Thursday, March 31, 2016
THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday, Hillbilly Piano King
And I believe that Aubrey Wilson "Moon" Mullican accomplished that goal many times over.
Born in Polk County, Texas in 1909, Tuesday would have been Mullican's 107th birthday.
As a boy in Texas, the first music he loved was the blues. According to an article on the Texas State Historical Association site:
Though Moon served as a church organist during his teens, he developed an interest in blues music and learned to play the guitar with instruction from a black farmer. Impressed also by pianists who performed in local juke joints, Mullican developed a distinctive two-finger right-handed piano style that became his trademark. Much to the chagrin of his father, he began to play for dances as a teenager and aspired to become a professional musician. When he was about sixteen years old he moved to Houston and worked as a piano player for establishments that some observers characterized as "houses of ill repute." Sleeping by day and working evenings, Mullican may have received his nickname for his nocturnal habits during this period. For a time in the 1930s he performed with his own band in clubs and on the radio in Southeast Texas and Louisiana.
By the 1930s he was playing in a number of western swing bands including Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers,
In 1947 he signed with King Records in Cincinatti, where he recorded his best-known song "I'll Sail My Ship Alone." In 1949 he joined The Grand Old Opry.
Along the way, Mullican he developed a style of hillbilly boogie that was a huge influence on rockabilly. In fact one of Mulican's devotees was a fellow singing piano player named Jerry Lee Lewis. Mullican's style spanned country, blues, jazz and later, he embraced rock 'n' roll.
By the time he died on Jan. 1, 1967, he'd faded away from the national stage. But he kept on gigging in Texas, making them goddamn beer bottles bounce on the table until the end.
So happy belated birthday, Moon. Here are a few videos of live performances to keep his memory alive.
I wonder if Moon ever met Clarence "Frogman" Henry ...
Moon sings of the moon
On these clips Moon does best when pretty girls are around his piano
And here's Moon Mullican's signature song.
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
WACKY WEDNESDAY: This Gator's Gonna Get Your Granny!

This, of course was in the mid '70s when the King was in decline and during the scene Zak, played by Ray Romano, is disappointed and downright disgusted that his rock 'n' roll hero of his youth has morphed into the watered-down white jump-suited idol of un-hip old ladies.
But what really gets to Zak is the song Elvis (Shawn Klush) sings in the scene. It's "Polk Salad Annie," a 1968 hit by Tony Joe White that Elvis picked up on and made a staple of his live set.
“The king of rock ’n’ roll is singing about lettuce!” Zak says scornfully.
And that's why I got pissed. You can't argue that Elvis wasn't going downhill artistically at this point (though he still had guitarist James Burton and his back-up singers The Sweet Inspirations going for him.) But whatever Elvis' problems were, "Polk Salad Annie" was not one of them.
There was no shortage of over-produced, overwrought, cornball middle-of-the-road songs from the 1970s Elvis songbook the writers could have chosen to illustrate how far he'd drifted from his 1950s rockabilly heyday.
"Polk Salad Annie," in fact is one of his better musical choices of the '70s. Its lyrics contain a sexy swamp girl, her razor-totin' mama, wanton watermelon theft, and of course granny-chompin' gators.
Mister, that is rock 'n' roll!
Here's a live version by Elvis to make my case:
And more recently, Tony Joe sang a lower, slower rendition with Foo Fighters on The Late Show With David Letterman. Pat Smear looks like he's having the best time here.
Here is a Spotify playlist featuring the original Tony Joe version plus a whole bunch of covers (including one by the late Clarence Reid, Blowfly's alter ego) Play one, play some, play all.
And don't forget this song where Ray Wylie Hubbard explains how "Polk Salad Annie" helped win the heart of a stripper girlfriend.

And, no, Zak, Elvis was not singing about lettuce. It's actually a toxic plant called Phytolacca americana. Unless you cook it correctly, polk salad (also known as poke salad or poke sallet or poke weed) can hurt you.
As the Ohio State University Weedguide says:
Infants are especially sensitive and have died from eating only a few raw berries. Although boiled young shoots have been eaten as greens and berries cooked in pie, ingestion of any part of the plant cannot be recommended. Adults have been poisoned, sometimes fatally, by eating improperly prepared leaves and shoots, especially if part of the root is harvested with the shoot, and by mistaking the root for an edible tuber.
(The original cooking video I had here disappeared. And, so did the one I chose to replace it. So let's try this one)
Monday, March 28, 2016
Start your week with a healthy new BIG ENCHILADA Podcast episode
(Background Music: Outer Limits Surf by The Deadly Ones)
Karate Monkey by The Woggles
Swamp Pigs by Dash Rip Rock
Wise Old Man by The Fall
Psyche Out With Me by The Monsters
Boom by Wild Flag
You Fine and Healthy Thing by Charles "Boogie Woogie" Davis
(Background Music: Dapper Dan by Dr. Lonnie Smith)
Not Like You by The Vagoos
Château Phoquoeupe by The Come N' Go
Bad Love by Night Beats
UFO, Please Take Her Home by Coachwhips
Chicken Yodeling Woman by O Lendário Chucrobillyman
(Background Music: Late at Bailey's Pad by Warren Barker & The Warner Brothers Star Instrumentalists)
Run Rabbit Run by Bantam Rooster
Whispers by Sulphur City
My Life by Harlan T. Bobo
Feeling Grear Now She's Gone by Lynx Lynx
Git Back on the Truck by Hickoids
Tipsy #3 by The Chumps
Sunday, March 27, 2016
TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
Sunday, March 27, 2016
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
Peter Cottontail by The Bubbadinos
Karate Monkey by The Woggles
The Pot by The Monsters
Freezer Burn by Edison Rocket Train
Alligator River by Lothar
Lonely Planet Boy by New York Dolls
Ax Me by J.J. & The Real Jerks
Zombie Blocked by Left Lane Cruiser
Deathbed Side Manner by The New Bomb Turks
40 Miles of Bad Road by Dead Moon
Shangri Lah by The Night Beats
Venice with Girls by The Fall
Attitude by The Come N' Go
Miss Phenomenal by King Automatic
Born Bad by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Great Big Idol with the Golden Head by The Gories
Tears in Vain by Jonah Gold & His Silver Apples
Gilligan's Island by Manic Hispanic
Bad and Good by Javier Escovedo
New Kind of Kick by The Cramps
Meet Me at the Graveyard by Andre Williams
What Am I Gonna Do by John the Conquerer
Glow in the Dark by Lovestruck
Come Back, Bird by Manby's Head
Amazons and Coyotes by Simon Stokes
96 Tears by Aretha Franklin
What Kind of Girl Do You Think We Are / Bwana Dick / Latex Solar Beef by Frank Zappa & The Mothers
Stormy Monday by Bobby "Blue" Bland
Every Woman Needs a Working Man by Johnny Rawls
Opportunity by Timmy Thomas
I'll Take Care of You by Bobby Patterson
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
Friday, March 25, 2016
THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FMEmail me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
Here's my playlist :
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens
Back in the Saddle Again by Gene Autry
Git Back in the Truck by Hickoids
If Looks Could Kill by T. Tex Edwards
Receiver by The Waco Brothers
Swamp Pig by Dash Rip Rock
That Truck by The Texas Rubies
Can't Get Away by Banditos
99 Years to Go by The Wray Brothers
Baby He's a Wolf by Werly Fairburn
Fist City by Loretta Lynn
Too Close to Heaven by Dad Horse Experience
Good Times by Oh Lazarus
Tied by The Yawpers
The Whiskey Lingers by The Bonnevilles
Georgia on a Fast Train by Billy Joe Shaver
Fruit of the Vine by Nancy Apple
Ramblin' Man by Steve Young (Live on the Santa Fe Opry 2005)
Seven Bridges Road by Dolly Parton
Lonesome, Onery and Mean by Waylon Jennings
The Angel of Lyon by Tom Russell
Long Way to Hollywood by Steve Young (Live on the Santa Fe Opry 2005)
The Darkest Day by Eilen Jewel
Mississippi Sue by Andre Williams
Big Fake Boobs by The Beaumonts
Bury Me Deep by Steve Train & His Bad Habits
Don't Bet Against Me by Hackensaw Boys
Evicted by Peter Case
Any Old Time by Maria Muldaur
Gunter Hotel Blues by Paul Burch
The Year We Tried to Kill the Pain by Bob Woodruff
Were You There When They Crucified My Lord? By Johnny Cash
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 SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST
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