Sunday, November 11, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Nov. 11, 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
!0 o'Clock by The Malarians
Don't Look Down by LoveStruck
Bow Down and Die by The Allmighty Defenders
Thrift Baby by J.J. & The Real Jerks
Call the Zoo by The A-Bones
Bad Boy by The Headcat
High Class by The Buzzards
Out of Control by Demented Are Go
Wilder Wilder Faster Faster by The Cramps

Bel Air Blues by Drywall
My Baby is a Pole Dancer by The Barbarellatones
Secret Code by The Dirtbombs
Lilly's 11th by The Nevermores
I Wish You Would by The Fleshtones
I'll Follow Her Blues by The Gibson Bros.
Cantina by Pinata Protest
Wine-O Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys

ZAPPA SET 
All songs by Frank Zappa unless otherwise noted
Ian Undewood Whips It Out
Titties and Beer
I'm Not Satisfied by The Fall
Harder Than Your Husband (FZ with Jimmy Carl Black)
Brown Moses (with Johnny "Guitar" Watson)
You Are What You Is by The Persuassions
Whipping Post

Nothing Can Bring Me Down by Mondo Topless
The Purple People Eats The Witch Doctor by The Big Bopper
You're Not as Pretty by The Reigning Sound
When The Drugs Kick in by The Del Lords
Yesterday is Here by Bettye LaVette
Muriel by Eleni Mandell
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, November 09, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 9, 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
Jimmy's Mule by Jimmy Martin
Eggs of Your Chicken by The Flatlanders
Party Dolls and Wine by Eddie Spaghetti
Goddamn Holy Roll by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Road Movie by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
Ants on the Melon by The Gourds
Almost to Tulsa by Junior Brown
Highway Cafe by Kinky Friedman & His Texas Jewboys
The Women Make a Fool Out of Me by Ernest Tubb

Copperhead Road by Steve Earle
Bathwater by The Calamity Cubes
I Just Can't Let You Say Goodbye by Willie Nelson
You Only Kiss Me When You Say Goodbye by Cornell Hurd
My Witness by James Hand
Lazarus by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Mud by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Tearin' Up the Town by The Stumbleweeds
Geeshie by The Mekons

Ain't No Diesel Trucks in Heaven by Bob Wayne
Thy Will be Done by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
I Wish I Were a Single Girl Again by The Maddox Brothers and Rose
The Pill by Loretta Lynn
Guilty Conscience by Carl Smith
Whiskey Trip by Gary Stewart
Jack and Jill Boogie by Wayne Raney
Get the `L' on Down the Road by Bill Johnson's Louisiana Jug Band
Third Rate Romance by Amazing Rhythm Aces

Your Hearty Laugh by The Defibulators
Always Lift Him Up/ Kanaka Wai Wai by Ry Cooder
California Stars by Wanda Jackson
My Eyes by Tony Gilkyson
I Do Believe by Waylon Jennings
I Feel Like Going Home by Charlie Rich
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: The Present Day Zappa Catalogue Refuses to Die

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 9 2012

Here’s some good news for all you Frank-o-philes: After being off the shelves for several years, some 60 albums by the Father of Freakout are being rereleased.

Following an ugly legal struggle with Rykodisc, the company that rereleased Frank Zappa’s stuff in the ’90s (have I told you lately how much I hate the music industry?), the Zappa Family Trust has won back the rights to Daddy Frank’s wondrous catalog. And now, Universal Music is rereleasing all this crazy music to a world that doesn’t deserve it.

Don’t go looking for bonus tracks — rarities, demos, unreleased live material, or whatever. Basically, these are straight-up reissues. Most devotees probably already have the bulk of Zappa’s albums. But he was so prolific — nobody but zealots and completists have all of his stuff. Sometimes he would release several albums a year.

I’ve been a Zappa fan since the late ’60s, but there are lots of Zappa albums that somehow passed me by through the years. So this is a good time to catch up.

* Baby Snakes. Originally released in 1983, most the songs were recorded live in New York in 1977 (the one exception is “Baby Snakes,” which had appeared on Sheik Yerbouti).

This record is a soundtrack album for a concert video of the same name. From what we can hear on Baby Snakes, it was a good, if not great, show with a classic lineup that included guitarist Adrian Belew, drummer Terry Bozzio, and keyboardist Tommy Mars.

The inclusion of “Disco Boy,” in which Zappa rips into the disco scene with the same glee he once ripped into hippies, dates the music, but it’s a fun little artifact.

About two thirds of this album consists of three lengthy examples of Zappa’s scatological comedy-rock. There’s a rather rote “Dinah Moe Humm,” in which Zappa zips through the lyrics as if he’s sick of reciting them; “Titties and Beer,” which features a so-stupid-it’s-funny dialogue between Zappa as a biker and Bozzio portraying Satan; and the 11-minute “Punky’s Whips,” which deals with Bozzio’s supposed homoerotic attraction to a now forgotten singer named Punky Meadows (from a now-forgotten band called Angel).

* Thing-Fish. The Allmusic Guide describes this 1984 double album as Zappa’s “most controversial, misunderstood, overlooked album.” And when you’re talking about Zappa, that really is saying something. The songs are from a musical — which never made it to Broadway, for which it was intended — about a bizarre Tuskegee-like experiment by the government that goes awry and ends up turning black people into strange creatures with potato heads, duck bills, and enormous hands.

Ike Willis, who was part of Zappa’s Mothers during this era, performs the spoken-word narration for most of the songs. In the character of “Thing-Fish,” Willis basically does it in the dialect employed by “Kingfish” from Amos ‘n’ Andy.

There’s also a yuppie couple: Harry, who comes out as gay, and Rhonda, a briefcase fetishist. The couple is played by Terry Bozzio and his wife Dale Bozzio, who at the time was fronting the popular Los Angeles New Wave group Missing Persons.

Like the Joe’s Garage saga, the narration often gets in the way of the music — and you’ll probably enjoy Thing-Fish more if you just get lost in the music and don’t try to follow the plot.

It’s an interesting if not crucial latter-day Zappa work. Every now and then a familiar Zappa song pops up. You’ll hear rerecorded songs like “The Torture Never Stops” (here called “The ‘Torchum’ Never Stops”), “You Are What You Is,” “Mudd Club,” “The Meek Shall Inherit Nothing,” and “Ms. Pinky” from Zoot Allures, reimagined here as “Artificial Rhonda.” One redeeming treat is “Brown Moses,” which features vocals by blues/funk great Johnny “Guitar” Watson.

* Uncle Meat: For some reason I never broke down and bought this album when it came out in 1969.

Maybe I spent all my Zappa budget on We’re Only in It for the Money and Cruising With Ruben & The Jets — and before I knew it, there were new Zappa albums like Hot Rats, Burnt Weeny Sandwich, and Weasels Ripped My Flesh to distract a youthful consumer.

Whatever the case, Uncle Meat is a masterpiece. It’s essential Zappa listening.

For 40-plus years I’ve considered We’re Only in It for the Money as the definitive Zappa record, and I’d still be predisposed to choose that one if you put a weasel to my head.

But with Money you have to be careful which version you get (beware of the controversial 1986 version, remixed by Zappa himself, with a new rhythm section and stuck on a CD with the entire Lumpy Gravy album tacked on).

And listening again to Uncle Meat, I realize that this album ranks up there too.

This sprawling work started out a a double LP — supposedly it’s a soundtrack to a very obscure Zappa movie that didn’t get finished until a decade later and exists now on VHS tape. (I don’t think it was ever released in theaters, at least not in this dimension.)

JIMMY CARL BLACK NOW AND THEN
The late great Jimmy Carl Black,
Albuquerque, 2007
There’s just about everything a Zappa fan could want: snatches of freeform jazz, including “Ian Underwood Whips It Out” and several versions of “King Kong”; contemporary classical interludes; greasy, sleazy Munchkin doo-wop like “Electric Aunt Jemima” and “The Air”; unclassifiable instrumentals like the strangely beautiful “Nine Types of Industrial Pollution”; bizarre spoken dialogue including a short message from the infamous Suzy Creamcheese and an argument between Zappa and drummer Jimmy Carl Black (a former New Mexico resident) complaining about not making enough money; and throwaway renditions of “God Bless America” and “Louie Louie.”

Some of Zappa’s classic tunes are here — the dirgelike “Mr. Green Genes,” in which advice to “eat your greens” somehow evolves into “eat your shoes.” And there’s “Dog Breath in the Year of Plague,” a pachuco love song to a girl who helps the narrator steal hubcaps and stay wasted all the time.

One deadly misstep here: on disc two there’s a 37-minute chunk of dialogue from the movie that messes with the otherwise flawless flow.

(Check out the official Frank Zappa Website. HERE

Hey! I just learned that Frank's son Dweezil will be bringing his "Zappa Plays Zappa" tour to Albuquerque next month. Should be fun.


Sunday, November 04, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Oct. 21, 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
Louie Louie by Iggy Pop
Big Blue Chevy 72 by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Daisys Up Your Butterfly by The Cramps
Bear Trap by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Screwdriver by The Bellrays
I Am the Lightbulb by Dan Melchior & Das Menace
La la LA by ZzZ
Run Run Run by The Velvet Underground

Dog Breath in the Year of the Plague by The Mothers of Invention
You Can't Judge a Book by It's Cover by Bo Diddley
Hello Mama by Willie West
Angel With Batwings by The Improbables
What a Way to Die by The Pleasure Seekers
Laugh it Me by The Devil Dogs
Eve of Destruction by Gregg Turner
Second Television by Mission of Burma
Blame it on Obama by Andre Williams

The Changeling by The Doors
I Know it All So Well by Dinosaur Jr
The Fevered Dream of Herando DeSoto by Pere Ubu
I'm a Mummy by The Fall
This Sinister Urge by The Fuzztones
Everything's Broken by Bettye LaVette
Black Widow Spider by Dr. John

People Have the Power by Patti Smith
Super Theory of Super Everything by Gogol Bordello
Infected by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
The Kindness of Strangers by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Daddy's Home by Shep & The Limelighters
Waiting at the End of the Road by Geoff Muldaur's Futuristic Ensemble
American Tune by Paul Simon
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, November 02, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 2, 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
Graveyard Shift by Wanda Jackson
Long White Cadillac by Janis Martin
Lookout Mountain Girl by David Bromberg with Vince Gill
World Renown by The Riptones
Bye Bye Baby by Halden Wofford & The Hi-Beams
There Ought to Be a Law Against Sunny California by Terry Allen
The Phantom of the Opry by Junior Brown
Daddy Was a Preacher But Mama was a Go Go Girl by Southern Culture on the Skids

Leavin' Amarillo by Billy Joe Shaver
Marie Laveau by Bobby Bare
Drop Us Off at Bob's Place by Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys
Payday Blues by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
That's When I'll Come Back to You by The Jim Kweskin Jug Band
I Truly Understand That You Love Another Man by The Carolina Chocolate Drops
The Wild and Wicked Look in Your Eyes by Ernest Tubb
Sweet Virginia by The Rolling Stones

Favorite Fool by James Hand
One Two Three by Billy Kaundart
Funnel of Love by T. Tex Edwards & The Swingin;'Kornflake Killers
Tall Tall Trees by Roger Miller
We're Livin' on $15 a Week by Chris Darrow
My Go Go Girl by Bozo Darnell
The Green Willow by Peter Rowan
Jack's Red Cheetah by Bob Coltman
Wildness by Trailer Bride
Touch Taven by Elizabeth LaPrelle

Oh These Troubled Times by The Corn Sisters
Lucille by The Beat Farmers
Shakin' the Blues by Robbie & Donna Fulks
Hearts That Can't Be Broken by Ronny Elliott
Same God by The Calamity Cubes
Bufallo Gals by J. Michael Combs
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: COUNTRY ALBUM OF THE YEAR

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 2, 2012

Let’s get right to the point: Mighty Lonesome Man by James “Slim” Hand is the best county album of the year. The best basic old-fashioned, honest-to-God heartache and honky-tonk country music of the year. Maybe in the last several years.

Do I make myself clear?

And surprise, surprise — you haven’t heard this on so-called country radio stations. Probably not on many radio stations at all. And chances are, unless you’re from Texas, you haven’t even heard of Hand.

I’d never heard of him until earlier this year, when I went to a show at the Austin Moose Lodge — an official meeting place of the Loyal Order of Moose — during South by Southwest.

While I was watching a young “underground country” band called Hellbound Glory, a guy about my age wearing a cowboy hat and a spiffy Western-cut jacket came up to me and introduced himself. He was working the crowd, greeting individuals before his own impressive set that night. While on stage, he said he wanted to shake the hands of everyone in the audience.

The soft-spoken singer seemed sincere, not smarmy. So maybe I shouldn’t be surprised that his new album seems like an old friend. Sounds corny, I know, but I wouldn’t say it if it weren’t true.

Hand was raised in Tokio, Texas, a tiny town near Waco, the son of a rodeo rider. (Hand himself is a horse trainer by profession.) He has been singing all his life and wrote his first song when he was 15. He recorded several albums on small labels and one, The Truth Will Set You Free, on a major minor label, Rounder, in 2006. That was his first brush with national fame. He even got interviewed on NPR’s Fresh Air. In my book, he ought to be a lot more famous.

James "Slim" Hand
Hand at the Moose Lodge
On Mighty Lonesome Man, Hand is backed by a bunch of impressive Texas musicians — Cindy Cashdollar on steel guitar, Alvin Crow on fiddle, and Earl Poole Ball on piano all make appearances. And on every song, Will Indian plays electric guitar and Speedy Sparks — best known for his work with Doug Sahm and the Texas Tornadoes — plays bass. Sparks was in Hand’s band when I saw him at the Moose Lodge.

But even more impressive are the songs, all originals except for a cover of Johnny Cash’s “Get Rhythm.” The album starts out with the title tune, a nonflinching account of the lonesome life. “I know what it’s like when night starts fallin’/And God above won’t even raise his hand/And I know what sorrow steals when I start crawlin’/And I know ‘cause I’m a mighty lonesome man.”

Another song dealing with the same subject is “Lesson in Depression,” in which Hand sings, “Thanks for droppin’ by, but you don’t need to see/What I do when I get sick and tired of me.”

Many have compared Hand’s music to that of Hank Williams and fellow Texan Lefty Frizzell. But the voice that comes to mind when I hear this song and “Mighty Lonesome Man” is that of the late Gary Stewart, whose hits “Drinkin’ Thing” and “She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Doubles)” were some of the starkest, most moving sounds on country radio in the mid-’70s. Hand’s voice has that haunting Stewart quiver.

“My Witness” has all the marks of a classic honky-tonk weeper. The steel and fiddle set the mood (Bobby Flores plays both on this track). The “witness” is some barroom chippy, while “my judge and jury” is apparently the singer’s wife, sleeping in a house down the street.

Hand has a talent for story songs. “The Drought” is a tale of a farmer watching his land go dry. “I see the tracks of baby quail/Fallen cracks along the trail/And I know like them, the earth will swallow me/But before I give up, I’ll haul water in a coffee cup/From the pits of hell or the deepest darkest sea.”

Then there’s “Old Man Henry,” the tale of another old farmer who refuses to sell his land to the government for a road project. “In his 97th year/Old man Henry had made it clear/They could build their damned highway somewhere else/He wasn’t about to go.” This story doesn’t end happily.

The themes and situations Hand sings about and the simple music with which he conveys them are not groundbreaking or innovative. They are just honest songs that prove that old-school country can still sound fresh and that mighty lonesome men can still make mighty powerful music.

Also recommended:

* Goin’ Down Rockin’: The Last Recordings by Waylon Jennings. Jennings died in 2002. A couple of years before his departure, he recorded a bunch of basic tracks in the home studio of his friend Robby Turner.

These recordings, mostly songs he wrote himself, just feature Jenning’s voice and guitar and Turner’s bass. Nearly 10 years after Jennings’ death, Turner gathered some of Jennings’ old sidemen, including drummer Richie Albright and guitarist/keyboardist Jim “Moose” Brown, to make this album. I was skeptical when I first heard about about this project. It could have turned out cheesy and exploitative. Fortunately, it didn’t.

As the title song suggests, there are some good country rockers here, including the title song, “If My Harley Was Runnin’ ” and “Sad Songs and Waltzes,” which is neither (and it’s also not the Willie Nelson song of the same title). However, “She Was No Good for Me” is indeed a sad song and a waltz. This is one of my favorite songs Jennings did in his later years.

Another latter-day Waylon favorite is “I Do Believe,” originally appearing on a mid-’90s album by the outlaw supergroup The Highwaymen. It’s a moving statement of humanist spiritually that starts out: “In my own way I’m a believer, in my own way right or wrong/I don’t talk too much about it/Something I keep working on.”

Here he rejects the hellfire sermons of a preacher and “voices I can’t hear” while embracing his inner spirit and praising a “loving father, one I never have to fear.”

This album might not stand up to Honky-Tonk Heroes and Lonesome On’ry, and Mean, but it’s a proper, if belated, goodbye from a giant who left us too soon

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 ...