Friday, June 03, 2011

Tennessee Criminalizes "Password Sharing"

Even though there are far more pressing issues facing our brave nation (like maybe human/animal hybrids), the Tennessee state Legislature has passed and  the governor has signed -- a bill that would clamp down on people sharing passwords to music download sites.

from the Associated Press:

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — State lawmakers in country music's capital have passed a groundbreaking measure that would make it a crime to use a friend's login — even with permission — to listen to songs or watch movies from services such as Netflix or Rhapsody.The bill, which has been signed by the governor, was pushed by recording industry officials to try to stop the loss of billions of dollars to illegal music sharing. They hope other states will follow.The legislation was aimed at hackers and thieves who sell passwords in bulk, but its sponsors acknowledge it could be employed against people who use a friend's or relative's subscription.While those who share their subscriptions with a spouse or other family members under the same roof almost certainly have nothing to fear, blatant offenders — say, college students who give their logins to everyone on their dormitory floor — could get in trouble.

Who's beind this? You guessed it -- the Recording Industry Association of America.

The thing is, I bet that some of the lawmakers who voted for this are some of the same folks who go to Tea Party rallies and bellow about the loss of "liberty."

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: On the Case

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
June 3, 2011


About a year ago, Peter Case released a hard-punching, minimalist, blues-soaked album called Wig!, considered by at least one major Peter Case fan (Steve Terrell) as the singer’s strongest effort in more than a decade. If Wig! had Case fans longing for more, his new album, The Case Files, will satisfy at least some of that hunger.

Subtitled "Demos, Outtakes, One Live Shot & Other Rarities," this compilation reaches all the way back to the 1980s, right after Case’s best-known band The Plimsouls broke up and he began his long haul as a solo singer-songwriter; it includes material from as recent as 2009. “These tracks are some favorites gathered together from tapes in closets, boxes, garages, attics, and suitcases as well as from more recent sessions,” the artist writes in his liner notes.

And if his filing system is a little chaotic, so are the best tracks on the album. As on Wig!, the most powerful songs here are those in which Case’s rock ’n’ roll tendencies overshadow his folk/troubadour sensibilities. Paradoxically, most of these are performed with Case backed by his acoustic guitar and not much else.

Such is the opening cut, a frantic little rocker called “(Give Me) One More Mile,” featuring a nasty guitar hook — that’s Case on 12-string — some desperate-sounding harmonica honking, and bass and drums. I knew it sounded familiar and indeed it was. Though it’s been remastered for Case Files, the same recording appeared on a self-released, limited-distribution 2001 album called Thank You, St. Jude, which consisted mainly of songs from Case’s early solo albums rerecorded with violinist David Perales. “One More Mile” deserves a good revival. It helps set the tone for the rest of the album.

The same rough-hewn blues approach is found on Case’s cover of Kokomo Arnold’s classic “Milk Cow Blues.” Case is playing electric guitar on this live 2005 number, backed only by bass and drums. Also rocking is “Round Trip Stranger Blues,” recorded in 1989 with the late Stephen Bruton playing some piercing electric slide.

PETER CASE
Case in Los Alamos last year,
Baird Banner on drums
Case gets political on a few cuts. With his L.A. pal Stan Ridgway adding some subtle Wall of Voodoo touches, “Let’s Turn This Thing Around” is a good early-21st-century protest song about stolen elections, liberties lost, and economic injustice. Some of the lyrics reappear in “The Ballad of the Minimum Wage,” in which Case speaks rather than sings the lyrics behind an electronic beat while an organ and guitar create sinister disjointed fills.

Recorded at the same time in 2005 is another spoken piece, “Kokomo Prayer Vigil.” The refrain is “America comes in two great flavors of angry voices on the radio/This is Preacher Bob callin’ on election eve/For a prayer night vigil in Kokomo.” He paints a portrait of a country losing its spirit. Case recalls a Border Patrol stop near El Paso when, because of some misunderstanding, an officer aimed a gun at Case’s head. Another verse talks longingly about an anti-war rally in Washington, D.C., that Case attended as a youth. “I was 15 and the world seemed wide compared to what I see here now.”

There are some dandy cover tunes on Case Files. Case does a commendable job on Alejandro Escovedo’s “The End,” which sounds like a slightly shorter version than the one he did on the 2004 Escovedo tribute album Por Vida. Picking up his 12-string again and overdubbing some honky-tonk piano, he does a fine gutbucket take on a Rolling Stones obscurity, “Good Times, Bad Times,” a Wig! outtake. Even more fun is Bob Dylan’s “Black Crow Blues.” Case bangs the piano while his friend Ron Franklin responds on harmonica.

One of the best songs from Case’s first solo album is “Steel Strings.” A demo of that song appears here. I see the Case Files version as an indictment of the 1980s. After hearing the demo, with Case backed by T Bone Burnett on electric guitar and percussion, it’s hard to listen to the original, which was all gussied up with yucky ’80s synths and whatnot by producers Burnett and Mitchell Froom. Yes, back in the Reagan era even scruffy singer-songwriters got glossy overproduction. I’m glad Case made this soulful underproduced version available.

Also recommended:

Scott H. Biram
Biram in Santa Fe 2011
* No One Got Hurt: Bloodshot Records 15th Anniversary @ The Hideout, Chicago. The label that invented “insurgent country” quietly turned 15 years old in September 2009. Well, not really quietly. This album, recorded live at a Chicago club, is a rowdy blast, featuring acts from the current Bloodshot stable as well as some returning veterans.

Moonshine Willy, which was the first band to release a single-act album on Bloodshot, reunited for this show. But an even more impressive homecoming was that of Alejandro Escovedo, who does a scorching “Castanets” and a moving version of “I Was Drunk.”
WACKY WACOS
Waco Brothers Kicking Rump

Newer Bloodshot acts like Deadstring Brothers and The Scotland Yard Gospel Choir do themselves proud (though the former wear their Stones influence a little too obviously and the latter remind me of The Decemberists, which gives me mixed feelings).


But these are no match for one-man wacko Scott H. Biram (especially on his hopped-up “Truckdriver”) or Bloodshot’s flagship band The Waco Brothers, who do rousing versions of “See Willy Fly By” and “Red Brick Wall.” The Wacos also back Mekons squeeze-box man and one-time Bloodshot artist Rico Bell.

It’s a limited-edition album, so hurry to Bloodshot to get yours.

And speaking of Bloodshot compilations, there's a new FREE one over at Amazon.com . It's called Bloodshot Records Spring Cleaning Sampler. It's full of old Bloodshot favorites like Robbie Fulks, Trailer Bride, The Meat Purveyors, former Santa Fe resident Rex Hobart, and of course The Waco Brothers.

Here's a promo video for The Case Files.

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

New Potatoheads Widget and Music Page

I've added a separate page for my own tacky recordings, including one and only CD, Picnic Time For Potatoheads ( and Best-Loved Songs From Pandemonium Jukebox) 

It features my dandy new CD Baby widget for this highly-prized cult classic.


I've made dozens of dollars over the Internet on this album. This little gizmo should rake in even more!

And I've included my ReverbNation player so you can here complete versions of some of the Potatoheads/Panda-Juke songs. And just for laffs, my dynamic Soundclick player for a handful of rarities.

You can find it HERE and there's a link right up at the top of the right-hand column.

The CD Baby widget is posted below too. Check it out:

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

In Honor of Philadelphia Beer Week

I'm not from Philadelphia. And the band that sent me this, Jesus H. Christ & The Four Hornsmen of the Apocalypse, is from New York, not Philadelphia. And the video was shot in Massachusetts, not Philadelphia.

But what the Hell. It's Philadelphia somewhere.




Here's some info Risa from JHC sent me. I normally hate press release stuff, but I liked this.


"Alcoholics In My Town" is Jesus H Christ and The Four Hornsmen of The Apocalypse’s take on an ode to small town life, crossed with a great American drinking song that actually calls out the alcoholism looming under both genres.

“Let’s party like we’ll never get old,” the message seems to be, “And then let’s run our van into a guardrail on the way home and become paralyzed from the waist down and not have health insurance.”

The band wanted to write a song that celebrated small town life, in the vein of John Cougar Mellencamp and Bruce Springsteen: songs about the people they grew up with: the good times and the good buddies.

But, growing up in small towns, they knew, from personal experience, that most of these Good-Time-Charlies-and-Charlenes were usually alcoholics. The band doesn’t condemn, or exclude themselves, from this state of affairs- they just wanted to be medically accurate.

Mose Allison Plays This Year's SF Bandstand

It's true. The great Mose Allison will play on the Plaza for free Tuesday July 19 as part of the Santa Fe Bandstand program.

Zimbabwe music giant Thomas Mapfumo also is part of the program this summer, as is Cracker, who I saw do a fantastic show in Albuquerque a couple of years ago.

And for you fans of Treme,  New Orleans voodoo blues badass Coco Robicheaux is scheduled for Tuesday August 9. (Will he sacrifice a rooster on stage? You'll just have to wait and see.)

Also on board are loads of my favorite local groups. there's zydeco, Cuban music, western swing, jazz, blues, mariachi, reggae, native American music and more.

The schedule is below.

Sf Bandstand 2011

Sunday, May 29, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 28, 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Little Girl by The Syndicate of Sound
Willie Mehan by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Harm's Way The Ugly Beats
Second Coming by Alice Cooper
Dont Mess With My Mind by The Stomachmouths
Haunted by God by Lonesome Ghost
New Twist by Numbskull Action
Final Solution by Rocket From the Crypt
Turkeys by The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band
More Messages by Neil Innes

Gil Scott-Heron Tribute

(all songs by GSH)
New York Was Killing Me
Winter in America
H20 Gate Blues
The Bottle
Me And The Devil
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised



Dengue Fever/Cambodian Rock Set
SAX SOLOCannibal Corpse by Dengue Fever
Give Me One Kiss by Dara Chom Chan
I'm 16 by Dengue Fever
Snaeha by Pan Ron
Tiger Phone Card by Dengue Fever
Family Business by Dengue Fever
Eyes Like Diamonds by Sinn Sissamouth

You're Breaking My Heart by Nillson
Ways Of A Man by Guitar Shorty
Waves of Fear Lou Reed
It's All Over Now, Baby Blue by 13th Floor Elevators
You Don't Love Me Yet by Bongwater
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, May 27, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, May 27, 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! terrel(at)ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Rag Mama Rag by Levon Helm
Monkey Business by Eddie Bond
You Win Again by Mike Ness
White Lightning by The Waco Brothers
Turn the Lights Down Low by Moonshine Willie
Everything I Ever Wanted To Do by Legendary Shack Shakers
Lay Me Down by The Perreze Farm
Fortune Teller by Coco Robicheaux

One of Those People by Neil Innis
The Beasts on the Backs of our Children by The Imperial Rooster
The Iliad by Ed Sanders & The Hemptones
Baby He's A Wolf by Werly Fairburn
Fan it by The Great Recession Orchestra
Honey, You Had Me Fooled by The Defibulators
Joy by Nilsson

The Ballad of the Minimum Wage by Peter Case
Honky Tonk Nighttime Man by Merle Haggard
Don't Think Twice by Gal Holiday
Subterranean Homesick Blues by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Buckshot by The Riptones
Meanest Man In Town by The Maddox Brothers and Rose
Beauty Meets Beast by Angry Johnny
Wolverton Mountain by Claude King
Moonshine Man by Alford's Band of Bullwinkles

Zoot by Tery Diers
I'm Walking the Dog by Webb Pierce
Heavy Breathin' by Cornell Hurd
Parallel Bars by Robbie Fulks (with Kelly Willis)
Beatin' My Head by Jayke Orvis
Wasp's Nest by Ray Wylie Hubbard
That'll Never Happen No More by Howard Armstrong
24 Hour Store by The Handsome Family

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

R.I.P. GSH

I just learned of the death of Gil Scott Heron.

NPR, which first reported his death, says he died Friday afternoon in New York at the age of 62.

The influential poet and musician is often credited with being one of the progenitors of hip-hop, and is best known for the spoken-word piece "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised."
His 2010 album I'm New Here was one of my favorites of the year. I reviewed it HERE 

I'll do a special set for Gil Sunday night on Terrell's Sound World.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: An Outbreak of Dengue Fever

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
May 27, 2011


Whenever a band is based on an unusual concept — say, re-creating and building upon a suppressed style of music from several decades ago from a faraway land — there are inherent dangers.

First of all, said band might become too stuffy and scholarly, drifting away from being a creator to being a curator. Or, such a band might get a whiff of success and yield to the temptation of distancing itself from its original mission. And, of course, with any musical act there’s always the danger that what sounded fresh and innovative a couple of years ago will eventually sound dated and stale.

I’m happy to report that my favorite psychedelic Californian/Cambodian band Dengue Fever has avoided all those pitfalls. Dengue’s latest album, Cannibal Courtship, is a glorious blast from start to finish.

Short primer for newcomers: Dengue Fever came about after a trip to Cambodia in the ’90s by keyboardist Ethan Holtzman, who became an enthusiast of the crazy, psychedelic music that flourished there in the pre-Pol Pot years. Returning to his native California with cassette tapes of this music, Holtzman and his guitarist brother Zac got a band together to play it. But the sound wasn’t complete until they found Cambodia-born singer Chhom Nimol, who had a gig at a joint called the Dragon House in the Little Phnom Penh area of Long Beach.

The title song, which kicks off the album, starts as a slow soul groove. But the music slowly builds up in volume and intensity and, by the time Nimol is shouting the refrain, “Be my sacrificial lamb!” listeners know this album is going to a wild ride.

The next tune, “Cement Slippers,” is a funny dialogue song between Nimol and Zac Holtzman that reminds me of “Tiger Phone Card” on Dengue’s previous studio effort, Venus on Earth. “My girlfriend loves everything at the beach/Except the water, the sand, and the sun,” Holtzman sings. Nimol responds, “My boyfriend loves everything about me except the endless hours of therapy.”

THAT'S A REAL FARFISA
Dengue in Santa Fe 2007
But the best part of this song is a maniacal, it, sax solo by horn man David Ralicke. Nimol reverts to her native tongue, Khmer, in the following song, the slow-moving, exotic “Uku.” Ethan Holtzman’s Farfisa organ shines on this one.


Actually, I wish the song “2012 (Bury Our Heads)” was sung in Khmer or some other language I don’t understand. I think the group is actually making fun of the New Age-y reading of ancient Maya prophecies that next year will bring the end of the world. After the recent “rapture” idiocy, I’m getting tired of this doomsday crap. But the song is a decent little rocker, so not all is lost.

A better topical tune is “Family Business,” which is about a girl caught up in some weapon-merchant business — it sounds like a Nicolas Cage movie in the making. The instrumental “Kiss of the Bufo Alvarius” reminds me of Henry Mancini’s score for the early ’60s John Wayne flick Hatari. I can’t listen to it without images of rhinos chasing jeeps haunting my brain.

Cannibal Courtship will probably induce lots of crazy visions for listeners.

Also recommended:


*Dengue Fever Presents Electric Cambodia. Had Mick, Keith, and the boys ever released a compilation called “The Rolling Stones Presents Chicago Blues Favorites,” it would have been to them what this collection is to Dengue Fever. The music here represents the basic DNA of the band.

Electric Cambodia, released last year, contains 14 Cambodian rockers from the late ’60s and early ’70s. The sound is lo-fi, because the original recordings — as well as the original artists — were destroyed by the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime that ruled that country in the mid-to-late ’70s. The only surviving recordings were on old cassette tapes kept and hidden by fans.

But you have to love the basic sound of the electric organ playing off the fuzzy guitars (sometimes straying off into the same cosmic territory Carlos Santana pioneered) and the singers who seamlessly bring together Cambodian folk melodies, Asian pop, and American rock ’n’ soul of the ’60s.

All but two of the selections here are by the three biggest stars of Cambodian rock — female singers Pan Ron and Ros Serey Sothea and a man named Sinn Sisamouth, who was such a super-stud, he recorded duets with both Ron and Sothea. “Jasmine Girl,” a Sisamouth/Ron duet, is a soft romantic tune that starts off sounding almost like an Asian bossa nova.

A couple of these songs were covered by Dengue Fever on its first album in 2003. There’s the slinky, sexy “Flowers in the Pond” by Sothea (Dengue did a slower version, just calling it “Flowers,” on its own album). And even better is “Shave Your Beard,” another Sothea song.

“Snaeha” has a melody you might recognize. Sung by Ron, it’s a Khmer version of the old Cher hit “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down).”

This album is available from the usual online places. And if you like these old songs, let me also recommend the Cambodian Rocks series, currently available on the Khmer Rocks label. At least three of the four volumes are available from Amazon at reasonable prices.

BLOG BONUS:

Enjoy "Cement Slippers"


Cement Slippers (official) from DENGUE FEVER on Vimeo.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, May 22, 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 (at) ksfr.org

BOB DYLAN 70th BIRTHDAY PARTY!!!!!!
OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Baby Let Me Follow You Down by Bob Dylan
Maggie's Farm by The Blue Giant Zeta Puppies
Highway 61 Revisited by Johnny Winter
Dear Landlord by Janis Joplin & The Kozmic Blues Band
A Simple Desultory Philippic by Simon & Garfunkel
Absolutely Sweet Marie by C.J. Chenier
Isis by Bob Dylan

Mixed Up Confusion by Bob Dylan
My Back Pages by The Magkoro Brothers
The Wicked Messenger by The Black Keys
Ballad Of Hollis Brown by Thee Headcoats
Million Miles by Alvin Youngblood Hart
Like A Rolling Pin by The Replacements
Wallflower by Doug Sahm with Bob Dylan

Every Grain Of Sand by Giant Sand
Blind Willie McTell by The Band
I Pity The Poor Immigrant by Richie Havens
Bob Dylan's 300 Game by Emily Kaitz
Señor (Tales Of Yankee Power) by Willie Nelson & Calexico
Billy 1 by Los Lobos

Shake Mama Shake by Bob Dylan
Saved by The Mighty Clouds of Joy
Gotta Serve Somebody by Mavis Staples
Royal Jelly by Dewy Cox
You're Going to Make Me Lonesome When You Go by Mary Lee's Corvette
Death Is Not the End by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

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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...