Monday, July 30, 2018

Enjoy the Latest Big Enchilada Podcast Episode

THE BIG ENCHILADA



A phony demon is better than no demon at all. And now it's time for good old fashioned demonic rock 'n' roll with bitchen sounds that even the angels can cherish. There's even an entire set of songs that musicians have submitted to Radio Mutation.

Remind your loved ones that The Big Enchilada is officially listed in the iTunes store. So go subscribe, if you haven't already (and gimme a good rating and review if you're so inclined.) Thanks. 

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Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Wooly Bully by Charlie & His Go-Go Boys)
Flowers in My Hair, Demons in My Head by The Mystery Lights
I Never Told You by Reverend Beat-Man & Izobel Garcia
Dominique Laboubee by The Fleshtones
Am I Going Insane by Miss Ludella Black & The Masonics
Big Boss Man by Tony Joe White
Little Demon by The Amazing Crowns

(Background Music: Hijacked by West Hell 5)
Standing on the Corner by Mal Thursday Quintet 
Fried Pork by Craterface
Sally Can't Wait by Hey Honcho & The Aftermaths
Risky Ricky by Rougemont
Loser Leave Town by The Mighty Jabronis
The Love Witch by Thee Girl Fridays

(Background Music: Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend by Marilyn Monroe vs. Swing Cats)
Bullet by The Darts
Dando Vueltas by Los Eskeletos
About Alice by The Legendary Tigerman
Most Guys by Roger Arvidson
Demons are a Girl's Best Friend by Nekromantix

Play it below:




Sunday, July 29, 2018

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST





Sunday, July 29, 2018
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres

Mini-Mekonville Set
The Glory that was Mekonvilled
Memphis Egypt by The Mekons
Shoes by Striplight
The Curse by Chivalrous Amoekons

Mototcycle Boy by The Legendary Tigerman
Sweet Lenore by Leather Girls
8:05 by Moby Grape
Everywhere is Nowhere by The Fleshtones with Mary Huff
Viva la Figa by Reverend Beat-Man & Izobel Garcia
I Shouted by Bee Bee Sea
His Latest Flame by '68 Comeback

It's Fun by Lynx Lynx
Slowly Losing My Mind by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Am I Going Insane? by Miss Ludella Black & The Masonics
Your Dangerous Mind by The Masonics
Fever of the New Zealot by The Bonnevilles
It's a Gas by The Hombres

The Slow Drag Under by Benjamin Booker
I Want You by Hollywood Sinners
1880 0r So by Television
This is Hi-Fi by Mission of Burma
Frying Pan by Salty Pajamas
Bring It by Barbarellatones
Charlottesville by Jesse Dayton
Who Cares by Robbie Fulks & Linda Gail Lewis
South Street by The Orlons

Killer Diller Blues by Alabama Shakes
Old by Bettye LaVette
Awful Dreams by Tony Joe White
Moonbeam by King Richard & The Knights
Singing in the Rain by Petty Booka
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Want to keep the party going after I sign off at midnight?
Go to The Big Enchilada Podcast which has hours and hours of music like this.

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast CLICK HERE

Thursday, July 26, 2018

THROWBACK THURSDAY: It's George Clinton's Birthday ... (at least ONE George Clinton ...)

Vice President George Clinton: "We want the funk!"
On this date in 1739, George Clinton, the 4th vice president of the U.S. was born in Little Brittain, New York.

According to the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, Clinton, who had been governor of New York was "elected Vice President of the United States in 1804 as a Republican and served four years under President Thomas Jefferson; reelected in 1808 and served under President James Madison ..."

Clinton laid low after leaving the vice presidency. But more than 150 years, George Clinton reemerged as the leader of the two funkiest bands in the history of the cosmos.

Funny how things work out ...

Here's some classic George Clinton music ...



And this one, "Cosmic Slop" in which Clinton and Funkadelic look like a weird cross between the Sun Ra Arkestra and The Warriors



Getting jazzy and snazzy with "Mr. Wiggles."



And what do you know, Clinton is still at it. He released an album with Parliament called Medicaid Fraud Dog earlier thjis year. Here's a tune from that:



GEORGE COMMANDS THE CLOUDS TO ROLL AWAY
George Clinton & The P-Funk Allstars in Santa Fe August, 2007.

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Keep on Mashin'!



It's been  two and a half years since I did a Wacky Wednesday on musical mash-ups.


Let's start with one I saw on Facebook a few days ago, rekindling my interest in mash-ups: The Metalica Macarena




James Brown meets Led Zeppelin



The Clerkenwell Kid's Antique Beat, Electro-Swing, bootleg mashup remix of Lady Gaga's "Poker Face" and The Real Tuesday Weld's "Going Gaga"



Aerosmith goes bluegrass



Nirvana gets Rick-rolled!




Sunday, July 22, 2018

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST





Sunday, July 22, 2018
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
I Surrender by The Fleshtones
The Cutting Edge by Archie & The Bunkers
Before I Die by The Sloths
Shrunken Head by Deadbolt
This Dog is the King of the Losers by Bee Bee Sea
Beautiful Gardens by The Cramps
You're Humbuggin' Me by Ronnie Dawson
Second Fiddle by Bill Hearne

Black Metal by Reverend Beat-Man & Izobel Garcia
Cuidad Muerto by Los Eskeletos
Poor and Broke by Trixie & The Trainwrecks
Bad She Gone Voodoo by Chief Fuzzer
Dirty Photographs by The Bonnevilles
Guts is Enough by The Devils
Fiesta Nuclear by Hollywood Sinners
Honeymooners by The Scuzzballs
Stealin' Stealin' by Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore

Bartholomew by The Silent Comedy
Oh Sinnerman by Black Diamond Heavies
I Came Back to Bitch by L7
Cry to Me by Solomon Burke
Pushin' Too Hard by The Standells
Bloody Hammer by Roky Erickson & The Aliens
Cold Studded Stunner by The Trouble Boys
Napoleon's Index Finger by The Common Cold
C'Mon a My House by The Satellites
Boogie Woogie Country Girl by Robbie Fulks & Linda Gail Lewis

Eminence Gris Gris by Churchwood
Rude by Dinosaur Jr.
Ghost Train by The Dead Brothers
Lonesome Friends of Science by John Prine
Circus of Life by Kinky Friedman
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Like the Terrell's Sound World Facebook page


Want to keep the party going after I sign off at midnight?
Go to The Big Enchilada Podcast which has hours and hours of music like this.

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast CLICK HERE

Thursday, July 19, 2018

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: The Fabulous 70s

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
July 20, 2018



Let us now praise the fabulous seventies. No, I’m not talking about the 1970s, the decade. I’m talking about a bunch of new albums by country/folk/roots artists who are septuagenarians — Kinky Friedman (73), John Prine (71), and Jimmie Dale Gilmore (73), the latter of whom just released a duet record with a younger musical partner, Dave Alvin, a mere lad of 62. While none of these works reach the heights of the music that made us love these guys in the first place, all three albums are worthwhile and welcome efforts that deserve some time in your eardrums.

Cover by Jon Langford
* Downey to Lubbock by Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore. This is the first time Gilmore and Alvin have made a record together, but the Downey/Lubbock collection goes back decades. Back in the early ’80s, Alvin’s old band The Blasters toured with Joe Ely, who, along with Gilmore and Butch Hancock, was in The Flatlanders, Lubbock’s greatest act since Buddy Holly and The Crickets. Ely played on the same bill with The Blasters in 1982 at the Golden Inn.

Ten of the 12 songs here are covers, including those written by Woody Guthrie (a haunting “Deportee [Plane Wreck at Los Gatos],” sung by Gilmore); Texas bluesman Lightnin’ Hopkins (a nice and rowdy “Buddy Brown’s Blues”); Lloyd Price (“Lawdy Miss Clawdy”); Brownie McGhee (“Walk On”); and not one, but two from the vast songbook of The Memphis Jug Band (“Stealin’ Stealin’ ” and “K.C. Moan”).

Tracks from more recent artists abound. For instance, the Mexican-flavored tune called “The Gardens” is a sad number about violence in the barrio written by Alvin’s late sideman and crony Chris Gaffney. It’s a highlight of the album, as is the late Steve Young’s “Silverlake,” a lilting bittersweet blues.

Alvin wrote two new tunes for this album, including the title cut as well as “Billy the Kid and Geronimo.” This is about a fictional meeting between the two at some bar in Lordsburg. “Billy The Kid said, ‘We’re just the same./We’re cursed and we’re damned as they whisper our names’ … /Geronimo said, ‘No, We’re not the same, for the harm I have done, I feel great shame/I fought for my family, my tribe and my land/But we’ll pay the same price for the blood on our hands.’ ”

I could have done without the new version of the old Youngbloods hippie peace ’n’ love anthem, “Get Together.” (I thought it was sappy back in the late ’60s. It’s no better now.) But that doesn’t stop me from being happy that Gilmore and Alvin got together for Downey to Lubbock.

* The Tree of Forgiveness by John Prine. As has been true throughout his career, Prine’s goofy grin is practically audible in many of the songs on his new album — his first collection of new original songs in 13 years.

And he has a lot to grin about. For instance, the awkwardly titled “Egg and Daughter Night, Lincoln Nebraska, 1967 (Crazy Bone).” Here Prine sings, “If they knew what you were thinkin’/They’d run you out of Lincoln/Just blame it on that ole’ crazy bone.”

“Lonesome Friends of Science” is a strange bird as far as songs go — even by Prine standards. I listened to it a couple of times and practically pulled out what’s left of my hair trying to figure out where I’d heard it before. Then it finally hit me that this is a sardonic, almost surreal rewrite of Townes Van Zandt’s “Pancho and Lefty.” The melody is subtly similar to “Pancho,” as are a few lyrical turns. But Prine’s song is full of sublime nonsense. He laments the loss of planet status for Pluto, and sings about the Vulcan statue in Birmingham, Alabama: “Venus left him long ago/For a guy named Mars from Idaho …” And in the chorus, Prine sings, “The lonesome friends of science say/‘The world will end most any day’/Well, if it does, then that’s okay/’Cause I don’t live here anyway …”

In the final song, “When I Get to Heaven,” Prine sings with glee about the possibility of going to heaven. Speaking, not singing the verses, he says, “Then God as my witness, I’m gettin’ back into show business/I’m gonna open up a nightclub called The Tree of Forgiveness/And forgive everybody ever done me any harm ...”

Personally, I’m not a big believer in heaven. But albums like these make this earthly plane just a little more heavenly.


* Circus of Life by Kinky Friedman. Kinky has built a career on the outrageous, politically incorrect, funny, and raucous songs he recorded in the mid-1970s, tunes like “They Ain’t Makin’ Jews Like Jesus Anymore,” “The Ballad of Charles Whitman,” and “Get Your Biscuits in the Oven and Your Buns in the Bed.” So it may be surprising that this — Kinky’s first album of new original songs in more than 40 years — is dominated by slow, somber, and quiet tunes.

So if it’s the cigar-chomping, wisecracking Friedman you’re looking for, this ain’t the album for you. In fact, my initial reaction was this wasn’t the album for me. But after a couple of listens, these songs by the aging, more reflective Friedman started to grow on me. The title song is not about an actual circus. It’s about old people coming to grips with their lives of regret and desperation. Then there is “Jesus in Pajamas.” You might think this would be one of Kinky’s twisted religious parables. Instead, it’s about a destitute man at a Denny’s in Dallas.

While I’ll always remember Kinky for his funny stuff, Circus of Life is a sweet glimpse at another, deeper side of the artist.

Alright ...How about some videos?

Here are the wild blue Blaster and the old Flatlander ...



"The lonesome friends of science say/`The world will end most any day' ..."



Here's Kinky's "Circus"



THROWBACK THURSDAY: Songs for the Governors

Gov. Pat Neff
Today 21 state governors are coming to Santa Fe for a meeting of the National Governors Association.

In honor of that here's a Throwback Thursday salute to a couple of governors from the past century -- Gov. Pat Neff of Texas and Gov. O.K. Allen of Louisiana,

These are the two governors who were honored with songs by singer Hudie Ledbetter, best known as Lead Belly, And both were known for freeing the singer after he'd flattered them in song.

Neff was governor of Texas while Leadbelly was serving time in the prison at Sugar Land for killing a relative.

According to their book The Life and Legend of Leadbelly (by Charles K. Wolfe and Kip Lornell, published in1999), Neff had regularly brought guests to the prison on Sunday picnics to hear Ledbetter sing. At the time of the pardon, Leadbetter had already served his minimum of seven years.

Ironically, Neff had run on a promise to be more strict on pardoning criminals.

The song "Gov. Pat Neff" sounds s if it might have been an existing tune onto which Lead Belly tacked on a verse about the governor. "Had the Governor Neff like you got me, I'd a-wake up in the mornin', I'd set you free," he sang. Judge for yourself:



By the 1930s, Ledbetter was in prison again, this time in Louisiana. With the help of famed folklorists John and Alan Lomax, Lead Belly once again worked his magic on a sitting governor, one Oscar K. Allen.

This time the appeal to the governor was front and center of the song: "In nineteen hundred and thirty two / Honorable Governor O.K. Allen, I'm pleading to you./ I left my wife wringing her hands and crying / `Honorable Governor O.K. Allen, save that man of mine.' "

Allen released him in 1934.



Speaking of Louisiana governors and music, surely the finest singer and songwriter to ever become chief executive of a state was Louisiana's Jimmy Davis. He's most beloved for his song "You Are My Sunshine." But I like his dirtier tunes even more.



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...