Friday, May 22, 2009

HAVE I TOLD YOU LATELY HOW MUCH I HATE THE MUSIC INDUSTRY?


Here's one that got me pig-bitin' mad this evening.

Sparklehouse and Danger Mouse have colaborated on a new album called Dark Night of the Soul. It's got guest vocals by all sorts of folks including Iggy Pop, Frank Black, Vic Chessnutt and -- I'm not kidding -- David Lynch. Lynch also produced several strange photographs for the project (including the one here I nabbed from the NPR site.)

But, according to NPR, don't expect to see Dark Night of the Soul on record store shelves, or on iTunes or Amazon anytime soon.

An unnamed spokesperson for Danger Mouse says that "due to an ongoing dispute with EMI" the book of photographs will "now come with a blank, recordable CD-R. All copies will be clearly labeled: 'For legal reasons, enclosed CD-R contains no music. Use it as you will.'" While offering no specifics, EMI has acknowledged the legal dispute with Danger Mouse and released a statement saying, "Danger Mouse is a brilliant, talented artist for whom we have enormous respect. We continue to make every effort to resolve this situation and we are talking to Brian Burton (Danger Mouse) directly. Meanwhile, we need to reserve our rights."

I think EMI needs to reserve its last rites.

Like one of the commenters on the NPR site wrote, "Would they rather I download it for free illegally from a bit torrent client...instead of having my money from iTunes..."

Indeed. And record company suits wonder why their stupid industry is in the toilet. There's lots of fans who gladly would pay for this music.

Anyway, you can listen to the entire album -- or any track you want -- streaming on the NPR site.

And if you look hard enough on the web, (I haven't yet) I'm sure you can find illegal downloads of the album.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

TERRELL'S TUNEUP:THE ANCIENT ONE AS TEX-MEX CROONER

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 22, 2009



In the twilight of his career, Bob Dylan is still making solid albums that are worth listening to and that spark passionate debate. Most important, as his new one, Together Through Life shows, it’s music worth debating.

It’s not his best album. Far from it.

Dylan’s throat is getting so froggy he’s starting to make Tom Waits sound like Beverly Sills (as if anyone ever listened to Dylan for his vocal abilities). Just to use examples from his (fairly) recent works, there’s nothing here that’s as deep as his chess game with Sgt. Death on Time Out of Mind, nothing as ominous as “High Water” or as funny as “Poor Boy.” But still, the new album is a sweet, sometimes-funny hobo journey into the hazy mists of American music.

As with his other 21st-century albums — Love & Theft (released on Sept. 11, 2001) and Modern Times (2006) — Dylan presents himself as a bluesman oracle, half Homer, half Howlin‘ Wolf. You can almost picture him as the blind bard in O Brother, Where Art Thou?, using simple tunes to offer otherworldly wisdom, popping up at opportune times on his railroad handcar. Or perhaps the Ancient One in the Doctor Strange comics — if the Ancient One sang in a Tex-Mex band.

Yes, there’s a distinctive Southwestern flavor on this record. Much of the credit for that belongs to Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo, whose accordion colors just about every cut. On the song “This Dream of You,” Hidalgo’s accordion is there, as is a violin that will remind longtime Dylan fans of Scarlet Rivera’s playing on Desire.

Then on “I Feel a Change Comin’ On,” Dylan’s band sounds like Dylan & The Band on Planet Waves, with Hidalgo doing his best Garth Hudson and Mike Campbell (of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers) doing his best Robbie Robertson.

“I’m listening to Billy Joe Shaver and I’m reading James Joyce,” Dylan sings here. “Some people they tell me I’ve got the blood of the lamb in my voice.” (I love that there’s a national dialogue about whether he’s singing “blood of the lamb” or “blood of the land” here. Either works.)

My favorites on the album are the rocking, blues-based numbers, such as the opening song (“Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ ”), “Jolene” (no, not the Dolly Parton song, though it could be about the same home-wrecking woman), “Shake Mama Shake,“ and “It’s All Good” — though, had God made me the producer of this album, I would have added a screaming sax to this last song.

Some have complained about Dylan lifting way too much from classic blues songs and claiming them as his own. For instance, “Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ ” owes much to Howlin’ Wolf’s “Who’s Been Talkin’,” “If You Ever Go to Houston” is a mutated version of “The Midnight Special,” and “My Wife’s Home Town” is so close to “I Just Want to Make Love for You” that a listener might suspect the bass line is sampled from Willie Dixon himself. This isn’t a new Dylan practice. “Rollin’ and Tumblin’ ” from Modern Times was even more blatant reworking.

I dunno. Maybe Dylan should have shared songwriter credits (and, who knows, perhaps copyright lawyers are poring over these tunes at this very moment). But for good or for ill, this “love and theft” is a time-honored American tradition. Willie Dixon himself, not to mention A.P. Carter, Woody Guthrie, and who knows how many others have been accused of taking hoary old folk melodies and motifs and melding them into their own. Dylan reignites these songs with his own crazy fire.

So here it is 2009. Dylan’s approaching 70. It’s been 40 years since Nashville Skyline and 30 since Slow Train Coming. Those weren’t Dylan’s greatest albums either, but all these years later we still remember them. And I still love “Lay Lady Lay” and “You Gotta Serve Somebody.” And we’re still listening to crusty old Bob. I wonder if we’ll still be doing this in 2019?

* This just in! Dylan, along with Willie Nelson and John Cougar Melencamp are scheduled to appear at the Journal Pavilion Aug. 9. Tickets go on sale May 30 and range from $79.50 to $29.50 (lawn tickets). They will be available at Live Nation.


* Roy Orbison lives! Well not really. But sometimes late at night during heartbreak hour, the lonely can hear his voice in the wind ...

And you can see and hear the bard of Wink, Texas, on the big screen when his great 1987 concert A Black and White Night is shown at the Lensic Performing Arts Center on Saturday, May 23. His widow, Barbara Orbison, and “surprise guests” will be on hand to answer questions.

A Black and White Night, originally a Cinemax special on cable TV, featured Orbison with a super band including Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Tom Waits, and guitar super-stud James Burton. Big names aside though, the star here is Roy himself. He sings his greatest tunes, mainly from the early 1960s, and does justice to each one. Another treat is Orbison’s first recorded performance of “The Comedians,”a Costello song that sounds as if it were written with Orbison in mind.

Not only is the music solid, it’s almost worth the price of admission just to catch a glimpse of Orbison laughing at one of Waits’ bizarre organ solos.

The show was part of a well-planned Orbison comeback campaign that began when weirdo filmmaker David Lynch used Orbison’s “In Dreams” in one of the most intense scenes in Blue Velvet. To this day, I can’t hear the song without hearing Dennis Hopper as thl Frank Booth rasping menacingly, “In dreams I walk with you. In dreams I talk with you.” (In fact, sometimes I hear that when I’m not even listening to the song.)

So there was Blue Velvet, then A Black and White Night, and then Roy joined Bob Dylan, George Harrison, and others in the Traveling Wilburys. And then, in late 1988, at the age of 52, he died.

At the time, I wrote in Pasatiempo, “Roy Orbison is dead and the world is a cheaper and colder place because of it.”

I still believe that. Mercy!

* Roy Orbison and Friends: A Black and White Night shows at 7:30 p.m. at the Lensic, 211 W. San Francisco St., 988-1234, presented to benefit New Mexico Women in Film. Tickets are $20, available at the box office.

BLIP.FM ADDS VIDEOS

My old No Depression board buddy Paul Bonanos writes in The New York Times about Blip.fm's latest deal with Youtube to bring music videos to its service.

Paul's story is HERE .

His Blip page is HERE

My Blip page is HERE.

And below is a very short clip of Al Hurricane and his brother Tiny Morrie. The video doesn't show up when you embed the blip, so I'll embed the Youtube itself.



Sunday, May 17, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 17, 2009
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
Animal Party by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Psychotic Girl by Black Keys
Sookie Sookie by Roy Thompson
Wigglin' Room by Bob Log III
Yesterday's Trash by The Hentchmen
Patty by Half Japanese
Who Dat? by The Jury
Sexy Boots by The Hollywood Sinners
I Saw God by The Black Lips

I See Lights by King Khan & The Shrines
Big Booty Woman by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Bad News Travels Fast by The Fuzztones
Old Dog, New Tricks by Rufus Thomas
Stalking My Woman by Howard Tate
Electrik Fool by Troy Gregory with the Glow In the Dark Monsters
Bottle Up and Go by Jawbone
Shout Sister Shout by Sister Rosetta Tharpe


Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground by The White Stripes
Time Bomb High by The Reigning Sound
Alabama's Doomed by Wizzard Sleeve
Life by The Residents
Seething Pyschosexual Conflict Blues by Figures of Light
Octapussy by Hog Molly
Magadelena by Frank Zappa

Phantom Surfer by Mr. Gasser & The Weirdos
The Wild Mouse by Los Straightjackets
Preparation Clount by Man or Astroman?
Blue's Theme by Davy Allan & The Arrows
Let's Go Trippin' by Dick Dale
Taos Pueblo by Impala
Shut Up Little Man by The Wipeouters
Echoes From Neptune/Shenendoah by The Surf Lords
Jump the Shark by The SG Sound
Gouch by The Astronauts
The Black Widow by Link Wray
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

COUPLE OF LOCAL MUSIC PLUGS

First of all there's a new local music radio show, The Santa Fe Mix, which debuts Monday, May 25, 10 p.m. to midnight, from the new Milagro 139 restaurant in downtown Santa Fe. The performance will be broadcast the following week, June 1 on KBAC-FM 98.1, 10 p.m. to midnight, and will stream on the internet at HERE.

The show, hosted by David Schwartz and Clayton Cheek, will feature live acoustic performances combined with interviews, Santa Fe music calendar updates, along with Schwartz and what the press release says is "Cheek's insider views on the music scene, both locally and nationally." The show will center on singer-songwriters and soloists and feature several artists per show.

Schwartz was the founder and former editor-in-chief of Mix magazine, a music and audio technology trade magazine, while Cheek is a Nashville singer/songwriter and recording artist and a former classical music announcer for eleven years on PBS. (No, he's not the owner of Cheek's.)

Scheduled guests for the May 25th inaugural Santa Fe Mix show include Jono Manson, Sharon Gilchrist, Wiley Jim and Terry Diers. The first broadcast will be Monday, June 1 featuring Joe West, Jim Almand, Ramsey Scott and Jesus Bas.

The public is invited to attend the free live performances at 139 W. San Francisco St. Monday's at 10 pm.

XXXXXXXXXXX

Secondly there's FrogFest 4, 2 p.m. to midnight on Saturday, May 30 at the Santa Fe Brewing Company. Admission is $10 and kids under 12 free.

Here's this year's line-up:

Main stage outside:

Bill Hearne's Roadhouse Revue 2pm-3pm
Goshen 3:30-4:30 pm
Peacefield 5pm-6pm
Taarka 6:30-7:30pm
Boris & the Saltlicks 8pm-9pm
Hundred Year Flood 9:30-10:30pm
Santa Fe All Stars (inside) 10:30pm

Be-tweener stage inside:

The Strange 3pm-3:30pm
Joe West + Mike the Can Man 4:30-5pm
John Courage + Sharon Gilchrist 6pm-6:30pm
Stephanie Hatfield & Hot Mess 7:30-8pm
Sean Healen band 9-9:30pm

SINNER'S CROSSROADS

This morning, while selecting some gospel tunes for Blip.fm, I stumbled across a moving little tune, "Been in the Storm Too Long" by Tommy Ellison.

Googling the artist, I found a nice little Web site called Just Moving On, which is dedicated to gospel sounds of the '70s. It's well worth checking out. (I also learned Ellison died on Jan. 3.)

There I came upon a link for a WFMU radio show called Sinner's Crossroads with Kevin Nutt, which he describes as "Scratchy vanity 45s, pilfered field recordings, muddy off-the-radio sounds, homemade congregational tapes and vintage commercial gospel throw-downs; a little preachin', a little salvation, a little audio tomfoolery."

I've been listening to his most recent (May 14) podcast since, and it's wonderful. If you like the kind of music I did on my gospel podcast a couple of months ago  (and the kind of gospel I play on my own radio shows sometimes and my Sunday blips) check out Sinner's Crossroads

Meanwhile, here's that Tommy Ellison song:

Friday, May 15, 2009

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, May 15, 2009
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
Milkcow Blues Boogie by Elvis Presley
Roots Rock Weirdos by Robbie Fulks
American Music by The Blasters
Marie Marie by Dave Alvin & The Guilty Women
Silent Partner by Big Sandy & Los Straitjackets
One Last Question by Jason & The Scorchers
Amos Moses by Jerry Reed
When the Police Came by Mama Rosin
Kissin' Kouzans by C.C. Adcock

Soy Chicano by Flaco Jimenez
Jockey Full of Bourbon by Los Lobos
If You Ever Go to Houston by Bob Dylan
Boxcars by Rosie Flores
Honky Tonkin' by Joe Ely
Hank Williams Saved My Life by Ashley Raines
Steam Roller by Kris Hollis Key

I Could Get Used to This by Lil Mo & The Monicats
After All These Years by Mose McCormack
It Wouldn't Be Hell Without You by Cornell Hurd
One Kiss Away from Lonliness by Amber Digby
Shakin' All Over by Eilene Jewell
Hillbilly Blues by Ronnie Dawson
Ladies Love Outlaws by Waylon Jennings
Honky Tonk Affair by David Serby
Midnight Stars and You by Wayne Hancock

Back in the Goodle Days by John Hartford
The Cold Hard Facts of Life by John Doe & The Sadies
Botomless Well by Bobby Bare
Comeback Kid by Deano Waco & The Meat Purveyors
Now We Have the Bomb by Jon Langford
The Magician by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Johnny One Time by Willie Nelson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

HOOTENANNY FESTIVAL 2009




I'll be there.


Will you?

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: KHAN'S KINGDOM

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 15, 2009


Unlikely as it might seem, one of the greatest living soul men happens to be a Canadian of East Indian descent living in Europe. I'm talking about his majesty King Khan (born Erick Khan), who, with his band The Shrines, will amaze and delight all his subjects with the group's latest album, What Is?!

Khan is known — though not nearly as known as he should be — in two musical contexts. With his Montreal pal Mark Sultan, he's part of a stripped-down blues/punk/doo-wop duo called The King Khan & BBQ Show. But it's with The Shrines that he really shines. They're an extremely tight, though thoroughly insane, nine- or 10- or 11-piece band complete with horn section and a go-go dancer (billed as "Bamboorella, Go-Go Queen of the Underworld").
KING KHAN & THE SHRINES at the Pitchfork Festival 2008
I was fortunate enough to see this band last summer at the Pitchfork Festival in Chicago. With The Shrines cooking ("like Stax/Volt all-stars on crystal meth," is what I wrote at the time) and Bamboorella gyrating like a crazy cheerleader, Khan bounced and lurched around the stage like a cross between Screamin' Jay Hawkins and some Hindu god.

A little explanation about this album. What What Is?! is is a reissue of The Shrines' most recent studio album, which was released by the German label Hazelwood in 2007. But, for reasons known only to the gods of commerce, it wasn't released in the U.S. at that time. It's now on Vice Records, which last year released the band's "greatest hits" compilation The Supreme Genius of King Khan. Five of this album's 14 songs also appeared on Supreme Genius.

Songs like "Land of the Freak," "I See Lights" (I love the bongos here), "I Wanna Be a Girl," and "Le Fils de Jacques Dutronc" (French lyrics on this one) show Khan and The Shrines at their hopped-up, rock 'n' soul finest. A classic tune is "In Your Grave," which starts out with a basic garage-rock guitar hook, and then takes a sharp turn to the funky with a snaky blaxploitation wah-wah guitar. The band plays like a dynamite truck with no brakes going 100 mph down a mountain road.

But Khan can also get mellow and meaningful. "Welfare Bread" is sweet, Southern-style soul with lyrics like "You don't have to pay your bills anymore, now/You just have to eat my welfare bread."

But the biggest surprise on What Is?! has to be the five-and-a-half minute "Cosmic Serenade." What can I say? It's cosmic. I'd read before that Khan considers one of his biggest influences to be the music of Sun Ra, but I never really heard much evidence of that until I heard this song. Meandering horns and primitive, jangly percussion (tambourine? rainstick?). Khan doesn't start singing until nearly two minutes into the track and then not for long.

After hearing this, I think Khan and the band ought to try Pharaoh Sanders' "The Creator Has a Master Plan."

You also can hear Sun Ra echoes, though not quite as obviously, in the opening minute or so of "Fear and Love." It's a fast-paced tune, but Khan doesn't play the soul shouter here. Instead he sounds like some laconic, psychedelic ranger. There's an irresistible multihorn freakout where most people would have put a solo.

The album ends with "The Ballad of Lady Godiva" — no, not the stupid old Peter & Gordon hit. This is an uncharacteristic folk-rockish, lo-fi tune with droning keyboards (by Freddy Rococo) and what sounds like a dulcimer. Khan sounds almost like Bob Dylan as he urges everyone to take off all their clothes.

It's great that Vice is rereleasing this album. I hope someday the company rereleases Khan's other albums, Three Hairs and You're Mine (originally on Switzerland's Voodoo Rhythm Records) and Mr. Supernatural, as well. And perhaps Khan will get his supernatural self to a recording studio soon and make a new album. I believe America is ready.

Also recommended:

Blue Day
by Howard Tate. This album is the latest effort by Tate, an underappreciated soul man of the 1960s who re-emerged earlier this decade after decades in the wilderness of drugs, tragedy, and undeserved obscurity. Blue Day doesn't quite have the excitement level of his 2003 comeback album, Rediscovered. It's fun and very listenable, but too many tunes are run-of-the-mill.

A couple of the songs here are remarkable, however. The opening tune, "Miss Beehive," is a cautionary tale apparently inspired by troubled soul singer Amy Winehouse, the "Miss Beehive" who "likes to misbehave."

Sings Tate, "Everybody knows she puts something up her nose/And she don't want to go to rehab." But, with Tate's experience in life's gutter, there's compassion in the lyrics. "The girl is so defensive/Why does she act so tough/All of us should reach out to her/And send her a little love."

And there's "Stalking My Woman," a minor-key, first-person account of an obsessed lover who doesn't care about a judge's warnings to leave the poor girl alone.

If all the songs were as powerful as these two, Blue Day would have been a soul classic.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 10, 2009
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
Not to Touch the Earth by Modey Lemon
Do the Rump by The Black Keys
Big ol' Bear by Little Howlin' Wolf
Cheap Women by The Black Smokers
Get Down Lover by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Let Me Holler by King Khan & The Shrines
Deliliah by Tom Jones

Voodoo Love by The Monsters
You Don't Love Me Yet by Roky Erikson
Motorpsycho by Nekromantix
They Saved Einstein's Brain by The Dirtbombs
Designed to Kill by James Chance
Insane Jane by The Molting Vultures
Dragstrip Riot by New Bomb Turks
Hulkster's in the House by Hulk Hogan

Hey Thelma by Don & Dewey
Crazy Lover by Richard Berry
Little Chickie by Jimmy Kelly & The Rockabouts
A La Carte by James "Red" Holloway
Bopper's Boogie Woogie by The Big Bopper
The Boogie Disease by Doctor Ross
Jungle Talk by Shane Kai Ray
Yessiree by Impala
Andre Williams is Moving by Andre Williams
Bad Boy by Larry Williams

It's All Good by Bob Dylan
Fork in the Road by Neil Young
Nocturnal Twist by Los Straightjackets
Vanity Surfin' by Jesus H. Christ & The Four Hornsmen of the Apocalyose
Sugarfoot by Black Joe Lewis & The Honey Bears
Back to My Old Ways Again by Howard Tate
Pouring Water on a Drowning Man by James Carr
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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...