Friday, November 30, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 30, 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
Look at That Moon by Carl Mann
Nightride by The Legendary Shack Shakers
Lose Your Mind by Wayne Hancock
Looking at the Moon and Wishing on a Star by Charline Arthur
Bachelor Man from El Gaucho by Lucky Tubb
Strut My Stuff by Slim Redman & Donnie Bowshier
Blue Moon of Kentucky by Rev. Beat-Man
Big Dwarf Rodeo by Rev. Horton Heat
Bell Clappin' Mama by Bill Carlisle
The Jukie's Ball by Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks

Merry Christmas Darlin' by James Hand
There Goes the Neighborhood by Kevin Deal
Shout Little Lulie by Ralph Stanley
Tip Your Hat by Marty Stuart with Earl Scruggs & Josh Graves
Backsliders Wine by Gary Stewart
Never Be Your Darling by The Backsliders
Consolidation by Gary Heffern
Hey Little Dreamboat by Rose Maddox

Rhinestone Cowboy by The Frontier Circus
She Still Comes Around by Jerry Lee Lewis
Shotgun by Southern Culture on the Skids
London Homesick Blues by Jerry Jeff Walker
Gettin' Drunk and Fallin' Down by Hank 3
Prison Show Romp by 16 Horsepower
Siste Reis by Ed Pettersen
Old Rub Alcohol Blues by Dock Boggs

I Just Want to Meet the Man by Robbie Fulks
Flower From the Fields of Alabama by Norman Blake
Drinking Champagne by Willie Nelson
Seven Spanish Angels by Ray Charles & Willie Nelson
I Ain't Ever Satisfied by Steve Earle
Skillet Good and Greasy by Sid Hemphill
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Some Soul to Warm Your Winter

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 30, 2012


Bettye LaVette is considered a late bloomer. And, as her new album Thankful N’ Thoughtful shows, she’s still blooming.

She’s been in the show-biz game since the 1960s, but stardom elluded her. By the ’90s, she had established a fan base in Europe and was beginning to amass a cult following in the U.S.

Then in 2005, with the release of I’ve Got My Own Hell to Raise (in which she covered songs by Lucinda Williams, SinĂ©ad O’Connor, Dolly Parton, and Joan Armatrading), LaVette finally began receiving the recognition she long deserved.

At the age of 66, she’s a soul star. And she’s not showing any signs of slowing down. Sometimes her voice is full of sex and fire. Sometimes it’s a voice of weary wisdom. It’s a voice that will not be ignored.

LaVette is an interpreter, not a writer. But there’s no question that she puts her own stamp on the songs she covers. And in Thankful N’ Thoughtful, she and producer Craig Street came up with some material for LaVette to transform. Here she performs songs by some of the most venerated veteran songwriters around — Bob Dylan, Tom Waits, and Neil Young — as well as some surprising new interpretations of tunes by more contemporary artists like The Black Keys and Gnarls Barkley.

The album begins with a swampy take on Dylan’s “Everything Is Broken.” It is one of the best songs on Dylan’s 1989 album Oh Mercy. But LaVette makes it sound as if it were written especially for her. As she does with other songs here, she takes liberties with the lyrics — instead of “broken voices on broken phones,” her “broken voices” are singing “broken songs.” She even sneaks in an obscenity that isn’t in Dylan’s original. And by the end of the track, she’s shouting “Oh Lord! Oh Lord!” pleading in desperation for divine intervention before her whole world breaks.

She turns Young’s “Everyone Knows This Is Nowhere” from a country-rock romp into a soulful meditation on frustration and nostalgic yearning. She does Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy” as if it were an Al Green song. And, for the title song, she takes a little-known gem from Sly and The Family Stone’s 1973 album Fresh and turns it into a sacred affirmation.

The best song on this album is so good, there are two versions. I’m talking about “Dirty Old Town,” a tune written by British folk singer Ewan MacColl, but probably better known for its version by The Pogues. (Pixies singer Frank Black did a good rockabilly-tinged version a few years ago, too.) There’s a funky four-minute slow-groove take and an even slower seven-minute version. LaVette recently told The Washington Post that she prefers the long version. “I liked the one that sounded like a funeral dirge, because the song is about a city that’s dying.”

LaVette changed some of the lyrics to make the song about her childhood home of Detroit instead of a town in England. In the second verse, she adds a little crime action. Cats “prowling their beat” as MacColl and The Pogues have it, become cops patrolling in LaVette’s version. And then, “A shot rang out, and that changed it all.” And in the earlier renditions, the singer dreams of taking “A big sharp ax/Shining steel tempered in the fire” and chopping down the dirty old town like “an old dead tree.” But LaVette turns it around, singing that the town took the ax and tried to chop her down.

“But they couldn’t,” she snorts defiantly.

Also recommended:

* Sinner Man: The Lost Session by Esquerita. Perhaps you haven’t heard of Eskew Reeder Jr., better known by his loving cult as “Esquerita.” Like Bettye LaVette, he started out decades ago — the 1950s, in his case — but never got a break from the music industry.

He actually got signed to Capitol Records in the ’50s — allegedly to be Capitol’s answer to Little Richard. But he never caught fire.

Dan Epstein explained it best years ago on eMusic: “A one-eyed, six-and-a-half-foot transvestite who [claimed to have] taught Little Richard how to play piano (and copied Richard’s mile-high pompadour in return), the late Esquerita was simply too ‘out there’ for mass consumption during the Eisenhower era.”

Well, he’s got a point. But I’d argue that Little Richard’s look and sound was just as crazy, and somehow he did make it big in the “I like Ike” days.

With fame and success passing him by, Esquerita’s career went into decline. Reportedly by the ’80s he was working as a parking-lot attendant and at one point was spotted washing car windows for tips in Brooklyn. He died of AIDS in 1986.

Years ago, Norton Records — a label that specializes in wild, primitive rock ’n’ roll rarities — released an Esquerita collection called Vintage Voola. But to my ears, that compilation doesn’t have half the crazed energy of Sinner Man. This new album comes from sessions recorded in New York City in 1966. Esquerita sings and plays piano and organ, sometimes switching back and forth during the course of a song. He’s accompanied only by a drummer, whose name has been lost to history.

The fiery eight-minute title track, which opens the album (there’s also a shorter version later) should be required listening for any student of soul music. Inspired by Nina Simone’s take on the old spiritual, Esquerita pounds the piano as frantically as his drummer pounds the skins. He sings “Running to the Lord/He told me to go on to the devil” like someone who had just had that conversation a few minutes before. And when he sings “Went to the devil/The devil he was waiting,” you can almost smell the brimstone.

This is definitely a case of saving the best for the first. But all the subsequent songs are loaded with fun. Esquerita plays around with some of the standards of the day — “On Broadway,” “C.C. Rider,” and the blues classic “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out.”

But more interesting are some of the more obscure songs like “Letter Full of Tears,” a song by Gladys Knight & The Pips, and “Leave Me Alone,” recorded by a little-known singer called Baby Washington. Both of the originals are far more sedate and sweetened by strings. Esquerita, with his frantic, bare-boned approach, goes straight to the raw nucleus of these songs.

This is powerful music from an artist who deserved much better out of life.

Enjoy some videos:






Sunday, November 25, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Nov. 25, 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
Jack Ruby by Camper Van Beethoven
November by The Rockin' Guys
Llevo Un Tigre En Mi Guitar by The Fleshtones
Fire Engine by The Molting Vultures
Alien Frontier by Alien Space Kitchen
Redneck Riviera by The Barbarellatones
White Elephant by The Hentchmen
Young Man Blues by The Who

Sookie Sookie by Steppenwolf
Murder in My Heart for the Judge by Moby Grape
Hunger by The Bama Lamas
Land of The Freak by King Khan & The Shrines
Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out by Esquerita
Sock It to Me Baby by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
Try Me One More Time by Demon's Claws
Owed T'Alex by Captain Beefheart

Dog Breath in the Year of the Plague by The Mothers of Invention
The Eternal Question by The Grandmothers
Don't Take Your Bad Trip Out on Me by The Electric Mess
Is it a Dream? by The Figures of Light
Hang a Picture by Thee Oh Sees
Old Folks Boogie by Jack Oblivian
Attrition by Soundgarden
Gypsy by LoveStruck
I'll Make a Bet bvy Nookie Boy

Starry Eyes by Gregg Turner
It'll Chew You Up and Spit You Out by Concrete Blonde
The Slide Song by The Afghan Whigs
The Ugly Band by The Mekons
Heels by Andre Williams
Angel Baby by Alice Bag
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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FOLK REMEDY PLAYLIST

KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sunday Mountain Time 
Guest Host: Steve Terrell (substituting for Tom Adler)
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org

Gospel Train by Bellview a Capella Choir
I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord by Peerless Four
See How They Done My Lord by Angola Quartet
The Church in the Wildwood by The Carter Family
I'm on My Journey Home by The Alabama Sacred Harp Singers
Backslider's Plea by The Swan Silvertones
God's Mighty Hand by The Rev. Utah Smith
Believe on Me by The Rev. Louis Overstreet
If I Had My Way I'd Tear This Building Down by Blind Willie Johnson
Lazarus by Henry Morrison

One Kind Favor by Hobart Smith
Walkin' Cane Stomp by Kentucky Jug Band
The Razor Ball by Blind Willie McTell
Bad Luck Dice by Clifford Gibson
Moon May Rise in Blood by Blind James Campbell
Runnin' Wild by James Cole's Washboard Four
He Rambled by Charlie Poole
Bottle Up and Go by The Bootlegger's Quartet

Insane Crazy Blues by Memphis Jug Band
The Dozens by Eddie "One String" Jones
Got the Jake Leg Too by The Ray Brothers
Shake Sugaree by Elizabeth Cotton with Brenda Evans
Trouble, I've Had it All My Days by Mississippi John Hurt
Wild Bill Jones by Eva Davis
Beware by Blind Alfred Reed
Trail of the Lonesome Pine by Laurel & Hardy

Booth Killed Lincoln by Bascom Lamar Lunsford
My Four Reasons by Banjo Ikey Robinson
Bad Company by Rev. Gary Davis
Atlanta Bound by Gene Autry
I Ain't Got a Home in This World Anymore by Woody Guthrie
It Ain't Gonna Rain No Moore by Butch Cage & Willie B. Thomas
Bootlegger's Blues by The Memphis String Band
Skip to Ma Lou My Darlin' by Uncle Eck Dunford
You Are My Sunsh\ine by Gov. Jimmie Davis

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Friday, November 23, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 23, 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

Lincoln Limousine by Jerry Lee Lewis
Lee Harvey by T. Tex Edwards & The Hickoids
Whisperin' in My Ear by The Waco Brothers
Jason Fleming by Neko Case & The Sadies
The Stalker's Song by Pearls Mahone
Night Spots (of the Town) by Roy Acuff
Hard to Be Humble by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Ya Ba Da Ba Do (So are You) by George Jones
My Own Kind of Hat by Merle Haggard
Bang Bang by Gov. Jimmie Davis

One Time One Night by Los Lobos
I Was Drunk by Alejandro Escovedo (For info on the Alejandro/David Hidalgo show CLICK HERE)
A Doctor and a Lawyer by Ronny Elliott
Cornbread 'Lasses (And Sassafrass Tea) by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Room to Room by Terry Allen with Lucinda Williams
Cajun Joe by Doug & Rusty Kershaw
Jennie by Angry Johnny

Snake Drive by R.L. Burnside with the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Ragz n Bones by The Goddamn Gallows
Swamp Blood by Legendary Shack Shakers
Get Rhythm by James Hand
Old Weakness by Wanda Jackson
Blame it On the Stones by Kris Kristofferson
Bring it With You When You Come by David Bromberg with Levon Helm
Committed to Parkville by Porter Wagoner
Little Maggie by Jimmy Martin

I Don't Want Your Millions, Mister by Greg Brown
Glory Glory Hallelujah by The Rev, Peyton's Big Damn Band
I Need Revival by Kevin Deal
Tall Buildings by Soda Gardoki
Face of a Fighter by Willie Nelson
Thanksgiving by Loudon Wainwright III
Empty Bottle by The Calamity Cubes
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

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...