Monday, October 30, 2006

I'M THE VICTIM OF A VICIOUS NEGATIVE CAMPAIGN!

Inspired by the latest season of campaign commericals, veteran New Mexico newsman Ned Cantwell, in his latest column, has launched a negative campaign against fellow columnists and political pundits in this state. It's cheap, shocking, misleading, libelous and the act of a desperate man.

Also funny as hell. Read it HERE

Jim Belshaw, Joe Monahan, my old boss Larry Calloway and I all get roasted.

Cantwell suggests his readers

"Call Steve Terrell, 1 555 REPORTS, and ask, `Steve, when did you first learn of the Page Scandal and who did you notify?' Tell him, `Steve, New Mexico journalism is looking for a fresh face!' "


Dang, Ned, I get those calls every day and they haven't stopped me yet.

(By the way, the stuff about Bill Richardson being an anti-marijuana crusader in his fraternity is all from the gov's biography Between Worlds. )

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, October 29, 2006
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Prenzlauerberg by Beirut
Little Sally Tease by The Standells
Ponytail by The Monsters
Do Me by Jesus H. Christ & The Four Hornsmen of The Apocalypse
Gimme Some Salt by Clap Your Hands and Say Yeah
The Model by King Automatic
A Bad Note by Outkast

The Corktown by The Sadies (spoken intro by Ed "Big Daddy" Roth)
Finksville U.S.A. by Mr. Gasser & The Weirdos
Huey's Hut Rod by The Weird-ohs
Surfin' Bird by The Trashmen
Up in Flames by Julee Cruise
Afghan/Forklift by Stan Ridgway
RockEl Casbah by Racid Taha
Weak Brain, Narrow Mind by Willie Dixon

The 75th annual STEVE TERRELL SPOOKTACULAR

Halloween Hootenanny by Zacherlee
Halloween (She Got So Mean) by Rob Zombie & The Ghastly Ones
(It's a) Monster's Holiday by Buck Owens
Bloodletting by Concrete Blonde
Monster by Fred Schneider
Monsters of the Id by Mose Allison
Feast of the Mau Mau by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
The Raven by Lou Reed

Murder in the Graveyard by Screaming Lord Sutch
Satanic Beatles by The Rev. Mike Mills
Don't Shake Me Lucifer by Roky Erikson
King Henry by Steeleye Span
Marie Laveau by Bobby Bare
The Witchdoctor's Curse by The Frantic Flattops
Heeby Jeebies by Little Richard
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Sunday, October 29, 2006

THE RICHARDSON RECORD


My story in today's New Mexican on how Gov. Richardson has consolidated power in the governor's office can be found HERE.

The sidebar on specific ways in which he's expanded his power can be found HERE.

Dave Miles' story on Richardson's spending priorities can be found HERE.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, October 27, 2006
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Dying Is Easy by The Sadies
The Devil in Us All by Butch Hancock
Polecat by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Autograph by Delbert McClinton
This Lonely Night by Wayne Hancock
Cry Like a Baby by The Hacienda Brothers
That's the Smoke They're Blowin' by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Singin' the Blues by Tommy Hancock & The Supernatural Band

Beausoleil by Rotondi
La Chanson de Mardi Gras by Beausoleil
Half a Boy And Half a Man by Queen Ida
Burn the Honeysuckle by The Gourds
Are You Okay by Jim Lauderdale
You're the Kids Are Ugly by Conway Twitty & Loretta Lynn
Yuppie Scum by Emily Kaitz

The Meanest Man in Town by Maddox Brothers & Rose
Cadillac Model A by Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys
The I.W.W. Song by Holy Modal Rounders
St. James Infirmary by Chris Thomas King
Wayfaring Stranger by John Stirratt
Mother Earth by Dave Alvin
Were You There by Rob McNurlin
Tom Dula by Carolina Chocolate Drops

Girls by Eleni Mandell
Darlin' Say It's Not You by George Jones & Keith Richards
This Old Town by Chip Taylor
Summer of Roses/December Day by Willie Nelson
My First Lover by Gillian Welch
Walkin' Man by Guy Clark
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Friday, October 27, 2006

POLICE SKETCH OF PAIGE'S ATTACKER

This was just released today. It's a sketch of the man who attacked Republican operative Paige McKenzie on Oct. 4.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: ROCKIN' WITH RAT FINK

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 27, 2006


Did The Beatles kill Rat Fink? That’s the implication of Ron Mann’s documentary Tales of the Rat Fink, a loving tribute to visionary hot-rod artist Ed “Big Daddy” Roth that was released on DVD this month.

Mann calls the film an “animentary,” an animated documentary in which still photos magically come to life (and Roth’s “anti-Mickey Mouse” gets the cartoon treatment he always deserved). Actor John Goodman gives Roth his voice, telling the story of Roth and the custom-car culture he helped create.

Roth, who died in 2001, rose to fame as a designer of some of the craziest automobiles ever known. “He and his fellow Kar Kustomizers worked in the only uniquely American art medium, the automobile,” Tom Wolfe wrote of Big Daddy.

“Personally, I flunked everything but auto shop and art,” Roth/Goodman says. He not only built cartoonish cars, but he also became famous as a cartoonist, creating hilarious bug-eyed, fang-toothed, green-skinned creatures like Rat Fink, Mr. Gasser, Mother’s Worry, and Drag Nut, who zipped around in their even more fantastic vehicles. Roth started out airbrushing T-shirts and jackets for California car clubs. By the early ’60s, his characters and their cars invaded mainstream America in the form of plastic models, beloved by a generation of glue-sniffing American youth.

So how did the lads from Liverpool put an end to this? According to the movie, after the great British Invasion of 1964, kids across the country transformed their garages — once used mainly to soup up their cars — into rehearsal spaces for their new Beatles-inspired bands.

That interpretation is a bit too neat. As a fifth-grader during that time when the freedom cry of “yeah, yeah, yeah” was first heard across this land, I remember the Fab Moptops co-existing quite comfortably with Big Daddy in my personal pantheon. Rock ’n’ roll, monster movies, professional wrestlers like Sputnik Monroe, and Big Daddy’s stable of finks all were important cultural touchstones in a well-rounded American kid’s life in the mid-’60s.

But maybe there’s a grain of truth in the idea that The Beatles signaled the end of the Big Daddy heyday. When “I Want to Hold Your Hand” became No. 1 on my local AM rock ’n’ roll station WKY in Oklahoma City, it displaced “Surfin’ Bird,” the garage-band classic by the one-hit wonders known as The Trashmen.

The Trashmen had the manic, surf-slop sound that Rat Fink himself could appreciate. I’ve always felt that The Beatles robbed them of the glory they deserved.

Actually Big Daddy had his own band, Mr. Gasser & The Weirdos, a studio outfit that included lots of respected ’60s Los Angeles studio cats. But let’s just say that as a singer, Roth was a great car designer and cartoonist. Tales of the Rat Fink wisely chose to have The Sadies, a Canadian alt-country group, do most of the music on the film. The Sadies have released the soundtrack album with 26 short, twangy, surfy instrumentals, closer in style to Duane Eddy than Dick Dale.

If The Beatles really did kill Rat Fink, Mann’s film is a fun-filled attempt to resurrect Ed Roth to his rightful status as a rock ’n’ roll hero.

More from The Sadies: Just a few weeks before the Rat Fink soundtrack, The Sadies released a two-disc live set, In Concert Volume One.

Normally, I complain when guest stars overrun albums. (See nearly all my reviews of The Chieftains over the last 15 years or so.) But this might just be the exception that proves the rule.

Because their instrumental abilities are the major strength of The Sadies, the addition of this cast of singers seems natural. Among those appearing here are Neko Case, Jon Langford, Jon Spencer, and Kelly Hogan.

Not only that, but Garth Hudson of The Band — yes, the bushy-faced guy I always think I see on the fourth floor of the Capitol every time I pass those pictures of New Mexico’s territorial governors — joins the group with his majestic and mystical keyboards.

I especially like the second disc. There you find Langford and The Sadies’ version of The Mekons’ “Memphis, Egypt” (with Case and Hogan doing Sally Timms’ shout-along harmonies) and Spencer, with Heavy Trash partner Matt Verta-Ray, leading a crazed Bo-Diddley-like “Back Off” and a Chuck-Berry-on-angel-dust tune called “Justine Alright.”

And it’s Disc 2 on which you find Case’s best moments — The Band’s “Evangeline” and “Jason Fleming,” a little-known Roger Miller song that she performs like a rockabilly goddess.

Also recommended

* A Stitch in Time by The Twilight Singers. First the real news for fans of Greg Dulli and the Twilights: the group plays The Launchpad in Albuquerque on Saturday, Oct. 28, with none other than whiskey-voiced crooner Mark Lanegan helping Dulli on vocal duties. This tour is officially to support the band’s magnificent album Powder Burns, released only months ago, but the group is also hawking this new five-song EP.

A Stitch in Time starts out with Lanegan at the mike on “Live With Me,” a Massive Attack cover. Like the best material of Lanegan and Dulli, it’s dark, brooding, and menacing. When Lanegan intones, “I’ve been thinking about you baby, come live with me,” you’re almost tempted to call the cops.

The album also includes a guest vocal by Joseph Arthur on the relatively tame “Sublime.”

But the true highlight here is “Flashback,” a cover of a song by the New Zealand group Fat Freddy’s Drop. It starts off with a bass line similar to that on Jane’s Addiction’s “Three Days” and is colored by sly blaxploitation wah-wah.

If you don’t already have Powder Burns, by all means start with that. And if you’re hungry for more, seek out this EP. A Stitch in Time is available at Twilight Singers shows and on iTunes. Next month, you can get it at their record company, One Little Indian.

The Twilight Singers with Mark Lanegan perform at The Launchpad, 618 Central Blvd. S.W. in Albuquerque. Doors open at 8 p.m. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door and are available at Natural Sound in Albuquerque and www.Virtuous.com.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

BEIRUT COMES HOME TO SANTA FE


I'm too tired and burnt to write anything resembling a coherent review, (plus I've been dealing with computer issues for a couple of hours that have me ready to maim and kill) but I have to say a few words about the Beirut show at the College of Santa Fe Wednesday night, which exceeded all expectations.

And I wanted to post a few snapshots. There will be more on my FLICKR page tomorrow, I promise.

While, as I indicated in my review Friday , I was quite taken by Beirut's album Gulag Orkestar. However, much of the album seems somber and foreboding. I wasn't quite sure how it would go over in a concert setting

No worry was necessary. Playing live, Beirut is a damned party. Without losing a bit of the texture and intricacy captured on the record, Zach Condon and band was in pure celebratory mode -- blowing horns, gypsy violin, accordion, a baritone sax and crazy ukuleles -- and of course Zach on trumpet. Everyone was switching off instruments and the magic was near seamless. And ever so often I'd hear a clatter behind me only to find some of the members out in the audience banging their tambourines.

Of course it was a homecoming for Condon, who spent part of his youth here. (I got to meet his dad after the show.) And apparently at least a couple of others attended school at SF's College of Knowledge. The crowd -- dang there had to be at least a couple of hundred people there -- treated Condon and Beirut like conquering heroes.

Rightfully so. I'm hoping this band goes far.

Hey you Albuquerque folks -- Beirut is playing The Launchpad Thursday night and it's only $5. No excuses! Be there.

UPDATE: Here's a link to my photos from the show.

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Albums Named for Unappetizing Food

O.K., I'll admit this is a pretty dumb idea.  It came to me yesterday after I ran into my friend Dan during my afternoon walk along the ...