Sunday, February 05, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Sunday, Feb. 5, 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
Dropkick Me Jesus by Bobby Bare
We Gettin' Naked for the Super Bowl by The Swank Brothers
The Great Jie Bib by Terry Allen
You Are Not Your Job by Gas Huffer
Hot Smoke and Sassafras by Bubble Puppy
High on the Hog by TAD
You Broke My Mood Ring by Root Boy Slim & His Sex Change Band
Log Bomb by Bob Log III
Laugh at Me by The Devil Dogs

Everything I Do Is Wrong by The Reigning Sound
Hard Way by Andre Williams & The Goldstars
Treat Her Right by Roy Head
I Got Love by The King Khan Experience
Tobacco Road by The Blues Magoos
Do You Swing by The Fleshtones
Bobo Boogey by Kid Congo Powers & The Pink Monkeybirds
Man on Mars by Harry Perry
Rocket Man Blues by Edison Rocket Train

Remembering Lux Interior
All songs by The Cramps!
Goo Goo Muck
Bend Over I'll Drive
Psychotic Reaction
Heartbreak Hotel
Mad Daddy
Get Off the Road
Bikini Girls with Machine Guns
Rockin' Bones

Where'd You Go by J. Mascis & The Fog
Windy City by Delaney Davidson
Jumper Hangin' on the Line by R.L. Burnside
Big Boss Man by Jimmy Reed
St. James Infirmary by Bobby "Blue" Bland
Nudist Camp by Ross Jonson
Requiem for the Masses by The Association
I Saw Her First by Bruce & Jerry
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Friday, February 03, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, Feb. 3, 2012 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Oklahoma Hills by Jack Guthrie & The Oklahomans
Defibulator by The Defibulators
Why Baby Why by George Jones with Ricky Skaggs
Shout Sister Shout by Ray Condo & His Ricochets
Crazy Things by Jason Arnold
Boney Fingers by Hoyt Axton
Elbow Grease, Spackle and Pine Sol by Dale Watson & The Texas Two
Truck Driver's Woman by Nancy Apple
Temptation (Tim-Tayshun) by Red Ingle & The Natural Seven
I've Got A Bimbo Down On Bamboo Isle by The Hoosier Hot Shots

Soldier Boy Johnny by The Imperial Rooster
Don't Let Your Deal Go Down by Chris Darrow
Sadie Green (The Vamp of New Orleans) by Roy Newman & His Boys
That's What I Like About the South by Hank Thompson
Rhonda Rose by Jason Eklund
Get Out of My Car by Hasil Adkins
The Little Girl And The Dreadful Snake by Red Allen & Frank Wakefield
The School House Fire by The Dixon Brothers

Buddy Holly
Buddy, Bopper & Richie 
Midnight Shift by Buddy Holly
Begger to a King by The Big Bopper
Rockin' All Night by Richie Valens
When Sin Stops by Waylon Jennings with Buddy Holly
Crying, Waiting Hoping by Steve Earle & Marty Stuart
White Lightning by The Waco Brothers
Come on Let's Go by Los Lobos
That'll Be the Day by The Flamin' Groovies
Changing All Those Changes by Buddy Holly
La Bamba by Richie Valens

Halden is (Hell-Raisin' Town) by Rick Broussard & Two Hoots and a Holler
Little Glass of Wine by Paul Burch
I'll Be Glad When You're Dead by The Great Recession Orchestra
Lonesome Side Of Town by Johnny Dilks & His Visitacion Valley Boys
The Way You're Treating Me by Jim Gatlin
Dark Hollow by Benny Martin
Would You Die For Love by Stevie Tombstone
I'll Walk Around Heaven with You by Blonde Boy Grunt & The Groans
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 TUNEUP: Some Texas Honky Tonk Sounds

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Feb. 3, 2012


Texas country singer Dale Watson’s latest album, The Sun Sessions, has a funny backstory. Watson had been booked at a bar in Memphis, Tennessee. Or at least he thought he had a gig there. Somewhere between Austin and Memphis he learned there was a misunderstanding. “No, we have a DJ on Tuesdays, and we don’t have you booked,” someone at the club told him.

“After feeling awful that a music town with such a history would rather have a dance DJ than live music, I thought, ‘What the hell. I got lemons. Let’s make lemonade,’” Watson writes in the CD liner notes.

Dale Watson at Broken Spoke 3-23-11
Dale Watson last year at the Broken Spoke
So he called Sun Studio — the funky little magic factory in Memphis that gave birth to rockabilly and launched the careers of Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Johnny Cash — and asked to book some time. He was in luck. And so were fans of Watson’s music.


Watson almost always plays country music in a basic, understated way — steel, fiddle, guitar, bass, drums, and not much else.

But for this album, he strips it down even more. In honor of Cash’s Tennessee Two, Watson calls the backup band on this record The Texas Two. They are stand-up bassist Chris Crepps and a drummer, Mike Bernal, who just hits the snare. Watson only plays his acoustic guitar. Together they celebrate the signature sound of Sun.

To Watson’s credit, even though this is something of a “tribute” album, he didn’t play the hits of the ascended masters that we’ve all heard a zillion times before. He wrote all these tunes — six of them on the bus to Memphis after he booked his session time at Sun. Watson’s baritone sounds more like Cash’s voice than the voices of the other Sun titans, so this album might be viewed as more of an alternative-reality tribute to the Man in Black.

The album starts out with a jittery little tune called “Down Down Down Down Down.” With Crepps’ urgent bass doing most of the work, Watson spins a tale of a man about to sink. “Well I had my first taste of whiskey/I had my first taste of love/Both got me high and twisted up inside/Only one way to go after up.”

No, this isn’t the beginning of some gigantic bummer. It has fun and good times, too.

For instance, “My Baby Makes Me Gravy” is a happy song of good country cookin’ and sex. “Drive Drive Drive” sounds a lot like Cash’s “Cry Cry Cry,” and “Gothenburg Train” has the feel of a classic train song.

Big Daddy
Big Daddy
Watson also does several character sketches. “George O’Dwyer” is the story of a hell-raising buddy of Watson’s who owned a recording studio in Austin. “Jonny at the Door” is a salute to a barroom bouncer, and “Big Daddy” is about a shoeshine man in Austin. (I got my shoes shined by Big Daddy when I was at the Broken Spoke for a Watson show last year.)

My favorite song on The Sun Sessions is “Elbow Grease, Spackle and Pine Sol.” The narrator is served his divorce papers, and he’s in his empty house, apologizing to his ex about holes in the wall and stains on the carpet.

At first a listener might think he’s regretting being a sloppy and possibly violent husband. But — in one of those wonderful twists you find in country-music classics like Leon Ashley’s “Laura (What’s He Got That I Ain’t Got)” and Willie Nelson’s “I Just Can’t Let You Say Goodbye” — you realize the narrator is holding a gun, and he’s apologizing for the mess he’s about to leave his former Mrs. to clean up.

One amazing thing about this album is that none of the 14 songs here reaches the three-minute mark. Nearly half of them are under two minutes. Watson knows that brevity sometimes packs a harder punch.

Also recommended:
TWO HOOTS & A HOLLER
RB & Two Hoots at Threadgill's last year
*  Come and Take It by Rick Broussard’s Two Hoots and a Holler. I know Matt Brooks, the guitar player for this band, through an online music-discussion board that I used to belong to starting back in the 1990s. I had never met him face to face, but for years he had been trying to get me to see his band when I went to Austin.

Somehow I never was able to arrange that — until last August, when I was at the Live Music Capital of the World and Matt’s band was playing a gig at Threadgill’s World Headquarters.

I was impressed. Broussard is a fine singer and songwriter, and the Hoots are a mighty tight country-rock band. They ought to be by now. Broussard started the group back in 1984. Members have changed and shuffled through the years, but Broussard has been at it long enough to know what he wants from his players. (And, showing what a small world it is, I learned that the fiddle player, Sean Orr, used to play with Joe West’s band when the pride of Lone Butte lived in Austin.)

Many of the songs they played the night I saw them are on this album. Among them are the Mexican-flavored opening cut, “I Cried and Cried the Day Doug Sahm Died.” It’s Broussard’s heartfelt tribute to a fellow San Antonio native.

There are some excellent honky-tonkers here, such as “Me Not Calling” and “Every Bit as Proud.” Maybe you haven’t heard of them, but Rick and the boys are big in Norway — at least the town of Halden, to which they pay a rocking tribute in “Halden (Is a Hell Raisin’ Town).” In an obscure historical reference to a Swedish monarch who was killed in battle there in 1718, Broussard sings, “Those people never go to bed/They shot King Karl in the head.”

With the help of fiddler Amy Farris, Broussard delivers a bluegrass sound on “Over My Head in Blue.” It’s a shift from the song that precedes it, “Love Me Truly,” a honky-tonk tune with echoes of British Invasion-era rock. But it works.

This group also plays one of the best Bob Dylan covers recorded in recent years. I didn’t think there was much else anyone could do with the song “The Times They Are A-Changin’,” but Broussard and the band rip through it with abandon, like a fun cross between The Pogues and Jason & The Scorchers.

I’m hoping Two Hoots and a Holler are playing next time I’m in Austin.

Monday, January 30, 2012

SF Opry's NM Centennial Show

The festivities at the Roundhouse today for the 100th anniversary of statehood for New Mexico made me realize I haven't posted the stream of my Jan. 6 Santa Fe Opry centennial set on this blog yet.

I'm going to start uploading some of my radio shows to Mixcloud in the weeks to come. More on that later.

Until then, Happy Birthday, Land of Enchantment!

Sunday, January 29, 2012

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, January 29, 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
No Fun by Iggy Pop
Love Train Express by Rocket from the Tombs
Caroleen by Pere Ubu
Tijuana Hit Squad by Deadbolt
You Better Find Out by Stomachmouths
Nightmare Blues by R.L. Burnside
Moneymaker by The Black Keys
Opus 17 (Don't You Worry 'Bout Me) by The Four Seasons

Shave Your Beard by Dengue Fever
Can't Hold On by Reigning Sound
I Got High by JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound
Black Snake Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Look Out Miss James by Richard Berry
Stop the Wedding by Etta James
Babblin' Brook by Andre Williams & The Goldstars
Cry Me a River Blues by Little Esther Phillips with The Johnny Otis Show
Wreck My Flow by The Dirtbombs

Pancakes by Mark Sultan
She's a Tiger by The Ding Dongs
Out the Door by Les Sexerinos
Too Much in Love by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Bow Down and Die by The Almighty Defenders
Growl by Johnny Kidd & The Pirates
Everything's Raising by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Who Put the Garlic in the Glue by NRBQ

I Told a Secret by Delaney Davidson
Hey Pachuco by Royal Crown Revue
Messin' With the Man by Muddy Waters
She Got the Devil in Her by Buddy Guy
Lord Bloodbathington by Kid Congo & the Pink Monkey Birds
Kickboxer Girl by The Black Smokers
Tootie Ma Is a Big Fine Thing by Preservation Hall Jazz Band & Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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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 ...