Friday, May 27, 2011

R.I.P. GSH

I just learned of the death of Gil Scott Heron.

NPR, which first reported his death, says he died Friday afternoon in New York at the age of 62.

The influential poet and musician is often credited with being one of the progenitors of hip-hop, and is best known for the spoken-word piece "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised."
His 2010 album I'm New Here was one of my favorites of the year. I reviewed it HERE 

I'll do a special set for Gil Sunday night on Terrell's Sound World.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: An Outbreak of Dengue Fever

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 27, 2011


Whenever a band is based on an unusual concept — say, re-creating and building upon a suppressed style of music from several decades ago from a faraway land — there are inherent dangers.

First of all, said band might become too stuffy and scholarly, drifting away from being a creator to being a curator. Or, such a band might get a whiff of success and yield to the temptation of distancing itself from its original mission. And, of course, with any musical act there’s always the danger that what sounded fresh and innovative a couple of years ago will eventually sound dated and stale.

I’m happy to report that my favorite psychedelic Californian/Cambodian band Dengue Fever has avoided all those pitfalls. Dengue’s latest album, Cannibal Courtship, is a glorious blast from start to finish.

Short primer for newcomers: Dengue Fever came about after a trip to Cambodia in the ’90s by keyboardist Ethan Holtzman, who became an enthusiast of the crazy, psychedelic music that flourished there in the pre-Pol Pot years. Returning to his native California with cassette tapes of this music, Holtzman and his guitarist brother Zac got a band together to play it. But the sound wasn’t complete until they found Cambodia-born singer Chhom Nimol, who had a gig at a joint called the Dragon House in the Little Phnom Penh area of Long Beach.

The title song, which kicks off the album, starts as a slow soul groove. But the music slowly builds up in volume and intensity and, by the time Nimol is shouting the refrain, “Be my sacrificial lamb!” listeners know this album is going to a wild ride.

The next tune, “Cement Slippers,” is a funny dialogue song between Nimol and Zac Holtzman that reminds me of “Tiger Phone Card” on Dengue’s previous studio effort, Venus on Earth. “My girlfriend loves everything at the beach/Except the water, the sand, and the sun,” Holtzman sings. Nimol responds, “My boyfriend loves everything about me except the endless hours of therapy.”

THAT'S A REAL FARFISA
Dengue in Santa Fe 2007
But the best part of this song is a maniacal, it, sax solo by horn man David Ralicke. Nimol reverts to her native tongue, Khmer, in the following song, the slow-moving, exotic “Uku.” Ethan Holtzman’s Farfisa organ shines on this one.


Actually, I wish the song “2012 (Bury Our Heads)” was sung in Khmer or some other language I don’t understand. I think the group is actually making fun of the New Age-y reading of ancient Maya prophecies that next year will bring the end of the world. After the recent “rapture” idiocy, I’m getting tired of this doomsday crap. But the song is a decent little rocker, so not all is lost.

A better topical tune is “Family Business,” which is about a girl caught up in some weapon-merchant business — it sounds like a Nicolas Cage movie in the making. The instrumental “Kiss of the Bufo Alvarius” reminds me of Henry Mancini’s score for the early ’60s John Wayne flick Hatari. I can’t listen to it without images of rhinos chasing jeeps haunting my brain.

Cannibal Courtship will probably induce lots of crazy visions for listeners.

Also recommended:


*Dengue Fever Presents Electric Cambodia. Had Mick, Keith, and the boys ever released a compilation called “The Rolling Stones Presents Chicago Blues Favorites,” it would have been to them what this collection is to Dengue Fever. The music here represents the basic DNA of the band.

Electric Cambodia, released last year, contains 14 Cambodian rockers from the late ’60s and early ’70s. The sound is lo-fi, because the original recordings — as well as the original artists — were destroyed by the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime that ruled that country in the mid-to-late ’70s. The only surviving recordings were on old cassette tapes kept and hidden by fans.

But you have to love the basic sound of the electric organ playing off the fuzzy guitars (sometimes straying off into the same cosmic territory Carlos Santana pioneered) and the singers who seamlessly bring together Cambodian folk melodies, Asian pop, and American rock ’n’ soul of the ’60s.

All but two of the selections here are by the three biggest stars of Cambodian rock — female singers Pan Ron and Ros Serey Sothea and a man named Sinn Sisamouth, who was such a super-stud, he recorded duets with both Ron and Sothea. “Jasmine Girl,” a Sisamouth/Ron duet, is a soft romantic tune that starts off sounding almost like an Asian bossa nova.

A couple of these songs were covered by Dengue Fever on its first album in 2003. There’s the slinky, sexy “Flowers in the Pond” by Sothea (Dengue did a slower version, just calling it “Flowers,” on its own album). And even better is “Shave Your Beard,” another Sothea song.

“Snaeha” has a melody you might recognize. Sung by Ron, it’s a Khmer version of the old Cher hit “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down).”

This album is available from the usual online places. And if you like these old songs, let me also recommend the Cambodian Rocks series, currently available on the Khmer Rocks label. At least three of the four volumes are available from Amazon at reasonable prices.

BLOG BONUS:

Enjoy "Cement Slippers"


Cement Slippers (official) from DENGUE FEVER on Vimeo.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 22, 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 (at) ksfr.org

BOB DYLAN 70th BIRTHDAY PARTY!!!!!!
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Baby Let Me Follow You Down by Bob Dylan
Maggie's Farm by The Blue Giant Zeta Puppies
Highway 61 Revisited by Johnny Winter
Dear Landlord by Janis Joplin & The Kozmic Blues Band
A Simple Desultory Philippic by Simon & Garfunkel
Absolutely Sweet Marie by C.J. Chenier
Isis by Bob Dylan

Mixed Up Confusion by Bob Dylan
My Back Pages by The Magkoro Brothers
The Wicked Messenger by The Black Keys
Ballad Of Hollis Brown by Thee Headcoats
Million Miles by Alvin Youngblood Hart
Like A Rolling Pin by The Replacements
Wallflower by Doug Sahm with Bob Dylan

Every Grain Of Sand by Giant Sand
Blind Willie McTell by The Band
I Pity The Poor Immigrant by Richie Havens
Bob Dylan's 300 Game by Emily Kaitz
SeƱor (Tales Of Yankee Power) by Willie Nelson & Calexico
Billy 1 by Los Lobos

Shake Mama Shake by Bob Dylan
Saved by The Mighty Clouds of Joy
Gotta Serve Somebody by Mavis Staples
Royal Jelly by Dewy Cox
You're Going to Make Me Lonesome When You Go by Mary Lee's Corvette
Death Is Not the End by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Saturday, May 21, 2011

SADDLE UP FOR THE NEW BIG ENCHILADA! SWEATHOG OF THE RODEO!

THE BIG ENCHILADA



Alright you rodeo clowns! Come ride this wild bull of a podcast. Get in the saddle and enjoy some fine honky tonk, rockabilly and cowpunk melodies. Don't get bucked off!

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Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Back in the Saddle Again by Gene Autry)
Let's Rodeo by The Gibson Bros. & Workdogs
Tennessee by The Last Mile Ramblers
Anything Goes at a Rooster Show by The Imperial Rooster
Mean Kind of Blues by Rachel Brooke
Truck Driver by Scott H. Biram
Jug Town by Neil Hamburger
The Devil, My Conscience and I by Billy Barton

(Background Music: Number 111 by J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers)
Midnight Rodeo by Cordell Jackson
Rock 'n' Roll Granny by Nancy Apple
Get Lost You Wolf by Hylo Brown & The Timberliners
Rollergirl Gail by The Misery Jackals
The Ballad of Candy Barr by George McCoy & The Balladeers
I Miss My Boyfriend by Folk Uke with Shooter Jennings

(Background Music: Blue Steel Blues by Ted Daffan's Texans)
Big Dwarf Rodeo by Rev. Horton Heat
Yes Ma'am by Gal Holiday & The Honky Tonk Revue
Scrap Collecting Man by Crankshaft & The Geargrinders
One Foot in the Grave by Black Eyed Vermillion
You Turned Your Back by Toni Brown
EZ Ridin' Grumblers by Sanctified Grumblers

Play it here:



You like this hillbilly stuff? If so, then you'll probably like some of my previous episodes like:

Episode 31: Below Tobacco Road
Episode 26: Hillbilly Pigout
Episode 22: Honky in a Cheap Motel
Episode 16: Hillbilly Heaven
Episode 10: More Santa Fe Opry Favorites
Episode 8: Santa Fe Opry Favorites Vol. 2
Episode 2: Santa Fe Opry Favorites

Also, check out the country craziness at Give Me My XXX

Friday, May 20, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, May 20, 2011
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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Fried Chicken and Gasoline by Southern Culture on the Skids
She'll Be My Baby by The Hormonauts
Don't Touch My Horse by Slackeye Slim
God Has Left the Building by The Imperial Rooster
Big Iron by Mike Ness
Code Of The Road by The Band of Blackie Ranchette
Sixteen Tons by Homer & Jethro

The Lonesome River by Bob Dylan & Ralph Stanley
Little Emperor by Steve Earle
Treat Me Right by Suzette Lawrence & The Neon Angels
Shake It and Break It by Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Everybody's Girl by Eddie Spaghetti
Did You See the Devil, Uncle Joe by Wade Ward & Charlie Higgens
Dig Boy Dig by Freddie Hart
Move it On Over by George Thorogood & The Destroyers
Honky Tonk Queen by Whitey Morgan & Teh 78s
Empty Bottles on a Broken Shelf by Jayke Orvis

Tombstone Blues by Tim O'Brien
I'm Gonna Dig Up Howlin' Wolf by Mojo Nixon & Skid Roper
Romp Stompin' Boogie by Jaycee Hill
Black Crow Blues by Peter Case
Sally's Got a Wooden Leg by Sons Of The West
Let the Teardrops Fall by Gal Holiday
Chunky by Terry Diers
Like A Rolling Stone by Drive-By Truckers

Girl From The North Country by Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash
Don't Forget Me When I Die by Rachel Brooks
You've Never Been This Far Before by Conway Twitty
I Wish It Would Stop Raining by Exene Cervenka
Sad Milkman by Sally Timms & Jon Langford
The Pale Horse & His Rider by Hank Williams
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

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

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 4, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Email...