Sunday, July 18, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 18, 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
CIA Man by The Fugs
Video Violence by Lou Reed
Live Like A Dog by The Kill Spectors
The Molasses by The Scrams
Haitian Voodoo Baby by The X-Rays
Licking the Frog by Manby's Head
What's Wrong With You? by The Lyres
Girl Gunslinger by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages

Garbage Head by Roscoe's Gang
You Got the Love by The Cynics
What A Way To Die by Nikki Corvette & The Hell On Heels
Almost a God by Movie Star Junkies
Nervous by Willie Dixon And Memphis Slim
Sock it to Me by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
Don't Tease Me by ? & The Mysterians
There But For The Grace of God Go I by The Gories
Hot Aftershave Bop by The Fall
Bang Your Thing at the Ball by Bob Log III

Good Time Kids by Xoe Fitzgerald
Demon Stomp by The Things
The Spy Who Couldn't Get Any Action by The Ray Corvair Trio
Big Blond Baby by King Salami & the Cumberland 3
Kill the Messenger by The Bellrays
They Call Me Big Mama by Big Mama Thornton
Jolie's Nightmare by Chuck E. Weiss
My Mammy by Al Jolson

Ride In My 322 by Spyder Turner
The Bitch Done Quit Me by King Ivory
Toug Frog to Swallow by Little Freddie King
Roll That Woman by Paul "Wine" Jones
Lennox Avenue Boogie by Poison Gardner & His All-Stars
Ruby's Arms by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Friday, July 16, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, July 16, 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
Billy the Kid by Ry Cooder
Billy the Kid by John Hartford
Ice Water by Glenn Barber
'Cause I'm Crazy by Kell Robertson

KELL ROBERTSON
Interview

Naked Girls by Stephen W. Terrell
Maria Elena by Kell Robertson
Kell Live
My Baby Ate Every Taco in Town
I'll Walk Around Heaven With You
Mary Lou (Good Time Gal)

Uh-Huh-Honey by Autry Inman
You Don't Have To Do It by Reverend Beat-Man & The Un-Believers
It Ain't Nobody's Biz'ness What I Do by The Hoosier Hot Shots
Hog-Tied Over You by Tennessee Ernie Ford & Ella May Morse
Little Dog Blues by Mel Price
Oil Tanker Train by Merle Haggard
Don't You Think This Outlaw Bit's Done Got Out Of Hand by Waylon Jennings
Oak Tree Hangin' by Gary Gorence

Lackie's Men by Delaney Davidson
John Hardy by The Sixtyniners
Xoe's Favorite Honkey Tonk by Xoe Fitzgerald
Moonshiner's Life by Hank III
Bring 'em Home by Tao Seeger
Weary Blues From Waitin' by Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
Red Velvet by The Kirby Sisters
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Hurricane Warning for Santa Fe

Al Hurricane that is.

The Godfather of New Mexico music and his son Al Hurricane, Jr., will perform 7:30 pm, Saturday, August 7 Santa Fe Community Convention Center at a benefit dance for the Santa Fe Fiesta Council.

Al the Elder released his first album in 1967. Hurricane has released 29 more albums with his latest in 2007.

CLICK HERE and scroll down to find my 1998 profile of Al, Sr.

Tickets are $15 per person or $25 per couple and can be purchased at the Lensic Peforming Arts Box Offfice, by phone at (505) 988-1234 or online.

XOE LANDS AT TINY's



The lovely Xoe Fitzgerald, Santa Fe's Favorite time-traveling transvestite is having his/her CD release party Friday at Tiny's.

In case you haven't heard this legend, Xoe is allegedly the offspring of David Bowie's Man Who fell to Earth and some hippie girl from Madrid, N.M.

This glam-rock, honky-tonk spectacular starts at 8:30 p.m. Admission is free and the first 50 who show up get a Xoe bumpersticker.

Joe West is allegedly involved with this. He's has been working on this concept for a few years. By some weird coincidence, Thursday is Joe's birthday. But I doubt that he shows. He's never has been seen at the same time and place with Xoe.

THE BEAT-MAN WAY

REV. BEAT-MAN SHOW 7-15-10

Once again, Reverend Beat-Man and his pal Delaney Davidson amazed and delighted in Santa Fe rocking a hopped-up crowd at Little Wing.

Instead of doing an opening-act/star-time arrangement, Beat-Man and Davidson played together both doubling on guitar and drums and trading off on lead vocals.

Like last year's show at Corazon, the set leaned heavy on Beat-Man's Surreal Folk Blues Gospel Trash (Volumes 1 and 2) and Get On Your Knees. as well as Davidson's Self-Decapitation. A lion's share of the songs deal with God, the Devil, Hell and salvation

DELANEY DAVIDSON While not as charismatic as the reverend, Davidson is a remarkable performer. The New Zealand native uses tape loops to subtly and almost seamlessly create a multi-layered sound. He'll be singing a part then all of a sudden you hear harmonies and wonder for a few seconds "how's he doing that?" And even though I'd thought that Nirvana had taken the song "Where Did You Sleep Last Night" to its ultimate level, Davidson's interpretation of "In the Pines" (a very close cousin of "Sleep") shows the song still has strange corridors to explore.

Beat-Man and Davidson are playing in Denver tonight, then on to Austin, New Orleans, Memphis and Nashville next week.

Is Nashville ready for Rev. Beat-Man?

REV. BEAT-MAN SHOW 7-15-10

More snapshots from the Santa Fe show are HERE.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: GUNS, GUITARS & KELL

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 16, 2010


With all due respect to Funky Donnie Fritts, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, and all those other icons of guitars, grit, and dusty glory that Kris Kristofferson names in the introduction to “The Pilgrim: Chapter 33,” Santa Fe’s Kell Robertson should have been on that list, somewhere near the top.

He’s a poet. He’s a picker. He’s a prophet. You know the rest. Robertson, who is somewhere in the vicinity of 80 years old, just released his latest album, ’Cause I’m Crazy, his first in nearly seven years.

Like his previous CDs, Crazy is a lo-fi, warts-and-all effort, deftly underproduced by Robertson’s cohort Mike Good, a musician who records under the name Blonde Boy Grunt. Kell cusses and fusses and clears his throat. It’s clearly not ready for modern country radio or any other civilized medium (I’ve been playing it on my show and have no intention of stopping).

Living the life: I interviewed the singer for a short profile in No Depression magazine in 2004. (For that story I also went to one of his local gigs where he intimidated some patrons of a now-defunct hippie café by growling, “I’m gonna take all your organic sandwiches and throw ’em in the woods and make you eat bologna/Because I’m evil,” as the climax to a blues song he performed.)

Robertson was born in Kansas, and, according to him, his stepfather kicked him out of the house at age 13, launching his years of rambling. He has worked as an usher in a movie theater, a fruit picker, a dishwasher, a soldier during the Korean War, a DJ at country and jazz stations, a bartender, and — this is the only one I have trouble believing — an insurance salesman. Robertson said that he considered a career in law enforcement and even took some classes at a police academy in California.

But poetry and music are his passions. Seeing a Hank Williams show in Louisiana was a turning point in his life, he said. But Robertson is far better known in poetry circles than he is in the music world. He published a mimeograph poetry magazine called Desperado in the ’60s and has issued 17 books of poetry. The liner notes of his previous album, When You Come Down Off the Mountain, contained a quote from Lawrence Ferlinghetti: “I would say Kell Robertson is one fine cowboy-poet, worth a dozen New Yorker poetasters. Let them listen and hear the voice of the real America out there.”

Robertson landed in Santa Fe sometime around the turn of the century and has been here since.
’Cause he’s crazy: The new album starts out with some classic outlaw bravado. In the title track, Robertson sings about being compelled to go into a tavern, even though “every time I go in there, they throw me out.” (It’s ’cause he’s crazy, and he’s in love.)

The next song, “Guns, Guitars, and Women,” celebrates a long life of trouble: “First man I killed was down in Dallas/I was only 21.” Later in the album there’s “Down the Bar From Me,” which is about some of his fellow saloon denizens. “There’s one old lady showin’ her bullet scar,” he sings, a hint of lust in his voice.

“Migrant Farm Worker” sounds like a modern Woodie Guthrie song. It’s about the toil and trouble of field workers with their “overalls trimmed in manure.” The chorus speaks not only to a feeling of anonymity but also a fear of being trapped in some bad karmic Möbius strip: “Who will remember me when I am gone/Who will remember me then/When they bury me ’neath that cottonwood tree/Will I have to start over again?”

Robertson offers his take on religion on a few songs. “Singin’ for Jesus” is about a street preacher. “I’m screamin at them sinners to come back to Jesus ... but he’s gonna pay me back some day. ... I’m down on skid row selling salvation ... but you know, boys, salvation is free.”

In “Jesus Christ Is Dead,” Robertson sings: “They nailed him to a tree/And the only way he can live again is inside you and me.” “Great Big Donut,” a song he says was inspired while sitting on the can watching the spiders on the wall, is a shaggy-dog parable about God trying to save the world by sending us a mysterious rolling pastry.

With “Lookin’ For Somebody to Kill,” you know you’re in for trouble from the first line, “I lost my heart in a barroom in Juárez.” Indeed, he’s looking for someone to kill, but when you learn who his victim is in the last verse, you may be shocked.

Actually this song seems to be the third part of a trilogy of songs about drug addicts. “Maria Elena” is about a doomed woman: “The powder they gave you is mixed up with death/You’re finding it harder to catch up with your breath.” The next song, “Junkie Eyes,” is about an encounter with a strung-out prostitute: “Lord, lord, them junkie eyes/Everytime you see them something dies/Something may be crawlin’ around inside/what’s left are them ravin’ junkie eyes.”

There are a couple of new versions of songs from previous albums — “Madonna on the Billboard” and “Mary Lou” (the tale of a “good-time gal”). The new versions don’t add that much to the old takes, and I’m not quite sure why they’re here. But both are fine songs, and they do fit in with the others.

The official conclusion of ’Cause I’m Crazy is “As You Still Got a Song.” Robertson sings again about getting kicked out of bars, but like the refrain says, “As long as you’ve still got a song, everything is all right.”

I’m glad Kell’s still got these great songs.

Kell on the radio: Kell Robertson plays live on The Santa Fe Opry tonight. The show starts at 10 p.m on KSFR-FM 101.1

Sunday, July 11, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 11, 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
Love by Country Joe & The Fish
Big Mamou by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Mosquito Stomp by Gas Huffer
Pyscho by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes
I Need Your Lovin' by Wolfman Jack
Rock 'n' Roll Fever by Willie Egans
Keep on Rubbing by Capt. Beefheart
Soba Song by 3 Mustaphas 3
Shave My Soul by The Come N' Go
I Need Somebody by Manby's Head
Pencil Neck Geek by Fred Blassie

Come Back Lord by Rev. Beat-Man
Back in Hell by Delaney Davidson
Dram Shopper by The Scrams
Demolicion by Waugh y Los Arrrghs!!!
Bitch, I Love You by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
40 Birds by King Khan & The Shrines
Memphis Creep by The Oblivions
Skippy Is A Sissy by Roy Gaines
The Wakin' Blues (Walk Right In, Walk Right Out) by The Jessie Powell Orchestra with Fluffy Hunter

Wine, Wine Wine/2,000 Pound Bee by Bobby Fuller
Bye Bye by The Friends
R.L. Got Soul by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Snakedrive by R.L. Burnside
Wolf Call by The Dots
Shout Bama Lama by Otis Redding & The Pinetoppers

Jeepster by T. Rex
Bikini by The Bikinis
You Got Good Taste by The Cramps
With the Idiots by Urban Junior
Poison Tree by Movie Star Junkies
Velvet Touch by Figures of Light
Low Down Dog by Joe Turner & Pete Johnson
It's Only Make Believe by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Friday, July 09, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, July 9, 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
Blue Moon of Kentucky by Rev. Beat-Man
Drinkin' Wine Spo Dee o Dee by Malcom Yelvin
Busy Body Boogie by The Carlisles
Callin' in Twisted by Rev. Horton Heat
Too Many Rivers by Webb Wilder
Loco by D.M. Bob & The Deficits
A Girl in the Night by Ray Price
How Cold Hearted Can You Get by Hank Thompson
Tennessee Rooster Fight by The Howington Brothers
Magpie Song by Delaney Davidson

New Orleans/Little Bitty Pretty One by Bobby Fuller
I Fought the Law by Sonny Curtis
Muswell Hillbillies by Southern Culture on the Skids
Dixieland Boogie by Hardrock Gunter
Nails In My Coffin by Jerry Irby & His Texas Ranchers
Hot Rod Lincoln by Johnny Bond
Always Late with Your Kisses by Lefty Frizzell
Nobody Here But Me, Lord by Kell Robertson

Xoe Fitzgerald by Joe West
Wild West Huapango by Tara Linda
Strut My Stuff by Slim Redman, Donnie Bowshier & The Junior Melody Boys
Devilsong by Shinyribs
Meadowlark Boogie by Buck Griffin
Mental Cruelty by Buck Owens & Rose Maddox
Too Drunk to Truck by The Sixtyniners
Who Walks In When I Walk Out by Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys
Too Much Month at the End of The Money by Marty Stuart

You Want to Give Me a Lift by Eilen Jewell
I'd Come Back To Me by Johnny Paycheck
Shelley's Winter Love by Bill Kirchen With Paul Carrack & Nick Lowe
Better Than Bein Alone by Joe Swank And The Zen Pirates
Into the Big Fire by Kris Hollis Key
You've Never Been This Far Before Conway Twitty
Treasures Untold by Doc & Merle Watson
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

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

Thursday, July 08, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: BOBBY FULLER LIVES!

Please see an update on this column HERE.

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 9, 2010


Bobby Fuller, the greatest rocker ever to emerge from El Paso, is best known for two things: his huge 1966 hit “I Fought the Law” and his mysterious death, which the police ruled a suicide though many, including Fuller’s brother and former bandmate Randy Fuller, believe it was a murder.

For several years, Norton Records has been doing its best to prove that, while Fuller might technically be a “one-hit wonder,” there was a lot more to his music than his one hit, and Fuller deserves to be known more for his music than his bizarre and shadowy death. Norton’s latest contribution to this cause is El Paso Rock, Early Recordings Volume 3. This is the first installment in that series since the mid-1990s.

Crime scene: As an old cop reporter, there’s no way I’d be writing a column about Bobby Fuller without spending a little time on his death, so let’s get that out of the way. Fuller was found dead on July 18, 1966, inside his mother’s Oldsmobile parked in front of his apartment in Hollywood. He was 23. He died of gasoline inhalation, the police said.

A 1996 press release from his old record company, Del-Fi — which at the time was shopping the idea of a movie but only got an episode of Unsolved Mysteries out of it — described the crime scene:

“The car had mysteriously appeared after hours of searching the local area had not turned up any clues to his whereabouts. The doors were unlocked, the windows were closed tight, and no keys to the vehicle were found inside. When the first Hollywood-division police officers arrived and opened the driver’s side door, they noticed there was a book of matches on the seat beside Fuller on the front seat. An eyewitness to the gruesome discovery remembers that Fuller had traces of dried blood around his chin and mouth, and that his face and chest were bruised as if he had been beaten. Fuller’s hair and clothing were also soaked with gasoline, and his right hand still clenched a rubber siphoning-tube.

“An empty gas can, found in the back seat, was removed by a policeman (who apparently didn’t consider it vital to the investigation) and thrown into a nearby dumpster. The Olds was not dusted for fingerprints, nor was it ever impounded and searched for further clues. Members of the radio and television press at the scene were told that it looked to be a clear case of ‘suicide,’ despite much visual evidence to the contrary.”

Fuller’s family and friends have made a credible case that he was killed. I attended a panel discussion featuring Fuller’s brother Randy, singer Marshall Crenshaw, and Norton Records’ Miriam Linna at the 1998 South by Southwest Music Conference in Austin.

Fuller reportedly was depressed before he died and was planning to break up his band. A new fan of psychedelic music, he’d started taking LSD. He was hanging out with a prostitute named “Melody” (or “Melanie,” by some accounts). Some of his music-biz associates might have had ties with organized crime.

All tantalizing details, but it’s not likely that the truth about his death will ever be told.

Back to the music: There’s no question that Bobby Fuller worshipped Buddy Holly. He arranged a recording session at Buddy’s old stamping grounds, Norman Petty Studios in Clovis, in 1962 — an experience that, according to Linna’s liner notes, inspired Fuller to build a home studio. (Most of this collection comes from the Clovis session, save a few cuts recorded live at Skylanes Bowling Alley’s Little Dipper Lounge.)

“I Fought the Law” — Fuller’s version, not The Clash’s — sounded like what Buddy Holly would have sounded like in the 1960s. It’s not surprising, considering that the tune was written by Holly pal and sometimes Cricket Sonny Curtis (whose second-best-known song is “Love Is All Around” — the Mary Tyler Moore show theme). It originally appeared on a post-Holly Crickets album in 1960.

A rare early Fuller recording of “I Fought the Law” kicks off this collection. It’s nine seconds longer than the “official” version and doesn’t quite have the punch. But it’s interesting to see how Fuller played with the tune. One notable difference between the two takes: Here, the singer robs people with a shotgun, not the “six gun” we later came to know and love.

The second song on this collection, “You Made Me Cry,” sounds even more like the sainted Holly.

While Fuller’s love for Holly cannot be denied, he was apparently also a fan of rockabilly giant Eddie Cochran. On Volume 3 we find an enthusiastic cover of “Nervous Breakdown” (there are two versions included) and a live-at-the-bowling-alley medley of Cochran’s best-known songs “Summertime Blues” and “Somethin’ Else” — which I can’t listen to without thinking of Sid Vicious and his take on the song. Fuller sounds even wilder here than Sid later would.

Another live medley teams up a couple of R & B hits, Gary U.S. Bonds’ “New Orleans” (which Fuller mistakenly introduces as “Mississippi Queen”) and “Little Bitty Pretty One,” which I first came to know through Clyde McPhatter.

Probably my favorite here is “Wine, Wine, Wine,” a favorite of garage bands everywhere at the time that probably evolved from Sticks McGhee’s “Drinkin’ Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee.” The wildest guitar work on the whole album is found here. Fuller sounds like he’s a school kid caught by a teacher while telling a dirty joke as he sings: “I know a girl, she drives a rod/She ain’t good lookin’ but she’s got a good bod.” The last word is muffled (which isn’t the case with the “Wine Wine Wine” on the previous volume of El Paso Rock).

The album ends with “California Sun,” which — considering what awaited Fuller in July 1966 — comes off as sad: “I’m going out West where I belong ...” The song fades before he can even finish the last chorus. It sounds like a premature ending ... oh, I won’t say it.

Fuller Bio Coming: There's a Bobby Fuller bio in the works by none other than Miriam Linna and Randy Fuller. Read more about that HERE


Enjoy a Fuller video:

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.

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...