Wednesday, July 07, 2010

FELIX y LOS GATOS CD RELEASE PARTY

FELIX y LOS GATOS

How long's it been since you've seem Felix y Los Gatos?

Well, that's too long.

Felix and the boys are having a release party for their new CD, Green Chili Gumbo this Saturday night at the Cowgirl BBQ, 319 South Guadalupe St. here in Santa Fe. Many special guests are promised.

Personally, I'm looking forward to the new album/ I've played their first one on both of my radio shows as well as one song on a Big Enchilada podcast.

There's a whole bunch of promising live shows coming up next week.

On Thursday, straight out of Switzerland, Rev. Beat-Man and Delaney Davidson play at Little Wing at the Candyman Center on St. Michael's Drive.

Then Friday, down in The Underground (Evangelos' basement) one of New Mexico's finest garage band, The Scrams are on a bill with The Kill Spectors and Angola Farms.

And start planning ahead: Coming up in August there's Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks coming back to Santa Fe Brewing Company and Nick Curran & The Lowlifes will be doing a free show up in Los Alamos. I just hipped myself to Curran (Thanks, Russ Gordon!) and he's crazy great.

And in September prepare yourself for the great Barrence Whitfield! More on that later.

Monday, July 05, 2010

eMusic July

* Pissing Out The Poison: Singles and Other Swill by New Bomb Turks. I'm a relative newcomer to the NBTs. I decided to download this in anticipation of NBT frontman Eric Davidson's new book We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988-2001. a history of below-the-radar proudly uncommercial, untrendy bands like The Dwarves, The Cynics, The Mummies, Thee Headcoats, Dead Moon, The Devil Dogs, The Gories, and, yes, New Bomb Turks among others. (The book arrived and I'm reading and enjoying it now. You should too.)

This album is a compilation of singles, rarities, even a Christmas song. It's all high-charged, furious, crazy guitar rock -- what Davidson calls "Gunk Punk."

There's a handful of covers, including The New York Dolls' "Bad Girl" and a Rolling Stones obscurity called "Summer Romance." And there's strong alternative versions of Turk classics like "Crying in the Beer of a Drunk Man," "Let's Dress Up the Naked Truth," "Sucker Punch" and "Taller Crush."

* I Know You Be Houserockin' by The Gories. Before he started The Dirtbombs, Detroit's Mick Collins was in another amazing band -- The Gories.

This was a trio featuring two guitars (Collins and Dan Kroha) and drums (Peggy O'Neill). No bass, no frills, just raw punk blues.

This compilations contains the Alex Chilton produced I Know You Fine But How You Doin' plus almost all of The Gories' first album, Houserockin' (missing only "Let Me Ear the Choir Sin.")

Hey, while fooling around on YouTube, I found an actual live video of The Gories doing one of my favorite songs from this album, "Thunderbird ESQ." Peggy looks pretty sexy chewing her gum. Check it out:




*Party Favorites by Ray Condo and his Hardrock Goners. This Canuckabilly was perhaps the finest rockabilly revivalists of the 90s and early 00s. The only one who comes close was Big Sandy, but the late Condo, who died in 2004, had a crazier edge. The title of his 1997 album Door to Door Maniac (which was an alternate title for a very obscure 1961 Johnny Cash movie)

I first came to know Condo's music when he was living in Vancouver and playing with his band The Ricochets. This album is from his days in Montreal, when he was playing with The Hardrock Goners (named in honor of hillbilly boogie monster Sidney "Hardrock" Gunter) This outfit, which had a fine fiddle player (not sure of the name) and perhaps was a bit more country sounding than The Ricochets.

There's a cool "St. James Infirmary" here as well as a version of "Her Love Rubbed Off," one of Carl Perkins' more crazed compositions, also covered by The Cramps.

But my favorite tune here is "Barroom Crazy," which contains the verse, "I broke both of my arms/I fell down on the floor/I started to dance but I lost my pants/So they tossed me out the door."

I hate when that happens.

PLUS

* Seven songs from The Very Best Of by Hoosier Hot Shots. True story. When I was a little kid and my grandmother was taking me somewhere, she'd say, "Are you ready, Hezzie?" She'd just laugh when I'd ask who the hell was Hezzie. A few years ago when I discovered The Hoosier Hot Shots it all became clear to me. Maybe I got my habit of making obscure cultural references from my grandmother.

When I did discover the Hotshots it made me appreciate how hip Nana actually was. (After all, she took me when I saw Cab Calloway as a kid.) These guys basically were a country string band (well they had a clarinet too) with the soul of Spike Jones.

I only had enough to get seven tracks this month, but I'll pick up the rest when my account refreshes. (This is a good one for eMusic bargain hunters. 40 track for the price of 12!)

And, by the way, Hezzie was Paul "Hezzie" Triesch, who played washboard, bells and whistles.

* "Cucaracha Taco" by Joe "King" Carrasco. I got this for my latest podcast of The Big Enchilada. I already had most of the other songs from this collection, called Yabba Ding Ding. But it looks like a great introduction to the master of Nuevo Wavo.

* "Bandy the Rodeo Clown" by Moe Bandy. I just love this song. Bandy is one of the few stars of the early '80s Urban Cowboy era of country music I can stand. I got this tune especially for my recent Rodeo de Santa Fe set on The Santa Fe Opry

Sunday, July 04, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 4, 2010
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
Opening Montage to Big Enchilada 11
An American is a Very Lucky Man by Fred Waring & His Pennsylvanians
The Outcast by Tom Russell featuring Dave Van Ronk
Fourth of July by X
American Music by The Blasters
This Land is Your Land by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
U.S. Blues by The Harshed Mellows
The Body of an American by The Pogues
The Star Spangled Banner by Tiny Tim

Your Fat Friend by The Raunch Hands
Slut by New Bomb Turks
Hey Amigo by Havana 3 a.m.
Do the Climb by King Salami & the Cumberland 3
Clap Your Hands by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
House Rent Jump by Peter Case

The Clown Of The Town by Reverend Beat-Man
I Slept Late by Delaney Davidson

Transcontinental Hustle by Gogol Bordello
Patches Rides the Rail by Deadbolt
Coconut Heart Thee Butchers' Orchestra
Mexico Wax Solvent by The Fall
Skinny Ginny by Dossie (Thunderbird) Terry

Pink Berets by Tin Huey
Twilight's Last Gleamings by William S. Burroughs
Two Left Feet by Mark Sultan
Tight Sweater by The Marathons
Big American Problem by Drywall
America The Beautiful by Ray Charles
Coda by Little Jack Horton
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Thursday, July 01, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: GET WIGGY!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 2, 2010


Peter Case, who is playing a free show in Los Alamos Friday, sounds like he’s having more fun on a record than he’s had in years with his new album, Wig!

For more than 20 years, Case has built a respected (if not overly lucrative) career as a singer-songwriter/neo-folkie, whatever you want to call it. He’s done some wonderful albums in this vein, the best being The Man With the Blue Post Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar (1989) and Torn Again (1995). I could also mention 2000’s Flying Saucer Blues, but Case’s old record company actually paid me to write some propaganda to send out to potential reviewers and radio stations for that record, so my opinion of that one is compromised.

Case is so good in the acoustic troubadour role that many of his listeners might not even realize that he’s also an accomplished rocker. In the late ’70s and early ’80s, he was the frontman in The Plimsouls and, before that, The Nerves.

Case recently reimmersed himself in the music of his early bands. While recovering from cardiac surgery, he assisted in remastering a Nerves reissue (One Way Ticket) and concert album (Live at Pirate’s Cove) as well as a live Plimsouls album (Live! Beg, Borrow & Steal, which I reviewed here earlier this year). Remastering these old live recordings woke up the rocker inside.

Aided by guitarist Ron Franklin and D.J. Bonebrake, the drummer for X, Case recorded a bunch of blues-soaked, swampy rockers for this album, which was released just days ago. In short, it’s some of the toughest music he’s ever made.

The seeds of Wig! were first sown a quarter-century ago. The song “‘New’ Old Blue Car,” which starts out with some fine caveman drumming from Bonebrake, is a slightly rewritten version of “Old Blue Car” from Case’s first solo album (Peter Case, 1986), a tune written with his then-wife Victoria Williams. While the original, produced by T-Bone Burnett and Mitchell Froom, has slight hints of that 1980s studio sheen, it was bursting with the blues-raunch abandon that guides the new album.

Wig! starts out with a Case story-song called “Banks of the River.” It’s about a couple of brothers, Frank and Tony, who run away from home and eventually get in trouble with the law. The story could have come from one of Case’s ’90s albums, but the pounding piano, grating harmonica, and smoldering guitar are harbingers of what awaits you on this album.

The jittery “I Dig What You’re Puttin’ Down” sounds like an inspired melding of Blonde on Blonde with Canned Heat. There’s a slight digression into Heat’s “Catfish Blues,” but even cooler is when Case apes Elvis — ”I want you, I need you I-iiiiiii love you!” What’s impressive is how seamlessly he pulls it off.

This is just one example in which Case has fun throwing in some obvious references to rock ’n’ roll standards. “Ain’t Got No Dough” starts out with the pounding piano riff from Barrett Strong’s “Money (That’s What I Want),” a song covered by the Beatles, Jerry Lee Lewis, and others. “The Words in Red” features a jangle-guitar riff straight out of The Byrds’ “So You Want to Be a Rock ’n’ Roll Star.”

The title of the rocking “House Rent Jump” recalls John Lee Hooker’s “House Rent Boogie,” as does the basic theme of the song (the singer doesn’t have enough cash to pay the rent). But Case and the band sound more like Hound Dog Taylor here.

On “Thirty Days in the Workhouse,” a Leadbelly song, Case plays an acoustic 12-string guitar, and Bonebrake keeps it stompin’. Things slow down for a while in “My Kind of Trouble,” a piano-driven blues on which Case wails like he’s leading an after-hours jam in some dangerous skid-row dive. “She got an hourglass figure and a glass eyeball,” Case sings. “Somebody Told the Truth” sounds like it came right out of the swamp with its tremolo guitar and conga drum. It’s easy to imagine Tom Waits doing this song.

After “Colors of Night,” another rough blues romp, Case goes back to worrying about the rent in “House Rent Party,” the album closer. Surprisingly, this sounds like less of a party than anything else on the album. The singer rages against his poverty, pins his hopes on the lottery, and vows to start a brand new band: “We’ll play anywhere but here.” It’s another 12-string acoustic song; in fact it’s just Case without the band.

Perhaps it’s a signal that Case isn’t turning his back on this side of his music. He’s still a dang fine acoustic troubadour. But it’s the wild and rowdy tunes that carry this record. I hope Case keeps rocking.

* See for yourself: Peter Case is playing at 7 p.m. Friday, July 2 at the Pajarito Ski Area in Los Alamos. The show, part of Russ Gordon’s Los Alamos County Summer Concert series, is free. Tiho Dimitrov opens.



Tuesday, June 29, 2010

REV. BEAT-MAN RETURNS TO SANTA FE!

REV. BEAT-MAN in SANTA FE

I just got the word that the Supreme Commander and President for Life of Voodoo Rhythm Records will be doing a show at Little Wing on St. Michael's Drive on July 15.

As was the case last year, Delaney Davidson will be with him. I just reviewed Delaney's album Self Decapitation a couple of weeks ago.

Here's my review of Beat-Man's show last year. CLICK HERE

Be there on July 15!

Sunday, June 27, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 27, 2010
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
Inside Job by Mudhoney
Sally Sensation by The Molting Vultures
Nobody But Me by The Lyres
Modern Man by The Shrunken Heads
Get Off the Phone by Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers
Gizzard Boogie by The Divetones
Combination of the Two by Big Brother & The Holding Company

Let's Dress Up the Naked Truth by New Bomb Turks
Down The Road Apiece by The Shades
The Future is Now (andIt Stinks) by J.J. & The Real Jerks
Blow Job by The Fleshtones
Blue Green Olga by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Pornography Part 1 by Mike Edison
Bend Over I'll Drive by The Cramps

PLIMSOULS 3-16-06Colors of Night by Peter Case
Hush Hush by The Plimsouls
Old Blue Car by Peter Case
Hanging On The Telephone The Nerves

Cry in the Night by Q 65
She's Wicked by The Fuzztones
Edith by Buick MacKane
Do the Milkshake by The Oblivions

900 Million People Daily by The Seeds
Space Ship by Sky Saxon
Lonely Boy by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Death Blues by The Dead Brothers
Little Red Rooster by Sam Cooke
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

NEW BIG ENCHILADA! The Combination Plate Murders!

THE BIG ENCHILADA


Greetings citizens of Podland. This month The Big Enchilada features songs about two of my favorite obsessions: crime and Mexican food. You'll hear dangerous musical treats from the likes of The Gories, The Monsters, The Fleshtones with Tony Truant, Joe "King" Carrasco, Scott H. Biram, The Leaving Trains, The Goblins. There's hot steaming platters from old masters like Bobby Hatfield and Freddy Fender, plus new treats from some of my GaragePunk Hideout cronies like Lovestruck, The Geargrinders and The Jackets. Enjoy!

You can play it here:





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Here's the play list:

(Background Music: Serial Killer from Los Peyotes)
Comb Your Hair by Lovestuck
Out of My Head by The Jackets
D'accord Tony D'accord by The Fleshtones with Tony Truant
Bongo-Beatin' Beatnik by Joe Hall & The Corvettes
Thunderbird ESQ by The Gories
Blues for Joe by The Monsters

MEXICAN FOOD SET
(Background Music: Taco Wagon by Man or Astroman?)
Hot Tamales by Bobby Hatfield
Guacamole by Freddy Fender featuring Augie Meyers
Pink Burrito by R. Crumb & The Cheap Suit Serenaders
Mucho Burritos by The Come n' Go
Cucaracha Taco by Joe "King" Carrasco
Chili Mac by The Moroccos
Hot Tamale Baby by Clifton Chenier

CRIME SET
(Background Music: Hot Tamale Pete by Bob Skyles & His Sky Rockets)
Blood, Sweat and Murder by Scott H. Biram
Shoot You Dead by The Geargrinders
Crime in the Streets by Shrunken Heads
Gonna Murder My Baby by Pat Hare
Rock 'n' Roll Murder by The Leaving Trains
Police Are Just Doing Their Jobs by The Goblins
(Background Music: Martha's Tacos by Billy Bacon & The Forbidden Pigs)

Friday, June 25, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, June 25, 2010
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
Cover of the Rolling Stone by Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
Seven Nights to Rock by Moon Mullican
Kitten by Quarter Mile Combo
Alarm Clock Boogie by Billy Briggs
If I'm Gonna Sink I Might as Well Go to the Bottom by Neko Case
Whoa Boy by Red Smith
11 Months and 29 Days by Dave Alvin
Water Baby Boogie by Joe Maphis
The Silver Tongued Devil and I by Kris Kristofferson

Billings Bop by Halden Wolford & The Hi-Beams
Hep Cat Baby by Eddie Arnold
I Guess I'm Crazy by Tommy Collins
Rhythm and Booze by Corky Jones
Thirty Days in the Workhouse by Peter Case
Miss Maebelle by Richard Johnston
Twang Town Blues by Jason & The Scorchers
Guns, Guitars and Women by Kell Robertson
Wine-O Boogie by Don Tosti's Pachuco Boogie Boys

RODEO de SANTA FE SET

Bandy the Rodeo Clown by Moe Bandy
Bad Brahma Bull by Rex Allen
Amarillo by Morning by Chris LeDoux
All Around Cowboy by Marty Robbins
Bull Rider by Johnny Cash
Just a Rodeo Cowboy by Vincent Craig
Pappa Was a Rodeo by Kelly Hogan
Big Dwarf Rodeo by The Rev. Horton Heat

Nancy Jean by Bobby Fuller
Wild Side of Life/Honkey Tonk Angels by Wanda Jackson
I'm Feelin' Bad by Ray Condo & The Ricochets
Dyin' Crapshooter's Blues by David Bromberg
Before the Next Teardrop Falls by Freddy Fender
Down From Dover by Sally Timms
Truckstop Cafe by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Thursday, June 24, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: SCORCHED AGAIN

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 25, 2010


After a dozen or so years in limbo, Jason & The Scorchers are back with a rocking album called Halcyon Times.

The band might qualify for the description “institution.” Or maybe the group might just belong in an institution for carrying this flame for so long.

Singer Jason Ringenberg, guitarist Warner E. Hodges and the original Scorchers started out in the early ’80s, combining country tunes with punk/metal fury. They might not have been the first to do that, but I believe they were the best and definitely the most influential.

They broke up by the end of the ’80s, but re-formed in the mid-’90s — just in time to join in the fun of the alt-country movement, playing on bills with bands they had clearly influenced. They might have been senior statesmen of the genre, but they rocked harder than just about any other band on the scene.

But by 1998, the Scorchers were scorched out. They called it quits with a double-fun, double-disc live set, Midnight Roads and Stages Seen, released at the height of the alt-country era.

Ringenberg didn’t exactly disappear. He did some solo albums. Some were politically tinged, like 2004’s Empire Builders (which has a great version of Merle Haggard’s “Rainbow Stew”), and he did some children’s records under his alter ego "Farmer Jason."

But now, armed with a new rhythm section, we have Jason & The Scorchers version 3.0. “I have to confess that the primary reason I committed to do this record was to shut Warner up about it,” Ringenberg writes in the liner notes.Jason & The Scorchers, SXSW 1997

As an old Scorchers fan, (to the left is a snapshop I took first time I saw them -- Liberty Lunch, Austin, 1997) I’m glad the band made Halcyon Times. It’s hardly an essential album, but it’s got some good songs and very few duds. I bet all the songs would sound better live, but that’s the case with all of this group’s albums.

Halcyon Tmes starts off with a high-voltage character portrait — “Moonshine Guy,” which is about a backwoodsman who lives with a dog, a jug, and a television set he blew up “because it wouldn’t play his favorite song.” It’s done as a medley with a original tune called “Releasing Celtic Prisoners.”

Even better is “Twang Town Blues,” a slow-burning tale of sleaze and betrayal in Music City, U.S.A. Ringenberg speaks the lyrics of the verses. The ghost of the Man in Black hovers over the chorus: “Last night he dreamed of Johnny, that he was still alive/Tonight he’ll kill a six pack, just to watch it die.”

Also worthy is “Beat on the Mountain,” co-written by Ringenberg and Baltimore songwriter Arty Hill. It’s the story of a third-generation coal miner who feels trapped. “Nowadays the union rep still don’t know my name/the days of scrip are over, but the dust rolls just the same.”

The major throwaway is “Better Than This,” featuring Hodges on vocals. Let’s just say that, as a singer, he’s a wonderful guitarist. But that’s not the trouble here. The song sounds like generic cock rock.

Another tune with a different singer fares better. “When Did It Get So Easy (to Lie to Me)” is sung by Scorcher pal Dan Baird of The Georgia Satellites and, more recently, The Yayhoos. The song, an acoustic blues stomp, doesn’t sound much like a Scorchers tune, but it’s pretty cool..

Also recommended:
Cornell Hurd
* A Bad Year for Love by The Cornell Hurd Band. The concept of a bad year couldn’t have been far from Cornell Hurd’s mind. In August 2008, his longtime rubboard man Danny Roy Young died of cancer. Then six months later, guitarist Paul Skelton (who also played with Wayne Hancock, among others) died, another cancer victim.

This record includes some tracks with Skelton and/or Young. They are both listed in the credits, along with the usual small army of pickers, pounders, and singers.

The album starts off with an original song called “Respect for the Dead” — if that’s a tribute to his fallen bandmates, it’s a subtle one. The “dead” in the title refers to the narrator, who has had his heart ripped out by the woman he’s singing to. “It will come back to haunt you if you dance on my grave/You’ve got to show some respect for the dead.” The title song is also about a romantic breakup: “ ’86 might have a been a good year for wine, but it sure was a bad year for love.”
DANNY ROY YOUNG
Actually, there are some songs dedicated to the departed, all of which are instrumentals. “Cold Rain,” the liner notes explain, was originally titled “Rubboards and Roses” and was written for Young. New rubboarder Bear Eagle plays it here.

That tune and five other instrumentals, the liner notes say, make up the Paul Skelton Suite. Among them is “White Sands (Home of the Radar Men)”, a breezy little swing tune that sounds like it could be from a ’60s soundtrack. My favorites of the suite are “Thunderbird Highway,” a party rocker, and “My Very Last Dream,” which is sad and wistful.

As usual, Hurd includes some fine honky-tonk covers. He and the band do a nice job on the Roger Miller classic “Invitation to the Blues,” which includes a Skelton solo. And there’s “I Got Wine on My Mind,” an obscure Johnny Paycheck lament about being a hopeless sot. Hurd goes back to an obscure ’50s rocker (by a group called The Bell Notes) for “I’ve Had It.”

But Hurd’s own songs are the backbone of the album. His “I’m Gonna Drive” has a classic country feel with just a hint of rockabilly.

Let’s hope he keeps on driving and that this year will be a better one for good old Cornell.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, June 20 , 2010
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
Cryin' in the Beer of a Drunk Man by New Bomb Turks
Sun Is Shining by The Dirtbombs
Ghostrider by The Gories
Little Miss Contary by Wild Billy Childish & The Musicians of the British Empire
Firewater by The A-Bones
One Day I Will Kill You by Deadbolt
Hog Heaven by Shrunken Heads
Psycho Over Europe by The Monsters
Not Your Saint by The Fast Takers
Quarter to Four by Mad Mike & The Maniacs

That Man In Your Bed by The Hormonauts
Funnel of Love by The Fall
Won't Cook Fish by The Immortal Lee County Killers
All My Lovin' by The Almighty Defenders
We're Sinking by Mark Sultan
Whiskey Wagon by Barrence Whitfield & the Savages
Sally Sensation by The Molting Vultures
I Need Somebody by Manby's Head
Dram Shopper by The Scrams
Charley Aikens by The Sidewinders

Swamp Woman/Lies/Yolanda by Johnny Dowd
Look Out by Peter Case
No Reason To Complain by The Alarm Clocks
How Can I Make Her Mine by The Lyres
Atom Spies by The Fleshtones

Ju Ju Hand by Handsome Dick Manitoba
I Think We're Alone Now by Tommy James & The Shondells
Demon Stomp by The Things
Coal Black Mattie by Richard Johnston
Who Do You Love by Quicksilver Messenger Service
Take It Slow by Strangers Family Band
Vikings by The Black Angels
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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...