Sunday, October 27, 2013
NOOOOOOO! Lou Reed is Dead
Lou Reed, founding member of The Velvet Underground and all-around rock 'n' roll bad-ass is dead.
According to Rolling Stone the cause of death isn't known yet, but Reed received a liver transplant earlier this year.
I only got to see him live once, in Austin in 1996 when he was promoting his album Set the Twilight Reeling. Damn it, I'd like to write now that it was the greatest concert of my life. It wasn't. It was a good show, but just a couple of nights later his contemporary Iggy Pop did a free show right off Sixth Street and his crazy energy basically wiped Lou Reed's more sedate concert out of my memory.
Still, I cried when I learned that Lou Reed had died. I thought the surly son of a bitch was immortal.
I'll give Lou a proper send-off tonight on Terrell's Sound World. (10 p.m Mountain Time on KSFR, streaming HERE.)
Until them, here's a couple of Lou videos
Friday, October 25, 2013
THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST
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
(It Was a) Monster Holiday by Buck Owens
The Lonesomest Ghost in Town by Southern Culture on the Skids
What's a Simple Man to Do by Steve Earle
Fightin' Side of Me by Bryan & The Haggards with Eugene Chadbourne
Workin' Man's Blues by Merle Haggard
Take a Letter Maria by New Riders of the Purple Sage
You and Your Damn Dream by Pat Todd & The Rank Outsiders
Dark Hollow by Bill Monroe & The Bluegrass Boys
Memories of Kennedy by Hasil Adkins
Dr. Demon & The Robot Girl by Captain Clegg & The Nightcrawlers
Demon in My Head by Joe Buck Yourself
Take an Old Cold Tater and Wait by Little Jimmy Dickens
Devil at Red's by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Ham Tramck Mama by The Volebeats
Marie Laveau by Bobby Bare
Voodoo Queen Marie by The Du-Tells
My Untrue Cowgirl by The Jewel Cowboys
Always a Friend to You by Alejandro Escovedo
According to Law by Carol S. Johnson
Junkyard in the Sun by Butch Hancock
Cowboy Boots by Dale Watson
Junkyard in the Sun by Butch Hancock
Cowboy Boots by Dale Watson
Thwarted by Rob Nikowlewski
Ghost Riders in the Sky by Last Mile Ramblers
Let's Go Burn Ole Nashville Down by Mojo Nixon & Jello Biafra
Never Be Again by Ugly Valley Boys
Willie the Weeper by Dave Van Ronk
Bringing Mary Home by Mac Wiseman
Big Joe & The Phantom 309 by Red Sovine
The Ghost and Honest Joe by Pee Wee King
Making Believe by Willie Nelson & Brandi Carlisle
Making Believe by Willie Nelson & Brandi Carlisle
That's Neat, That's Nice by NRBQ
I Never Go Around Mirrors by Lefty Frizzell
Buffalo Gals by J. Michael Combs
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
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets
Like the Santa Fe Opry Facebook page
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list
TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Halloween Tingles
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
Oct. 25, 2013
The holiday season is upon us, the time for trick-or-treating, bobbing for apples with razor blades and communicating with the spirits of the dead. And for listening to deliciously tacky rock 'n' roll like that found on Mondo Zombie Boogaloo.
This definitive Halloween collection of the year features the work of my three favorite bands on North Carolina's Yep Roc label, The Fleshtones, a New York garage band that’s been around since the ‘70s; Southern Culture on the Skids, a North Carolina trio that specializes in a raw Dixie-fried mix of rockabilly, swamp rock, country and surf music in songs about fried chicken, stock-car races and cheap liquor; and Los Straitjackets, an instrumental band known for wearing masks (Mexican wrestling masks) even when it’s not Halloween.
It's just what the (mad) doctor ordered. The album even has an cover by Steve Blickenstaff, best known. for creating the groovy ghoulie cover of The Cramps’ 1984 album Bad Music for Bad People, as well as doing the art for last year's GaragePunk Hideout Halloween compilation, Garage Monsters.
The good news is that the three Mondo Zombie bands are touring together. The bad news is that they aren't playing anywhere near Santa Fe, so this album will have to suffice for those of us in the rock 'n' roll hinterlands.
Yes, I do love all three of these bands, and all of them make worthy contributions to this compilation. But I have to say the best songs here are by Southern Culture on the Skids. I never knew until a couple of years ago, when they released a ready-for-Halloween album called Zombified, how fond SCOTS is of monster songs. The five new tracks of theirs on Mondo Zombie Boogaloo are swampy, twangy treasures. These include a cover of "Goo Goo Muck," a song made famous by The Cramps, but originally done by Ronnie Cook & The Gaylads. Mary Huff of Southern Culture sings it sexy.
They also do a western-flavored tune called "The Loneliest Ghost in Town," as well as "Demon Death," which starts out with a squall of feedback before settling into a Deadbolt-style doom-swamp groove, with Rick Miller speaking nearly all the lyrics.
But my favorite Southern Culture tune here is "Tingler Blues," which starts out with an audio clip from The Tingler, a 1959 Vincent Price movie best known for its promotional gimmick of installing vibrating devices in theater seats that simulating “tingling” in the scary parts of the movie. SCOTS’ Rick Miller sings in his lowest register: “I’ve got a monster living inside of me / It’s a killer and it won’t let me be …”
The least valuable SCOTS number here is an instrumental called "La Marcha De Los Cabarones." It's not bad, but when you're sharing an album with Los Straitjackets, you probably ought to leave the instrumentals to them.
And indeed, the musical luchadors from Memphis have some dandy instrumentals on Mondo Zombie Boogaloo. Most are theme songs from films like “Halloween,” “Young Frankenstein,” (a beautiful, almost Latin-sounding melody on that one) and, yes, “Ghostbusters.”
But even better is “It’s Monster Surfing Time,” a cover of a song by The Deadly Ones, a surf band from the ‘60s led by Joe South, (who later found fame writing songs like “The Games People Play” and “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.”)
Unfortunately, The Fleshtones is the least utilized of the three bands here. While the other two groups each have five tracks of their own on this album, The Fleshtones only have four. And one of those, “Ghoulman Confidential,” (which sounds like a crazy mash-up of “Short Shorts” and the Batman theme) was on a previous Yep Roc Halloween sampler, Rockin’ Bones, several years ago.
But the contributions of The Fleshtones are essential to the album especially “Sock It To Me Baby (in the House of Shock),” a silly ‘60s monster song originally done by a band called The Animated Sounds and “Haunted Hipster,” a Fleshtones original, which is a back-handed ode to the universally loathed modern-day hipster (“You think you’re cool, but you are dead too …”)
All three bands contribute to “Que Monstruos Son,” a Spanish version of “The Monster Mash” with The Fleshtone’s Keith Streng providing the Bobby “Boris” Picket imitation.
(This isn’t the first “Monster Mash” en Espanol. Search Youtube and you’ll find several videos of Mexican singer Luis "Vivi" Hernandez performing his hit he called "El Monstruo.")
Like the vampires and zombies who haunt this album, Halloween spook rock cannot die. Long may it rattle your bones.
Also recommended:
* Merles Just Want to Have Fun by Bryan & The Haggards featuring Eugene Chadbourne. I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of Merle Haggard fans listening to this album went away thinking that these guys were making fun of ol’ Hag considering some of the off-key horns and Bizzaro World solos that color this album.
But I don’t think that’s the case. Chadbourne, an avant garde guitarist, and sax maniac Bryan Murray indeed are having a lot of fun with the material – primarily Haggard songs and a medley of Bob Wills songs that Merle has covered, but they’re not making fun. But even though Hag didn’t do it this a way, this is a true tribute done with love in the heart.
Neither Chadbourne and Murray are country musicians, but both love country music – even though in their hands the music gets mutated into something new.
The first time I ever heard Chadbourne on the radio, she was doing a crazy Johnny Paycheck medley. As for Murray, this ain’t his first Merle rodeo. Bryan & The Haggards have a couple of previous albums filled with songs by their namesake.
On the opening cut, “The Fightin’ Side of Me,” one of Haggard’s most belligerent numbers is turned into what sounds like a drunken polka (Chadbourne begins the second verse, “I read about some squirrelly guy …” then abruptly changes the lyrics: “That’s me! I don’t believe in fightin’ …” Soon the tune melts down into jazz cacophony. Then there’s “The Old Man from the Mountain,” which Chadbourne and crew do as an insane rocker.
Other highlights include the aforementioned Bob Wills medley and “Listening to Wind,” which retains the song’s lovely melody even with the off-kilter jazz embellishments. And while the album starts with “The Fightin’ Side of Me,” it ends with “That’s the News,” a relatively recent Haggard song, in which the Okie from Muskogee had begun to question the endless wars of the 21st Century.
* Haunted podcast: Just in time for your Halloween party comes the sixth annual Big Enchilada Spooktacular. It's already terrifying people all over the internet.
Here's some Youtubes:
(This Los Straitjackets song's not actually on the Mondo Zombies album, but who cares?)
Here's Luis "Vivi" Hernandez
Start tinglin'
Oct. 25, 2013

This definitive Halloween collection of the year features the work of my three favorite bands on North Carolina's Yep Roc label, The Fleshtones, a New York garage band that’s been around since the ‘70s; Southern Culture on the Skids, a North Carolina trio that specializes in a raw Dixie-fried mix of rockabilly, swamp rock, country and surf music in songs about fried chicken, stock-car races and cheap liquor; and Los Straitjackets, an instrumental band known for wearing masks (Mexican wrestling masks) even when it’s not Halloween.
It's just what the (mad) doctor ordered. The album even has an cover by Steve Blickenstaff, best known. for creating the groovy ghoulie cover of The Cramps’ 1984 album Bad Music for Bad People, as well as doing the art for last year's GaragePunk Hideout Halloween compilation, Garage Monsters.
The good news is that the three Mondo Zombie bands are touring together. The bad news is that they aren't playing anywhere near Santa Fe, so this album will have to suffice for those of us in the rock 'n' roll hinterlands.

They also do a western-flavored tune called "The Loneliest Ghost in Town," as well as "Demon Death," which starts out with a squall of feedback before settling into a Deadbolt-style doom-swamp groove, with Rick Miller speaking nearly all the lyrics.
But my favorite Southern Culture tune here is "Tingler Blues," which starts out with an audio clip from The Tingler, a 1959 Vincent Price movie best known for its promotional gimmick of installing vibrating devices in theater seats that simulating “tingling” in the scary parts of the movie. SCOTS’ Rick Miller sings in his lowest register: “I’ve got a monster living inside of me / It’s a killer and it won’t let me be …”
The least valuable SCOTS number here is an instrumental called "La Marcha De Los Cabarones." It's not bad, but when you're sharing an album with Los Straitjackets, you probably ought to leave the instrumentals to them.
And indeed, the musical luchadors from Memphis have some dandy instrumentals on Mondo Zombie Boogaloo. Most are theme songs from films like “Halloween,” “Young Frankenstein,” (a beautiful, almost Latin-sounding melody on that one) and, yes, “Ghostbusters.”
But even better is “It’s Monster Surfing Time,” a cover of a song by The Deadly Ones, a surf band from the ‘60s led by Joe South, (who later found fame writing songs like “The Games People Play” and “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.”)
Unfortunately, The Fleshtones is the least utilized of the three bands here. While the other two groups each have five tracks of their own on this album, The Fleshtones only have four. And one of those, “Ghoulman Confidential,” (which sounds like a crazy mash-up of “Short Shorts” and the Batman theme) was on a previous Yep Roc Halloween sampler, Rockin’ Bones, several years ago.

All three bands contribute to “Que Monstruos Son,” a Spanish version of “The Monster Mash” with The Fleshtone’s Keith Streng providing the Bobby “Boris” Picket imitation.
(This isn’t the first “Monster Mash” en Espanol. Search Youtube and you’ll find several videos of Mexican singer Luis "Vivi" Hernandez performing his hit he called "El Monstruo.")
Like the vampires and zombies who haunt this album, Halloween spook rock cannot die. Long may it rattle your bones.
Also recommended:
* Merles Just Want to Have Fun by Bryan & The Haggards featuring Eugene Chadbourne. I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of Merle Haggard fans listening to this album went away thinking that these guys were making fun of ol’ Hag considering some of the off-key horns and Bizzaro World solos that color this album.
But I don’t think that’s the case. Chadbourne, an avant garde guitarist, and sax maniac Bryan Murray indeed are having a lot of fun with the material – primarily Haggard songs and a medley of Bob Wills songs that Merle has covered, but they’re not making fun. But even though Hag didn’t do it this a way, this is a true tribute done with love in the heart.

The first time I ever heard Chadbourne on the radio, she was doing a crazy Johnny Paycheck medley. As for Murray, this ain’t his first Merle rodeo. Bryan & The Haggards have a couple of previous albums filled with songs by their namesake.
On the opening cut, “The Fightin’ Side of Me,” one of Haggard’s most belligerent numbers is turned into what sounds like a drunken polka (Chadbourne begins the second verse, “I read about some squirrelly guy …” then abruptly changes the lyrics: “That’s me! I don’t believe in fightin’ …” Soon the tune melts down into jazz cacophony. Then there’s “The Old Man from the Mountain,” which Chadbourne and crew do as an insane rocker.
Other highlights include the aforementioned Bob Wills medley and “Listening to Wind,” which retains the song’s lovely melody even with the off-kilter jazz embellishments. And while the album starts with “The Fightin’ Side of Me,” it ends with “That’s the News,” a relatively recent Haggard song, in which the Okie from Muskogee had begun to question the endless wars of the 21st Century.
* Haunted podcast: Just in time for your Halloween party comes the sixth annual Big Enchilada Spooktacular. It's already terrifying people all over the internet.
Here's some Youtubes:
(This Los Straitjackets song's not actually on the Mondo Zombies album, but who cares?)
Here's Luis "Vivi" Hernandez
Start tinglin'
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Thursday Music Treat: Dave Alvin Live in Santa Fe, 2008
This is Alvin at SF Brewing in 2009 |
Messing around on the Live Music Archive last night, I discovered this November 2008 show.
It's Dave Alvin, doing an acoustic show at the Gig Performance Space in November 2008 with guitarist Chris Miller.
There's a bunch of great tunes here, including non-electric takes on rockers like "Ash Grove" and "Jubilee Train," which normally are performed with a full band.
And you'll hear Alvin's dry humor. At one point when he's having a little trouble tuning his guitar, he says, "Ah hell, that's close close enough. It's only Santa Fe. You know, it's not like the bowling alley in Farmington, where people are discerning."
You can listen to the show here or go to The Live Music Archive and down any or all of the songs. Enjoy!
Sunday, October 20, 2013
TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
Check out the brand new Big Enchilada podcast, the 2013 Spooktacular. It's free at www.bigenchiladapodcast.com
Sunday, Oct. 21, 2013
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
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
Sock it to Me Baby (in the House of Shock) by The Fleshtones
Sugar on Top by The Dirtbombs
Many Times Worse Than Los Tentatkills
Single Again by The Fiery Furnaces
Watch Your Mouth by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Dog Faced Boy by The Eels
Dog Faced Boy by The Eels
At the Gates by The Night Beats
Electrocuted Blues by The Mooney Suzuki
Electrocuted Blues by The Mooney Suzuki
Dregs by Bass Drum of Death
It's Too Soon to Know by Irma Thomas
Gilligan's Island by Manic Hispanic
I Think of Demons by Roky Erikson & The Aliens
Death Train Blues by Daddy Longlegs
Death Train Blues by Daddy Longlegs
Jukebox by Left Lane Cruiser
The Bag I'm In by Big Foot Chester
I'm Sad About It by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Jump into the River. By The A-Bones with Roy Loney
Ninety Nine (Minimalist Mix) by Figures of Light
To the Other Woman ( I'm the Other Woman) by Sandra Phillips
Plastered To the Wall (Higher than the Ceiling) by Swamp Dogg)
Big Bad John by Big John Hamilton
Big Bad John by Big John Hamilton
If He Walked Today by Wolf Moon
The Hipster by Black Joe Lewis
Soul Power by Walter Washington & The Soul Powers
Lonely Street by Clarence "Frogman" Henry
Kiss Yourself for Me by Doris Allen
Vinon So Minsou by Oinsou Corneille & Black Santiago
Don't Be Afraid of the Dark by The Sonics
The Rad Lord's Return by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkeybirds
World of Freaks by Harry Perry
World of Freaks by Harry Perry
River of Blood by the Black Angels
Pussywhipped by Johnny Dowd
Pussywhipped by Johnny Dowd
The House of Blue Lights by Don Covay
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Like the Terrell's Sound World Facebook page
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Like the Terrell's Sound World Facebook page
Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
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TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
Sunday, August 10, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell ...

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