Sunday, February 28, 2016 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
Little Girl by The Syndicate of Sound
A plus by Figures of Light
Apartment Wrestling Rock 'n' Roll by Lightning Beat-Man
Welcome to the latest hillbilly episode of the Big Enchilada podcast, Hillbilly Hot Sauce. These hillbilly sounds are so hot they'll scorch your innards and make you squeal like a feral hog.
Friday, Febuary 26, 2016 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
Receiver by The Waco Brothers
Polk Salad Annie by Jason & The Scorchers
Bottle of Wine by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Let's Get Drunk by The Beaumonts
Gonna Love My Baby Now by T. Tex Edwards & The Swingin' Kornflake Killers
Whiskey Trip by Gary Stewart
Your Cousin's on Cops by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Dotted White Line by The Blues Against Youth
Lady Cop by Cousin Jody
Black Jack David by Loretta Lynn
Ain't a Goin' by James Hand
Too Late for Tequila by DM Bob & Country Jem
Tall Tall Trees by Roger Miller
I'm So Lonesome Without You by Hazeldine
Diddey Wah Boogie by Al Dexter
Ziggy Stardust by The Gourds
Poor White Trash by Rudy Preston
I Ain't Never by Webb Pierce
Worm by Reverse Cowgirls
Crow Jane by Oh Lazarus
All the Way Back Home by Dinosaur Truckers
Oh Susana by The Perch Creek Family Jugband
Back Street Affair by Brennen Leigh & Jesse Dayton
When the Helicopter Comes by The Handsome Family
Mermaids by Bobby Bare
Ain't Hurtin' Nobody by John Prine
Say It's Not You by George Jones & Keith Richards
Let the Jukebox Keep on Playing by Carl Perkins
Lost Highway by Willie Nelson, Ray Price & Merle Haggard
Runnin' from the Ghost of Your Past by Stevie Tombstone
Whiskey Girl by Gillian Welch
Ain't That Water Lucky by Paul Burch
Over the Next Hill (We'll Be Home) by Johnny Cash with Anita Carter
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican February 26, 2016
I don’t know how many times I’ve been asked “Where do you find this stuff?” by folks who read this column and/or listen to my radio shows and podcast. Mostly the question is asked by the sincerely curious, though sometimes the question is accompanied by a derisive smirk. My normal response is a half-joking, “I don’t find it. It finds me.” But in the case of the fantastic array of crazy, rocking, sometimes bizarre, and occasionally beautiful sounds I get from an obscure little German outfit called Off Label Records, I honestly don’t remember how I found it. All I know is that in the past four or five years, links to music-packed zip files just show up in my email and sometimes physical CDs appear in my mailbox (yes, shipped all the way from Europe). Off Label is a prolific little outfit, having released albums, EPs, and 7-inch singles by dozens of acts in the past few years, mostly from Europe, but also South America and Australia. Just recently I was happily surprised to find a new CD mailed by Off Label’s supreme commander, Johnny Hanke, in my box, a tasty little compilation called Off Label Werkschau 2009-2014 featuring most of my favorite Off Label artists. And better yet, nearly all of these are new songs (plus a few that saw very limited releases). So what kind of music is this? “Good music” is the short answer. But more specifically, Off Label specializes in the stuff I love the best. There is a healthy portion of wild, snotty garage-punk, represented here by, among others, The Vagoos, Jonah Gold & His Silver Apples, Lynx Lynx, Thee Verduns, and The Mokkers, an all-female German group that does a spirited cover of Thee Headcoatees’ “Wild Man.”
Pea & The Pees
Also, there’s a whole lot of warped country and folk. Louisiana expatriate DM Bob and his accomplice Speedy Jake do an inspired slop-bucket cover of Charlie Rich’s “Big Man,” while The Dad Horse Experience XL kick off the album with a banjo-led gospel romp, “Too Close to Heaven.” The Salty Pajamas’ “Rats in My Amp” is one of the more surreal selections here. The Dinosaur Truckers play a song called “All the Way Back Home” in their sweet ’n’ purdy German bluegrass style. And Pea & The Pees’ wacky hillbilly workout “Horse & Cows” would make Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs jealous.
O Lendário Chucrobillyman
Off Label is one of the world’s leading purveyors of loud, stripped-down, Bob Log-informed blues, and some of its major masters of this weird subgenre are present and accounted for on the compilation. My favorite is the Brazilian one-man sonic assault team O Lendário Chucrobillyman, who plays a song about a “Chicken Yodeling Woman.” Speaking of poultry, the Australian one-man band who calls himself Made for Chickens by Robots does a slow, clunky, and irresistible number called “Meatjuice Moustache,” while The Blues Against Youth, yes, another one-man guy, this one from Rome, shows off some hot licks on his song “Dotted White Line.” But there also selections on Werkschau that don’t fit neatly into any of these categories. For instance, Jenny & The Steady Go’s play straight-ahead rockabilly, while Reverse Cowgirls, a Dutch group, performing a tune called “Worm,” falls somewhere between country-rock and garage. The Coconut Kings, a Swiss band, sound a lot like the Squirrel Nut Zippers on “No Calypso Song.” And VulgarGrad, a band from Australia that specializes in Russian-style songs, sounds like an acoustic Gogol Bordello on the song “Ballroom,” though the singer sounds more like Popeye than Eugene Hütz. Chances are you’ve never heard of most — maybe not even any — of the musical acts on Werkschau. Don’t feel bad. I hadn’t either, before Hanke started sending me all this stuff a few years ago. Don’t let that stop you. You can find this compilation and all the other crazy Off Label music at their website, www.offlabelrecords.de, as well as the usual download sites. Here are some other recent releases from the company. And as fate would have it, all three of these acts have Bandcamp sites, so you can listen to their music and if you like it, do yourself and civilization a favor and buy it!
The Vagoos
* The Vagoos Love You. This is the second release by this German garage group, following their 2014 self-titled album. Love You is only six songs — and that’s my only complaint about it. If you like The Yardbirds and early Stones and songs like “(I’m Not Your) Stepping Stone,” you’ll hear those influences immediately. And they even include a hopped-up surf instrumental called “Vendetta.” The Vagoos’ Bandcamp page is www.thevagoos.bandcamp.com. You’ll also find their first album there. * Good Times by Oh Lazarus. Here’s an Italian group that loves good old early 20th-century blues, country jug-band and hot jazz. This album has Euro-filtered covers of songs like “I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate,” “St. James Infirmary,” “Single Girl Again,” Skip James’ “Crow Jane,” and Tom Waits’ “Come On Up to the House.” Its Bandcamp page is www.ohlazarus.bandcamp.com. * Uneasy Grounds by Dead Cat Stimpy. You like those raunchy lo-fi one-man blues bashers like O Lendário Chucrobillyman and the others I mentioned above? Then Dead Cat Stimpy is for you. He’s a Dutch fellow who’s undaunted by inviting comparisons to one of America’s greatest in his song “Possessed by Robert Johnson.” But my favorite here is the aggressively rocking “Twist Man.” Stimpy’s Bandcamp page is www.deadcatstimpy.bandcamp.com. You can even find a free download of a live album there. Enjoy some videos from some of these Off Label bands. Here is Jonah Gold & His Silver Apples
A dirty song, an alleged music biz ripoff in which one of America's most revered musicians was the victim. And possibly --- just possibly -- a mysterious link to a murder in a New Orleans whore house.
That's my kind of music!
I's the story of the little ditty called "I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate," an oft-recorded novelty tune that would become one of the biggest hits of the jazz age nearly 100 years ago.
The lyrics of the song that became successful are about a girl -- or sometimes a boy -- who goes to a dance with his or her sister Kate who amazes and delights everyone there by her prowess in dancing the Shimmy -- a controversial dance craze that was leading the youth astray right before the 1920s began to roar.
Here's the chorus:
Oh, I wish I could I shimmy like my sister Kate; She shimmies like a jelly on a plate. My mama wanted to know last night, What makes the boys think Kate's so nice. Now all the boys in the neighborhood, They know that she can shimmy and it's understood; I know that I'm late, but I'll be up-to-date When I shimmy like my sister Kate.
Here's a 1922 recording by Leona Williams
So where did Kate learn to shimmy?
Even though a pair of New Orleans musician and pubisher Armand Piron is credited with the song -- sometimes sharing the glory with musician Clarence Williams, Louis Armstrong long claimed he knew Kate before she even shimmied.
Laurence Bergreen, in his biography, Louis Armstrong An Extravagant Life told Armstrong's story of "Sister Kate." Armstrong said that when Kid Ory hired him, he told the young coronet player he should "Work up a number so we can feature you once in a while," So he did,even creating a little dance to go with it. Bergreen writes:
Bergreen describes the song as 'an unashamedly filthy thing" which was titled "Keep Off Katie's Head" or, sometimes "Take Your Finger Out of Katie's Ass" The lyrics Bergreen quotes in the book though don't seem all that dirty:
Why don't you keep off Katie's head? Why don't you keep out of Katie's bed? It's a shame to say this very day
Kate Townsend
She's like a little child at play.
Bergreen also says "Katie's Head" is possibly inspired by the stabbing death of Kate Townsend, "a Storyville madam who'd been barbarously murdered years before."
Kate Townsend, who ran a high-class cat house on Basin Street, was killed in 1883 during a drunken quarrel by her longtime "fancy man" Troisville Sykes. A jury found him not guilty.
As much as a bordello murder adds some dark, romantic appeal to the song, I'm skeptical. Townsend was killed about 35 years before Armstrong started performing "Katie's Head." There's not much that even hints at any killing or violence of any kind in the lyrics of either the dirty or clean version of the song.
Except perhaps the line, "It's a shame how you're lying on her head /I thought sure you would kill her dead ..."
Still, I think that's a stretch.
Getting back to Satchmo, Bergreen writes:
When Louis sang this to a packed house at Pete Lala's one, "Man, it was like a sporting event. All the guys crowded around an they like to carry me up on their shoulders." It wasn't just the song that got the crowd so excited, it was the little dance Louis did with it, his version of the Shimmy. which was just beginning to appear in cities around the country, scandalizing proper folks ... "One night, as I did this number I saw this cat writing it all down on music paper. He was quick man , he could write as fast as I could play and sing. When I had finished he asked me if I'd sell the number to him. He mentioned twenty five dollars. When you're only making a couple of bucks a night that's a lot of money. But what really put the deal over was that I had just seen a hard-hitting steel gray overcoat that I really wanted for those cold nights. So I said `Okay' and he handed me some forms to sign and I signed them. He said he'd be back with the cash, but he never did come back."
A young Louis Armstrong
The stranger was Clarence Williams, who Bergreen describes as "the first important black musician in New Orleans ..." Williams and Armand Piron, who started the first black-owned music publishing business in New Orleans, published Artmstrong's song in 1919.
"They changed the music slightly, gave it a faddish title -- "I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate -- cleaned up the lyrics," Bergreen said.
The song became a hit.
So yes, young Louis, according to the story, sold the rights to what's been called "The first jazz hit of the 1920s" for an overcoat. And he never even got paid for it.
But did Armstrong actually write it? In his 1987 book I Remember Jazz: Six Decades Among the Great Jazzmen, Al Rose recalls a 1939 interview with an ailing Piron, who, in so many words, suggested Armstrong take his finger out of Katie's ass.
Asked about Armstrong's claim about "Sister Kate," Piron said, "that's not Louis' tune or mine or Pete's either. [Pete is New Oreans jazzman Peter Bocage, who was present at Rose's interview.] That tune is older than all of us. People always put different words to it. Some of them were too dirty to say in polite company."
Whoever wrote it, Sister Kate still shimmies among us. Enjoy a few versions of this classic song.
The Original Memphis Five had an early hit with this instrumental take.
WWII pin-up girl Betty Grable took a crack at this song -- including an introduction I'd never heard before.
The first version I ever heard, when I was in junior high, was by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on their 1967 debut album
The late David Bowie used to perform "Sister Kate" in the mid '70s as part of a medley with an old soul tune "Footstompin'" (Note the guitar riff he'd later use on "Fame.")
And just recently, this cool little band from Italy called Oh Lazarus recorded it for their album Good Times.
I'm a longtime Porter Wagnoner fan having discovered the Man from Missouri on his syndicated TV back in the '60s.
But as much as I loved Porter's music, the thing that originally drew me to the show when I was a kid was a bizarre looking dude known as Speck Rhodes,
Dolly Parton gave The Porter Wagoner Show some sex appeal. Speck Rhodes gave it some weirdness.
He portrayed the ultimate country bumpkin, He dressed like a living ventriloquist dummy -- an ever-present bowler hat, often in a loud color, a checkered jacket and a bow tie. His top front teeth were blackened. I assume they were blackened.
Speck was born born Gilbert Ray Rhodes in West Plains, Mo. (which also was Wagoner's home town) in 1915. On the Wagoner show, he seemed like a throwback,something from the days of vaudeville -- and indeed he and his brothers were a part of that world, performing on the RKO circuit as The Log Cabin Mountaineers.
Wagoner hired Rhodes for his TV show in 1960. Sometimes you'd see him playing stand-up bass with the Wagon Master Band. But Speck would come out, tell a few corny jokes then do some funny songs, a few of which you'll see below.
Rhodes died in 2000 at the age of 84. You don't see many like him anymore.
Here's a tune -- I assume it's an early one since its in black and white -- called "I'm Going Back To Where I Come From."
After bantering with Porter for a minute or so, Speck sings a song called " If I Could Just Go Back."
This video seems to be a live concert performance. The song is "When Its Long Handle Time In Tennessee."
I call this next one "Speck-a-palooza." There are three songs here: Speck proves he's a rocker at heart with "Hound Dog" (yes that "Hound Dog"); "I'm a Plain Old Country Boy" and Little Jimmy Dickens' "Sleepin' at the Foot of Bed."
Sunday, February 21, 2016 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
Leave the Capitol by The Fall
Hey You by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
Sexy Boots by Hollywood Sinners
Wild Man by The Mokkers
Big Blue Chevy 72 by Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Bitch Slap Attack by Lovestruck
Not Like You by The Vagoos
Murky Water by Big John Bates
Wang Dang Doodle by Jerry J. Nixon
Tiger in a Cage by Johnny Rawls
One Cup of Coffee by Dead Cat Stimpy
Magical Colors by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Scratch That Itch by The Go-Wows
Tokyo Storm Warning by Elvis Costello & The Attractions
Bold Marauder by Drywall
She's Got Balls by The Cramps
John Lawman by Roky Erikson & Okkervil River
Abba by Captain Beefheart
How High by BBQ
Tuned Out by JJ & The Real Jerks
Of Walking Abortion by The Manic Street Preachers
Get Me Out of The Country by The Electric Mess
Nobody Spoil My Fun by The Seeds
Man of Considerable Taste by Billy Boy Arnold
Rebecca Rodifer by The Gaunga Dyns
Just Like All the Rest by Javier Escovedo
Fear Loves This Place by Julian Cope
Oh It's Such a Shame by Jay Reatard
Please Please Girl by The Flamin' Groovies
Which End is Up by Miriam
Ballroom by Vulgargrad
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Friday, Febuary 19, 2016 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
Old Dan Tucker by Bruce Springsteen
Wine, Wine, Wine by Dale Watson
Get a Little Goner by Marti Brom
San Antonio Romero by Cathy Faber's Swingin' Country Band
Honky Tonk Hangover by Miss Leslie
The Devil's at Red's by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Wolverton Mountain by Southern Culture on the Skids
My Baby is a Tramp by Brennen Leigh
Big Man by DM Bob & Speedy Jake
Samson/ Jacob's Ladder by Greg Brown
Down on the Corner of Love by Buck Owens'
Too Close to Heaven by The Dad Horse Experience
Girl at the End of the Bar by The Waco Brothers
Where Does Love Go by Uncle Dave & The Waco Brothers
Big Fat Nuthin' by The Bottle Rockets
I'll See You in My Dreams by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
My Walking Stick by Leon Redbone
Hard Hearted Hannah by Ukulele Ike
Good Times by Oh Lazarus
Jonestown Blues by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Rats in my Amp by Salty Pajamas
Get What's Coming by The Defibulators
Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight by Mississippi John Hurt
The legislators went on past midnight and I've got to get back to the Capitol soon this morning, so I don't have anything fancy for this blog on Throwback Thursday.
So I'll just share this song that my grandfather, who was born in Kentucky, used to love. It's "Old Dan Tucker," performed here by Gid Tanner & The Skillet Lickers.
Enjoy. I've got to wash my face in a frying pan and get back to work.
Here are a few twisted rock 'n' roll takes on some of your favorite television theme songs.
Let's start with a reliable old psychobilly group, Elvis Hitler, who brought Hendrix to Hooterville with this 1980s mash-up, "Green Haze.".
Iggy Pop paid tribute to songwriter Neil Hefti and Adam West in his glorious live cover of "Batman."
I was too old to appreciate The Banana Splits Saturday morning kiddie show in the '70s. But I'll never be too old for The Dickies' version of the theme song.
When I hear Husker Du's version of Sonny Curtis' "Love Is All Around," the theme to the Mary Tyler Moore Show, I truly believe I'm going to make it after all.
The Chicano punk band Manic Hispanic brought took Gilligan's Island to the barrio. (It's from a 1997 compilation called Show & Tell: A Stormy Remembrance Of TV Theme Songs a fun collection of rock 'n' roll TV theme covers.)
And speaking of Gilligan's Island, here's a version that sparked a vicious lawsuit filed by led Zeppelin's lawyers that resulted in a court order requiring the band Little Roger & The Goosebumps to destroy all copies of the record.
Ironically, Robert Plant in a 2004 interview on NPR's Fresh Airsaid this was his favorite parody of "Stairway to Heaven." (He talks about that right around the 15 minute mark.)
To which "Little" Roger Clark replied in a 2007 interview, "Thanks for nothing, Bob. Well, I met him. He said, `Oh, I’ve always liked this record.' It was Jimmy Page and the manager that hated it. But that’s just like any business situation. `I love you, babe, but my partner’s got a problem.' "
Some copies of the original are still floating around. And Little Roger & The Goosebumps released a legal version 16 years ago,