Wednesday, July 12, 2023

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Mash-Ups for the Mind and Body

How long has it been since I posted a bunch of mash-ups?

About three months, I think.

But as the Wolf Brand Chili guy would say, "Well friend, that's too long."

So here ya go!

Let's start out with a soul-metal mash (by the masterful Bill McClintock) featuring The Temptations and Danzig:


Another McClintock soul/metal mash-up, this one featuring Edwin Starr and Slayer:


Creedence Clearwater Revival and The Velvet Underground go together better than you might think:


True story: Jim Morrison faked his death and reemerged in the early '90s to team up with Nirvana. (Then he murdered Kurt Cobain!)

Speaking of the '90s, anyone out there have nostalgia for commercial grunge? Me neither. But here's a pretty good mash-up of what they used to call "alternative rock" during the Clinton era:


More fun with mash-ups from this blog, HEREHERE, HERE, HERE and HERE


Sunday, July 09, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, July 9, 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
Back from the Shadows Again by Firesign Theatre
Home by Iggy Pop
American Music by Dave Alvin & The Guilty Men
Let's Get The Band Back Together by Lucinda Williams
Creatures of Culture by The Minks
Surfin' the Lake by Sex Hogs II
Taking Care of My Home by Churchwood 

Tomahawk by Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives
Moaning Myrtle by Robert Shredford 
Fisticuffs by Primus
Manny's Bones by Los Lobos
Don't Blow Your Mind by The Spiders
My Evil Twin by Deano & Jo
I Had My Hopes Up High by Joe Ely
Devil's Right Hand by Steve Earle

Tower Of Song by Tom Jones 
Tom Jones Levitation by Jon Langford
The Hurrier I Go the Behinder I Get by The Last Mile Ramblers
Drinka Little Poison (4 U Die) by Soul Rebels Brass Band with John Mooney 
Party While You Still Can by Shinyribs
No Mistakes by Sarah Shook & The Disarmers
How Lew Sin Ate by Dr. West's Medicine Show & Junk Band 

Crooked River by Eilen Jewell 
Like Strangers by The Everly Brothers 
Mississippi by The Cactus Blossoms
Crazy Clown Time by David Lynch
Death Of A Clown by The Kinks 
Unsatisfied by The Replacements
One of the Unsatisfied by Lacy J. Dalton
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Instrumental "bed" music tonight by Mucca Pazza


Wednesday, July 05, 2023

WACKY WEDNESDAY: A Vacation Quickie -- Just a few Doo-wop Novelty Songs

The Golden Era of The Doowops series on Relic Records has been
a major source of doo-wop for me for several months now


Howdy gentle readers. By the time you read this, I'll probably be heading for the airport so I can return to New Mexico from my vacation.

So for this Wacky Wednesday I'll just  present a bunch of doo-wop novelty tunes for your listening pleasure.

Let's start off with Lydia Larson & The River Rovers. This classic ode to a chrome-dome will make you want to shave your head:

Hey, battle axes need love too, no matter what The Charmers say!

Next time some jerk pisses  me off, I'm going to take a tip from The Jumping Jacks and call him a "Long-head leggy rascal"!  


And remember what The Nobles, as well as McGruff the Crime Dog, told us, kind readers: Crime Don't Pay:


Finally, I'm not sure what this is, but I do think it's Disturbed enough to qualify for Wacky Wednesday. Get down with the sickness and enjoy:


If you want to read something I wrote years ago about my decades-long awe of doo-wop, CLICK HERE

Thursday, June 29, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: A Musical Salute to Slim Pickens

 


Today, Thursday June 29, is the birthday of Louis Burton Lindley, Jr., but most people who remember him know him by his stage name Slim Pickens.

Happy birthday, Slim!

Pickens, who died in 1983, was born in Kingsburg, Arizona in 1919. His dad was a dairy farm and young Louis took a quick interest in horses -- he allegedly got his first horse at the age of four -- and eventually was drawn to the rodeo.

According to his obituary in The New York Times, "Mr. Pickens came naturally by his ability to play saddle tramps and range bums, for before he got his first Hollywood role he had spent 20 years as a rodeo bronco buster, trick rider and clown."

According to that obit:

Mr. Pickens said that when he dropped out of school at the age of 16 to join a rodeo: ''My father was against rodeoing and told me he didn't want to see my name on the entry lists ever again. While I was fretting about what to call myself, some old boy sittin' on a wagon said, 'Why don't you call yourself Slim Pickens, 'cause that's shore what yore prize money'll be.''

Indeed, his pickins were slim in the rodeo biz for 20 years or so. But in 1950 he lucked out when film director William Keighley saw him perform at a rodeo and offered him a screen test. He was hired for Keighley's Rocky Mountain starring Errol Flynn. He played a character named "Plank."

No, Slim didn't get his name 
on the poster
He became the ultimate cowboy character actor, appearing in countless westerns, mostly as a comical sidekick. He also made a ton of t.v. appearances in shows from Annie Oakley to Circus Boy to McMillan and Wife to B.J. and The Bear.

But undoubtedly Pickens is best known for his role in Stanley Kubrick's 1964 dark political comedy Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. There, as  B-52 pilot Major T. J. "King" Kong, he made his greatest rodeo ride of his career as , riding a nuclear bomb like a bucking bronco into eternity.

But this is a music blog, and Slim Pickens also was a recording artist -- albeit a late-blooming one. And a friend of mine -- seriously -- had a lot to do with that. 

New Mexico singer/satirist and my longtime pal Jim Terr is responsible for nearly all of Slim Pickens' slim discography.

Terr says he first met the actor in the 1970s at the Burbank Airport ("I think," Terr adds). At the time, Terr says "I couldn't even think of his name. I said, `Aren't you  in the movies?' " To which Pickens responded And "Why, I haven't been in the movies since, oh, about 9 o'clock this morning over at Warner Brothers."

Terr continued: "I immediately had the idea of trying to get him to do a line as `the Sheriff' on The Last Mile Ramblers''s song, `The Hurrier I Go.' I talked to him on the plane (we were on the same flight), and he said heck yeah."

But Terr recalled, "I had a hard time catching up with him when  he was here, hunting with his buddy [then Governor] Bruce King," who Terr notes had a voice very similar to Pickens'. " I finally buttonholed him in the men's room of the Albuquerque airport when he was departing."

He not only "buttonholed" Pickens, he recorded the old cowpoke's line right there in the Sunport restroom!

After that the idea for a Pickens album was born, and in 1977 Slim Pickens was released on Terr's Blue Canyon label. As it turned out this would be Slim's only album ever to be released, though Terr said Pickens also recorded many unreleased tracks with Willie Nelson. Pickens also recorded a Christmas song, which you'll see below.

Terr recalled Pickens cutting a bunch of local radio station IDs to promote the album): "This is Slim Pickens and when I'm in  Salt Lake I listen to [whatever the station was]." Then he turned to Terr saying "God, I hope I'm never in Salt Lake."  

Here's Slim blowing harmonica with Festus in the Dodge City Jail -- perhaps awaiting extradition to Salt Lake City -- on the beloved TV western Gunsmoke:

Slim sings a Kinky Friedman song:

The writer of this song, Guy Clark, reportedly said Slim's take on his masterpiece his favorite version:


The only other record Pickens released after his Blue Canyon album was this maudlin Christmas song in 1980 -- which I'm surprised didn't become (an ironic) smash hit on Dr. Demento's show:


Here's The Last Mile Ramblers, the band that, as I've often said, provided much of the soundtrack for my drunken college years. Slim's restroom cameo is at the end of the song:


The only other record Pickens released after his Blue Canyon album was this maudlin Christmas song in 1980 -- which I'm surprised didn't become (an ironic) smash hit on Dr. Demento's show:


Though Slim didn't appear on this song (he'd been dead for nearly 30 years), The Offspring still paid tribute to the actor's greatest moment in Dr. Strangelove:

Finally, while looking last week for Slim Pickens songs for this post, I discovered that there was another Slim Pickens, a country bluesman whose real name was Eddie Burns. Here's a song from this Slim Pickens:


Ride 'em, Slim!


Sunday, June 25, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

 



Sunday, June 25, 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
Blowin' My Top by The Waco Brothers
Night Train From Chicago by The Jesters
Moonshine Runner by Churchwood
You're Humbuggin' Me by Ronnie Dawson
RNR Jungle Girl by Ana Threat 
Black Metal by Reverend Beat-Man & Izobel Garcia
The Eggplant That Ate Chicago by Dr. West's Medicine Show & Junk Band 
Two Stepping and Tacos by Dave Del Monte & The Cross County Boys 

A Friend Of Mine by Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives
What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round by The Monkees
I Miss Chicago Again by The Polkaholics 
Whatever by Urban Junior 
Chicago Bound Blues by Bessie Smith
Goin' To Chicago by The Blues Against Youth 
Three Cool Cats by The Beatles 
The World Is Mine by Cracker

Glorious Heroin by Frontier Dan & the Hickoids
Hey Stop Messin' Around by The Hush Puppies
Eddie, Are You Kidding? by Frank Zappa & The Mothers
Lonely Ain't Hardly Alive by Robbie Fulks
Priscilla and the Pyronauts by Robbie Quine 
U Got The Look by Prince with Sheena Easton
The House Where Nobody Lives by T. Tex Edwards & Out On Parole
Get it Right Now by Jon Spencer & The Hitmakers

A Stranger in Nashville by Slim Pickens
Could You Would You by Eilen Jewell
You Left Me A Long, Long Time Ago by Willie Nelson
The Vigilante by Judee Sill
When Two Worlds Collide by Roger Miller
Lucky Day by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Lucky Day by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis





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...