Thursday, October 04, 2012

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Shelter From the Tempest

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Oct. 5, 2012

Every few years Bob Dylan comes out with a new album like a medicine-show huckster returning to fleece a sleepy town.

Maybe the snake oil he sold you the last few times didn’t really cure what was ailing you. Maybe the euphoric effects didn’t last very long. But the show is usually fun; the music is nearly always great. And the joy juice the sly old crook is peddling does have a weird kick — whatever it is.

And such is the case with Tempest, the latest Dylan album, released last month. Some critics immediately declared that it’s one of the old master’s best, ranking it up there with Highway 61 Revisited, Blonde on Blonde, Blood on the Tracks, and Empire Burlesque. (Just checking if you’re paying attention there with that last one.)

I wouldn’t go that far, but I’m inclined to agree with one review that proclaimed Tempest to be Dylan’s best album since the turn of the century. Of course, there’s not much competition for that distinction. Not counting his 2009 Christmas album, it’s only his fourth record since the end of the ’90s.

For the past 10 or 15 years, Dylan’s voice has evolved into a wizened rasp, a world-weary hobo growl. But somehow he makes his ravaged vocal cords work in his favor. The gravel in his gut and the phlegm in his throat give his voice a fascinating aura.

Call it the croak of authority.

We don’t even hear Dylan’s voice for almost a minute into the album, but that’s OK. The guitar and steel-guitar instrumental intro to “Duquesne Whistle” can’t help but make a listener grin. It sounds like some strange old 78, evoking images of both Jimmie Rodgers and Laurel and Hardy before it settles into a railroad shuffle.

“Listen to that Dusquesne whistle blowin’, blowin’ like it’s gonna sweep my world away,” Dylan sings. The words — written by Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter — may sound foreboding. Later Dylan sings that the whistle is “blowin’ like the sky’s gonna blow apart.” But any apprehension is overshadowed by the joyfulness of the melody.

The next tune, “Soon After Midnight,” is a slow love song, one of the prettiest Dylan has done in a long time. The melody and the arrangement are reminiscent of sweet, melancholic instrumentals from about 50 years ago like Floyd Cramer’s “Last Date” and “Sleep Walk” by Santo & Johnny.

This leads into “Narrow Way,” a rocking blues like many of the better tunes on Dylan’s previous two albums, Together Through Life and Modern Times. In the song, Dylan warns, “I’m armed to the hilt, and I’m struggling hard/You won’t get out of here unscarred.”

He’s darn tootin’. This one contains an unusual historical lesson: “Ever since the British burned the White House down/There’s been a bleeding wound in the heart of town.” I can’t help but think this is a disguised reference to the 2001 attack on American soil and the effect it’s had on the American psyche during the past 11 years.

Speaking of bleeding wounds, the body count on Tempest is much higher than on your usual Dylan album.”Pay in Blood” is the title of one song. “I pay in blood, but not my own,” goes the refrain. In one verse he snarls, “I got something in my pocket make your eyeballs swim I got dogs could tear you limb from limb.” Yikes! And by the final verse he’s threatening, “Come here I’ll break your lousy head.”

The record is full of several epic story songs, lengthy tracks that deal with violence and/or death. “Roll On John” is a seven-minute ode to his friend John Lennon. He was murdered more than 30 years ago, but Dylan makes the pain of his death seem fresh. The title song is a near-14-minute sea chantey about the 1912 sinking of the Titanic. Dylan turns this oft-told tale into an apocalyptic metaphor set to an upbeat melody with echoes of “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.”

The most impressive of these songs is “Tin Angel,” a violent minor-key dirge that probably has roots in a dozen or so folk and gunfighter ballads. I hear a lot of “Black Jack Davy” in it, though it also has elements of “Matty Groves.” It’s an age-old story of a cuckold, his unfaithful wife, and her lover. In this story there are no sympathetic characters, which probably is good. No one survives the final encounter.
My secrets are safe (Photo by Associated Press)

In a dirge called “Long and Wasted Years” — one in which the only tragic victim may be the soul of the singer — Dylan croaks, “I wear dark glasses to cover my eyes/There are secrets in them I can’t disguise.”

(Dylan fans might recall cool Bob raising some eyebrows this year by wearing his shades at the White House when accepting his Medal of Freedom from the president.)

 With Tempest, once again, he’s lifted those glasses a little and let a few more secrets out. Dylan’s never-ending medicine show rolls on.


Also recommended:

* Greenwood by Stevie Tombstone. No, I’m not declaring Tombstone “the new Dylan.” But I bet a lot of Dylan fans would appreciate his music.

In fact. you might argue he’s like a reverse Dylan. The sainted Bob started out as a folkie and then went electric. The Georgia-born Tombstone started out electric, with a powerful if unsung “swamp rockabilly” (as he calls it) band called The Tombstones, and then went acoustic.

I’ve heard several Tombstone solo albums, and this one’s my favorite. It may be his most personal as far as lyrics go, but he never sounds self indulgent. He grabs you from the very first line in the opening track, “Lucky”:

“I’m lucky that I’m still alive/Well, I thought I’d used nine, but I must have been high/Forgotten and shot at, delivered denied, I’m lucky that I’m still alive.”

The title song is not about the awful singer who wrote and recorded “God Bless the U.S.A.” It’s the story of a young Tombstone who in 1991 bought a tombstone for blues god Robert Johnson.

Accompanied by Johnson contemporary Johnny Shines, Tombstone went to the purported Johnson grave in Greenwood, Mississippi, to place the headstone. Apparently that evoked some criticism by some blues fans who blasted Tombstone for what the singer thought was an act of respect.

“I won’t go back to Greenwood, I’m not welcome there,” he sings.

While these are strong tunes, my favorite is the jaunty country song “I Wish I Was Back in Las Vegas.” Maybe it’s just because it’s the only song I know of that starts out talking about huevos rancheros.

Blog Bonus:

Here's Mr. Tombstone telling the story behind the title song.


Monday, October 01, 2012

I Am The Slime on the DVD

Here's something to look forward to: Frank Zappa & The Mothers' December 1973 performances at the Roxy Theater are coming to DVD. (Hat tip to David Barsanti for alerting his friends to this.)

According to the Gibson Guitars website:


Over the weekend, the Zappa Family Trust announced that they've quite thoroughly identified all parts and participles of the audio and video recordings of this famous run of shows, and will finally deliver a concert film in theatres, DVD and on Blu-Ray some time before December 2013.

In the meantime, in anticipation of the actual movie, the ZFT will release a prequel to the soundtrack. Or as Gail Zappa describes it, "75 minutes and 49 seconds of Roxy without the Elsewhere."

This features the George Duke/Ruth Underwood/Napoleon Murphy Brock/Fowler BRos. era Mothers -- one great band..

For Zappa fans, this is a long-anticipated development to say the least.

Below is a trailer/teaser released last week:



And below is 32 minutes of a '73 Roxy show. (Watch this quick. I have a feeling it could get taken down before the DVD comes out.)

Sunday, September 30, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Sept. 30, 2012 
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
Shine on Harvest Moon by Laurel & Hardy
Black Mould by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
TV Eye by Iggy Pop
Third Degree Burn by The Electric Mess
Dig That Groove Baby by Lolita #18
Who Are the Mystery Girls by New York Dolls
Staring Down by New Mystery Girl
Combat Zone by Found Dead in Trunk
Mickey's Son and Daughter by BBC Dance Orchestra

Ode to Billy Joe by Joe Tex
King Kong by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
But'n by Andre Williams
Mama Talk to Your Daughter by Hound Dog Taylor
You Don't Know My Mind by Memphis Slim & Canned Heat
Welcome to the Jungle by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears *
To the Left to the Right by T-Model Ford

Add in Unison by Mission of Burma
Bad Penny by Big Black
Funky Russia by Alien Space Kitchen
A Different Kind of Ugly by The Sons of Hercules
areyoutalkintome by Madd Blake & The Stalins
Serious by The Fleshtones
Please Jesus Don't Let Me Go to Jail Tonight by Stout City Luchadores
House of Smoke and Mirrors by The Nevermores
How 'Bout I Slap Your Shit? by Weirdonia
Dumpster Dive by The Black Lips
I'm Wild About That Thing by Bessie Smith

Get Happy by Simon Stokes
Iron Lung Oompa by Legendary Shack Shakers
Dancing in the Head by The Mekons
Tin Angel by Bob Dylan
Love Letters by Kitty Lester
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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* Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears are playing at Sol Santa Fe, Oct. 15.

Friday, September 28, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 28, 2012 
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
Mighty Lonesome Man by James Hand
Okie Boogie by Jack Guthie & His Oklahomans
Shakin' the Blues by Johnny Paycheck
Angels Look Like Devils by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
I Like to Sleep Late in the Morning by Jerry Jeff Walker
Fred the Rabbit by Rick Brousard
Blood Train by The Bloody Jug Band
I Wanna Be Your Zombie by Slackeye Slim
Help Me From My Brain by Legendary Shack Shakers
Roll Me Up by Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Snoop Dog, Kris Kristofferson & Jamey Johnson

The Ghost of Travelin' Jones by Ryan Bingham
Workin' Man by Hank 3
Georgia on a Fast Train by Billy Joe Shaver
You've Never Been This Far Before by Freakwater
Honky Tonk Heroes by Billy Joe Shaver
He'll Never Cheat No More by Ann Clark
Liquored Up by Southern Culture on the Skids
Monkey Face Gene by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Kentucky Waltz Boogie by Pete Burke Trio

Long White Cadillac by Janis Martin
Drug Store Rock 'n' Roll by Rosie Flores
Ain't Got a Clue by Josie Kreutzer
Money Honey by Wanda Jackson
Let's Elope, Baby by Janis Martin
Kitty Cat Scratch by Suzette Lawrence & The Neon Angels
I Swear I Was Lying by Kim Lenz & Her Jaguars
Just Because by The Collins Kids
His Rockin' Little Angel by Rosie Flores with Wanda Jackson
It'll Be Me by Janis Martin
Blues Keep Callin' by Rosie Flores with Janis Martin

Best of Worst Intentions by Stevie Tombstone
I Lost My Baby to the Guy At The Bobcat Bite by Greg Turner
Long and Wasted Years by Bob Dylan
Disappear by Patterson Hood
Same God by The Calamity Cubes
I Believe in You by Don Williams
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: Love For the Rockabilly Fillies

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Sept. 28, 2012


One of the most exciting CDs I’ve been listening to in recent weeks is The Blanco Sessions, the posthumously released, should-have-been-a-comeback album for rockabilly fireball Janis Martin. It’s an upbeat, generally happy CD, and yet there’s a sad story behind it.

Martin died of lung cancer in 2007, just a few months after she finished recording the album. It was the final raw deal for a woman whose career was full of raw deals. (It’s also a raw deal that it took five years to find a record company to release the album, but that’s another story.)

I’d like to be the first writer to do a piece on Martin without referring to the fact that in the 1950s her record company marketed her as “the Female Elvis.”

I guess I blew that.

That "female Elvis" bunk doesn’t do justice to Martin. It makes her sound like some kind of novelty act. She wasn’t.

True, the Virginia native (who signed to RCA Records in 1956. just months after Elvis did), was an early female practitioner — and one of very few — of rockabilly in her day. And she did have a song called “My Boy Elvis.” But she was very much her own person — an artist with a strong, confident voice.

Janis Martin in the '50s
A dynamic, vivacious performer with a natural rockabilly spunkiness, Martin might have achieved a long and productive career as a singer.

But at the age of 16 (15 by some accounts), she secretly married her boyfriend. And by the age of 17, after she got pregnant, she could no longer keep it a secret. RCA couldn't handle the potential scandal (remember, this was the late ’50s), so the company dropped the pregnant teenage rockabilly.  It’s strange, but one of the first songs she recorded for RCA was one called “Let’s Elope Baby.”

An overly cautious and conservative record label was her first professional roadblock. Her second was her second husband, who hated being on the road so much in the early ’60s he gave Martin an ultimatum — your music career or your marriage. She chose the marriage and put a lid on the music for the rest of the time she was married to him — 13 years.

This album, lovingly produced by modern rockabilly singer and longtime Martin fan Rosie Flores, is something of an unintentional farewell letter from Martin. It wasn't the first time the two worked together. Martin contributed her vocals on a couple of songs on 1995’s Rockabilly Filly (Flores’ best album) — as did fellow rockabilly matriarch Wanda Jackson.

Rosie & Janis
When Martin and Flores worked on The Blanco Sessions — recorded in April 2007 in Blanco, Texas — Martin had not yet been diagnosed with cancer. The illness certainly didn’t show in her voice, which sounded just as powerful as, though more mature and somewhat husker, than it did in her girlhood days.

Flores made no noticeable effort to modernize or force her own stamp on Martin’s basic sound, as producer Jack White did on Jackson’s recent album The Party Ain’t Over. There are no Amy Winehouse songs and no fancy studio tricks here. Flores just gathered a handful of capable Texas musicians and let the music rip, with Martin clearly out front.

The songs include a couple of tunes associated with Jerry Lee Lewis. There’s “Wild One (Real Wild Child),” originally recorded by Aussiebilly Johnny O’Keefe. But even better is “It’ll Be Me,” a classic, if under- appreciated, Jerry Lee B-side written by Cowboy Jack Clement. Martin delivers with fire.

She also performs some lesser-known rockabilly and neo-rockabilly tunes like “I Believe What You Say” (a minor hit for Ricky Nelson written by Johnny and Dorsey Burnette); “Find Out What’s Happening,” an Elvis song from the early ’70s; Ronnie Dawson’s “Wham Bam Jam”; and The Blasters’ 1983 ode to Hank Williams, “Long White Cadillac.”

Like most of her peers, beginning in her teen years, Martin was a fan of rhythm and blues. She kicks off this album with a billyed-up version of a Ruth Brown song “As Long as I’m Movin’.” She also covers “Roll Around Rockin’,” a lusty blues song by Carolina Beach Music master Billy Scott.

Martin’s roots are in country music, however. In the 50s, she toured with the likes of Hank Snow, Jim Reeves, and Faron Young. Among the country songs here are a soulful take on Patsy Cline’s “Sweet Dreams.” It doesn’t quite match the intensity of Cline’s classic original, but it’s a worthy try.

On the other hand, I’d match Martin’s upbeat, rocking take on Don Gibson’s “Oh Lonesome Me” against any version of that much-covered tune. (Let’s start a needless argument: the worst version of “Oh Lonesome Me” is Neil Young’s dreary take on his After the Gold Rush album. Talk among yourselves.)

In interviews, Flores has said that she believes Martin realized this would be her last album. It’s a fitting goodbye from a rock pioneer, rocking until the very end.

Also recommended:

* Working Girl’s Guitar by Rosie Flores. On the heels of The Blanco Sessions finally seeing the light of day, Flores will be releasing her latest album (coming Oct. 16), which as always is full of delights.

Although she has helped carry the rockabilly torch — and this work features a bang-up version of “Drugstore Rock ‘n’ Roll,” an early hit for Janis Martin, and a fresh take on Elvis’ “Too Much” — Working Girl’s Guitar isn’t a pure rockabilly album. Most of the CD is good basic roots rock, and it includes a tasty instrumental, “Surf Demon #5.”

One of the highlights here is Flores’ duet with former teen idol Bobby Vee (you read that right — Bobby Vee!); it’s a sweet ’50’s-style ballad called “Love Must Have Passed Me By.”

Another cool surprise is Flores’ arrangement of George Harrison’s “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” She does it jazzy, with a stand-up bass and soft acoustic guitar solos, subtly showing off her chops on the instrument.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Some Live Biram For Your Listening Pleasure

Scott H. Biram

Here's a little Scott H. Biram, courtesy of the Live Music Archive, to kickstart your slow-moving Tuesday.

It's a live show from Durham, N.C. in September 2011. (The photo above is from his show at Santa Fe's Corazon a few month's before,)



And if you like this one-man-band thing, check out my video from Bob Log III's recent performance ar the Santa Fe Railyard :


Sunday, September 23, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST



Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Sept. 23, 2012 
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
Charlie Laine Ate My Brain by The Ruiners
Do You Understand by The Sinister Six
Lee, Bob & Lula by Love Struck
Garbagehead by Eric "Rosco" Ambel
We Ruined It (Ranch Version) by The Grannies
Jumpin' in the Night by The Plimsouls
Ghostified by Persian Claws
Her House is the Way to Hell by The Tombstones
Hog Heaven by The Shrunken Heads

Pachuco Hop by Joe "King" Carrasco
Playtex, the Cryptic Village Idiot by Sexton Ming
Putty In Your Hands by The Detroit Cobras
Ham and Eggs by Skip Manning
Sometimes Sometimes by April March
Cherry Bomb by Joan Jet with L7
Corpse Fishing by Found Dead in Trunk
Being by The Angry Dead Pirates
Bless You by The Devil Dogs
I Need Money (Keep Your Alibis) by Slim Harpo

The Slim by Sugar
Second Television by Mission of Burma
Dagger Moon by Dead Moon
Early Roman Kings by Bob Dylan
Ain't It Strange by Patti Smith
Time Has Come Today by The Angry Samoans

Beep Beep Beep by Andre Williams
I'm So Green by Can
Pinky's Dream by David Lynch
Old Shep by Al's Equinox Party
Deborah Lee by BBQ
Little Girl by The Syndicate of Sound

CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Enjoy the Fall with a New Big Enchilada Podcast


THE BIG ENCHILADA



All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray. Fall is falling. Here's some sweet rocking sounds to comfort you as the world around you decays.


Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Beginning of Autumn by Capra)
Bloody Mary by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
There is a Mall by Dennis Most & The Instigators
The Heretic's Song by The Blue Giant Zeta Puppies
Ain't Dumbo by The Night Beats
Horror Asparagus Stories by The Driving Stupid
Lightning's Girl by Lydia Lunch

(Background Music: Memphis Heat by Memphis Slim & Canned Heat)
Bang Your Thing at the Ball by Bob Log III
Can't Get Right by Jehoshaphat Blow
They Grew Wild for You by Goshen
The Young Psychotics by Tav Falco & Panther Burns
Feel Allright by The Oblvians
Don't Kick My Dog by Andre Williams

(Background Music: Autumn Sweater by Yo La Tengo)
Lucky Boy by Alien Space Kitchen
Drugs, Guns, Hookers by The Angel Babies
The Beat by Thee Vicars (R.I.P. Chris Langeland)
The Girl From Kook a Monga by Tommy Ridgely
Pretty Thing by Nightlosers



Friday, September 21, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 21, 2012 
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
Pretty Polly by Bone Orchard
Birthday Cake by Bobby Fuller Four
Oh Lonesome Me by Janis Martin
Chug a Lug by Mojo Nixon & The World Famous Blue Jays
Hard Luck and Old Dogs by Nancy Apple
Little Alma by Mose McCormack
Downtown Boogie by The Milo Twins
Wildcat Mama by Hank Penny
Drunkard's Blues by Kelly Hogan with The Pine Valley Cosmonauts

I Want to Buy Your Truck by Fred Eaglesmith
Duquesne Whistle by Bob Dylan
I Just Can't Be True by Webb Pierce
Sadie Green (The Vamp of New Orleans) by Roy Newman & The Boys
Payday Blues by Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
You Don't Want My Love by Roger Miller
Long Gone Lonesome Blues by Hank Williams
Yearn 'n Burn 'n Heart by DM Bob & The Deficits

Moonlight Midnight by Old & In the Way
Coochie Coochie by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Too Close to Heaven by The Dad Horse Experience
The Mortuary Bop by The Misery Jackyls
Blood on the Saddle by Tex Ritter
Birthday Boy by Drive-By Truckers
Betty Ford by Patterson Hood
Between the Ditches by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band

Midnight Stars and You by Wayne Hancock
Nobody to Love by World Famous Headliners
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues by Sir Douglas Quintet
Dying Breed by Lonesome Bob with Allison Moorer
Green Green Grass of Home by Ted Hawkins
Goodnight Captain by Ronny Elliott
While My Guitar Gently Weeps by Rosie Flores
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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eMUSIC SEPTEMBER

* Undercover by West Hell 5. On my recent trip to Amsterdam, I planned to go to a party put on by The Amsterdam Beat Club at a Club called Paradisio. (I was alerted to this by fellow GaragePunk podcaster Suzanne of Rock 'n' Roll Rampage.)

One of the bands playing was West Hell 5, an instrumental group featuring sax, guitar and organ. They call their sound "Mod & Crime," which is inspired by "old spy-fi & crime-soundtracks, 60's groove jazz, Vegas Grind and early rhythm 'n blues." It's a cool, greasy sound.

And I like their album cover.

Most the tracks are original though they do cover The Man from U.N.C.L.E. theme and "Secret Agent Man" (though I still like Junior Brown's cover of that one the best.)

Long story short, I missed the show at Paradisio. For some reason I thought it was on Friday. It was on Thursday. At least I have this album.


* Live in the Red by Pussy Galore. Before he detonated the Blues Explosion, Jon Spencer was the frontman for this rocking little unit from Washington, D.C.

They reveled in crazy noise, but they were far more fartsy than artsy. Listen close enough and you can hear strains of rockabilly and Rolling Stones but all on distorted overdrive. (Don't listen too close or you'll blow an eardrum.) Every song they ever tackled was a party out of control.

This was Pussy's last concert, recorded at CBGB's in 1989. If there was any petty onstage bickering that night, they left it off this album. But Spencer and the boys don't sound like a group at the end of its rope here. They play their songs, more than half of which are from their greatest album Dial "M" for Motherfuckerwith pride and spirit.

* Memphis Heat by Memphis Slim & Canned Heat. One of Canned Heats most remembered records was the double album they did with John Lee Hooker, 1971's Hooker 'n' Heat. Far less known is this team-up with piano man Memphis Slim.

"I want everybody to know just who I am," Slim sings in the title song. "Me and the Canned Heat are gonna have a little jam." And indeed they did.

This collaboration includes two sets of sessions in Paris, (where Slim was living at the time) in 1970 -- Heat at its prime -- and 1973, which includes contributions from The Memphis Horns.

While the horns add an extra dimension, they represent a departure from the guitar-centric boogie usually associated with Canned Heat. Still, the interplay between Slim's piano and Henry Vestine's guitar makes this a treat for any blues fan.

Slim handled all the vocal responsibilities except on "Five Long Years." (I'm not sure who sang it. It doesn't sound like Slim or Bobby "The Bear" Hite, the band's lead singer during those years.)

The best tracks here are One of Slim's best-known songs, "Mother Earth" -- much more upbeat than other versions I've heard him do -- and "Paris" an snazzy little ode to his adopted home. (He moved there in 1962 and would die there in 1988.)

Now I've got to get my hands on Gates On the Heat, Canned Heat's album they did with Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown.

* Between the Ditches by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band. You might think that a trio consisting of a crazy slide guitarist, his wife on the washboard and his cousin playing a bass drum and junkyard percussion might be little more than a fun little novelty act.

But those who have enjoyed the recordings and/or the live shows of The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band, know that this group from rural Indiana goes way beyond the novelty spectrum.

Sound familiar? Yes, I just reviewed this album in Terrell's Tuneup not long ago. Read the whole thing HERE

Plus:

3 Nancy Sinatra covers (I played these in my Nancy tribute in a recent Terrell's Sound World):

"Lightning's Girl" by Lydia Lunch & 8-Eyed Spy
* "Some Velvet Morning" by Firewater
* "How Does That Grab You Darlin' " by Empress of Fur

All three are fine tributes in their own peculiar ways. But I still prefer Nancy's originals.


TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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