Friday, May 06, 2011

Radio Joe!

I've just become brothers-in-radio with Joe West, one of  my all-time favorite Santa Fe songwriters.

Joe's new show, The Intergalactic Honky Tonk Machine can be heard 1 a.m. (yes, that's a.m.!) Thursdays on KSFR . And if you're not a night owl, Joe is archiving his shows on his website.

Joe West & Mike the Can Man sing "Okie from Muskogee"
Joe West with Mike the Can Man at Frogfest '09
It's not just another music show. His first episode is a musical character profile of a singer named Dona Dylanschneider. Check it out.

In other Joe West news, he's got a new album coming out in June called Aberdeen, South Dakota. Joe says it's "my own personal "nod" to the memories, the relics and the debris of yesterday and was created using antiquated recording equipment and found thrift store instruments."

It'll be available on CD as well as cassette. (Get ready for the cassette revival!)

And there's more! Joe is following the Butch Hancock route. He'll be the special musical guest on rafting trips down the Chama River by Santa Fe Rafting. Joe will  be playing campfire concerts on these trips. (I still say that the best concert I ever went to was a Butch show one night during a Rio Grande raft trip. It was raining, so the concert was under a tarp held up by us in the audience.)

(I haven't posted my rafting photo with Butch in a couple of years, so check it out)

Thursday, May 05, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Go Rimbaud!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 6, 2011


Just what the free world needs: another blues-rock band from Austin, Texas.

But Churchwood is different. To start with, instead of idolizing Stevie Ray Vaughn, this band names the late, great Captain Beefheart as its guiding spiritual light. No, Churchwood doesn’t exactly sound like the Captain on its new self-titled album. It just shares his ability to take the essence of primitive blues and mutate it into something new.

And the group doesn’t sound like all those trashy, lo-fi blues-punk groups — many of which I love — like the ones who populate Voodoo Rhythm’s roster. Churchwood is a little more refined, though it is still far from slick. For the record, the band doesn’t share many musical similarities with one of my favorite bluegrass punk bands, The Meat Purveyors, even though one of its guitarists, Bill Anderson, played in that group.

These guys are downright literate. Singer/ harmonica-honker Joe Doerr might sound like he spends every night chugging Budweisers in biker bars, but he’s a published poet and is a professor of English at St. Edward’s University in Austin. Churchwood’s literary bent is most obvious in the song “Rimbaud Diddley,” a tribute to Elias McDaniel and his famous beat as well as to the French Symbolist poet.

(There is rock ’n’ roll precedent here. Bob Dylan namechecked Rimbaud in the song “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go,” and Patti Smith began her career shouting “Go Rimbaud, go Rimbaud” on the song “Land” on her first album, Horses.)

And then on “Ulysses,” Churchwood cleverly mixes references to the hero of the Odyssey, the hard-drinking Civil War general, and James Joyce.

And wake up, fans of Hermann Hesse and Carlos Santana. There’s a song called “Abraxas.” This is a spoken-word piece with a bluesy backdrop and a beatnik vibe. Doerr recites, “I only speak in tongues now/ I wrangle serpents because they rankle me/ I do sleep well in the arms of dragons/Blind drunk on poison with the will to see.”

My favorite Churchwood song is “Car Crash,” despite its grim lyrics. The narrator prophesies and describes in detail his own death on some lonesome highway:

 “The road is wet and the hills are steep/I’ve miles to go before I sleep/A tractor trailer blows its horn at me/A stream of headlights makes it hard to see.”

But the music is so upbeat and rocking that you get the feeling it’s been a pretty fun joyride until the moment of impact.

Hear “Rimbaud Diddley”in its entirety on the latest exciting episode of The Big Enchilada podcast.

Also recommended:

* Kicking It With the Twits by The Hickoids. I never would have guessed that long-time Texas cowpunkers The Hickoids were Anglophiles. But they are, and this album, which has a Union Jack-themed album cover, consists of tunes from the British Invasion.

Actually from more than one British Invasion.

The liner notes of this CD (Note to MP3 generation: ask your parents what liner notes are) explain the weird trans-Atlantic musical ping-pong game between American and British rock ’n’ roll, from early blues and R&B to the Beatles era, West Coast psychedelia, British glam rock, and the rise of punk rock in New York and London.

“Our look and sound has always owed at least as much to England as it does to the United States,” The Hickoids declare, “so this is our own little tribute to the sexually deviant rockers of the British Isles.”

Come to think of it, singer Jeff Smith is known as “the thin white Duke of Hazzard.”

Among the selections here are songs by The Stones and The Who as well as by Mott the Hoople, Brian Eno, The Damned, Slade, The Move, and Elton John. Elton John? Why not. I like The Hickoid’s cover of “Bennie & The Jets,” with its steel guitar, better than Elton’s original. (And at least they avoided “Tiny Dancer.”)

The Hickoids did a great job of choosing at least slightly lesser-known songs from their English heroes. For instance, the Rolling Stones cover is “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?” It’s not exactly an obscurity — it was played on the radio all the time when I was in junior high — but not one overplayed on “oldies radio.” I like the tacky electric organ sound The Hickoids put on it.

The Hickoids add some subtle country guitar licks to The Who’s “Pictures of Lily,” Pete Townshend’s early ode to porn. Mott’s “Whizz Kid” is good and rocking. But I’d also like to hear a Hickoids version of “All the Way to Memphis.”

My only real complaint is that the album is just eight songs long. Come on, Hickoids, where are the covers of songs by The Animals, The Zombies, and — especially — The Fall? “Big New Prinz” with steel guitar would be a real treat. Maybe a “Twits Part 2” is in order.

By the way, both The Hickoids and Churchwood are on the Saustex Media label — as are cool bands like PiƱata Protest and T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole. Visit www.saustexmedia.com.

The Hickoids in Santa Fe: Synchronicity alert! I had just finished writing the above review when I checked my email and learned The Hickoids are coming here June 24. It’s their first time in Santa Fe. They play the Underground — that’s the basement of Evangelo’s — with Santa Fe’s beloved The Blood Drained Cows.
 

A Gentle Folk Song Marks a Historical Moment

The singer's name is Bob Cheevers. According to his website, his songs have been recorded by Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings. In the late '60s he sang the theme song for a tv comedy called Love American Style.

Now Cheevers is giving some of his American love to the late Osama Bin Laden in a song called "The End of Bin."

It's a sturdy minor-key folk tune. Nice melody, but somehow I can't imagine Peter, Paul & Mary singing, "I hope his death was painful and slow ..."

Sunday, May 01, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 1, 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 Be Glad When You're Dead, You Rascal You by Coleman Hawkins
Meet Me Boys on the Battlefront by The Wild Tchoupitoulas
Time Is on My Side by Irma Thomas & Alan Toussaint
Junco Partner by Professor Longhair
Firewater by Big Chief Monk Boudreaux
Ooh Poo Pah Doo Part 1 by Jessie Hill
My Indian Red by Dr. John
I Been Hoodooed by Bo Dollis & The Wild Magnolias

Lover's Curse by The A-Bones
Robacuna by Davila 666
You're Gonna Miss Me by Doug Sahm & Sons
School Is for Donkeys by Will Crum
Gudbuy T' Jane by The Hickoids
Hardworkin' Man by The Cramps
Mama Get the Hammer by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Red Rose Tea by The Marquis Chimps

Mustang Ranch by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
All Fall Down by The Standells
Ulysses by Churchwood
Horse Fever Blues by The Cheating Hearts
Tricks by Andre Williams
Killer Wolf by The Ultimatemost High
The Pygmy Grind by Sonny Dublin
Heaven is Mine by Unidentified Woman & Pentecostal Temple Congregation

Winter Funeral by Manby's Head
Dead Moon Night by Dead Moon
New Orleans Walkin' Dead by North Mississippi Allstars
Village of Love/Back to the Village of Love by Nathaniel Mayer
I Need Your Lovin' by Wolfman Jack & The Wolfpack
Get Out of the Car by Richard Berry
Sweet Roseanne by Bright Light Quartet
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, April 29, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, April 29, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasti

ng!

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
Red Red Robin by Rosie Flores
See Willie Fly By by The Waco Brothers
Bone to Pick by Black-Eyed Vermillion
DWI Marijuana Blues by The Imperial Rooster
The End by Peter Case
Castanets by Alejandro Escovedo
Me and Rose Connelly by Rachel Brookes
Highway Patrol by Junior Brown

Yes Ma'am, He Found Me in a Honky Tonk by Gal Holiday
Dope Smokin' Song by Jesse Dayton
Waitin' on the Sky by Steve Earle
Three Bloodhounds Two Shepherds One Fila Brasileiro by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
When the Hammer Came Down by House of Freaks
Ruthie Lingle by 16 Horsepower
Meanest Jukebox In Town by Whitey Morgan
Broken Man by The Goddamn Gallows

ARHOOLIE SET
Brother Low Down by Jesse Fuller
Louisiana Rock by Clifton Chenier
I Knew You Didn't Want Me by K.C.Douglas
The Touch of God's Hand by Vern & Ray
Barushka by Howard Armstrong
Mean Boss Man by Mance Lipscomb
Pachuco Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys
Yeah, Lord! Jesus Is Able by Rev. Louis Overstreet
I Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag by Country Joe & The Fish

I Wish I Was A Single Girl Again by The Maddox Brothers & Rose
Lowdown Dirty Things by Skip James
Don't Forget Me Love by Toni Brown
Treasury Scandal by Atilla the Hun
The Dirty Dozen by Butch Cage & Willie B. Thomas
Come See by Bobby Neurwirth
Lawtell Two-Step by Pine Leaf Boys
Up on Telegraph Avenue by Lightnin' Hopkins
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

  Sunday, August 3, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell ...