Monday, May 28, 2007

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 27, 2007
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

NEW: email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
I Need Somebody by ? & The Mysterians
Juvenile by The Black Lips
Slip Insde This House by The 13th Floor Elevators
Can't Be So Bad by Moby Grape
Mooney by The Kilimonjaro Yak Attack
Riot on Sunset Strip by The Standells
Edith by Buick MacKane
Nest of The Cuckoo Bird by The Cramps

P2220011
Bill Richardson Campaign Theme Suggestions

Mr. Big Stuff by Jean Knight
Big Bad Bill is Sweet William Now by Emmett Miller
Billy Boy by Jerry Lee Lewis
Built For Comfort by Howlin' Wolf
The Envoy by Warren Zevon
Bill Richardson by Angel Espinoza
I Want to Grow Up to Be a Politician by The Byrds

Time Travel Freaks by The Harry Perry Band

Echoes from Neptune/Shenandoah by The Surf Lords
Shredded Heat by Dick Dale
Let Loose the Kraken by The Bald Guys
Whittier Blvd. by Los Straitjackets
The Ghastly Stomp (Everyone's Doin') by The Ghastly Ones
Cha Wow Wow by The Hillbilly Soul Surfers
Escape Velocity by Man or Astroman?
Fish Taco by Surfacide
Ginza Lights by Satan's Pilgrims
Land of the One Percenters by The Bomboras
Black Widow by Link Wray

Let's Get Radical by Gogol Bordello
Willesden to Cricklewood by Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros
Red Angel Dragnet by The Clash
Another Side of This Life by The Jefferson Airplane
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Saturday, May 26, 2007

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, May 25, 2007
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
The Eggs of Your Chickens by The Flatlanders
Monkey Face Gene by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Artificial Flowers by Cornell Hurd Band
Join the Club by The Wacos Brothers
The Lucky and the Lonely by Randy Kohrs
I'm Gonna Take You Home and Make You Like Me by Robbie Fulks with Donna Fulks
Big Ol' White Boys by Terry Allen

Hoy Hoy by The Collins Kids
Rockin' Bandit by Ray Smith
Treat Me Right by Cliff & Barbara Thomas
Baboon Boogie by Jimmy Murphy
Split Personality by Clyde Leopard's Snearly Ranch Boys
Good Rockin' Baby by Sid King & The Five Strings
Red Hot by Billy Lee Riley
Down on the Farm by Big Al Dowling
Low Down Dog by Sleepy LaBeef
Religious Discussion (Sam Phillips & Jerry Lee Lewis)
Wild One by Jerry Lee Lewis

Jack's St. Pete Blues by Ronny Elliott
No Good For Me by Waylon Jennings
Night of the Wolves by Gary Heffern
Road Too Long by Bill Hearne's Roadhouse Revue
Weary Blues From Waitin' by The The
God's House Ringing Dark and True by The Gourds
Do You Call That A Buddy by Martin, Bogan & Armstrong

Coldwater by John Hammond
Icewater by Peter Case
Three Chords and The Truth by Ry Cooder
Goin' The Country by C.W. Stoneking
Border Radio by Dave Alvin
Wish I Could by Marlee MacLeod
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots
Radio list

Friday, May 25, 2007

PETE'S POLLS


My story about Sen. Pete Domenici's falling poll numbers in this morning's New Mexican can be found HERE.

Survey USA's recent poll on Domenici and Sen. Jeff Bingaman can be found HERE.

To track Survey USA's monthly polls on Domenici for the past two years, CLICK HERE

GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS (AND A COOL VIDEO)

First the bad news:

Frogville John informs me there will be no Frogfest this year. That's disappointing because last year's was so much fun for the few of us who attended. But I can't blame him. You blew it, Santa Fe! (For my thoughts on last year's Frogfest CLICK HERE and HERE)

But the good news is that Frogville is hosting three concerts at Santa Fe Brewing Company this summer. The first two already are set:

JUNE 9th 6pm-1am GOSHEN
A CD release party for Goshen's Lioness


7 pm Hundred Year Flood
9 pm Boris & the Saltlicks
11 pm Goshen
with special MC, Joe West
$10.00 at the door

June 27th 7pm-12 am
a double CD release Party for:
ThaMuseMeant's never settle for less and Nathan's In his own worlds


ThaMusueMeant
Nathan Moore
Taarka
This will be the only New Mexico show this year for these guys. I don't have the price on this one yet.

I just spotted this video of Hundred Year Flood doing "Rich Man's War" at last year's Frogfest. It brings back memories of a great show. (If you look at the audience shot near the very last you'll find my pretty face.)

(Speaking of HYF, the group is scheduled to appear on this Sunday’s “Gotta Dance” program on KSFR 90.7 FM, 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Mountain Time. You can hear a stream of the show on the KSFR site.)

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: BLUES DON'T GET MUCH BETTER


A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 25, 2007


For years and years I’ve basically dismissed John Hammond Jr. as a well-meaning but inconsequential blues interpreter. Granted, Hammond, who is playing at the Santa Fe Brewing Company on Friday, May 25, has been at it for 45 years now.

The son of the hallowed producer who discovered Billie Holiday, Bob Dylan, and Bruce Springsteen, Hammond the younger released his first album in 1962, the same year Bob Dylan’s first album was released. This was an era in which Mississippi John Hurt, Skip James, and Son House were doing the coffeehouse circuit, and the likes of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and Sonny Boy Williamson ruled Chicago like tribal warlords.

My attitude toward Hammond was always, “Why should I listen to this guy when I can listen to the originals?” Undoubtedly some latent reverse-discrimination attitude was at work here.

I’ve got to admit that attitude didn’t change until a few years back, when Hammond released Wicked Grin, a blues-upped collection of songs by Tom Waits. I guess you could ask, “Why should I listen to this guy when I can listen to Waits’ originals?”

But on that 2001 album, Hammond did everything artists are supposed to do with cover songs. He got to the kernel of each tune and added fresh perspective. There are several cuts on Wicked Grin — “Murder in the Red Barn” for instance — that I like as well as or better than the originals. The album made me re-evaluate my attitude toward Hammond.

But I don’t think it’s just my attitude that’s changed. I think Hammond has gotten better with age. Not only does his most recent work rock more than before, but his voice has aged exquisitely. Whether he’s going into a falsetto cry on Junior Well’s “Come Into This House” or doing a one-man call and response on the choruses of “Take a Fool’s Advice,” he sounds like a grizzled blues prophet.

While I’m not ready to say that Hammond’s latest album, Push Comes to Shove, is as good as Wicked Grin, the new record is one of the freshest-sounding blues efforts I’ve heard in months. It’s nice and raw, hard-edged in places but with a lighthearted feel throughout most of the tracks.

He’s assembled a cool little roadhouse band, with the most valuable player (besides Hammond himself) being Bruce Katz on keyboards. Most of the record features Hammond on electric guitar, which, as far as I’m concerned, is Hammond’s greatest strength despite all his years as an acoustic-blues troubadour. On this album, Hammond’s guitar is loud and raunchy but not flashy. It grates and howls.

Push is produced by Garrett Dutton, better known as the one who put the Love in G. Love & Special Sauce, a group known for its hip-hop-informed blues rock.

In the album’s liner notes, Hammond’s wife, Marla, says the producer met the artist at a 1992 Hammond show near Philadelphia. Dutton was too young to drink at the time, and he approached the first couple he saw who looked like they were old enough to buy him a beer. It turned out to be the Hammonds. (The notes don’t say whether the couple defied Pennsylvania liquor laws and illegally purchased alcohol for a minor.)

Hammond and Dutton next crossed paths in 2005 at a train station in Japan. And from that encounter this album grew.

Although Hammond’s never been known as a songwriter, most of my favorite tunes on Push are Hammond originals. This includes the title song, which kicks off the album with some nasty, distorted guitar licks; “You Know That’s Cold,” which rocks hard with Hammond on National steel guitar and harmonica; and “Take a Fool’s Advice,” which sounds as if he’s communing with the restless ghost of Willie Dixon.

For all us Wicked Grin fans, there’s a Waits song here called “Cold Water.” It’s a gospel-flavored tune, a natural singalong number that reminds me of The Band at the group’s best. Katz even sounds like Garth Hudson on organ and accordion. The good-time feel of the song is belied by some of the verses that describe a grim world:


“Seen them fellows with the cardboard signs/Scrapin’ up a little money to buy a bottle of wine/Pregnant women and Vietnam vets/Beggin’ on the freeway, ’bout as hard as it gets.”

Modern blues just doesn’t get much better than this.

Hammond plays at 7 p.m. Friday; Santa Fe Brewing Company is at 27 Fire Place off N.M. 14, south of Santa Fe. The cover is $19 in advance and $25 at the door; call 424-3333 for information.

Hammond also plays the Outpost Performance Space (210 Yale Blvd. S.E. in Albuquerque, 505-268-0044) at 8 p.m. Saturday, May 26. Tickets are $25 or $20 for Outpost members. And he’s at the Silver City Blues Festival at Gough Park (corner of Pope and 12th streets) at 6 p.m. Sunday, May 27. If you want to drive down to Silver City, the festival is free.

Also recommended:
*
King Hokum by C.W. Stoneking. Speaking of acoustic-blues troubadours, here’s a record by an American-born singer who moved to the outback of Australia as a child and got his start busking on the streets of Melbourne.

Performing all original material, Stoneking goes right for the swampy, spooky soul of the blues on songs like “Don’t Go Dancin’ Down the Darktown Strutters Ball,” which opens with a clanging bell, a barking dog, and ominous footsteps. Stoneking plays a banjo that wouldn’t sound out of place on a Waits tune like “Murder in the Red Barn.” By the end of the first chorus he’s joined by his band, The Primitive Horn Orchestra, which could only be described as Dixieland Goth. (They sound a lot like Stoneking’s Voodoo Rhythm label mates The Dead Brothers.)

But as the title reveals, most of the album is dedicated to hokum — funny, suggestive blues that springs from vaudeville and even minstrelsy. I hear echoes of 1920s and ’30s acts like Barbecue Bob & Laughin’ Charlie and Butterbeans & Susie (especially on the comic dialogue of “You Took My Thing and Put It in Your Place”). And “DoDo Blues” sounds a lot like an old Emmett Miller blackface routine.

It’s politically incorrect on several levels, but it’s loads of devilish fun.

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 15, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Ema...