Sunday, November 21, 2010

Be Thankful For THIS: The New BIG ENCHILADA Episode

THE BIG ENCHILADA


Welcome to the November episode of The Big Enchilada podcast, called Psychic Flotsam. Sit down. Relax. Look deep into my eyes. The Spirits are about to speak.

You're going to hear some mystical sounds of Carbon/Silicon, The Ding Dongs, The Tandoori Knights, The Gories,  The Rockin' Guys and so much more, all very cosmic -- in a trashy kinda way

Play it here:




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Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Cosmic Bellydance by The Monsters)
Fix That Broken Halo by The Ruiners
Ding Dong Party by The Ding-Dongs
Bandstand by The Tandoori Knights
Great Big Idol With the Golden Head by The Gories
Framed by The Coasters
The Return of the Pretty One by Lord Sundance

(Background Music: Hell of a Woman by Impala)
November by The Rockin' Guys
Turboa by Make-Overs
Man Man by Leroy MacQueen & The Gussets
Ringue by Horror Deluxe
A Poison Tree by Movie Star Junkies
Happyland by Arrington de Dionyso & Old Time Relijun
Daddy The Swingin' Surburbanite by The Weird-ohs

(Background Music: Grungy by Davie Allan & The Arrows )
Flyin' Blind by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes with Phil Alvin
El Tren de la Costa by The Del Moroccos
Outta Site by Sinister Six
Sin Eater by Th' Legendary Shack Shakers
What's Up Doc by Carbon-Silicon

Friday, November 19, 2010

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, November 19, 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
Sweet Soul Music by Run C&W
Honky Tonk Queen by Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
Blues Keep Callin' by Marti Brom
Vang Bang by Zeno Tornado And The Boney Google Brothers
Treat Me Right by Suzette & The Neon Angels
Red Velvet by The Kirby Sisters
Go-Go Truck by The Defibulators
Hey Sexy by Robbie Fulks
Rollergirl Gail by The Misery Jackals
Rub-A-Dub-Dub by Hank Thompson

Your Friends Think I'm the Devil by Imperial Rooster
Rainbow Stew by Merle Haggard
The Squeeky Wheel Gets the Oil by The Coal Porters
It Ain't Nobody's Biz'ness What I Do by The Hoosier Hot Shots
Hound Doggit Blues by Cordell Jackson
Rockin' Granny by Nancy Apple
Cheap Living by Eric Hisaw
Animal Hoedown by Harry Hayward

What Ails You by Boris & The Saltlicks
Pill-Poppin' Country Weirdo by Halden Wofford & The Hi-Beams
I Hold the Bottle, You Hold the Wheel by Reckless Kelly
Everything's Raising by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Whoop and Hollar by Ray Wylie Hubbard
The Hills of Hell by Legendary Shack Shakers
Gypsy Lou by Bob Dylan
Monkey Rag by Asylum Street Spankers

Smoke Along the Track by Doug Jeffords
I Never Want to Be Your Ex by The Whateverly Brothers
Wreck on the Highway by The Waco Brothers
Whispering Sea by Eilen Jewell
Drinkin' Thing by Gary Stewart
Fit For a King by Joe Diffie
Summer Wages by David Bromberg
Treasures Untold by Doc and Merle Watson
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, November 18, 2010

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: TENSION & ROMANCE

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
November 19, 2010

It has been five years since Martí Brom released an album (Martí Brom Sings Heartache Numbers). This was about the time she and her family moved from Austin, Texas, to Washington, D.C. I was worried Brom might have hung it up.

So seeing her new CD, Not for Nothin’, was a true sight for sore eyes — in more ways than one. The artwork, based on old detective-story pulp magazine covers, is one of the sexiest album covers I’ve seen lately. Trouble ahead, lady in red!

Brom makes sweet, rockabilly-informed, R & B-influenced retro country. Her voice has been compared to that of Patsy Cline. (Think Cline during her mid-1950s rockabilly flirtation, such as her tune “Stop, Look and Listen.”) But back during her teenage years, Brom’s main musical turn-on was proto-punker Suzi Quatro.

And one of the first times she played before an audience was when her husband, Bob, a career Air Force officer, convinced her to audition for an officers’ wives club musical called The 1940s Radio Hour, for which she sang “Blues in the Night.”

(Another cool tidbit about Brom: she allegedly named her daughter Ivy, now 20, after The Cramps’ Poison Ivy.)

Not for Nothin’ (subtitled Tales of Tension & Romance) is Brom’s tribute to singers, musicians and songwriters from the Washington, D.C., area. Fortunately, none of the songs have anything to do with government or politics. And even more fortunately, the album shows Brom in top form, despite her five-year absence from recording.

The first song is a fun little hopped-up bopper called “Finders Keepers” by Wynona Carr, a singer best known for her gospel songs though she later turned to R & B. Brom’s high-charged version is driven by a screaming sax.

“Mascara Tears” is a honky-tonk weeper written by Artie Hill, a fine performer in his own right. Backed by steel guitar and fiddle, Hill makes it weep.

One of the standout songs is one made famous by Elvis Presley: “A Fool Such as I.” The song, done here as a country shuffle, is a perfect vehicle for Brom’s voice. Elvis would be proud.

She teams up with D.C. picker/singer Bill Kirchen on “Sweet Thang.” It’s a delight, but also seek out the 1967 version by Ernest Tubb and Loretta Lynn.

Not For Nothin’ is full of spunk and heartache. It’s great to have Brom back.

Also recommended:


Tex-O-Billy by Suzette & The Neon Angels. Tejana almost became a dirty word during the recent gubernatorial campaign in New Mexico.

So maybe I should clarify that when Suzette Lawrence sings, “Yo Soy Tejana (I’m a Texas Girl),” I don’t think her purpose is to steal New Mexico’s water from working families. This song is a stomping rocker with some crazy slide and a melody similar to Terry Allen’s “Amarillo Highway.”

Lawrence left Texas for Los Angeles in the early 1990s. There she became a fixture at the Palomino Club and fell in with the “Town South of Bakersfield” crowd (her picture appears on the cover of the third volume of the album series of that name) along with the likes m Lauderdale, Rosie Flores, and James Intveld.

Now a Nashville resident, Lawrence also has roots in rockabilly. That’s obvious in the opening number, “Kitty Cat Scratch,” which also owes a debt to Ted Nugent’s “Cat Scratch Fever.”

But good bluesy roadhouse roots-rock is Lawrence’s foundation. When she sings “Tear Up the Honkytonk,”  her fervor makes you take the threat seriously. And when she sings “Go Girl Go,” it’s tempting to shout along with her.

Eilen Jewell Presents Butcher Holler: A Tribute to Loretta Lynn. Jewell’s voice doesn’t really sound much like Lynn’s blue Kentucky drawl. And to her credit, she doesn’t try to imitate Lynn. But like any real country fan, Jewell clearly admires Lynn’s songs. Aided with an able country band and her unaffected alto, she does them justice in her own style on this appealing tribute.

She includes several of Lynn’s best-known songs: “You Ain’t Woman Enough (To Take My Man),” “Don’t Come Home a Drinkin’ With Lovin’ on Your Mind),” “Fist City,” and “I’m a Honky Tonk Girl.” But she also does several lesser-known gems from the Lynn songbook.

There’s the defiantly religious “Who Says God Is Dead,” as well as the sweet adultery odes “A Man I Hardly Know” and “Another Man Loved Me Last Night.” And I had never heard the original “Deep as Your Pocket,” a song about a gold digger (“Her love for you is as deep as your pocket”).

Local alert: Born in Idaho and now living in Boston, Jewell, according to several sources, lived in Santa Fe around the turn of the most recent century, attending St. John’s College. Apparently she used to play at the farmers market. I couldn’t find her anywhere in The New Mexican’s computer archives. Anyone remember her?

A ROTTEN BLESSING FOR ROYAL COUPLE

John Lydon might have sung, "God save the Queen/she ain't no human bein'," with The Sex Pistols all those years ago, but according to an interview in The Sun, the Rotten one has nothing but nice things to say about Prince William and his bride-to-be.

"People think I hate the Royal Family, but that's not true. My animosity is towards the institution, not the people themselves. ... They really appear to have stars in their eyes. I can see it, and that is a lovely thing. So much more important than diamonds and tiaras. I can't stand it when people have a jealous reaction to this - saying she is a gold-digger and he is marrying beneath him. ... They'd probably be happy with a small wedding. But in their situation the State requires a load of pomp and ceremony. And why not? I love a bit of flag-waving."

Here's the Johnny Rotten I remember:

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

eMusic: Getting What They Wanted, Losing What They Had

eMusic, a subscription download service to which I subscribe, used to be known as a paradise for independent music.

Then last year they started hooking up with major companies. The price went up -- strictly coincidence, they assured the world -- but it was still a good deal.

Now they're adding another major, Universal, supposedly next week. And they're screwing with the price structure. No more credits. Now it's all dollars and cents.

But, the service just announced they're losing lots of independent labels: Matador, Merge and others. "This is as heartbreaking to us as it is to you," says a note on the eMusic Web forum. "Please know we have done everything we could to keep them from leaving."

Hopefully Norton, Bloodshot, Voodoo Rhythm and other favorites won't join the exodus.

I'll stick around to see whether eMusic remains a good deal. But, as Benjamin J. Grimm used to say, "What a revoltin' development."

UPDATE: Pitchfork has a story about this with label responses. Both Merge and Beggar's Group blame the new deals with the majors. Says Merge, "Unfortunately, eMusic’s unilateral changes in effort to bring on the major labels has created a situation where it would be harmful to the interests of Merge and our artists to continue our partnership at this time."

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

ALL YOU NEED IS HYPE

We hold patents on a few gadgets we confiscated from the visitors. Velcro, microwave ovens, liposuction. This is a fascinating little gadget. It'll replace CDs soon. Guess I'll have to buy the `White Album' again.


Tommy Lee Jones as Agent K in Men in Black, 1997

Yes, I liked The Beatles. Yes, they changed my life and made me want to start a band when I was in 5th grade and saw them on The Ed Sullivan Show. Yes, I cried openly when John Lennon was murdered in 1980.

And yes, I re-purchased several of their albums when they came out on CD -- mostly from the used bin -- though I truly believe almost everything you need can be found on Beatles For Sale (which I first knew as Beatles '65), Revolver and the Past Masters compilations.

So forgive me if I'm cynical about all the hoopla about the "unforgettable news" that Apple Corps finally reached accord with Apple iTunes and The Beatles catalog is available on iTunes.

Honestly, I was more excited when I stumbled across the MP3 of "Frankenstein Meets the Beatles" a few weeks ago. What did The Clash say about "phony Beatlemania"?

If nothing else you have to give credit ot  EMI or the surviving Beatles and their heirs or whoever for their amazing talent in creating publicity and fresh waves of nostalgia for the simple act of accepting technology that most of us accepted years ago.

They did the same thing 20 years ago when they finally agreed to allow The Beatles music to be sold on CD. The secret is simple: Just drag your feet for a few years and you've got the makings of a prefab Fab Four frenzy. It's an old trick, but when you're selling The Beatles, apparently it always works.

But let's get real. Those of you who own Beatles CDs, haven't you already ripped those albums, or at least your favorite songs from those albums, onto your computer? No matter what the RIAA says, you can do that and put 'em on your iPods too.

So no, Agent K, you don't have to buy 'The White Album' again.

Let's let the witty Beatle put this all in perspective:


Monday, November 15, 2010

SOME MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT TO START THE WEEK

This music can't help but make you feel good.

Enjoy some "Spike Driver Blues."

That's Pete Seeger introducing him. Not sure who the woman is. I wonder if Mississippi John ever answered her question at the end: "Why'd he have a big hammer?"

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...