Thursday, October 02, 2008

ROUNDHOUSE ROUNDUP: THE RUIDOSO CONNECTION

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 2, 2008


A recent article in The New York Times alluded to a little-known John McCain tie to New Mexico. His father-in-law, Jim Hensley, whose Arizona beer distributorship helped bankroll the Republican presidential candidate’s first congressional race, once owned Ruidoso Downs with his brother Gene Hensley.

A quick trip to the microfilm room of the state library reveals the racetrack under the Hensleys more than 50 years ago was the source of scandal involving allegations of arson, death threats, political corruption and organized crime. Not the type of family history you find in campaign literature.

Jim Hensley Jim and Gene Hensley purchased the track in Ruidoso in late 1952. This followed some trouble in Arizona. There, in March 1948, a federal court jury convicted the brothers of “making false entries to the government on distilled liquor sales,” according to an Associated Press account. Jim Hensley got a six-month suspended sentence. But his older brother Gene was sentenced to a year and served nine months in a federal prison camp.

But the convictions didn’t stop the New Mexico Racing Commission from granting the Hensleys a license to run the track. No state law at the time barred convicted felons from operating racetracks.

Jim Hensley, Cindy McCain’s father, sold his share of Ruidoso Downs in 1955 and returned to Phoenix, where he started working for a beer wholesaler. Later, he bought the company.

He left New Mexico just before things got interesting in Ruidoso.

The summer of ’55: The state had ordered an audit of the track in June 1955. During that time, a lawsuit was filed by a Phoenix man named Clarence “Teak” Baldwin, described as a “nightclub owner and gambler,” who claimed he owned a third interest in the racetrack. Baldwin, who ran a food concession at the track, had a police record in Arizona. According to a 1977 story in the Albuquerque Journal, Baldwin was accused by some of his customers of “doctoring the drinks and then fleecing (the customers) in gambling games.”

The Hensley brothers had denied Baldwin’s involvement in Ruidoso Downs at a Racing Commission hearing in 1953.

By the end of July, things started getting ugly in Ruidoso. In a period of just a few days, according to stories in The New Mexican by reporters Bill Bailey and Neil Addington, a state police officer was assigned to protect a Racing Commission secretary performing the audit after threats to the secretary’s life; a stables fire, suspected as arson, killed 22 horses; and two days after the fire, someone poisoned two race horses.

In August 1955, Racing Commissioner Oliver “Hop” Lee resigned after The New Mexican revealed his financial entanglements with Ruidoso Downs. He owned stock in the company and had loaned it $60,000. Lee had received at least two checks from the company — $4,000 for interest on the loan and $8,000 for “personal services.” Lee was part of a partnership that had sold the track to the Hensleys.

The paper also showed that the mother-in-law of Racing Commission Chairman B.M. “Red” Keohane owned stock in Ruidoso Downs. Both Lee and Keohane had accepted gifts from the company, including hats valued at more than $100 (and that’s in 1955 money). Keohane told The New Mexican he saw nothing wrong with accepting gifts from organizations he’s supposed to regulate.

His spirit still lives in the Roundhouse every time the Legislature defeats ethics bills.

The Hensley situation sparked a political hissing match between then-Gov. John Simms, a Democrat, and his predecessor, Republican Gov. Ed Mechem.

Simms blasted Mechem for allowing the Hensleys to get the license in the first place. However, someone identified only as “an authentic and unimpeachable source” told Albuquerque Journal columnist Ed Minterm in 1955 that Mechem had warned Simms about Ruidoso.

“The current operators, the Hensleys, now under fire, were under constant surveillance” during Mechem’s watch. “No action was taken against the Hensleys because the investigation showed that as tracks go, all the laws were being observed. But Mechem prodded the Racing Commission to be alert because he was worried about it.”

A Phoenix businessman: According to the Aug. 4, 1955, New Mexican, Keohane, asked why he approved the Ruidoso racing license in the first place, said “he considered the Hensleys a good risk because of their association with a Phoenix businessman.”
Kemper Marley, businessman
However, the paper pointed out that a state police report given to the commission in 1953 “shows this ‘businessman’ has a long police record in falsification of records with the (Hensley) brothers.” He also owned a racetrack wire service in Phoenix that was connected to the bookie operation of famed Chicago gangster Al Capone.

The businessman in question was Kemper Marley, a millionaire rancher and liquor distributor who had employed Jim and Gene Hensley in the 1940s when they were convicted in federal court. His racing wire service at one point was managed by Baldwin.

Marley, who died in 1990, was a suspect in the 1976 car bombing death of Arizona Republican investigative reporter Don Bolles. John Harvey Adamson, the only person convicted in the killing, said in court documents that he’d been hired by an Arizona contractor to kill Bolles for writing articles damaging to Marley.

Marley was never charged in the case. He sued Investigate Reporters and Editors Inc. and won $15,000 in damages for emotional stress over an article the group published about the Bolles case. But that jury, according to Marley’s obituary in The New York Times, found IRE did not libel Marley or invade his privacy.

The state took over Ruidoso Downs in August 1955, but that didn’t last long. Gene Hensley hung on to the track until 1969. Three years earlier, he was convicted of tax evasion and was imprisoned in La Tuna, Texas.

According to The New York Times, Gene Hensley and his former wife sold their shares in Ruidoso Downs to a company connected with Marley. The track currently is owned by R.D. Hubbard, who bought it in 1988.

The Phoenix New Times in 2000 published a lengthy article about McCain and James Hensley. (CLICK HERE.) The Hensley era at Ruidoso Downs is discussed on pages 3 and 4.

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

MITT IN SANTA FE


If either Mitt Romney or Steve Pearce ever called themselves "tireless" campaigners, that wasn't the case yesterday. Romney stumped for Pearce's U.S. Senate campaign Tuesday at Garcia's Tires on Airport Road.

Lupe Garcia, who built the store in the late '80s, is a past chairman of the Santa Fe County GOP.

Neither Romney nor Pearce used the setting to mock Barack Obama's (correct) assertation that properly inflated tires gets better gas mileage.

My story on the event is HERE

Sunday, September 28, 2008

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 28, 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
Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More by Mudhoney
On Broadway by Neil Young
Red Sun by Half Japanese
Boomerang by The Black Lips
No Puedo Hacerte Mia by Los Peyotes
Buena by Joe "King" Carrasco & The Crowns
The Day I Got My Spine Back by Deadbolt
Fattening Frogs for Snakes by Sonny Boy Williamson & The Animals
Dog Eat Robot by The Meteors

Jackie Chan Does Kung Foo by Thee Headcoatees
Haisai Oijsan (Hey, Man!) by Shoukichi Kina
Wrestling Rock 'n' Roll by Lightning Beat Man
Teenage Depression by Eddie & The Hotrods
Theme From a Summer Place by Ross Johnson
Electrocuted Blues by The Mooney Suzuki
I Got Spies Watching You by Figures of Light
Lonesome and Loathsome by Hipbone Slim & The Knee Tremblers
D'Accord Tony D'accord by Tony Truant with The Fleshtones
Wine-O Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys

Mumbles by Jack Ross
Bikini by The Bikinis
The Strip by The Upsetters
Kaput by Sam & The Saxtones
Dragon Walk by The Noblemen
Aw Shucks by J.J. Jones
The Grunt by The 50 Milers
Chicken Papa by The Preachers
Ooba Gooba by The Charts
(Hot Pastrami with) Mashed Potatoes by Joe Dee & The Starlighters
The Jungle by The Nite Cats

Get These Blues Off of Me by B.B. King
T.V. Mama by Taj Mahal with Los Lobos
Soul Meeting by The Soul Clan (Solomon Burke, Arthur Conley, Don Covay, Ben E. King & Joe Tex)
The Night Time Is the Right Time by Bettye LaVette, Andre Williams & Nathaniel Meyer
Wolf's at the Door by Howlin' Wolf
You'll Find Your Mistake by Junior Kimbrough
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Friday, September 26, 2008

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, September 26, 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

SUPPORT THE KSFR FALL FUNDRAISER!Call me during the show 505-428-1382 or PLEDGE ONLINE

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Spayed Kooley/Filipino Dance Hall Girl by Ry Cooder
I'll Fix Your Flat Tire, Merle by Pure Prairie League
Happy Hour in Hell by Cornell Hurd
Absolutely Sweet Marie by C.J. Chenier
Should Have Lied About That by Nancy Apple
NANCY IN THE FIRELIGHT
NANCY APPLE LIVE SET
I'll Be Fine When I Get Home to You
If Money's the Root of All Evil
428-1382 (KSFR Pledge Song)
Chariot Wheels
Bears in Them Woods

Riding in My Car by Gann Brewer
Cora by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
Gorgeous George by Ronny Elliott

Border Radio by Dave Alvin
Jungle Fever by Charlie Feathers
Trucker from Tennessee by Link Davis
Devil's Bop by Bovine
Tobacco Road by Tav Falco
Race With the Devil by Gene Vincent
Sweet Love on My Mind by Johnny Burnett & The Rock 'n' Roll Trio
Monkey Beat City by Ronnie Dawson
High Priced Chick by Yuichi & The Hilltone Boys
Somebody's Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonight by Jet Girls
I'm a Hobo by Danny Reeves
Whirlwind by Charlie Rich

Blood by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
The Gift Horse of Mercy by Butch Hancock
Shanty by The Mekons
There's a Rugged Road by Shawn Colvin
Last Date by David Bromberg
Laura by Rolf Cahn
Everybody's Talkin' by Bobby Bare
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: HOW BLUE CAN YOU GET?

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



Listening to B.B. King’s new album, One Kind Favor, makes me remember the exact moment I became a B.B. King fan for life.

It was my freshman semester in college, back in 1971. I was just getting into the blues and had bought two cassette tapes — Endless Boogie by John Lee Hooker and King’s Live in Cook County Jail.

Hooker’s album was OK. It was one of those guest-star-laden affairs featuring endless riffage from various young, white rock guys. Not bad but not a classic.

King’s jailhouse romp is another story. From its very first moments, when various jail officials are introduced and roundly booed by the inmates, you realize it’s going to be an authentic experience. Both King and his band are in top form and captivate — oops, that might not be the right word — from start to finish.

But the moment that clinched it for me was the bridge in “How Blue Can You Get”: “I gave you a brand new Ford, but you said ‘I want a Cadillac’/I bought you a $10 dinner, you said ‘Thanks for the snack.’/I let you live in my penthouse, you said it was just a shack.”

And then B.B. pours his guts into the kicker that still makes me grin, 37 years later: “I gave you seven children, and now you want to give ’em back.”

I doubt there’s anything on One Kind Favor that would give any college freshman today a lifelong memory. But it’s still an impressive effort (especially considering that the guy is 11 years older than John McCain) and an enjoyable listen. The record is a sweet reminder of everything a B.B. King fan loves about the old pro.

Produced by T-Bone Burnett, the T. Boone Pickens of roots-music producers, One Kind Favor is mainly a collection of blues standards. But the production is so sparse and understated and King’s voice is so soulful throughout that it sounds fresh. The basic band includes Dr. John on piano, Jim Keltner on drums, Nathan East on stand-up bass, and, of course, King on guitar. With a horn section on many tracks, the band sounds as if it has been backing B.B. forever.

The opening song, from which the title is taken, is one of my favorite songs in blues history — “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean.” Blind Lemon Jefferson wrote it. Canned Heat rocked it up under the title “One Kind Favor,” and Mavis Staples covered it a few years ago, calling it “A Dying Man’s Plea.” (Though Canned Heat’s version is still my favorite version, folkie Geoff Muldaur laudably used the song in a two-part epic song, “Find Blind Lemon,” about searching for Jefferson’s grave. “He only asked one favor, to see that his grave is kept clean.”)

There are two songs by the Mississippi Sheiks (a string band from the ’30s) — “The World Is Gone Wrong” and the chestnut “Sitting on Top of the World” — and one by Hooker (“Blues Before Sunrise”). Two of my favorite songs here were composed by old-time bluesman Lonnie Johnson. “Backwater Blues” is a flood song performed almost like a dirge. But even better is Johnson’s “Tomorrow Night.” Elvis Presley did a heart-stopping version of this back in his Sun Records days, and Bob Dylan has also covered it. It’s a perfect blues ballad for King and a perfect closer for this record.

Some musicians say their albums are like children. If so, this is one you won’t want to give back.

Also recommended:

*Maestro by Taj Mahal. It took me a few songs to warm up to this new record by Taj Mahal. Scheduled for release on Tuesday, Sept. 30, it’s a “celebration” of his 40 years in show biz. As often is the case with such celebrations, the record is overrun with guest stars. In this case, the results are decidedly mixed.

The record kicks off with a thud: a surprisingly flat cover of Slim Harpo’s “Scratch My Back.” There’s also a boring Caribbean-flavored ballad featuring Taj’s daughter Deva Mahal and Los Lobos and a duet with Jack Johnson, a champion prizefighter who’s been dead since 1946. (Wait ... that’s a different Jack Johnson. Sorry. )

Though the Ben Harper duet, “Dust Me Down,” isn’t bad, I was about to yank the CD out of my changer at the end of “Black Man, Brown” an old Taj song sung here with Ziggy Marley. But I let it play through the pretty but ultimately inconsequential “Zanzibar,” a collaboration with African musicians Angélique Kidjo and kora player Toumani Diabaté.

And then, once Taj gets the world-beat weenie stuff out of his system, he lowers the boom. Los Lobos is back, and it sounds like the band woke up — with a vengeance. “TV Mama” is a hard-edged rocker, with Taj playing a mean harmonica and David Hidalgo showing that slide guitar is yet another of his many talents.

Even better is the next track, “I Can Make You Happy,” backed by The New Orleans Social Club, which includes Henry Butler on piano and Ivan Neville on organ. Taj uses his Howlin’ Wolf voice on this dusky stomper. If the entire album were as strong as these two numbers, Maestro would probably be blues album of the year.

Nothing else matches this middle section of tunes, though the rest of the album is much stronger than the first half. I especially like the Dixieland-flavored “Slow Drag” and the back-alley snarler “Strong Man Holler.”

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...