Sunday, December 15, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Dec. 15, 2013 
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

 OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Cosmic Thing by The B 52s
Dance Like a Monkey by New York Dolls
Wiggin' Out by The Del-Gators
Astral by The Rockin' Guys
Some Velvet Morning by The Frontier Circus
The Mad Daddy by The Cramps
Real Change by Night Beats
Eve of Destruction by Gregg Turner

Bad Reruns by Big Foot Chester
Don't Need You No More by The Outer Limits
Make Dat Money by Black Joe Lewis
If You Leave Me by Andre Williams
Fruta Podrida by Wau y Los Arrrghs!!!
Two Headed Dog by Roky Erikson & The Aliens
Prehistoric Love by J.C. Satan

Back Street Hangout by The Oblivians
Eviler by The Grannies
Little Sally Tease by The Standells
We Tried It, Try It by The Movin' Morfomen
Springtime for Argentina by Billy Joe Winghead
Hey Cookie by The Dirtbombs
South of the Borderline by J.J. & The Real Jerks
The Talking Hot Pants Blues by Hickoids
Banana Bike by Dot Wiggins Band

Maze Fancier by Thee Oh Sees
All or Nothing by La La Brooks
I Should Have Been in Art School by Wild Billy Chyldish & CTMF
All That Glitters by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
I Know It's Too Late / Starchild by Sam Samudio
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, December 13, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Dec. 13, 2013 
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
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Everybody's Doin' It by Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen
Voodoo Cadillac by Southern Culture on the Skids
I'm No Communist by Granda Jones
How Cold Hearted Can You Get? by Hank Thompson 
Peg and Awl by Carolina Tar Heels
Hello Walls by Rev. Horton Heat with Willie Nelson
West Virginia Gals by Al Hopkins & The Buckle Busters
Dragons by Possessed By Paul James
I'm  a Long Gone Daddy by The The

Goodbye, Ray Price set
Lonely Street by Ray Price
Pick Me Up on Your Way Down by Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard & Ray Price
I'll Be There If Ever You Need Me by John Fogerty
Crazy Arms by Van Morrison & Linda Gail Lewis 
Ain't Your Memory Got No Pride at All by Johnny Bush & Ray Price
Under Your Spell Again by Buck Owens
Sittin' and Thinkin' by Ray Price
Old Friends by Roger Miller, Willie Nelson & Ray Price

Marching Through Georgia by Old Crow Medicine Show
Secesh by the Tennessee Jugband Mafia
Kingdom Come by Pokey LaFarge
The Legend of the Rebel Soldier by Lee Ann Womack
Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette by Johnny Bond
Drunkard's Hiccups by J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers 
Walkin' My Baby Back Home by Dan Hicks with Maryanne Price

Charleston Girl by Tyler Childers
Up on High by The Gourds
Don't Let Her Know by Ray Charles
Give Me Wine or Money by The Mekons
Today I Started Loving You Again by Rufus Thomas
Highway Cafe by Tom Waits
Flowers on the Wall by The Statler Brothers
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: A VERY MUSICAL WAR

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 13, 2013

As terrible as the Civil War was, it was a very musical war.

Probably because of the movies and various documentary depictions that have become inseparable from that war in the popular mind-set, when you think about the Civil War, you’re likely to think of rousing marches, blue coats, and gray coats. Or perhaps you conjure up the image of a lonesome soldier sitting by a campfire at night playing sweet nostalgic songs of home on his old harmonica.

Or maybe you think of contemporary songs about the Civil War like The Band’s haunting “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” or Hank Williams Jr.’s shockingly clueless “If the South Woulda Won.”

While a few of the popular songs of 150 years ago have remained somewhat familiar, many have faded from memory. Producer Randall Poster has collected 32 Civil War-era songs from both sides of the Mason-Dixon line and rounded up a bunch of country, bluegrass, blues, and folk musicians for an impressive two-disc compilation called Divided & United: The Songs of the Civil War.

“Because of the richness of the music of the 1850s and 1860s, so much of it concerned with universal themes of longing, death, and liberty, experiences like that constantly recur on Divided & United,” writes historian Sean Willentz in the liner notes.

Although most of the tunes in the project deal directly with the war, some are just songs that were popular during that era, among them “Listen to the Mockingbird,” done by Stuart Duncan and Dolly Parton; “Wildwood Flower,” performed by Sam Amidon; and a heartbreaking “Lorena,” which was beloved by soldiers on both sides of the war, sung by bluegrass master Del McCoury.

A couple of the most popular songwriters of the war years are well represented. Stephen Foster songs include “Beautiful Dreamer,” sung by Cowboy Jack Clement (who died in August); an instrumental version of “Old Folks at Home,” by Noam Pikelny and David Grisman; and a heartfelt “Hard Times” by ex-Byrd/Flying Burrito Brother Chris Hillman.
Henry C. Work

But even more impressive are the songs of Henry Clay Work, who is far less remembered these days than Foster. Born in Connecticut, Work wrote songs for minstrel shows. But before you condemn him as a bigot, realize that he was an avid abolitionist whose parents’ house was used as a stop in the Underground Railroad for escaped slaves fleeing to Canada. His abolitionist views frequently come across in his minstrel songs. More on Work’s works later.

Loretta Lynn kicks off the album with “Take Your Gun and Go, John,” a song about a farm woman sending her husband off to battle. “Don’t fear for me nor the children, John, I’ll care for them you know,” she sings. It’s not only child care she’ll be dealing with, but heavy agricultural labor as well. “Ruth can drive the ox, dear John, and I can use the hoe.”

One of the few gung-ho, go-team songs here is “Marching Through Georgia,” written by Work and performed by Old Crow Medicine Show. It starts off sad and slow, but after one verse and chorus, it erupts into a joyful hoedown as the Yanks drive the rebels to the sea. From the Confederate side, there’s The Tennessee Mafia Jug Band’s upbeat “Secesh,” which is the story of a Southern kid excited about going to Shiloh. “I’ll put a rifle on my back and there I’ll be a soldier.”

But more typical for Divided & United are songs that take a hard look at war, songs like T Bone Burnett’s “The Battle of Antietam” (a song about two brothers on opposite sides in the war); Lee Ann Womack’s gut-wrenching “The Legend of the Rebel Soldier,” which deals with a Confederate soldier dying in a “dreary Yankee prison”); and John Doe’s “Tenting on the Old Campground,” in which the former X man sings, “Many are the hearts weary tonight, wishing for the war to cease/Many are the hearts looking for the right to see the dawn of peace.”

Steve Earle and Dirk Powell engage in a little historical revisionism in “Just Before the Battle, Mother.” The original version tells of a brave Union soldier proud to die for a noble cause. But in this version, the narrator remembers his mother’s advice that “discretion is the better part of valor,” and he deserts when he sees the Confederate army approach. Most of the songs deal with the soldiers and their families left behind — their hardships, horrors, and occasional joys.

There were others whose lives were turned upside down by the war — the slaves. A few, probably too few, selections in Divided & United tell those stories. Taj Mahal does a rousing version of “Down by the Riverside,” a spiritual known for its chorus: “I ain’t gonna study war no more.”

And there’s Work’s “Wake Nicodemus,” performed by the Carolina Chocolate Drops (under the title “Day of Liberty”). It’s about an old slave whose last dying wish was to be woken up when freedom finally came for the slaves. “He was known as a prophet — at least was as wise — for he told of the battles to come,” recites Chocolate Drop Dom Flemons. A longtime personal favorite is “Kingdom Come,” another Work tune, sung by Pokey LaFarge.
Pokey LaFarge

Sometimes known as “Year of Jubilo,” this is one of those classic tunes you’d probably recognize by its melody, if not the lyrics. It was used extensively in Ken Burns’ Civil War series, not to mention a couple of Tex Avery cartoons. Originally written for a minstrel show, this classic was meant to ridicule the white masters and overseers rather than the black slaves.

In the song, the master has been frightened away from the plantation by Union gunships. The slaves are celebrating, locking the cruel overseer in the smokehouse, throwing the key down the well, and helping themselves to the master’s liquor cabinet. “The whip is lost, the handcuffs broken, but the master will have his pay/He’s old enough, big enough, he ought to have known better than try to run away.” With the trumpet and military drums on LaFarge’s track, it’s easy to envision the Yankee army in pursuit of the fleeing plantation master

(Jubilation flashback: My favorite version of this song is by The Holy Modal Rounders, though they rewrote the lyrics. Both versions start out with the hated master “with the mustache on his face.” But in the Rounders’ hands you don’t see Lincoln’s gunships, you see Lincoln himself with “a piece of paper in his hand,” presumably the Emancipation Proclamation. “Abe Lincoln come, ha ha/Jeff Davis go, ho ho,” they sing.)

As is frequently the case with large-scale various-artist musical projects involving singer-songwriters, a few songs drift into the predictable and maudlin. But the duds are few and far between. Listeners who let Divided & United sink in can’t help but come away with a greater understanding of the Civil War and those it affected.

Blog Bonus:

These promo videos are pretty good. Enjoy







Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Fascist Puppet Rock 'n' Roll Medley

I just got Billy Joe Winghead's new album Spanish Asshole Magnet (Jimi Hendrix fans will know what's behind that title) from Saustex Records.

BJW is a band from my hometown, Oklahoma City.

Below is a video of a bizarre little puppet show performance of Winghead's heart-lifting medley of "Springtime for Hitler" and "Don't Cry for Me Argentina." You don't have to be a fascist to love it.

So how ya like them apples?


Sunday, December 08, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Dec. 8, 2013 
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

 OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Call the Police by The Oblivians
Million Miles Away by The Flamin' Groovies
Shaky City by The Plimsouls
Toe Cutter- Thumb Buster by Thee Oh Sees
She Looks Like a Woman by The Fleshtones
Mama's Queen by Black Joe Lewis
The Devil Writhed In by The Mobbs
Speed Limit by Dot Wiggin Band
That Little Sports Car by The Shaggs

Rat King by The Night Beats
Albuquerque Freakout by Holy Wave
You Don't Love Me by Bo Diddley
Sugar Dyed Honey Pants by St. Paul & The Broken Bones
I Think I'll Do It by ZZ Hill
Dimples by The Animals 
Stick With Her by Gaunga Dyns 
Neighborhood by Left Lane Cruiser
Looking the World Over by Big Mama Thornton
Boney Maronie by The Who

Kick Me One Down by The Raunch Hands
A Different Kind of Ugly by The Sons of Hercules
Betty Lou Got a New Tattoo by The A-Bones
In This Rubber Tomb by Mudhoney
Am I Blue by The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black
Lost Innocent World. By Gogol Bordello
Horse Thief by Kulture Shock
Charlie's Enormous Mouth by Frank Zappa

Another Lost Heartache by Gregg Turner with Billy Miller
Nobody's Baby Now by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Ghost of Myself by Doris Duke
Dead and Lovely by Talya Eliav
Time by Shiela Ferber
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Folk Remedy Playlist




KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
8 - 10 a.m Mountain Time 
Substitute Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org

In That Great Gettin' Up Morning by The Leonard DePaur Infantry Chorus
My Robe Will Fit Me by The Original Blind Boys of Mississippi 
I'm on My Way by Rev. Louis Overstreet
Jesus is Coming Soon by Blind Willie Johnson
Do You Call That Religion? By Rev. A. Johnson
Christian Automobile by Bright Light Quartet
Just Got Over It at Last by Little Brother Montgomery
Lift Him Up That's All by Washington Phillips
Same Man by Gospel Writers
Let the Church Say Amen by Sonny Terry & Brownie McGee 
The Christian Warfare by The Original Sacred Harp Choir

Nine Pound Hammer by The Monroe Brothers
Pig Ankle Strut by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Three Nights Drunk by J.E. MainerRailroad Blues by Sam McGee
False Hearted Lover by Dock Boggs
Don't Wake it Up by Mississippi Sheiks
Frankie and Albert by Mississippi John Hurt
Chicken Roost Blues by Cliff Carlisle

United & Divided Set
Take Your Guns and Go John by Loretta Lynn
The Vacant Chair by Ralph Stanley
Marching Through Georgia by Old Crow Medicine Show
Down by the Riverside by Taj Mahal
Dear Old Flag by Vince Gill
Secesh by The Tennessee Jug Band Mafia
Kingdom Come by Pokey LaFarge
Year of Jubilo by Holy Modal Rounders (not actually from United & Divided)

Cocaine by Dick Justice
My Four Reasons by Howard Armstrong
Hadacol Boogie by Jesse Rogers & His 49ers
Diga Diga Do by The Hoosier Hotshots
That's My Rabbit, My Dog Caught It by The Walter Family
Standing by a Window by Clay Everheart & The North Carolina Cooper Boys
Keep on the Sunny Side by The Carter Family

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Friday, December 06, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Dec. 6, 2013 
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
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Long White Cadillac by Janis Martin
Fruit of the Vine by Nancy Apple
Wild Man Boogie by Ray Batts
TJ by The Hickoids
Wave That Flag by The Bottle Rockets
Lookout Mountain by Drive-by Truckers
Yankee Taste by Jayke Orvis
Dig Them Squeaky Shoes by Andy Starr
Whiskey and Women and Money to Burn by Joe Ely 

The Buzzard Was Their Friend by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Everyone in Town Wants You Dead by Singing Sadie
If It Ain't Love by The Delta Sisters
Dark Inside by Al Duval 
Trouble in Mind by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Pearly Lee by Billy Lee Riley
Harder Than Your Husband by Frank Zappa with Jimmy Carl Black

Please Me When You Can by James Hand
Getting By by The Riptones
Bluest Boy in Town by Yuichi & The Hilltones
Too Sweet to Die by The Waco Brothers
Pepper Hot Baby by Bloodshot Bill
Rich Man's Town by Country Dick Montana
She's a Hum Dum Dinger by Gov. Jimmie Davis
Love is Blind by Country Blues Revue
Tenting on the Old Camp Ground by John Doe
Bed Bug Blues by Dave Van Ronk

The Low Lights of Town by Butch Hancock
One Click Away from Judgement Day by The Imperial Rooster
Beauty Meets Beast by Angry Johnny
You've Never Been This Far Before by Freakwater
Lead Me On by Conway Twitter & Loretta Lynn
After the Ball by Dave Davies
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Dot Wiggin is Shaggsadelic!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Dec. 6, 2013

When listening to Ready! Get! Go! by The Dot Wiggin Band, it might be helpful to realize that it all started with a palm reading.

The Gypsy woman — actually, it was his mom — told Austin Wiggin of Fremont, New Hampshire, that one day he would have daughters who would be in a famous band. And verily, he had daughters, four of them.

In the mid-1960s, when the girls hit their teens, Austin bought them guitars and drums, told them they were going to be a band, ordered them to rehearse hours and hours in the basement, named them The Shaggs, and, in 1968, way before the girls actually thought they were ready, took them to a Massachusetts recording studio. What came out was an album called Philosophy of the World. It wasn’t a monster hit. In fact, it never had a chance.

According to Shaggslore, the president of their “record company” made off with 900 of the thousand copies they had pressed. The Wiggin family just assumed the whole endeavor was a flop. When Austin Wiggin died in the mid-’70s, The Shaggs broke up.

But somehow Philosophy of the World lived on, its strange charm spreading like a secret. Frank Zappa allegedly said Philosophy was his favorite album and, though I’ve never been able to find the original source of this assertion, claimed The Shaggs were “better than The Beatles.”

Terry Adams of NRBQ was so blown away when he heard them that in 1980 he persuaded Rounder Records to give Philosophy a proper rerelease.

Basically, the music was too crazy to die.

It was like a strange language spoken only by the Wiggin girls. Dot and Betty Wiggin sang all the songs in unison and not always on key, assuming they were using traditional Western scales. Dot’s lead guitar basically followed the melody of the song, while Helen Wiggin’s drums sounded like urgent tribal messages from a different universe. Their vocal phrasing was “unique.” And the lyrics were sweet and guileless — earnest songs about their parents, boys they were crushing on, Halloween and their cat Foot Foot.

The Shaggs’ philosophy? “Well the poor people want what the rich people’s got/And the rich people want what the poor people’s got/And the skinny people want what the fat people’s got/And the fat people want what the skinny people’s got.”

At the urging of NRBQ, The Shaggs had one brief reunion around the turn of the century. The Wiggin sisters were less than enthusiastic about trying to make music for a living, but somehow, Dot Wiggin, known in her private life by her married name, Semprini, let New York musician Jesse Krakow talk her into fronting a new band and recording a new album — her first time in the studio in decades.

And it’s a delight. A strange delight to be sure, and definitely an acquired taste. But it’s a delight nonetheless.


True, Ready! Get! Go! is far more self-aware than The Shaggs’ original recordings. And Krakow assembled a bunch of actual musicians for the group. So even though you can’t say the record is overproduced, some of the primitivism of Philosophy of The World is missing (though drummer Laura Cromwell of The Vivian Sisters often seems to be channeling the insane rhythms of Helen Wiggin, who died in 2006).

The music might remind you of late-’80s/early-’90s bands like Half Japanese or Beat Happening. But the songwriting on the new album is pure Shaggs. Some of the songs were written back in the day. One of them, “My Cutie,” appears on the 1980s compilation Shaggs’ Own Thing. The melodies meander down unexpected corridors. Dot is now in her 60s, but that doesn’t distract from the clumsy grace of her childlike lyrics.

Some of the best songs on the album deal with transportation. The first song, “Banana Bike,” concerns a girl who zips around on such a vehicle. Later, Wiggin sings about her secret outlaw life as a speed demon behind the wheel of a motor vehicle on two songs — “Speed Limit” and “Speed Limit 2.” The first is crazed, hopped-up garage rock; the second starts with sonic weirdness before slowing down into a sludge/grunge tempo. Someone hearing only the instrumental break in this song might think the Butthole Surfers are back.

The album has several splendid Shaggsy love songs. “The Fella With a Happy Heart” is equal parts heartfelt and kooky with a bouncy melody that will stick to your brain. “The fella with a happy heart is my kind of man,” Wiggin sings with longing. “Boo Hoo” features a twangy country guitar.

My favorite love song here is “Love at First Sight”: Wiggin duets with Krakow. It starts off with a greasy sax solo and is driven by a one-finger piano. The melody is similar to that of the song “Philosophy of the World.” And though the pace is somewhat plodding, the deeper you sink into it, the more addictive it becomes.

The album ends with a cover song, the late Skeeter Davis’ “The End of the World.” The selection isn’t surprising considering that The Shaggs had a fondness for pop country. (Shaggs’ Own Thing includes the Wiggin sisters’ versions of songs like “Paper Roses” and Tom T. Hall’s “I Love.”) Davis sang “End of the World” as if losing a lover left her nothing to live for; Wiggin, as a mature woman, sings it with world-weary resignation, as if this is just her latest “end of the world.”

This track is one of the only places on the album where Krakow adds a truly un-Shaggs-like touch, a brief angelic Brian Wilson-esque vocal harmony flourish behind Wiggin in the final verse. Behind Wiggin and her limited vocal range, it sounds strange. But nobody involved with this album — including the listener — is averse to strange.

Something tells me this is a one-shot deal. In recent interviews, Wiggin hasn’t seemed like she’s overwhelmed by a thirst for fame. She’s still kind of amazed that people still remember The Shaggs and that so many strangers like her old music.

“I’m not making a whole lot of money, but basically I’m doing it for the fans that have stuck with us all these years, that we didn’t even realize that we had all these fans,” she recently told the Associated Press. “So, I figure if the fans have been there all these years for us, then I’ll do as much as I can, as long as I can.”

As a fan, I just want to say thanks, Dot.

Here's some videos. And be sure to watch all the videos in the “Dot Speaks” section of Dot's website.




Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Busy Musical Sunday

UPDATE Dec. 8, 1:05 pm Gregg just told met that the venue had to cancel the gig today because of electrical issues. We may reschedule for NEXT Sunday.Watch this blog!






I'm going to be busy this Sunday, with two radio shows and a performance with my Angry Samoan pal Gregg Turner.

Once again I'll be subbing for Tom Adler on Folk Remedy on KSFR. I'll be playing the strange and wonderful sounds that made America great (mostly old hillbilly, blues and gospel sounds of the 1920s and '30s. That's from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Then I'm heading out to Eldorado where I'll be doing a short set with Turner -- the first time we've played together since our Jean Cocteau gig in September. This will be at the Cafe Dre in the Agora shopping center.

Gregg's wife Mindy will be there to autograph copies of her new children's book The Punkydoodle. Tom Sibley will do some spoken word.

Then I'll end my day back at KSFR, where I'll do my regular Terrell's Sound World. That starts at 10 p.m.

That's a long day of musical entertainment. Hope to see you at Cafe Dre.



Sunday, December 01, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Dec. 1, 2013 
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

 OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
The New World by The Night Beats
In This Rubber Tomb by Mudhoney 
Speed Limit 2 by The Dot Wiggin Band
Chicken Flow by O Lenario Chucrobillyman
The Beat by Elvis Costello
Rescate Griego by Wau y Los Arrrghs!!!
Jack Ruby by Camper Van Beethoven 

Nov. 22, 1963 by Destroy All Monsters
Greasy Meal by Lawn Chair Kings
Leave Her Alone by Figures of Light
Jukebox by Left Lane Cruiser
Up in the Treehouse by Pocket FishRmen
You Are Not Your Job by  Gas Huffer
Prissy Missy by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
My Baby Loves the Secret Agent by Detroit Cobras
Mark My Words by Black Rabbit

Tango til They're Sore by Aya Korem
Big Black Mariah by John Hammond
Invitation to the Blues by Giant Sand
Heart of Saturday Night by Jonathan Richman
Telephone Call from Istanbul by Kazik Staszewski
The House Where Nobody Lives by King Ernest
Heart Attack and Vine by Lydia Lunch
Dirt in the Ground by Yehu Yaron

Strawberries 1and 2 by Thee Oh Sees
Justine Alright by Heavy Trash
The Headless Flowerpot Girl by Wild Billy Chyldish & CTMF
I Don't Care Anymore by Doris Duke
A Psychopath by Lisa Germano
Poor Kennedy by Avery Brady
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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FOLK REMEDY PLAYLIST


Sunday, Dec. 1, 2013 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
8 a.m. to 10 a.m Sundays Mountain Time 
Substitute Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
Jesus' Blood by Golden Stars of Greenwood, S.C.
He Will Welcome Me There by The Sensational Nightingales
Jericho by Sister Rosetta Tharpe
I Cried Holy by Swan Silvertines
Wonder Where Is the Gambling Man by Norfolk Jubilee Quartet
I'm Working on a Building by Bill Monroe & The Bluegrass Boys
Pray On by The Staples Singers
I'll Lead a Christian Life by Elder Golden Harris
Two Wings by Rev. Utah Smith
Be With Me Jesus by The Soul Stirrers

Didn't it Rain by Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet
I Know I Got Religion by Andy Mosely & Hogman Maxey
Angels by Professor Johnson & His Gospel Singers 
I Know I've Been Changed by Rev. Johnny L. Jones
He's Got His Eyes On You by Rev. James Cleveland
The Old Gospel Ship by Ruby Vass
Life is a Mountain Railroad by Dorothy Norwood
Run Children, Run by Rev. A. Johnson
Gideon and the Sword by The Trumpeteers

Beautiful Blue Eyes by Red Allen & The Kentuckians
Take Your Foot Out of the Mud and Put It In the Sand by Dr. Humphrey Bates' Possum Hunters
Did Die Wah Diddie by Blind Blake
Bath House Blues by Ashley's Melody Men
The Coo Coo Bird by Clarence "Tom" Ashley
When My Man Shimmies by Butterbeans & Susie
Jelly Roll Blues by Gov. Jimmie Davis
Selling the Jelly by Noah Lewis' Jug Band
Yes, Pappy, Yes by Martin, Bogan & The Armstrongs
That Yodelin' Gal Miss Julie by The Delmore Brothers

Jimbo Jambo Land by Shorty Godwin 
Sail Away Ladies by Uncle Dave Macon
It's Movin' Day by Charlie Poole
The Last Shot Him by The Mississippi Possum Hunters
Onion Eatin' Mama by Cliff Carlisle 
Frankie by Dykes Magic City Trio
Last Kind Word Blues by Geeshie Wylie
Lindberg Hop by Memphis Jug Band

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Friday, November 29, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 29, 2013 
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
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Turkey in The Straw by Sen. Robert Byrd
It Was the Whiskey Talking, Not Me by Jerry Lee Lewis
Secesh by The Tennessee Mafia Jug Band
Highway Cafe by Kinky Friedman & The Texas Jewboys
Don't Remember Me by The Misery Jackals 
Done Gone Crazy by Ray Condo & His Ricochets
Double A Daddy by Wayne Hancock
Hot Dog by Rosie Flores
Pick Me Up on Your Way Down by Augie Meyers

How the West Was Won by Anthony Leon & The Chain
I Don't Want Love by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Skills Bom Billy Flop by The Imperial Rooster
Pass the Booze by Ernest Tubb
4th Street Mess Around by Old Time Honey
Big River by Earle Poole Ball
Shadow Fallin' Down My Face by The Dinosaur Truckers
Wasp's Nest by Ray Wylie Hubbard 

Don't  Monkey With Another Monkey's Monkey by Johnny Paycheck
Puddin' Truck by NRBQ 
Take Your Gun and Go, John by Loretta Lynn
The Flying Trapeze by Graham Parker
The Mermaid Song by Jorma Kaukonen 
Blues Stay Away from Me by The Louvin Brothers
Seein' Double, Feelin' Single by Merle Kilgore
Rockability by Country Blues Revue
One Teardrop at a Time by Wanda Jackson

Water by Lydia Loveless
Get Behind the Mule by John Hammond
When You Get to the Bottom by Robbie Fulks
Drink in' Thing by Gary Stewart
Thanksgiving by Loudon Wainwright III
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Happy Hanukkah! A Hebrew Tom Waits Tribute

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 29, 2013

Making a tribute album honoring the music of Tom Waits isn’t a new idea. A few of them have come out over the years, though since Waits’ stature, especially among his fellow artists, it’s actually surprising there haven’t been more. (A good surprise, I have to say, considering that most tribute albums suck out loud.)
Shirim Meshumashim

Speaking of surprises, I just stumbled across a various-artists Waits tribute that might just twist your head off. Shirim Meshumashim — in English, “Used Songs” (which is also the name of a Waits “best-of” compilation a few years back) — features songs by an assortment of Israeli musicians little known outside their own country.

All of the 22 songs, compiled by Israeli producer Guy Hajjaj, are sung in Hebrew. Don’t worry if you’re like this Okie goy boy and don’t understand a word of that language. This only adds an element of mystery and majesty to the music. That’s apparent from the opening of the first song, “Clap Hands” by Yaron Ben Ami & Noa Golandski. The duo recites an a cappella, sing-song nursery rhyme (one of them in a mocking falsetto voice) before starting the actual song. The effect is impressively spooky.

A recent review of this album in the online Heeb magazine (an irreverent “lifestyle” publication aimed at young Jews) sums it up best: “Tom Waits always seemed to me to have more in common with biblical prophets than he did with other musicians. Listening to his gravely yowl, it’s not hard to imagine Waits in good company next to the wild haired, wild eyed madmen of the Bible, who stumbled out of the desert with evil visions in their heads, declaring to anyone within earshot that, yes, they’d seen God in the wilderness, and boy was he pissed.”

Like Waits’ own vast catalog over the past 40 years or so, on Shirim Meshumashim you can find sleazed-up torch songs, beatnik jazz, sweet folkie ditties, dirty-sounding blues, hobo confessionals, ominous barnyard banjo tunes, and crazy sonic experiments.

As is the case with any tribute album, the contributions that work best are the ones that take some subtle liberties with the source material but capture the original artist’s spirit. A good example of this is Ursula Shwartz’s take on “God’s Away on Business.” With a steady trombone and urgent rhythm, Shwartz’s multitracked vocals sound distant and understated.

Meanwhile, Einav Jackson Cohen & Iddo Sternberg offer a tense, minimalist version of “Lie to Me” featuring hand claps, piano, and a slide guitar, while Shany Kedar makes “I Don’t Wanna Grow Up” into a cool singalong. Though she mostly employs acoustic instruments (even ukulele), Kedar seems to draw, spiritually at least, from The Ramones’ cover of this song as well as Waits’ original.

Sheila Ferber’s performance of the slow, sad “Time” isn’t really a radical departure from Waits’ original version on Rain Dogs. But her husky voice gives the song a maternal edge. “Dead and Lovely,” performed here by Talya Eliav, suggests a 21st-century Israeli version of “St. James Infirmary.” Aya Korem adds some sex appeal to Waits’ “Tango Till They’re Sore.” Less successful is her earnest rendition of “Falling Down,” making it sound like a Joni Mitchell piano ballad.

Yes, there are some disappointments, including “A Little Rain” by Tal Cohen-Shalev and David Blau’s version of “Martha.” I’m prejudiced, because these are not my favorite Waits songs, but neither artist lifts them beyond inoffensive folkie dribble. And poor Ze’ev Tene was up against not only Waits but Waits’ duet partner Keith Richard on the immortal after-hours barroom lament “That Feel.” Tene doesn’t even attempt to sing it, instead choosing to recite it. Though he’s not speaking French, his delivery reminds me of Maurice Chevalier.

But see for yourself. You can listen for free to the stream of any or all of the songs from Shirim Meshumashim HERE (or on the widget below). If you want to download the album, you can name your own price.

Below are some previous tributes to Waits:

* Piosenki Toma Waitsa by Kazik Staszewski. This album by Polish rock star Kazik Staszewski should have become a classic. It’s the only other foreign language Waits tribute I'm aware of, so if you like Shirim Meshumashim, definitely seek this out. As I said when I reviewed this album in 2004, Waits’ music has detectable Eastern European influences. You can hear it in his songs like “Cemetery Polka,” “Innocent When You Dream,” “Underground,” and “I’ll Be Gone” (all of which Staszewski covers on this album) and in the entire album Blood Money, which he wrote for a theater production of the tragic Woyzeck. (Staszewski does three songs from that.) Kazik's tribute also has a version of “In the Neighborhood,” which he turns into an eight-minute odyssey. This record isn’t easy to find, but you can order it for a fairly reasonable price online at D&Z House of Books in Chicago.
as I know) foreign-language album of Waits tunes, so if you like Shirim Meshumashim, you definitely should seek this out. As I said

* Wicked Grin by Johnny Hammond. This 2001 album by veteran blues interpreter Hammond captured Waits’ blues spirit. With help by sidemen including keyboardist Augie Meyers, harmonica man Charlie Musselwhite, and Waits bassist Larry "The Mole" Taylor, this album, which Waits produced, has excellent versions of “Heart Attack and Vine,” “Get Behind the Mule,” “Murder in the Red Barn,” and “Big Black Mariah.” The album ends with a gospel tune called “I Know I’ve Been Changed,” which is a rowdy duet between Hammond and Waits himself. (It has never appeared on a proper Waits solo album, but you can find some videos of Waits doing it on Youtube.)

* Step Right Up and New Coat of Paint. These collections, both released by Manifesto Records, are fairly typical 1990s-style tribute albums (though Paint was released in 2000) with lots of alternative stars taking a swing at Waits tunes. A large number of the tracks are bland and forgettable, but a few covers are good. Step Right Up — at least later digital versions of the album — includes a jaunty “Heart of Saturday Night” performed by Jonathan Richman and a nice and crazy Giant Sand version of “Invitation to the Blues.” New Coat of Paint’s highlights are Lydia Lunch’s brutal “Heart Attack and Vine,” Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ “Whistlin’ Past the Graveyard,” and Carla Bozulich’s sad and beautiful “On the Nickel.”

* Anywhere I Lay My Head by Scarlett Johansson. OK, even though I have a weird fondness for “Golden Throats” material — songs performed by non-musician celebrities — and even though it was produced by Dave Sitek from TV on the Radio, and even though The Village Voice in 2008 raved “Pretty Good, Actually!” I confess I’ve never been able to bring myself to listen to this album. It’s available on Spotify, but I think I’ll just let the mystery be.

Listen to and/or download Shirim Meshumashim below:



Here's Waits singing a gospel classic:



And here's one of my all-time favorite Waits covers. It's by the late King Ernest.

Friday, November 22, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 22, 2013 
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
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
You Don't Miss Your Water by The Byrds
Standing at the Edge of the World by Earl Poole Ball
(Earl Poole Ball Interview)
Luxury Liner by The International Submarine Band
(Earl Poole Ball Interview)
The Night Hank Williams Came to Town by Johnny Cash
(Earl Poole Ball Interview)
One of Those Things We All Go Through/I Still Miss Someone by Earl Poole Ball
(Earl Poole Ball Interview)
Southern Rain by Jimmy Lee Hannaford
Something's Gonna Get Us All by Earl Poole Ball

Between Lust and Watching Tv by Cal Smith
Three Years Blind by Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys 
Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets by DM Bob & The Deficits
I Feel Alright by Steve Earle
Sure Fire Kisses by Justin Tubb & Goldie Hill 
Marie by Willie Nelson
Goddamn Holy Roll by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
The Gypsy by. Cornell Hurd
You're  Still On My Mind by Courtney Granger
Lee Harvey Was a Friend of Mine by Homer Henderson

And in Time by Country Blues Revue
Dreamin' Ain't Waltzin' by Copper & Coal
Let's Turn This Thing Around by Peter Case
Welfare Music by The Bottle Rockets
Get Behind the Mule by John Hammond
That's Where I'm From by Robbie Fulks
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, November 21, 2013

TERRELL's TUNEUP: Strange Rumblings From The Grassy Knoll

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 22, 2013

Tragic Songs From the Grassy Knoll is a rather cheeky name for a collection of songs about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy -- which is exactly what fans of the fun-loving Norton Records have come to expect from the label from Brooklyn, N.Y.

But the title is one of the few irreverent things about this album. All but arguably one of the 16 songs here are dripping with sincerity and profound grief over the murder of the president.

The performers here are mostly obscure country singers who recorded their heartfelt odes to JFK on a galaxy of tiny, obscure, regional labels like Avenue, Prism and Cowboy Junction.

In fact, I'd only heard of two of the performers on this collection: The late Hasil Adkins (who has two songs here, both titled "Memories of Kennedy," both of which are uncharacteristically somber for the normally hyper-exuberant West Virginia wild man) and Homer Henderson, a one-man band from Dallas.

The original recording of Henderson's most famous song, "Lee Harvey Was a Friend of Mine" is here. This song has become something of an underground classic, recorded by artists including The Asylum Street Spankers, T. Tex Edwards, Laura Cantrell and New Mexico's own Boris & The Saltlicks. It's the story of a youngster who was a neighbor of Lee Harvey Oswald's. ("He used to throw the ball to me when I was just a kid / They say he shot the president, but I don't think he did.")

Originally released in 1985, "Lee Harvey" is the most recent vintage recording on Grassy Knoll. It's also the only one that even mentions the possibility of a conspiracy.

Immediately following the assassination, the immediate reaction was grief and a sense of patriotic shock. Most of these singers were more concerned about mythic notions of the brave commander-in-chief struck down while trying to spread freedom and liberty and sentimental images of Jackie placing her wedding ring into the hands of her husband's corpse than niggling cynicism dealing in magic bullets and grassy knolls.

"The Tragedy of John F. Kennedy" by The Justice Brothers, which uses the melody of the old murder ballad, "Knoxville Girl," as performed by The Louvin Brothers. In "JFK and That Terrible Day," Bill Kushner recites the lyrics over the melody of "Battle Hymn of the Republic" played on organ and piano.

One of the later songs included here, released sometime after the 1968 killing of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, is one called "Two Brothers" by a singer named Bobby Jenzen. He refers to the Kennedy Brothers as "two of America's greatest men. Speaking rather than singing the verses of the song, Jenzen says, "It's ironic that the wrongs they tried to right would be the wrongs that struck them down. ... As Americans we should all feel ashamed that this kind of evil lives among us."

The idea of innate "evil" being responsible for Kennedy's killing pops up in "A Sunny Day in Dallas Part 1" by The Honorable Bob Peters (apparently he  became honorable by serving as a state senator from Tennessee), who says JFK was "the victim of the hatred and prejudice of man." As reporter Scott K. parks wrote in a recent historic piece in The Dallas Morning News, "The image of Dallas as a bulwark of right-wing extremism lodged in the American mind during the early 1960s ...  Dallas became known to the world as the city of hate, the city that killed Kennedy."

But Texans being Texans, there has to be at least song that's extremely defensive about the Lone Star State and it's part in the assassination. In "Don't Blame the State of Texas'" singer Lowell Yoder basically washes the state's hands of any responsibility. It contains a curious chorus, in which Yoder offered what almost sounds like a veiled threat: "Don't blame the state of Texas and Texas won't blame you."

While listening to this album, I was struck by the fact that there were so few songs at the time by mainstream artists dealing with the assassination.

Three years after the events at Dealy Plaza, The Byrds did a sad but beautiful song called "He Was a Friend of Mine" (rewritten from an old folk song that had nothing to do with Camelot) and a few years later, following the killings of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Dion had an actual radio hit with "Abraham, Martin and John" It wasn’t until years later that I heard Jerry Lee Lewis’ 1966 assassination song “Lincoln Limousine.”

I guess at the time, the radio, major record companies and Dick Clark weren't interested in downer material about assassinations. So these songs from unknown singers on unheard-of record labels actually represent folk music in its purest sense -- honest musical reactions by real people to a major historical event. Corny as some of the tunes are, the compilation is a valuable historical document.

Also Recommended:

* Conspiracy a-Go Go by Various Artists. This is a free MP3 compilation of JFK assassination songs by (mostly unknown) garage/psychedelic, punk and noise bands put together this year by Todd Gardner of the Turn Me On Dead Man internet radio show.

Unlike the reverent singers on Tragic Songs from the Grassy Knoll, the bands on this collection go full throttle down the conspiracy rabbit hole. You can tell by the titles of some of the songs – “Back and to the Left” (a reference to the Zapruder film) by JFn’K; “Kennedy’s Head” by Buckwheat Caterpillar (“We all want to know about Kennedy’s brain … / The government lost it, that’s insane,” goes one verse.) – and even some band names: Single Bullet Theory (who do a crazed Butthole Surfers-like tune called “Exploding Castro Cigars”), The New Jack Rubies among them.

Among the highlights here are “Bullet” by Hounds, Hounds Hounds (who apparently never listened to Lowell Yoder’s song, as the singer declares, “Texas is the reason that the president’s dead”); the hard crunching “Mark My Words” by Black Rabbit; “Get Out of Dallas” by fellow GaragePunk Pirate Radio podcaster Mal Thursday and his band The Cheetahs; and “O.H. Lee,” which actually is a rocked-out mutation  of “Lee Harvey Was a Friend of Mine” by the Arkansas punk band The Rockin’ Guys, which was part of their Assassination EP a few decades ago.

(Disclosure: Knowing The Rockin’ Guys had done that EP, I alerted their singer Rockin’ Dan to this project a few months ago after seeing a solicitation for submissions. Apparently Dan followed through.)

Download any or all songs from this compilation for free HERE or from the widget below:


And check out Turn Me On Dead Man’s massive list of JFK assassination songs HERE.

* Radio Plug: I’ll be doing a lengthy assassination set including many of the songs mentioned here on Terrell’s Sound World Sunday Nov. 24 (the 50th Anniversary of Lee Harvey Oswald’s death) 10 p.m. on KSFR, 101.1 FM and streaming RIGHT HERE.

Now heeeeeeeere's Homer!




Roger Miller on Opry Almanac

My friend Paul Milosevich, an artist with impeccable taste, alerted me to this series of videos.

It's  the late great Roger Miller on a local Nashville show called Opry Almanac, hosted by Ralph Emory. This was shot in the mid 60s, when men were men and you could smoke right there in a tv studio! That's Thumbs Carlisle in the Batman shirt playing guitar with Roger. And Roger's interview banter is as classic as his music.

Other guests include Charlie Louvin and Jerry Allison of The Crickets.

Watch one, watch 'em all.













Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Earl Poole Ball on The Santa Fe Opry



Honky-tonk/rockabilly piano titan Earl Poole Ball, who has played with the likes of Johnny Cash, Gram Parsons, Wynn Stewart, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, The Byrds and many other greats will appear this Friday night on the Santa Fe Opry.

Ball, who recently has been playing with Dale Watson in Austin -- including an upcoming appearance on Austin City Limits, which they're taping next week -- released a solo album, Pianography, earlier this year. (SF Opry listeners have heard many cuts from this.)

He's coming to the area for a show Saturday at the Mine Shaft Tavern with Honky Tonk Deluxe, a band featuring Susan Hyde Holmes, Ollie O'Shea, George Langston and Pete Amaral. 

Tune into The Santa Fe Opry 10 p.m. Friday on KSFR, 101.1 FM, and streaming live HERE


Here's a recent video:

Sunday, November 17, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Nov. 17, 2013 
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

 OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Revolution by Mudhoney 
Tell Me Pretty Baby by Screamin' Joe Neal
I Can't Control Myself by The Troggs
Use It or Lose It by The Deadly Vibes
54/40 or Fight by Dead Moon
Directly From My Heart to You by The Mothers of Invention
Hard Lessons by The Manxx
Steppin' Out by Paul Revere & The Raiders

Long Gone by The Customs
Self Destructive by The Motards
Be So Fine by Left Lane Cruiser
Grease Monkey Go by The X-Rays
I Blew My Speakers  by The Angel Babies
It's Lame by Figures of Light
1880 or So by Television
El Vampiro by Los Vampiranos
I Lost My Baby to the Guy at the Bobcat Bite by Gregg Turner

It Ain't No Use by Z.Z. Hill
To The Other Woman, I'm the Other Woman by Sandra Phillips
Laughin' and Clownin' by Sam Cooke
Will it Go Round in Circles by Billy Preston
People Get Ready by Wolfmoon
He's Gone by Doris Duke
When My Baby Comes by La La Brooks

Diddly Wah Diddy by Captain Beefheart
Fruit Fly by The Hickoids
Breaking My Heart by Robrert Belfour
The Trip by Kim Fowley
Take it Away by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
Love Letters Straight From My Heart by Kitty Lester
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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A New Big Enchilada Hillbilly Episode





Howdy friends and neighbors and welcome to the latest hillbilly episode of The Big Enchilada. Every song this month truly is a trophy in its own peculiar way. And smack dab in the middle of the episode is a set, inspired by Norton Records' new compilation, Tragic Songs From the Grassy Knoll,  of country and blues songs commemorating the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Hang on!




Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Dance, Cajun Dance by Sammy Naquin)
Old Man from the Mountain by Bryan & The Haggards with Eugene Chadbourne
My Frijoles Ain't Free Anymore by Augie Meyers
Shackin' Up by Daddy Longlegs
All Hearts in Wichita By Two Ton Strap
Dreamin' Ain't Waltzin' by Copper & Coal
Welfare Music by The Bottle Rockets
(Background Music: Brownie's Stomp by Milton Brown & His Musical Brownies)

COUNTRY & BLUES ASSASSINATION SET

Memories of Kennedy by Hasil Adkins
Sad Day in Texas by Otis Spann
The Death of John F. Kennedy by The Southern Gospel Band
Lee Harvey by T. Tex Edwards
Friend by The Rockin' Guys

(Background Music: Texas Guitar Stomp by The Maddox Brothers & Rose)
I Don't Want to Wash Off Last Night by The Gaunga Dyns
Ain't That a Dilly? by Marlon Grisham
Two Hoops and a Holler by Jean Shepard
Your Wildlife's Gonna Get You Down by Carol S. Johnson
Julia Belle Swain by The Howlin' Brothers
I'll Trade You Money For Wine by Robbie Fulks
Corn Liquor Made a Fool Out of Me by The Bad Livers


Friday, November 15, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Nov. 15, 2013 
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
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Lose Your Mind by Wayne Hancock
Banana Puddin' by Southern Culture on the Skids
Must've Been High by The Supersuckers
Pretty Boy Floyd by The Byrds
Dumb Blonde by Dolly Parton 
Gutter Queen by Soda Gardocki
Cowgirl Hall of Fame by Joe West
American Trash by Betty Dylan

Standing at the Edge of the World by Earl Poole Ball
Monkey on a String by Charlie Poole
Ragz n Bones by The Goddamn Gallows
Devil in Her Eyes by The Calamity Cubes
Get Up and Go by David Bromberg 
Ophelia by Country Blues Revue
A Rejected Television Theme Song by Shooter Jennings

Where I Fell by Robbie Fulks
Boy Crazy by Lydia Loveless
Idiot's Revenge by The Bottle Rockets
The Death of John F. Kennedy by The Southern Gospel Band
Lee Harvey by Boris & The Saltlicks
Don't Blame the State of Texas by Lowell Yoder
Mama Tried by Bryan & The Haggards with Eugene Chadbourne 
Steamboat Whistle Blues by John Hartford

No Reason to Quit by Merle Haggard
Apartment #9 by Tammy Wynette
Do Remember Me by Willard Artis Blind Pete Burrell
Missouri Gal by Big Sandy & The Fly Rite Boys
Tell Me Twice by Eleni Mandell
Back Street Affair by Webb Pierce
You're Still on My Mind by George Jones
My Old Man by Jerry Jeff Walker
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: A Triple Shot of Bloodshot

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Nov. 15, 2013

At any given moment since the mid-’90s, some of my favorite music — at a few odd points most of my favorite music — has come from the independent Chicago record label Bloodshot Records .

Starting out as an “alternative country” label (actually, Bloodshot coined the handle “insurgent country”), the company has included in its stable the likes of Neko Case, Alejandro Escovedo, The Old 97s, various Jon Langford projects — most notably The Waco Brothers — Andre Williams, Wayne Hancock, Barrence Whitfield, Scott H. Biram, Graham Parker, The Detroit Cobras, Rosie Flores, and many more.

I’m not saying I’ve liked every act they’ve signed or every album they’ve released. But Bloodshot’s batting average is pretty impressive. Three recent releases are especially noteworthy.


*  Gone Away Backward by Robbie Fulks. Singer-songwriter Robbie Fulks is a Bloodshot OG. Back in the ’90s he was a natural for the label, with twanging, irreverent songs like the anti-Nashville anthem “Darn This Town” (I cleaned that up for this family publication), and “She Took a Lot of Pills and Died.”

Fulks helped the label build its reputation in its early days. But while those songs are fun and outrageous, Fulks’ “serious” songs from the early albums, such as the self-loathing “Barely Human” and “I Just Want to Meet the Man” (which may or may not be a prelude to a murder), showed he had more than just comic songs in him.

He left Bloodshot shortly after the turn of the century. But now he’s back. And that’s as it should be.

It took me a little while to warm up to Gone Away Backward. It’s a low-key acoustic affair, with some outright bluegrass songs and a few instrumentals. Hard to believe this was produced by Chicago noise monster Steve Albini, though he’s produced Fulks before. The record has very few rousers and not a lot of Fulks’ trademark humor. But there are more than enough songs to keep me coming back, and I like it more with every listen.

“That’s Where I’m From” is a haunting tale of a suburban guy originally from the country who worked hard to make sure his children never knew the hardships of his youth: “I’ve watched them grow now I see, one thing separates them from me/And that’s where I’m from.” The bluegrass tune “Sometimes the Grass Is Really Greener” is about a backwoods musician who won’t go along with a record company’s plan to make him the next hot new country sensation.

The melody and banjo on “Long I Ride,” one of the upbeat songs here, remind me of “The Swimming Song” by Loudon Wainwright III. It’s about a happy-go- lucky hillbilly in New York whose major goal is “to make a bit more in the daytime than I drink down at night.” “Imogene” is a slow bluesy love/sex fantasy.

But I suggest listeners start out with “Where I Fell.” It’s the sad story of a man who is dissatisfied with virtually every aspect of his life. The song begins: “Daddy used to catch his supper in this river now you can’t swim it/Smells like a 20- ton truck full of paint thinner sank down in it.” The narrator hates his job (“Now I sling hash for what all spills off the interstate”), he’s not in love with his sometime lover (who “comes by for some TV and leg it down with me every now and again”), and he’s sick of the mindless prattle of his friends down at the bar (“Game score, Tea Party, world war, I don’t give a good goddamn”). There’s no ray of hope for this poor guy. As he sings in the chorus, where he fell is where he dwells.

I’m glad Fulks fell back to Bloodshot Records.

* Bottle Rockets/The Brooklyn Side (reissue) by The Bottles Rockets. More than two decades ago this band became the pride of Festus, Missouri. Back before anyone was calling it alt-country, The Bottle Rockets, along with Uncle Tupelo, were helping to define that sound. Arguably, their sound was closer to Skynyrd-soaked Southern rock than to Gram Parsons-style country. In any case, they were powerful.

They’ve been Bloodshot mainstays since the early part of the 21st century, but unfortunately the band’s early albums have been out of print for years. So it’s great news that Bloodshot is reissuing their first two albums as a double-disc package, generous with bonus tracks (including some live tracks by Chicken Truck, an early incarnation of The Bottle Rockets).

Frontman and chief songwriter Brian Henneman has always shown a blue- collar sensibility. Struggling working-class regular guys populate songs like “1,000 Dollar Car.” (I played this for my son a few years ago when he was considering buying an $800 car, but did he listen?) Henneman even shows sympathy for the dim-witted protagonists who accidentally burn down their trailer in “Kerosene.” (“If kerosene works, why not gasoline,” goes the chorus.)

As these first albums show, the band sometimes got political as well. “Wave That Flag” on Bottle Rockets is a putdown of meatheads in four-wheel drives displaying Confederate flags: “You can whistle ‘Dixie’ all day long/If the table turned wouldn’t you hate that song?” On The Brooklyn Side, the song “Welfare Music” takes a shot at Rush Limbaugh (“angry fat man on the radio”) and anyone else attacking single moms on government assistance.

Even a punchy rocker like “Radar Gun” — which makes fun of law enforcement agencies and local governments that raise revenue by busting speeding motorists — can be seen as carrying a political message, though most listeners will be drawn more to the raunchy guitar crunch than the civics lesson. And speaking of speed, if you love cranked-up 90-mph guitar rock, “Rural Route” is nothing short of a rush.

It’s great to have this music readily available again. And hopefully The Bottle Rockets are working on some new music too.

* Boy Crazy by Lydia Loveless. This five-song EP is a follow-up to young Lydia Loveless’ eye-Indestructible Machine. The singer from Columbus, Ohio, was only 21 when that album came out, but as I said about that record, “Her throaty voice suggests an ancient soul.” And that holds true on these songs.
opening 2011 Bloodshot debut,

Some critics quibbled that there were too many songs about booze on Indestructible Machine — as if they didn’t remember being 21. (I don’t actually remember either, but people have told me what I was like then.) But on Boy Crazy, sex seems to have replaced alcohol as the main theme.

Here Loveless’ songs are more pop and rock and less country than on her previous album, though the steel guitar still wails. There’s nothing on this EP that immediately grabs and shakes you as much as “Bad Way to Go” or “Can’t Change Me” on Indestructible Machine, but the new songs are full of irresistible hooks that invite repeat listens.

And speaking of repeat listens, the first time you hear “Lover’s Spat,” you might not realize the story behind the song. Go back and listen again. Loveless wrote it about boy-crazy serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.

Loveless, according to Bloodshot, is working on a full-length album expected to be released next year. Boy Crazy is a good appetizer.

UPDATE 4:05 pm I misquoted a Bottle Rockets song in the original version. The correct lyric in "Welfare Music" is "angry fat man on the radio." The text has been changed. My apologies to white people.

Enjoy some videos:





I couldn't find any of Lydia's new songs, but here's a good one from her first album.

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 9, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Email...