Sunday, August 10, 2008

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, August 10, 2008
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

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

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
The Snake by Johnny Rivers
He Did It by The Detroit Cobras
Judgement Day by The Pretty Things
Harem Orgy by Mohammed & His Robed Rockers
Ju Ju Hand by Sam the Sham & The Pharoahs
Stayed Too Long by The Chesterfield Kings
Treat Me Like a Fool by The Hollywood Sinners
Seven Mystic Horsemen by Sky Saxon
Shake Your Hips by Slim Harpo
Joe Bonner by The Gluey Brothers

Square Pegs by The Waitresses
My Boyfriend's Learning Karate by Thee Headcoatees
Dangerdog by The Wipeouters
If You Leave Me by Andre Williams & The New Orleans Hellhounds
Smokestack Lightning by The Electric Prunes
Bad Trip by Lee Fields
Dancing Queen by The Yayhoos

AROUND THE WORLD IN A DAZE
Lucifer in Coelis by Slava Kunst Orchestra
Clown of the Town by Reverend Beat-Man
Angelita by Mod East
La Yegua by Cordero
Chian by Voodoo Kung Fu
Biskotin by Istabul Blues Kumpanyasi
Letters to Castro by Gogol Bordello
Bhangra Brothers by Firewater
(I'll be substituting for Susan Ohori's Beyond Borders 9 p.m. to midnight Monday night on KSFR.)

San Francisco Fan by Chris Calloway
Ain't No Sunshine/Lonely Avenue by Isaac Hayes
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Saturday, August 09, 2008

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Thanks to Laurell for subbing for me last night on The Santa Fe Opry, so I could go sse my son's band ansd The Gluey Brothers with my daughter. Here's her playlist.

Friday, August 8, 2008
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time
Guest Host: Laurell Reynolds

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

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by The Byrds
Wynn Stewart-Another Day Another Dollar
Neil Young-Piece Of Crap
Buffy Sainte-Marie-Not the Lovin Kind
Neko Case-Hold On Hold On
Shel Silverstein-The Taker
Sir Douglas Quintet-Nuevo Laredo

RG Stark Live at KSFR
Coyote
Mineral Wells
Not Crazy Tonight
Narcocorrido Nuevo Laredo (from CD)
Strong Wine Strong Women (Blue Diamond Shine)

David Crosby-Cowboy Movie
Gary Stewart-Single Again
Holy Modal Rounders-Junko Partner
Michael Hurley-Your Old Gearbox
James Taylor-Handy Man
Bob Dylan-If Not For You/All I Really Want To Do
Hank Williams-Honky Tonk Man
Don Williams-Tulsa Time
Willie Nelson-Midnight Rider
John Anderson-Seminole Wind
Emmylou Harris-Queen of the Silver Dollar/Beyond The Great Divide
Junior Brown-Guitar Man
Dolly Parton-Jolene
Bill Monroe-Body and Soul
Townes Van Zandt-Nothin'
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

GLUEY MANIA

THE GLUEY TWIST


Regis was right!

It was "a lotta fun."
VIVA LOS HERMANOS GLUEY!
The Brothers Gluey with all the Santa Fe contingent of thier Established Gentlemen band played a nice long show pacekd with madness, mayhem and raw funk at the Santa Fe Brewing Company Friday night.

I hadn't seen them in a decade or so, but just a couple of minutes into "Gluey Brothers Creep" I recalled jsut about everything I ever loved about these guys.

And it only got better from there. They played all my favorite tunes --"Penny and the Young Buck," "Pinon Lurker," "Walk Belly Cologne" -- and they even dedicated a song to me, "Coffee Shop Tribute," thanks to what I said about the "Reuben Kincaid" line in Friday's Tune-up.

Let's pressure the brothers to not stay away for so long.

Check out my Gluey snapshots HERE.
****
OUTTA GEAR
It was a great night of rock 'n' roll in Santa Fe. Before The Glueys, I saw my son's band Outta Gear play at Warehouse 21.

Friday, August 08, 2008

SPIRIT OF THE '60s

Hats off to Joe Monahan and whatever alligator discovered that the "hippies" in the recent Steve Pearce newspaper ad originally appeared on the cover of some cheesy As-Seen-On-TV album.

Reminds me of the good old days when you'd wake up, drop some LSD, listen to some Strawberry Alarm Clock records then go out and protest for higher taxes. (Hey, I still like The Strawberry Alarm Clock!)

'No Drilling!' 'No Nukes!' 'No Copyright Laws!'

Actually when I first saw the Pearce ad, I was reminded of a TV commercial for another album advertised on TV a few years ago. Maybe Pearce can find these guys if he decides to make a television version of the print ad.

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: GLUEY BROTHERS CREEP AGAIN

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 8, 2008


They were a mysterious explosion of comedy, kitsch, experimental theater, neo-Beat poetry, and pop culture run amok — backed by a supertight band navigating a turbulent sea of funk, hip-hop, metal, blues, tango, and whatever else floated by. They were funny and outrageous. They were insightful, often-poignant storytellers, celebrating hustlers, street people, burnouts, and even the occasional dental hygienist with love on her mind. Not only that, they were snazzy dressers — in a riot-at-the-Goodwill-store kind of way.
People will freak
Hands down, The Gluey Brothers were the most original band to ever call Santa Fe their home. The two frontmen, King Hummus (Logan Richards) and MC Tahini (Jim Goulden) disappeared around the turn of the century, ending up in California, where they continued the path of The Gluey.

But they’re back. (Actually Tahini has been living in Santa Fe for the last year or so, though Hummus remains in Los Angeles.) They’ve got a cool new DVD, Rio Vista: Visuals, Volume One, which features Gluey music videos, footage from live performances from 1994 to 2005, a documentary, an interview, and assorted weirdness.

The DVD captures a big chunk of the old Gluey magic. There’s the Brothers’ 1998 national-television debut on Penn & Teller’s Sin City Spectacular (a short-lived FX network series and that’s no BS.) They do a seven-minute version of their signature tune and classic show opener, “Gluey Brothers Creep.”

One of my favorite Gluey Santa Fe songs is here — a 2000 live performance of “Piñon Lurker,” a high-charged guitar boogie about a guy you shouldn’t make eye contact with if you see him walking down Agua Fría.

The DVD wouldn’t be complete without “Coffee Shop Tribute,” which features some of the Brothers’ funniest, if most obscure, trivia references: “I saw Reuben Kincaid with a shoddy perm” is one of my favorite lines in contemporary music. Unfortunately, the song is abbreviated, coupled with a snatch of “Freedom Rap.”

Mark Sommerville created a surreal Flash cartoon for “Stabbing Trilogy (in Five Parts).” My favorite part is the talking-catfish segment. Lots of Gluey tunes would make great cartoons, so I hope to see more of these.

In putting this together, Sean “Momma Bates” Browning reached way back in the Gluey archives. There are versions of “Donut Quota” and “Hash House Line” from the boys’ second performance (in Van Nuys, California, 1992), when it was just Hummus and Tahini with a drum machine.

The initial version of Rio Vista: Visuals, Volume One is a limited-edition run. Each copy is numbered and hand-signed.

If you missed out on these guys in the 1990s, it’s not too late. Let The Gluey Brothers creep into your life. They play at 8 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 8, at Santa Fe Brewing Company, 27 Fire Place. Admission is $8. It’s their first show here since they played at the Paramount, right before it closed.




Also recommended:

* Can You Deal With It by Andre Williams & The New Orleans Hellhounds. This R&B codger — who wrote the ’60s soul classic “Shake a Tail Feather” — is apparently indestructible. He’s in his early 70s and has survived drug problems, homelessness, poverty, and obscurity. But he keeps cranking out hot and nasty albums.
ANDRE!
In the past decade, he has teamed up with bands like The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, The Dirtbombs, The Sadies, The Diplomats of Solid Sound, and now with a funky punky unit called The New Orleans Hellhounds to make some of the grittiest raunch-rock known to man. He might look like a nice, harmless old guy, but once he starts singing, you realize you’re flirting with danger.

Williams romps through a number of new songs about his favorite subjects: sex, girls, and sex. He gives dirty old men a good name. He saves his best for the first with the title song, in which he sings about “the rhythm of your booty” and “them great thunder thighs” as a metallic guitar plays tag with a diabolically slinky organ.

“Pray for Your Daughter” could almost be a Gary U.S. Bonds party-in-the-studio song — that is, if Bonds were partial to honking harmonicas and tunes celebrating crack whores. Meanwhile, “If It Wasn’t for You” is a soul ballad that sounds like something Van Morrison would love to sing. The saxes remind me of the band on Bob Dylan’s Street Legal.

On “Never Had a Problem,” The Hellhounds sound like a crazy mash-up of The Clash, The Who, and Ruben and the Jets, as Williams growls, “I ain’t never had a woman who did not kick me out. ... I ain’t never had a habit I could not live without.”

As always, Andre sounds like he means business.

* The Diplomats of Solid Sound featuring The Diplomettes. You can find soul music in some of the strangest places. Here’s a band from Iowa — yes, that Iowa — full of punchy funk.

The Diplomats of Solid Sound started out as an instrumental group, sounding a lot like Booker T & The MG’s with a horn section. On this album, they’re joinea trio of female singers. Sharon Jones won’t lose any sleep over The Diplomettes, but these Iowa gals get the job done.

“Come on in My Kitchen” (not the Robert Johnson song) is a cool, grooving workout, while “Hurt Me So” is thick and smoky. There are actually two versions of that song. A faster-paced dub remix closes the album. But my favorite is the rocking “Budget Fro,” which gives organ man Nate “Count” Basinger and the horn guys a chance to shine.

So yes, Virginia, there is soul in Iowa. I guess you could call this sound “ethanol funk.”

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...