Sunday, April 17, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 17, 2011
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
I Walked With the Zombie by Roky Erikson & The Nervebreakers
Don't Slander Me by Lou Ann Barton
New Orleans Walkin' Dead North Mississippi Allstars
Can O' Worms by Churchwood
Blew My Speakers by The Angel Babies
Bad Boy by The Backbeat Band
Dizzy, Miss Lizzy by Larry Williams
Shout by The Isley Brothers
Right String Baby (But the Wrong Yo Yo) by Carl Perkins

Grease Box by TAD
I Don't Think So by Dinosaur Jr.
I'm Now by Mudhoney
Who Was in My Room Last Night by The Butthole Surfers
Funnel of Love by Wanda Jackson with The Cramps
One Monkey Don't Stop No Show by Big Maybelle
Hot Skillet Momma by Yochanan
Show Me by Joe Tex
Bumble Bee by LaVerne Baker

It Came From The Hideout/Records to Ruin Any Party Set
(For More Info CLICK HERE )
Whistlebait Baby by Lovestruck
I Need More by The Cynics
Dust My Broom by The Jukejoint Pimps
Brush your Tits by Mondo Ray
Short-Term Memory Lane by J.J. by The Real Jerks
Two-Headed Demon by Urban Junior
Short Leash by Scorpion Vs. Tarantula
She by Audio Kings of the Third World
I'm Going Away Girl by The Monsters
City of Bother and Loathe by Jukebox Zeroes

She Floated Away by Husker Du
Rosemary's Baby by Half Japanaese
Gorgeous by Kustomized
Thrash City by Poly Styrene
She's So Scandalous by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Hymn No. 5 by The Mighty Hannibal
Lonely Town by Stan Ridgway
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Friday, April 15, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, April 15, 2011
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
Meet Me in the Alleyway by Steve Earle
Reefer Load by Scott H. Biram
Chug-A-Lug Mojo Nixon And The World Famous Blue Jays
I Ain't Drunk by Whitey Morgan
Rock 'n' Roll Yodel by Johnny Wildcard
Come Back Uncle John by Ronnie Dawson
Sneaky Snake by Buddy Miller with Duane Eddy
Everybody's Girl by Eddie Spaghetti
I'll Be Glad When You're Dead by The Great Recession Orchestra

Foolkiller by Johnny Rivers
Sixpack to Go by Gal Holiday
Get Lost, You Wolf! by Hylo Brown And The Timberliners
Honky Tonkin' by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Blue Yodel No. 4 by Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys
Ruby Ridge by Peter Rowan
My Four Reasons by Howard Armstrong with Ikey Robinson
Long Gone Daddy by Jimmie & Leon Short
Foothill Boogie by Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
Who Puts The Cat Out When Papa's Out of Town by Sam Nichols

VOODOO RHYTHM COUNTRY
Blood by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
The Coo-Coo Bird by Andy Dale Petty
Slide Off Of Your Satin Sheets by DM Bob & The Deficits
Teardrops by Sixtyniners
Le Pistolet by Mama Rosin
Cold And Blind by Possessed By Paul James
Honest I Do by John Schooley
Chopped by The Watzloves
Blue Moon Of Kentucky by Rev, Beat-Man

Ballad of Clara Mae by E. Christina Herr & Wild Frontier
Peach Blossom by Hundred Year Flood
Katie Mae by David Johansen
I Want My Crown by The Swan Silvertones
Set 'em Up (I'm Afraid to Go Home) by Cornell Hurd
No Reason to Quit by Merle Haggard
LSD by Wendell Austin
The Fame of Lofty Deeds by Jon Langford
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Hits from the Hideout

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
April 15, 2011



A few months ago, Jeff “Kopper” Kopp stumbled across Little Steven’s Underground Garage compilation series The Coolest Songs in the World. He was not impressed.

“Looking over the track lists on these, I thought to myself, ‘Wow, these are what he thinks are the coolest songs in the world? Hell, the bands on the Hideout have better stuff than this,’ ” Kopper wrote over at the GaragePunk Hideout, an internet social network he established for rock ’n’ roll misfits and miscreants.

In fairness to Little Steven, the Coolest Songs collections have been graced by bands like The Stooges, The Dictators, The Fleshtones, The Chesterfield Kings, and The Hentchmen.

But Kopper was right. There are indeed unknown bands lurking around the Hideout that put most of the Coolest Songs acts to shame. So he invited bands there to submit original songs for a new independent garage-punk compilation series. It Came From the Hideout: The Best of the GaragePunk Hideout Vol. 1 was unleashed this week with a bitchen monster-cartoon cover by a resident Hideout artist, an Austrian known only as Idon Mine.

(Disclosure time: My Big Enchilada podcast is part of the GaragePunk Hideout Podcast Network. It’s a labor of love I don’t get paid for. Not even in hookers and blow. And except for encouraging some bands I know to submit songs, I’m not in any way connected to this compilation.)

What’s impressive here is the variety of sounds within the primitive guitar-rock framework. There’s beer-bust bar rock; sweet, savage girl punk; mutant blues; good old- fashioned snot punk; and even Swedish surf rock from The Surfites, a Stockholm band.

The collection starts out with a new tune from the one band here that you might have actually heard of before. The Cynics is a Pittsburgh group that started out back in the mid-1980s. “I Need More,” with its catchy melody and jangly guitar, sounds like pumped-up, fuzzed-out folk rock.

That’s followed by “Short Term Memory Lane,” a boozy, harmonica-driven rave-up by J.J. & The Real Jerks, a Los Angeles band that also features a piano and sax. That leads into “Bollywood Woman” by The Above, which has a British Invasion, early Who feel, though the band is actually from New York.

A couple of my favorite tracks on this collection are by groups with female vocalists. The Manxx is a Denver band doing a song called “Luck,” which has a hypnotic organ and slashing guitar. Then there’s “Whistlebait Baby,” which almost sounds like a punk bolero, by LoveStruck. This Brooklyn-based power trio, fronted by Danish singer Anne Mette Rasmussen, is one of my longtime favorite bands from the Hideout.

A couple of crazed Arizona groups are represented here. Scorpion vs. Tarantula does a wild, crunching tune called “Short Leash,” while The Plainfield Butchers do a pleasant little love song called “Truck Stop Urinal.”

One standout tune here is “She” by Audio Kings of the Third World. The Kings, who are from the third-world back roads of Philadelphia, list The Fall as one of their favorite bands. And indeed, singer Johnny O’s slow, singsong drawl has distinct traces of Mark E. Smith in it. And the fuzzy guitar is downright addictive.

Perhaps my favorite one is “Drunk” by Mark Steiner & His Problems. Steiner is an American who lives in Norway. The song is a sinister blues number that almost sounds like crime jazz, with sleazy sax and clanky percussion.

All in all, It Came From the Hideout is cooler than Coolest Songs.

And here’s some great news: Songs the Hideout Taught Us: The Best of the GaragePunk Hideout Vol. 2 is just around the corner, coming in mid-May. In fact, there’s supposed to be a new volume out every month through August.

The compilation is free to Hideout members and available for download in the usual places. There’s more information HERE.

Also recommended:


* Records to Ruin Any Party: Voodoo Rhythm Compilation Volume 3. Loyal readers of this column and listeners of my radio show know I’m an avid fan of Voodoo Rhythm Records, that Swiss label that’s home to psychobilly, damaged blues, garage rock, and criminally insane (that’s a step or two beyond “outlaw”) country music.

If you’ve ever been tempted to seek out some of the Voodoo Rhythm acts but haven’t quite taken the plunge to actually buy any of the records, this convenient, 21-track compilation would be a good place to start.

It’s a great sampling of stuff, mainly from albums released in the past two or three years. There are songs by The Movie Star Junkies and Delaney Davidson (doing songs from albums that made my 2010 Top 10 list). Label founder/owner Reverend Beat-Man’s frightening signature “Jesus Christ Twist” is there, as is a song by Beat-Man’s garage group The Monsters.

King Khan & The Shrines perform randy punk soul. The Pussywarmers do a gypsy- flavored stomper. You get one-man techno blues from Urban Junior, an acoustic Tom Waitsian dirge from The Dead Brothers, an Elmore James song as you’ve never heard it by Germany’s Juke Joint Pimps, and punchy blues from Hipbone Slim & The Knee Tremblers.

Though it’s a European label, this compilation is crawling with Americans. You’ll find wild one-man blues blasters like Bob Logg III and John Schooley, backwoods shouter Possessed by Paul James, California garage punkers The Guilty Hearts, and Alabama folkster Andy Dale Petty, who performs a straightforward version of “The Cuckoo Bird.”

And did I say something about crazy country? Check out Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers (Switzerland), Sixtyniners (Netherlands), and Mama Rosin’s Swiss/Cajun “Le Pistolet,” which features a weird a cappella doo-wop intro.

And if you want to go back further into Voodoo Rhythm history, the label recently re- released Volumes 1 and 2 in a two-disc set. You can order theVol. 3  CD from Voodoo Rhythm or download it on Amazon.com when it becomes available on April 22.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Live and Almighty


For your Thursday listening pleasure I just stumbled across a May 2010 concert by The Almighty Defenders, that garage/gospel supergroup featuring members of The Black Lips and King Khan & BBQ Show. (I reviewed their album HERE.)

Some of the stuff here was not on the album. Enjoy the show, courtesy of the Free Music Archive.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Road to Humiliating Youtube Apologies

(This also was posted on my political blog)

Ever since the day when both Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale were trying to ride on Bruce Springsteen's coattails, candidates have been using rock 'n' roll to try to carry their messages. Sometimes it backfires, as it did when former Talking Head David Byrne sued ex-Florida Gov. Charlie Crist for using his song "Road to Nowhere" in his doomed Senate campaign last year.

Wow, Tom Petty could mop up if he sued every politician who played "I Won't Back Down" at a political rally. (Are you listening Bill Richardson and Tom Udall?)

Actually, I liked it better when politicians still considered rock 'n' roll to be evil.

This video by Crist wasn't done out of the kindness of his heart. It's part of a settlement of a law suit by Byrne.



Here's the song. (Confession, I don't know whether it's authorized. But nobody's yanked it off YouTube yet.)

Sunday, April 10, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 10, 2011
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
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead by Warren Zevon
Love Propaganda by Audio Kings of the Third World
Glam Racket bv The Fall
Grieving Man Blues by The Blue Giant Zeta Puppies
Spy Boy by Graceland
Reel Rock Party by Nick Curran and the Lowlifes
I've Got the Devil Inside by Rev. Beat-Man
Box-o-Wine by Dirtbag Surfers
Jack (Pepsi) by TAD

Booty City by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Three Hairs and You're Mine by King Khan & The Shrines
The World (Is Going Up In Flames)b y Charles Bradley
Ode to Billy Joe by Joe Tex
Your Thing Is A Drag by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
Living For the City by The Dirtbombs
Whistle Bait by Barrence Whitfield & the Savages
Farmer John by Don & Dewey
The Dozens by Eddie "One String" Jones

Philosophy by The Manxx
Short Term Memory Lane by J.J. & The Real Jerks
U Bug Me by Modey Lemon
Sugar Snap Brain by Kilimanjaro Yak Attack
(We're a) Bad Trip by Mondo Topless
Fed Up With You by Candy Snatchers
Lee, Bob & Lula by LoveStruck
Supersize it by Half Japanese
Mambo del Pachuco by Don Tosti y Sus Conjunto

Kaiser by Gibby Haynes & His Problem
Jump, Jive & Harmonize by The Plimsouls
Fix These Blues by Heavy Trash
Zulu King by Cannibal & the Headhunters
What I Know by Grinderman
I Made A Vow by The Robins
Minor Blues by Pinetop Perkins & Willie "Big Eyes" Smith
I'm Goin' To Live The Life I Sing About In My Song by Mahalia Jackson
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

Saturday, April 09, 2011

eMusic April


* Louie Bluie Film Soundtrack by Howard Armstrong. About 30 years ago, my pal Alec turned me on to a fun little LP called Martin, Bogan & Armstrong. It was an old African-American string band recorded in the early '70s.

It wasn't "blues," there there were some bluesy tunes there. It wasn't "jug band." These guys were playing mainly pop and jazz tunes of bygone eras. The players were old guys but all excellent musician -- and they were full of Hell. They'd been playing together in various combinations since the '30s under names such as The Tennessee Chocolate Drops and The Four Keys.

For instance, they start out with a straight version of the  uptight WASPy frat  song "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" (which before, I'd only heard performed by The Lettermen!) before they slip into a parody that was popular in the '20s ("She's the sweetheart of six other guys.") But my favorite MB&A song was "Do You Call That Buddy," which has a line that stuck with me for years: "If I had a million doughnuts, durn his soul, I wouldn't even give him a doughnut hole."

Just a few years ago I found Martin, Bogan & Armstrong on CD, as part of a twofer with a subsequent album That Old Gang of Mine. But even more recently I discovered a documentary called Louie Bluie made in the mid '80s directed by Terry Zwigoff, who is more famous for Crumb. The title character of Louie turns out to be fiddler/mandolinist Howard Armstrong. Also featured here is guitarist, singer Ted Bogan -- who catches continual unmerciful ribbing from Armstrong throughout the film.

The film tells the story of Armstrong (who got the nickname of "Louie Bluie" from a tipsy mortician's daughter) To quote Roger Ebert, "The movie is loose and disjointed, and makes little effort to be a documentary about anything. Mostly, it just follows Armstrong around as he plays music with Bogan, visits his Tennessee childhood home, and philosophizes on music, love and life." And I love it.

This soundtrack album on Arhoolie captures some of the greatest moments of the film, as well as some that didn't make the final cut. There's a delightfully filthy version of "Darktown Strutter's Ball." There's blues, gospel and jazz tunes. Also, a German waltz and a Polish tune. Yes, Armstrong, as he explains in the movie, was fluent in several languages, including Italian and a little Chinese. This, he said, helped him get gigs when he moved to Chicago.

Included on this album are some old songs originally released on 78rmp records, including some with Yank Rachell, who appears in the movie. A couple of these feature Sleepy John Estes on vocals.

Armstrong died in 2003 at the age of 94.

* Unentitled by Slim Cessna's Auto Club. This band often is billed as a "country gothic" band. Led by Cessna, who shares vocal duties with sidekick Jay Munly, the Auto Club often takes the guise as sinners in the hands of an angry God.

But on this album, which some critics are saying is the group's most accessible, so many songs are so upbeat and happy sounding, I really don't think the "gothic" label does them justice.

True, they've that 16 Horsepower banjo apocalypse vibe going full force on the first song, "Three Bloodhounds Two Shepherds One Fila Brasileiro" a harrowing tale that deals with bloodhounds being set loose on some hapless target, perhaps an escaped prisoner.

However, the very next song takes off with an eye-opening, frantic, almost '90s ska-like beat. The music is fierce and thundering and not very "country." Then  the following song "Thy Will Done" gets back to the banjo with an almost raga-like melody and some otherworldly whistle instrument I've yet to identify. The only thing this one lacks is Tuvan throat singers.

That old time religion is a major theme with the Auto Club. The 7-minute "Hallelujah Anyway" is a twisted tale of an arranged wedding. But even better is the closing song, "United Brethren," an emotional song of a preacher losing his congregation to another church -- just as his great-grandfather had experienced. It's not a problem most of us will ever face, but as Munly pleads, "Lord have mercy upon us ..." in his lonesome tenor with just an autoharp behind him, only the the most hard-hearted heathen would be unmoved.

* The Swan Silvertones 1946-1951. And speaking of spiritual crisis, the song "A Mother's Cry" on this album starts out with "Oh this world is in confusion .." -- and the listener isn't confused at all. It's the story of a mother whose son is fighting overseas. I would guess Korea.

Yes, those post WWII years covered by this album were confusing times indeed and, probably not coincidentally, great years for Black gospel music as well.

Take  "Jesus is God's Atomic Bomb," another tune in this collection. The Silvertones sing, "Oh have you heard about the blast in Japan/How it killed so many people and scorched the land." But it gets scarier. "Oh it can kill your natural body, but the Lord can kill your soul ...'

Yikes! World in confusion indeed.

The Swan Silvertones was an a capella group led by the great Claude Jeter, a former coal miner from Kentucky who wrote many of the songs here, including the ones I mentioned. This album captured their years at King Records. They weren't as raw sounding as The Five Blind Boys of Mississippi. They didn't have the irresistible personality of Sister Rosetta Tharpe or the sweet grace of Mahalia Jackson. But the Silvertones were solid and credible. And even now, a respite for confusing times.

* The tracks I didn't get last month from Hannibalism! by The Mighty Hannibal. This is not your average obscure lost '60s soul-shouter compilation. This album contains the greatest anti-war song of the Vietnam era that you've never heard. Written and recorded in 1966, "Hymn #5" is a first-person tale of a scared soldier. It's a minor-key moan that sounds like one of the spookiest minor-key gospel songs you can imagine.

"I'm waaaaayyyy over here, crawling' in these trench holes, covered with blood. But one thing that I know, (chorus comes in) There's no tomorrow, there's no tomorrow ..."


There's a sequel that came four years later -- following a stint in prison by Hannibal  for tax evasion -- another soldier's-eye-view of the war. It's good, but not a fraction as jolting as "Hymn #5."

I love Hannibal's early dance '60s tunes like "Jerkin' the Dog" (Settle down, Beavis!) and "Fishin' Pole." But I find his religious cautionary tales extremely fascinating. The moral of "The Truth Shall Make You Free" basically is that Jesus can help you kick heroin. Hardly original, but Hannibal sings with wild conviction. He was an addict for some years in the '60s. "There's nothin' I wouldn't do when I needed a fix/ I met the mother of my children goin', turning tricks," Hannibal testifies. And  its dark psychedelic/Blaxplotation guitar touches and the "Pappa Was a Rollin' Stone" bass line make you wonder why the song and the singer didn't become better known.

Even wilder is the final song, "Party Life." What can you say about a song that starts out "There was a pimp by my house the other day ..." Next thing you know, said pimp has taken the singer's daughter and she ends up in a hospital in Kentucky in such bad mental condition she doesn't even recognize her own dad. Seriously, people, keep those pimps away from your home!

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...