Sunday, September 20, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 20, 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
(Brian Hardgroove in studio for interviews between songs)
Can You Hear Me by OverShine
How Can You Sell Soul to a Soulless People Who Sold Their Soul by Public Enemy
69 Faces of Love by King Khan & The Shrines
Got a Thing on My Mind by Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings
It's a Sunny Day by The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker

Fugo Fish by Simon Stokes & Timothy Leary
This Sinister Urge by The Fuzztone
I Don't Want No Funky Chicken by Wiley & The Checkmates
That Man in Your Bed by The Hormonauts
Blue Black Hair by The Del Moroccos
Rootie Tootie Baby by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
The Lover's Curse by The A-Bones
Gunpowder by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears

Satisfy You by The Seeds
Moving On by The Things
Ferryboat Bill by The Velvet Underground
The Other Side of This Life by The Jefferson Airplane
Mocker by Los Peyotes
Psycho by The Sonics
Whatcha Gonna Do by Andre Williams & The Dirtbombs
Get on the Good Foot by Lee Fields

Tower of Song by Nick Cave
God Box by The Fall
Haywire Hodaddy by The Hodads
Battle Cry by Monkeyshines
Mama Get the Hammer by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Into the Drink by Mudhoney
Walking Through a Cemetery by The Monsters
Please Please Please by James Brown
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

HARDGROOVE ON SOUNDWORLD TONIGHT

CHUCK D & BRIAN HARDGRROVE Don't forget to tune into Terrell's Sound World 10 p.m. Mountain Time tonight on KSFR. I'll be joined by Brian Hardgroove who's going to talk about his new band OverShine, the upcoming Santa Fe Pumpkin Festival (that's Oct. 3), his career with Public Eneny (that's him with Chuck D in this picture I took at the Santa Fe Music Festival a couple of years ago), his own Saturday Morning radio show The Fusebox on KBAC.

In Santa Fe and much of Northern New Mexico you'll find KSFR at 101.1 FM. For the rest of the world, listen to us online.

And speaking of KSFR, the fall pledge drive is starting today. You know what that means. FORK IT OVER, YOU FREELOADERS! You can donate online HERE. Thanks for your support.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

LIVE BUICK MacKANE SHOW


Here's a little treat for your Saturday musical enjoyment. It's a cool show I stumbled across on the Live Music Archive , a 1997 show in North Carolina by Buick MacKane, Alejandro Escovedo's "garage band" in which he played with his brother Javier.



Here's the playlist:

01 introduction
02 The End
03 Gravity
04 Everybody Loves Me
05 stage banter
06 Falling Down Again
07 band introductions
08 Paradise (introduction)
09 Paradise
10 Say Goodnight
11 Edith
12 stage banter
13 Marianne
14 She's Got
15 Shine a Light
16 stage banter and Powderfinger false start
17 Powderfinger (with Chip Robinson and Brad Rice of The Backsliders)

To download the show yourself and for more information CLICK HERE.

Friday, September 18, 2009

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, September 18, 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
I'm Gonna Take You Home and Make You Like me by Robbie & Donna Fulks
Electrified by Quarter Mile Combo
Guvment by Roger Miller
Deep as Your Pocket by Amber Digby
Oh Babe by Big Al Dowling
The Great State of Misery by Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
Good Lovin' by C.C. Adcock
Cool Love by Kim Lenz
How Come it by Thumper Jones
Fish House Blues by Georgia Tom & Kansas City Kitty

Bring the Noise by The Unholy Trio
Gin & Juice by The Gourds
Six Nights a Week by Peter Case
High on a Hilltop by Tommy Collins
Trouble by Ethyl & The Regulars
Buzz Buzz Buzz by The Blasters
Bumble Bee by Heavy Trash
Fireball Mail by Roy Acuff
Strangler in the Night by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole

Hush, Sorrow by Buddy & Julie Miller with Regina McCrary
Chain Gang by Fred Eaglesmith
Safe and Sorry by Nathan Moore
Frankie and Johnny by Jerry Lee Lewis
Death Metal Guys by Rev. Horton Heat
Nighttime Ramblin' Man by Hank Williams III
Handcuffed to Love by Johnny Paycheck
The Ballad of Charles Whitman by Kinky Friedman & His Texas Jewboys

Strip Joint is Closed by The Red Elvises
I Hate These Songs by Dale Watson
One Sweet Hello by Merle Haggard
TVA by Drive-By Truckers
I Tremble for You by Johnny Cash
Going Down the Road Feeling Bad by Doc & Merle Watson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: HOT SOUL

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
September 18, 2009



Here's one to file under "weird science."

A few weeks ago I got an advance copy of the new album by The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker. I'd been looking forward to this release, because I truly enjoyed this band's first album, which came out a couple of years ago. So I took it out to my car and popped it in the CD player. From Leo Black's rasty little guitar lick that kicks off the title song to the end, I was happy.

The next day I drove to Albuquerque. After a couple of stops, I decided to play the CD again. I reached down to my little plastic CD box to grab my copy only to experience a startling discovery. The jewel box was warped. It had melted — both the clear plastic part and the black plastic part. I keep CDs in my car all the time, winter and summer, and this has never happened before (or since).

Here's the good news. Somehow, by the grace of the music gods, the CD was unscathed. To my relief, the funk flowed fine in my car stereo.

Oh yeah, the title of this CD is Burn It Down. Yikes! I'm just happy that The Dynamite's first album, Kaboom!, didn't explode in my car back in 2007.

Burn It Down is a hot time. Walker is a soul shouter from Nashville — that's right, not Memphis — whose career goes back more than 40 years. (I'm not sure why they don't just call the band "Charles Walker & The Dynamites," but the group didn't ask for my opinion.)

The music goes down the same path as Kaboom! does — tight, horn-heavy, gritty Southern soul. Sure, the sound recalls the heyday of funky soul, but this is no nostalgia trip. The songs are new and original, and the lyrics, while mainly dealing with the time-honored themes of love and heartache, make occasional reference to modern times. There's a shout-out to our first black president at the end of the title song.

Walker gets political on other songs, too. There's "Somebody's Got it Better," which deals with the gap between the rich and poor. Over riffs that sound like they're straight out of James Brown's "Super Bad," Walkers, "I know a man who works all night/Never gets home until the morning light/I know another man don't even have a job/Got so much money, must be breakin' the law. ... You can see it in the paper, see it in the news/Some people got the green, others got the blues."

On "It's a Sunny Day," Walker chides the doomsday prophets, presumably from all political sides. "It don't take much to get you down, there's no shortage of bad news. ... Turn off that TV, walk out that front door/Get out, it's a sunny day."

"Can't Have Enough," with its funky flute and wah-wah guitar, sounds like it could be from a blaxploitation movie. It would sound great alongside Marvin Gaye's "Trouble Man" or Curtis Mayfield's "Freddy's Dead." The lyrics warn against materialism and excess.

Another favorite is the jumping "The Third Degree," which features some tasty organ licks from either Charles Treadway or Tyrone Dickerson — the band's blessed with two fine keyboardists. And “The Real Deal,” which concludes the album is a duet between Walker and fellow Nashville soulster Shawna P.

So yes, I heartily recommend this album. Just don't leave it in your car.

Also recommended:

We Call It Soul by Wiley and The Checkmates. Like Charles Walker, Mississippi native Herbert Wiley is a veteran journeyman soul singer whose career goes back to the 1960s — although he also had a day job for a few decades, operating a cobbler shop in Oxford. Guess you could call that sole-to-soul. According to one interview, Wiley claims that, as a child, he worked on William Faulkner's shoes.

Wiley got back into the music game around 2004, rounding up a band with members who have played with a diverse group of musicians, including the late Fat Possum blues belter Paul "Wine" Jones and techno-rock outfit LCD Sound System. Wiley and his group released Introducing Wiley and The Checkmates in 2004.

The Checkmates tend to sound a little looser than The Dynamites do. And humor creeps into Wiley's music a little more often. The funniest here is definitely "I Don't Want No Funky Chicken." Wiley tells how his experience working on a chicken farm as a youth ruined his appetite for poultry as an adult.

One of my favorite tracks is a cover song — actually a medley of covers, Booker T. & The MG's "Hip Hug-Her" slinking around an upbeat take on Bobbie Gentry's "Ode to Billy Joe." I'm just a sucker for that song, though my favorite version is the irreverent one I saw the late Joe Tex perform on American Bandstand at least 40 years ago. (Tex played with the ending lyrics, "And me I spend all my time eatin' cold watermelon up on Choctaw Ridge/And I spit the seeds in the muddy waters off the Tallahatchie Bridge.")

Perhaps the highlight of this record is "I Did My Part," a dark minor-key song that slowly builds into an emotional storm with call-and-response vocals with Tricianna McGee and a crazy trumpet solo by Marc Franklin.

Listening to Wiley and The Checkmates along with The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker — not to mention Black Joe The Honeybears plus Sharon Jones and her Daptone label pals, it's easy to conclude that soul music is very much alive in the 21st century.

Monday, September 14, 2009

eMUSIC SEPTEMBER

This is late and long!

Just as I was about to finish up this post and publish the darn thing about a week ago, eMusic surprised me by bestowing me with 50 extra downloads. That was a "loyalty bonus" for those of us who didn't dump them when they decreased the number of downloads allowed. This post also includes the 25 extra downloads given to loyal members last month. Confused? Don't worry about it. Let's just talk about the music.

* A Thousand Footprints in the Sand by Jim Dickinson with Chuck Prophet. I didn't even read the info about this album when I pressed "download." I didn't recognize the title, so I just assumed it was the new album by Dickinson, the great Memphis producer who died last month.

But I was wrong. The new one is Dinosaurs Run in Circles. But I wasn't too disappointed. Footprints is a live set from the early '90s featuring Dickinson disciple Chuck Prophet and his band. And it's full of fire and steaming voodoo soul.

Most of the songs are old blues and R&B tunes. There's a lean and mean version of J.B. Lenoir's "Down in Mississippi," which Dickinson shouts as if his life depended on it. There's a straightforward version of "The Gypsy," (an old chestnut recorded by The Ink Spots and Dinah Shore, but my favorite version is by Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs).

He also does what might the the finest song he ever wrote, "Across the Borderline," whose best-known version was sung by Freddy Fender. Jim didn't have the Mayor of Milagro's voice, but his soul still comes through.

Now I have to get my hands on Dickinson's new one.


* Lysergic Legacy by The Fuzztones. This is a "greatest hits" compilation by Rudy Protrudi and the boys. Since I didn't have LSD 25: 25 Years of Fuzz and Fury, the Fuzztones best-of that just came out four years ago, I was happy to see this new collection.

Yes, this group's been around in one form or another since the early 1980s, spreading the gospel of Farfisa and fuzz through good times and bad.

Legacy includes a couple of songs from their most recent album, last year's Horny as Hell -- plus several original versions of songs that were reworked for Horny.

It's not quite a "duets" album, but Legacy includes several impressive guest appearances by '60s garage/psychedelic greats. "Get Naked" features the late Sky Saxon. Mark Lindsay of Paul Revere & The Raiders sings on "Caught You Red Handed." James Lowe of The Electric Prunes can be heard on "Hallucination Generation." And the sitar-soaked "All the King's Horse" features both Arthur Lee of Love and Sean Bonniwell of The Music Machine. (Sorry, "Look For the Question Mark" doesn't have the lead singer of The Mysterians.)

And there's not one but two covers of Sonics songs here, "Strychnine" and "Cinderella." The Fuzztones did an Sonics tribute EP a few years ago.

* Stay With We by NRBQ. When I interviewed "Big" Al Anderson a few years a few years ago (you can read that HERE, he insisted that his predecessor, Steve Ferguson was the best guitarist NRBQ ever had and that their first album, the self-titled 1969 release, was NRBQ's greatest album.

I'm still partial to NRBQ at Yankee Stadium and Kick Me Hard, but Big Al's right that early Q was dynamite. This album is a compilation of songs from that first album (10 of the fist album's 14 songs are here) plus a few cuts from Boppin' the Blues, (a 1970 collaboration with Carl Perkins) and lots of previously unreleased tunes from that era.



* Dirty Blues Licks by Various Artists. Here's the bargain of the month -- 49 tracks for 12 credits (even though I already owned several tracks -- Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith Bo Carter, Mississippi Sheiks, etc.)

The blues as a genre has made such a strong bid for respectability, some of its modern hawkers would like to forget its down-and-dirty, raunchy past. This collection is a blow against bowdlerizing.

Some of the biggest names in the blues are here -- Smith, Johnson, John Lee Hooker, Lightnin' Hopkins. There's even one from R&B shouter Wynonie Harris

Of course, little if anything in these songs is all that explicit, especially by modern standards.. The singers assume their listeners realize the metaphorical significance of bananas, hotdogs, cabbage and poodles. If these tunes actually offend you, you must not have any lead in your pencil.

This a good companion for another collection I picked up on eMusic years ago, Please Warm My Weiner.

* Not Now! by The A-Bones The album cover is an homage to an ancient Rolling Stones LP. But The A-Bones aren’t one of those neo-Stones bands, such as The Chesterfield Kings, and they don’t sound much like Mick and the lads.

But on this new record they capture some of the spirit of the early Stones, sharing a love for greasy old blues and R&B. In fact, you could argue that the Bones go for greasier, nastier and definitely more obscure source material than did The Stones.

The A-Bones, in case you've never had the pleasure, is a project of singer Billy Miller and drummer/singer Miriam Linna, a couple whose other major project is Norton Records, one of the finest labels in the known universe (and one I regularly turn to on eMusic.)
For my full review of Not Now! CLICK HERE

* Cavernicola by Los Peyotes This is an early album by Argentina’s finest garage band, first released in 2005, recently made available in download version by London’s Dirty Water records.

Among their originals, on this record the boys cover crazy old rock songs, Los Peyotes do justice here to the infamous “Fire” by The Crazy World of Arthur Brown (called “Fuego” here), "Jack the Ripper" (Screamin' Lord Sutch's song, not Link Wray's) and “The Witch.” by The Sonics.

Warning to those who took my advice last year and got Introducing Los Peyotes: “El Humo te Hace Mal” and “I Don’t Mind” appear on both albums (and sound like the same versions.) And the "secret bonus song at the end of "The Witch" (no, it's not really a 10-minute version of the song) is "Scream," which also appears on Introducing.


* Do the Wurst , Mojo Workout and Shake It Wild by King Salami & The Cumberland 3. These actually are an EP (Mojo Workout) and two "singles," totalling eight songs.

The London-based Salami reminds me of another "King," namely Khan. Like Khan's work with The Shrines, Salami plays a high-charged melding of soul and punk rock. But The Cumberland Three is a much smaller group than Khan's Shrines, so the sound is more stripped down.

The band tries its hand at surf music on "Uprising." It sounds like "Apache" (complete with tacky faux Indian war cries). And "Birddog" is a takeoff of The Trashmen's "Surfin' Bird."

But my favorite has to be the cover of Bobby Long & The Satellites' "Mojo Workout," a little-known but powerful R&B stomper. You can hear that song in its entirety on the 39th episode of RadiOblivion.


*Some Kind of Kick by The Things. No, not The Pretty Things. Not even The Dirty Pretty Things. Just The Things, a garage-punk band from Dublin that I somehow stumbled across while fooling around eMusic. This album that apparently was released early this year.

Despite their Irish heritage you don't hear much of the olde sod in The Things. They sound nothing like The Pogues -- and thankfully, even less like U2. In fact, if anything, they remind me a lot of The Fuzztones -- heavy on the Farfisa and fury.

There's some cool spooky tunes -- "Psycho Lover," "Demon Stomp" -- but I think my favorite here is "Set Me Free" in which singer Neilo Thing sounds like The Hives' Howlin' Pelle Almqvist.

* Butterbeans & Susie Vol. 1: 1924-1925 Jodie Edwards and his wife Susie Hawthorne were stars of TOBA (Theatre Owners Bookers Association -- or popularly known as "Tough on Black Asses") circuit starting in the 1920s. This basically was Black vaudeville. I wouldn't want to live in that era, but what I'd give to be able to go back in time and sit in the front row at a Butterbeans & Susie show.

The duo sang funny songs about domestic disputes and sex. Decades before The Rolling Stones' "Some Girls," Butterbeans even gave a lesson in the sexual politics of skin color -- "high yellow gals" vs. "browns" in "Brown Skin Gal." They mocked each each other, making wisecracks to punctuate each other's singing. "Is that so?" Susie would say dryly as some Butterbean boast, putting him firmly in place with three little words.

Sometimes there were even insinuations of physical violence. Nobody of course took this literally back then. Joking about domestic violence has been so taboo for so long, such blatant political incorrectness now seems wickedly daring. Besides, Susie was no mousy pushover. "If you raise your hand to hit me, I'll put you under the jail" she sings in "Bow Legged Papa." Note, that's not in the jail it's under the building!

"A Married Man's a Fool," Butter declares in the song of the same title. And yet the two stayed married until Susie's death in 1963.

Most of the songs feature simple piano accompaniment, though King Oliver -- the King Oliver! -- sits in on cornet on "Kiss Me Sweet" and "Construction Gang."

This collection was taken from old 78s and Document Records made no effort to clean up the scratching. (Some songs, like "You Ain't Talkin' to Me" are nearly unlistenable.) Even so, this record, as well as Vol. 2, which I've owned for years, is just sheer delight.

* Eight Miles High/Makes No Sense No Sense at All (single) by Husker Du. It says single, but it's really four songs. I got it for "Love is All Around" -- yes, the Mary Tyler Moore theme (written by Buddy Holly crony and sometimes Cricket, Sonny Curtis!). There's also Husker's fantastic cover of The Byrds' "Eight Miles High." Because of some weird policy, you can't download individual songs for this work, it's all four or nothing, so to get the others, I had to download the song "Makes No Sense at All" even though I already have the tune on the Flip Your Wig album.

Plus

* "Strutting with Some Barbecue" by Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five. I got this for my latest podcast. Classic Satch. A great tune and it makes me hungry for barbecue. (Then again, most things do.)

* Three songs from Introducing Wiley & The Checkmates. More on that one next month.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 13, 2009
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell

Guest Co-host Stan Rosen
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell@ksfr.org
Annual Post-Labor Day Songs For the Workin' Man Show

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Plenty Tuff and Union Made by The Waco Brothers
Joe Hill by Paul Robeson
There is Power in the Union by Utah Phillips
May the Work I Have Done by Freedom Song Network

Big Boss Man by Jimmy Reed
Anita Pita by Joe West
Revolution by Larry Burch

Corrido de Dolores Huerta by Carmen Moreno
We Were There by Brooklyn Women's Chorus
Then Death of Mother Jones by Gene Autry
Yo Estoy con Chavez by Ramon "Tiguere" Rodriguez & Los Lobos
We're All a Dodgin' by The Weavers
Have You Been to Jail For Justice? by Anne Feeney
All the Weary Mothers by Charles Bernhardt

Workin' man Blues by Merle Haggard
Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore by John Prine
Union Medley by Peter, Paul & Mary
Pie in the Sky by Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco
Talking Union by The Almanac Singers
Wal-Mart Union Gonna Rise Again by Charlie King & Karen Brandow
Working at Working by Wayne Hancock
Freedom is Coming by Seattle Labor Chorus

Bougeois Blues by Taj Mahal
Working Man by Bo Diddley
Red Neck, Blue Collar by James Luther Dickinson
(Happy Birthday to You (Dave Barsanti) by Steve Terrell & Stan Rosen)
This Land is Your Land by Pete Seeger, Sweet Honey in The Rock, Doc Watson & The Little Red Schoolhouse Chorus
Banker's Son by Joe West
Banks Were Made of Marble by The Weavers
Bread and Rose by Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco
SUBSTITUTE CLOSING THEME: Solidarity Forever by Joe Glaser

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...