Thursday, June 26, 2008

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: OF MOUNTAIN SPIRITS, CZARS & THE 2014 RACE

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 26, 2008


The story about two Muslim women who weren’t allowed to sit behind Barack Obama at a Detroit rally last week reminded me of an incident in Santa Fe during the 2004 presidential campaign.

The Detroit incident involved some overzealous Obama handlers who didn’t want the world to see television footage of the women, who were wearing the Islamic head scarf known as a hijab.

The campaign aides apparently were concerned about those stupid Internet rumors that Obama is a secret Muslim. The removal of the women caused outrage in the U.S. Muslim community, including a rebuke from U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., the first Muslim elected to Congress. Obama called both women last week to apologize.
Hide this from the voters!
Back in September 2004, John Edwards, who was Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry’s running mate, came to Santa Fe for a speech at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. He spoke near an 18-foot bronze statue of an Apache mountain spirit dancer that had been sculpted by San Carlos Apache Craig Dan Goseyun.

But the impressive statue wasn’t visible in any television footage of the event. Rally organizers were careful to obscure it with huge, oblong “Kerry-Edwards” signs.

A local volunteer I know who helped set up the area for the Edwards stop told me some campaign honcho had ordered the statue be hidden behind the signs. People from other parts of the country, the campaign guy told my friend, might think the hulking bronze figure was a “war dancer,” and the tablita and bullroarer the dancer holds in his hands could be interpreted as weapons — which they aren’t, according to museum officials.

The state spokesman for the Kerry campaign denied this, claiming the signs were placed in front of the statue because “it’s just good sign placement.”

Right.

I’m betting they were afraid of rumors Edwards is a secret Apache.

The rise of the czars: New Mexico already is full of Russian olive trees; now we’re starting to accumulate czars.

A spokesman for Gov. Bill Richardson said this week that the guv might soon be appointing a “corrections-reform czar” to oversee recommended changes in the state prison system.
Richardson has had success with his czars
Gilbert Gallegos says the administration has had success with its other czars.

“The czars coordinate the many varied, and sometimes redundant, services, programs and funding sources that deal with these important issues,” according to a page on the governor’s Web site. “One person in each area manages, coordinates and, most importantly, is accountable for making these efforts effective.”

For the record, there’s Behavioral Health Czar Linda Roebuck, Domestic Violence Czar Sharon Pino and the state’s longest-serving czar, DWI Czar Rachel O’Connor.

And this doesn’t even count Jay Czar, executive director of the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority.

Previously, New Mexico had a drug czar, Herman Silva. But he was transferred a couple of years ago to head the Department of Public Safety’s Special Investigations Division. The drug czar’s position has been vacant since.

So why name these program coordinators after Russian royalty? Why not “domestic-violence mandarin” or “behavioral-health sultan” or “drug duke” or “DWI kaiser”? Heck, this is New Mexico. Why not “corrections-reform jefe”?

It probably started back in the Nixon administration when William Simon was appointed “energy czar” during the 1973 Arab oil embargo. His actual title was director of the Federal Energy Administration (a precursor of the U.S. Department of Energy).

In most places, the word czar is an unofficial or informal term. For instance, John P. Walters is commonly called the national “drug czar” although his real title is director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

But here in New Mexico, under Richardson, czar is the official title. It’s even on the czars’ business cards.

Which isn’t a bad thing. Why bother with some fancy $50 title when you can use a simple one-syllable word? It saves precious ink.

Anyway, Richardson apparently is fond of the title. Back in 1999 when he was secretary of energy, he appointed a security czar (though the official title was director of the Office of Security and Emergency Operations).

And last year when he was running for president, Richardson said if elected, he’d appoint a national cancer czar.

Gearing up for ’14: You’ve got to hand it to Richardson. While most local political junkies assume the big fish wants to get out of this small pond as fast as humanly possible, he made eyeballs pop this week when he suggested in a fund-raising letter he might be interested in a third term as governor.

“I still have a lot of work to do here in New Mexico before I leave office in 2010 due to term limits, including fighting to extend health care to every New Mexican,” Richardson wrote. “And I remain actively involved with national politics because we need to change America, and every one of us has to contribute something. But who knows? Maybe I’ll even decide to run for governor again in 2014 — if something else doesn’t pop up in the meantime!”

I can’t help but wonder what Lt. Gov. Diane Denish thinks about this. If Denish has her way, she’ll be running for re-election as governor in 2014.

Richardson hinted at a long New Mexico residency at the Democratic Unity dinner this week. My Capitol bureau partner, Kate Nash, recorded his speech in which he needled state Democratic chairman Brian Colón.

“By the way, thanks Brian for trying to get rid of me. All of you ... you tell me, ‘Geez, you’d be a great so and so,’ ” Richardson said. “Well listen, I am here and I am here to continue our agenda in New Mexico to make us strong, proud, vibrant, no matter how long it takes.”

Could it be Richardson really does think governor of New Mexico is the best job in the world?

Coincidence? Just a week after the unexpected death of Meet the Press host Tim Russert, KOAT-TV, Channel 7, announced it’s moving This Week With George Stephanopoulos from its current late afternoon Sunday slot to 9 a.m. Sunday — the same time as Meet the Press.

The station’s press release doesn’t explain why This Week has been airing at 4 p.m. in the first place. Might Russert have had something to do with it?

Sunday, June 22, 2008

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 22, 2008
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@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
America the Beautiful by The Dictators
The Kingdom of My Mind by The Blood-Drained Cows
Bumble Bee Zombie by Roky Erikson
Bumble Bee by The Casual Dots
Sonic Reducer by The Dead Boys
Libertines in My Scene by The Dirty Novels
Summertime by Ricky Nelson
Death Wears an Overcoat by Bichos
Jolie's Nightmare by Chuck E. Weiss
Rock-a-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody by Al Jolson

You Are My Sunshine by Spider & The Crabs
On the Outside Lookin' In by The Upside Dawne
Shake & Fingerpop by Tide
Crawfish Song by The Astronauts
Love Man by Otis Redding
Quiero Ser Como Wau y Los Arrrghs!!! by The Hollywood Sinners
Rey Los Tablistas by Wau y Los Arrrghs!!!
I'm Happy Too by Hubb Capp & The Wheels

Rock 'n' Soul Music by Country Joe & The Fish
Land of the Freak by King Khan & The Shrines
If You Leave Me by Andre Williams & The New Orleans Hellhounds
Everlovin' Man by The Dirtbombs
Cream by Prince
Premadawnut by Fishbone
Am I the One by The King Khan & BBQ Show

Whittier Boulevard by Los Straitjackets
Mega Bottle Ride by Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros
Yo Frankie (She's Allright With Me) by Dion
Heartbeat of Time by Scott Kempner
Who Will Lead Us by The Gutter Twins
Jesus of the Moon by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Ramona by NRBQ
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

UDALL vs. PEARCE ON ENERGY

REP. STEVE PEARCE
REP. TOM UDALL My story in today's New Mexican on the differing views on energy policy of Senate candidates Tom Udall and Steve Pearce can be found HERE. The sidebar on key energy votes can be found HERE.

This morning the Pearce camp "demanded" a debate on energy policy with Udall.

"Pearce called for the two camps to begin immediate talks to determine the location and format for the debate," the news release said.

I can't imagine Udall not agreeing to debate with Pearce before the gerneral election, but at the moment when polls show him up by 25 percentage points, I'm betting he's not in a rush.

Friday, June 20, 2008

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, June, 2008
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Bears in Them Woods by Nancy Apple
It'd Be Sad If It Wasn't So Funny by Lonesome Bob
Poor Little John by Roger Miller
Deisel Smoke, Dangerous Curves by Doye O'Dell
Roll Truck Roll by Laura Cantrell
Rolling Stone by Neko Case
Poisonville by Ronny Elliot
Creole Stomp (Happytown) by Steve Riley & The Mamou Playboys
Dancing Shoes by Mama Rosin

The Birth of Rock 'n' Roll by Carl Perkins
How's My Ex Treating You by Jerry Lee Lewis
Walk on Out of My Mind by Waylon Jennings
Rebel Rouser by Jim Stringer
My Eyes by Tony Gilyson
Billy 1 by Los Lobos
Senor (Tales of Yankee Power) by Willie Nelson & Calexico

Lawrence Jones by Kathy Matea
Are They Going to Make Us Outlaws Again by Hazel Dickens
Waiting For The Demons to Die by Boris & Saltlicks
The Girl on the Side by The Boxmasters
Wildwood Flower by Cedar Hill Refugees
Checkout Time in Vegas by The Drive-By Truckers
The Seeds of My Destruction by Cornell Hurd

I'll Give You Needles by Scott Kempner
Whatever Happened to Cheetah Chrome by Tommy Womack
Lonely Town by Julien Aklei
Gun Blue by Goshen
Tower of Song by Martha Wainwright
Invitation by Richard Buckner
A Whorehouse is Any House by Bonnie Prince Billy
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Thursday, June 19, 2008

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: SUPERGENIUS SOUL

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 20, 2008


Back in 1968, Country Joe & The Fish envisioned the concept of “rock ’n’ soul” music with an exhilarating, if tongue-in-cheek song by that name.


“Now this ain’t soul music, mind you, this is rock music. But it’s got soul to it, if you can dig that. And now the band would like to play a new riff they just learned, we call a sockin’-it-to-you.”
Forty years later that sockin’-it-to-you spirit is embodied by a Canadian guitar picker of East Indian heritage who lives in Germany — ladies and gentlemen, the mighty King Khan. As Country Joe might say, his love is like a rainbow.

Since the turn of the century, Khan has been ripping up European audiences. He released a couple of CDs with buddy Mark Sultan as The King Khan & BBQ Show, a hard-charging blues/garage duo distinguished by its love of doo-wop harmonies.

But even more impressive is Khan’s work with The Shrines, a nine-, 10-, or 11-piece (depending on which account you read) full-fledged psychedelic soul band, complete with horn section. At one point, the group included a Japanese go-go dancer named Bamboorella who, according to an early press release, “traded a life of crime, sex, and drugs for a life of rock ’n’ roll, sex, and drugs. With her salacious dances she enthuses both men and women alike.”

Khan’s is an amazing sound. But even more amazing is that until June 17, the young king hadn’t been available on any American record label.

Vice Records, the same independent label that’s home to The Black Lips, just released The Supreme Genius of King Khan & The Shrines, a best-of compilation complete with a Bollywood-style album cover and liner notes from The Black Lips’ Jared Swilley. The album features tracks from the band’s three albums — Three Hairs and You’re Mine, Mr. Supernatural, and What Is?! — plus various singles and EPs.

While you can often detect punk and garage rock influences in Khan’s grooves, and the pace of some tunes like “Land of the Freak” is closer to speed metal than to soul, Khan and the band clearly respect the traditions of soul. This is no silly parody. It’s a legitimate update of the genre.
Among my favorite tracks is “Took My Lady to Dinner,” a tune that might owe its hooks to the Beatles’ “Drive My Car.” The narrator in the song sits in horror as his girlfriend orders “15 pounds of ribs, deep fried with some burgers on the side” not to mention the ice cream for dessert. In the refrain, Khan sings, “She’s fat, she’s ugly, I really really love her.”

“Welfare Bread” has a sweet, Southern melody, though the arrangement reminds me a little of Springsteen’s “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out.” There’s even a little “Born to Run”-style glockenspiel. It’s a poor man’s love song. “You don’t have to pay your bills anymore, now/You just have to eat my welfare bread.”

Whoever compiled this album had no way of knowing that Bo Diddley would die just a few weeks before the release. So I guess it’s just righteous synchronicity that Diddley’s “Crackin’ Up” is the only cover song on Supreme Genius. Khan does it justice with his tremolo guitar and ragged vocals.

The real showstopper, though, is “Shivers Down My Spine,” a dark, bluesy, minor-key song in which Khan sounds like he’s at the end of his rope and in some kind of vampiristic relationship (”She bites me square on my neck/I say, ‘Baby, what the heck?’”) The tune features a cool, spooky organ solo by Freddy “Mr. Ovitch” Rococo (aka Fredovitch).

I’m hoping this is just the first shot fired in the King Khan & The Shrines invasion of America and that Vice releases an album of new material in the near future. Because, like Country Joe might say, “Everywhere I go, you know that it’s always understood/Rock and soul music is doggone good.”

More super sounds of soul
* Daptone 7-Inch Singles Collection, Vol. 2
by various artists. I’ve been yakking about the latest great soul revival for a couple of years now. The one record company most responsible for this delightful phenomenon is Daptone, a New York label that has been cranking out the soul for several years.

The collection features several tunes by Daptone’s two greatest stars — Sharon Jones, the corrections-officer-turned-songbird who is fast becoming the 21st-century Aretha Franklin; and Lee Fields, who’s loud and proud about his musical debt to James Brown but is a dynamic performer in his own right.

There are other acts here too, like shouter Charles Bradley, The Mighty Imperials, the Dap-Kings (who regularly back Jones and also recorded with Amy Winehouse), and Antibalas, here under its original name, Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra. The band’s appearance almost makes up for the absence of The Budos Band, one my favorite Daptone groups, which, like Antibalas, explores the relationship between African music and American funk.

Fields shines here with the slow Stax/Volt-sounding “Could Have Been.” Shouting over a gutbucket guitar, sweet organ, and sax-led horn section, Fields sounds like Howard Tate in his prime.

The song that really stands out on this collection is Jones’ version of “I Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In).” Yes, that weird psychedelic pop gem that served to introduce the world to Kenny Rogers (with The First Edition), circa 1967.

The lyrics (by a young and apparently stoned Mickey Newbury) are gibberish (“I woke up this morning with the sundown pouring in/I found my mind in a brown paper bag within,” and so forth) But Jones sings it with gospel-fired intensity, and those Dap horns respond in kind.

Sorry, CD lovers, this album is only available as a download. You can find it on iTunes, Amazon or eMusic.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

ROUNDHOUSE ROUND-UP: A TRAVELING CONGRESSMAN

A Washington, D.C.-based institute dedicated to "fostering enlightened leadership and open-minded dialogue" by holding seminars and forums for Congress members in various parts of the world has paid more than $100,000 since the turn of the century for travel expenses for U.S. Rep. Tom Udall and his wife.
REP. TOM UDALL
In trips paid for by The Aspen Institute, Udall has gone to conferences on "the global environment" in Lausanne, Switzerland, Barcelona, Spain, and Rome; a confab in Florence, Italy, on "the convergence of U.S. national security and the global environment"; conferences on "political Islam" in Helsinki, Finland, and Istanbul, Turkey; meetings between Chinese and American scholars in various cities in China; an education-reform conference in Canún, Mexico; and two conferences on Latin American policy in the beach resort city of Punta Mita, Mexico.

And don't forget a "congressional planning" meeting in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. — a popular location for congressional retreats — back in 2001.

The total cost of Udall's Aspen trips was $105,066.66.

The Legistorm Web site, which compiles a database of congressional trips, makes a notation — a dollar sign symbol — on the Punta Mita trips to indicate hotel charges were "unusually expensive." The hotel charges for Udall and his wife, Jill Cooper, were $3,175 for the January 2006 trip and $2,950 in January 2005. But that's probably just a case of Punta Mita being a pricey little town. Nearly all of the Aspen Institute's 61 trips for senators and representatives to Punta Mita listed at Legistorm have the "unusually expensive" icon.

Udall's trip to China last year, which cost more than $29,000, was the fourth most expensive trip a member of Congress has reported since 2000, according to Legistorm. The most expensive one was a $31,000 trip to London in 2000 by Rep. Thomas Billey, R-Va., and his wife, which was paid for by the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co.

In response to questions Wednesday about Udall's Aspen trips, spokeswoman Marissa Padilla said in a written statement: "The world is a dangerous place and there are complex global issues facing New Mexico and the nation today. Tom Udall has proven he'll do what's right for New Mexico and the nation by constantly working to expand his knowledge and maintain a strong grasp of the serious issues impacting us today. ... These high level policy conferences give Congressman Udall the opportunity to focus on the key issues affecting New Mexico and the nation. The Aspen educational programs have never cost the taxpayers a dime, and the Congressman has never missed a vote by attending them. ... Every week Congress is in session, the Aspen Institute also holds policy briefings and sessions with distinguished scholars and international experts that the Congressman attends."

What is the Aspen Institute? According to Aspen's Web site, the institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization created in Aspen, Colo., by Chicago businessman Walter Paepcke. Now headquartered in Washington, D.C., the institute has campuses in Aspen, Colo., and near the shores of Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.

The institute's board of trustees includes former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; former Disney chief executive officer Michael Eisner; David Gergen, who has been an aide to several U.S. presidents, most recently Bill Clinton; and former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Michael Powell.

Former Secretary of State (and Bill Richardson employer) Henry Kissinger; former Defense Secretary and World Bank President Robert McNamara; and former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker are listed as "lifetime trustees."

According to a written statement by former U.S. Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa, director of Aspen's Congressional Program, in 2006, funding for the program was provided solely by Carnegie Corp. of New York, the Ford Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Pew Charitable Trusts, The Packard Foundation, the Charles S. Mott Foundation, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Asia Foundation.

Though corporate contributions aren't accepted for the congressional program, Aspen's most recent annual report lists dozens of corporate sponsors — assumedly for other institute activities. According to the most recent tax form available, Aspen took in nearly $55 million in contributions in 2005.

According to Legistorm, which has compiled congressional trips going back to 2000, Aspen has spent more money on congressional travel than any other group — more than $4.9 million on 894 trips.

Its closest competitor is the American Israeli Education Foundation, which has spent $2.5 million on trips since 2000.

According to Legistorm's breakdown, Aspen has spent more than $3.4 million on travel for Democratic members of Congress, compared with $1.5 for Republicans.

Other Aspen Institute trips: Udall isn't the only member of the New Mexico delegation to travel on Aspen's dime. Democratic Sen. Jeff Bingaman and his wife traveled to London in August 2002 for a conference on U.S.-Russia relations; to Helsinki alone in 2003 for the same conference on political Islam that Udall attended; and alone to Moscow in 2003 for another conference on U.S.-Russia relations.

Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., along with her husband and two children, went to the same conference in White Sulphur Springs that Udall went to, courtesy of the Aspen Institute in 2001.

Grubesic won't leave early. When state Sen. John Grubesic, D-Santa Fe, defeated incumbent Roman Maes in the 2004 Democratic primary, Maes, a senator since 1985, resigned to give Grubesic a little head start and a little extra seniority.

But Grubesic, who didn't seek re-election this year, said this week he won't do the same for state Rep. Peter Wirth, who won the Democratic primary unopposed and faces no general election opposition.

"I was elected to a four-year term and I intend to serve it," Grubesic said. Another factor in keeping his seat, he said, is the prospect of the long-threatened special session — currently rumored to be in the works for August or September, though anyone who really knows anything about it is keeping mum.

Wirth said this week that he doesn't mind waiting until January to take the District 25 Senate seat. In fact, he said, if there is a special session, he'd probably be more comfortable in his current House seat than as a newcomer to the Senate.

He said he's met with Grubesic recently, "just to talk about what I've gotten myself into."

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...