Wednesday, August 12, 2015

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Watergate in Song

One of Ralph Steadman's many Nixon drawings
This past Sunday was the 41st anniversary of the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon.

I was but a lad ...

Nixon was driven from power by what became known as the Watergate scandal.

Watergate, as it turns out, inspired a number of songs in the realms of blues, soul, country and rock, several of which are included here. Some were bitchen tunes by great artists. Some aren't. You decide which is which.

Let's start out with the great Howlin' Wolf. His "Watergate Blues" celebrated Frank Wills, the security guard at the Watergate who discovered the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters.




Another "Watergate Blues" is a wry little country tune by Tom T. Hall. But by the last verse the Storyteller gets pretty serious. The melody is lifted from the song "White House Blues" (performed by Charlie Poole, Bill Monroe and others), which was about the assassination of President McKinley



Fred Wesley, best known for his work with James Brown did "Rockin' Funky Watergate" with The New J.B.s

 

 Even better is proto-rapper Gil Scott Heron's caustic "H2O-gate Blues."



I'm not really familiar with bluesman Bobo Jenkins, but his "Watergate Blues" is pretty spooky. Listen closely and at the 1:03 mark you can hear a phone ringing.



Here's an obscure country singer named Les Waldroop applying some Cash-style Chunka chunka to the Watergate saga. It's called "Watergate Bugs." (Update 8-9-2017: The only version currently on Youtube has a second Waldroop song  attached.)



This one, by someone called "The Creep" is just plain tacky.



And here is some incisive commentary from sampling pioneer Dicky Goodman.



Do you ever get Dick Nixon mixed up with Billy Jack? Me neither. But this band, appropriately called The Dick Nixons, did.



So now if there were some scandal taking place here they'd call it "Watergate-gate"
They say that on a full moon night you can see Nixon's ghost
 peering out of a sixth foot window of the Watergate

Monday, August 10, 2015

Tony Gilkyson & Friends at Skylight Tuesday

Gilkyson at Railyard in June
A few weeks ago former Santa Fe musician Tony Gilkyson made a rare local appearance at the Make Music Santa Fe show at the Railyard Plaza.

Well he's back.

Tony -- who has been a member of Lone Justice, X and Chuck E. Weiss's G-d Damn Liars-- is playing at Skylight Tuesday night.

He'll be playing with a band made up of Santa Fe all-star cronies including  David Gilliland, Arlen Johnson, Mark Clark, and Steve Lindsay, who is visiting Santa Fe after several years in exile.

Lindsay told me, "We'll be unrehearsed and winging it, but they are all great players and it's a one-off occasion so it might even be OK. "

I bet he's right. Show starts 7:30 pm Tuesday.

Sunday, August 09, 2015

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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Sunday, Aug. 9, 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

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

Better Off by The Routes

Putty in Your Hands by The Detroit Cobras

Andres by L7

House on Fire by The Electric Mess

Rogue Planet by Thee Oh Sees

Man With Soul by Alex Maiorano & The Black Tales

I Wanna Be a Girl by King Khan & The Shrines

Dog Tired by Wiley & The Checkmates

Want More by J.C. Brooks & The Uptown Sound

Katy Didn't by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages

Little Girl by John & Jackie

 

Duende by Churchwood

Chupacabra Rock 'n' Roll by The Blood-Drained Cows

Little Electric Chair by Iggy & The Stooges

Heart Attack and Vine by Tom Waits

Shy Guy by Juke Joint Pimps

Diddy Wah Diddy by Ty Segall

Shout Bama Lama by The Detroit Cobras

Sucker Punch by New Bomb Turks

 

Drug Through the Mud by Joe "King" Carrasco

Snake Drive by R.L. Burnside

Wax Dummy by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion

Saved by Boss Hog

Fire on the Moon by The Bell-Rays

My Baby's Comin' Home by Big Clyde Allen & His Movin' Masters

Sugar on Top by The Dirtbombs

Doug the Thug by The 99ers

Funny by The Black Lips

 

The Other Side of This Life by Jefferson Airplane

Crazy West Virginia Mutant Water Woman Blues by The Slow Poisoner

Broken Bones & Pocket Change by St. Paul & The Broken Bones

Magic Touch by Sam The Sham & The Pharaohs

CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, August 07, 2015

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

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Friday, August 8, 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 :

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens

Maybelle by Jackie Cray

Out All Night by The Riptones

The Holygram's Song (Back From The Shadows Again) by The Firesign Theatre

A Day at a Time by Dale Watson

Maybe Little Baby by George Jones

I'll Be There if Ever You Want Me by The Rizdales

Rated X by Loretta Lynn

Cowboy in Flames by The Waco Brothers

Thank You Lord by James Hand

Ballad of Waterhole #3 by Roger Miller

 

Alone And Forsaken Social Distortion

Another Great Dream Of You by Eric Hisaw

Sleep With A Stranger by Nikki Lane

Choctaw Bingo by James McMurtry & The Heartless Bastards

One Road More by Butch Hancock & Jimmie Dale Gilmore

Big Fat Nuthin by The Bottle Rockets

I Want to Be a Cowgirl's Sweetheart by Lynn Anderson

 

The Breeze by Banditos

Lampshade On by Dustbowl Revival

Bad Man by The Appleseed Collective

Back in the Goodle Days by John Hartford

Cool Arrow by The Hickoids

The Great Joe Bob by Terry Allen

Jamie Was a Boozer by Joe West & The Sinners

 

There Must Be Someone by The Byrds

Where the Wind Will Let Me Go by Slackeye Slim

(Give Me) One More Mile by Peter Case

Donna on My Mind by Robbie Fulks

Left Hand Cigarette Blues by Trailer Bride

Storms Never Last by Waylon Jennings & Jessie Colter

CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, August 06, 2015

THROWBACK THURSDAY: The Strange Allure of Moonlight Bay

This is one of those great songs that I used to assume was part of every American's DNA. I'm talking about tunes like "The Man on the Flying Trapeze," "I'll See You in My Dreams,"  "Shine on Harvest Moon" or "I'm in the Mood For Love."

Notice I said "used to assume." Maybe I'm getting old and cynical, but these days I wonder if many people under the age of, say, 40 would even recognize those songs.

Kids these days ...

But I didn't come here to grumble. I came to celebrate one of those great old songs, one that pops in and out of my skull when I least expect it:

"Moonlight Bay"

The song, originally published in 1912, features lyrics written by Edward Madden and music by Percy Wenrich.

So where is Moonlight Bay? I found a Moonlight Bay Resort & Campground in Minnesotta. And there is a Moonlight Bay Resort on Spider Lake in Traverse, Mich. Somehow I think these were named for the song, not the other way around. And why didn't anyone ever write, "We were sailing along on Spider Lake ..." ??

The lyrics to "Moonlight Bay" are below. You probably won't recognize the verse. I suspect most people who know the song are familiar only with the chorus.

Voices hum, crooning over Moonlight Bay
Banjos strum, tuning while the moonbeams play

All alone, unknown they find me
Memories like these remind me
Of the girl I left behind me
Down on Moonlight Bay

Chorus
We were sailing along
On Moonlight Bay
We could hear the voices ringing
They seemed to say:
"You have stolen her heart"
"Now don't go 'way!"
As we sang love's old sweet song
On Moonlight Bay

Candle lights gleaming on the silent shore
Lonely nights, dreaming till we meet once more
Far apart, her heart, is yearning
With a sigh for my returning
With the light of love still burning
As in of days of yore


I'm not 100 percent sure this is the earliest version on record, but the American Quartet, featuring Billy Murray, a huge star in his day, recorded it in 1913.



Skip ahead a little more than 30 years, and we find Bing Crosby singing it with a vocal quartet called
The Charioteers -- a group that started out singing gospel but later branching out in to pop and jazz.
The Charioteers was the studio chorus from on der Bingle's Kraft Music Hall between 1942 and 1946. (A few years later Crosby recorded it with his son Gary in a faux Dixieland style.)



In the 1951 Doris Day vehicle called On Moonlight Bay, leading man Gordon MacRae, following a smug tirade against baseball, gives a harsh review of the song that gave the movie its title. My favorite line is when Bow-tie Daddy tells popcorn muching Doris, "That must have been written by a man with a glass of beer in one hand and a rhyming dictionary in the other."



Speaking of beer, often, epecially in cartoons, "Moonlight Bay" is associated with sentimental drunks. In this Porky Pig clip a bunch of drunken cats serenade. (UPDATE: The original video posted featured drunken fish. That one disappeared from YouTube.)



And in this early '60s British variety show, the comedy team of Morecambe & Wise team up with the Fab Moptops to sing ... you guessed it!



And now we have this guy:




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

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

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