Thursday, June 24, 2004

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: JUMPING SHIP

An e-mail from the national Bush reelection campaign in Arlington, Va. Wednesday contained two mysteries.

“The Bush-Cheney ’04 campaign will hold a press conference at the Obelisk Plaza on Thursday, June 24, to announce that a New Mexico elected Democrat official will endorse President Bush for the November election.”

Mystery #1: What and where is the “Obelisk Plaza”?

Mystery #2: Which Democrat is jumping ship?

We’re pretty sure that the location of this press conference actually is by the obelisk on the Plaza.

But nobody in the GOP wanted to disclose the identity of the mystery Democrat until today’s press conference.

I think I’ve rounded up a pretty good suspect though.
Contacted Wednesday, City Councilor David Pfeffer said he knew the name of the Bush-supporting Democrat.

When asked whether it was him, Pfeffer would neither confirm or deny it.

“You’re asking a politician to either tell the truth or lie,” Pfeffer joked. “That’s pretty rude.”

City councilors, as well as mayors and municipal judges, are elected in non-partisan contests. Currently the council is dominated by registered Democrats, which isn’t unusual in a town where Dems have a 3-1 edge over Republicans.

Pfeffer was the only councilor to vote against a 2002 resolution opposing military action in Iraq war. He also was the lone dissenter on a resolution directing police to not cooperate with federal authorities under the Patriot Act in cases where in their judgment it violates an individual’s constitutional rights.

Pfeffer often finds himself at odds with some of his fellow party members on the council. He was in the center of a controversy following the March city election when he admitted to proofreading a newspaper ad for a group called Santa Fe Grass Roots that was highly critical of three councilors seeking election. Some of those councilors characterized the full-page ad, which ran in this paper, as an “attack ad,” saying it contained inaccuracies about their council records.

So is Pfeffer the elected local Democrat supporting Bush, or was he just pulling a columnist’s leg by refusing to confirm or deny? We’ll find out today in Obelisk Plaza.

Ship-jumping Greens: New Mexico’s Democratic Party isn’t the only political party with mavericks switching sides. A former state Green Party chairman and candidate for U.S. Senate, Abe Gutmann, is listed as a spokesman for an organization called “Greens For Kerry.”

Sarah Newman, a spokesman for the Oakland, Calif.-based group said the organization is launching its campaign to convince Greens to vote for John Kerry this week because the national Green Party is having its convention in Milwaukee, Wisc.

“The larger goal is beating George Bush,” she said. “Every Green and Nader supporter concerned about keeping civil liberties and environmental protection should vote for John Kerry.”

Gutmann, who couldn’t be reached for comment Wednesday, has bucked his party to support a Democrat before. In 1998 he publicly backed Tom Udall for Congress over Green candidate Carol Miller.

The latest from Zogby: According to the latest known tracking poll in the state, Kerry is leading Bush by nearly seven percentage points. However, that lead still is within the margin of error.

The interactive poll of 505 New Mexicans, conducted via e-mail, shows Kerry with 50.1 percent, Bush 43.2 percent and Nader with 1.4 percent.

The Zogby organization conducted the poll in 16 battleground states June 15-20. Kerry is ahead in nine of the states, while Bush leads in seven.

However, the poll shows Bush gaining some ground. He only led in five states two weeks ago. Bush is leading 285-253 in electoral votes by Zogby’s estimate. The number of electoral votes needed to win is 270.

Monday, June 21, 2004

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAY LIST

Sunday, June 20, 2004
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Host: Steve Terrell

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Miracle Drug by A.C. Newman
All For Swinging You Around by The New Pornographers
No Regrets by The Von Bondies
Falling Down Again by Buick MacKane
The Secret by Eric Burdon
Mother Rose by Patti Smith
Summer's Killing Us by The Tragically Hip

Little Billie by Michelle Shocked
This Is It (Your Soul) by The Hothouse Flowers
Black by Pearl Jam
Certain People I Could Name by They Might Be Giants
Everything Starts at the Seam by The Polyphonic Spree
Delilah by Tom Jones

FATHER'S DAY SET
That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine by The Everly Brothers
Papa Was a Rolling Stone by The Temptations
Papa Won't Leave You, Henry by Nick Cave
Just Like My Dad by ThaMuseMeant
Papa Was a Steel-Headed Man by Robbie Fulks

On the Couch by Prince
The Love Below Intro/Love-Hater by Outkast
When Did You Stop Loving Me/When Did I Stop Loving You by Marvin Gaye
The Stingray by The Funk Brothers
Hello, It's Me by The Isley Brothers
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Sunday, June 20, 2004

BE MY E-BAY BUDDY

Here's a cheesy self-promotional plug. I'm selling something on E-Bay, a VHS version of Grateful Dawg, the documentary on Jerry Garcia's collaborations with David Grisman.

Here's the deal: I just won this tape on E-Bay. I thought was bidding on the DVD, so when I opened the package I was disappointed. (When my last VCR broke, I went to DVD and never looked back).

It was my own fault. The auction clearly stated VHS. There's a moral to this story ...

But if you've got a VCR and dig Jerry's bluegrass side, help me out and BID.

E-music

This isn't an ad. I don't even get a free download out of this. I just think some of you might be interested in a legal music download service I've been using the past couple of months, E-Music

The basics: You sign up and get 50 free song downloads for the first two weeks. After that you gotta pay. But the prices are fairly reasonable. I'm on the cheap -- $10 a month for 40 downloads -- plan. Under most the plans the downloads come out to about 25 cents apiece.

Although the selection of participating artists and labels isn't vast, there's quite a lot of great stuff available. There's tons of stuff by The Fall and The Cramps. I've downloaded live discs -- not available anywhere else -- by The Gourds and Robbie Fulks, Long Tall Weekend (an e-music only album by They Might Be Giants), a couple of Tav Falco efforts, some funky old blues compilations including Please Warm My Wiener, Jim Dickinson's Field Recordings, and It Came From Memphis, Vol. 2 (which has one track featuring pro wrestling great Jerry "The King" Lawler singing "Memphis, Tennessee.", plus stray songs from Willie Nelson, Wayne Kramer, Flaco Jimenez, Queen Ida, Steeleye Span, Billy Joe Shaver and others.

I've used up my 40 downloads this month, but I've got my eyes on a bunh of others. I've found multi-disc sets by Uncle Dave Macon and The Delmore Brothers, plus albums by Jay Farrar, Michael Hurley, Loretta Lynn and 16 Horsepower. (There's enough there for a few months.)

To be sure, I do have some complaints about E-music. On some live albums, between-song stage patter counts as a song. Thus a 23-second rant by Hasil Adkins ends up costing the same as a 13-minute cut by John Fahey. I wish they could work out a system with breaks for downloading an entire album.

And again, while there's plenty of great stuff, the selection isn't great if you're looking for something specific. I hope E-music makes a bigger effort to attract more labels and more musicians to its fold.

But I think it's worth the $10 a month. And it definitely beats getting sued by the RIAA. Check it out.

Saturday, June 19, 2004

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAY LIST

The Santa Fe Opry
Friday, June 18, 2004
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Host: Steve Terrell

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Hey! Sexy by Robbie Fulks
CaledonIa by The Gourds
Settin' the Woods on Fire by The Flatlanders
I Just Wanted to See You Again by Lucinda Williams
Does My Ring Burn Your Finger by Buddy Miller
If Walls Could Talk by Eric Amble with The Bottle Rockets
Rio Grande by Dave Alvin
I Always Loved a Waltz by Kell Robertson

Twilight by Jon Dee Graham
Too Long in the Wasteland by James McMurtry
Queen of Compromise by Graham Parker
Where Does Love Go? Uncle Dave & The Waco Brothers
Stop the World and Let Me Off by Dwight Yoakam
Pee Wee, Where Have You Gone? by Ukulele Man

Truckdrivin' Son of a Gun by Dave Dudley
My Uncle by Steve Earle
He's a Good Dog by Audrey Auld
Tramps Rouge by Starlings TN
I've Watched You Fall in Love Before by Cornell Hurd
(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover by Jon Rauhouse with Sally Timms
Tit Monde by Taj Mahal
Pop a Top by Jim Ed Brown
Redemption by Johnny Cash

Midnight Sun by Rolf Cahn
Fame Apart from God's Approval by Norman & Nancy Blake
My Songbird by Emmylou Harris
Rising Son by Patterson Hood
I Still Could Not Forget You Then by Angel Dean & Sue Gardner
This Could Be the One by Peter Case
A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow by Mitch & Mickey
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 28, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrel...