Sunday, May 21, 2023 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org
Here's my playlist :
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Old Man from the Mountain by Bryan & The Haggards featuring Dr. Eugene Chadbourne
Monster by Fred Schneider
No Other Girlby The Blasters
Bundle of Joy by The Dean Ween Group
Karate Monkey by The Woggles
Stroller Pollution by Quintron & Miss Pussycat
Daytime Satan by Robert Shredford
Wildest Cat In Town by Crazy Cavan & The Rhythm Rockers
Beginning To See The Light by The Velvet Underground
I guess he's Devolved into an old man now, (happens to the best of us), but
today Mark Mothersbaugh, the voice of Devo, turns 73 tomorrow.
Happy birthday, Spud Boy!
Mothersbaugh was born May 18, 1950 in Akron, Ohio. Attending Kent State University, he fell in with future Devos Gerald Casale and Bob Lewis.
Casale was at the May 4, 1970 where he saw two people he knew -- Allison Krause and Jeffrey Miller -- right after they'd been shot by Ohio National Guardsmen. That was impetus for creating Devo -- a band based on the concept of the "devolution" of the human race -- as Casale explained in The Washington Post in 2018.
Mothersbaugh, Casale and various other Devos (including at various points Mark's brothers Bob and Jim) performed around the area for several years. In 1976, they filmed the 9-minute The Truth About De-Evolution, which won a prize at the Ann Arbor Film Festival. It featured two Devo songs and an appearance by Mothersbaugh's dad, Robert Mothersbaugh, Sr. as "General Boy."
Here's a clip featuring the the original version of "Joko Homo," the first Devo song that asked the age-old musical question, "Are we not men?":
The film stirred the interest of David Bowie, who along with Brian Eno, produced the first Devo album, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!
The group's second album includes this bit of madness. I wonder whether Spud Boy ever found his "real tomato":
The only time I got to see Devo was at the 1996 Lollapalooza in Chandler,
Ariz. Devo was great, but many of the macho mosh-pit metal heads, didn't
appreciate them. This came following an awful Arizona dust storm that caused
The Ramones to cut their set short and postponed the rest of the show for a
couple of hours.
Between that and the regular July heat, anger was rising But
Mothersbaugh and crew seemed to feed off the foul energy. Following Devo's
set, Soundgarden came on, with singer Chris Cornell (RIP) scolding the
dumbfucks who's booed such a great band. (A not-very good-quality video
of
Devo's entire set
is up on Youtube. Nearly gave me PTSD just watching it.)
Here's "Uncontrollable Urge" from another '96 Lollapalooza show:
Getting back to the show I saw, what really got the metalhead mob angry
was when Mothersbaugh assumed his identity of Booji Boy. He ended that set with some confrontational humor, pulling what some said was bacon out of his diaper (and some assume was worse) and throwing it into the crowd.
So to close this birthday tribute, here's Mothersbaugh as Booji Boy in a
movie, Neil Young's
Human Highway:
Sunday, May 14, 2023 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org
Here's my playlist :
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Livin' For The Weekend by The Dirtbombs
Chantilly Lace by Jerry Lee Lewis
Crazy Mixed Up World by Nick Curran & The Nitelifes
Today I'm talking about a tune about another gypsy woman, a lady operating out of a
"quaint caravan" who "can look in the future and drive away all your fears.
"I see your bike ... it's someplace far away ...
it's in the Alamo
... in the basement!"
No, that's another fortune teller ...
This is about the best-known work of British songwriter
Billy Reid, "The Gypsy."
Basically it's a song about about an old fraud preying on desperate people. (Well, that's my framng.) The narrator here goes to see The Gypsy because he or she is worried about his or
her lover.
The Gypsy pounces!
... she looked in my hand and told me
That my lover would always be true
But the mark was rightly skeptical:
And yet in my heart I knew, dear
That somebody else was kissing you ...
And yet even so, the reassuring words along, (probably with the usual psychic mumbo jumbo), has gotten our lovelorn narrator hooked:
But I'll go there again 'cause I want to believe the Gypsy ...
There's one born every minute.
But don't get me wrong, I've loved this song ever since I heard the version by
Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs nearly 60 years ago.
Here's the original 1945 recording, performed by Welsh singer (and future wife
of James Bond actor Roger Moore) Dorothy Squires. She was Billy Reid's man
musical partner from the 30s through the early 50s.
Squire's version -- was titled "The Gipsy" -- has a
minute-long introductory verse not included in takes by other singers.
I sit alone and dream, dear
Dream of you night and day
Once you were here beside me
Now you are far away
I've had my fortune told me
Can I believe it's true?
Soon we shall be together
Living our life anew
Listen yourself:
But the song didn't make much of an impact on American ears until
The Ink Spots changed the "i" to a "y" and gave it their Ink Spot sheen:
Years before she saw the USA in her Chevrolet, Dinah Shore also wanted to
believe The Gypsy:
Louis Armstrong took The Gypsy to New Orleans (even though this was from a
concert in Chicago):
At least one doo-wop group, The Five Keys, ventured into that quaint caravan
for spiritual and romantic advice:
Here's that doo-wop colored Sam the Sham
& The Pharoahs version I mentioned above. This was on their second
album, which I still like even more than their first album with "Wooly Bully.":
For the past 20-plus years, my favorite version of "The Gypsy" is the one by Austin honky-tonker Cornell Hurd, which was on his album A Stagecoach Named Desire. Unfortunately it's apparently not on Youtube or any other place from which I can embed.
So instead, I'll go out with this honky-stomp version by another Texan, Doug Sahm with the Sir Douglas, from their 1971 album The Return Of Doug Saldaña:
Sunday, May 7, 2023 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org
Here's my playlist :
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Threat Landscape by Robert Shredford
Get Off The Air by Angry Samoans
Fighting the Good Fight by Råttanson
Life's Not Like The Movies by The Jackets
Ding Dong Daddy by Nick Shoulders
Backstage at the Boneyard by Waco Brothers
The Devil's Chasing Me by Reverend Horton Heat
Girls are Dancing on the Highway by Weird Omen
Guru by Loudon Wainwright III
Tonight by MC5
Sharkskin Suit by Wayne Kramer
Heed The Warning by The Thanes
Umbrella Man by Churchwood
This Is Hi-Fi by Mission of Burma
Bird Brain by Kevin Coyne
You Lied To Us by The Mekons 77
I Want What Holly's Got by The Manxx
Ode To Billy Joe by Joe Tex
Sally Go Round the Roses by Question Mark & The Mysterians
Wrecking Ball by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Voodoo Mirror by Iguana Death Cult
Route 90 by Clarence Garlow
A Better Mousetrap by Mucca Pazza
Love Grows Where Rosemary Goes by Edison Lighthouse
I Can't Refuse by The Orchids
Standard White Jesus by Timbuk 3
Too Many Rivers by Willie Nelson
I'll Walk Out by Miss Leslie
I Do Believe by Waylon Jennings
If Oh I Could Be With You by Nolan Strong & The Diablos
This One's From The Heart Tom Waits & Crystal Gayle
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis