Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Sun Arise!

If anyone was ever dumb enough to put me in charge of a radio station, I would mandate that every morning at sunrise we'd have to play this song.






"Sun Arise" appeared on Alice's greatest album Love it to Death in 1971, (following the creepy classic "The Ballad of Dwight Fry.") I actually like the album version best, but I couldn't resist posting this grainy, 40-year-old footage that gives the song a proper primordial feel.

The song was written by Australian novelty singer Rolf Harris, (most famous for "Tie Me Kangaroo Down"), but it's based on Aboriginal music.

(I used to have the album pictured below)



I can't help but think that everyone's day would go a little better if it started off with this song.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

An International Incident Waiting to Happen: A New Big Enchilada




All aboard the Big Enchilada, where this month, to borrow a phrase from the Three Stooges, we're going Around the World in a Daze, a whirlwind tour of the world's garages. It's an international incident waiting to happen.



Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Sueno Sicodelico by Los Holys (Peru) )
We Rise Again by Gogol Bordello (Multi-national)
Yom Pha Barn Norn Pahwaa (Satan's Nightmare) by Paiboon (Thailand)
Bashana Haba'ah by Yidcore (Australia)
We're Laughing by The Psychedelic Aliens (Ghana)
Ljubav Kraj Izvora by 3 Mustaphas 3 (England)
Miedo by Los Explosivos (Mexico)
(Background Music: (On the Road Again by Istanbul Blues Kumpanyasi (Turkey) )


Los Nuggetz Set  
(All the songs in this set are from the new Rock Beat Records box set  Los Nuggetz: '60s Garage & Psych From Latin America, available on disc or download at all the usual places)

Bule Bule from Los Shains (Peru)
Me Reire by Los Shakers (Spain)
Colours by Kaleidoscope (Dominican Republic)
I Wanna Go by Los Mockers (Uruguay)
Peace of Mind by La Vida (Mexico)
Més Enllà (Milkcow Blues) by Els Xocs (Spain)
Te Olvidare by The Speakers (Columbia)

(Background Music: Juzno-Moravsko Kolo by Aca Novkovic Orchestra)
Fayt by Cankisou (Czech Republic)
Wait for Me by Roger Damawuzan (Benin or Togo)
Pissed Off by The Rodeo Carburettor (Japan)
Bye Bye by The Friends (Sweden)
Fever Fever Fever by Kult (Poland)

Play it here:




You like this international intrigue? Here's a link to my first Around the World in a Daze podcast, back in 2009. I also did a set of "Around the World in a Daze" on More Freeform Weirdo Podcasting. There's a set of Japanese punk and garage music on Forbidden Cavern Fandango and a set of African psychedelic rock on Felonious Funhouse.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, July 28, 2013 
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
Julie Oulie by Peach Kelli Pop
Hey Sailor by Detroit Cobras
The Return of Jackie and Judy by Tom Waits
69 Faces of Love by King Khan & The Shrines
Too Much Paranoias by Devo
White Collar Worker by The Mobbs
Devotion by Mission of Burma
Voices from the Inner Soul by The Confusions
Better Be Women by The Dwarves
Idle in Kangaroo Court by The Clash

Troubled Mind by The Buff Medways
Big Bad John by Big John Hamilton
Black Beard by The Universals
Bread by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Rouse Yourself by JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound
We Rise Again by Gogol Bordello
Jimmy Collins' Wake by The Dropkick Murpheys
To Hell With the King by Black Irish Texas

Rock en Espanol Set: Los Nuggetz and Beyond
Colors by Kaliedoscope 
Hombre Secretor by The Plugz
I Wanna Go by Los Mockers
Garage o Morte by Los Peyotes
Este Bien Mamacita by El Vez
Puto by Davila 666
96 Lagrimas by Los Shains
El Microscopo Bikini by Los Straitjackets with Cesar Rosas
Volver Volver by Piñata Protest
Baby Doll by Horror Deluxe
Pronto un Doctor by Los Yorks

I Like the Things About Me by Mavis Staples
Just to Touch Her Cheek by Johnny Dowd
I Want You Back by The Plimsouls
Pirates by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
Fayt by Cankisou
What Have My Chickens Done Now by The Residents
99 Luftbaloons by Richard Cheese
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, July 26, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

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Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, July 26, 2013 
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
Gone at Last by Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver
When You're Hot You're Hot by Jerry Reed
Mama was a Trainwreck by Karen Hudson
In the Jailhouse by The Grievous Angels 
Raise the Moon by The Goddamn Gallows
Alcohol and Drugs by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Honky Tonk Swing by Bill Monroe
The Ballad of Charles Whitman by Kinky Friedman & The Texas Jewboys
Blazing Trailer of Love by Neil Mooney

Down in Mississippi by Ry Cooder
Jambalaya by Jerry Lee Lewis
I'm Ready If You're Willing by Mimi Roman
Hell Cat by Two Tons of Steel
Friday Night by Two Ton Strap
You Get to be My Age by Eddie Spaghetti 
I've Done It All my Merle Haggard
Your Wild Life's Gonna Get You Down by Carol S. Johnson
Lonesome Train on a Lonesome Track by Robert Gordon

Cajun Stripper by Doug Kershaw
Rocky Mountain Honky Tonk by Halden Wofford
Old McDonald Sold the Farm by Mark Newton & Steve Thomas
Blood in My Eyes by Rod Balch
Gypsy Davy by Eric Hisaw
Don't Get Above Your Raising by Ricky Skaggs with Elvis Costello
Don't Fall in Love With a Girl Like That by The Boxcars
Say You Love Me by Earl Poole Ball

Storms Never Last by Waylon Jennings & Jessi Colter
Old Faded Memory by Rachel Brooke with Lonesome Wyatt 
Don't Touch Me by Eleni Mandell 
I Believe in You by Don Williams
Softly and Tenderly by Hank Williams
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Viva Los Nuggetz!




A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
July 26, 2013

At the same time that Hispanic Americans like Sam the Sham, Question Mark & The Mysterians, Cannibal & The Headhunters, Thee Midniters and – of course, Carlos Santana were making their individual marks on what later would be known as "garage rock," there were bands in Mexico, Peru, Uruguay and other Spanish-speaking lands who also got the rock ‘n’ roll juju.

Although groups like Los Pets (Venezuela), Los Ovnis (Mexico), Los Holys (Peru) and Kaleidoscope (Dominican Republic) never got well known far beyond their native regions, they rocked with abandoned.

And now, more than 40 years after most these bands hung it up, we can appreciate them here in the U.S. thanks to on a new four-disc 100-plus track collection from Rock Beat Records, Los Nuggetz: '60s Garage & Psych From Latin America. This compilation is a bonanza of rock en Espanol (and stray song or two in Portugese.)

And Los Nuggetz even has Spanish-language covers of Mexican-American garage classics like Sam the Sham’s “Wooly Bully” and Question Mark’s “96 Tears” (appearing here as “Bule Bule,” and “96 Lagrimas,” both by the Peruvian band Los Shains).

Some historical context: The basic story of 1960s rock 'n' roll is that British kids got fired up up on American blues, R&B and first generation rock 'n' roll and thus created the British Invasion bands we know and love. Americans reacted by forming unknown numbers of new bands, and thus was born garage-rock psychedelic music, proto-metal, proto-punk, etc.

And all of this spread across the world as rockers virtually everywhere adapted, mimicked and put their own stamp on the popular music coming out of the U.S. and the U.K. Many don’t realize how popular this decadent Western music was in unexpected corners of the world. And unless you're a fanatical record collector, chances are you've never heard or even heard of many 1960s rock 'n' roll groups from non-English-speaking nations.

In recent years there have been some CD compilations that have attempted to document garage rock and other raw pop sounds from around the world. In 2001 Rhino released a 4-disc collection called Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts from the British Empire and Beyond, 1964-1969 -- though the lion’s share of these were from the United Kingdom and nearly all the songs were in English.

Then, to get a little obscure, there was the 11-volume World Beaters series, which sprang up early this century on a mysterious label called Krazy World. Now out of print, World Beaters featured garage rock from all over the world. Even Papua New Guinea was represented. It was the World Beaters CDs that first got me acquainted with Los Shakers, Los Shains, and Los Salvajes, who now appear on Los Nuggetz.

Geographical grumble: Despite the subtitle, a big number of the songs on Los Nuggrtz   technically are not from Latin America. Many are by groups from Spain, which isn’t part of America, Latin or otherwise.

But in the long run who cares? " Me Reire" by Los Shakers (not to be confused with the Argentine Los Shakers, also on Los Nuggetz), a song that sounds like a mutation of Them's "Mystic Eyes," as well as Los Salvajes' covers of "Paint it Black" and "19th Nervous Breakdown" are among the highlights of this collection, so I’ll just shut up about that.

Compiled by James Austin, a former producer at Rhino Records (remember back when Rhino was the coolest name in music reissues?), Los Nuggetz includes many tracks that have never seen reissue. And it comes in a very attractive package -- a 70-page full-color hardcover book featuring the images of a psychedelic skull sharing smoke with an Indian as well as a masked luchador!) And there are extensive liner notes by Randall Wood detailing each and every song.

But the music, of course, is the main draw. It’s definitely not as polished as the recordings of the American and British bands that inspired these groups. But most the tracks here capture the raw enthusiasm of the Nuggetz musicians – many of the players being teenagers when they went into the studio.

Many of the songs on this collection present a virtual alternate reality of ‘60s pop. You don’t have to speak Spanish to recognize a huge number of the songs here. There’s a plethora of covers made famous by rock and soul icons like James Brown, The Beatles, The Kinks, The Four Tops (not one, but two versions of “Reach Out, I’ll Be There”) and The Doors.

One of my favorite covers here is “See See Rider,” done by Los Pops (Spain) in an arrangement based on the version by The Animals. There are Spanish remakes of hits of the day including Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots are Made for Walking” (by Gloria Benevides of Chile); The Rivieras’ “California Sun,” reworked as “Tijuana Sun” by Javier Batiz & The Fabulous Finks; and The Crazy World of Arthur Brown’s “Fire,” as done by Los Sirex from Spain.

Los Nuggetz also features covers of classic garage hits like The Trogg’s “Wild Thing,” sung by Juan “El Matematico” Garza from Mexico under the title “Loco de Patina el Coco); Them’s “Gloria” performed by Columbia’s Los Young Beats; and a ferocious take on The Leaves’ “Hey Joe,” by Los Locos del Ritmo, (Mexico).

While covers dominate this album, among my favorites are originals. The best are “El Psicodelico” by Los Yorks of Peru, the even-more psychedelic “Colours by Kaleidoscope, and the Joe Meek/13th Floor Elevators-influenced instrumental “Sueno Sicodelico” by Los Holys.

While most, if not all of these bands broke up decades ago, there’s plenty of noise still rocking the garages of Latin America. If you like Los Nuggetz, I suggest you check out contemporary groups like Los Peyotes from Argentina, Los Vigilantes from Puerto Rico, Horror Deluxe from Brazil, Los Explosivos from Mexico – as well as Spanish bands like Wau y Los Arrrghs!!! and The Hollywood Sinners.

Here's a couple of songs from Los Nuggetz:




TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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