Barbara Manning
Sweetheart (Waitress In A Donut Shop) by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Don't Blame Me by Dex Romweber Duo
Book of Love by The Monotones
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Summer's Here and The Time is Right For Voodoo in the Streets on The Big Enchilada!

THE BIG ENCHILADA



Summer's here and the time is right for dancing in the streets. Not to mention sun, surf, hotdogs, BBQ and, best of all Voodoo orgies! Join me for some magical musical moments to keep your summer hot.

DOWNLOAD | SUBSCRIBE| SUBSCRIBE TO ALL | FACEBOOK | ITUNES

Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Ghost Surfer by The Surf Lords)
Voodoo Love by The Monsters
It's Mighty Crazy by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Mad Dog by The Black Lips
It's Friday Night and I Wanna Get Laid by The Experiments
Just Because of You by Chuck Violence & His One-Man Band
Davy, You Upset My Home by Joe Tex
Filme de Terror by Horror Deluxe

(Background Music: Voodoo Theme by The Infoiatis)
Johnny Voodoo by Empress of Fur
Roll the Cotton Down by The Zipps
Goodnight by The Conjugal Visits
Cave Girl by The Tex-Reys
I Got the Creeps by Big John Bates
State and 32nd by Kenneth Rexroth

(Background Music: Voodoo Doll by Dr. Lonnie Smith)
It's Your Voodoo Working by Charles Sheffield
Swamp Water by Mama Rosin with Hipbone Slim & The Knee Tremblers
Free Wi-Fi by Crappy Dracula
Potluck by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Summertime by Die Zorros

Play it Here:

Friday, June 24, 2011

Night Off the Opry

Laurell Reynolds will be subbing for me tonight on the Santa Fe Opry at 10 pm Mountain. You can still listen online HERE or at 101.1 FM if you're near Santa Fe and northern New Mexico.

I'm heading downtown where The Hickoids, Blood-Drained Cows and Manby's Head have a little rock 'n' roll entertainment planned. If you're out and about check out the show at The Underground.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Hey! You! Get Onto My Cloud!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 24, 2011



I felt like Cinderella being invited to the royal ball.

Last week, buried in my email among my music press releases, pleas for money from politicians, notices of car dealers and Albuquerque restaurants I’ve never heard of following me on Twitter, and fabulous business opportunities from widows of high-ranked Nigerian officials was my invitation!

It was from Google Music Beta. It had been weeks and weeks since I’d sent my request for an invitation. (To be honest, having to request an invitation made me feel cheap and tawdry. But I like that feeling.)

(If you haven't already, you can request your information HERE.)

For those of you still trying to figure out this internet fad, Google Music is the latest major entry into the realm of “cloud” storage for music. It joins Amazon Cloud Player, which launched earlier this year. And before the end of the year it will be joined by Apple’s iCloud.

The “cloud” has been a big internet buzz for the past couple of years among music fans. Those of us who listen to music over our computers do so using a player, such as iTunes or Windows Media Player (I understand there are still people who use that) to play MP3s or other music files stored on our computer or external hard drive.

But with the cloud, you upload your music files to big ol’ computers somewhere far away — probably located in nightmarish sweatshops in hideous countries where child labor is forced to work 16-hour shifts to keep dangerous machinery running just so you can listen to your lousy Coldplay MP3s whenever you want. (Just kidding, just kidding. Nobody sue me, please.)

I set up my Amazon Cloud Player when that first came out. And now with Google Music Beta, I could upload even more of my collection to a home up in the clouds. My collection is nearly 227 gigabytes (GB) — well more than 42,000 “items” (mostly individual songs, with several podcasts, radio-show soundchecks, etc.).

What is the advantage of having music on the cloud? You can access both Amazon Cloud and Google Music from any web browser on any computer. For those of us with huge digital music collections, that means we don’t have to lug around our external hard drives everywhere we go to enjoy thousands of songs. Your computer blows a gasket, your hard drive freezes up, your house burns down, and your music, or at least a good chunk of it, still will be available for you online.

Cloud wars: I've found both cloud systems easy to operate from my laptop. And I’m no audiophile, but to these ravaged ears, the playback sounds as good as it does from iTunes.

Most of the comparisons I’ve read — written by people who know a lot more about this tech stuff than I ever will — have tended to give the edge to Google over Amazon. Google Music uploads your music faster, critics insist (both take a long time to upload your tunes), and Google lets you upload more music for free.

Amazon currently allows you to upload five gigabytes of music for free to their Cloud Player. But if you purchase any MP3 album from Amazon, you get 15 more GB for free for a year. (I took advantage of that, buying the North Mississippi Allstars’ latest album, Keys to the Kingdom, when it was on sale for $5.)

What happens at the end of the year isn’t clear. Can you renew by buying a new album? Will you have to cough up $20? Will the company zap 15 gigs from your library if you don’t? Time will tell. There are various plans for additional storage at Amazon Cloud. They all work out to $1 a year for each GB, up to $1,000 for 1,000 GB.
Are these clouds or chemtrails?

One cool thing about Amazon. When you buy MP3s from the site now, they automatically go to your Cloud Player stash. And these songs don’t count against your limit. One uncool thing, though — you have to manually upload MP3s you bought from Amazon before the launch of the Cloud Player — and these will count against your limit. So far I’ve used nearly all of my Amazon allotment. That’s more than 4,000 songs.

But over at Google Music Beta, you can upload 20,000 songs for free. You don’t even have to buy an album. In fact, you can’t buy an album there, for reasons best known to the captains of the music-industrial complex. As of now, I’ve only uploaded nearly 9,000 songs. (Note my personal figures are updated than the ones published today in Pasatiempo.)

But will this free storage at Google Music last forever? An article at Engadget.com speculated last month, “Chances are you’ll have to pony up in order to keep things there once the beta label is yanked.”
One factor in Amazon’s favor is that you can download your music from the cloud. This is a huge advantage if your computer or hard-drive crashes — though I’d hate to guess how much time it would take to download 20 GBs from Amazon. Google doesn’t have this feature.

There is free music available from Google Music when you first set up your cloud player. You get to select from several genres. I didn’t want to clutter up my online library too much, so I just chose blues and alternative rock, The free blues selections were good, with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and Elmore James among them. The “alternative rock” selections were fairly useless (though there was some good Social Distortion tracks). But heck, they were free, and deleting duds is easy.

Both the Amazon and Google services can be accessed on Android phones. Neither is supposed to be accessible from an iPhone (there are no iPhone apps for them), but there’s a backdoor way in through the Safari browser.

Just log into your Amazon account and go from there — simply ignore the warning that the service isn’t compatible. Once you’re in, just add it to your home screen for easier access in the future. That’s good news, at least if you want to listen when you’re someplace where your connection is steady. I played it in my car, and it worked for several songs in a row, but several times the streaming music got choppy. This won’t replace my regular iPod.

Speaking of i-things, Apple’s iCloud is bound to shake up the fledgling music cloud biz. The only free storage Apple is going to give you is for the stuff you buy on iTunes. But for $25 a year, you get unlimited storage. For those with big collections, that’s a bargain.

Whichever service becomes the most successful, I believe a lot more music junkies are going to have their heads in the clouds.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The Mekons Return

Those lovable Mekons are releasing a new album, Ancient & Modern in late September on their reconstituted label Sin Records.

Their friendly publicist said it's cool to share this Mp3, "Space in Your Face" from the album. CLICK HERE to play (right-click to download).

Here's the press release:

On Ancient & Modern, Mekons bring you an “album” just like albums used to be; cardboard things filled with cheeky, chunky 78rpm shellac. Just take a look at the cover of Ancient & Modern and you’ll know what we’re talking about! Let the band take you for a walk down memory lane, to the world as it was just before the First World War ... to the Edwardian Era, to the Naughty Naughties a hundred years ago, a cozy nostalgic world: cricket on the village green, punting down the river in a striped blazer and boater, off with the hounds, picnic hampers, community singing, mistresses and wives, mysticism, secret societies, dangerous poetry, radical modern art, Freud, national strikes, revolution, anarchists, bombers, British concentration camps ... oops, is that really a hundred years ago?!? Mekons travel back/forward to a world unaware that it’s waiting for the pistol to CRACK CRACK CRACK in Sarajevo, plotting their singular course through the digital tsunami of contemporary sounds that blare tinnily from your mobile phone or spin at 78rpm in His Master’s Voice from the horn of your exquisite Gramophone.

Despite the talk of 78 shellac, I'm assuming it will be on CD as well.


Sunday, June 19, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June, 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Susquehanna Hat Company by Too Much Joy
Red Cobra #9 by The Mummies
Raw Meat by Black Lips
Midnight To Six Man by The Pretty Things
Hell Ain't What it Used to Be by Nashville Pussy
Sweet Talk by The Naughty Ones
Dog Food by Iggy Pop
Washing in the Blood (of Rock and Roll) by The Professor and His One Man Dirty Rhythm and Blues Explosion
Rollin' and Tumblin' by Canned Heat
Cause I Sez So by New York Dolls
Give Him A Great Big Kiss by The Shangri-Las

The Flame that Killed John Wayne by The Mekons
Run Away From Me by Movie Star Junkies
Born With a Tale by The Supersuckers
Cosmic Belly Dance by The Monsters
Shaggy Dog by Lightnin' Hopkins
My Baby Got Drunk by Paul "Wine" Jones
Nobdy Gets Me Down by T-Model Ford
Racoon City Limits by Black Smokers
Neat Neat Neat by The Hickoids

Merry Go Round/My Name Is Larry by Wild Man Fischer
Don't Shake Me Lucifer by Roky Erikson
I'm Weak by New Bomb Turks
Question My Sanity by L7
Motorhead with Me by Nobunny
Sinister Kid by Black Keys
Schrodinger's Puss by Crappy Dracula
Shave Your Beard by Ros Sereysothea

Standing on the Verge of Getting It On by Funkadelic
Stepchild by Solomon Burke
All You Can Eat and You Can Eat it All Night Long by Candye Kane
Land of Hope and Dreams by Bruce Springsteen
The Way We Were Wild Man Fischer with Mark Mothersbaugh
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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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 ...