Sunday, April 28, 2013 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
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Jump Jive and Harmonize by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Get Me to the World on Time by The Electric Prunes
Dead Moon Night by Dead Moon
Rubber Gloves by The Psyched
Crystal Snake by J.C. Satan
Slipping Away by Mudhoney
Jelly Roll by Richard Berry
Hand to Hand by Thee Headcoats
On Lover's Lane by The Dirty Novels
Tomboy by Acid Baby Jesus
He Looks Like a Psycho by The Electric Mess
Grease Box by TAD
Janet by The Sauterelles
Rollin' and Tumblin' by Elmore James
Voodoo Moonshine by Deadbolt
Green Eyed by The Fall
I Just Want To Have Something To Do by The Ramones
Anna by Joe "King" Carrasco y Los Molino
Bad Harmony by Frank Black & The Catholics
Crazy Crazy Mama by Roky Erikson
New Years Eve by Dengue Fever
Stranger by Black Lips
Shake Your Hips by Slim Harpo
Keep on Churnin' by Wyonie Harris
Waste of Time by The Paint Fumes
Weekend by New Bomb Turks
New Values by The Livids
Searching by The Monsters
Ain't Done You No Harm by Dead Man's Tree
Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance by The Mothers of Invention
Lake of Fire by Meat Puppets
Highway Man by Blue Cheer
Get Happy by Simon Stokes
Back When Dogs Could Talk by Wayne Kramer
Good Night Irene by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
OK, I'm risking my LIFE to bring you this episode, but I have to alert you to some DANGEROUS PLANS by high-raking officials I've uncovered! If you listen closely to the lyrics of each song -- ok, some of them you'll have to play backwards -- and you READ BETWEEN THE LINES you'll realize that I'm sending a CIPHERED MESSAGE to you, my faithful podcast listeners, about a widespread clandestine program to destroy the very FABRIC OF CIVILIZATION!! It's a mystery, inside a riddle, wrapped in an enchilada! Yes, the Trilateral Commission is involved, but so are The Rothschilds, the RAINBOW GIRLS and the Small Business Administration!!! Listen if you dare, but once you crack this code, alert all your friends and email them the link to this episode!!!!THE WORLD MUST LISTEN TO MY TRUTH!!!!!
(Background music: The Man From U.N.C.L.E. by West Hell 5)
Born in 77 by Black Jaspers *
Double 0 Bum by Gas Huffer
Coup D'Etat by Circle Jerks
Egyptian Rats by Paint Fumes
Discontented Man by Dead Man's Tree
Kicker Conspiracy by The Fall
* The songs so marked are from the free Slovenly Recordings compilation, Globule Expectorations. Download it HERE.
Play the episode below
Friday, April 26, 2013 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
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Exit Me by The Imperial Rooster
It's All Over by Joe West
Killed a Chicken Last Night by Scott H. Biram
Owls by The Handsome Family
HANDSOME FAMILY INTERVIEW Brett & Rennie Sparks live on the phone!
Wildebeest by The Handsome Family
And the Band Played On by Richard Thompson & Christine Collister
You and Me by Luke Winslow-King
There to Stay (Small Town Girl) by The Electric Rag Band
Low Down Blues by Wayne Hancock\
Ophelia by Country Blues Revue
GEORGE JONES TRIBUTE
All Songs by Geoerge unless otherwise noted
Just One More
Stand On My Own Two Knees
George Jones Talking Cell Phone Blues by Drive-By Truckers
White Lightning
Root Beer by Buck Owens
Choices
The Window Up Above by The Blasters
Take Me
Walk Through This World With Me by Don Rich
You Got to Be My Baby
Color of the Blues
Tall Tall Trees by Roger Miller
If Drinkin' Don't Kill Me Her Memory Will
Why Baby Why by Webb Pierce
Say It's Not You by Jones with Keith Richard
The Race is On
I Pity the Poor Immigrant by Richie Havens
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list
Due to a last minute space crunch, this column won't be appearing in the print edition of Pasatiempo this week. However, it's supposed to appear on the website. And obviously, it's already on this blog.
Santa Fe’s Joe West proved many years ago that he could make excellent albums full of funny and provocative — not to mention catchy — country-flavored songs. And he’s still perfectly capable of writing and singing fine, slightly cockeyed country tunes. But judging from his output in recent years, at some point West got restless. He needed to stretch.
There was the 2010 rock opera, Time-Traveling Transvestite (credited to Xoë Fitzgerald, the hero of that story), on which West and his band branched out into 1970s glam rock and a little old-school garage band sounds. This was followed by Aberdeen, S.D., a loving ode to the town where West spent his high-school years. This album’s even more experimental than Xoë's album — with lots of spoken-word pieces, field recordings of train whistles and old friends, sinister tape loops over moody instrumental pieces — and some straightforward West songs.
Cover by Joe's dad, Jerry West
Now comes Blood Red Velvet, a rich collection, which, if not quite as experimental as Aberdeen, still shows West progressing.
With his band, The Santa Fe Revue (not to be confused with The Santa Fe All Stars, another West ensemble), West performs some dandy new songs in the country/folk vein.
These include the opener “It’s All Over,” a song about a break-up; a minor-key love ballad called “Tara’s Song” (he sings, “People say, Joe, what in the world are you doin’/A chick like that will lead you down the road to ruin./That ain’t no chick, mister, that’s my wife/I never felt so alive in all my life.”); the banjo-driven“Don’t Let ’Em Get You Down”; the title song, which has one of the prettiest melodies West has ever written; and “Hometown Shit Beer,” a sudsy ode to cheap local brews.
But West doesn’t keep it all country. “The Blues” is an anthem-rocker with a full-blown horn section. “Pink Nun,” which features some beautiful background vocals by Santa Fe’s Felecia Ford — and someone who sounds like a male opera singer and what sounds like samples of Spanish-language radio in the background.
West does a little recycling here. The album has a couple of new and improved versions of Xoë Fitzgerald songs, including a trip-hoppy “Frank’s Time Travel Experiment” (sounding even more alien than the original) and “I Got It All,” featuring the brassy, bluesy vocals of band member Lori Ottino.
And then there’s “The Glory Days of Doña Dillenschneider,” which originally appeared on the first episode of West’s defunct (or, hopefully, only dormant) KSFR-FM radio show, Intergalactic Honky Tonk Machine. This features a violent little anecdote told by Dillenschneider, a friend of West’s (and 1967’s Miss Rodeo de Santa Fe). The track ends with her take on the old Mary Hopkins hit “Those Were the Days.”
Blood Red Velvet ends with a look at mortality. It’s a cover of the late Warren Zevon’s “Don’t Let Us Get Sick,” with band member Margaret Burke on lead vocals, accompanied by West’s young daughter Clementine.
But that’s not the only look at morality on the album. Among the tracks is “Death in Santa Fe.” It’s less than two minutes long, and it turns out to be a dumb joke. But it’s the little touches like this that give West’s work its flavor.
The CD release party for Blood Red Velvet begins at 7 p.m. Friday, April 26, at Vanessie (427 W. Water St., 982-9966). West is slated to take the stage at 8 p.m. There is a $10 cover.
More local yokels
* Cluckaphony by The Imperial Rooster. Here’s another rough, rowdy, raucous, and sometimes a little raunchy romp by Española’s number one gonzo country band.
And while the group retains plenty of its punk/slop spirit that made us Rooster fans in the first place, I do believe the musicians sound tighter than ever before. You can really tell on breakneck songs like “Overunderstimulated” and “Santa Cruz.” They still sound like they’re having a party when they play, but musically, they’re getting stronger.
You’re not going to mistake them for The Beach Boys, but the vocal component is one of the strong points of this collection. At least four of the six members sing. The choruses on lots of the songs here feature boisterous vocals, sometimes harmonies, sometimes unison, and sometimes with a Rooster or two singing in falsetto. It sounds as if everyone in the bar is singing along with the band, and indeed it makes the listener want to sing along as well.
But the main attraction for The Imperial Rooster always has been the group’s hilarious songs. There’s no shortage of those on Cluckaphony. There’s an encounter with Satan in “The Hoover Farm Exorcism,” drugs and debauchery on “April,” and irreverent look at death on “Pine Box Blues.” And “Polka de Nalgas,” a song any man could get behind.
* A Minor Bit Blue byCountry Blues Revue. This is the second album of easy-going, unpretentious music by a Santa Fe band fronted by singer and guitarist Marc Malin and “Harmonica” Mike Handler (I forget what he plays). The rhythm section for most of the tunes are bassist Larry Diaz and drummer Arne Bey.
A host of local musicians make cameos here, as does one out-of-towner, singer Roberta Donnay, who probably is best known for being one of Dan Hicks’ Lickettes in recent years. She takes turns with Malin singing lead on “Comfort,” a breezy little song that sounds like something Hicks himself might record.
Despite the name, CBR doesn’t limit itself to country blues. In fact, several songs feature horns. The musicians take a stab at rockabilly on the original song “Rockability” and a cover of “That’s Alright Mama.” Some tunes like “No More Bad News” (featuring call-and-response vocals between Malin and Stephanie Hatfield) hint at New Orleans funk.
My favorite songs on this album include the good-time cover of The Band’s “Ophelia” and the swampy “Voodoo Queen” featuring Handler growling the vocals and Terry Diers on accordion. But CBR saved its best for last, another one rooted in the swamp called “The Blues Chose Me.”
HERE'S SOME VIDEO ACTION
Here's Joe and band at SF Bandstand last year, irresponsibly making light of the New World Order robot menace.
The Imperial Rooster singing a song from Cluckaphony