Friday, July 23, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: INTERGALACTIC TRANSVESTITE CONSPIRACY

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 23, 2010


Synchronicity is a funny thing.


Early this month, I received a review copy of Xoë Fitzgerald: Time-Traveling Transvestite, a new album from Frogville Records that starts off with a spoken introduction by Fitzgerald, whose voice spookily resembles that of songwriter Joe West:

In the summer of 1975, a bright light was seen falling into the hills south of Santa Fe, NM. Some claim it was a meteor. Others say that later they found a strange unearthly substance that appeared to be the remains of a flying vehicle. Shortly thereafter, a child was born to a young hippie girl who made her home in the old mining town.


Indeed the album — which is unleashed publicly Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s — is what some might call a “rock opera,” telling the story of a mysterious, time-traveling, cross-dressing union organizer.

Then, less than a week later, an editor forwarded me an email containing a link to a blog with this startling information about more time-travel activity in Santa Fe:

According to (Andrew) Basiago, the U.S. government already had a fully operational teleportation capability in 1967-1968, and by 1969-1970, was actively training a cadre of gifted and talented American schoolchildren, including himself, to become America’s first generation of “chrononauts” or time-space explorers.

He confirms that the United States has been teleporting individuals to Mars for decades and recounts the awe-inspiring and terrifying trips that he took to Mars in 1981. He describes how he and his father (an engineer working on time/space research projects for the U.S. defense department) would teleport from Woodridge, NJ, to Santa Fe, NM, and return via a teleportation device at Sandia National Labs in Albuquerque.

On my political blog I wrote a tongue-in-cheek post quoting that Information Farm blog article about “Project Pegasus.”

By the next day, Basiago himself responded, telling me that “Santa Fe was the Kitty Hawk of teleportation” and claiming that Gov. Bill Richardson was involved. “Mr. Richardson was a young staffer on Project Pegasus who took roll when we first began teleporting to the New Mexico state capitol in group training exercises held in Summer 1970. That’s right, Bill Richardson’s first job in government was as a staffer on a secret time travel project!”

(As a political reporter, during the past eight years I’ve frequently asked Richardson questions that made both of us uncomfortable. But I haven’t worked up the courage to ask him about this.)

So, soon after Basiago and his pint-size “chrononaut” pals were zapped from New Jersey to Santa Fe, there was that bright light seen falling south of Santa Fe and the birth of the “boy with paisley eyes.”

Synchronicity overload. And there’s more mystery. The liner notes of Xoë Fitzgerald: Time-Traveling Transvestite say that the album “was conceived by Joe West in the year 2007 at Club Alegria. ...”

But let’s travel back in time a bit to late 2005, when I interviewed West for an article in New Mexico Magazine. (CLICK HERE, scroll way down)

There he told me about “his contraption called The Intergalactic Honky Tonk Machine, which West says is a ‘time traveling music device,’ which includes a drum machine, electronic tape loops, and a smoke machine. And he’s talking about doing a concept album about an ‘androgynous time-traveler space character’ who claims to be the love child of a glam-rock star, conceived in New Mexico during the filming of The Man Who Fell to Earth.”

Indeed David Bowie made that film shortly after the Project Pegasus experiments. Part of it was shot in Madrid just down N.M. 14 from the Cerrillos Cultural Center amphitheater, where according to the Information Farm article, Project Pegasus members sat and listened to speakers such as Donald Rumsfeld.

It’s probably worth noting that the interview with West took place at the Cowgirl BBQ, which is just a half mile or so from the state Capitol, where Basiago and the other children of the Pegasus Project were teleported in the early ’70s.

And come to think of it, in April 2008, I saw West play with the Santa Fe All-Stars at an event at the Capitol Rotunda — an event attended by none other than Bill Richardson! I have no solid evidence, but you have to wonder whether the governor used this occasion to pass on information from Project Pegasus to West to use in Xoë Fitzgerald.

The “coincidences” keep piling up!

Is there a record review in here somewhere? Joe West has made some of the finest country-rock albums ever to come out of New Mexico. If you’re a country-rock purist, the music on Xoë will jar you. Fortunately, I doubt that West’s following includes too many rabid purists.

The record rocks with a refreshing sound. The band, which includes Josh Martin, Margaret Burke, Arne Bey, and John Courage (who has since teleported out of Santa Fe), Xoë leans heavily on the glam rock of the 1970s — Bowie, Mott the Hoople, Lou Reed’s Rock ’n’ Roll Animal period, a little T-Rex.

There’s a song called “I Wanna Party (Like It’s 1985),” but this party sounds a lot more like 1974. And “The Good-Time Kids” sounds more like 1965, with a Question Mark & The Mysterians sound. That and “Xoe’s Favorite Honky-Tonk” are currently my favorite West rockers on the album.
JOE WEST prepares his infant daughter for a teleportation experiment
West has rarely, if ever, recorded a cover song (I’m still pushing for him to put Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which he frequently performs live, on an album), but he and his band do quite an impressive version of Bowie’s anthem “Heroes.” I won’t give away the plot, but this song comes at a very appropriate emotional moment in the saga.

The album ends with a sweet acoustic coda, “Butterfly.” It’s a low-fi recording that sounds like Xoe’s transmitting from a far-away dimension.

CD release party: Xoe Fitzgerald and his honky-tonk glam co-conspirators play at 8:30 p.m. tonight Friday, July 23, at Tiny’s, 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. Admission costs nothing, and the first 50 who show up get a Xoe bumper sticker.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

BUDOS BAND COMING TO SANTA FE


David Barsanti, aka Spinifex of KSFR's The Twisted Groove just informed me of an upcoming show that's bound to be one of the finest Santa Fe shows of the year.

The Budos Band is coming to Corazon on Thursday August 19th.

Budos is a 13-piece group from New York that plays right along the border of American soul and African pop. They're on Daptone Records, so that right there tells you they're going to be good.

Spinifiex his bad self will be DJing before and after The Budos Band that night.

You can buy the tickets HERE ($10. Cheap)

And speaking of soul, start preparing your mind for the great Barrence Whitfield, who's coming to the Santa Fe Brewing Company Pub & Grill on Friday, Sept. 17. You'll hear more rants from me about that one in the weeks to come.


Here's a little Budos for ya...

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT ON BOBBY FULLER

I had a fascinating phone conversation this afternoon with Rick Stone, a friendly guy from El Paso who in the mid '60s was the road manager for The Bobby Fuller 4.

Rick had contacted Kyla Fairchild of No Depression, where I'd cross-posted my recent column on the new Norton Records Bobby Fuller reissue El Paso Rock, Early Recordings Volume 3. I wanted to find out what those might be and clear them up.

First a little background on Rick.

In July 1966 he'd just finished what sounds like a hellish tour with the Bobby Fuller 4. They toured in a hot and crowded truck and, as might be expected, tempers were short and tensions were high.

Bobby and his brother Randy, the band's bassist had gotten into a fistfight at a San Francisco Club called the Chinese Dragon. (Stone stressed it wasn't a serious fight, but something typical for young brothers.)

Bobby had decided to break up the band, Stone said. Guitarist Jim Reese had just received his draft notice. Drummer Dalton Powell was missing his wife and new baby back in El Paso. Bobby was happy about his decision, Stone said. Now he was hoping to get out from under the thumb of Bob Keene and Del-Fi Records, Stone said. "He really wanted to get away from Bob Keene."


As he's told other journalists, Stone was one of the first of Fuller's friends to arrive on the scene after Fuller's mother found Bobby's body in her car. In fact, he's told Spin magazine and others that he had crashed the night before on the couch of Bobby's apartment, just a couple of blocks from Grauman's Chinese Theatre where Bobby's mother Lorraine also was staying.

Stone said when he woke up the morning of July 18, 1966, Lorraine Fuller told him saying that Bobby hadn't come that night. At this point Stone wasn't worried. "Bobby liked women," he said.

In the Spin article, Stone said he'd thought he'd heard Fuller leaving the apartment about 2:30 a.m.

Stone told me went down to the parking lot and didn't see the silver blue Oldsmobile Bobby had been driving.

Stone said he later attended a scheduled meeting at Del-Fi Records. Other members of the band showed up, but not Bobby. On his way back to the Fuller apartment, Stone said he had a horrible feeling. Soon police cars started to pass him. Stone said deep down he knew that something terrible had happened.

The Oldsmobile was there in a lot next to Fuller's apartment building -- not on the street, as I had written.

Bobby was inside, his head in the seat facing the back, Stone said. His face was swollen and distorted from the heat and the gasoline fumes that permeated the car. "About half of his face was black and blue," Stone recalled. The rest was reddish purple.

In Fuller's right hand was a hose, which Stone said looked as if someone had placed it there. Nearby was a gas can.

Stone denied the statement in Del-Fi Records press release I quoted that the gas can "was removed by a policeman (who apparently didn’t consider it vital to the investigation) and thrown into a nearby dumpster." He also said the gas can was on the front floor board, not in the back of the car.

Stone told me something I hadn't heard before. He said the officer there put the can in the car's trunk. But later Fuller's family and friends found not one but two gas cans in the trunk, he said. Neither were empty.

Contrary to what was said in the Del-Fi press release, Stone said he doesn't remember any dried blood on Fuller's face, which he said was too discolored to immediately tell if there was any blood.

But, Stone said, the shoes Fuller was wearing -- which were his mother's house slippers -- had marks as if someone had dragged his body.

As I said in my initial column, all these details are tantalizing, but if Bobby Fuller really was murdered as his friends and family believe, it's unlikely the killer ever will be caught.

So let's remember Bobby Fuller for his music.





UPDATE:

I forgot to mention that Rick pointed out to me that Bobby Fuller's body was found about 250 feet away from the apartment where Janis Joplin would die four years later.

Fuller was found in a then vacant lot next to his apartment at 1776 N Sycamore Ave. in Hollywood. Joplin's apartment was at 7047 Franklin Ave.

The two singers didn't know each other, Stone said. But he pointed out that they were born about four months apart in southeast Texas and both left Texas the same year to move to California the same year.

There's a part on the corner of Franklin and Sycamore. Stone says there's no marker indicating that two famous rockers died in the area. Seems there ought to be.

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.

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...