Monday, April 09, 2007

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 8, 2007
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

NEW: email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Heaven on Their Minds by Murray Head
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues by Bob Dylan
The Temple by The Afghan Whigs
Standard White Jesus by Timbuk 3
Bionic Woman is a Cousin of Mine by The Sisterhood
Easter by Patti Smith
Peter Cottontail by The Bubbadinos
Jesus Christ by Pegboy

I Walk My Murderous Intentions Home by King Automatic
You're Gonna Miss Me by 13th Floor Elevators
Don't Burn the Witch by The Monsters
Go Away by The Plague
Fireball by Alan Vega
Winding Up by Roy & The Devil's Motorcycle
Rock Me Baby by Blue Cheer
(I'm In With) The Out Crowd by The A-Bones
Peter Gunn Twist by The Jesters




FALL SET
All Songs by The Fall

Systematic Abuse
Elves
Pacifying Joints
Just Step Sideways
I'm A Mummy
Pinball Machine
Cab It Up
(end of set)

Waveform Disturbance by Rumble Trio
Beltsanded Man by Mike Watt
Jesus Children of America by Stevie Wonder
Wicked Game by The Surf Lords
Heaven Only Knows by Mary Weiss
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Saturday, April 07, 2007

RICHARDSON'S TRIPS

RICHARDSON PREPARES FOR TV INTERVIEW
Gov. Bill Richardson left for North Korea this morning, just his latest trip out of New Mexico. My story in today's New Mexican showed that as of Friday he's been out of state at least 38 days so far this year. (Friday was day 96 of 2207.)

I say "at least," because it is the Richardson campaign's policy not to publicize out-of-state events, such as private fundraisers, that are not open to the public.

Richardson is scheduled to return to New Mexico from the North Korean trip on Friday. That means, assuming he doesn't have another trip planned for next Saturday, that he will have been out of New Mexico on all but four days days of the first two weeks of April.

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, April 6, 2007
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

NEW: email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Get Up And Go/Fiddle Tunes by David Bromberg
Cryin' Drunk by Old 97s
Ain't No Top 40 Song by Terry Allen
Blinding Sun by Jimmie Dale Gilmore
The Ballad of Thunder Road by R.B. Morris
That's How It Goes by The Meat Puppets

When the Man Comes Around by Jorma Kaukonen
Wanted Man by Johnny Cash
Country Heroes by Hank Williams III
Mind Your Own Business by Hank Williams
Hank Williams by Brent Hoodenpyle & The Loners
Blue-Eyed Elaine by John Prine & Mac Wiseman
Bolinas by Audrey Auld Mezera
The Mystery of The Mystery by Dolly Parton
Are You Washed in the Blood of the Lamb by Uncle Dave Macon

You Made Me What I Am Today by The Watzloves
Stick to the Plan by Graham Parker
Financing His Romance by The Bottle Rockets
Better Every Day by The Waco Brothers
Too Much Pork For Just One Fork by Southern Culture on the Skids
Brother To the Blues by George Jones
Truck Driver's Blues by Merle Haggard
Mata Hari Dress by Marlee MacLeod

Kashmere Gardens Mud by Johnny Bush
The Bloody Bucket by Grey DeLisle
Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight by Whiskeytown
Cloak of Frogs by Freakwater
Louise by Jerry Jeff Walker with Nicolette Larson
My Long Journey Home by Charlie Louvin with Paul Burch
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Friday, April 06, 2007

EGGS-ESTENTIALISM



Here is the official New Mexico Easter egg on display at the White House during this holy season. All states have an egg for the collection organized by (I kid you not) the American Egg Board.


The egg, created by artist Sharon Locke, looks like it has a little Mudhead in there. But here's what Wonkette had to say about it:

There’s a little Bill Richardson inside this egg, drinking an entire pitcher of margaritas. Good work, New Mexico!

Meanwhile, my old partner in crime at the New Mexican Capitol Bureau Ben Neary, (now working for the Associated Press in Wyoming), reveals that the Wyoming egg was created by some college kid from Illinois whose mother works for the Egg Board. CLICK HERE.

UPDATE: To add more insult to injury to the great state of Wyoming, in the web version of a Washington Post story that quotes Ben, when you run your mouse over the photo it says "Montana State Easter Egg."

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: FALL FORWARD

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
April 6, 2007

Spring is here. It’s time for The Fall.

Thirty years on the road and Mark E. Smith, on The Fall’s new album, Reformation Post TLC, is still cranking out his crazy brand of rant ’n’ roll, shouting his incomprehensible, half-comical lyrics over steady, driving beats; bubbly, fizzly synth noises; and ever-tasty, irresistible, garage-band guitar riffs.

It’s a formula tried-and-true and one from which the former dockworker from Manchester, England, rarely strays. But dagnabbit, the darn thing still works.

A little background on this album. Last year, just a few dates into an American tour, all of Smith’s sidemen — except his wife and keyboardist Elena Poulou — walked out on him. (“They went home because of my violent and abusive behavior,” Smith told Maximum Rock’n’ Roll in an interview last year. It’s not clear if he was being facetious.) The Fall’s latest record company, Narnack, recruited a trio of Americans to take the place of the absent Brits. It’s this group that recorded Reformation Post TLC.

The new boys — guitarist Tim Presley, bassist Rob Barbato, and drummer Orpheo McCord — might not share Smith’s Manchester working-class roots, but they seem to have caught on to the basic Fall sound.

More than a decade ago, in reviewing some Fall album or another, I wrote, “I doubt if all the CIA’s computers could crack the garbled ranting of Mark E. Smith.” In recent years I’ve been leaning toward a conspiracy-theory explanation for The Fall’s appeal to its scattered cult.

The band is actually sending coded messages to some alien/Lovecraftian sleeper cell. Some isolated Smith yelp in conjunction with some post-Standells guitar hook causes some shift in brain chemistry in some isolated listener, and next thing you know some unwitting Fall fan in Dalhart, Texas, is making a 4 a.m. drive to the Tucumcari airport to pick up a crate of something unspeakable delivered on a secret flight from Bohemian Grove.

I hope I’m safe now that I’ve spilled that secret.

Or maybe people like me like The Fall because it’s good, stripped-down rock and because Smith’s crackpot/shaman lyrics open up the imagination.

There are a few departures from normal Fall fare on Reformation. Poulou handles the vocals on “The Wright Stuff,” reciting the lyrics in her lovely Greek accent as a snaky Farfisa organ riff slithers behind her.

Smith tries a turn at country music (ploughing the same ground as The Mekons on “Lost Highway” and “Sweet Dreams”), singing with a Bizarro World cover of Merle Haggard’s “White Line Fever.” (It’s not the first time The Fall has gone country. Back in the ’80s the band recorded a fine little hillbilly tune called “Pinball Machine.”) Here the Haggard song seems to be a setup for the next track on the album, “Insult Song,” which starts off with Smith, in some wino/pirate voice, grumbling, “White line fever/I got it off the children of Captain Beefheart/They’d been locked in the forest for many years/They could not help it/They were retards from the Los Angeles district” and repeating "White line fever" several times through the mysterious spoken-word song.

The one major misstep here is “Das Boat.” Unfortunately, at 10 and a half minutes, it’s the longest song on the album. It’s mainly a dull synthesizer drone with percussion that sounds like someone hitting a desk with a ruler and chimplike chants of “eee eee eee eee” by Smith and Poulou. The following track, “The Bad Stuff,” works better even though it sounds as if it might be a collage of studio outtakes. It starts off with spooky guitar twanging but soon goes into a hopped-up, classic-Fall, instrumental workout, with indecipherable Fall-jabber popping up here and there.

(Belated correction: in my past couple of reviews of The Fall, I mentioned a July 1981 gig at what used to be the old El Paseo Theater in downtown Santa Fe. I mistakenly called it The Gold Bar, but after some e-mail correspondence from Stefan Cooke (who has an excellent Fall Web site), I dug out the original clip of my review of that show in the Santa Fe Reporter and discovered the theater was operating under the name of Paseo de la Luz. )

Also recommended:
* I Walk My Murderous Intentions Home
by King Automatic. This is a one-man garage band from France. Mr. Automatic (his real name is Jay something) plays guitar, drums, harmonica, and Farfisa organ. Until I checked the Web site, I thought it was a full band. (A guy named Julien plays sax on a couple of tracks here.)

King Automatic sounds like one of those proud, unsung ’60s bands you find on compilations like the Pebbles series. But he also has a fine sense of noir. The title cut and a reggae-tinged tune called “Here Comes the Terror” could be from a soundtrack of some warped foreign cop show. And there’s an instrumental tribute to Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti-Western themes called “A Few Dollars Less.”

*Garage Punk Vol. 1: 20 Years of Uncontrolled Live Shows and Ultra Rare Records by The Monsters. Here’s an aptly titled, double-disc record by the Swiss band led by Voodoo Rhythm Records high priest Rev. Beat Man. It’s a self described “no-fi” collection from “one of the trashyest, loudest, ... bands you’ll ever see!” On one of the live cuts (“Dead End Street”) Beat Man proclaims the music to be a cross between death metal and rockabilly. Throw in some Stooges, Cramps, and a little Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, and that’s a good start.

If you can get past the no-fi, there’s some real oughta-be classics here. “Nightmares” and “Blues for Joe” are timeless garage glory. “Searchin’” is downright ferocious. And the cover of Rick Nelson’s “Lonesome Town” is touching and hilarious at the same time.

Anyone who believes that “Psychotic Reaction” ought to be the national anthem should check out The Monsters. While the sound quality definitely lives up to Beat Man’s “trash” aesthetic, this group indeed is monstrous.

Learn more about The Monsters, King Automatic and other trash-rock avatars at the Voodoo Rhythm site.

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Come for the Shame, Stay for the Scandal

  Earlier this week I saw Mississippi bluesman Cedrick Burnside play at the Tumbleroot here in Santa Fe. As I suspected, Burnsi...