Sunday, December 07, 2008

CHRISTMAS PODCAST 2008


Merry Christmas, all you out in podland. Here's my fourth and latest podcast with lots of my favorite musical Christmas goodies new and old.

CLICK HERE to download the podcast. (To save it, right click on the link and select "Save Target As.")

CLICK HERE to subscribe to my podcasts (there will be more in the future) and HERE to subscribe on iTunes.

You can listen to it right here, below.




My cool BIG feed player is HERE.

Here's the play list:

Little Drummer Boy by Joan Jett & The Blackhearts
Silent Night by Bad Religion
Santa Claus is Watching You by Ray Stevens
Eggnog by The Rockin' Guys

6 Bullets for Christmas by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Christmas with Bazooka Joe by The Fleshtones
Christmas at K-Mart by Root Boy Slim & The Sex Change Band
Christmas Boogie by Canned Heat & The Chipmunks
Santa Looked a Lot Like Daddy by Buck Owens
Pumkinhead by Wilf Carter
Christmas in Jail by The Youngsters

Santa Claus by Thee Headcoatees
Christmas 1979 by Billy Childish & The Musicians of The British Empire
Christmas is Just Another Day by Johnny Dowd
On a Christmas Day by C.W. Stoneking
Kung Fu Christmas by Christoper Guest
Must Be Santa by Brave Combo

Blue Christmas by Stan Ridgway
Can Man Christmas by Joe West
Sawahdi by Terry Allen

Friday, December 05, 2008

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, December 5, 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
Leavin' Amarillo by Billy Joe Shaver
Southern Streamline by John Fogerty
Don't Ya Tell Henry by The Band
Tulsa Breakdown by Kim & The Caballeros
Your Greedy Heart by Hazel Dickens
Eat Steak by Rev. Horton Heat
Rated X by Neko Case
You and The Devil by The Electric Rag Band

Pardon Me, I've Got Someone to Kill by The Rockin' Guys
Suckin' a Big Bottle of Gin by Joe Ely
Feudin' and Fightin' by Marti Brom
I'm So Lonesome Without You by Hazeldine
Trucker From Tennessee by Link Davis
Seven Nights to Rock by Moon Mullican
Keep a Light in the Window by Cornell Hurd
Drunk Tank by The Starline Rhythm Boys
Crystal Chandeliers by Charlie Pride

Robots of Rayleen by Joe West
Belly Button Blues by Wee Hairy Beasties
Dancing With Bears by Bayou Seco
You Only Love Me For My Lunchbox by The Asylum Street Spankers
Shake It and Break It by Devil in the Woodpile
Grwoing Upside Down by The Ditty Bops
How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away by Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
Brother Drop Dead Boogie by Pee Wee King

Seen You With No Makeup by Mike Neal
The Wolfman of Del Rio by Terry Allen
My Rifle, My Pony and Me by Dean Martin & Rick Nelson
New Mexico by Rebekah Pulley
You've Never Been This Far Before by Conway Twitty
My Dumb Heart by Johnny Dilks
My Death Comes a Callin' by ThaMuseMeant
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

DENISH-GARCIA?

Photo by Kate Nash
Here's a little Roundhouse rumor that might be worth reporting: I'm hearing that high on Diane Denish's list for a lieutenant governor is Veterans Affairs Secretary John Garcia.

Remember who appeared with Denish at that Albuquerque news conference last week right when the talk of Bill Richardson becoming Commerce secretary first broke? It was John Garcia. (Photo from that event by Kate Nash.)

Garcia supporters say that Republicans in 2010 might nominate Heather Wilson for governor, who is likely to stress veteran's issue. Garcia on the ticket could help blunt that.

Garcia is a Vietnam vet who served in the Central Highlands region in 1969 to 1970. He was deputy chief of staff for Gov. Bruce King and later was secretary of the Economic Development Department. Prior to his service in state government, Garcia was the executive director and CEO of the Albuquerque Hispano Chamber of Commerce.

Denish said Thursday that it's premature to be talking about her choice for lieutenant governor.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: EDISON IS THE LIGHT

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
December 5, 2008


Mike Edison is a journalist after my own heart. Just look at his résumé. He’s been a writer, editor, and/or publisher for a rich array of publications — Screw magazine, High Times, and Wrestling’s Main Event. Dang, he’s done everything but cover the New Mexico Legislature.

And he’s a rock ’n’ roller. He collaborated with the notorious G.G. Allin. He led a fine punk/blues group called Edison Rocket Train, which, back in 2005, released a sizzling little record called Yes! Yes!! Yes!!!

A slightly mutated version of ERT, called Rocket Train Delta Science Arkestra, appears on Edison’s latest sonic adventure, I Have Fun Everywhere I Go. This is a hilarious companion piece to Edison’s autobiography, which was published earlier this year. (The book is subtitled Savage Tales of Pot, Porn, Punk Rock, Pro Wrestling, Talking Apes, Evil Bosses, Dirty Blues, American Heroes, and the Most Notorious Magazines in the World.)

The album is a spoken-word affair, with Edison reading from the book over hard-driving musical backdrops produced by blues exploder Jon Spencer — an Edison crony who produced and guested on Rocket Train recordings.)

The album starts off with Edison reciting, “Number one, pornography. Number two, punk rock. Number three, drugs. That’s not a résumé. That’s a crime scene.”

This first cut, “Pornography, Part I,” is a seven-minute tale of Edison’s years at the post-Al Goldstein Screw. (He describes Goldstein, the magazine’s founder and first publisher, as a “corpulent media whore and vociferous loudmouth, so filthy ... even other pornographers avoided him like a summons server.”) As a spacey guitar and weird science-fiction blips and bleeps rage behind him, Edison brags about his proudest achievement — the issue published during the 2004 Republican National Convention.

On other tracks, Edison describes his work at other magazines. In “Talking Main Event Magazine Blues” he tells about getting involved with the World Wrestling Federation during the mid-’80s heyday of Hulk Hogan. Punctuated by distorted drums and bass, Edison explains that wrestling was even looked down upon by fans of roller derby and women-in-prison movies. But, he says, “Those of us in on the joke were having a blast.”

Though he describes promoter Vince McMahon as a “visionary on par with Columbus,” Edison naturally hates the Hulkster, who was known for “wrapping himself in red, white, and blue and proselytizing to his army of teeny-bopper fans to stay in school and stay away from drugs. Frankly, he just wasn’t my kind of people.”

Then there’s a 10-minute-plus epic called “Ozzy, High Times, and Me.” (“The next person who suggests putting Bob Marley on the cover is gonna be looking for a new job!” Edison bellows at a staff meeting, as related in the opening lines of the song.) Here he tells the story of the time he put Ozzy Osbourne on the cover of the celebrated dope rag. Sometime during the photo shoot, $1,600 worth of premium illegal and dangerous marijuana went missing. So Edison leaked the story to the New York Post, which resulted in one of the biggest-selling issues in the magazine’s history, although leaking to the paper caused Edison problems with the stoners and “corporate hippies” on the staff.

One track is actually touching. That’s “G.G. Allin Died Last Night,” Edison’s tribute to his pal, whose concerts frequently turned into brutal, violent, obscene, and unhygienic spectacles. Over the sounds of a fuzz bass and wailing harmonica, Edison intones, “Beyond the bluster and beyond the broken glass, G.G. adhered to a cogent philosophy of rock ’n’ roll. Rock ’n’ roll as creator, rock ’n’ roll as destroyer.”

Edison talks about a barbecue that was the last time he ever saw his friend. Allin offered to put Edison on the guest list for his show the next night. But Edison declined. “We’re having a nice time. It was really good to see you. Why would I want to ruin that vibe by going to one of your gigs?”

With so much stale pabulum passing for rock ’n’ roll in these troubling times, this CD is a vital reminder of the importance of danger and sleazy fun.

Also recommended:

* Gonzo: Music From the Film. Speaking of savage tales, there used to be this other writer ...

This recording consists of music and spoken-word snippets from the documentary The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, which played at The Screen in Santa Fe last summer.

Some of the tunes — Brewer & Shipley’s “One Toke Over the Line,” “Combination of the Two” by Big Brother & The Holding Company, and The Youngbloods’ hippie anthem “Get Together” — also appear on the soundtrack album for the movie version of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.

So the real fun on this compilation comes from the obscurities. There’s a great little jazz piece called “Gonzo,” featuring New Orleans organist James Booker. David Schwartz’s theme, “Gonzo’s Honest Run,” first sounds like a slow swamp rocker but explodes into a surf-guitar stomper. Jo Stafford’s “Haunted Heart” is inspired schlock.

But the strangest and most glorious of all is “Weird and Twisted Nights.” The track is credited to Thompson; his sidekick, cartoonist Ralph Steadman; and Mo Dean, wife of Watergate tattletale John Dean. This collaboration took place in 1979, during the shooting of the Thompson-inspired Bill Murray movie Where the Buffalo Roam. It’s a bouncy little pop tune with a Zappa-like meandering melody and lyrics like “Mangled bodies tell no tales and tell no lies.” I’m not sure who actually recorded this (the credits say it’s produced by Hal Willner); it’s lo-fi but sounds like there were professional musicians involved, especially the Clarence Clemons-like sax solo.

ON TO WASHINGTON

RICHARDSON IN CONCORD, NH I've been too busy to blog much about the Richardson nomination to the Commerce Department.

Here's a story from today's paper about Richardson's previous confirmation hearings in the U.S. Senate .

And here's the story from the previous day, in which he appeared at a "news conference" at Wood Gormley Elementary shortly before the story leaked that the official announcement would be on Wednesday.

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...