Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Mess With THIS!


Here's one of the coolest garagepunk bands working today, The Electric Mess from New York, performing recently on WFMU's Cherry Blossom Clinic with the lovely Terre T.. (Courtesy of the Free Music Archive)

I recently reviewed the Mess' new album Falling of the Face of the Earth. You can read it HERE (Scroll down some)

Listen, download, TURN IT UP!

(Courtesy of the Free Music Archive)

Sunday, July 29, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST



Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, July 29, 2012 
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

Monkey Mess by Thee Vicars
Like Calling Up Thunder by The Gun Club
Hog Heaven by The Shrunken Heads
Rockin' Bones by Flat Duo Jets
Get Away by The Giant Robots
Thickfreakness by The Black Keys
Chocolate River by The Seeds
This Boy by The Mokkers
Nice Guys Finish Last by The Electric Mess

Jerusalem by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Dog is Life/Jerusalem by The Fall
Slumber Blues by Pirate Love
Baby Don't Tear My Clothes by The Raunch Hands
Just Like Me by Paul Revere  & The Raiders
High Noon Blues by The Night Beats
7 x7 Is by Love

The Cuckoo by Big Brother & The Holding Company
Janis by Country Joe & The Fish
The Golden Road to Unlimited Devotion by The Grateful Dead
Hey Grandma by Moby Grape
Who Do You Love by Quicksilver Messenger Service
The Other Side of This Life by Jefferson Airplane

Little Black Drops by El Pathos
Killer Lifestyle by Pong
Better Off Alone by The Black Angels
The Movies by The Angel Babies
National Hamster by The Melvins
Maybe I'll Loan You a Dime by Memphis Slim

CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Friday, July 27, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, July 27, 2012 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Oh You Pretty Woman by Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel
Hot Dog by Rosie Flores
Let's Jump the Broomstick by The 99ers
Ding Dong by The World Famous Headliners
Let Me Love You Right by Big Sandy & The Fly Rite Trio
Boogie Baby by The Great Recession Orchestra
Water Into Wine by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Eatin' Fish and Drinkin' Sterno by The Imperial Rooster
Sam Hall by Tex Ritter
If You Want to Be a Bird/ Wild Blue Yonder by Holy Modal Rounders

Bad Water by The Strange
Death Don't Have No Mercy by Black-Eyed Vermillion
Blood on the Bluegrass by Legendary Shack Shakers
Down and Out by Honky Tonk Hustlas
Run Mountain by Carolina Chocolate Drops
Someone That You Know by The Waco Brothers with Paul Burch
Lay Some Boot In by Menic
Baby He's a Wolf by Werly Fairburn
Bubbles in My Beer by Hank Thompson

Me and Bobby McGee (Demo) by Janis Joplin
Epitaph (Black and Blue) by Kris Kristofferson
Molasses by Filthy Still
Sidewalk Slammer by The Goddamn Gallows
$2 Pints by Last False Hope
Do Fries Go With That Shake by Chris Thomas King
Thirteen Women by T. Tex Edwards
Lover's Prison by Stone River Boys

Hand of the Almighty by John R. Butler
Down in Mississippi by Ry Cooder
Fadin' Moon by Hank 3 with Tom Waits
Bank of the Brazos by James "Slim" Hand
Deliah Rose by The Calamity Cubes
Skillet Good and Greasy by South Memphis String Band
You're Learning by The Louvin Brothers
It's All in the Game by Bobby Bare
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

New Primus Video


Here's a bitchen new from Les Claypool and the boys -- an ode to the great Lee Van Cleef.

Sit through the Wendy's commercial. It's worth it.


TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Remembering Janis

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
July 27, 2012

Janis Joplin has been dead nearly 42 years. During her brief time in the sun, she was hardly prolific, recording a couple of albums with Big Brother & The Holding Company and two solo albums, the second released only after her death. 

But all these years later, her music does not seem dated. Her voice still seems like a tornado blowing through a human throat. When I listen to Janis Joplin, it’s not out of sappy nostalgia, some longing for the good old days of Haight-Ashbury or Woodstock. I listen because her albums are still some of the most powerful, soulful recordings ever made.

Joplin fans have a lot to be happy about this year. In recent months, we’ve gotten two albums with plenty of unreleased material. Here’s a look at both.

* Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968 by Big Brother & The Holding Company. One of the biggest musical crimes of the late ’60s was when the suits convinced Janis to leave Big Brother. True, she was the star and she was the main draw, and they never would have been famous without her. But Big Brother was a spirited little psychedelic combo, ragged but righteous.

Janis was the MVP, but guitarist James Gurley was an unsung monster. His solos here on songs like “Light Is Faster Than Sound,” “It’s a Deal,” and the nine-minute Joplin signature “Ball and Chain” are first-class examples of San Francisco psychedelia.

Most of the 14 tracks on this album were never made available, legally at least, before this cool document saw the light of day this year. (A few songs appeared on a box set several years ago.) The album was recorded over two nights in late June 1968, soon after the band finished recording its masterpiece (and final album), Cheap Thrills. Most of the songs from that album are here. And a few, such as “Summertime” and the ever-explosive “Ball and Chain,” are better than the album versions.

But most fun are the more obscure tunes: “Flower in the Sun,” “Catch Me Daddy,” and especially “Coo Coo” —this one is folk-rock at its very finest. For one thing, it’s an actual folk song. But more importantly, it really walks. Big Brother used a similar melody and arrangement for their Cheap Thrills song “Oh, Sweet Mary.”

The sound here might seem strange. Recorded by Grateful Dead sound man and famed LSD manufacturer Augustus Owsley Stanley III (who supervised the remastering for this package last year, before he died in a car wreck), the album has basically no overlap in the stereo mix. Drums and vocals come out of one speaker; everything else from the other.

And while Joplin’s vocals for the most part are right on target, sometimes Sam Andrews’ vocals seem off. It’s really apparent in the opening song, “Combination of the Two.” This might be because the group had no stage monitors back then, and finding their pitch was sometimes tricky.

* The Pearl Sessions by Janis Joplin. Pearl was Joplin’s last album, released posthumously. It’s not as strong as Cheap Thrills. By this stage in her career, she had basically become a soul singer, a wilder Etta James, not a psychedelic waif goddess. And, of course, Big Brother was long gone. But this was where most of us first heard some of Joplin’s landmark tunes — “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Move Over,” and her swan song, “Get It While You Can.”

This album is more for rabid Janis zealots than for casual fans. While disk 1 has the entire Pearl album, plus mono-mix singles of several songs, alternative takes and studio banter make up the lion’s share of the second disc.

Longtime fans will love hearing how these songs evolved in the studio. And it’s great hearing Janis’ wheezy horse-laugh as she chastises herself for blowing some of her vocal parts or gossips about fellow musicians.

Janis as muse: 

Not only did Joplin leave behind a lot of music of her own, she also inspired several songs about her.

* “Janis” by Country Joe & The Fish. “Into my life on waves of electrical sound/And flashing light she came.” This appeared on The Fish’s second album, I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die, in 1968.

Country Joe McDonald had dated Janis before either was famous. One day, according to an autobiography on his website, McDonald said he thought they should break up. Janis then “asked me to write her a song, ‘before you get too far away from me.’ I agreed.”

But even though “Janis” was written and recorded long before she died, the chorus almost sounds like an epitaph: “Even though I know that you and I/Could never find the kind of love we wanted/Together, alone, I find myself/Missing you and I/You and I.”

* “Epitaph (Black and Blue)” by Kris Kristofferson. Here’s another songwriter who had an affair with Janis. She included Kristofferson’s “Me and Bobby McGee” on Pearl, and he wrote this angry, heartbreaking tribute for her, which appeared on his album The Silver Tongued Devil and I.

 “When she was dying/Lord, we let her down./There’s no use cryin’/It can’t help her now. … Just say she was someone/Lord, so far from home/Whose life was so lonesome/She died all alone/Who dreamed pretty dreams/That never came true/Lord, why was she born/So black and blue?”

* “Chelsea Hotel No. 2” by Leonard Cohen. Yet another Janis tribute from yet another of her lovers. Like the best Cohen songs, it’s sad and funny at the same time.

“I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel/You were famous, your heart was a legend/You told me again you preferred handsome men/But for me you would make an exception. … You fixed yourself, you said, ‘Well never mind/We are ugly but we have the music.’”

* “Saw Your Name in the Paper” by Loudon Wainwright III. This entry, admittedly, is questionable. For 40 years I assumed this song was a lament for Janis. “Make yourself a hero, it’s heroes people crave/Make yourself a master, but know you are a slave.”

But last year, Time magazine mentioned the song, saying it actually was about Wainwright’s jealousy over “the rising fame” of his then wife and fellow singer, Kate McGarrigle.

But damn the facts. I don’t care. When I first heard the song as a freshman in college, only months after Joplin’s death, in my heart I knew it was a song for Janis. I’m sticking with that.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, July 22, 2012 
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
Puppet on a String by The Night Beats
Nutbush City Limits by Nashville Pussy
Black Grease by Black Angels
25th Floor/ High on Rebellion by Patti Smith
Dealin' in Death N' Stealin' in he Name of the Lord by Troy Gregory with The Wild Bunch
Tone Deaf by The Angel Babies
Don't Care About You by The Pygmies
No Woman, No Nickel by Bumble Bee Slim

Mary Has a Son by Kult
Olga's Girls by The Roughies
Lilly's 11th by The Nevermores
If Ever The 99ers
So Strange by The Molting Vultures
Meet Me By The Garbage Can by Waylon Thornton and the Heavy Hands
Pachuco Hop by Joe "King" Carrasco & The Crowns
Centerfold by The Beach Balls

Diane by Husker Du
Butthole Surfer by The Butthole Surfers
Low Self Opinion by The Rollins Band
Psycho Mafia by The Fall
My Box Rocks by Figures of Light
Lady Gaga by The Swinging Iggies featuring Gar Francis
Light is Faster Than Sound by Big Brother & The Holding Company

Three Alley Cats by The Red Elvises
Boss Lady by Detroit Cobras
Grease 2 by The Oh Sees
Mysteries by The Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Spooky Girlfriend by Elvis Costello
Across the Border by Stan Ridgway
Sun Arise by Alice Cooper
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Gospel Glory!

Need some good old fashioned gospel music for a Sunday morning? (Or any time?) Check out my Gospel Glory Spotify playlist. I just updated with dozens of more songs. I like to put it on shuffle mode.

(You have to have Spotify to make it work, but you gotta have Spotify anyway. )

And below this jukebox is an all-gospel Big Enchilada episode from 2009.

And here's my all-gospel Big Enchilada episode from a few years ago.

Friday, July 20, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, July 20, 2012 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
South of the River by Ray Wylie Hubbard
47 Crosses by The Goddamn Gallows
I Truly Understand That You Love Another Man by The Carolina Chocolate Drops
Viceroy Filter Kings by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Here Lies a Good Old Boy by James "Slim" Hand
The Story of My Life by Big Al Dowling
In the Jailhouse Now by The Soggy Bottom Boys
Country Bumpkin by Cal Smith

Smells Like Low Tide by Molly Gene One Whoaman Band*
My Go Go Girl by Bozo Darnell
Jukebox Blues by June Carter
Devils Look Like Angels by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band *
Steve McQueen by Drive-By Truckers
Ugly Woman by Hasil Adkins
Jimbo Jambo Land by South Memphis String Band


Woody Guthrie Covers Set 


Viva Sequin/Do-Re-Mi by Ry Cooder
Pretty Boy Floyd by The Byrds
Vigilante Man by Hindu Love Gods
Philadelphia Lawyer by Maddox Brothers & Rose
Hard Travelin' by Simon Stokes
Grand Coulee Damn by Lonnie Donnegan
Dust Bowl Refugee by James Talley
Deportee by The Byrds
This Land is Your Land by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
I Ain't Got a Home in This World Anymore by Bruce Springsteen

Honky Tonk Angels by Kitty Wells
The Bad Girl I Keep in My Heart by Cornell Hurd
Wind Blown Waltz by Giant Giant Sand
Seven Shades of Blue by Martin Zellar & The Hardways
The Portland Water by Michael Hurley
If You's a Viper by Martin, Bogan & Armstrong
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

* These songs available on the 2012 Muddy Roots Festival compilation. Download for free HERE

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

Thursday, July 19, 2012

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Songs From Woody

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
 July 20, 2012


Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, you wrote us some songs.

And because July 14 would have been Guthrie’s 100th birthday, it’s a good time to celebrate his impressive body of work, which in turn celebrates all of us — when he’s not calling a pox on cruel vigilantes, bankers who rob you with a fountain pen, and others who would oppress the people.

I realized that Guthrie had transformed from a dusty old counterculture outcast hero into a mainstream icon eight years ago when I was covering a campaign speech by President George W. Bush in Albuquerque. At the end of the rally there was canned music — upbeat, if not quite inspirational, instrumental versions of patriotic songs. And among these was “This Land Is Your Land” by Guthrie.

I couldn’t resist needling a Republican friend I saw there. “Do you realize they’re playing a song written by an admitted communist?” He looked at me like I was crazy.

But a lot of people take this stuff seriously. At least they used to.

According to the Roadside America website in an article about the Guthrie statue in the the town of Okemah, Oklahoma, where he was born, local folks “remembered him mostly as a socialist who wrote a regular column, `Woody Sez,’ for The Daily Worker — the newspaper of the American Communist Party.”

It’s true that there were lots of bitter feelings about Woody’s politics among conservative elements in the Sooner state. I remember visiting there in the mid-’70s when the idea of the Okemah statue was first being discussed. The Daily Oklahoman was frothing over the notion of building a memorial for a commie folksinger. As Roadside America notes, “It wasn’t until 1998, 31 years after his death — and after everyone who disliked him had also died — that the town erected a statue in his honor.”

So you can listen to the songs of Woody Guthrie these days without being labeled a dangerous subversive. And there’s lots to choose from.

Here are my Top 10 Guthrie covers.

1) “Do-Re-Mi” by Ry Cooder. Guthrie meant for this song to be good-natured and humorous, a warning to poor folks against being lured to California to find work only to be exploited and mistreated once they got there. But on his live album, Show Time!, Cooder, aided by Flaco Jiménez on accordion, combines this with the Mexican polka “Viva Sequin” to turn “Do-Re-Mi” into a fiesta.

2) “Vigilante Man” by Hindu Love Gods. The Love Gods was a one-off project by Warren Zevon, backed by members of R.E.M. in 1990. This is a straightforward folk-rock version led by Zevon’s ragged voice and Peter Buck conjuring up the music of both Luther Perkins and Ennio Morricone on guitar.

3) “I Ain’t Got a Home in This World Anymore” by Bruce Springsteen. This appears on a 1988 various-artists compilation called Folkways: A Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly. It was just a few years before that when Springsteen’s manager turned him onto Joe Klein’s biography Woody Guthrie: A Life, which was instrumental in politicizing Springsteen. Springsteen also did a rocking version of “Vigilante Man” on this tribute album, but his mournful, acoustic version of “I Ain’t Got a Home” goes straight to the heart.

4) “Philadelphia Lawyer” by The Maddox Brothers & Rose. This is a tale of revenge — well, perhaps just Old West justice — about a cowboy who loses his sweetheart to a slick attorney from the East. I’ve got it on a collection called America’s Most Colorful Hillbilly Band Vol. 1. Rose Maddox would record it again as a bluegrass number a few decades later on a solo album, This Is Rose Maddox.

5) “Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)” by The Byrds. Guthrie wrote this song in 1948 after reading about a U.S. government plane deporting 28 people to Mexico. The plane had caught fire over Los Gatos Canyon in California and crashed, killing everyone on board. Guthrie was saddened by the tragedy and angered at the fact that the victims weren’t named. The Byrds did this song as a country waltz, powered by those trademark Byrds harmonies.

6) “Pretty Boy Floyd” by The Byrds. Again with the Byrds. In their early days they were known as devoted Dylan interpreters. But they also did well by Guthrie. Years before I’d ever heard this song, my Oklahoma grandmother used to tell me the story of the famous Robin Hood-style bank robber delivering a truckload of groceries to the poor in Oklahoma right before Christmas one year during the Depression. Most of the world, me included, first heard this tune, done as a bluegrass romp on the landmark 1968 country-rock album Sweetheart of the Rodeo.

7) “Hard Travelin’ ” by Simon Stokes. Guthrie sang this as a happy hobo tune. But Stokes, with his gruff voice and minor-key arrangement, makes a listener believe that he’s traveled every mile and barely survived the journey. Stokes sounds like a hobo who would rip out your spleen and throw it in the pot with his Mulligan stew. He sounds scary in the song even when he does a verse in a strange falsetto.

8) “Grand Coulee Dam” by Lonnie Donegan. This song celebrates a massive public-works project of the ’30s — an economic stimulus package on a scale we can’t even imagine these days. True story: in 1941 the Bonneville Power Administration in Portland, Oregon, hired Guthrie to write music for a film about the Columbia River and public power. This song, “Roll on Columbia” and several others came out of that arrangement. Skiffle King Donegan’s 1958 studio recording of this song is a spirited take that gets faster and faster as the song progresses.

9) “Dust Bowl Refugee” by James Talley. This song is from Talley’s excellent tribute album, Woody Guthrie and Songs of My Oklahoma Home, which was recorded in Santa Fe at Stepbridge Studios in the 1990s. This is one of Guthrie’s finest if not that famous Dust Bowl ballads, and Talley did it justice.

10) “This Land Is Your Your Land” by Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings. Guthrie wrote in response to Kate Smith’s “God Bless America,” which he thought was pompous. “This Land” has been de-fanged to the point that it’s no more controversial than a summer camp singalong. But Jones, the most significant soul singer to arise in the last 10 years or so, puts fire and defiance back into the tune.

Here are some of those songs on video

 



Wednesday, July 18, 2012

eMusic July

* The Essential Early Years: 1949-1954 by June Carter. Most people think of this lady as Mrs. Johnny Cash. It's a shame that her early solo largely has been overlooked. This collection, (a bargain -- $5.99 for 27 songs) shows Little Junie was a funny, sexy singer and a hundred-proof hillbilly.

A handful of these tunes were on the June Carter Cash retrospective, Keep on the Sunny Side, that Sony Legacy put out a few years ago.

As I've said before, back in the period covered in this collection, Nashville apparently was trying to market June as a real hillbilly version of Dorothy Shay (“The Park Avenue Hillbilly”). This involved a lot of novelty material. But June was really good at it.

A few songs that were on Keep on the Sunny Side are here -- "Root Hog or Die," "No Swallerin' Place" for instance. "Knock Kneed Suzy" is low-tone hillbilly humor, (and thus I love it). And speaking of funny business, Homer & Jethro are all over the place here on songs like "Hucklebuck" and "I Said My Nightshirt and Put On My Prayers."

Meanwhile, she sings about the heartbreak of erectile dysfunction in the song "You Flopped When You Got Me Alone."

But not everything here is a novelty song. Songs like "Honey Look What You've Done," "Crocodile Tears" and  "He Don't Love Me Anymore" are shoulda-been classic country weepers. A young Chet Atkins plays guitar on most tracks

* Lex Hives by The Hives.  Many critics have been less than kind about this album. Granted, a lot of the tunes here have a certain classic-rock sheen. “Go Right Ahead” sounds like Electric Light Orchestra filtered through T Rex. “I Want More” might be an AC/DC sendup. And on the very first track, The Hives seem to put the whole album in the context of arena-rock knuckleheadedness with their minute-long tongue-in-cheek invocation “Come On!” Here, with overdubbed crowd cheers in the background, Almqvist chants, “Come on! Come on! Come on! ... Everybody, come on!”


Sound familiar? I wrote about this album in a recent Terrell's Tuneup. Read the whole thing HERE


But before you do, have a little consumer advice: There are two versions of this album on eMusic: The regular (linked above) and a deluxe edition. The deluxe costs $2 more and has two additional tracks. The catch is, those are only available when you download the entire deluxe edition. Also, you can't get them separately on Amazon or iTunes either. So if you want the songs "High School Shuffle" and "Insane," (and they are pretty good -- I've heard them on Spotify.) be sure to go deluxe.

* Metal Circus by Husker Du . This seven-song EP from 1983 is one of the few Husker Du works I'd never bought.

This is known as a transitional record, where Bob Mould, Grant Hart and Greg Norton began to move away from being just another Midwest hardcore band and started paying more attention to songwriting, melody, lyrics, all those good things -- without losing the fire and fury that propelled them in the first place.

Although I tend to gravitate to the Mould songs on most Husker albums, and the opening song, "Real World" is a fine Mould effort, as is the exhilarating "First of the Last Calls."

But the greatest song on Metal Circus is a Hart tune. "Diane" is a chilling first-person account based on the 1980 abduction and murder of a West Minneapolis waitress by serial killer Joseph Donald Ture. The song is written from the perspective of the killer (eight years before Nirvana would take the same approach with "Polly."

"Hey little girl, do you need a ride?/Well, I've got room in my wagon why don't you hop inside?" (In reality, witnesses heard Edwards scream and saw the abductor force her into his car.) "... We could lay in the weeds for a little while / I'll put your clothes in a nice, neat little pile "
I was a latecomer to Husker Du. They had broken up shortly before I bought that used CD of Flip Your Wig that made me a fan. Now I almost wish I'd have heard this nightmarish contemporary murder ballad before I heard all the great Husker albums that followed

* Gus Cannon Vol. 1 (1927-28).   While writing my recent review of  The South Memphis String Band's Old Times There ...   I wanted to hear Cannon's original recording of  "Can You Blame the Colored Man," which Cannon recorded under the name of "Banjo Joe." Lo and behold, it was right here on eMusic on this fine Document Records collection.

Not only that, but there were five other Banjo Joe songs, which Cannon recorded before forming his quintessential jug band, Cannon's Jug Stompers. On these, which were Cannon's first recordings, he's accompanied by Blind Blake on guitar.

So I nabbed all those, plus a couple of Jug Stompers tracks I didn't already have ("Springdale Blues" and "Riley's Wagon")

Some of the Banjo Joe songs -- "Jonestown Blues" (no, not that Jonestown!), "Madison Street Rag" and "My Money Never Runs Out") were later recorded by the Jug Stompers. The later versions sound fuller with prominent harmonica and, of course, jug.)


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 ...