Thursday, December 20, 2012

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Soundgarden Roars Again

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 21, 2012

Years before Nirvana came to symbolize the Seattle sound — and something called “grunge,” a label that no “grunge” band actually embraced — a group called Soundgarden seemed perched to conquer the world.

It started out in the mid ’80s, recording on venerable independent labels like SST and, yes, Sub Pop. With a fresh metallic punch — too derivative, in the early days, of Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath — by the early ’90s Soundgarden had evolved into a powerful musical force.

The band’s album Badmotorfinger, released in October 1991, was nothing short of a head-twister. With songs like “Rusty Cage,” “Jesus Christ Pose” and “Outshined,” it was metal, all right, and but it was metal hurling itself into exciting, unexplored directions.

But in what definitely was a case of bad timing, this album was released just after Nirvana’s breakthrough Nevermind, which (sorry) outshined Soundgarden’s album in terms of national attention and critical acclaim But then and now I believe Badmotorfinger was the superior album. And, in fact, I still like it even more than Superunknown, Soundgarden’s most popular album, which came out in 1994.

Soundgarden called it quits in 1997. But they’re back. The musicians reunited for some live shows a couple of years ago. And late this year they unleashed King Animal, an album of all new material. All hair-metal casino acts, nu-metal pretenders, indie-rock shoegazers, and emo wimps should flee in fear. This album, especially the first half, is a doozie.

If Soundgarden fans back in, say, 1999 could have heard King Animal, they probably would have been delighted, but they would not have been shocked. Thankfully, there’s no self-conscious effort to update the band’s basic sound. No fancy, zingy technological touches are noticeable.

Granted, there are some signs of maturity on this record. The band employs a little more acoustic guitar than it did in the old days on songs like “Black Saturday” and “Bones of Birds” (which reminds me of Temple of the Dog, an early 90s album that included Soundgarden members.) But singer Chris Cornell still wails — if not quite as loud as the old days. Kim Thayil’s guitar still leads the screaming life. And drummer Matt Cameron and bassist Ben Shepard are still one brawny rhythm section.

King Animal starts off, appropriately enough, with a rocker called “Been Away Too Long.” It’s the lament of someone returning to his hometown, though it’s hard not to see it as a metaphor about going back to a “town” called Soundgarden. “I’ve been away for too long/Though I never really wanted to stay.”

The next song, “Non-State Actor,” is also a pounder, with Cornell seemingly giving voice to some underground populist movement: “We’re not elected but we will speak/We’re not the chosen, but we believe/And we settle for a little bit more than everything.”

The thumping “Blood on the Valley Floor” is Soundgarden at its most Black Sabbath-like, while the opening strains of “By Crooked Steps” might remind you of early U2, until the entire band bursts in. The song starts out with Cornell singing about “stealing love” and declaring, “I’m a walking believer/I’m a ghost and a healer/I’m the shape of the home inside your mind.” That sounds nice and positive. But this ain’t no New Age ballad. The narrator soon reveals a harsher sider. “Blood raining down/Cuts a deep, deep river/And we’re diving.”

The album ends with “Rowing,” a five-minute slow burner that almost suggests an old chain-gang chant. “Don’t know where I’m going, I just keep rowing” goes the refrain.

Let’s hope Soundgarden keeps on rowing through the murky river of modern music.

Also Recommended:

The Frontier Circus
* Sideshow EP by The Frontier Circus. Here’s a four-song disc from a group I currently consider the best cover band in America. This is a nifty follow-up to the Conway, Arkansas, group’s debut album, A Little Bit Psycho … A Little Bit Western, released last year. That one featured the Circus’ feedback-drenched psychedelic/punk versions of songs by Johnny Paycheck, Jefferson Airplane, Wanda Jackson, and Roky Erickson, among others. My favorite there is a loud, grating mash-up of “A Horse With No Name” and “Cool Clear Water.”

On Sideshow, Frontier Dan and his combo perform crazy versions of songs made famous by Nancy Sinatra, The Velvet Underground, Cher, and fellow Arkansas native Glen Campbell.

They’re all good, but the best is the visionary take on the Lee Hazlewood-penned “Some Velvet Morning,” on which Dan sings both the Nancy and Lee parts while the guitars sound like a Martian attack. It sounds kind of funny when Dan sings “White men always called me ‘Indian squaw’” on Cher’s “Half-Breed,” but this is one rocking tune.

“All Tomorrow’s Parties” retains the folk-rock jangle of the Velvets’ original, and Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy” is pure joy (even though my favorite cover still is local boy Joe West’s version.)

My only complaint is that this is a four-song EP and not a full album. This might just be a sideshow, but I’m looking forward to seeing what’s inside the big top for The Frontier Circus.

Blog Bonus:

Enjoy yourself some videos:




And here's a little Circus music

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Merry Christmas from The Big Enchilada Podcast!

THE BIG ENCHILADA


Once again it's Christmas time at the Big Enchilada. Hang your Yule logs and burn your stockings, It's the War on Christmas and it's gonna rock.



Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Jingle Bells by Rebirth Brass Band)
City of Christmas Ghosts by Goldblade feature Poly Styrene
Tamale Christmas by Joe "King" Carrasco y El Molino *
Boogie Woogie Santa Claus by Mabel Ross
Santa is a Swinger Now by Candye Cane
Santa's Helper by Joe Poovey
Santa's Gonna Shut 'em Down by Untamed Youth
Jingle Bells by Richard Cheese
(Background Music: Black Santa by King Salami & The Cumberland 3)

White Elephant by The Hentchmen
The Only Law That Santa Clause Understood by Ted Lyons
Under the Tree by Drunken Thunder 
Christmas Tree on Fire by Holly Golightly
The Death of an Elf by Rev. Glen Armstrong
Merry Christmas Polka by Sonny Cash
Pappa Ain't No Santa, Mama Ain't No Christmas Tree by Butterbeans & Susie
(Background Music: Sleigh Ride by El Vez)

Please Daddy, Don't Get Drunk This Christmas by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Drinking Up Christmas by The Dwarves
You Better Ask Santa by The Yule-Tones
Christmas with Satan by James White

* From Holiday HAAM Jam, a benefit CD for the Health Alliance for Austin Musicians.

Play the darned thing here:



 For all my Christmas podcasts, CLICK HERE

Sunday, December 16, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Dec. 16, 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
Heartbreak Hotel by The Cramps
Hey Sailor by The Detroit Cobras
Bottle Baby by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Personality Crisis by Johnny Thunders
Ring Dang Do by Lyres
My Love Machine by The Fleshtones
The Tongue by The Ty Segall Band
The Wolf Song by LoveStruck
Christmas Boogie by Canned Heat & The Chipmunks
Boogie Woogie Santa Clause by Busy McCarroll

Non-State Actor by Soundgarden
Holy Juke Joint Beat by The Juke Joint Pimps
This Shit is Gold by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Half Breed by The Frontier Circus
Eggnog by The Rockin' Guys
Happy Wanderer by The Polkaholics
Wiener Dog Polka by Polkacide

Run Run Run/ Who Do You Love ? by The Plimsouls
Before You Accuse Me by The 13th Floor Elevators
Hot Pastrami with Mashed Potatoes by Joey Dee & The Starliters
Long Haired Guys From England by Too Much Joy
Sock it To Me Santa by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Reindeer are Wild by Thee Headcoats with  Thee Headcoatees
This is Hi-Fi by Mission of Burma
Apartment Wrestling Rock 'n' Roll Girl by Lightning Beat-Man & The Never Heard of Ems

Dark Night of the Soul by Dangermouse, Sparklehorse & David Lynch
Get Happy by Simon Stokes
It's Bad You Know by R.L. Burnside
Jenny I Read by Concrete Blonde
Death is Not the End by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

See the Terrell's Sound World Facebook page

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Thursday, December 13, 2012

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Dark Cries from the Country

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 14, 2012

I was afraid that there was no way Rachel Brooke’s new album, A Killer’s Dream, could live up to her previous one, Down in the Barnyard. I was correct in thinking that the new one would be a lot different from Barnyard.

But my fears were for naught. The new album is just as good if not better than her earlier effort.

Brooke’s previous albums have mostly been acoustic affairs. On her new one, a lot of the songs feature the sweet-voiced Michigan country singer backed by a Florida group called Viva Le Vox. The band gives her sound heft, and Brooke gets the opportunity to rock and even strut. Together they do a creditable version of a Fats Domino song, “Every Night About This Time.”

When I reviewed Down in the Barnyard a couple of years ago, I called Brooke the “Wednesday Addams of country music,” because, despite her innocent-sounding voice and her pretty melodies, her lyrics reveal a dark, spooky side and are full of stories of murder, violence, vengeance, and all the things that make American folk music — real folk music, not the watered-down stuff too many people think is folk music — the deep, mysterious force it is.

The lyrics of the new album aren’t quite as violent as those on Barnyard, but there are still plenty of dark corners. The song “Serpentine Blues” opens with Brooke singing, “I had a dream last night, a big black rat in my bed.” Spookier still is a tune called “The Black Bird,” in which she explores the paranoia prompted by forbidden love. “Fox in the Hen House” sounds like an easygoing blues tune, but by the end of the song Brooke is threatening her romantic rival with a firearm.

For this album Brooke rerecorded a couple of songs from an acoustic EP she released earlier this year. Personally, I like the new versions of “Late Night Lover” and “Ashes to Ashes” better. Both feature a sleazy sounding trumpet, while “Late Night Lover” also has an uncredited musical saw — or at least something that sounds like a saw. You might think it’s a torch song from another planet.

The most emotional song here is “Old Faded Memory,” a duet with a guy named Lonesome Wyatt (from the band Those Poor Bastards). This a melody that could be straight out of the 1890s. It’s a story of two elderly people, once a couple, separated by the decades, pining for each other.

“And with my last breath unto death may I stare/I’ll remember the life that we never shared,” Brooke sings. It’s sentimental, but it packs a punch.
^
Also recommended:

* Sunday Run Me Over by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs. For the past five years or so, British-born singer Holly Golightly and her partner, “Lawyer Dave” Drake, have quietly cranked out some of the most enjoyable country-soaked, devil-fearing blues-inspired rock ’n’ roll records you’ll find anywhere. These albums seemingly pop out of the soil of the couple’s Georgia farm like misshapen pumpkins or oversized zucchinis that look like Dick Nixon.

Golightly clearly loves the roots music of her adopted land, and she and Drake play it in an irresistibly irreverent way. Their latest album is an unmitigated joy.

Golightly is a protégée of English garage-rock renaissance man Billy Childish. If you haven’t heard Holly’s old band Thee Headcoatees, a ladies auxiliary of Childish’s Thee Headcoats, that’s your next assignment. One of the tunes here, a swampy stomper called “This Shit Is Gold” actually reminds me of Holly’s Childish days.

Sunday Run Me Over kicks off with “Goddamn Holy Roll,” an urgent gospel-infested rocker with some devilish slide guitar from Lawyer Dave. It’s followed by the slow, menacing “They Say,” another showcase for Dave’s slide. And this is followed by “Tank” — with some chicken-scratching lead guitar that sounds as if Jerry Reed has risen from the dead. “One for the Road” is a clunky-funky waltz that has echoes of vaudeville or English music hall songs.

While Golightly wrote most of the songs here, The Brokeoffs also do some wonderful covers. “I Forgot More” is a sad, sweet country tune made famous by The Davis Sisters (though I first heard it done by Johnny Cash in the ’60s).

Lawyer Dave steps out front to sing a hilarious take on an old Mac Davis novelty, “It’s Hard to Be Humble.”

(Involuntary flashback: back when I was a substitute teacher about 30 years ago, I overheard a girl at a local junior high talking to her friend say, “Did you see Mac Davis on TV last night? He sang the most conceited song!” Irony deficiency is a most tragic condition.)

The most subversive cover song I’ve heard lately is The Brokeoffs’ rewrite of Wayne Raney’s finger-wagging classic, “We Need a Lot More of Jesus (And a Lot Less Rock and Roll).” Golightly has retitled it, “A Whole Lot More …” and, true to her punk-rock heritage, basically reversed the sentiment, singing “We need a whole lot less of Jesus and a lot more rock ’n’ roll.”

The couple harmonizes, “You can read it in the morning paper, hear it on the radio/Christ has taken the nation, and we don’t all want to go.” I hope their neighbors in rural Georgia understand.


Queen of the wild frontier: E. Christina Herr & Wild Frontier are having a CD-release party for her hot-off-the-presses album Americana Motel at Cowgirl BBQ (319 S. Guadalupe St., 982-2565) on Saturday, Dec. 15, at 8:30 p.m. There is a $5 cover.

Herr is an Albuquerque singer who has a warble in her voice that may remind you of Chrissie Hynde.

A follow-up to her 2009 album Lullabies & Cautionary Tales, Americana Hotel is a collection of 11 original songs, plus one impressive drum-heavy cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “State Trooper.” Hopefully she’ll be doing this one on Saturday, as well as the title song and “Townes,” which may or may not be a tribute to the late Mr. Van Zandt.

BLOG BONUS

Here's Our Miss Brooke doing an early version of "Late Night Lover."

And here's Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs singing about the Rapture

SF MUSIC ALLIANCE PARTY

Mariachi Buenaventura 
The newly formed Santa Fe Music Alliance is hosting its first fundraiser/membership drive/holiday party. There's going to be live music by Mariachi Buenaventura and the Swinging Ornaments plus "special guests."

The shindig is 5 pm to 8 pm Sunday at the Cowgirl BBQ (which will be providing free appetizers.)

The party is free but expect the group to hit you up to buy a membership, which is only $20 a year (cheap).

And, in case you were wondering, "The Santa Fe Music Alliance is a non-profit organization of musicians, music industry professionals, and music advocates. The SFMA is dedicated to fostering creativity and community by supporting a sustainable and vital environment for music of all genres in Santa Fe, N.M."

So go foster some creativity and go to the party Sunday.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Adventures in Santa Fe Music

(not my Teddy bear.)
I had kind of a flashback today when I was at an auto glass repair shop making an appointment to replace my windshield. I realized I'd been in the exact same place just over 34 years ago.

It was October 1978. At the time I had a weekly Sunday-night gig at this bar called Faces in DeVargas Mall. (It was where the Baskin-Robbins ice cream shop is today.)

One night there was a table full of rowdy members of a local basketball league. A bunch of drunken  jerks. (I'd better be careful. Most of them probably still live here.)

They got in some kind of hassle with Faces' bouncer, who kicked them out.

But apparently the basketball boys came back for revenge.

They broke every damned windshield of every vehicle in the parking lot, including my new 1979 Ford Fiesta. Needless to say, the windshield cost a lot more than I made that night.

Otherwise, a pretty good gig for a Sunday.

Monday, December 10, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Dec. 9, 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
Funky Russia by Alien Space Kitchen
Some Velvet Morning by The Frontier Circus
Third Degree Burn by The Electric Mess
Glow in the Dark by LoveStruck
Girl from '62 by Thee Headcoats
Dick Shake by The Juke Joint Pimps
Black-Hearted Woman by The Standells
Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine by Country Joe & The Fish

Red Hot by Sam the Sham & The Pharoahs
Big Boss Man by The Syndicate of Sound
Lockdown Blues by The Angel Babies
In the Blood by Mudhoney
Strawberry Soda by Bastard Winos
Funtime by Iggy Pop
Mine All Mine by The Beat Rats
ZIp a Dee Doo Da by The Mummies
Honey Don't You Want a Man like Me by Frank Zappa

Wasted Time by The Grannies
Blood Rush to Your Head by Dennis Most
(Yeah Baby) It's Because of You by Outrageous Cherry
Anti-Disco by The Stilletos
Caught You Red Handed by The Fuzztones
El Tren de la Costa by The Del Moroccos
Try Me One More Time by Demon's Claws
Adeline by The Nevermores
Flood's New Light by Thee Oh Sees

Wasted by Pere Ubu
Pierce the Morning Rain by Dinosaur Jr.
One Night of Sin by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
The Sniper by The Black Angels
Dagger Moon by Dead Moon
John Lawman by Roky Erikson & Okkervil River
Soul Searchin' by Solomon Burke
No Regrets by King Khan & The Shrines
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

See the Terrell's Sound World Facebook page

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Friday, December 07, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Dec. 7 , 2012 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me terrel(at)ksfr.org

Tonight's show was pre-recorded so I could play at the Santa Fe Children's Museum benefit.

 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Fox in the Henhouse by Rachel Brooke
Blow Your Top by Pearls Mahone
Go-Go Truck by The Defibulators
Shake Shake by The Bluetones
Move a Little Closer by The Collins Kids
Chicano by Doug Sahm
You're an Angel by James Hand
Wanted Man by Johnny Cash
I Want to Be Sedated by Two Tons of Steel
Tonight I Think I'm Gonna Go Downtown by Mudhoney
Tamale Christmas by Joe King Carrasco

 Hang Up and Drive by Junior Brown
Shady Grove Gypsy Moon by Jayke Orvis
Roly Poly by The Last Mile Ramblers
Purr Kitty Purr by Sid King & The Five Strings
Turn Around by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Bourbon Street Lights by Jason Ecklund
You Put the X in Christmas by Dead Men's Hollow

Americana Motel by E Christina Herr & Wild Frontier
Parallel Bars by Robbie & Donna Fulks
Gideon by Kevin Deal
Jack's Red Cheetah by Bob Coltman
San Antonio Romeo by Cathy Faber's Swingin' Country Band
Cold Black Hammer by Joe Ely
Boom Town Boogie by Butch Hancock, Terry Allen, Jo Carol Pierce & Joe Ely
Bathwater by The Calamity Cubes
Carved Your Name by Angry Johnny

Waltz Across Texas by Ernest Tubb
One Sweet Hello by Merle Haggard
I Wish I Was Back in Vegas by Stevie Tombstone
So Much to Do by Willie Nelson
Jessie's Mom by Nels Andrews
In Your Wildest Dreams by The Rev. Horton Heat
One Endless Night by Jimmie Dale Gilmore
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

See the Santa Fe Opry Facebook page 

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

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: From the Sonic Garage

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 7, 2012

Here are a few new, or at least fairly recent, records from the sonic garage.

Just A.S.K. by Alien Space Kitchen. This Albuquerque group describes its sound as “hot interstellar space punk for consenting adults.” Dr. Rox (Dru Vaughter) handles guitar bass and most of the lead vocals, and Chiffon (Noelle Graney) plays drums and sings. They create a pleasant, upbeat, kind of garagey, kind of poppy sound with catchy tunes that might remind you a little of early New Pornographers.

Did I say catchy? Some of these melodies will stick in your head all day. “Lucky Boy,” the opening track, might be the best one on the album. It’s probably the hardest-rocking one, with lyrics extolling the joy of being a local rock hero. “Give those lucky bones another throw/Let’s get this rock ’n’ roll show on the road,” Vaughter sings.

 In “Parallel Universe,” an acoustic guitar is prominent, and the lyrics are dark. “In the new world paradigm, everyone’s a whore.” Though it doesn't sound like country music, in the last verse Vaughter name-checks the Hillbilly Shakespeare: “To quote the late Hank Williams, no one gets out alive.”

Graney sings lead on “Red Planet,” a dreamy tune aided by Steve Brittenham on organ and Vaughter’s wah-wah pedal. The group lives up to its space-alien heritage on “Alien Frontier,” thanks to guest theremin player Dan Vascko. And even though “Funky Russia” doesn’t sound particularly funky or remotely Russian, it’s a punchy little number.

The least interesting songs here are the folk-rock influenced numbers such as “I Can’t See It Anymore” and “The Cause.” Alien Space Kitchen should stick to the space pop and leave the warmed-over alt country to lesser mortals.

Just A.S.K. is available in vinyl, CD, and MP3 downloads.

Glow in the Dark by LoveStruck. The group isn’t well known in these parts, but it is one of the finest bands I’ve ever met hiding out at the GaragePunk Hideout. LoveStruck is a basic guitar/bass/drums trio seeped in garage punk with recessive rockabilly DNA.

The band is based in Brooklyn, though frontwoman Anne Mette Rasmussen is originally from Denmark. She sings and plays guitar. (Her day job is technical fashion designer.) Bassist Stu Spasm and drummer Rich Hutchins round out the band.

This is LoveStruck’s second full album, following 2010’s Will the Good Times Never End? And it’s no sophomore slump. The group hasn’t lost that original spitfire spirit and knack for writing good hooky tunes that made me like it in the first place. But the sound on the new album is more varied, more experimental (without sounding self-conscious), and ultimately more memorable than before. It’s the sound of a band that’s growing.

Lovestruck in action
I love LoveStruck’s rocked-out tough-chick tunes like “Dogs and Dolls,” “Don’t Look Down,” and “Stick a Fork in It” as well as frantic sonic craziness like “Ji Ha.” Another standout is “The Wolf,” a minor-key psychedelia-infused track (someone’s playing a lysergic organ on this one) that Nick Cave might appreciate.

I can’t tell what the song “Gypsy” is about, but the crazy rhythms are a nice showcase for drummer Hutchins. I’ve already praised the song “Shoot the Freak” in this column. Named after a now-defunct game booth on Coney Island, this brash little cruncher — with Rasmussen shouting “I am a lunatic!” — is one of the strongest cuts on the recent GaragePunk Hideout Halloween collection, Garage Monsters.

But the song against which I’ll measure all future LoveStruck material is the title track. It’s a slow, sleazy minor-key tune that might best be described as “garage noir.” There’s even a cello that comes in in the middle of the song, but it’s mixed so masterfully that it’s not overwhelming, as cellos sometimes are with rock ’n’ roll songs.

I’m tempted to complain that the album is too short — 10 songs weighing in at just 23 minutes. It left me wanting more. But LoveStruck accomplishes more in 23 minutes than a lot of bands do in an hour.

* Now More Than Never by The Nevermores. This high-energy St. Louis foursome is influenced by a lot of the usual garage-rock suspects — The Sonics, The Stooges, Billy Childish, Edgar Allan Poe — Well maybe the latter isn’t that usual. I understand that he wrote a poem about a bird or something.

Actually, the band’s previous album, Nevereverafter, featured several songs ripped from the pages of the poet —“Annabel Lee,” “I Lost Lenore,” “Tell-Tale Heart.” They aren’t the first musicians to be inspired by Poe. Folkie Phil Ochs put the poem “The Bells” to music in the ’60s.

On this album, The Nevermores’ Poe lore isn’t quite so obvious. For instance, I don’t think Edgar Allan had anything to do with the song “Tangerine Submarine.” But there are plenty of tracks to give listeners a mild case of the creeps as they rock out.

Among these are “Shallow Grave” (another one from Garage Monsters), “I’m Waiting” (in which the narrator appears to be a stalker), and “Adeline,” in which the narrator compares his love to the “ghostly remnants of an opium dream.”

* What kind of message does this send to the children? You might know Gregg Turner as a former Angry Samoan, a Roky Erickson accolade, and a writer of crazy songs about chupacabras and hantavirus. But he also loves children and has two beautiful little girls. Turner got bent out of shape when he heard about the financial woes of the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, so he organized a benefit with local favorite Jono Manson — who, like me, has the weird distinction of singing at Turner’s wedding many years ago. Also on the bill are Turner, naturally, and Art of Flying from Taos. I’ll make one of my periodic comical attempts to play a couple of songs. The show is at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 7, at Gig Performance Space, 1808-H Second St. Admission is $10.

Blog Bonus: I couldn't find anything by Alien Space Kitchen, but here's a couple of videos from LovesStruck and The Nevermores.

This is from LoveStruck's first album



And here's The Nevermores ...

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

Enjoy This Rachel Brooke Song (and Cartoon)


I just got a copy of Rachel Brooke's new album Killer's Dream last weekend and I'm loving it.

I'll start playing it on The Santa Fe Opry this Friday.

Meanwhile, enjoy "The Black Bird," one of the songs, accompanied by a cool cartoon. The animation is by Matt Rasch








TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

  Sunday, July 13, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell E...