Monday, December 25, 2006

THE BIG FLASHBACK: JAMES BROWN 1999

I'm still stunned about the death of The Godfather.

I just located the story I did for The New Mexican when I saw James at the Pit in Albuquerque in 1999.

In James' memory:

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 7, 1999


ALBUQUERQUE During the middle of James Brown's concert at The Pit Tuesday, the singer known as The Hardest Working Man in Show Business spent a good deal of time in front of the drummers, his back turned to the audience.

Sometimes it looked as if he was conducting the band, but in the hands of the capable 14-piece outfit called The Soul Generals, the music seemed to take care of itself.

Sometimes it seemed as if Brown was spending that time recharging his psychic batteries. Every so often he'd turn around and let loose one of his patented shouts ``Hit me!'' or ``Good God, ya'll!'' or he'd do a little dance just a snapshot of the crazy-legged soul gymnastics he was capable of when he was but a young man, but it still drives a crowd wild.

Or maybe he was just contemplating the James Brownness of it all, the music giving rise to powerful memories.

Imagine the jumble of images passing through the mind of James Brown as the music plays. ``The Big Flashback'' he might call it, as he recalls shining shoes in front of that radio station he'd later own; Bobby Byrd; The Famous Flames, Please, Please, Please!; shaking off his cape in the T.A.M.I. Show movie back in the '60s and screaming for redemption; ``Maceo!'' (He's got a new sax player now and he's great too, but you know sometimes James still has to shout ``Maceo!''); stopping riots in smoldering ghettos of the '60s; Cold Sweat!; ``Spotlight on James Brown, ya'll! He's the King of them all, ya'll!''; embracing Nixon and ``Black Capitalism'' in '68; ``Hot Pants!''; trying to outrun the cops on that South Carolina highway; ``Hit me!''; Living in America!; all the stages, all the wives, all the drugs, the jails, all the music; ``It's Star Time....''

The Big Flashback. Good God, ya'll!
INFLATABLE SEX MACHINE
The Albuquerque audience consisted of 50-ish My Generation folk, some of whom brought their children; teens and young adults, many of whom came to know The King of Soul from samples on rap records; people dressed all swanky, as well as the T-shirt-and-jeans set; black, white, Hispanic and Indian.

There was something kind of sad about the fact that an ``oldies'' radio station was sponsoring Brown's Albuquerque show. Although indeed most of his ``hits'' are old enough to run for president, and even though he's 66 years old (some say more), and even though all but a smidgeon of his material Tuesday was from the '50s, '60s and 70s, nobody wants to think of James Brown as an oldie but goodie. At the very least, he's one of the great innovators of popular American music. And some of us believe he's a supernatural force offering a glimpse into a higher realm.

It didn't seem right that some cheeseball had sold advertising space and put banners for a local limousine company and some business called cyber-somethingorother on the stage of The Godfather of Soul.

But then again, James Brown has always been a big-time update of old Southern traveling burlesque revues or even medicine shows the warm-up numbers by the band, the seemingly worthless female singer who sang three boring songs just to add to the anticipation, the ritualistic ``Star Time!'' intro, the three sexy dancers who took the stage every so often Tuesday.

Heck, Brown even had a stage magician come out in the middle of the show to perform dumb tricks as the band vamped behind him. You almost expected him to start pitching King Flour biscuits or Doc VanDexter's Tizzic Tincture.

But the real magic was performed by Brown himself.

If he didn't play all the hits, he played enough to satisfy: "Cold Sweat," "It's A Man's Man's Man's World", "Try Me," "Pappa's Got a Brand New Bag" and the obligatory "I Got You (I Feel Good)," (which unfortunately has lost some of its power after years of use in floor wax commercials.) Once or twice he forsook the microphone to play an ultra-funky electric organ, a talent many didn't realize he had.

By the final tune an extended jam that started out as Sex Machine and built into a blast of undiluted cosmic funk he proved that James Brown is still Soul Brother Number One.

GOOD GOD YA'LL! R.I.P. JAMES BROWN!


I just woke up to the news that the Godfather is dead.

Here's the L.A. Times story.

Here's the NPR story. Audio soon should be available.

He's one of the great ones folks. I became a fan first time I heard him on the radio. I became a fanatic when I saw him on the T.A.M.I. Show, which now, more than ever needs to be released on DVD.

Sunday, December 24, 2006

THE STEVE TERRELL CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

Sunday Dec. 24, 2006
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell


Silent Night by Bad Religion
Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto by James Brown
Santa Claus Goes Straight to the Ghetto by Snoop Doggy Dog
Santa Doesn't Cop Out on Dope by Sonic Youth
Even Squeeky Fromme Loves Christmas by The Rev. Glen Armstrong
Run Rudolph Run by The Rev. Horton Heat
Egg Nog by The Rockin' Guys
Christmas Treat, Peppermint by The Sisterhood
Happy Birthday, Jesus by Little Cindy
CHRISTMAS DEVIL
Ao Tumhen Chand Pe by Asha Bhosle
Must Be Santa by Brave Combo
Oy to the World by The Klezmonauts
Sleigh Ride by The Squirrel Nut Zippers
Merry Christmas Elvis by Michelle Cody
Bkue Christmas by Elvis Presley
Little Drummer Boy by Joan Jett
Santa Looked a Lot Like Daddy by Buck Owens

Christmas at K-Mart by Root Boy Slim & His Sex Change Band
BeBop Santa Claus by BeBop Santa Claus
I Don't Believe in Christmas by The Sonics
My Last Christmas by The Dirtbombs
Santa Came in on a Nuclear Missile by Heather Noel
We Wish You'd Bury the Mrs. by The Crypt Keeper
Father Christmas by The Kinks
Santa Claus Boogie by Hasil Adkins
I Wish You a Merry Christmas by Big Dee Irwin & Little Eva
Christmas Spirit by Julia Lee & Her Boyfriends
White Christmas by Otis Redding

Christmas is a Special Day by Fats Domino
Christmas Eve Can Kill You by The Everly Brothers
Nothing But a Child by Steve Earle & Maria McKee
Christmas in the Trenches by John McCutcheon
Silent Night/What Christmas Means by Dion
Oh Holy Night by Brian Wilson
Star of Wonder by The Roches.

SOME CHRISTMAS TUNES

I almost forgot to post the Christmas CD reviews I did for Pasatiempo this week.

Some of these I've been playing on my radio shows the last few weeks.

And you can hear even more on my (pre-recorded) Steve Terrell Christmas Special on KSFR tonight 10 p.m. to midnight on KSRF, 90.7 FM. It'll be streaming HERE.



* Christmas in Jail by The Soul Deacons (CD single, self-released) No, this isn’t some dark-hearted Christmas wish from The Soul Deacons for their former manager, whom they are suing. Santa Fe’s favorite soul band is covering an old R & B novelty song for a good cause. Not only are they selling it as a single (backed with the sweet soul ballad “Next Time”), but they also struck a deal with New Mexico’s department of transportation to use it for an anti-DWI radio spot, which is swamping the state’s radio waves. Several people have recorded “Christmas in Jail” through the years, but unlike other Christmas novelties, it hasn’t been overdone. The oldest version I know is by an obscure R & B group called The Youngsters. (It’s on an old Rhino compilation called Bummed Out Christmas.) You also can find it by Asleep at the Wheel’s Ray Benson on Redneck Christmas. (reviewed below) The song is a longtime holiday favorite for Brother E. Clayton and the boys. When I saw them last December, they played it twice. The crowd would have been happy with a third time. The Deacons’ version includes a comical rap between a couple of “jailbirds.” But my favorite part is bassist Jimmy Martinez’s sinister “Ho, ho, ho.”

*Redneck Christmas by Various Artists (Time Life) As you might expect with a collection like this, Redneck Christmas has its share of “hot new” country duds and hackneyed corn. Let’s just say, if I never hear Elmo and Patsy’s “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer” again, my Christmas would not be any less merry. But what is surprising is how many good tunes — even a few great tunes — are here. There’s a wonderful, old (1957!) George Jones song, “A New Baby for Christmas,” a Yuletide trucker tune (Red Simpson’s “Truckin’ Trees for Christmas”), and some hilarity from hick hipsters Homer & Jethro (“All I Want for Christmas Is My Upper Plate”). My favorite new discovery is Texas singer Dale Watson’s “You Can Call Me Nick,” a politically edged song about meeting a mysterious stranger in a drunk tank on Christmas Eve. (“He looked like an immigrant, his skin was dark and tough/He couldn’t even name our president.”) One twisted touch: on both ends of this compilation are songs that are basically country variations of “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus.” The disc starts with Buck Owens’ 1965 hit “Santa Looked a Lot Like Daddy,” which contains that classic line: “If Santa Claus ain’t Daddy, then I’m gonna tell on them.” Buck and the Buckaroos were at the peak of their power about this time, and this song made the season even jollier. But on the other end of the album is “Santa Can’t Stay” by Dwight Yoakam, a darker version of this story that Yoakam first recorded for his 1997 Christmas album. On one level, the song — featuring an almost Phil Spector-esque production — is funny: a drunken father dons a red suit and barges in on Mama and her new boyfriend, Ray, as the mystified children look on. But any divorced parent who remembers that first holiday after the split-up can’t help but feel pangs of horror.

THE CHRISTMAS RAT
*Lou Rawls Christmas (Time Life) This, according to the liner notes, was the last album that Rawls — who died of cancer in January — recorded. He went down swinging. Recorded with a 10-piece band, Rawls romps through familiar, time-honored Christmas tunes. He even makes “Hark the Herald Angels Sing” and “Come All Ye Faithful” — songs typically performed with an aura of piety — sound downright hip. You almost can imagine the shepherds and the wise men snapping their fingers along with these. And, backed only by piano and guitar, he brings out a bluesy side I’d never heard in “Jingle Bells.” There are a couple of missteps, though. Rawls is a little lackluster on Mel Torme’s “The Christmas Song.” And the pseudo-Latin beat doesn’t quite flow on “Joy to the World.” If he wasn’t already likable enough, the album ends with Rawls talking about Christmas memories — mainly about his grandmother’s cooking. “She could make a turkey do dances and dances. ... She knew everybody loved them sweet potato pies. That’s what Christmas was all about. Yeah, buddy!” All in all, it’s a classy effort by a singer who could belt out soul ballads with Sam Cooke and then turn around and do a convincing take on the Sinatra songbook.

R.I.P. DEE JOHNSON

Former New Mexico First Lady Dee Johnson, Gov. Gary Johnson's former wife, died unexpectedly last week, the family announced Saturday.

The cause of death isn't known.

There's more about it HERE and there will be more from reporter Natalie Storey in Sunday's New Mexican.

UPDATE: Natalie's article is HERE

Saturday, December 23, 2006

SUSPECT IN KATIE SEPICH MURDER ARRESTED

There's been a major break in the 2003 case of the Las Cruces murder that last year sparked major changes to the state's DNA collection laws.

Police in Las Cruces have arrested a suspect in the rape and murder of Katie Sepich, 20-year-old New Mexico State University who disappeared after a party at NMSU. The district attorney says Gabriel Adrian Avila, 27, has confessed.

Katie's parents, Dave and Jayann Sepich were at the Legisalture practically every day earlier this year lobbying for "Katie's Law," which requires law enforcement to collect DNA from all adults arrested for certain felonies. Currently DNA is collected only from those convicted of felonies. The law passed and was signed by the governor.

And, yes, DNA evidence is what led police to Avila -- although Katie's Law itself hasn't yet gone into effect.

Read the whole story HERE.

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, December 22, 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
Santa Can't Stay by Dwight Yoakam
Rolling Stone by Neko Case
Red Red Wine and Cheatin' Songs by Marty Stuart
You're Still on My Mind by Jeff Leischer & Janet Beveridge Bean
My Idaho Home by Carolyn Mark
Rootin' Tootin' Santa Claus by Pee Wee King
Drinkin' Blues by Wayne Hancock
Based on Real Life by Artie Hill & The Long Daddies
Christmas on the Moon by Troy Hess

I'm in Misery by Hasil Adkins
Gravity Fails by Drive By Truckers
Withered Rose by Ramsay Midwood
Robin Sings at Midnight by Gurf Morlix
I'm Waiting For Santa Claus by Nervous Norvus
As Far As I Can Throw Her by John Egenes
If You Never Seen Her Smile by Jim Lauderdale
White Trash Christmas by The Buckerettes

Ain't Got You by Solomon Burke
Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor by Irma Thomas
What Would Jesus Do? by Chris Thomas King
If We Make It Through December by Merle Haggard
Cold and Bitter Tears by Ted Hawkins
$500 Car by Ed Pettersen
Little Ole Wine Drinker Me by Miss Leslie & The Juke Jointers
Cryin' Time by Dean Martin
Winter Wonderland by Leon Redbone

Old Toy Trains by Roger Miller
You Can Call Me Nick by Dale Watson
Got Your Name on It by Carrie Rodriguez
It's Different Now by Chip Taylor
Dreamboat by Eleni Mandell
Remain by Jon Dee Graham
No Vacancy by Marlee MacLeod
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, May 12, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Email...