Friday, August 09, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

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Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Aug. 9, 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
Blink of an Eye by The Waco Brothers
Come and Get it by Southern Culture on the Skids
St. John's Isle by Karen Hudson
Drank So Much (Just Feel Stupid) by The Gear Daddies
Texas Tornado by Doug Sahm
If Drinkin' Don't Kill Me, Kill Me by The Hickoids
God Loves The Hickoids by The Grannies
The Window Up Above by The Blasters
Closing Time by The Pleasure Barons featuring Dave Alvin

Hillbilly Child by Paul Siebel
Blood, Sweat and Murder by Scott H. Biram
Blue Diamond Mines by Kathy Mattea
Sleeper Hold on Satan by Rev. Billy C. Wirtz
Uppers by Two Ton Strap
Willie the Weeper by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Get Along Stray Dog by Steve Martin & Edie Brickel
It Took 4 Beatles to Make One Elvis by Harry Hayward

I Won't Forgive You by Pat Todd & The Rankoutsiders
Under the Chicken Tree by The Texas Sheiks  
Alcohol and Drugs by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Tavern Town by Kenny Roberts
Best to Be Alone by Wayne Hancock
You Better Not Do That by Tommy Collins
Hard Travelin' by Tim Timebomb 
Hairy Ass Hillbillies by Jerry Jeff Walker
Lying Your Way to the Promised Land by Angry Johnny

Anything Goes at a Rooster Show by The Imperial Rooster
Do You Know Thy Enemy by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Short Life of Trouble by Ralph Stanley
Sing it Boy by Earl Poole Ball
I'll Stand in Line by Miss Leslie
Cry Guitar by Janis Martin
Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues by Elvis Presley  
In My Time of Dying by Dad Horse Experience
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, August 08, 2013

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Born With Singing Heart

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Aug. 9, 2013

“Borders are scars on the face of the planet,” Gogol Bordello frontman Eugene Hütz sings in his thick Eastern European accent on “We Rise Again,” the opening song on the band’s new album, Pura Vida Conspiracy.

And where better to make such a proclamation than a real live border town. Maybe that’s why Gogol, a New York-based multinational group, decided to record the album in El Paso late last year.

Actually, I’m not really sure why Hütz and Gogol chose El Paso, which has never been known as a major recording Mecca, to put down tracks for all but one of the songs on Pura Vida Conspiracy. (“We Shall Sail” was recorded in Río de Janeiro.)

But one thing that’s noticeable is that the Latin influence on the band’s international smorgasbord of sound — which first became apparent on their previous album, Trans-Continental Hustle, recorded after the Ukraine-born Hütz’s move to Brazil — is even more audible on the new album.

This influence perhaps is most pronounced on “Malandrino,” a lovely melody you can almost imagine Vicente Fernádez singing. “My birth I hardly can remember/But I remember from the start/My midwives looking at each other. … This boy is born with singing heart.” Of course, it’s a little harder to imagine Fernádez performing this song after the point in the chorus, when it breaks into Gogol’s trademark breakneck rhythm. Either way, the mariachi trumpets at the end of the song are a tasty touch.

Throughout the album you can hear a smattering of Spanish lyrics and flourishes of flamenco and samba, along with Gogol’s regular arsenal of Gypsy violin (Russia-born fiddler Sergey Rjabtzev is, next to Hütz, the band’s most valuable player) and accordion, plus occasional reggae rhythms and Celtic melodies. Part of the melody of “The Other Side of Rainbow,” according to the album’s liner notes, is based on a traditional Ecuadorian song. And then there’s the bossanova-like “I Just Realized,” an uncharacteristically mellow tune for this band renowned for its sweaty, exhilarating attack.

And perhaps the ghost of Marty Robbins — or wicked Felina — haunting modern-day El Paso persuaded Gogol to “go country” on “We Shall Sail.” It’s an acoustic number with only a guitar and Hütz’s vocals that has a melody that sounds like some long-forgotten cowboy lament.

In case you’re not familiar with this band — and I don’t want to hear your sniveling excuses — here’s some history. The band was formed not long after Hütz landed in New York City in the early ’90s and, naturally fell in with like-minded musicians, many of them immigrants as well. (According to Gogol-lore, the Hütz family fled Ukraine after the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986.) They created a sound Hütz himself labeled “Gypsy Punk.”
Gogol in NewYork, 2010

Several songs here could have appeared on virtually any of Gogol Bordello’s previous five studio albums. “We Rise Again” is one of those rousing anthems — such as “Start Wearing Purple,” “Not a Crime,” and “Dogs Were Barking” — the band does so well. “With a fist full of heart/And relics of future/Mama we rise again,” Hütz and other Gogols sing.

Then there’s a rowdy ode to wandering called “My Gypsy Auto Pilot,” in which Hütz sings, “I’ve been watching trains swiftly rolling by/I’ve been jumping them without long goodbyes/To uncover rules of life and how to break them well.”

Another instant Gogol Bordello classic is the fierce but moving “Lost Innocent World,” in which the narrator yearns to find a place that has long passed, the place where “my father showed me my first guitar chord” and “where my friends are still alive.”

Though Pura Vida Conspiracy on the whole is not as immediately satisfying as the band’s masterpieces Super Taranta! and Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike, it’s an impressive and ultimately crazy whirlwind global tour. I hope Hütz keeps jumping those trains and telling his tales.

Also recommended:

* Faÿt by Cankisou. This group’s most recent album, released in late 2011, is another testament to the power and the glory of a band that has a following in its native (the Czech Republic) and parts of Europe but has yet to catch on in these United States.

Cankisou has its own strange mythology. The website bio reveals: “Cankisou music is based on an old legend about one-legged Canki people, and the band also learnt their language which is understandable all over the world.” No, I don’t understand the words. But the musical language is very clear.

Like Gogol Bordello and the British band 3 Mustaphas 3 before them, the seven-member group Cankisou takes musical influences from several cultures and blends them into an exciting, seamless style of rock ’n’ roll. There are melodies and horn riffs that sound Mideastern; saxophones that sound like a jazz band that made a wrong turn in Bucharest; very subtle touches of electronica; and joyously overpowering drums and percussion (two members are drummers).

Faÿt begins with a short, slow invocation called “Absintro,” which sounds a little like Delta blues — except for the Tuvan throat singer and the otherworldly rumblings from a didgeridoo. This slips into the album’s title song, a lively, celebratory rocker.

The song “Khreyyy” has overtones of metal, while “Vardusa Saza” starts off with a throbbing bass and wah-wah guitar that made me think it was going to be a Canki version of a Blaxploitation theme. It’s not. In fact, the song later features a group of women singing in a style reminiscent of Bulgarian choral music.

The album ends with “Kambines,” which begins with a flute solo and then goes into a lilting melody that might remind you of South African music.

Cankisou has yet to release anything on an American label. But that doesn’t mean that much anymore. You can download Faÿt at the usual places at the regular prices, and if you like bands like Gogol Bordello, I suggest you do.

Some videos. First a couple from Gogol Bordello





Here's Cankisou performing the song "Faÿt" live in Borneo last year



GaragePunk Hideout Open Again

Great news for fans of  “traditional garage rock to trashy punk, surf/instro to rockabilly, ’60s garage to swamp rock, broken blues to greasy R&B, soul to funk, frat rock to psych, freakbeat to power pop, proto punk to new wave, noise to lounge/exotica, and anything in between.”

My favorite internet music hangout, the GaragePunk Hideout is back in business.

The place had been closed since early July because Ning, the social network platform that had hosted the place for years, was about to hit the Hideout with a hefty price increase and other drastic changes.

It took longer than expected, but the Hideout migrated to a new platform powered by SocialEngine. It reopened yesterday and the place is just starting to get re-populated with all the bands, fans, DJs, podcasters and other outcasts and ne'er-do-wells.

I first stumbled on an earlier incarnation of The Hideout back in 2007. Not long after, I wrote about it in a Tuneup column. I stuck around and eventually went native. My major contribution there is producing The Big Enchilada podcast, one of many great shows on The GaragePunk Pirate Radio network.

So if you like the kind of music I play on Terrell's Sound World and The Big Enchilada, check out the Hideout. Stop by my page and shoot me a friend request.


Sunday, August 04, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Aug. 4, 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
FOH by Superchunk 
The Corner Man by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages 
Lost and Thirsty in Palookaville by Coconut Kings
Ides of March by Figures of Light
Rock This Joint by Tim Timebomb
Smokes by Question Mark & The Mysterians
Liars Beware by Richard Hell & The Voidoids
Let Me Entertain You by Rusty Warren
Setima Patrula by Los Bellkings 
We're Gonna Have a Real Good Time Together by The Velvet Underground 

Slander by Ty Wagoner
Palm Trees, Sun and Parking Lots by The Terrorists
Makin' Love by The Sloths
What About Us by The Fall
I Got a Feelin' in My Body by Elvis Presley 
Bank Robber by The Clash
Solo Estoy by Lorella y Los Shakers

My Gypsy Auto Pilot by Gogol Bordello
I Create in the Broken System by Arrington de Dionyso's Malaikat Dan Singa 
Pretty Boy by Johnny Dowd
Space II by Butthole Surfers
Social Fools by Devo
Hound Dog by Gefilte Joe & The Fish
I Come From the Mountain by Thee Oh Sees
Longview by Richard Cheese

Them Changes by Big John Hamilton & Doris Allen
Mixed Up Crazy World by Nick Curran & The Nitelifes
The Devil's Daughter by Buddy Guy
Quitter La Ville by Thee Verduns
Summer Wine by Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazelwood
The Kindness of Strangers by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Some Bluegrass Gospel for a Sunday Morning



Jimmy Martin: Going to Heaven in a flashy suit

Here's some sweet gospel sounds bluegrass style. If these songs don't touch your soul, I don't know what will.

Leading off is the great Jimmy Martin, singing a beautiful song in a pretty snazzy suit.


Next is a couple who aren't as famous as they ought to be, Tammy & Jerry Sullivan



Finally, here's Ricky Skaggs appearing on Marty Stuart's show




Friday, August 02, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

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Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Aug. 2, 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
Warmed Over Kisses by Dave Edmunds
I'm Gonna Dig Up Howlin' Wolf by Mojo Nixon & Skid Roper
Dirty Mouthed Flo by Robbie Fulks
Cajun Joe (The Bully of the Bayou) by Doug & Rusty Kerhaw
Hooker Bones 2 by DM Bob & The Deficits
How the West Was Won by Anthony Leon & The Chain
(Between the Two of Us) One of Us Has The Answer by Tim Timebomb
This Ain't a Good Time. By Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys

Billy the Kid by Ry Cooder
Miss Bonnie and Mr. Clyde by Joe Ely & Joel Guzman 
Mama Hated Diesels by Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen
Your Greedy Heart by Hazel Dickens
She and Us Pets by The Dirt Daubers
Oh Lonesome Me by Jerry Lee Lewis
Play My Boogie by Bill Mack
Beaver Hat Boogie by. Halden Woffard & The Hi- Beams

The Lord Knows I'm Drinkin' by Cal Smith
Penny Instead by Charlie Pickett
Skull and Crossbones by Bell & Shore
Hoboes Are My Heroes by. Legendary Shack Shakers
Don't Be Angry by Dale Watson
Beatin' My Head by Jayke Orvis
Nervous Breakdown by Whiskeytown 
Rehab Rendezvous by Rod Balch
Old Chunk of Coal by Billy Joe Shaver
Alligator Man by Jimmy C. Newman

Prohibition is a Failure by John Cohen & The Dustbusters
If You Don't Know Me by Now by Shineyribs
It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels by Kitty Wells
Tonya's Twirls by Loudon Wainwright III
When Two Worlds Collide by Roger Miller
Between the Whiskey and the Wine by Miss Leslie
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

LIVE AT CBGB

Terrell's Tune-up got held today for space in Pasatiempo. Happens sometimes. So instead of that, here's this:

I got a press release this morning for an upcoming soundtrack album for an upcoming movie about CBGB, that famouse dump in New York City's Bowery that was the proving grounds for many of the bands that became the cream of American punk rock.

I only got to go there once, back in the late 90s. I was with my daughter, then a teenager, and her friend. The band playing that night was one none of us had ever heard of, This Bike is a Pipe Bomb. I kept trying to imagine that they were The Patti Smith Group or The Ramones. (They weren't even close, but they were kind of fun.)

"The film tells the story of Hilly Krystal, played by Alan Rickman, and his legendary Bowery club that brought punk to life and helped birth the underground music scene in the U.S." So says the press release. "The film also stars Malin Akerman, Ryan Hurst and Ashley Greene. The movie will premiere at the CBGB Festival, and will open in select cities on October 11th."

The soundtrack, to be released Oct. 8 by Omnivore Records features lots of the bands who rose out of CBGB -- including Richard Hell & the Voidoids, The Dead Boys, Television, The Talking Heads -- and those that influenced them like The Velvet Underground, The Stooges, The MC5, etc.

Any who, here's some videos of some bands playing CBGB before they got famous.

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TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

  Sunday, April 21, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell E...