Sunday, September 05, 2010

eMusic September

Besides my usual 50 credits, this month includes 15 additional ones eMusic gave me as "loyal member." eMusic caught a lot of flack last year when it changed their its pricing structure, but to their credit they've given us loyal members similar bonuses two or three times. So, thanks.

* Varieties of Religious Experience: 1993-2003 by Arrington de Dionyso and the Old Time Relijun. While writing my recent review of The Movie Star Junkies' A Poison Tree, I started Googling around looking for rock bands that had covered William Blake poems. There I discovered "Tyger" by this band. I'll stand by my description that it sounds like Roy Orbison on angel dust.

That was interesting enough for me to download the whole album. This is a fun little distillation of lots of classic avant, primitive rock. I hear Beefheart. I hear Ubu. I hear some Thinking Fellers. And there's a definite No-Wave influence here. Whoever's playing that sax owes James Chance some royalties.

Old Time Relijun is a creature of K Records up in Olympia, Washington. So I'm probably hearing a little Twin Peaks mushroom madness in there too.

* Fuck Me Stupid by The Raunch Hands. Yes, Eric Davidson's We Never Learn still is inspiring me to catch up on some of superstars of Gunk Punk that I somehow overlooked in their glory days.

The Raunch Hands were a rootsy little outfit, playing hard-charging whacked out punk blues back in the '80s before many people were doing that.

This 1995 release was the Raunch Hand's last album for Crypt Records. They were getting close to breaking up, but the group sounds like they were having the time of their lives recording it.

My favorites here are "Baby Don't You Tear My Clothes," a hilarious rewrite of "Baby Let Me Follow You Down." "What's the Matter Now" is a soul workout with touches of crazed gospel energy. This might be what the Almighty Defenders were aiming at on their Punk gospel" album.

*The Ding-Dongs. (My comments on this and the next album might look hauntingly familiar to loyal readers. I wrote about these a few weeks ago in my Terrell's Tuneup column.)

Mark Sultan, aka BBQ, meets Bloodshot Bill for a rollicking half-hour of Canadian trash rockabilly. This is unabashed bashing fun. The sound is closer to what you’d hear on a Bloodshot Bill album than to King Khan & BBQ. It’s less scatological and more traditional rockabilly sounding.

My one complaint is that Sultan’s amazing voice isn’t at full force here. He does channel Buddy Holly on the tune “Worried Man.” and does a respectable job on the countryish “Until I Die.” But nowhere does his voice really soar.


* $ by Mark Sultan So if you want more Sultan, check out $, his latest solo album, which was released earlier this year. Not only will you hear more Sultan, you’ll get a greater diversity of sound.


Compared with his previous solo album, The Sutanic Verses, $ is far more experimental. For instance the kick-off cut, “Icicles” is a 6-plus minute opus with a lengthy instrumental section marked by layers of fuzz guitars and faux Mideastern sounds . Is BBQ going prog rock? Naw, the album retains an admirable home-made, blues-slop appeal.
Plus


* 10 Tracks from Red Hot Rockabilly (the ones I didn't already have) I was listening to an old episode of Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour the other day -- and came across a rockabilly song I hadn't noticed before: "Okie's in the Pokie" by Jimmy Patton. I had to have it! Doing a quick search on eMusic I found it on this collection of (mostly) obscurities. Also included here are Buck Owens' original version of "Hot Dog" (under the name "Corky Jones") and a bluesy shuffle called "Grits" by a wildcat named Harmonica Ray.


* The 64 remaining tracks from Hillbilly Classics. This collection has to be my eMusic find of the year. It's a 73-song collection of mostly obscure country tunes from the '40s and '50s and it costs only 12 credits. I picked up nine songs last month, so these 64 tracks only cost me three credits.

Several tunes on my latest podcast Hillbilly Pig Out -- "Give it To Me Daddy" by Hartman's Heartbreakers, "Nothin; Clickin' Chicken" by The Down Homers and "Who Puts the Cat Out When Papa's Out of Town" by Sam Nichols came from this collection. And I've been playing lots of it on The Santa Fe Opry in the past few weeks.

There are a few well-known artists here. There's pre-Nashville Sound Chet Atkins (doing "Boogie Man Boogie"), The Carter Family, Spade Cooley and Tennessee Ernie Ford. But for every Delmore Brothers or Grandpa Jones, there's five or six like Roy Hogsed or Smoky Wood & The Woodchips. This almost is a secret history of country music. Truly, this is the music Nashville would like you to forget.

* "Navajo" and "Wild Texas" by Los Peyotes. These are the two tracks I didn't already have on the Psychotic Reaction EP by South America's Los Peyotes. "Navajo" is an instrumental "surf" rocker in the tradition of "Apache," except it's got a flamenco (!) finale. "Wild Texas" is a cool fuzz 'n' Farfisa rocker Los Peyotes do so well. The band has a new album called Garaje o Muerte coming out at the end of the month.

* "Ducken" by Hasil Adkins from 1950s Rock 'n' Roll and Rockabilly Rare Masters. Here's another cool bargain collection from eMusic -- 56 tracks for 12 credit. I had only one credit left, so I made a "down payment." I hope the rest of it's as fun as this Hasil track. He does a pretty good impersonation of a police siren here.

Friday, September 03, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, September 3, 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
Handcuffed to Love by Johnny Paycheck
Hey Sheriff by Josie Kreutzer
Okie's In The Pokie by Jimmy Patton
Hell's Comin' by The Cedar Squeezers
Bald Headed Baby by Buddy Sharpe & The Shakers
Rebel Within by Hank III
Hot Dog by Corky Jones (Buck Owens)
Action Packed by Ronnie Dee
Sweet Virginia by The Rolling Stones

Sweet Virginia by Jerry Lee Lewis with Keith Richards
You Shake Me Up by Andy Anderson
Oh You Pretty Woman by Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel
Oh Honey Baby Doll by Bloodshot Bill
Word to the Wise by Bill Kirchen with Dan Hicks
Who Walks In When I Walk Out by Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys
Don't Make Me Walk Away by The Stanfields
Sharon by David Bromberg

What Am I Doing Hanging Around by Michael Martin Murphey
Freight Train Boogie by Doc and Merle Watson
Keep on the Firing Line by Ralph Stanley
Corn Liquor Made A Fool Out Of Me by Bad Livers
Steamboat Whistle Blues by John Hartford
Don't You Hear Jerusalem Moan by Miss Tammy Faye Starlite
Cash on the Barrelhead by Dolly Parton

You're the Reason by Nancy Apple
A Man Like Me by Roger Miller
In Spite of Ourselves by John Prine with Iris DeMent
A Girl Don't Have To Drink To Have Fun by Wanda Jackson
Third Rate Romance by The Amazing Rhythm Aces
Lead Me On by Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty
You're Lookin' at Country by Eilen Jewell
Haunted by Jon Langford
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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

Thursday, September 02, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: MOVIE STAR JUNKIES & BAD BAD BILLY BLAKE

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
September 3, 2010


Elusive rock ’n’ roll poet William Blake might be considered something of a one-hit wonder.

True, folks like Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison, and Patti Smith owe Blake an obvious debt, and Van Morrison actually name-checked Blake and his band The Eternals in “You Don’t Pull No Punches But You Don’t Push the River” on Veedon Fleece. Folkie Greg Brown did a whole album of Blake tunes in the 1980s called Songs of Innocence and Experience, and an Olympia, Washington, band called Arrington de Dionyso and the Old Time Relijun did a version of Blake’s “Tyger” that sounds like Roy Orbison on angel dust.

But Blake’s only work to get much mileage in the rock universe is his poem “Jerusalem,” best known for its treatment by 1970s prog-rock commissars Emerson, Lake & Palmer, who recorded it on their album Brain Salad Surgery. The Mekons recorded it too, though I prefer the trash-rock version by The Fall from the late ’80s.

However, a new version of an old Blake poem (written in 1794) recently emerged. A Poison Tree, the new album by Movie Star Junkies, features a Blake poem as the title cut. “I was angry with my friend:/I told my wrath, my wrath did end./I was angry with my foe:/I told it not, my wrath did grow.” Spoiler alert: The “wrath” grows into a tree, and by the end of the poem, “In the morning glad I see/My foe outstretched beneath the tree.”

That Blake is a heck of a writer. Too bad he’s never made any albums of his own. But I bet if he did, he’d sound a lot like The Movie Star Junkies. They’re a well-read bunch. Their previous (and first) album was a whale of a record called Melville, which featured songs about shipwrecks and crazy obsessions.

The Blake tune is pretty indicative of the rest of this album. Images of murder, torture, and betrayal color the lyrics. “How many nights I got to wait before you put me on a stake?” is the first line of “Leyenda Negra.” Then there’s “Almost a God,” which ends with a religious observation: I admire the devil/For finishes everything.”


And there’s another song about a tree, “The Walnut Tree,” a minor-key romp that sounds like Gogol Bordello paying tribute to Johnny Cash’s chunka-chunka beat. It’s a song of doomed love. My favorite foreboding line: “We danced in a field with ravens and crows.”

The basic MSJ sound is dark but melodic — spaghetti-Western guitars over (a real) Farfisa organ and drums that evoke a marching band. The band proudly cites The Birthday Party as an influence, and you can hear echoes of early Nick Cave in there. The last song, a seven-minute epic called “All Winter Long,” ends in a dense instrumental with fuzzy guitar licks that bring back memories of The Electric Prunes.

The album is barely more than 30 minutes long. But it’s intense enough by the time it’s over that a listener feels like he’s been through a journey.

Also recommended:

*Two-Headed Demon by Urban Junior. Voodoo Rhythm is fond of the one-man-band concept. They’ve red albums by John Schooley and Bob Logg III (both Americans), French wonder King Automatic, and label head Rev. Beat-Man’s masked alter ego Lightning Beat-Man.

And now comes Urban Junior, who, even by Voodoo Rhythm standards, will amaze you with how much noise one man can produce.

But unlike most of those others listed, Urban Junior doesn’t seem to be following in the footsteps of the late West Virginia madman Hasil Adkins, who created a distinctive one-man country/blues bash sound. Instead,

UJ describes his sound as “Swiss-spankin-electro-trash-garage-boogie-disco-blues-punk” and lists The Beastie Boys as an influence. He fears not the synthesizer. But don’t get the notion that his sound is slick or glitzy. He uses his synth as an assault weapon.

The title cut sounds like invading Huns in a disco massacre. “With the Idiots” is a little more rootsy, at least in the opening moments before the decibels rise. It has what sounds like a theremin solo.

UJ shows his true perversity in the last song, “We Love Urban Junior,” in which a couple of little girls — well, at least they sound like little girls — literally sing his praises, complimenting both his music and his manly physique.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

ROSIE COMES TO ELDORADO


Rockabilly filly Rosie Flores will perform at Mike's Music Exchange in Eldorado, Sunday, Sept. 12. The show starts at 7. Tickets are $20

Apparently she'll be here with a band, so that's great news.

I wrote about Rosie's latest album, Girl of the Century, (with Jon Langford's Pine Valley Cosmonauts! ) a few months ago.

HERE's the link.

And speaking of music in Eldorado, on Friday Sept. 10, Chipper Thompson, Terry Diers and Ron Whitmore (I confess, I'm not familiar with Ron's music) will be doing a Writers -in-the-Round at Mike's Music Exchange. That show starts at 7:30 p.m. and costs $10.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, August 29, 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
Baby Don't You Tear My Clothes by The Raunch Hands
Samson & Delilah by Edison Rocket Train
Lorraine by Th'Empires
Monkey Paw by Eddie "The Chief" Clearwater & Los Straitjackets
Bum My Trip by Dirtbag Surfers
Ain't Life Strange by Pierced Arrows
Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby by Syndicate of Sound
Come On Lil Dolly by The Ding Dongs
Kickboxer Girl by Black Smokers
Scarum Harem by The Spook Lights
Scatty Cat by Bob Bunny

Rosalyn by Pretty Things
Burning Hell by John Lee Hooker & Canned Heat
Heidi's Head by Urban Junior
Walk Boys by Kult
Lion Tamer by Arrington de Dionyso and the Old Time Relijun
Big Fuckin Part by The Devil Dogs
Almost A God by Movie Star Junkies
Do the Clam by The Cramps
Chop Suey Rock by The Instrumentals

Nobody But You by Mark Sultan
Get Happy by Simon Stokes
Bad Luck Charm by Luck of the Draw
Found a Peanut by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds
Traitor by The Jackets
Chicken Back by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
Get Outta Dallas by The Malarians
Go Ahead and Burn by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages

Scavenger Hunt by Stan Ridgway
Bold Marauder by Drywall
Short Fat Fannie by Wolfman Jack & The Wolf Pack
Old Man of the Mountain by Phil Alvin
This Is It by The Treniers
My Man Called Me by Big Mama Thorton
Seasick Boogie by Seasick Steve
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis


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Friday, August 27, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, August 27, 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
Jawbone by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Pay the Devil by Van Morrison
Keep Your Motor Hot by Sam Nichols With The Melody Rangers
I Like Drinking by The Gourds
Fisherman's Friend by Shinyribs
Death in the Morning by Phil Alvin
Oh Those Tombs by Roy Acuff
In the Pines by Charlie Feathers
Waymore's Blues by Waylon Jennngs
Baby Doll by Jimmy Dale

Freeway Ballet by Chipper Thompson
Twice the Lovin' (In Half the Time) by Jean Shepard & Speedy West
Hogs on the Highway by Bad Livers
Lone Cowboy by Michael Martin Murphey
Liquor Store by The Meat Purveyors
Worried Man Blues by Ralph Stanley
Hey Joe by Jerry Douglas

Hello Trouble by Buck Owens
Arizona Rose by The Waco Brothers
Walk Hard by Dewey Cox
Bad Actor by Merle Haggard
Fan It by The Swift Jewel Cowboys
Honky Tonk Affair by David Serby
Maybellene by Marty Robbins
Gettin' Drunk and Fallin' Down by Hank III
Wild Man Boogie by Ray Batts
Talking Hot Pants Blues by The Hickoids

You Wanna Give Me a Lift by Eilen Jewell
Wings of a Dove by Dolly Parton, Tammy Wynette & Loretta Lynn
This Orchid Means Goodbye by Carl Smith
Steel Guitar Heaven by Ry Cooder
When You're Finally Done Drinkin' by The Stumbleweeds
There's a Tear in My Beer by Big Bill Lister
I Love You Because by Elvis Presley
You Don't Have to Be a Baby to Cry by Ernest Tubb
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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

Thursday, August 26, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: RIDGWAY'S NEON MIRAGE

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 27, 2010


Even before he formed Wall of Voodoo back during the New Wave scare, Stan Ridgway had a cinematic perspective on the music he makes. Many of his songs — the instrumental “Heat Takes a Walk,” epic meditations like “My Beloved Movie Star” — sound like they were ripped from celluloid. Even some of his albums, the noirish The Big Heat being the most obvious, seem like soundtracks.

So when I popped Ridgway’s new one, Neon Mirage, into the CD player and heard the opener, “Big Green Tree,” it occurred to me that all his musical work might be considered one big soundtrack of his life.

Here was a recurring theme. The song first appeared on Ridgway’s 1995 album Black Diamond (as “Underneath the Big Green Tree”). It’s a wistful, bittersweet tune, more first-person confessional than Ridgway usually gets (especially back in 1995).

“Is there a home, a home for me?/Where the people stay until eternity?/Is there a road that winds up/Underneath the big green tree?”

It seemed like a fitting song for Black Diamond. That was Ridgway’s first solo album on an independent label, and he undoubtedly was feeling somewhat chewed up and spit out by his experience in the majors. And indeed, it seems appropriate for Neon Mirage, an album that, as Ridgway has explained, was forged when several people close to him — including his father, an uncle, and one of the musicians who plays on some of the tracks — died.

“Events like that can’t help but have an impact on the music you’re making at the time,” Ridgway said in his blog. “You’d be lying to yourself — and your listeners — if you thought otherwise. I’ve probably confused people with my music, my choices, the albums, and the changes in direction from year to year. But I can’t help it. There’s a weird old American jukebox in my head, and it still plays everything that’s ever got under my skin.”

In the new version of “Big Green Tree,” produced by Dave Alvin, it’s amazing how Ridgway’s voice has matured since the first one — not that he was a spring chicken in 1995. But now his voice sounds richer, more wizened, sadder, and wiser.

And singing background harmonies is Amy Farris, the violin player who committed suicide last year before the album was completed.

The new songs on Neon Mirage are pretty remarkable too. “This Town Called Fate” features the Western — well, probably spaghetti Western — sound that Ridgway has done so well since his Wall of Voodoo days.

The melody of this one sounds like it was influenced by Ridgway’s friends The Handsome Family. It’s a song built around a metaphor of impending death, fearing that “final knock on the door.” But it’s not without Ridgway’s wry humor.

“Now don’t pick up the phone, just wait until I’ve run the test/Unplug all these computers now, we’ll burn them with the rest/We’ll leave this hard drive by the tree, yes as policeman’s bait/Here in this town they call Fate.”


That classic Ridgway story line about small-time criminals and drifters running from the law — and one another — pops up in the song “Scavenger Hunt,” which features a jazzy flute by saxman Ralph Carney and a fuzzy, bluesy guitar by longtime Ridgway collaborator Rick King. We never find out exactly why the narrator’s wife has flown the coop, but there are all sorts of fascinating clues — broken dishes, a treasure map, an interstate underpass “where your uncle hid the briefcase on our wedding day.”

“Desert of Dreams” is an enlightened take on what is termed “easy listening,” with sinister touches of exotica. Images of cocktails by the pool will fill your head. But the sweet daydream starts to turn downright crazy right near the end when Carney starts blowing wild, like Pharoah Sanders ripping out pages of the Creator’s master plan. It’s like he’s trying to abduct the listener and break out of the whole vision. It’s one of the most remarkable moments on the album.

“Turn a Blind Eye,” is a smoky little rocker about the world going to hell — Ridgway’s answer to The Temptations’ “Ball of Confusion”?

Then “Like a Wandering Star” sounds like a stray show tune. It’s a bouncy little number with a subtle steel guitar and string section in the background. (Ridgway says this is his stab at the Owen Bradley countrypolitan sound.)

There are some sad, pretty, introspective songs here. “Behind the Mask” is perhaps the best example. It’s atmospheric in a Daniel Lanois way, starting off with a violin solo by Farris and ending with some psychedelic guitar by King. “Who am I behind the mask?” Ridgway croons throughout.

Neon Mirage includes a Dylan cover. It’s “Lenny Bruce,” an early 1980s song Dylan wrote for the late comic renegade. But the album ends with an original song that sounds even more like a Dylan tune — “Day Up in the Sun” has a Planet Waves vibe to it. Pietra Wexstun’s keyboards here can’t help but remind you of Garth Hudson. It’s a big, upbeat production that ends the album with a note of optimism.

If this album were a movie, the credits would be rolling during “Day Up in the Sun” and everyone would be filing out full of hope, gratitude, and popcorn. But as Ridgway fans know, this is just an intermission.

This movie ain’t over yet.

Here's a video from the album:



RIDGWAY & ME

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

TAKE A BITE OUT OF THE NEW BIG ENCHILADA PODCAST

THE BIG ENCHILADA

PODCAST 26

It's a Hillbilly Pig Out this month on The Big Enchilada, a delicious high-cholesterol feast of Dixie-fried rockabilly, hickory-smoked honky-tonk madness, pickled bluegrass, meaty backwoods boogie and crazy country side dishes. So loosen your dadgum belt, sit back with your favorite moonshine and prepare to stuff your ears.





DOWNLOAD | SUBSCRIBE

Here's the play list

(Background: Porky's Boogie on Strings by The Rhythm Boys)
Hogtied Over You by Billy Bacon & The Forbidden Pigs with Candye Kane
Diggin' For Gold by The Stumbleweeds
Pine Box Rotten by Crankshaft
Done Gone Crazy by Ray Condo & The Ricochets
Give It To Me, Daddy by Hartman's Heartbreakers
Brain Damage by The Austin Lounge Lizards
The Genitalia of a Fool by The Cornell Hurd Band featuring Justin Trevino

(Background Music: Feather Your Nest by The Washboard Wonders)
Hogs on the Highway by Bad Livers
Yodel Til I Turn Blue by Johnny Dilks & His Visitacion Valley Boys
Nothin' Clickin' Chicken by The Down Homers
Little White Pills by The Meat Purveyors
Hillbilly Blues by Ronnie Dawson
Ed's Place by Horace Heller

(Background Music: Texas Playboy Rag by The Pine Valley Cosmonauts)
Too Much Pork For Just One Fork by Southern Culture on the Skids
Sweet Singin' Daddy by Jimmy & Johnny
Countin' the Years by Yuichi & The Hilltone Boys
Who Puts The Cat Out When Papa's Out Of Town by Sam Nichols & The Melody Rangers
You've Never Been This Far Below by Freakwater
The Wings of a Dove/God Said I'll Be There by Retta & The Smart Fellas

You like this hillbilly stuff? If so, then you'll probably like some of my previous episodes like:

Episode 22: Honky in a Cheap Motel
Episode 16: Hillbilly Heaven
Episode 10: More Santa Fe Opry Favorites
Episode 8: Santa Fe Opry Favorites Vol. 2
Episode 2: Santa Fe Opry Favorites

Listen to this podcast 7 p.m. Mountain Time Tuesday August 24 on Real Punk Radio

Sunday, August 22, 2010

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, August 22, 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
Bitch Slap Attack by Lovestuck
Fire on the Moon by The Bell Rays
Easy to Cry by The Little Darlings
Mister Down Child by Sonny Boy Williamson with The Yardbirds
What's Your Name by Nathaniel Mayer
I Don't Like the Man I Am by Thee Headcoats
Panic in Georgia by Deadbolt
Sorrow's Forecast by Dead Moon
Mary Louise by Ichabod Strangelove
I Got Worms by Archie & The Pukes
Roly Poly by Joey Dee & The Starliters
The Pigmy Grind, Pt. 1 by Sonny Dublin

Woman Cops by The Ding-Dongs
Ten of Hearts by Mark Sultan
Anala by The King Khan & BBQ Show
Honey Hush by Big Joe Turner
Tiger Man by Rufus Thomas
Rocker by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes
100 Days, 100 Nights by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
Find Me a Home by Detroit Cobras

R.I.P. Richard "Cannibal" Lopez

Zulu King by Cannibal & the Headhunters
Land by Patti Smith (Live 2005 version)
Land of 1000 Dances by Chris Kenner
Cannibal Girls by The Hydes
Whittier Boulevard by Thee Midnighters


Mark of the Unnamed/Budos Band Theme by The Budos Band
I Told You So by The Dirty Robbers
Idiot From Here by Kult
Under the Marble Faun by Movie Star Junkies
Please Ban Music/Gegen Alles by Country Teasers
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Friday, August 20, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, August 20, 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
One Cup of Coffee by Glen Glenn
Honky Tonk Merry Go Round by Lucky Tomblin
Pawn Shop Guitars by Al Anderson
Tore up and Loud by Hank III
Sweet Singing Daddy by Jimmy & Johnny
Honky Tonk Man by Sleepy LaBeef
Hootin'-Nanny Papa by The Buchanan Brothers
She Likes to Boogie Real Low by Ray Condo & His Richochets
Lovin' Ducky Daddy by Carolina Cotton
Down the Bar From Me by Kell Robertson

Cherokee Fiddle by Michael Martin Murphey
Tennessee Boogie by Zeb Turner
Driving Nails in My Coffin by Hank Thompson
I Hold the Bottle, You Hold the Wheel by Reckless Kelly
The Window Up Above by George Jones
That Mink On Her Back by Hank Penny
Mental Cruelty by Buck Owens & Rose Maddox
Don't You See That Train by The Delmore Brothers
Side by Side Doublewides by The Hickoids

Right or Wrong by Willie Nelson & Asleep at The Wheel
Until I Die by The Ding Dongs
I Get Nothin' From My Girl by Mark Sultan
Fire's Still Burnin' by Hipbone Slim & The Knee Tremblers
Endless Sleep by The Frantic Flintstones
You Tell Her, I Stutter by Jimmy Lee Prow
Hi De Ho Boogie by Al Dexter
I Ain' Got Time For the Blues by Bill Kirchen with Maria Muldaur
Mean, Mean Man by Wanda Jackson

This Town Called Fate by Stan Ridgway
Death Valley Days by Jon Langford & Skull Orchard
Sittin' & Thinkin' by Ray Price
Cheap Living by Eric Hisaw
Ain't No Cane on the Brazos by The Band
Faded Loves and Memories by Blaze Foley
Last Days of Tampa Red by Ronny Elliott
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

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...