Thursday, July 21, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Bashing Away at the Blues

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
July 22, 2011


The Romweber kids are back, and they’re bursting with joyful noise.

 I’m referring to the Dex Romweber Duo — Dex and his sister Sara on drums — and their new album Is That You in the Blue?, which is scheduled for release on Tuesday, July 26. It’s a worthy follow-up to their 2009 album Ruins of Berlin.

A primer for newcomers: Dex Romweber was the frontman for an earlier dynamic duo called Flat Duo Jets. Though the group never got as big as The White Stripes or The Black Keys, FDJ is properly credited for being an important pioneer of the two-person blues-bash sound.

Is That You?, like DRD’s previous album, is a minimalist masterpiece basically consisting of Dex and Sara bashing away, subtly aided by other instruments in certain spots — an organ here, a sax there, stand-up bass here and there. Their North Carolina compatriot Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids helps out on guitar on the opening cut, “Jungle Drums,” while Mary Huff of SCOTS lends some background vocals on “Midnight Sun.”

DRD is the second band I love that has released a version of Billy Boy Arnold’s “Wish You Would” this year. Dex one-ups The Fleshtones by doing two versions of the song here. The first version is the best, but it’s hard to say whether I like that one better than The Fleshtones’ cover. Both bands capture the essence of this blues classic.

“Nowhere” is one of those slow, smoky minor-key songs Dex so loves. He croons the verses and shouts on the choruses. Another one of these is “Midnight Sun,” which is even spookier than “Nowhere.” And speaking of crooning, Dex sings the living bejesus out of the song. He wrote it himself, but it sounds like some powerful pop ballad of the ’50s.

One of the highlights here is DRD’s version of “Brazil,” a song that has been covered by Frank Sinatra, The Coasters, and many in between. Dex adds a “Viva Las Vegas” riff to this jumpy little version. After the first three or four listenings, my favorite tune here is the cover of “Redemption.” This is one of the strange visionary religious songs from the first American Recordings volume. The band speeds it up, with Sara putting some voodoo in her drums.

Dex does a solo acoustic cover of “Homicide,” an obscure rockabilly tune by Myron Lee and the Caddies. It’s not bad, but it could have used a crazy sax like the original version. If that’s the most serious complaint I can find, this has to be a pretty good record. In fact, it’s a mighty fine affair.


Also recommended:

* Peyton on Patton by The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band. Somewhere in the Big Cosmic Blues Afterlife, the angel Charley Patton probably has a chip on his shoulder. “How come that young upstart Robert Johnson gets so much of the credit?” he grumbles to the other blues angels. “I was playing the blues before the devil ever tuned his damned guitar!”

It’s true that Patton has never received nearly as much credit as he deserves as one of the titans of Delta blues.

He was the archetype. Patton was known as a crazy entertainer, tossing his guitar in the air, popping his bass strings like a proto Bootsy Collins, singing about jellyroll one minute and then getting all holy and shouting the gospel the next.

He recorded about 60 songs between 1929 and 1934. And while several compilations of Patton material are available, Allmusic.com gives this depressing disclaimer: “No one will never know what Patton’s Paramount masters really sounded like. When the company went out of business, the metal masters were sold off as scrap, some of it used to line chicken coops. All that’s left are recordings of scratchy 78s.”

But Josh Peyton, known professionally as “The Reverend Peyton,” is out to rescue Patton’s music from the chicken coop. His latest album, just released, is a sweet and powerful tribute to the departed bluesman.

Peyton isn’t from the Delta. He’s from Indiana. But the country blues of Patton and those who followed are the chief driving factor of Peyton’s music.

Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Rev. Peyton at Santa Fe Brewing Co.
Feb. 2010
Some of Patton’s greatest tunes are included here — among them “Mississippi Boweavil Blues,” “Shake It and Break It” (which was recorded by Canned Heat in the early ’70s), “A Spoonful Blues,” and “Tom Rushen Blues.” And there’s not one, not two, but three versions of Patton’s “Some of These Days I’ll Be Gone.” There’s one featuring an acoustic guitar, one with a banjo, and one with a slide guitar. The last is my favorite.

My chief complaint about this album is that I miss the Big Damn Band — Breezy Peyton on washboard and Aaron “Cuz” Persinger on percussion, Though it’s not billed as such, Peyton on Patton is basically a Josh Peyton solo album. Breezy supplies strong call-and-response vocals on “Elder Greene Blues” but you barely hear Persinger. The only drumming he does is slapping a tobacco barrel like bongos with his bare hands. True, most of Patton’s recordings were done solo. But I think the full band, which itself is pretty minimalist, would have added more dimension.

I don’t think Charley would have minded.

BLOG BONUS
Moving pictures with music



Sunday, July 17, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Perverts in the Sun by Iggy Pop
Folly of Youth by Pere Ubu
Curious Orange by The Fall
Rats in My Kitchen by The Fleshtones
Sookie Sookie by Steppenwolf
La Ruota Gira by Le Carogne
Jungle Seizure by The Makeovers

Cantina by Pinata Protest
Gilligan's Island by Manic Hispanic
Cretin Hop by The Ramones
Steppin' Out by Paul Revere & The Raiders
The Stomp by The Hives
On the Prowl by WolfBoy Slim & His Dirty Feets
Big Fat Mama by Paul Kimball
Ride In My 322 by Spyder Turner
I'm Insane by T-Model Ford
Goo Goo Muck by Ronnie Cook & The Gaylads
Delta Trip by Juke Joint Pimps
Pimps of Polka by The Polkaholics

Heartbreak Hotel by The Cramps
Spidey's Curse by The Black Lips
Just a Boy by Butthole Surfers 4
I'm a Nothing by Magic Plants
Booty City by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Hand of God by Soundgarden
Ring A Ling Dong by Rudy Ray Moore
It Ain't What You Say by Little Esther
Midnight Sun by Dex Romweber Duo

Pappa Legba by Pops Staples with The Talking Heads
Eddie's Gone by Houndog
I'm Wild About That Thing by Bessie Smith
Let's Go Get Stoned by Ray Charles
It Comes to Me Naturally by NRBQ
So Long by Jimmy Scott
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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FOLK REMEDY PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 17, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sunday Mountain Time
Guest Host: Steve Terrell (subbing for Laurell Reynolds)

101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell (at) ksfr.org

I Wants My Lulu by Welling & McGee
Hapa Hole Hula Girl by Kalama's Quartet
Hula Girl by R. Crumb & His Cheap Suit Serenaders
How You Want it by Big Bill
Gamblin' Dan by Cliff Carlisle
I've Got Blood in My Eye For You by The Mississippi Sheiks
I'm Gonna Live Anyhow Until I Die by Miles & Bob Pratcher
Two Sweethearts by The Carter Family
Carve That Possum by Uncle Dave Macon

Billy the Kid by Vernon Dalhart
Oh! Didn't He Ramble by Arthur Collins
I'll Put You Under The Jail by Butterbeans & Susie
Barbeque Bust by Mississippi Jook Band
Tired Chicken Blues by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Do You Call That a Buddy by Martin, Bogan & Armstrong
My Four Reasons by Banjo Ikey Robinson
I Heard the Voice of a Porkchop by Jim Jackson
The Titanic by Bessie Jones
Like a Monkey Likes Coconuts by The Hoosier Hotshots
Buffalo Gal by Blind James Campbell
Skip to Ma Lou by Uncle Eck Dunford

Parchman Farm Blues by Bukka White
Walkin' Cane Stomp by Kentucky Jug Band
I'll Put You Under The Jail by Butterbeans & Susie
Barbecue Bust by The Mississippi Jook Band
Tired Chicken Blues by Cannon's Jug Stompers
Cocaine by Dick Justice
The Spasm by Daddy Stovepipe & Mississippi Sarah
Murphy's Wife by Frank Quinn
Old Rub Alcohol Blues by Dock Boggs

Are You Washed in the Blood? by Ernest Stoneman, & His Dixie Mountaineers
Strange Things by Henry Green
Lonely Tombs by Preston & Hobart Smith
The Morning Trumpet 85 by Henagar-Union Sacred Harp Convention
Soldiers of the Cross by Rev. Lonnie Farris
If I Had My Way I'd Tear This Building Down by Blind Willie Johnson
The Signs of the Judgement by Wiregrass Sacred Harp Singers
I Got a Telephone in My Bosom by Amazing Farmer Singers of Chicago
Yeah Lord, Jesus is Able by Rev. Louis Overstreet

(I also did this show in January. That playlist is HERE)

Friday, July 15, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, July 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
The Snake by Johnny Rivers
Sink Hole by Drive-By Truckers
Ain't Got No Dough by Peter Case
Payphone by Eric Hisaw
Never No More by Flat Duo Jets
I Want it So Bad by The Gourds
Road Bound by Bob Wayne
Crazy as a June Bug by Paula Rhea McDonald
Voodoo Queen Marie by The Du-Tels
The Voodoo man by Johnny Perry

La Bamba by Bud & Travis
Psychopath Of Love by The Dusty Chaps
Freeborn Man by Junior Brown
Out of Control by The Last Mile Ramblers
Truck Driver's Woman by Nancy Apple
I'll Tell You what to Do by Ronny Elliott
Hiding in the Hills by Butch Hancock

Gary, Indiana 1959 by Dave Alvin
Some of These Days I'll be Gone by Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Sixteen Chicks by J.P. McDermott & Western Bop
Banshee by Ed Sanders & The Hemptones
Nails In My Coffin by Jerry Irby & His Texas Ranchers
Victoria's Secret is safe With Me by Arty Hill
Tall, Tall Trees by Roger Miller
The Last Word in Lonesome is Me by The Desperados
Right String Baby (But the Wrong Yo Yo) by Carl Perkins

Runnin' Wild by James Cole's Washboard Four
Old Gospel Ship by Ruby Vass
Get Yourself a Monkey Man Make Him Strut His Stuff by Butterbeans & Susie
My Lord Keeps a Record by The Mountain Ramblers
Get a Load of This by R. Crumb & His Cheap Suit Serenaders
Keep it Clean by Charley Jordan
When He Calls Me I Will Answer by Howard Armstrong
Heard it Through the True Vine by Flora Molton
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

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Alvin Turns it Up to 11

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



On his new album, Eleven Eleven, Dave Alvin sounds tougher than ever, playing hard-edged blues-soaked songs of people on the outskirts facing desperate odds, harsh choices, and bittersweet memories.

As usual with Alvin records, my favorite tunes here are the rowdy rockers. But I have to admit that most of Alvin’s softer, prettier songs are knockouts as well. To use the words he sang about his father a few years ago, Alvin “can swing a sledgehammer or soothe a baby that’s cryin’.”

The title of the album comes from the fact that this is Alvin’s 11th solo album (not including his three live ones), and it was released in 2011. (That kind of begs the question of why he didn’t wait until November to release it.)

In this long-time fan’s view, this one ranks up there with his best.

“The songs are about life, death, love, family, friendship, faith, doubt, labor, money, justice, and survival,” Alvin writes in the liner notes. “The usual stuff.”

He effortlessly shifts between a pretty, folkie duet with Christy McWilson on “Manzanita” and a raw song of lust like “Dirty Nightgown” — and it all sounds true.

The album starts off with snarling guitars and stormy drums breaking into a moody boogie called “Harlan County Line,” which has music that reminds me of Canned Heat’s “On the Road Again.” It’s about a lost lover whose memory apparently comes through as the narrator clears his mind one morning with menthol cigarettes.

This leads into a fiery little blues called “Johnny Ace Is Dead,” which deals with the 1954 backstage suicide of R & B singer John Marshall Alexander Jr., aka Johnny Ace.

Alvin’s not the first to write a song about this incident, which, according to legend, was a game of Russian roulette gone bad. Released in the early ’80s, Paul Simon’s “The Late Great Johnny Ace” weaves the death of Johnny Ace with the killing of John Lennon into a sad nostalgic tale.

Alvin’s song is more literal. He has Big Mama Thornton — who was on the same bill as Ace that fateful night — telling the doomed singer to quit fooling around with his gun. “He said, ‘Ladies, want to see me play a wild little game?’ / But Big Mama Thornton said ‘Go sing your song / And put that damn thing down before something goes wrong.’ ”

By the next verse, Ace’s record company owner, Don Robey, is already plotting to exploit the death. “I’m gonna send him back to Memphis in a refrigerated truck / Cause Johnny Ace is gonna make me a million bucks.”

Amy Farris at SF Brewing Co. 
Ace is not the only suicide victim Alvin sings about. “Black Rose of Texas” is a somber ode to Amy Farris, the fiddle player in Alvin’s Guilty Women band a few years ago. She killed herself with pills in 2009, about a month after performing with Alvin at the Santa Fe Brewing Company.

Another fallen musical partner of Alvin’s gets a tribute here. “Run Conejo Run” is about Chris Gaffney, who played accordion with Alvin’s Guilty Men before he died of liver cancer in 2008. It’s one of the strongest rockers on this CD, with a punchy Bo Diddley beat. Gaffney sings with Alvin on “Two Lucky Bums,” the last song on the album. It’s a jazzy, mellow acoustic number, with Gaffney’s accordion sounding like a harmony.

Alvin with Chris Gaffney
Thirsty Ear Festival 2006
There’s at least one song I suspect was inspired by recent headlines. “Gary, Indiana, 1959,” which recalls the glory days of American labor, has to be sparked by the union struggles in Wisconsin, Ohio, and other states this year.

A couple of tunes deal with crime. “Murrietta’s Head” is about a poor guy considering the governor of California’s bounty on celebrated outlaw Joaquin Murrieta back in the Gold Rush era. More contemporary is “No Worries, Mija,” a Mexican-flavored acoustic song in which the narrator assures his lover that everything will be great after he makes some money doing some unspecified “job” across the border. “Yeah, there may be some trouble, honey I won’t lie,” the narrator admits.
Phil Alvin with The Blasters
Hootenanny Festival 7-4-09

For those, like me, who became familiar with Alvin’s music in the early ’80s, when his band The Blasters was making glorious punked-up rockabilly, R & B, and blues, the song “What’s Up With Your Brother” will be a true treat.

This is a duet with Dave Alvin and his brother Phil, the Blasters’ singer — and it’s the first time the Alvin brothers have ever sung together on record. (In the strict division of labor in that band, Dave played guitar and wrote songs but kept his mouth shut.)

On “What’s Up,” the two poke fun at their sibling rivalry, trading verses complaining that, despite their individual accomplishments, all anyone asks them about is what the other brother is doing. The song ends in a mock spat, acknowledging with a sweet wink the bitter way Dave left the band. A third Blaster is on this song too. Gene Taylor plays piano, as he does on “Gary, Indiana, 1959.”

The spirit of Eleven Eleven is summed up in a plea for sex on the song “Dirty Nightgown.” “Life is beautiful and sad, baby, and you know our time ain’t long / Friends and family pass away and tomorrow we may be gone / So just let your hair down, baby, and put your dirty nightgown on.”

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Catch Me On Folk Remedy Sunday Morning

This Sunday morning at 8 a.m. Mountain Daylight Time (twisted, I know) I'll be subbing for Laurell Reynolds on her Folk Remedies show on KSFR.

I've only done this show once before and I loved it.

About 90 percent of of the music I'll be playing will be Old Weird America stuff -- blues, hillbilly, gospel, jug band, cowboy songs, madness -- from the '20s and '30s, plus some field recordings from the South back in the late 50s, early '60s. So tune in and get remedied.

Here's the type of stuff you'll hear:







Sunday, July 10, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, July 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 (at) ksfr.org

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Cheap Thrills by Ruben & The Jets
Bad Knots by The Subsonics
Final Solution by Rocket from the Tombs
I Was On (The Bozo Show) by Nobunny
Gloria in Excelsis Deo by Patti Smith
Go Ahead and Burn/Barefoot Susie by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Blew My Speakers by the Angel Babies

I Wish You Would by The Dex Romweber Duo
Crazy Little Things by Captain Beefheart
I Gotta Way With Girls by The Fuzztones
The Pimps Don't Like It by Juke Joint Pimps
Cosmic Cars by The Dirtbombs
I Ain't Drunk by Jimmy Liggins
Solo Sex by Pussy Galore
Send Me Some by The Pussywarmers
Gomp Blues by Johnny Otis
But Officer by Sonny Knight

Tonight I'm Going To Jail by Felix y Los Gatos
Mojo Workout by King Salami & the Cumberland 3
Land of the Freak by King Khan & The Shrines
Disconnect by The Black Saxons
Night of the Living Bride by Mississippi Grover
The Zombie Stomp by Danny Ware
Dead Moon Night by Dead Moon
Down By The Riverside by Snooks Eaglin

Johnny Ace is Dead by Dave Alvin
The Late Great Johnny Ace by Paul Simon
Pledging a Love by Johnny Ace
On My Way by Mahalia Jackson
Let the Four Winds Blow by Fats Domino
Wrong Side Of The Road by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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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...