Sunday, February , 2011
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@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Dropkick Me, Jesus by Bobby Bare
The Great Joe Bob by Terry Allen
Coney Island Baby by Lou Reed
Penny Instead by Charlie Pickett
Miniskirt Blues by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
Penny Instead by Charlie Pickett
Mummy by The Kilimanjaro Yak Attack
Sooprize Package For Mr. Mineo by The Mummies
Love Hates Me by Texas Terri Bomb
Rock 'n' Roll Rocket by The Micragirls
People Look Away by Death
Born With Two Heads by Waylon Thornton and the Heavy Hands
Scorpion Accordion by Old Time Relijun
Dum Du by Butthole Surfers
Son of Sam by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Big Belly Giant by The Tandoori Knights
Mojo Workout by King Salami & the Cumberland 3
Found a Peanut by Kid Congo Powers & The Pink Monkeybirds
Happy Wanderer by The Polkaholics
In Memory of Lux Interior
All Songs by The Cramps except where noted
The Most Exalted Potentate of Love
Garbage Man
Shortnin' Bread
Rockin' Bones by Ronnie Dawson
Do the Clam
Get Off the Road
Love Me by The Phantom
You Got Good Taste (for Mr. A the Barber)
The Strangeness in Me by The Runabouts
Bikini Girls with Machine Guns
Mad Daddy
Now You Blame Me by Carlos Rodriguez
Theme from The Psycho Playboys by The Desperate Twisters
Ritalin by Sonic Reverends
I Worn My Body For So Long by T-Model Ford & GravelRoad
Don't You Ever Let Nobody Drag Yo' Spirit Down by Wilson Picket Picket with Linda Tillery Cultural Heritage Choir
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Sunday, February 06, 2011
Friday, February 04, 2011
THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST
Friday, February 4, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Kung Fu Fighting by Girls on Top
Pigfork Jamboree by The Imperial Rooster
Nothin' Shakin' by Linda Gail Lewis
Appleton by Webb Pearce
My Go-Go Girl by Bozo Darnell
Let's Do Wrong Tonight by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels with Annette Zilinskas
The Wrong Kind Of Girl by Roger Miller
Play It Cool by Ray Campi
One Too Many Mornings by Johnny Cash
Strangeness in Me by The Cramps
Chicken and Gravy by Richard Johnston with Jessie Mae Hemphill
Coulda Shoulda Woulda by J.P. McDermott & Western Bop
Precious Memories (The Only Hell My Mama Ever Raised) by The Blasters
Plastic Love by The Riptones
I Dig Dangling Participals by The Harper Valley PTA
The Maple Court Tragedy by Ed Sanders and the Hemptones
(If I Go to Heaven) Give Me a Brunette by Deke Dekerson
Lets Fall In Love Again Tonight by Hundred Year Flood

WANDA JACKSON SET
All songs by Wanda except where noted
Thunder on the Mountain
Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad
Funnel of Love by Wanda Jackson & The Cramps
Rock Your Baby by Candye Kane
Wild Side of Life/Honky Tonk Angels
Money Honey
His Rockin' Little Angel by Rosie Flores with Wanda Jackson
Honey Bop
Let's Have a Party by Wayne Hancock
Rip It Up
Riot in Cell Block #9 by Wanda Jackson & The Cramps
My Walking Stick by Leon Redbone
Honky Tonk Heroes by Billy Joe Shaver
Two Different Worlds by Hank Williams
I Dreamed Of A Hillbilly Heaven by Eddie Dean wth the Frontiersmen
In the Jailhouse Now by Jimmie Rodgers
Mother Earth by Mother Earth
MORE TO COME (Keep refreshing your browser until midnight)
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 Freeform American Roots Radio list
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Kung Fu Fighting by Girls on Top
Pigfork Jamboree by The Imperial Rooster
Nothin' Shakin' by Linda Gail Lewis
Appleton by Webb Pearce
My Go-Go Girl by Bozo Darnell
Let's Do Wrong Tonight by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels with Annette Zilinskas
The Wrong Kind Of Girl by Roger Miller
Play It Cool by Ray Campi
One Too Many Mornings by Johnny Cash
Strangeness in Me by The Cramps
Chicken and Gravy by Richard Johnston with Jessie Mae Hemphill
Coulda Shoulda Woulda by J.P. McDermott & Western Bop
Precious Memories (The Only Hell My Mama Ever Raised) by The Blasters
Plastic Love by The Riptones
I Dig Dangling Participals by The Harper Valley PTA
The Maple Court Tragedy by Ed Sanders and the Hemptones
(If I Go to Heaven) Give Me a Brunette by Deke Dekerson
Lets Fall In Love Again Tonight by Hundred Year Flood

WANDA JACKSON SET
All songs by Wanda except where noted
Thunder on the Mountain
Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad
Funnel of Love by Wanda Jackson & The Cramps
Rock Your Baby by Candye Kane
Wild Side of Life/Honky Tonk Angels
Money Honey
His Rockin' Little Angel by Rosie Flores with Wanda Jackson
Honey Bop
Let's Have a Party by Wayne Hancock
Rip It Up
Riot in Cell Block #9 by Wanda Jackson & The Cramps
My Walking Stick by Leon Redbone
Honky Tonk Heroes by Billy Joe Shaver
Two Different Worlds by Hank Williams
I Dreamed Of A Hillbilly Heaven by Eddie Dean wth the Frontiersmen
In the Jailhouse Now by Jimmie Rodgers
Mother Earth by Mother Earth
MORE TO COME (Keep refreshing your browser until midnight)
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 Freeform American Roots Radio list
TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Wanda Doesn't Need Jack White to Party
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
February 4, 2011
Dag nabbit! I’m about to write an album review that’s going to make me sound like a boring old purist. And in general, I hate boring old purists.
It’s like that joke told in music circles: How many bluegrass fans does it take to change a light bulb? The answer: Four — one to screw in the bulb, three to sit around and talk about how the old bulb was better. But this bulb — Wanda Jackson’s new Jack White-produced album, The Party Ain’t Over — has brought out my crotchety purist. ( And, as Luke told Laura — a few days after he raped her — “That’s a side of me I don’t like.”)
Brief history lesson: For those unfamiliar with Jackson, she’s a rockabilly fireball from Oklahoma who started out as a country singer — discovered by the great Hank Thompson, no less. She wrote the country classic “Right or Wrong.” But she heard the call of the wild. Her high-charged “Let’s Have a Party,” originally recorded by Elvis Presley, was a rock ’n’ roll hit in the late ’50s. Others followed, including “Fujiyama Mama” (which actually became huge in Japan) and my favorite, “Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad.”
In the mid-’60s, when rockabilly became unhip in the wake of the British Invasion (which was stupid, because The Beatles and other Brit rockers loved the ’billies), Jackson, like Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and others, turned back to the world of country. But with the rockabilly revival of the ’80s and ’90s, Jackson started rocking again. She appeared on Rosie Flores’ album Rockabilly Filly in 1995 (along with fellow early rockabilly gal Janis Martin). And — hot dog! — she’s been rocking ever since.
Back to the Party: White Stripe Jack White must have a thing for older women. In 2004, he produced an amazing “comeback” album, Van Lear Rose, for Loretta Lynn. I noted at the time in this column that some of the tracks had “about 10 times the drum sound of any previous Loretta effort” and described the song “Little Red Shoes” as “honky-tonk trip-hop.”
But Van Lear is a superior effort, because White stifled himself more on that album. On Party, he frequently goes overboard, doing something I previously assumed was impossible — overwhelming Wanda Jackson.
It’s obvious from the opening moments of the first song — a cover of Johnny Kidd & The Pirates’ “Shakin’ All Over” — that White’s going nuts, turning the knobs up to 11 when a seven would do. The horn section sounds machine-made, and worst of all, White uses some weird effect to distort Jackson’s voice.
But this isn’t even the worst of it. Little Richard’s “Rip It Up,” a natural song for Jackson, seems to have cold techno overtones. And “Busted” (a Harlan Howard tune recorded by Johnny Cash and Ray Charles) starts out with Jackson singing it straight but then turns into a jackhammer waltz or perhaps a mad polka. It sounds like some funny mash-up song created by a bored kid for YouTube giggles. And then there’s The Andrews Sisters’ “Rum and Coca-Cola.” Under White’s direction it sounds like a rejected commercial for Captain Morgan.
Sure ain’t like the Wanda we knew in the ’50s — grouse grouse, grumble grumble.
But seriously, folks, I don’t mind hearing Jackson in a more modern context. Back on her 2003 album, Heart Trouble, she played with The Cramps on a couple of tracks. “Riot in Cell Block #9” was a joyous kick, but even more successful was the remake of her old hit “Funnel of Love.” The fuzzy guitar didn’t sound like it did in the original version, but Lux and Ivy basically stayed in the background, letting Jackson carry the song.
That’s the trouble with The Party Ain’t Over. Too often it seems that White is trying to upstage Jackson with his gee-whiz studio gimmicks.
To be sure, sometimes White’s production works. And when it does, it’s wonderful. By far the best song here is “Thunder on the Mountain.” It’s a not-very-well-known Bob Dylan song from his 2006 album Modern Times — Dylan in his raging Old Testament prophet mode. It’s a hard-driving romp. Jackson sings it with undisguised glee backed by White’s screaming guitar, a horn section that sounds fueled by pep pills, and a madhouse Jerry Lee-style piano. It was a wise choice to pick this for the first video from the album.
Another song that stands out in a good way is Jackson’s cover of Amy Winehouse’s noir-soul “You Know I’m No Good.” Jackson captures the smoky, sleazy spirit of Miss Beehive’s song. True, it’s not a little disturbing to hear her sing, “I’m in the tub, you on the seat/Lick your lips as I soap my feet/Then you notice little carpet burn.” But sometimes disturbing is good.
The sexy Dinah Washington classic “Teach Me Tonight” almost works. It’s a perfect tune for Jackson. The steel guitar sounds sweet, but the twinkly keyboards get annoying: it seems White turns everything up — the horns, the guitar — during the instrumental. It’s not as bad as it could have been, but a lighter touch would have sounded so much better.
And then there’s Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #6,” which ends the album. It’s a low-production, unplugged version. No great revelation, just a good country song that Jackson does so well without all the weird studio distractions that mar many of the songs.
If this album gets more people interested in Wanda Jackson, then yippee. But take some advice from this stuffy old purist and seek out her wild sounds of yesteryear.
Wanda, yesterday and today: I’ll play some Jackson cuts from her long career on The Santa Fe Opry, the country music Nashville does not want you to hear, 10 p.m. on Friday. And don’t forget Terrell’s Sound World, free-form weirdo radio, same time on Sunday, both on KSFR-FM 101.1. It’s streaming and screaming on the web at www.ksfr.org.
BLOG BONUS:
Here's Wanda back in the '50s
February 4, 2011
Dag nabbit! I’m about to write an album review that’s going to make me sound like a boring old purist. And in general, I hate boring old purists.
It’s like that joke told in music circles: How many bluegrass fans does it take to change a light bulb? The answer: Four — one to screw in the bulb, three to sit around and talk about how the old bulb was better. But this bulb — Wanda Jackson’s new Jack White-produced album, The Party Ain’t Over — has brought out my crotchety purist. ( And, as Luke told Laura — a few days after he raped her — “That’s a side of me I don’t like.”)
Brief history lesson: For those unfamiliar with Jackson, she’s a rockabilly fireball from Oklahoma who started out as a country singer — discovered by the great Hank Thompson, no less. She wrote the country classic “Right or Wrong.” But she heard the call of the wild. Her high-charged “Let’s Have a Party,” originally recorded by Elvis Presley, was a rock ’n’ roll hit in the late ’50s. Others followed, including “Fujiyama Mama” (which actually became huge in Japan) and my favorite, “Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad.”
In the mid-’60s, when rockabilly became unhip in the wake of the British Invasion (which was stupid, because The Beatles and other Brit rockers loved the ’billies), Jackson, like Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and others, turned back to the world of country. But with the rockabilly revival of the ’80s and ’90s, Jackson started rocking again. She appeared on Rosie Flores’ album Rockabilly Filly in 1995 (along with fellow early rockabilly gal Janis Martin). And — hot dog! — she’s been rocking ever since.
But Van Lear is a superior effort, because White stifled himself more on that album. On Party, he frequently goes overboard, doing something I previously assumed was impossible — overwhelming Wanda Jackson.
It’s obvious from the opening moments of the first song — a cover of Johnny Kidd & The Pirates’ “Shakin’ All Over” — that White’s going nuts, turning the knobs up to 11 when a seven would do. The horn section sounds machine-made, and worst of all, White uses some weird effect to distort Jackson’s voice.
But this isn’t even the worst of it. Little Richard’s “Rip It Up,” a natural song for Jackson, seems to have cold techno overtones. And “Busted” (a Harlan Howard tune recorded by Johnny Cash and Ray Charles) starts out with Jackson singing it straight but then turns into a jackhammer waltz or perhaps a mad polka. It sounds like some funny mash-up song created by a bored kid for YouTube giggles. And then there’s The Andrews Sisters’ “Rum and Coca-Cola.” Under White’s direction it sounds like a rejected commercial for Captain Morgan.
Sure ain’t like the Wanda we knew in the ’50s — grouse grouse, grumble grumble.
But seriously, folks, I don’t mind hearing Jackson in a more modern context. Back on her 2003 album, Heart Trouble, she played with The Cramps on a couple of tracks. “Riot in Cell Block #9” was a joyous kick, but even more successful was the remake of her old hit “Funnel of Love.” The fuzzy guitar didn’t sound like it did in the original version, but Lux and Ivy basically stayed in the background, letting Jackson carry the song.
That’s the trouble with The Party Ain’t Over. Too often it seems that White is trying to upstage Jackson with his gee-whiz studio gimmicks.
To be sure, sometimes White’s production works. And when it does, it’s wonderful. By far the best song here is “Thunder on the Mountain.” It’s a not-very-well-known Bob Dylan song from his 2006 album Modern Times — Dylan in his raging Old Testament prophet mode. It’s a hard-driving romp. Jackson sings it with undisguised glee backed by White’s screaming guitar, a horn section that sounds fueled by pep pills, and a madhouse Jerry Lee-style piano. It was a wise choice to pick this for the first video from the album.
Another song that stands out in a good way is Jackson’s cover of Amy Winehouse’s noir-soul “You Know I’m No Good.” Jackson captures the smoky, sleazy spirit of Miss Beehive’s song. True, it’s not a little disturbing to hear her sing, “I’m in the tub, you on the seat/Lick your lips as I soap my feet/Then you notice little carpet burn.” But sometimes disturbing is good.
The sexy Dinah Washington classic “Teach Me Tonight” almost works. It’s a perfect tune for Jackson. The steel guitar sounds sweet, but the twinkly keyboards get annoying: it seems White turns everything up — the horns, the guitar — during the instrumental. It’s not as bad as it could have been, but a lighter touch would have sounded so much better.
And then there’s Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #6,” which ends the album. It’s a low-production, unplugged version. No great revelation, just a good country song that Jackson does so well without all the weird studio distractions that mar many of the songs.
If this album gets more people interested in Wanda Jackson, then yippee. But take some advice from this stuffy old purist and seek out her wild sounds of yesteryear.
Wanda, yesterday and today: I’ll play some Jackson cuts from her long career on The Santa Fe Opry, the country music Nashville does not want you to hear, 10 p.m. on Friday. And don’t forget Terrell’s Sound World, free-form weirdo radio, same time on Sunday, both on KSFR-FM 101.1. It’s streaming and screaming on the web at www.ksfr.org.
BLOG BONUS:
Here's Wanda back in the '50s
Monday, January 31, 2011
Jamie Leaves Fan Man
Here's some news I never expected to report.
Jamie Lenfesty, who for all practical purposes is Fan Man Productions just sent this email:
I don't know what this foundation is, but if starts to being good music here, more power to it.
Good luck Jamie.
Jamie Lenfesty, who for all practical purposes is Fan Man Productions just sent this email:
To all my friends, colleagues, and supporters of live music in Northern NM;
I am writing you to let you know that today, Monday, Jan 31 is my last day at Fan Man Productions. I am NOT leaving Santa Fe, but I have accepted a position at a non profit here called the Heath Foundation as Director of Heath Concerts. My position there begins tomorrow, Feb. 1.
After nearly 20 years it is time for me to take this opportunity to pursue some of the many ideas I have had to do more for Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico's music scene; to become even more involved in community building, community events and music education. Fan Man had a great run but this move has in many ways been a long time coming as my vision of my role here has matured as to how I want to impact my community. I am truly excited to take all that I have learned and apply it working for Heath
I look forward to hearing from you at Heath Concerts and assure you all there are many exciting developments afoot with this move that will help Santa Fe's music scene grow going forward.
I don't know what this foundation is, but if starts to being good music here, more power to it.
Good luck Jamie.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
Sunday, January 30, 2011
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@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead by Warren Zevon
Bite of My Soul by The Fleshtones
Rip This Joint by The Rolling Stones
Hold Me Tight by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Same Old Train by T-Model Ford & GravelRoad
The Storm Within by Death
New Kind of Kick by The Cramps
My True Story by The Jive 5
Hey You by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
One Hit Wonder by Texas Terri Bomb
Sugar Snap Brain by Kilimanjaro Yak Attack
Two Headed Demon by Urban Junior
Tonight Tonight by The Anabolics
Petey Wheatstraw by Nat Dove & The Devils
Mama, Keep Your Big Mouth Shut by The Pretty Things
Comin' Around the Mountain by Hound Dog Taylor
AROUND THE WORLD IN A DAZE
Kai Tom Yum by Kawaw Siang Thong
Katarina by Vartinna
Sét Alamenem by Girma Béyéné
Break the Spell by Gogol Bordello
Escape From Dragon House by Dengue Fever
Wodka by Kult
Lajtha Lassu by A Hawk & A Hacksaw
Pee Kow Pee Ork (Ghosts Come And Go) by Chai Muansing
Cold Bologna by The Isley Brothers
Flat Foot Flewzy by NRBQ
You Bug Me Baby by The Marathons
Vikings by The Black Angels
I Hear Voices by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Dear Friend by Eleni Mandell
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead by Warren Zevon
Bite of My Soul by The Fleshtones
Rip This Joint by The Rolling Stones
Hold Me Tight by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Same Old Train by T-Model Ford & GravelRoad
The Storm Within by Death
New Kind of Kick by The Cramps
My True Story by The Jive 5
Hey You by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
One Hit Wonder by Texas Terri Bomb
Sugar Snap Brain by Kilimanjaro Yak Attack
Two Headed Demon by Urban Junior
Tonight Tonight by The Anabolics
Petey Wheatstraw by Nat Dove & The Devils
Mama, Keep Your Big Mouth Shut by The Pretty Things

AROUND THE WORLD IN A DAZE
Kai Tom Yum by Kawaw Siang Thong
Katarina by Vartinna
Sét Alamenem by Girma Béyéné
Break the Spell by Gogol Bordello
Escape From Dragon House by Dengue Fever
Wodka by Kult
Lajtha Lassu by A Hawk & A Hacksaw
Pee Kow Pee Ork (Ghosts Come And Go) by Chai Muansing
Cold Bologna by The Isley Brothers
Flat Foot Flewzy by NRBQ
You Bug Me Baby by The Marathons
Vikings by The Black Angels
I Hear Voices by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Dear Friend by Eleni Mandell
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
FOLK REMEDY PLAYLIST
Sunay, January 30, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting! 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sunday Mountain Time
Guest Host: Steve Terrell substituting for Laurell Reynolds
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
I Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down by Mississippi Fred McDowell
Never Did No Wandering by The Folksmen
Tell it To Me by Grant Brothers & Their Music
Busted by Hazel Dickens
The Gayest Old Dude That's Out by Uncle Dave Macon
Dustbowl Refugees by James Talley
Philadelphia Lawyer by The Maddox Brothers & Rose
New Year's Flood by Stan Ridgway
Bufallo Skinners by Woody Guthrie
Fishing Blues by Henry Thomas
A Special Love by Rolf Cahn
Canned Heat Blues by Sloppy Henry
Bootlegger's Blues by The South Memphis String Band
Two Little Fishes by The Rev. Louis Overstreet
I'm the Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World by Loudon Wainwright III
He Rambled by Charlie Poole
Railroad Bill by Hobart Smith
Hog Of The Forsaken by Michael Hurley
Do You Call That A Buddy by Martin, Bogan & Armstrong
My Crime Blues by Barefoot Bill
Come To The Water by Possessed By Paul James
Country Blues by Dock Boggs
Find Blind Lemon (Part 2) by Geoff Muldaur
See That My Grave Is Kept Clean by Blind Lemon Jefferson
Bow Wow Blues by The Allen Brothers
Port of Amsterdam by Dave Van Ronk
Jug Band Set
Selling the Jelly by Noah Lewis Jug Band
Taint Nobody's Business If I Do by Hammie Nixon, Van Zula Hunt & The Beale Street Jug Band
What's That Taste Like Gravy by King David's Jug Band
Walkin' Cane Blues by The Kentucky Blues Band
She's in the Graveyard Now by Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band
Feather Bed by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Hoodoo Bash by Unholy Modal Rounders
Update: Thanks to Melissa for telling me about this documentary. Check out the trailer.
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting! 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sunday Mountain Time
Guest Host: Steve Terrell substituting for Laurell Reynolds
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
I Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down by Mississippi Fred McDowell
Never Did No Wandering by The Folksmen
Tell it To Me by Grant Brothers & Their Music
Busted by Hazel Dickens
The Gayest Old Dude That's Out by Uncle Dave Macon
Dustbowl Refugees by James Talley
Philadelphia Lawyer by The Maddox Brothers & Rose
New Year's Flood by Stan Ridgway
Bufallo Skinners by Woody Guthrie
Fishing Blues by Henry Thomas
A Special Love by Rolf Cahn
Canned Heat Blues by Sloppy Henry
Bootlegger's Blues by The South Memphis String Band
Two Little Fishes by The Rev. Louis Overstreet
I'm the Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World by Loudon Wainwright III
He Rambled by Charlie Poole
Railroad Bill by Hobart Smith
Hog Of The Forsaken by Michael Hurley
Do You Call That A Buddy by Martin, Bogan & Armstrong
My Crime Blues by Barefoot Bill
Come To The Water by Possessed By Paul James
Country Blues by Dock Boggs
Find Blind Lemon (Part 2) by Geoff Muldaur
See That My Grave Is Kept Clean by Blind Lemon Jefferson
Bow Wow Blues by The Allen Brothers
Port of Amsterdam by Dave Van Ronk
Jug Band Set
Selling the Jelly by Noah Lewis Jug Band
Taint Nobody's Business If I Do by Hammie Nixon, Van Zula Hunt & The Beale Street Jug Band
What's That Taste Like Gravy by King David's Jug Band
Walkin' Cane Blues by The Kentucky Blues Band
She's in the Graveyard Now by Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band
Feather Bed by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Hoodoo Bash by Unholy Modal Rounders
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio listUpdate: Thanks to Melissa for telling me about this documentary. Check out the trailer.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Hey Early Birds -- I'm Subbing For Folk Remedies Sunday
I'll be doing Laurell Reynolds' show Folk Remedies on KSFR starting at 8 a.m. Sunday morning.
Going to be playing a lot of old hillbilly and "race" records, field recordings and other Old Weird America stuff -- plus a few more modern "folkies" who don't make me cringe.
Then at 10 p.m. I'll be back for my usual craziness on Terrell's Sound World.
It's all on KSFR, 101.1 FM
Going to be playing a lot of old hillbilly and "race" records, field recordings and other Old Weird America stuff -- plus a few more modern "folkies" who don't make me cringe.
Then at 10 p.m. I'll be back for my usual craziness on Terrell's Sound World.
It's all on KSFR, 101.1 FM
Friday, January 28, 2011
THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST
Friday, January 28, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell
101.1 FMKSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Can't Find the Doorknob by Jimmy & JohnnySadie Green by The Great Recession Orchestra
Haggard Like I've Never Been Before by Merle Haggard
Mascara Tears by Marti Brom
High Priced Chick by Yuichi & The Hilltone Boys
Mind Your Own Business by Hank Williams
Get What's Comin' by The Defibulators
Ft. Wayne Zoo by Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
The Baltimore Incident by George KentI Don't Want Love by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Hot Dog ! That Made Him Mad by Carolyn Mark & The Roommates
Old Mountain Dew by The Delmore Brothers
Your Friends Think I'm the Devil by The Imperial RoosterNashville Radio by Jon Langford
Guns, Guitars and Women by Kell Robertson
Weakness In A Man by Waylon Jennings
Foolish Questions by Johnny CashCHARLIE LOUVIN TRIBUTE
Cash on the Barrelhead/Satan is Real by The Louvin Brothers
The Christian Life by The Byrds
The Angels Rejoiced Last Night by Gram Parsons & Emmylou Harris
I Don't Feel Like Dancing by Charlie LouvinI'll Never Go Back by The Louvin Brothers
I Wish You Knew by Kathy Louvin
You Finally Said Something Good (When You Said Goodbye) by Charlie Louvin
Kentucky /Wish It Had Been A Dream by The Louvin Brothers
The Great Atomic Power by Charlie Louvin with Jeff Tweedy
Weapon of Prayer by The Louvin Brothers
Freight Train Boogie by The Louvin Brothers
Knoxville Girl by Angry Johnny & GTO
You're Learning by The Louvin Brothers
Why Must You Throw Dirt on My Face by Elvis Costello
If I Coulde Only Win Your Love by Emmylou Harris
When I Stop Dreaming by Charlie Louvin
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 Freeform American Roots Radio list
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Terrell's Tuneup: Death Takes an Encore
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
January 28, 2011
With its new album, Spiritual Mental Physical, the Detroit proto-punk trio known in the mid-’70s as Death has a sequel to its unlikely debut CD, ... For the Whole World to See — which was postponed for about 35 years.
One of the saddest commentaries on the music of the ’70s is that about the only racially integrated bands that anyone remembers are Frank Zappa’s The Mothers of Invention and the Village People.
For all the great sounds that came out of the Me Decade, the ugly truth was that this was a period of segregation. For the most part, white people played “rock” — and awful singer-songwriter dreck — while black people played soul and funk — disco and rap coming later in the decade.
That’s why, in the early ’80s, a band like The BusBoys was refreshing — though it was telling that many considered the group a novelty. As The BusBoys sang in “Did You See Me”: “Bet you never heard music like this by spades.”
But, of course, there were exceptions. One was a band from Detroit called Death. No, you wouldn’t have heard the group on the radio, at least not back then. “We didn’t fit in at all,” bass player and singer Bobby Hackney said in an interview with NPR last year:
Death identified with Michigan groups and performers like The Stooges, The MC5, Alice Cooper (before he went on Hollywood Squares), and Bob Seeger’s groups (before he became “classic rock”).
Death, in its original incarnation, consisted of three Hackney brothers — Bobby, drummer Dannis, and the late David, who played guitar — and was called Rock Fire Funk Express (I have to admit, I like that name better). As Bobby tells it, there was a record company that was interested, but “the man with the big cigar” was put off by the morbid name the group went by at the time. The band refused to sell out and change its name again, so the record deal was off. The group broke up in 1977, and the Hackney brothers moved to Vermont.
But just a year ago, Bobby Hackney Jr. discovered dad’s old demo tapes and got the seven known Death demos released as an album called ... For the Whole World to See, on the Chicago independent label Drag City.
It didn’t become a big hit, but it got a great “underground” buzz. NPR did a feature, and Death was reborn with a new guitarist, Bobbie Duncan. The group played at South by Southwest in Austin last year. I was fortunate enough to see Death in New York last summer at a free show called The Detroit Breakdown. With a poster of David Hackney on the stage, the band was loud, proud, and rocking. (For videos of the show, check this out: CLICK HERE.)
My advice to those who haven’t been touched by Death: Before you get this album, definitely pick up the first. Like ... For the Whole World to See, Spiritual Mental Physical consists of demos. But they’re not as listener-ready as the ones on the first album. These sound more like home practice tapes — muddier, tinnier. Also, there are just more than 28 minutes of music here.
There are a few fun tunes. The album starts off strong with “Views,” a crazy rocker with falsetto vocals. Some songs are clearly derivative. “The Masks” plays upon the hook from The Beatles’ “Got to Get You Into My Life,” while “People Look Away” sounds suspiciously close to the teenage wasteland of The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly.”
There are noodling instrumentals such as “The Change,” as well as three solo spots — “David’s Dream,” “Bobby Bassing It,” and “Dannis on the Motor City Drums.” (Yes, it’s a drum solo. This is from the ’70s, remember.) The group redeems itself with “Can You Give Me a Thrill?” It’s the most Stoogey cut on the album. True, it goes on for nearly six minutes, but what the heck?
I’m pretty sure Drag City has scraped the bottom of the Death vaults by now. So I’m hoping that, for the next album — and I’m hoping there is a next album — the guys do some fresh recordings.
Also recommended:
* Like a Knife Through an Egg by Kilimanjaro Yak Attack. I normally don’t review CDs by kids of my friends or friends of my kids, but I’ve always gotten a real kick out of these young yaks. Even if Oscar Oswald (who sings, plays bass, and writes songs) weren’t the son of my brother in journalism Mark Oswald, I’d still like Yak Attack.

The band’s music is full of noisy punk spirit. But there’s also a clever, quirky undertone. Listening to the rubbery “Knabonga” from the new CD while driving down Cerrillos Road the other night, I almost thought I’d stumbled upon a long-lost song from the early days of The Talking Heads — back before David Byrne started taking himself too seriously.
These guys started out in Santa Fe, but one of their members now lives in Portland, Oregon, and Oscar’s going to school in Nevada, so they’re scattered throughout the West. I hope they’ll play some gigs here this summer.
Among my favorites here are “Mummy,” which is basically a psychedelic freakout, and “Pocket Calculator,” which has a little Captain Beefheart in it, as well as a little Television.
Then the boys get a little folk-rocky with “Munkar & Nakir.”
I also like the fact that on their MySpace page they described their music as “healing & easy listening.” Yup, this is real “lifestyle” stuff.
(There are songs by Death as well as Kilimanjaro Yak Attack on the latest episode of The Big Enchilada.
January 28, 2011
With its new album, Spiritual Mental Physical, the Detroit proto-punk trio known in the mid-’70s as Death has a sequel to its unlikely debut CD, ... For the Whole World to See — which was postponed for about 35 years.
One of the saddest commentaries on the music of the ’70s is that about the only racially integrated bands that anyone remembers are Frank Zappa’s The Mothers of Invention and the Village People.
For all the great sounds that came out of the Me Decade, the ugly truth was that this was a period of segregation. For the most part, white people played “rock” — and awful singer-songwriter dreck — while black people played soul and funk — disco and rap coming later in the decade.
That’s why, in the early ’80s, a band like The BusBoys was refreshing — though it was telling that many considered the group a novelty. As The BusBoys sang in “Did You See Me”: “Bet you never heard music like this by spades.”
But, of course, there were exceptions. One was a band from Detroit called Death. No, you wouldn’t have heard the group on the radio, at least not back then. “We didn’t fit in at all,” bass player and singer Bobby Hackney said in an interview with NPR last year:
“The rock bands that we identified with ... we didn’t hang out with those guys. We were in the inner city, on the east side, in the black community. Most of the bands were doing stuff like Al Green; Earth, Wind & Fire; The Isley Brothers. Being in the black community and having a rock band, people just looked at us like we was weird. After we got done with a song, instead of cheering and clapping, people would just be looking at us.”
Death identified with Michigan groups and performers like The Stooges, The MC5, Alice Cooper (before he went on Hollywood Squares), and Bob Seeger’s groups (before he became “classic rock”).
Death, in its original incarnation, consisted of three Hackney brothers — Bobby, drummer Dannis, and the late David, who played guitar — and was called Rock Fire Funk Express (I have to admit, I like that name better). As Bobby tells it, there was a record company that was interested, but “the man with the big cigar” was put off by the morbid name the group went by at the time. The band refused to sell out and change its name again, so the record deal was off. The group broke up in 1977, and the Hackney brothers moved to Vermont.
But just a year ago, Bobby Hackney Jr. discovered dad’s old demo tapes and got the seven known Death demos released as an album called ... For the Whole World to See, on the Chicago independent label Drag City.
It didn’t become a big hit, but it got a great “underground” buzz. NPR did a feature, and Death was reborn with a new guitarist, Bobbie Duncan. The group played at South by Southwest in Austin last year. I was fortunate enough to see Death in New York last summer at a free show called The Detroit Breakdown. With a poster of David Hackney on the stage, the band was loud, proud, and rocking. (For videos of the show, check this out: CLICK HERE.)
My advice to those who haven’t been touched by Death: Before you get this album, definitely pick up the first. Like ... For the Whole World to See, Spiritual Mental Physical consists of demos. But they’re not as listener-ready as the ones on the first album. These sound more like home practice tapes — muddier, tinnier. Also, there are just more than 28 minutes of music here.
There are a few fun tunes. The album starts off strong with “Views,” a crazy rocker with falsetto vocals. Some songs are clearly derivative. “The Masks” plays upon the hook from The Beatles’ “Got to Get You Into My Life,” while “People Look Away” sounds suspiciously close to the teenage wasteland of The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly.”
There are noodling instrumentals such as “The Change,” as well as three solo spots — “David’s Dream,” “Bobby Bassing It,” and “Dannis on the Motor City Drums.” (Yes, it’s a drum solo. This is from the ’70s, remember.) The group redeems itself with “Can You Give Me a Thrill?” It’s the most Stoogey cut on the album. True, it goes on for nearly six minutes, but what the heck?
I’m pretty sure Drag City has scraped the bottom of the Death vaults by now. So I’m hoping that, for the next album — and I’m hoping there is a next album — the guys do some fresh recordings.
Also recommended:
* Like a Knife Through an Egg by Kilimanjaro Yak Attack. I normally don’t review CDs by kids of my friends or friends of my kids, but I’ve always gotten a real kick out of these young yaks. Even if Oscar Oswald (who sings, plays bass, and writes songs) weren’t the son of my brother in journalism Mark Oswald, I’d still like Yak Attack.

The band’s music is full of noisy punk spirit. But there’s also a clever, quirky undertone. Listening to the rubbery “Knabonga” from the new CD while driving down Cerrillos Road the other night, I almost thought I’d stumbled upon a long-lost song from the early days of The Talking Heads — back before David Byrne started taking himself too seriously.
These guys started out in Santa Fe, but one of their members now lives in Portland, Oregon, and Oscar’s going to school in Nevada, so they’re scattered throughout the West. I hope they’ll play some gigs here this summer.
Among my favorites here are “Mummy,” which is basically a psychedelic freakout, and “Pocket Calculator,” which has a little Captain Beefheart in it, as well as a little Television.
Then the boys get a little folk-rocky with “Munkar & Nakir.”
I also like the fact that on their MySpace page they described their music as “healing & easy listening.” Yup, this is real “lifestyle” stuff.
(There are songs by Death as well as Kilimanjaro Yak Attack on the latest episode of The Big Enchilada.
New Fleshtones Album Coming -- Free Mp3!
Well, I'll be a dog. Just last Sunday on Terrell's Sound World I was saying saying it's about damn time for a new Fleshtones album, Lo and behold, the station got a news release from Yep Roc records announcing just that. Their upcoming record is called Brooklyn Sound Solution.
The last non-Christmas record by The Fleshtones was Take a Good Look from early 2008.
Courtesy of Yep-Roc, you can hear "Bite of My Soul" by clicking THIS or download it by clicking THIS.
The hardest working garage rockers in the U.S., The Fleshtones return with its first long player since 2008’s Stocking Stuffer. Clocking in at just slightly more than 30 minutes, BSS is one part covers record, one part originals all mixed with an R&B chaser. It shows Peter Zaremba (vocals, harmonica and organ), Keith Streng (guitar and vocals), Bill Milhizer (drums and vocals) and Ken Fox (bass and vocals) in fine form, with 12 tracks, including a boozy surf-rock cover of The Beatles’ “Day Tripper,” a psychedelized version of B.B. Arnold’s “I Wish You Would” (made popular by The Yardbirds) and the tripped-out Zaremba-penned “Bite of My Soul.”Lenny Kaye of The Patti Smith Smith Band sits in on all the tracks. The release date is March 15.
The last non-Christmas record by The Fleshtones was Take a Good Look from early 2008.
Courtesy of Yep-Roc, you can hear "Bite of My Soul" by clicking THIS or download it by clicking THIS.
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