Friday, December 30, 2016

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST



Friday, Dec. 30, 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
I Ain't Gonna Hang Around by Southern Culture on the Skids
Get Your Biscuits in the Oven and Your Buns in the Bed by Kinky Friedman & The Texas Jewboys
Kentucky Blues by David Bromberg
Big White Pickup by Jim Terr
Commandment 7 by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Train Wreckers by Scott H. Biram
I Ain't Drunk by Whitey Morgan & The 78s
Fishin' Forever by Mose McCormack
New Year's Eve at the Gates of Hell by Ray Wylie Hubbard

Wild Wild Lover by Legendary Shack Shakers
Ain't No Bars in Heaven by T. Tex Edwards & The Swingin' Kornflake Killers
Man Up by Nikki Lane
Fruit of the Vine by Nancy Apple
Wrong Side of His Heart by Rosie Flores
Dirty House Blues by Wayne Hancock
The Girl I Sawed in Half by Paul Burch
Mean Mean Woman by Ruby Dee & The Snakehandlers
Woody Guthrie's New Year's Flood by Stan Ridgway

I Do What I Can to Get By by The Supersuckers
Pills I Took by Hank III
Four Years of Chances by Margo Price
Sea Stories by Sturgill SImpson
Nobody to Blame by Chris Stapleton
Rusty Cage by Johnny Cash
Blue Ridge Cabin Home by John McEuen
Whiskey Trail by Los Lobos
Ain't Doing Nobody No Good by Tony Joe White

Hearts and Bones by Paul Simon
Fare Thee Well Carolina Gals by Robbie Fulks
'Tis Sweet to Be Remembered by Mac Wiseman & Allison Krauss
Trouble in Mind by Merle Haggard
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, December 29, 2016

THROWBACK THURSDAY: These Are People Who Died



2016 was a terrible bummer of a year in so many ways. If only for the number of great musicians who passed on, this would be one of the cruelest years I can remember.

Here are some songs from my favorites who breathed their last in 2016. Rest in peace all of you

(Caution: It might take a bit for this page to load. Be patient. And hope that none of our favorites croak by the time you reach the end ...)

Long John Hunter
(January 4)



Red Simpson
(January 8)



David Bowie
(January 10)



Blowfly (Clarence Reid)
(January 17)



Dan Hicks.
(Feb. 6)
I guess it was his time to go. But I miss him.



Steve Young
(March 17)



Merle Haggard
(April 6)
Hey, Hag. It was fun.



Prince
(April 21)



Lonnie Mack
(April 21)
Yes, the great Memphis blues/rock guitarist died the same day as Prince. (John Eskow at Counterpunch had some observations about that.) Here's a clip from a 1980s local Cleveland TV show featuring Lonnie playing with host Scott Newell



Billy Paul
(April 24)
Soulman Billy was something of a one-hit wonder. But what a hit!



Candye Kane
(May 6)



Guy Clark
(May 17)



Ralph Stanley
(June 23)



Scotty Moore
(June 28)
He was best known for being Elvis Presley's guitarist in the '50s. This is an Elvis song from a Scotty Moore solo record.



Alan Vega
(July 16)



Buckwheat Zydeco (Stanley Dural, Jr.)
(Sept. 24)



Jean Shepard
(Sept, 25)



Oscar Brand
(September 30)



Bobby Vee
(Oct. 24)
Lord, Mr. Ford, this is one of those crazy Scopitone videos!


Leonard Cohen
(Nov. 7)



Leon Russell
(Nov. 13)



Billy Miller
(Nov. 14)


Mose Allison
(Nov. 15)



Sharon Jones
(Nov. 18)



Keith Emerson (March 11) & Greg Lake (Dec.7)

OK, I'm not a big prog-rock, but losing two thirds of ELP in one year is a big deal. Plus I always loved this song. I saw them do it live on the Brain Salad Surgery tour in the mid '70s and it's still the loudest damned concert I ever saw.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

WACKY WEDNESDAY: New Year's Songs from Around the World


Holy Zozobra, Batman! It's traditional New Year scarecrow burning time in Ecuador.

New Year's Eve is only three days away.. And around the world there's a lot more ways to sing about it than "Auld Lang Syne."

Here's a quick spin around the globe to hear a sampling of New Year songs.

Let's start out with a New Year song by a group that might prompt Sting to ask, "Do the Russians love their crappy boy bands too?"



Let's go to Korea for some equally obnoxious but more polished sounds. It's K-Pop group UNIQ's "Happy New Year."



Here's a New Year's Eve drum party in Morocco



And finally, here's one I actually like. It's Mongolian underground rock star and yoga instructor Sunderia and her band playing "The New Year Waltz."










Sunday, December 25, 2016

It's a Johnny Dowd Christmas!





There's no Terrell's Sound World tonight, but to make up for it, here are THREE Christmas songs from the unstopable Johnny Dowd!

(Thanks and Merry Xmas to T. Tex Edwards, whose tweet just a few minutes ago inspired this post. Now I'm waiting for the T. Tex Christmas album ...)









Friday, December 23, 2016

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST



Friday, Dec. 23, 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
Alone and Forsaken by Social Distortion
Excitable Boy by John McEuen
Red Wine by Scott H. Biram
U.S. Rte. 49 by Paul Burch
Mule Train by Ronnie Dawson
Don't Fiddle With a Cowboy Hat by Sons of the San Joquin
Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad by Wanda Jackson
Jack's Red Cheetah by Cathy Faber's Swingin' Country Band
Little But I'm Loud by Rosie Flores

Broke Broom Blues / Long Walk by Mose McCormack
I'll Sail My Ship Alone by Johnny Bush
Six Bullets for Christmas by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Bless Your Heart by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Pay Day Blues by Dan Hicks & His Hotlicks
Lord Be My Airbag by Jim Terr
Blue Christmas Lights by Chris & Herb
Stutterin' Cindy by Charlie Feathers

American is a Hard Religion by Robbie Fulks
Hard Times by Martha Fields
Dirt by Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Crawdad Song by Washboard Hank
I'm Ready If You're Willing by Mimi Roman
Crazy Arms by Jerry Lee Lewis
Keep it Between the Lines by Sturgill Simpson
Wreck of a Man by Arty Hill
Christmas Ball Blues by Leon Redbone

Waitin' on my Sweetie Pie by NRBQ
Worried Mind by Eilen Jewell
Goin' Back South by CW Stoneking
I'll Walk Out by Miss Leslie
Sawadi by Terry Allen
I'm Just a Country Boy by Don Williams
Nothing But a Child by Steve Earle with Maria McKee
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, December 22, 2016

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: The Best Albums of 2016




A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 23, 2016


These are my favorite albums of the year:

* Meridian Rising by Paul Burch. On this song-cycle biography of ascended country-music master Jimmie Rodgers, Burch tells the story of Rodgers’ life from the Singing Brakeman’s point of view, as he toured the country like a Depression-era rock star, picking, drinking, womanizing, and eventually dying. Burch juxtaposes the sweet sunny South of romantic myth against its oppressive historical reality. “Let me tell you all about the place I’m from/Where the police tip their hats while they’re swinging their clubs.” It’s not an overtly political album, but Burch makes some biting commentary on social inequality with songs like “Poor Don’t Vote.”


* Meet Your Death (self-titled). This band is something of an Austin punk-blues supergroup fronted by harp-man Walter Daniels — a veteran of bands including Big Foot Chester and Jack O’ Fire (a band who, years ago, covered a Blind Willie McTell song called “Meet Your Death”) — and slide guitarist John Schooley, who I know best from his three albums on the Voodoo Rhythm label, under the name “John Schooley and his one-man band.” The standouts on this outstanding record are “Elephant Man” (that one comes from a nasty old gutter blues song) and “Obeah Man,” a Caribbean-rooted invocation to the ruling hoodoo deities of rock ’n’ roll.



* Hex City by Churchwood. If you’re a fan of Captain Beefheart, Frank Zappa, Pere Ubu, The Fall, The Butthole Surfers, or Jonathan Swift, get yourself acquainted with Churchwood. Every track on their fourth album is filled with incredible blues, funk, and sometimes even metal riffs, with unpredictable time signatures and lyrics that sound like a cryptic code that, for the illuminated, could open the secrets of reality. The band’s basic lineup on this album is fortified on some songs by a horn section (The Money Shot Brass) and female vocalists called The Nicotine Choir. Hex City is a dangerous adventure. And the adventure only deepens with every listen.




Blood on the Keys by James Leg. If you need more of that blues-driven, rump-bumpin’, holy-
roller-shoutin’, swampy rock ‘n’ roll, a keyboard player called James Leg just might be your man. A former member of Black Diamond Heavies and Immortal Lee County Killers, Leg has a voice that falls somewhere between Beefheart and Jim “Dandy” Mangrum of Black Oak Arkansas. And he can even do a credible version of a Blaze Foley song, “Should’ve Been Home With You.”




Changes by Charles Bradley. Like the late Sharon Jones, her Daptone label-mate Bradley’s music career didn’t take off until relatively late in life — Jones was in her forties when she put out her first solo album, Bradley was in his sixties. But this guy, known as the Screaming Eagle of Soul, sinks his talons into a song and won’t let go. Changes opens with a monologue by Bradley, who introduces himself as “a brother that came from the hard licks of life. That knows America is my home … America represents love for all the Americans in the world” before breaking into a soulful chorus of “God Bless America.” But his patriotism isn’t the blind kind. In “Change For the World,” he sings, “If we’re not careful, we’ll be back segregated … Stop hiding behind religion/Hate is poison in the blood.” The album is all this plus a sweaty, emotional cover of a Black Sabbath song — the title track, “Changes.”




The Mystery Lights (self-titled). Speaking of Daptone, the New York neo-soul label is branching out with an imprint (Wick) specializing in neo-garage rock. The first release is by this basic loud-fast-and-snotty, fuzz ’n’ Farfisa group that also loves to take sonic excursions into psychedelia. These guys obviously have spent some time listening to old records by The Seeds and new ones by Thee Oh Sees — and maybe even some early Country Joe & the Fish. Nobody's going to mistake singer Mike Brandon for Charles Bradley but this white-boy soul is a rocking delight.





* Upland Stories by Robbie Fulks. Once again, Fulks has graced this troubled land with a powerful acoustic album. Some of these songs were inspired by James Agee, who documented the lives of Depression-era Southern sharecroppers in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941). For instance, the opening song, “Alabama at Night,” is about Agee’s trip to the South in 1936. More pointed is the stark, hard-bitten “America Is a Hard Religion.” Fulks, who first became known for his funny, sardonic tunes, has some lighter moments here, too. “Aunt Peg’s New Old Man” is a celebration of an elderly relative finding a new beau. “Katy Kay” is a devilish hillbilly love song.


* Cosmetic by Nots. This is the most urgent-sounding music I’ve heard in a long time. Though it’s not always easy to understand the lyrics, it’s impossible to escape the intensity of the sound. Fronted by singer Natalie Hoffmann, this is basically a guitar group — except they’ve got a keyboard player, Alexandra Eastburn, whose fearsome synthesized blips, bloops, wiggles, and squiggles remind me of Allen Ravenstine, the keyboard maniac of early Pere Ubu. The five-and-a-half-minute title song begins with a slow distorted blues riff, then, about three minutes in, the pace suddenly takes off and becomes a frenzied race to the finish



* Tumbling Heights by The Come N’ Go. This Swiss band cut its proverbial teeth in the crazed world of garage-punk. On this, their fourth album for Voodoo Rhythm Records, The Come N’ Go prove they can play it fast and furious. But on some songs they show a folkie sensibility, while on others, they go psychedelic on us. They’re still working hard to get our butts shaking — but they also seem interested in getting our minds expanding.


* Johnny & Bo by The Dustaphonics. This London-based band, featuring the guitar of the French-born Yvan Serrano-Fontova and the full-throttle vocals of Hayley Red, combines surf music, punk, and R&B (and a few echoes of ska, soundtrack music, and exotica) into a unique hopped-up sound. The names in the title refer to Ramone and Diddley, who are in Serrano-Fontova’s and Red’s personal pantheon of music heroes. They also pay tribute to the late Tura Satana, the star of Russ Meyer’s Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!, who collaborated with Serrano-Fontova on some music projects.



Hey, I lucked out this year. I found songs from all these albums on Spotify, so I put 'em in this playlist:

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Forgotten Christmas Songs

A couple or three years ago I was at KSFR doing what was then my annual Christmas Special -- I'd been doing it for probably more than 15 years by then -- when a weird revelation came over me and chilled me to the bone.

God damn, I'm sick of these fucking songs!

Even the parodies, the punk-rock versions and the anti-Christmas novelties started rubbing me the wrong way.

That's one reason that I decided to break tradition this year and not do a Christmas show for the Big Enchilada Podcast. Instead I did THIS.

The trouble with most Christmas songs is that everyone has heard them so many times you just want to scream.

At least I do.

Hopefully by next year I'll be sick of being sick of Christmas music and get back into the spirit instead of acting like a sour old bastard.

So for this Throwback Thursday before Christmas, here are a few old old songs, some from the dawn of the recording industry, that hopefully nobody is sick of.

Back in 1904, Albert C. Campbell and James F. Harrison sang about a town drunk's Christmas redemption. "Old Jim's Christmas Hymn."



Australian-born singer Billy Williams protested Santa Claus' cruel injustices in 1913 with "Why Don't Santa Claus Bring Something to Me?"



 A few years after his big hit "The Wreck of the Old 97," classically-trained Texas musician Vernon Dalhart recorded this obscure little Christmas tune in  1928.



And finally, here's a jumpiin' little 1934 instrumental by Raymond Scott, "Christmas Night in Harlem."

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Albums Named for Unappetizing Food

O.K., I'll admit this is a pretty dumb idea.  It came to me yesterday after I ran into my friend Dan during my afternoon walk along the ...