Sunday, July 25, 2010
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
The Lowlife by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes
Sugar in My Hog by Fred Schneider with Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet
Bitch Slap Attack by Lovestuck
Toilet Duck by Scared of Chaka
Treat Her Right by Los Straitjackets with Mark Lindsay
Repo Man by Iggy Pop
Baby Who Mutilated Everybody's Heart by Thee Mighty Caesars
I'm In With the Out Crowd by Sam the Sham & The Pharoahs
Juimonos (Let's Went) by Little Richard Elizondo Combo
All These Things by Art Neville
Jenny Take a Ride by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
Devil With the Blue Dress by Shorty Long
C.C. Rider by Bobby Powell
Smokes by ? & The Mysterians
Ghost Rider by The Gories
La Llorona by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkeybirds
Troubled Friends by Gogol Bordello
Rockin' My Boogie by Charlie Musselwhite
Annie Mae/Memphis by Alex Maryol
Friday Night Dance Party by Bunker Hill
Baby Doll by The Del Moroccos
Memphis Chiken by The Gibson Bros.
Dizzy Miss Lizzy by Larry Williams
Never Go West by Seasick Steve
Shortnin' Bread by The Cramps
Flying High by Country Joe & The Fish
Adeniji by The Budos Band
The World Ends by The Black Mirrors
A Mission in Life by Stan Ridgway
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Saturday, July 24, 2010
ROD DOES BUCKLEY IN NYC
Hipsters, flipsters and finger-poppin' daddies ...
While stumbling around the Internet for information on the Detroit Breakdown, which I'm going to in New York City a week from today, I learned that Santa Fe's finest Lord Buckley channeler Rod Harrison is playing at the same venue the next day.
Unfortunately, I'll be flying back to New Mexico when Rod takes the stage.
He's playing at the Lincoln Center Out of Doors series. On the same bill is David Johansen, Sandra Bernhard and Steve Cuiffo, who does with Lenny Bruce what Rod does with Lord Buckley.
Friday, July 23, 2010
THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST
Friday, July 23, 2010
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
Dirty Dog by Jimmie Revard & His Oklahoma Playboys
Yearning Burning Heart by The Farmer Boys
Cherokee Boogie by Hank Williams
Mexican Bands by Merle Haggard
Escondido by Joe "King" Carrasco
Tornado by Dale Hawkins
Nervous Breakdown by Bobby Fuller
Your Atom Bomb Heart by Hank King & Bud Williams & His Smiling Buddies
I'm Fed Up Drinking Here by The Starline Rhythm Boys
I Want to be a Hobo by The McQueens
Heroes by Xoe Fitzgerald
Cash on the Barrelhead by The Louvin Brothers
You Finally Said Something Good (When You Said Goodbye) by Charlie Louvin
Bring then Noise by The Unholy Trio
Gin & Juice by The Gourds
Poor People's Store by Shinyribs
Lost John Boogie by Wayne Raney
Honky Tonk Girl by Eilen Jewell
Back Street Affair by Webb Pierce
Loreena the Slave by The Delmore Brothers
There Ain't No Saguro in Texas by The Rev. Horton Heat
Cheap Living by Eric Hisaw
Mother-in-Law Boogie by Earl Songer
Gone But Not Forgotten by Hank III
8 Weeks in a Barroom by Ramblin' Red Bailey
12 Gates to the City by Tao Seeger
The Lord is Coming by Rev. Beat-man
Freight Train by Taj Mahal
Play Dead by The Sixtyniners
The Blues My Naughty Baby Gave to Me by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Hold That Critter Down by The Sons of the Pioneers
Down the Bar From Me by Kell Robertson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets
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
Dirty Dog by Jimmie Revard & His Oklahoma Playboys
Yearning Burning Heart by The Farmer Boys
Cherokee Boogie by Hank Williams
Mexican Bands by Merle Haggard
Escondido by Joe "King" Carrasco
Tornado by Dale Hawkins
Nervous Breakdown by Bobby Fuller
Your Atom Bomb Heart by Hank King & Bud Williams & His Smiling Buddies
I'm Fed Up Drinking Here by The Starline Rhythm Boys
I Want to be a Hobo by The McQueens
Heroes by Xoe Fitzgerald
Cash on the Barrelhead by The Louvin Brothers
You Finally Said Something Good (When You Said Goodbye) by Charlie Louvin
Bring then Noise by The Unholy Trio
Gin & Juice by The Gourds
Poor People's Store by Shinyribs
Lost John Boogie by Wayne Raney
Honky Tonk Girl by Eilen Jewell
Back Street Affair by Webb Pierce
Loreena the Slave by The Delmore Brothers
There Ain't No Saguro in Texas by The Rev. Horton Heat
Cheap Living by Eric Hisaw
Mother-in-Law Boogie by Earl Songer
Gone But Not Forgotten by Hank III
8 Weeks in a Barroom by Ramblin' Red Bailey
12 Gates to the City by Tao Seeger
The Lord is Coming by Rev. Beat-man
Freight Train by Taj Mahal
Play Dead by The Sixtyniners
The Blues My Naughty Baby Gave to Me by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Hold That Critter Down by The Sons of the Pioneers
Down the Bar From Me by Kell Robertson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list
HOT & PIPIN' BRAND NEW BIG ENCHILADA PODCAST

Welcome, my friends to the latest Big Enchilada podcast. If you've got a touch of the criminal insanity, this episode should be nice and soothing for you.
I'm releasing this episode a little early this time because I'm going to New York at the end of the month. In anticipation of that trip I'm including songs from the stars of the Detroit Breakdown -- The Gories, ? Mark & The Mysterians, and Death, plus a Mitch Ryder hit recorded before it met Mitch Ryder -- and a tune from Kid Congo Powers, who I'm hoping to see at The Knitting Factory in Brooklyn next week.
Also in this show are The Kill Spectors and Xoe Fitgerald (my favorite Time Traveling Transvestite) from right here in Santa Fe; The A-Bones, The Devil Dogs and The Malarians; and some bands I met on the GaragePunk Hideout like Weirdonia and Thee Ludds.
So crank up the volume and get in the mood.
DOWNLOAD | SUBSCRIBE
Here's The play list:
Background Music: Peter Fun by The Dive Tones
Live Like a Dog by The Kill Spectors
Good Time Kids by Xoe Fitzgerald
Good Times by The Malarians
Girl Like You by Urban Junior
I'm a Moron by Thee Ludds
1960s Antique Clock by Weirdonia
(Background Music: Hi Neighbor by Spike Jones & His City Slickers)
DETROIT BREAKDOWN SET
Freakin' Out by Death
Let Your Daddy Ride by The Gories
I Hear Sirens by The Dirtbombs
Look for the Question Mark by The Fuzztones
Are You For Real by ? & The Mysterians
Hitchhiking by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds
Devil With the Blue Dress by Shorty Long
(Background Music: I'm in the Mood for Love by Man-Chau-Po Orchestra)
House Rent Jump by Peter Case
Lust Lil Lucy by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes
Monkey Mess by Thee Vicars
A Little Love by The A-Bones
Laugh at Me by The Devil Dogs
(Outro Music: Travelin' Mood by Wee Willie Wayne)
Listen to this podcast 7 p.m. Mountain Time Tuesday July 27 on Real Punk Radio
TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: INTERGALACTIC TRANSVESTITE CONSPIRACY
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 23, 2010
Synchronicity is a funny thing.

Indeed the album — which is unleashed publicly Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s — is what some might call a “rock opera,” telling the story of a mysterious, time-traveling, cross-dressing union organizer.
Then, less than a week later, an editor forwarded me an email containing a link to a blog with this startling information about more time-travel activity in Santa Fe:
On my political blog I wrote a tongue-in-cheek post quoting that Information Farm blog article about “Project Pegasus.”
(As a political reporter, during the past eight years I’ve frequently asked Richardson questions that made both of us uncomfortable. But I haven’t worked up the courage to ask him about this.)
So, soon after Basiago and his pint-size “chrononaut” pals were zapped from New Jersey to Santa Fe, there was that bright light seen falling south of Santa Fe and the birth of the “boy with paisley eyes.”
Synchronicity overload. And there’s more mystery. The liner notes of Xoë Fitzgerald: Time-Traveling Transvestite say that the album “was conceived by Joe West in the year 2007 at Club Alegria. ...”

Indeed David Bowie made that film shortly after the Project Pegasus experiments. Part of it was shot in Madrid just down N.M. 14 from the Cerrillos Cultural Center amphitheater, where according to the Information Farm article, Project Pegasus members sat and listened to speakers such as Donald Rumsfeld.
It’s probably worth noting that the interview with West took place at the Cowgirl BBQ, which is just a half mile or so from the state Capitol, where Basiago and the other children of the Pegasus Project were teleported in the early ’70s.
Is there a record review in here somewhere? Joe West has made some of the finest country-rock albums ever to come out of New Mexico. If you’re a country-rock purist, the music on Xoë will jar you. Fortunately, I doubt that West’s following includes too many rabid purists.
CD release party: Xoe Fitzgerald and his honky-tonk glam co-conspirators play at 8:30 p.m. tonight Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s, 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. Admission costs nothing, and the first 50 who show up get a Xoe bumper sticker.
July 23, 2010
Synchronicity is a funny thing.

Early this month, I received a review copy of Xoë Fitzgerald: Time-Traveling Transvestite, a new album from Frogville Records that starts off with a spoken introduction by Fitzgerald, whose voice spookily resembles that of songwriter Joe West:
In the summer of 1975, a bright light was seen falling into the hills south of Santa Fe, NM. Some claim it was a meteor. Others say that later they found a strange unearthly substance that appeared to be the remains of a flying vehicle. Shortly thereafter, a child was born to a young hippie girl who made her home in the old mining town.
Indeed the album — which is unleashed publicly Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s — is what some might call a “rock opera,” telling the story of a mysterious, time-traveling, cross-dressing union organizer.
Then, less than a week later, an editor forwarded me an email containing a link to a blog with this startling information about more time-travel activity in Santa Fe:
According to (Andrew) Basiago, the U.S. government already had a fully operational teleportation capability in 1967-1968, and by 1969-1970, was actively training a cadre of gifted and talented American schoolchildren, including himself, to become America’s first generation of “chrononauts” or time-space explorers.
He confirms that the United States has been teleporting individuals to Mars for decades and recounts the awe-inspiring and terrifying trips that he took to Mars in 1981. He describes how he and his father (an engineer working on time/space research projects for the U.S. defense department) would teleport from Woodridge, NJ, to Santa Fe, NM, and return via a teleportation device at Sandia National Labs in Albuquerque.
On my political blog I wrote a tongue-in-cheek post quoting that Information Farm blog article about “Project Pegasus.”
By the next day, Basiago himself responded, telling me that “Santa Fe was the Kitty Hawk of teleportation” and claiming that Gov. Bill Richardson was involved. “Mr. Richardson was a young staffer on Project Pegasus who took roll when we first began teleporting to the New Mexico state capitol in group training exercises held in Summer 1970. That’s right, Bill Richardson’s first job in government was as a staffer on a secret time travel project!”
(As a political reporter, during the past eight years I’ve frequently asked Richardson questions that made both of us uncomfortable. But I haven’t worked up the courage to ask him about this.)
So, soon after Basiago and his pint-size “chrononaut” pals were zapped from New Jersey to Santa Fe, there was that bright light seen falling south of Santa Fe and the birth of the “boy with paisley eyes.”
Synchronicity overload. And there’s more mystery. The liner notes of Xoë Fitzgerald: Time-Traveling Transvestite say that the album “was conceived by Joe West in the year 2007 at Club Alegria. ...”
But let’s travel back in time a bit to late 2005, when I interviewed West for an article in New Mexico Magazine. (CLICK HERE, scroll way down)
There he told me about “his contraption called The Intergalactic Honky Tonk Machine, which West says is a ‘time traveling music device,’ which includes a drum machine, electronic tape loops, and a smoke machine. And he’s talking about doing a concept album about an ‘androgynous time-traveler space character’ who claims to be the love child of a glam-rock star, conceived in New Mexico during the filming of The Man Who Fell to Earth.”

Indeed David Bowie made that film shortly after the Project Pegasus experiments. Part of it was shot in Madrid just down N.M. 14 from the Cerrillos Cultural Center amphitheater, where according to the Information Farm article, Project Pegasus members sat and listened to speakers such as Donald Rumsfeld.
It’s probably worth noting that the interview with West took place at the Cowgirl BBQ, which is just a half mile or so from the state Capitol, where Basiago and the other children of the Pegasus Project were teleported in the early ’70s.
And come to think of it, in April 2008, I saw West play with the Santa Fe All-Stars at an event at the Capitol Rotunda — an event attended by none other than Bill Richardson! I have no solid evidence, but you have to wonder whether the governor used this occasion to pass on information from Project Pegasus to West to use in Xoë Fitzgerald.
The “coincidences” keep piling up!
Is there a record review in here somewhere? Joe West has made some of the finest country-rock albums ever to come out of New Mexico. If you’re a country-rock purist, the music on Xoë will jar you. Fortunately, I doubt that West’s following includes too many rabid purists.
The record rocks with a refreshing sound. The band, which includes Josh Martin, Margaret Burke, Arne Bey, and John Courage (who has since teleported out of Santa Fe), Xoë leans heavily on the glam rock of the 1970s — Bowie, Mott the Hoople, Lou Reed’s Rock ’n’ Roll Animal period, a little T-Rex.
There’s a song called “I Wanna Party (Like It’s 1985),” but this party sounds a lot more like 1974. And “The Good-Time Kids” sounds more like 1965, with a Question Mark & The Mysterians sound. That and “Xoe’s Favorite Honky-Tonk” are currently my favorite West rockers on the album.

West has rarely, if ever, recorded a cover song (I’m still pushing for him to put Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which he frequently performs live, on an album), but he and his band do quite an impressive version of Bowie’s anthem “Heroes.” I won’t give away the plot, but this song comes at a very appropriate emotional moment in the saga.
The album ends with a sweet acoustic coda, “Butterfly.” It’s a low-fi recording that sounds like Xoe’s transmitting from a far-away dimension.
West has rarely, if ever, recorded a cover song (I’m still pushing for him to put Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which he frequently performs live, on an album), but he and his band do quite an impressive version of Bowie’s anthem “Heroes.” I won’t give away the plot, but this song comes at a very appropriate emotional moment in the saga.
The album ends with a sweet acoustic coda, “Butterfly.” It’s a low-fi recording that sounds like Xoe’s transmitting from a far-away dimension.
CD release party: Xoe Fitzgerald and his honky-tonk glam co-conspirators play at 8:30 p.m. tonight Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s, 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. Admission costs nothing, and the first 50 who show up get a Xoe bumper sticker.
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TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
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