Wednesday, July 08, 2015

WACKY WEDNESDAY: A Musical Tribute to Phil Austin



Phil Austin of The Firesign Theatre died June 18. I'm still getting over that.

Hell, I'm still getting over Peter Bergman's death three years ago. Phil Proctor and David Ossman now are the only Firesigns left.

Back in my college days in the early '70s I practically worshiped The Firesign Theatre. They were far more than a comedy team. And it wasn't just hippie humor. In their records they created new worlds, surreal, satirical, multi-layered universes where the jokes had multiple meanings. They were full of references to pop culture of the day and Shakespeare  and Edgar Allan Poe and spoofs of  old radio shows and televangelists and politicians and cheesy TV shows and commercials

It's been 45 years since they released my favorite Firesign album, Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers  and I still find lines I never noticed before.

So if you've never heard The Firesign Theatre, by all means seek them out. (Most of their albums, including their early classics, are on Spotify and a bunch of their stuff is on Youtube. Or you might do something old timey and BUY some of their albums. (Start with Dwarf or How Can You Be In Two Places At Once When You’re Not Anywhere At All -- which includes the debut of Austin's most famous character, Nick Danger.)

Because this is a music blog, this Wacky Wednesday I'm paying tribute to Phil with some Firesign musical bits -- songs The Firesign Theatre taught us.

R.I.P. Nick Danger!

Here is a live version of "Oh Blinding Light" from the movie Martian Space Party. Phil Proctor's fiddle solo comes in at about 1:42



Here's one from I Think We're All Bozos on This Bus.



And finally, "Toad Away," a hymn and sermonette from Dear Friends. Someday we'll all be toad away.

Sunday, July 05, 2015

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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Sunday, July 5, 2015
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

Here's the playlist
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Lupine Ossuary by Thee Oh Sees
Gimme Love by Sleater-Kinney
My Box Rocks by Figures of Light
Non-State Actor by Soundgarden
Glam Rock Girl by The Barbarellatones
The Lover's Curse by The A-Bones
Cretin Hop by The Ramones
Look at Little Sister by The Sonics
Duck for the Oyster by Malcom McLaren

PiƱon Lurker by The Gluey Brothers
I'm a Hog For You Baby by Screaming Lord Sutch
Don't Shine Me On by Frankie & The Dell Stars
White Bread n' Beans by Left Lane Cruiser
Candy Man Blues by Copper Gamins
Mine All Mine by The Beat Rats
Funeral by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Catch a Ride to Sonic Bloom by Night Beats
They're Coming to Take Me Away by Napoleon XIV

Backup Man by Greenland Whalefishers
Red Rover by Motobunny
Fly Like A Rat by Quintron & MissPussycat
Lesson Of Crime by YVY
You Treat Me Bad by The Ju Jus
Count Me Out by Boss Hog
( I Got a) Good 'Un by John Lee Hooker
Set Your Mind Free by Wiley & The Checkmates

Lavar dySara by Cankisou
Love Letters by Dex Romweber Duo (with Cat Power)
On the Horizon by The Compressions
Voodoo Boogie by J.B. Lenoir
Down in Mississippi by Ry Cooder
Venus by Television
Ac-cen-tu-ate the Positive / Things Are Getting Better by NRBQ
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Friday, July 03, 2015

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

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Friday, July 3, 2015
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

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens

American Trash by Betty Dylan

Fourth of July by Dave Alvin

Still Sober After All these Beers by Banditos

Lower 48 by The Gourds

Go-Go Truck by The Defibulators

Ballad of the Bellhop by The Dustbowl Revival

The Clams and I by The Dirty Bourbon River Show

A Day at a Time by Dale Watson

 

(Tom Russell message)

Hair Trigger Heart by Tom Russell

The Outcast by Dave Van Ronk

The Day Bartender by Al Duvall

Chevy Headed West by Jim Stringer

Thirteen Minutes by Earl Brooks

The Girl on Death Row by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole

Come Out Come Out by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies

 

Lucky by The Beaumonts

Down on the Corner of Love by Buck Owens

Aim to Please by Palomino Shakedown

Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette) by Phil Harris

Fried Chicken and Gasoline by Southern Culture on the Skids

I'm Barely Hangin' On by Johnny Paycheck

Alice in Hulaland by Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard

I Can Talk to Crows by Chipper Thompson

Hungover Together by The Supersuckers with Kelly Deal


Indoor Fireworks by Elvis Costello

Desert Rose Chris Hillman & Herb Pedersen

Worried Mind by Eilen Jewell

Sweet Virginia by The Rolling Stones

Can You Blame the Colored Man by South Memphis String Band

My Rosemarie by Stan Ridgway

CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, July 02, 2015

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday, Rev. Dorsey. Happy Birthday, Georgia Tom

Rev. Thomas A. Dorsey


Yesterday, July 1 was the birthday of two great American musicians born in 1899 in Villa Rica, Georgia.

One was a great blues pianist and occasional singer who played with greats like Ma Rainey and Tampa Red. He co-wrote and sang on Red's best-known song. "Tight Like That" -- and he recorded a few sides under his own name, Georgia Tom.

The other was the Father of Gospel Music, credited with, basically, inventing the genre of Black gospel, bringing the passion of the blues to sacred music ... and writing some of the greatest gospel songs ever known. He even coined the term "gospel music." His name was Reverend Thomas A. Dorsey.

Most of you probably realize Georgia Tom and Thomas Dorsey were the same guy,

He was the son of a Baptist preacher and a church organist. Some say he was a child prodigy. At first he adopted the stage name "Barrelhouse Tom" before settling on "Georgia Tom."

By the age of 19, he moved to Chicago, where he knocked around n some local jazz and blues bands before starting his own group, The Wildcat Jazz Band, which backed up Ma Rainey. Tampa Red was a guitarist in that band.

But in the 1920s, Dorsey's life took a turn toward darkness. According to a PBS documentary caled This Far by Faith:
Georgia Tom

At twenty-one, his hectic and unhealthy schedule led to a nervous breakdown. He convalesced back home in Atlanta. There, his mother admonished him to stop playing the blues and  serve the Lord. He ignored her and returned to Chicago, playing with Ma Rainey. He married his sweetheart, Nettie Harper. But in 1925, a second breakdown left Dorsey unable to play music.

It should be noted that different accounts have several conflicting dates for these "nervous break downs."  According to some sources after the second one he sought the spiritual guidance of a faith healer named Bishop H.H. Haley who, Dorsey told biographer, Michael Harris, extracted a `live serpent' out of Dorsey’s throat.

According to the story, Haley told Dorsey, "There is no reason for you to be looking so poorly and feeling so badly, The Lord has too much work for you to let you die." And he helped convince the young musician to turn away from those Devil blues and dedicated his talents to music for the Lord.

But Dorsey hadn't hit bottom yet. According to This Far by Faith:

After his recovery ... Dorsey committed himself to composing sacred music. However, mainstream churches rejected his songs. Then, in August 1932, Dorsey's life was thrown into crisis when his wife and son died during childbirth. In his grief, he turned to the piano for comfort. The tune he wrote, "Take My Hand, Precious Lord," came, he says, direct from God. 

Dorsey started the Dorsey House of Music, an independent music publishing company for Black gospel composers, in 1932. He established the National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses, serving as its president for more than 40 years. He would begin an association with Mahalia Jackson, one of the greatest gospel singers of all time

And he sang nothing but gospel music until his death in 1993

So happy birthday, Reverend! Here are a bunch of his songs.

Let's start off with Georgia Tom:



Here is is with a lady called Kansas City Kitty



Here is his most famous song, recorded with his pal Tampa Red



Now on to Dorsey's gospel career. This isn't one of his better known songs, but it's a good one.



Here is Mahalia Jackson singing "(There Will Be) Peace in the Valley," which Dorsey wrote for her in 1937. The song went on to be hits for Red Foley and, later, Elvis Presley. Johnny Cash also did a great version (the first one I ever heard back in the '60s.)



Here is Rev. Dorsey's best known song, performed late in his life




Wednesday, July 01, 2015

WACKY WEDNESDAY: The Secret History of White Rap

I'm not talking Vanilla Ice here ...

Decades before before The Sugar Hill Gang -- years before The Last Poets or Gil Scott Heron even -- courageous, (or at least shameless) Caucasians created their own forms of rap music that swept the nation.

Or at least made for some pretty weird novelty records.

The late, lamented Spy Magazine released a hilarious compilation called White Men Can't Wrap, which showcased many of the classics of the genre, some of which are included below.

The collection included liner notes by none other than Irwin Chusid, perhaps the nation's greatest expert on "outsider" music, and a major fan of all sorts of strange and wonderful songs.
Chusid sayeth:

White rap is a centuries-old tradition; the original white rappers were square-dance callers improvising rhymes for Saturday-night barn parties in America's rural backwaters. Like today's rappers, they were seen as debauchers, imperiling the morals of the young. The fiddle was "the instrument of the devil"; church leaders banned it. The callers' freestyle rhymes teased with erotic innuendos ("Duck for the oyster/Dig for the clam/Knock a hole in the old tin can").

The stuff they taught you in the grade-school gymnasium, that cornball mountain music with the do-si-dos - it was all about sex and forbidden behavior! It was the roots of today's white rap culture. Herewith, a tribute." (Thanks to the ever-excellent Music for Maniacs blog for transcribing that for their post about White Men Can't Wrap a few years ago.)

Besides its roots in square-dance calling as Chusid notes, another major manifestation of white rap was "talking blues," Folksingers like woody Guthrie and the young Bob Dylan loved the style and included several talking blues tunes in their repertoires.

But the style goes back at least to the mid-20s. South Carolina entertainer Chris Bouchillon recorded a song called "Talking Blues' in 1926. His song "Born in Hard Luck" is even better.


Hank Williams played his own style of talking blues also, in is guise as Luke the Drifter.



But hillbilly singers were not the only purveyors of white rap. In the late '50s comedian Lenny Bruce made this beatnik-jazz contribution.



By the 1960s, white rap was in full blossom. There were big radio hits like "Big Bad John" by Jimmy Dean, "Old Rivers by Walter Brennan," "Ringo by Lorne Green and "Gallant Men," a patriotic march by Everett McKinley Dirksen, whose day job at the time was minority leader of the U.S. Senate. (I posted a YouTube of that on a previous Wacky Wednesday.)

But the greatest white rapper of them all in the 1960s was not an actor or senator. He was Napoleon XIV (real name: Jerry Samuels)  who recorded this sensitive take on behavioral-health issues called "They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" This track actually was a crude form of hip hop, just a guy reciting lyrics over a beat and an ominous siren. Why has Napoleon XIV not been sampled more?



Finally, I know that technically he doesn't qualify for this category, but for his 1967 song "Don't Blame the Children," I believe that Sammy Davis, Jr. should be considered at least an honorary  white rapper.

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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