Showing posts with label Throwback Thursday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Throwback Thursday. Show all posts

Thursday, May 25, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: All the Chapel Bells Were Ringing


Little Jimmy Brown, aka Jean-François Nicot.

He was baptized. He got married. He died and there was a funeral for him.

And at all three of these events CHURCH BELLS RANG!!!!!

Coincidence

I don't think so ...

Today I'm diving into a song that's haunted me since I was but a wee tot. Composed by Swiss songwriter Jean Villard Gilles, the song emerged from France under the title of "Les Trois Cloches." It soon jumped over the Atlantic, where it became famous as "The Three Bells."

The first recording, telling the life story of a small-town bboy named Jean-François Nicot, was by none other than Edith Piaff  in 1946 with a bunch of French fellers (Les Compagnons De La Chanson). Here's a live take by Edith and her compagnons in 1956:


Jean Villard Gilles is one of the few Swiss musicians I know who was never on Voodoo Rhythm Records. I don't know the date of this recording (the compilation it's on was release in 2017. Gilles died in 1982) but here's the songwriter singing his most famous tune:


"Cloches" soon rang in the U.S. with at least two translations. One -- with new French lyrics by Marc Herrand before it was translated into English by Dick Manning (who also co-wrote at least two Perry Como hit,  "Hot Diggity" and "Papa Loves Mambo") -- was called "The Angelus Was Ringing."  As shown by Frank Sinatra's 1949 version, this version didn't even mention poor Jean-François. It was about a guy reuniting with a lover at church.


But the American translation, simply called "The Three Bells," became even more popular. It was recorded by The Andrews Sisters as well as Edith Piaff herself. Jean-François Nicot was gone, but in his place, as the star of the baptism, wedding and funeral, was one Little Jimmy Brown (not to be confused with "Jimmy Brown the Newsboy.")

But it didn't become a major hit in the U.S. until it was recorded by a country group called The Browns with lead singer coincidentally named Jim Ed Brown (his biggest solo hit was the 1967 honky tonk masterpiece "Pop a Top") along with his sisters Maxine and Bonnie.

This haunting version is the first I first heard as a child and still the one I love the best:


Through the years many other singers, including Johnny Cash (with The Carter Family), Andy Williams, Roy Orbison and, more recently Alison Krauss rang those three bells. I dig this take by Ray Charles


Finally, in the sacred words of The Dead Milkmen, "You can move to Montana and listen to Santana, but you still won't be as cool as Sha Na Na!"



For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook

Thursday, May 11, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: In a Quaint Caravan ...

 


She was a gypsy woman ...

No, that's another song.

Today I'm talking about a tune about another gypsy woman, a lady operating out of a "quaint caravan" who "can look in the future and drive away all your fears.

"I see your bike ... it's someplace far away ... it's in the Alamo ...  in the basement!"

No, that's another fortune teller ...

This is about the best-known work of British songwriter Billy Reid, "The Gypsy."

Basically it's a song about about an old fraud preying on desperate people. (Well, that's my framng.) The narrator here goes to see The Gypsy because he or she is worried about his or her lover.

The Gypsy pounces! 

... she looked in my hand and told me
That my lover would always be true

But the mark was rightly skeptical:

And yet in my heart I knew, dear
That somebody else was kissing you ...

And yet even so, the reassuring words along, (probably  with the usual psychic mumbo jumbo), has gotten our lovelorn narrator hooked:

But I'll go there again 'cause I want to believe the Gypsy ...

There's one born every minute.

But don't get me wrong, I've loved this song ever since I heard the version by Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs nearly 60 years ago. 

Here's the original 1945 recording, performed by Welsh singer (and future wife of James Bond actor Roger Moore) Dorothy Squires. She was Billy Reid's man musical partner from the 30s through the early 50s. 

Squire's version -- was titled "The Gipsy" -- has a minute-long introductory verse not included in takes by other singers. 

I sit alone and dream, dear
Dream of you night and day
Once you were here beside me
Now you are far away
I've had my fortune told me
Can I believe it's true?
Soon we shall be together
Living our life anew

Listen yourself:


 But the song didn't make much of an impact on American ears until The Ink Spots changed the "i" to a "y" and gave it their Ink Spot sheen:

Years before she saw the USA in her Chevrolet, Dinah Shore also wanted to believe The Gypsy:

Louis Armstrong took The Gypsy to New Orleans (even though this was from a concert in Chicago):

At least one doo-wop group, The Five Keys, ventured into that quaint caravan for spiritual and romantic advice:

Here's that doo-wop colored Sam the Sham & The Pharoahs version I mentioned above. This was on their second album, which I still like even more than their first album with "Wooly Bully.":

For the past 20-plus years, my favorite version of "The Gypsy" is the one by Austin honky-tonker Cornell Hurd, which was on his album A Stagecoach Named Desire. Unfortunately it's apparently not on Youtube or any other place from which I can embed. 

So instead,  I'll go out with this honky-stomp version by another Texan, Doug Sahm with the Sir Douglas, from their 1971 album The Return Of Doug Saldaña:

For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook


Thursday, April 27, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday, Woodpecker Wizard!

 


On this day, 124 years ago in New Rochelle, N.Y. a first-generation Italian-American boy named Walter Benjamin Lantz was born.


From the Hollywood Walk of Fame website:


Lantz was born in New Rochelle, New York to Italian immigrant parents, Francesco Paolo Lantz and Maria Gervasi. ...  Walter Lantz was always interested in art, completing a mail order drawing class at age twelve. He saw his first animation when he watched Winsor McCay’s cartoon short, Gertie the Dinosaur.


While working as an auto mechanic, Lantz got his first break. A wealthy customer named Fred Kafka liked his drawings on the garage’s bulletin board and financed Lantz’s studies at the Art Students League. Kafka also helped him get a job as a copy boy at the New York American, owned by William Randolph Hearst. Lantz worked at the newspaper and attended art school at night.


By the age of 16, Lantz was working in the animation department under director Gregory La Cava. Lantz then worked at the John R. Bray Studios on the Jerry On The Job series. In 1924, Lantz directed, animated, and even starred in his first cartoon series, Dinky Doodle. He moved to Hollywood, California in 1927, where he worked briefly for director Frank Capra and was a gag writer for Mack Sennett comedies.


Dinky Doodle! I got yer Dinky Doodle right here!

Woody's original, crazier  look.
(I've always liked this one better
.)


Lantz, who died in1994 ar the age of 93.  worked in several studios in the early animation biz for years, creating characters like Oswald the Rabbit and Andy Panda before Woody came knocking.


According to the origin story Lantz always told, it was during his 1941 honeymoon with actress Gracie Stafford at a lakeside cottage near Reno, Nevada that he found the inspiration for his most famous character.


"We kept hearing this knock, knock, knock on the roof," Lantz told The Los Angeles Times in 1992. "And I said to Gracie, 'What the hell is that?' So I went out and looked, and here's this woodpecker drilling holes in the shingles. And we had asbestos shingles, not wood. So, to show you how smart these woodpeckers are, they'd peck a hole in the asbestos shingles and put in an acorn. A worm would develop in the acorn, and a week later the woodpecker would come back, get the acorn and fly away, letting out this noisy scream as he flew away."


A honeymoon with woodpeckers, worms and asbestos. That sounds romantic... 


So, according to the story, Gracie suggested Lantz use an annoying woodpecker for a new cartoon character. So he did. 


But that' probably not what really happened. After all, Lantz got married in 1941 and Woody debuted in November 1940 as a supporting character in an Andy Panda short called "Knock Knock." So, unless they were time travelers ... 


Whatever way it came down, the great Mel Blanc provided Woody's voice for the first few cartoons. But when Mel signed an exclusive deal with Warner Brothers, Gracie took over on vocal duties for Woody Woodpecker. It's her voice that most of us remember.


Because this is a music blog, let's take a look at the song stylings of the beloved woodpecker. There was plenty of music in Woody Woodpecker cartoons


We'll start out with some variations on a song I actually remember from the show:

 


Even woodpeckers love to polka!



Woodpeckers apparently also like opera:



I guess Woody also was a fan of The Trashmen:



But when most people think of Woody Woodpecker music, this song, recorded in 1948 by Kay Kyser (featuring Gloria Wood on lead vocals and Harry Babbitt's insane laugh) undoubtedly is the first thing that comes to mind:




Thursday, April 13, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Send it in Care of the Birmingham Jail

 


I bet a lot of folks my age first heard this song on the Andy Griffith show, with Andy on guitar and his girlfriend Peggy (Joanna Moore) serenading Opie. 


Here's what I'm talking about:


I can't confirm the rumor that Deputy Barney Fife started his law enforcement career in the Birmingham jail, where he was fired for brutality. But I find it suspicious that Andy's version omits any mention of that correctional facility. Coincidence????!!!??)


But "Down in the Valley," aka "Birmingham Jail" and several other titles, has roots that go far deeper than Maybury.


According to the website Ballad of America, ace American folklorists John and Alan Lomax considered "Valley" to be a "jailhouse song" because they found it common in prisons. The Lomaxes found that some of the versions of the song referred to a specific jail and a loved one on the outside. ("Write me a letter, send it by mail / Send it in care of the Birmingham jail ...") 


John and Alan also considered the song as part of the British courting song traditions, that still could be found in the Appalachian and Ozark Mountains throughout the nineteenth century.


From Ballad of America:


In the first half of the twentieth century, "Down in the Valley" was printed in folk song collections from Missouri, Kentucky, Texas, North Carolina, and Virginia. More than twenty artists recorded it between 1927 and 1940, spreading its popularity nationwide. Printed and recorded versions exhibit variations in melody, lyrics, and title, which include "Birmingham Jail," "Bird in a Cage," "Twenty-One Years," "Down on the Levee," and "Little Willie's My Darlin'." Inclusion in countless church, camp, and school songbooks, as well as placement in movies and television, has rendered "Down in the Valley" one of the best-known American folk songs.


The first known recording of the song was in 1927 by Tom Darby & Jimmie Tarlton. Its flip side was another classic lovelorn jailbird song, "Columbus Stockade Blues." The song was such a hit that Tarlton, according to BHAM Wiki, was invited to the ceremony to dedicate the new Birmingham jail at 425 6th Avenue South in 1937. Of course, this song isn't the only thing that made this jail famous.


Tarlton reportedly claimed that he'd written "Birmingham Jail" while in the slammer for moonshining. I can't swear that's true, but I do hope it is.


Lead Belly supposedly sang the song for Texas Governor Pat Neff at the Sugarland Penitentiary in 1924. In this version, which he called  "Hear the Wind Blow," he refers to the Birmingham jail, though reportedly in other versions, the sad narrator's residence is in the Shreveport jail.


The Andrews Sisters took "Down to the Valley" to an audience beyond the hillbilly and blues markets.




Johnny Cash made it nice and mournful.




Flatt & Scruggs found bluegrass growing in the valley -- though, like Lead Belly, they called their version "Hear the Wind Blow."




And "Valley" got a little hippiegrass treatment by Jerry Garcia & David Grisman in the early '90s:



Solomon Burke in the early 1960s turned "Valley" into a soul classic. It one of the first 45s I ever bought as a child. (Otis Redding used a similar arrangement.) Here's King Solomon doing a live version at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 2006.



But besides country, blues, bluegrass, pop and soul, "Down in the Valley" also made it to the world of opera, courtesy of Kurt Weil and Arnold Sundgaard. Here's what a layman like myself might call the title song of this 1948 "folk-opera in one act."




For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook

Thursday, May 19, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Celebrating Mickey Newbury

 


Revered Nashville songwriter Mickey Newbury was born on this day, May 19, in 1940. The Houston-born Newbury, who died in 2002,  "quietly altered the fabric of country music in the late Sixties and Seventies," according to his obituary in Rolling Stone

The obituary also noted, "Newbury was best known for being unknown, a songwriter who wrote hits for Willie Nelson, Ray Charles, Jerry Lee Lewis, Joan Baez and numerous others, including “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In),” the first hit single for Kenny Rogers and First Edition."

Besides Kenny's psychedelic dabbling with "Just Dropped In," (I prefer Mojo Nixon's version), my favorite Newbury songs include "She Even Woke Me Up to Say Goodbye" (Jerry Lee did that one best); and "Funny Familiar Forgotten Feelings," especially as sung by Tom Jones.

And though he was a fantastic songwriter, Newbury's probably most famous for his arrangement of three songs he didn't write, "Dixie," "The Battle Hymn of the Republic"  and "All My Trials." The medley is known as "American Trilogy." And it got to be famous through Elvis Presley's version. (Please see my discussion of this HERE.)

But before Elvis did it, "American Trilogy" was on a Newberry album called Frisco Mabel Joy, which Allmusic Guide describes as "an entire series of songs that talk of dislocation, emptiness, and endless searching through regret, remorse, and ultimately acceptance and resignation. "

But for this Throwback Thursday I'd like to look at versions of Newbury songs from an old tribute album produced by Peter Blackstock, founder of (and my old editor at No Depression magazine, and now a music writer at the Austin American Statesman) I have to admit that the first time I heard some of these songs were the takes on  Frisco Mabel Joy Revisited.

Let's start with a sweet tune from my friend, Gary Heffern, Newbury"s "The Future's Not What It Used to Be:"

Heff's friends, The Walkabouts contributed this song, "How Many Times (Must The Piper Be Paid For His Song)" to Frisco Mabel Joy Revisisted.

One of my favorite tracks on this album was Chuck Prophet's haunting "You're Not My Same Sweet Baby.":


Dave Alvin & The Guilty Men rocked this song on Frisco Mabel Joy Revisisted.


The Mabel Joy tribute ended with a good version of this quasi-title song, sung by Kris Kristofferson. But I want to end this little blog post with the original 1971 version by Mickey himself.


Happy birthday, Mickey, wherever you are.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: My Favorite Concerts (after more than a half century of concert going)

 Warning: This is a LONG post!

In December 2020, my daughter gave me a subscription to a strange service called Storyworth, which basically asks you a question about your life, your history, your philosophy, your complaints,  every week. Each of these becomes a chapter in an actual book. Basically a vanity-press kind of deal. 

I did it. It was fun. And earlier this year, I got my book (as did both of my kids).

No, it's not commercially available. But I've decided to publish my longest chapter here on my music blog. 

Enjoy:

Chapter 29: What are the best concerts you've ever been to?

I’ve been to a lot of concerts in my life. I’m pretty sure that my first show was The Beach Boys at Springlake amusement park in Oklahoma City in 1964. I would have been 10 then. Brian Wilson was still touring with them then. (I saw The Beach Boys a year or so later. By that point, Brian was in his sandbox, not touring. His substitute in The Beach Boys was an unknown kid named Glen Campbell.) Later that year I saw The Dave Clark Five. (The Beatles never made it to Oklahoma. But DC5 did, and so did Herman’s Hermits, come to think about it.)

Speaking of British Invasion bands, one of the best shows I’ve ever seen had to be The Rolling Stones in Albuquerque in the summer of 1972. They were touring the Exile on Main Street album then, which I believe was the Stones’ greatest. The concert, which took place at the University of New Mexico Pit, was just a few weeks after the Vietnam protests at the university — at the end of my freshman year of college.

These were terrifying protests. I lost my tear-gas virginity then. A student journalist was shot, non-fatally, by a cop right after we’d blocked I-25 near Central Blvd. And the next night, I was shot at by a cop. I didn’t get hit, but my pal Green Bay Frank took some birdshot in his arm. So when the Stones played “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” and Mick Jagger sang, “I went down to the demonstration to get my fair share of abuse” I started shouting and pounding on whoever was sitting next to me (I think it was Alec Walling) and shouting, “They KNOW! They KNOW!!!!!”

But actually the best part of that show was the opening act, Stevie Wonder. I’d been aware of Stevie back when he was Little Stevie Wonder. He’d had several hits under his belt as a teenager, but in 1972, with the album Music of My Mind, Stevie’s music took a major step in establishing his own sound. He’d gone far beyond the Motown assembly-line sound, growing more funky and introspective at the same time. And live, he was nothing short of astonishing.

One final word about that show. Putting on my old-fart “back in the good old days” hat for a second, it seems amazing now that tickets were only $6 — considering that these days Stones tickets are in the hundreds. But back then, most people I know only begrudgingly bought tickets. We all were grumbling that the Stones were charging $6 while most bands only charged $5. “Who do they think they are?” To be fair, that same year I skipped what would be my only chance to see Elvis Presley (at the wretched Tingley Auditorium at the New Mexico State Fairgrounds) because the King was charging a whopping $15 for his show. 

The Rolling Stones, Austin, Texas 2021

[Update: Nearly 50 years later, in November 2021 while visiting the family in Austin, my pal Alec gave me a ticket to see the Stones there. Turns out they were just as good, if not better, than they were in 1972.]

Here are a few more of my favorite concerts over nearly a half century of concert-going:

* The Everly Brothers at Springlake amusement park in Oklahoma City circa 1965:

I went to this show with my whole family — my brother, my sister, my mother, my grandmother and my grandfather. This was during something of a slump in the Everly’s career, as was the case with so many first-generation rockers in the wake of the British Invasion. But they sounded great that night. 

However, as much as I loved the show, I didn’t love it nearly as much as my grandfather. Like Don and Phil, Papa was born and raised in Kentucky and something about those storied Everly harmonies sounded like home to him. At that point in my life, I wanted to be a lawyer like Papa But after the show, Papa turned to my brother and me and said, “Boys when you grow up, I don’t want you to be lawyers, I want you to play guitar like those Kentucky boys.” 

Jack took that advice more literally than I did, though for me it was a parental permission to let my obsession with music be a major force in my life. And I got a sweet, cosmic affirmation of that a couple of years later, a few months after Papa died. I was listening to the radio and the DJ announced a brand new song by The Everly Brothers. It was what would become a minor hit for the brothers, “Bowling Green” in which every verse contains the line, “A man from Kentucky sure is lucky.” I took that as a message from Papa from the great beyond.

* Steeleye Span at the University of New Mexico Pit, 1973:

Like Stevie Wonder at that Rolling Stones show, Steeleye was the opening act at this show, headlined by Jethro Tull. At the time I’d never heard of Steeleye. In fact, I thought the radio ads for the concert said that Steely Dan would be opening. So I get to the show flying high on an extremely strong marijuana brownie. The lights go out and a group of men, plus one woman take the stage in what looked like Druid robes. One of them had a hand drum as they sang a haunting, minor-key acoustic melody I later learned was titled “Rogues in a Nation.” In bizarre and ancient harmonies the group sang:

But pith and power, till my last hour

I’ll make this declaration

We were bought and sold for English gold:

Such a parcel of rogues in a nation!

Then, following a pithy and powerful fiddle solo, the group doffed their robes and began rocking in their own peculiar British folk way, singing of elves, witches, doomed greedy kings, stormy seas. My mind was fully blown and after that, Tull seemed kind of tedious.

* The Mahavishnu Orchestra at the UNM Student Union Building Ballroom:

This classic jazz-fusion group featured guitarist John McLaughlin as well as Jan Hammer on keyboards and Billy Cobham on drums. They had just released their first album, The Inner Mounting Flame, and at the time, nothing sounded like it. At one moment it would be wild, screechy and chaotic, then, meditative and peaceful, and sometimes even “jazzy.” No complaints about ticket prices here. It cost $2 to get in.

However, one thing I remember about this show is that I got in trouble. Before the band came on, I heard a knocking behind me. I was sitting on the floor by glass door exit, hidden by a curtain. I looked to see who was knocking. It was a cute hippie girl pointing at the door handle. I decided to help her, so I got up and open the door. She rushed in — followed by about 20 hippie freeloaders, who scattered quickly around the ballroom. A security dude started approaching me I thought, “Oh no, they’re going to kick me out. No Mahavishnu for me …” Turns out I was correct that the guy was angry. But all he did was tell me to move away from that door and don’t do it again. I’m grateful now because it truly was one of the best concerts I’ve ever seen.

* Dave Van Ronk at the Armory for the Arts, Santa Fe, 1980:

Me and Van Ronk

I’ll always remember this show, by the consummate New York folkie, because it was the first concert I was ever assigned to cover for a newspaper (The Santa Fe Reporter) and afterward, the “Mayor of MacDougal Street” became the first actual human I ever interviewed. (Actually, what I remember most was getting drunk with Van Ronk and his local entourage at La Posada.) But the show itself was great too. I’ll never forget Van Ronk’s raspy voice taking the audience into the misty, mystic world of William Butler Yeats’ “The Song of the Wandering Aengus.”


* John Lee Hooker, at The Line Camp, Pojoaque, 1982:

In early 1982, Stevie Wonder came to Santa to shoot a commercial for a recording tape company for Japanese television. He was staying at La Fonda with his mobile recording unit in the parking lot there. One night Stevie played an impromptu set at The Palace. I wasn’t there. Lots of people I know, including my brother were there — though if everyone who claims they were there that night really were, The Palace would have to be bigger than Lobo Stadium.

For the rest of the week, Wonder rumors were flying everywhere. “Stevie’s supposed to be here tonight. Stevie’s going to be there this afternoon …” One of the most compelling was that Wonder would be sitting in with his “old friend” John Lee Hooker, who was playing at the Line Camp north of town that weekend. I don’t think I’d ever seen the Line Camp so packed. Judging by the buzz, most of the crowd was there to see Stevie — who didn’t show. 

But Hooker, backed by a group called The Coast to Coast Blues Band, rose to the occasion. The venerated old bluesman seemed to draw energy from the capacity crowd and proceeded to give one of the most dynamic concerts I’ve ever seen. At one point, as the crowd became transfixed by the boogie spirit generated by the band, Hooker spread his arms and shouted, “Can you feel it? CAN YOU FEEL IT?” I felt it! I later learned that the Stevie Wonder-at-the-Line-Camp rumor was pure Grade-A hucksterism on the part of bar’s owner John Harvey. I always admired him for that.

* Butch Hancock somewhere along the Rio Chama, New Mexico 1995:

Butch Hancock, desparado waiting for the rain

This was not a regular concert by any means. There’s a river rafting company called Far Flung Adventures that organizes musical rafting trips in New Mexico and elsewhere featuring musicians, mostly Texas singer-songwriters. Butch Hancock, who is one of my favorite songwriters from any state, has done several of these. I convinced my editors at the New Mexican that I needed to cover one. (Dang it was nice when local papers had the funds to do things like this!)

 Butch, who is an experience raft pilot would help guide the trip down the Rio Chama during the day and sing us songs by a campfire at night. I believe it was the second night when the clouds above us got serious and began a heavy rain. Luckily the Far Flung staff had anticipated this and had brought a large tarp. When the rain came, several members of the audience, including me, became human tent poles, holding the tarp above Butch and other campers. It was a wonderful hearing Butch singing and playing his guitar as the rain on the tarp provided a soft percussion.

Starting with a trip to Denver with Alec for the 1993 Lollapalooza, I began my career as true rock ’n’ roll tourist. I went to several Lollapaloozas, in Denver and Phoenix. I started attending South by Southwest regularly in the mid ‘90s. Alec, his brother Will and I attended three nights of Grateful Dead shows in Las Vegas the year before Jerry Garcia died. I did a couple of music-based trips to with Molly (Bob Dylan and Paul Simon one year, The Chieftains and Sinead O’Connor another). About a decade later I went to the Pitchfork Festival in Chicago and the Hootenanny Festival in California with Anton. The remainder of the shows I talk about here all were on out-of-town trips.

* Tom Waits at the Paramount Theater, Austin, Texas, 1999:

This show, at a grand old theater on Congress Avenue, capped off the 1999 festival. Because seating was so limited, those who wanted a Waits ticket had to get up early the day before and wait in line at the Austin Convention Center. I was drinking back then and getting up early during South by Southwest was no easy task. But I did and the ordeal was worth it. The real show stopper at the concert was a song I’d never heard before, the bizarre and hilarious percussion-driven “Filipino Box Springs Hog.” But the tune that stuck in my head as I left the theater was Waits’ classic, “Innocent When You Dream.” It was the end of the 20th Century and it seemed like a more innocent time then.

* Los Lobos, The Blasters, Reverend Horton Heat and others, at The Hootenanny Festival, near Irvine, Calif. 2009:

Los Lobos-plus!

The festival, which featured several rockabilly, psychobilly and roots-rockers, was on the 4th of July the year I went, accompanied by my son. It was fairly early in the day and I’d heard a couple of inconsequential acts and had gone to a porta-potty. There I heard a loud cheer from the crowd and some familiar guitar riff. The Blasters had taken the stage and had begun their set with their song “American Music.” It was a July 4 miracle! I ran out of the plastic outhouse cheering like a maniac. It felt great to be an American! 

Later, during Los Lobos’ set, the band was joined onstage by Blasters singer Phil Alvin and Rev. Heat (Jim Heath) who’d also played earlier) for several songs. It was a roots-rock supergroup and it was fabulous.

* Question Mark & The Mysterians with Ronnie Spector at The Lincoln Center, New York City, 2010:


This show, called “The Detroit Breakdown,” featured bands from the Motor City: Death, The Gories, Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels. But the highlight was Michigan’s greatest garage band, Question Mark & The Mysterians. 

Though some might consider them to be a one-hit wonder, those of us who serious dug “96 Tears” and dove deeper into this band realize these guys were monsters. The band that played in New York that day included all the original Mysterians — five Chicano guys who grew up hanging out and playing music with each other. Though they’re from Michigan, I looked at them and saw Santa Fe. They were tight but had an easy way with each other. They’d done all these songs a jillion times, but they still look like they’re having the time of their lives playing them. The Mysterians got a little outside help at this show. Soul singer Louise Murray of the Jaynetts dueted with Question Mark on The Jaynetts’ big hit, “Sally Go Round the Roses.” But the real show stopper was when the one and only Ronnie Spector joined the group on a lengthy, groove version of “96 Tears.” It was nothing short of transcendental.

* The Sonics at the Ponderosa Stomp, Midtown Rock ‘n’ Bowl, New Orleans, 2013:

Gerry Roslie of The Sonics

This Washington State band are woefully under-recognized and under-appreciated by the masses. I’d never even heard them until I was an adult. My beloved WKY radio in OKC never played them for reasons I’ll never know. 

But it’s probably for the best that The Sonics never got to be that famous. They never had the temptation to do anything as embarrassing as Paul Revere & The Raiders’ teen idol period. They never went artsy during the flower-power era. Basically, they broke up, did other things in their lives and reunited decades later when they were old enough not to care about show-biz career pressures. 

The group I saw that night in New Orleans included three members from their glory days — Gary Roslie (who plays keyboards as well as handling about half the vocals), guitarist Larry Parypa and sax man Rob Lind. I shouldn’t even have to say this, but just because Roslie, Parypa and Lind are well into senior citizenship doesn’t mean they don’t rock like crazy. They blazed through their tunes like “”Psycho,” “Strychnine,” “Boss Hoss,” “Have Love Will Travel,” and others with crazed intensity. It seemed that everyone I ran into after The Sonics’ set had wide eyes and dazed grins.

* Negativeland, at The Crystal Ballroom, Portland, Oregon, 2014:

This wasn’t music, but it was a SHOW! There wasn’t a guitar in sight. But it was rock ‘n’ roll. Negativland, a sonic-collage, multi-media, socio-political art collective from San Francisco that’s well into their fourth decade as an entertainment unit, are an unlikely crew of revolutionaries, all four members wearing gray plaid shirts that might have come off the rack at K-Mart. 

But don’t be fooled. They are subversive. Employing sound and video from TV news, radio talk shows, government training movies, commercials, old educational films, all chopped up, manipulated and distorted on top of electronic noises and sound effects, this show the group has named “Content” was thought-provoking, hilarious, incomprehensible, annoying and almost mystical — sometimes all at once. They take all these messages — political, commercial, religious, educational — that we’re bombarded with constantly, throw it into an electronic blender and create new, frequently hilarious art.

* The Mekons at the Mekonville Festival, Suffolk County, the United Kingdom, 2017:

There aren’t that many bands I’d cross an ocean to see. But The Mekons are one of them. This festival was a celebration of the group’s 40th anniversary. About 90 percent of the people I know gave me blank stares when I told them I was going to England for a Mekons festival. That’s not surprising. The group has never had a really big hit. They haven’t even been on a major label in a quarter century or so. How many bands these days have eight members — including three or four lead singers — and feature fiddle, accordion, and oud? 

The Mekons sprang out of the punk world, but they went on to incorporate elements of folk and country music, reggae, and other sounds. Whether they are playing an original rocker, some mutated sea shanty, or a Hank Williams song, The Mekons don’t sound much like anyone else. Besides The Mekons — both the current musicians (a lineup that has been relatively stable since the mid-1980s) and the original 1977 crew — the three-day festival also spotlighted various bands involving Mekons members (Jon Langford’s Men of Gwent was a highlight), solo spots by Mekons Sally Timms and Rico Bell, as well as friends, family, former members and assorted allies of the group. While all The Mekons sets that weekend were amazing, my favorite still was the first night. 

The night before I’d been in Dublin, where I’d hurt my shoulder during a late-night egg roll run. It was still hurting and after a day of lugging my bags through airports and train stations, I was exhausted by the time I got to the festival grounds. But the moment the Mekons took the stage I felt a surge of happiness. And when they launched into their hard-driving battle cry, “Memphis, Egypt” (“Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late / The battles we fought were long and hard / Just not to be consumed by rock n’ roll …”), I knew I was at the exact right place at that moment.

Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late 


Thursday, April 07, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Root Root Root for the Home Team



Today, April 7 is the official opening day of Major League Baseball's 2022 season. I predict that the song at the center of this post will be played hundreds of times in baseball arenas around the country during the next six months ago.

I'm talking, of course, about "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," a song that's become synonymous with America's Pastime in the past hundred years, even though, according to the Library of Congress, composer Albert von Tilzer as well as lyricist Jack Norworth, who wrote the famous tune in 1908, each claimed they'd never actually been to a ball game.

The article about the song on the Library of Congress site says:

Few musical creations embody such significance in American musical culture or rise to the stratum of Americana as `Take Me Out to the Ball Game.' Just why the song has enjoyed such lasting popularity has been the topic of sports commentators, journalists, and popular music historians for decades. After all, one author quips, "Stardust it ain't." Critics have described the lyrics as crude, but singable, and puzzle over the chartbuster's instant success. Fans of the song, however, insist that it is the sheer simplicity and straightforwardness of the words, gender-neutral and shrewdly crafted so as not to name or favor any one team, coupled with von Tilzer's luring waltz-like rhythms and unforgettable melody that sealed the baseball ditty's success.

The Major League Baseball site says, "it is generally acknowledged to be the third most-performed song in America in a typical year, behind only `The Star-Spangled Banner' and `Happy Birthday to You.' " (They apparently forgot about "In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida," but, you know...)

Like many songs of the early 20th Century, most modern folks only know the chorus of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game."  But actually, there are verses that tell the story of one Katie Casey, who was was "baseball mad."

The first recording of "Ball Game" in 1908 was by a funky dude named Edward Meeker:

In 1949 Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly sang it in a movie called "Take Me Out to the Ballgame." By this time, for reasons I'm not sure of, "Katie Casey" had been changed, by Norworth himself (in 1927), to "Nelly Kelly."

Here's a sad trumpet version of the song, which appeared in the Ken Burns 1994 documentary series Baseball. It's by George Rabbai:


Dr. John's New Orleans funk version also appeared in the Burns project:


And here's an unusual, ukulele-backed version by The Skeletons


Having celebrities sing "Ball Game" at actual ball games has become common. Here's a transformational version by Ozzie & Sharon Osbourne during the seventh-inning stretch at Chicago's Wrigley Field in 2003:

Here's my favorite version of this song. It's by "Bruce Springstone," some kind of short-lived Flintstones/Springsteen parody act. But when I first heard it, I thought it was the actual Bruce:


Finally, "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" survived the change from Katie Casey to Nelly Kelly. But will it survive this?

Thanks to Cracker Jack's parent company Frito Lay which just recently introduced Cracker Jill to honor women in sports, there has been another lyric update. "Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jill / No one can stop you if you have the will...”

Here's singer Normani with the new version.(And like just about any change these days, the introduction of Cracker Jill has sparked conservative culture-war OUTRAGE! Read the comments on the Youtube page and you'll see):



For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook


Thursday, March 24, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Let's Get to Bob Bob Bobbin' Along!

 


It's officially spring -- although yesterday in Santa Fe we all woke up to a winter wonderland, which, thankfully melted by afternoon. And, during my daily walk, I actually saw a red red robin, bob bob bobbin' on a neighbor's recycling bin.

So let's help nudge our sleepyhead spring to get up, get out of bed by celebrating a song that for nearly 100 years has been synonymous with the spring, "When the Red, Red Robin (Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along)."

This tune was written in 1926 by Tin Pan Alley's Harry Woods, who also wrote or co-wrote songs like "Paddlin' Madeline Home,"  "I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover," "Side by Side," (that's the one that starts out, "Well we ain't got a barrel of money...") and "Try a Little Tenderness."

Woods' song about the bird was recorded by several singers in 1926, but Al Jolson's version is surely the best-known:


Starting in the late 1920s, "Red Red Robin" became the signature tune for actress Lillian Roth. (This recording was decades later, 1956 to be exact.):


There seemed to be a Robin revival in the '50s. For instance, Louis Armstrong took a shot at the robin in 1956...


... as Doris Day had done in 1954

But I believe my favorite version of this happy tune came even later. Texas singer Rosie Flores did this rockabilly "Robin" on a Bloodshot Records children's song compilation, The Bottle Let Me Down in 2002:


For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook


Thursday, March 10, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: It's Norman Blake's Birthday

 


Master picker Norman Blake, whose talents on guitar, dobro, mandolin, fiddle, and banjo as well as his Tennessee-soaked vocals have amazed and delighted country and bluegrass fans for decades, turns 84 today! 

Happy birthday, Norman.

Even if you don't recognize his name, if you're a fan of the O Brother Where Art Thou soundtrack, or the classic 1972 hillbilly collaboration Will the Circle Be Unbroken -- or certain seminal records by the likes of Johnny Cash, John Hartford, Bob Dylan, Kris Kristofferson, Steve Earle and others -- you have heard the music of Norman Blake. (I probably first heard him on Dylan's Nashville Skyline.)

Blake was born in 1938 in Chattanooga. According to a 2003 article in Vintage Guitar:

His career started when he left school at age 16 to be a professional musician. Early jobs included playing fiddle, dobro, and mandolin in country dance bands before a short stint in the Army. After serving, Norman worked with June Carter, then Johnny Cash when Cash’s regular dobro player couldn’t make a session. He stayed with Cash’s band for over 10 years.

Here is what I believe is Blake's finest moment with Cash. His dobro shines, though Cash's crazed vocal track almost makes you worry that he's going to go off the rails and start murdering his band.

Blake began his "solo" recording career (often sharing credits with his wife Nancy and other collaborators) in the early 1970s. Here are a couple of tunes from Norman or Nancy:

This is a favorite from 2001, Blake's version of an Uncle Dave Macon song, "All Go Hungry Hash House":


I looked for, but couldn't find a Youtube of Norman's "Precious Memories (Was a Song I Used to Hear)," which was written by our mutual friend and Santa Fe picker Jerry Faires. But here's that song on Spotify (I know, I know ...) by Norman & Nancy:


But this is my favorite Norman Blake song of all time, "Last Train from Poor Valley":



Thursday, March 03, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Celebrating Jackie Brenston, Ike Turner and "Rocket 88"

 

Delta Cats: Ike Turner, left, with Jackie Brenston 

Happy birthday rock 'n' roll!

On this day, March 3, 1951,  at Memphis Recording Service -- later renamed "Sun Studios," a band called Ike Turner & His Rhythm Kings, featuring a singer named Jackie Brenston from Clarksdale, Mississippi recorded a little jump blues tune called "Rocket 88."

And what a song it was.

Writing in Time Magazine in 2004,  Jamaican-born journalist Christopher John Farley said of "Rocket 88":

Rocket 88 was brash and it was sexy; it took elements of the blues, hammered them with rhythm and attitude and electric guitar, and reimagined black music into something new. If the blues seemed to give voice to old wisdom, this new music seemed full of youthful notions. If the blues was about squeezing cathartic joy out of the bad times, this new music was about letting the good times roll. If the blues was about earthly troubles, the rock that Turner's crew created seemed to shout that the sky was now the limit. And if anyone had ever thought before that black music was just for black people, Rocket 88 undercut that tall tale — the beat was too big, the lyrics too inviting, the melody too winning, the volume too loud, for the song to be taken as anything but an invitation for all who heard it, black or white or brown or whatever, to join the party.

Sun Studios licensed the song to Chicago's Chess Records. But instead of crediting the single to Turner and his band, Chess released it under the name "Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats." This had to have pissed off Ike Turner to the max.

Besides Turner's pounding piano, Brentson's joyful vocals and 17-year-old Raymond Hill's wild tenor sax, many "Rocket 88" fans also cite Willie Kizart's distorted electric guitar as a factor that made the song so unique. 

Talking to Rolling Stone in 1986, Sun king Sam Phillips said,:

"... when Ike and them were coming up to do the session, the bass amplifier fell off the car. And when we got in the studio, the woofer had burst; the cone had burst. So I stuck the newspaper and some sack paper in it, and that’s where we got that sound."

Many scholars dispute that "Rocket 88" is the very first rock 'n' roll song. Other candidates include Roy Brown's "Good Rockin' Tonight," or  Goree Carter's proto-Chuck Berry "Rock Awhile" or Sister Rosetta Tharpe's "Strange Things Happening Every Day" or other tunes. 

We'll leave that debate to grumbling academics. But even if it wasn't the first rock 'n' roll song, there's no denying "Rocket 88" is a wild joy.

Here's the song that made us all fall in love:

So why aren't we more familiar with Jackie Brenston? Not long after "Rocket 88," the singer left Turner's band to try a solo career. He never received much success, but Brenston, who died in 1979, left behind some pretty cool tunes. Here are a few of them, starting with one called "Leo the Louse":

This one is "Tuckered Out"

And from Jackie's short-lived career as a restaurant critic, (I know, I know) here's "Fat Meat is Greasy"



Oldsmobile's 1949 Rocket 88


Thursday, February 17, 2022

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday, Honky Tonker


 

Yesterday, February 16, 2022, would have been the 106th birthday of R&B keyboard great Bill Doggett, whose 1956 hit "Honky Tonk" remains a major R&B and rock 'n' roll instrumental from the '50s, covered by James Brown, Buddy Holly, The Beach Boys, Bill Haley & The Comets, George Clinton Roy Clark and more.

Doggett was born in Philadelphia in 1916. A master of the piano and organ who played with several bands, Doggett got his first big break in 1942 when he was hired by The Ink Spots as their pianist and arranger. He'd later work as an arranger for the like of Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, and Lionel Hampton.

He formed his own band and started recording for Cincinnati's King Records in 1951. Doggett worked up to the age of 80. He died in New York in 1996.

In honor of his birthday, here are some of his songs. Let's start with "Night Train":

This one's called "Big Boy":

I don't know about Part 1, but here's "Smokey (Part 2)":

Finally, here's a live version of Doggett's greatest hit, live on French TV


Thursday, December 30, 2021

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday John Hartford


Eighty four years ago today, December 30, 1937, in New York City (New York City????!!?) a boy named John Hartford was born. His family soon moved to St. Louis, where young John grew up watching the boats along the Mississippi (he'd later work as a towboat pilot on the Upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers) and listening to the Grand Ol' Opry on the radio.

He'd grow up to become one of the finest hillbilly instrumentalists (guitar, fiddle, mandolin), singers and songwriters of the late 20th Century. 

Most of us first became familiar with Hartford after a little song of his, having something to do with rolling up his sleeping bag, became Glen Campbell's first solo hit. Soon after that Hartford became a regular on the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour as well as the short-lived Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour.

Here are Hartford and Campbell performing that song on tv:

But Hartford quickly proved that he was no one-hit wonder. Though no other song of his ever became nearly as famous as "Gentle on My Mind," and his albums weren't exactly commercial smashes, in the 1970s he made some of finest country and bluegrass music around. His 1971 album Aereo-Plain, recorded with Norman Blake, Vassar Clements, Tut Taylor and Randy Scruggs should be considered a classic.

This is a later career (1999) song about New Mexico's most celebrated troubled youth:

Hartford died of cancer in 2001. His last hurrah was his appearance in the still amazing soundtrack of O Brother Where Art Thou? and the subsequent concert film, Down From the Mountain for which he served as MC as well as a performer:

Finally, here is my favorite Hartford song of all time, In Tall Buildings. 


Happy birthday and RIP, Gentle John.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Remembering Keely



On this day four years ago, December 16, 2017, we lost a wonderful American voice, Dorothy Jacqueline Keely, better known as Keely Smith. She was 89.

Keely, born in Norfolk, Virginia, became famous for singing in her husband Louis Prima's band. She met and began recording with Prima in 1949. They married in 1953 (and divorced in 1960.)

Onstage, besides her singing ability, Keely was best known for her hilarious deadpan expression and often appearing irritated at her husband's highly animated antics. Her obit in the New York Times says, "Her coolness amid Mr. Prima’s chaos cemented them as one of Las Vegas’s premier attractions and foreshadowed the style of Sonny & Cher in the 1960s."

I never thought of Louie and Keely in terms of Sonny & Cher, but, whatever ... Check out this 1960 clip from The Ed Sullivan Show.

I'm not sure where this performance was, but Prima & Smith's version of "That Old Black Magic" is one of their best-loved tunes.

Keely and Louie appeared in the Robert Mitchum 1958 classic Thunder Road. In this clip, Mitchum doesn't appreciate the loudmouth drunk whose obnoxious laughing nearly drowns out Keely's performance of "Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey."

In the mid '60s she released Keely Smith Sings the John Lennon—Paul McCartney Songbook, a collection of Beatles tunes. Here's a swingin' version of "Please Please Me."

But this was her first solo hit, from 1957. Keely, wherever you are, we wish you love.


Thursday, December 02, 2021

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Remembering Odetta


 On this day, just 13 years ago, December 2, 2008, a very powerful voice in American folk music went silent. Odetta Holmes, who was known to the world simply by her first name, died at the age of 77.

She was born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1930. According to The Washington Post:

After showing musical skill at a young age, she began classical vocal training that developed into ambition for a concert singing career. Her mother hoped she would follow the racially groundbreaking career of opera singer Marian Anderson. ...

After graduating from high school, Odetta followed her mother into work as a domestic worker. She also studied music in night classes at Los Angeles City College and found choral work in the West Coast touring company of the musical "Finian's Rainbow."

The show took her to San Francisco in 1949, and it was there that she was exposed to the folk music scene.

Odetta, who came to be known as the "Voice of the Civil Rights Movement," sang “I’m on My Way” on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during Dr. Martin Luther King's March on Washington in 1963. Also in 1963, she appeared on television with President John F. Kennedy on a nationally televised civil rights special called "Dinner With the President." She marched with King for voting rights in the Selma-to-Montgomery march in 1965. 

And she played at the Thirsty Ear Festival at Bonanza Creek Movie Ranch in 2001. That's the only time I ever got to see her perform live. 

Bob Dylan said in a Playboy interview just a couple of years ago " Bob Dylan, who said, "The first thing that turned me on to folk singing was Odetta. I heard a record of hers Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues in a record store, back when you could listen to records right there in the store. Right then and there, I went out and traded my electric guitar and amplifier for an acoustical guitar, a flat-top Gibson."

Here's Odetta  singing a chilling tune on Belgian TV in the '60s:


I believe this is the very first Odetta  song I ever heard back in the '60s, Woodie Guthrie's "Pastures of Plenty":


Skip ahead a few decades and here's Odetta with a full band singing Lead Belly's "Jim Crow Blues" with a full band. (Trigger warning for sensitive right-wingers: This song could contain traces of Critical Race Theory. Take note and protect the children):


In the spirit of the Christmas season, this is from Odetta's appearance on the Ed Sullivan show on Christmas night in 1960:


And here is a song I vividly remember from the time I saw Odetta at the Thirsty Ear Festival in 2001. She's backed here by The Holmes Brothers. 

Let it shine!

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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