Wednesday, May 06, 2015

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Do Not Adjust Your Computer, It's the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band


Back in the late 1960s in England there was a TV comedy show called Do Not Adjust Your Set, whose cast included Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin -- all three becoming members of a little comedy team called Monty Python shortly after the show was cancelled in 1969.

Another thing about DNAYS: Its house band was none other than The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, a group that had one foot in the Roaring '20s and the other in surreal rock 'n' roll. They performed a song (and sometimes helped out in the comedy skits) every week.

Originally called The Bonzo Dog Dada Band (and later just The Bonzo Dog Band), the group drew from traditional jazz, English Music Hall, novelty songs doo-wop, psychedelia and more. Among the members were Vivian Stanshall, Neil Innes, Rodney Slater, Roger Ruskin Spear and "Legs" Larry Smith.

The bond between the Bonzos and Monty Python would remain strong. Innes would perform with and write songs for Python. he and Idle would become members of The Rutles, a Beatles send-up that resulted in a TV movie, All You Need is Cash, and a soundtrack album.

I just stumbled across a stash of Bonzo Dog songs on YouTube from Do Not Adjust Your Set, which featured members of Monty Python. Here are a few of them that make for a perfect Wacky Wednesday.

I first heard this on the Urban Spaceman album when I was in high school.



The Bonzos performed this song in the strip-joint scene in The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour. (And a certain alt-rock band from the '90s took its name from this song.)



And speaking of The Beatles, I always wondered whether John Lennon got his idea for "Bungalow Bill" from this next one.



And here's one I wasn't familiar with:




Big hat tip to John Smallwood, who is an even bigger Bonzo Dog fan than me.


UPDATED Nov. 15, 2015. Most of the original videos I posted were yanked by the YouTube police. I've replaced them with versions that hopefully will be around for awhile.

Sunday, May 03, 2015

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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Sunday, May 2, 2015 
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

Here's the playlist below

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres


Volare by The Drifting Mines

Buzz the Jerk by The Pretty Things

Shortnin' Bread by The Cramps

Daddy You Lied to Me by The Del Moroccos

I'm Cryin' by The Animals

A New Wave by Sleater-Kinney

Look at Little Sister by The Sonics

Berlin by Dickie B. Hardy

Out of This World by The Rezillos

Reconsider Baby by Elvis Presley


Hot Corner by B-52s

Spittin' Fire by The Sons of Hercules

Midnight Hour by Question Mark & The Mysterians

White Jesus by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion

The Six Rat Rovers by Paddy & The Rats

Til the End of the Day by The Kinks

Shotgun John by Hundered Year Flood

Greasy Meal by Lawn Chair Kings

Hawkeye the Gnu by Bonzo Dog Doo-Da Band


Ruby Lee / See That My Grave is Kept Clean by B.B.  King

Little by Little by Paula Rhae McDonald

She Caught the Katie by Taj Mahal

I'm the Wolf by Howlin' Wolf

Goin' Down South by Markus James


Don't Pretend You Don't Know by Dinosaur Jr. 

Moonlight Motel by The Gun Club

Throw it Back by Jody Porter

Telepathic by The Gories

Bastards of Young by The Replacements

Harry Hippie by Bobby Womack

That's Life by Van Morrison

CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, May 01, 2015

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


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Friday, May 1, 2015 
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

Here's my playlist below:

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens

May Day by Jack Hardy

Red Red Robin by Rosie Flores

Cry Baby Cry by The Banditos

Long Way From Home by Texas Martha & The House of Twang

Tennessee Stomp by Hillbilly Casino

Cracklings by The Gourds

The Ride by David Allen Coe

Cousin Cupcake's Got the Blues by Rev. Billy C. Wirtz


It Wasn't You by Slackeye Slim

Gee, Oogle It Baby by Reno Jack

Down Among the Dead Men by Steve Train & His Bad Habits

Money For Drugs by The Beaumonts

Killed a Chicken Last Night by Scott H. Biram

Hallelujah Band by Eilen Jewell

Two Dollar Bill by Paula Rhae McDonald

Pass the Booze by Ernest Tubb


Beans and Make Believe by Mose McCormack

The Crawdad Song by The Meat Purveyors

Bright Lights and Country a Music by Rhonda Vincent

Breathing Room by Jim White vs. The Packway Handle Band

Let's Invite Them Over by Southern Culture on the Skids

I Push Right Over by Robbie Fulks

A Little Wind Could Blow Me Away by Peter Case

Pretty Peggy-O by The Grateful Dead

State Street Rag by Louie Bluie


I Can Talk to Crows by Chipper Thompson

Far From Any Road by The Handsome Family

Busted by Two Tons of Steel

My Morphine by David Johansen & The Harry Smiths

Funny How Time Slips Away by Willie Nelson

Lulu's Back in Town by Leon Redbone

CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, April 30, 2015

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Come Running Down The Stairs


I've got nothing against Simon & Garfunkel. I like a lot of their tunes.

But it's inconceivable to me how they managed to take a perfectly rough and tumble folk song that ends with a line saying, "If ever I return, all your cities I will burn ..." and make it sound wimpy.

But that's what they did with "Peggy O," which appeared on Paul & Artie's first album, Wednesday Morning 3 A.M.

I'm not even going to post the video of this useless version. In fact, I probably shouldn't have even mentioned it. The only reason I do is because it just so happens that Simon & Garfunkel's was the first "Peggy O" I ever heard.

I never liked that track, but I have to admit, that line with the arson threat always did intrigue me. Basically it's the story of a soldier, "our captain," who falls for "a lady like a dove" and promises to take her "in a carriage" to " places far and strange."

But something goes wrong. Apparently Peggy rejects him and his troops are threatening to burn all the cities and destroy "all the ladies in the ar-e-o."

Breaking up is hard to do.

"Peggy O" is the American descendant of an old Scottish song, going back at least to the late 18th Century, called "The Bonnie Lass O' Fyvie." Fyvie is a small town with a castle in the Aberdeenshire region of Scotland,

Some versions of the song appear under the titles of "Bonnie Barbara-O," "Pretty Peggy of Derby," and "Peggy Sue." O.K., just kidding about that last one,

The first known recording of the song was by an Aberdeenshire farmer named John Strachan.  Alan Lomax got him on tape in 1951. A few years later, Tommy Makem & The Clancy Brothers recorded it and called the song "The Maid of Fife-E-O."

Other folkies on both sides of the Atlantic began playing it. I like this one recorded by The Dubiners in the early 1960s.



Bob Dylan included the song, which he called "Pretty Peggy-O," on his debut album in 1962. His version was influenced by The Clancys'. But he made it crazier.

Unlike Simon & Garfunkel's pristine version, Dylan burst out of the gate joking on this one. "I've been around this whole country, but I never yet found Fenneario," he says at the beginning of the track.

He's changed the setting from ancient Scotland to contemporary America. He sings of the love-lorn captain (who has been demoted to lieutenant here) "The lieutenant he has gone, long gone
He's a-riding down in Texas with the rodeo."

And this live version is even funnier. (I'm fallin' down the stairs, pretty Peggy-O ...")



But after all these years, my favorite version is that of The Grateful Dead. Throwing in some well-placed minor chords, they create a heartbreaking and haunting melody. The local seems ambiguous, though when singing "Sweet William he is dead," he reveals, "He's buried in the Louisiana country-o."

I first heard the Dead do this song at a 1977 concert in Albuquerque. Seventeen years later I saw them play it again in Las Vegas -- which would turn out to be the last time I'd see the Grateful Dead play.

Here's a video of the song from that concert.



For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Louie-Louiepalooza


UPDATE 4--30-15: My friend Billy pointed out that the photo to the left is not the original Kingsmen. It's "Jack Ely & The Kingsmen," which Ely formed after he split from the original band. He was forced to change the name to "The Courtmen."

This Wacky Wednesday we pay tribute to Jack Ely, who, backed by his band at the time, The Kingsmen, recorded a strange little hit called "Louie Louie."

Ely died Monday at his home in Redmond, Oregon, He was 71. Here's a story in The Seattle Times.

The Kingsmen weren't the first to record "Louie  Louie. That honor goes to the songwriter and L.A. R&B titan, Richard Berry. And The Kingsmen wasn't even the firt pacific Northwest Band to record it. Was it The Wailers or was it Little Bill & The Bluenotes who first put it to wax? And Paul Revere & The Raiders weren't far behind. (Here's a brief early history of the song from a website devoted to "Louie Louie." )

But The Kingsmen  did the definite "Louie Louie." They had the first real hit with the song (even though Ely left the band not long after they recorded it.) They're the ones who inspired the FBI to investigate the song. (Skip to the bottom of this post for more on this shining highlight in FBI history.)

In honor of Jack Ely here's a whole stinkin' mess of "Louie," starting with Richard Berry's original.

Come on, let's give it to him RIGHT NOW!



Any excuse to post a Sonics song. They recorded it in the '60s. This is a more recent live version.



Ike & Tina Turner took a stab at it.



Iggy & The Stooges did a completely filthy version (captured on the Metallic K.O. album.) But by the early '90s, Iggy had rewritten the lyrics to make the song about the fall of the Soviet Union. Or something.



Frank Zappa teamed up with Howard Stern in the late '80s to screw around with it,



Motorhead did it:



So did The Clash.



Brave Combo turned it into a cha cha cha.



Here's an easy listening rendition by The Sandpipers IF YOU DARE!



And of course, The Kingsmen!



And to make Wacky Wednesday even wackier, here are documents from the FBI's 1964 investigation into The Kingsmen's "Louie Louie." They wanted to make certain that Ely's unique vocals weren't hiding secret obscene lyics that might harm the children. J. Edgar's boys eventually determined "Louie Louie" was "unintelligible at any speed."

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TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 13, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Em...