Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Video Tribute to Jerry Lieber

Leiber on the left, Stoller on the right, some
singer they apparently worked with in the middle.
I didn't seriously get into rock 'n' roll until I was much older  -- third grade -- but the very first songs I remember as a toddler -- yes, I remember hearing them back in the '50s -- were "Charlie Brown" and "Yackety Yak" by The Coasters and "Peggy Sue" by Buddy Holley.

Two out of three of those were written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. As the years went by, I realized Leiber & Stoller were perhaps the greatest songwriter team to ever grace popular music. They had soul, they had humor, and they wrote songs that still stand today.

Leiber died Monday at the age of  78. If there's a Heaven, Leiber and Carl Gardner of The Coasters, who died in June are causing a lot of yakety yak.

Here's the New York Times obit 

And below are some of his immortal compositions.











On a hitchhiking trip in the summer of 1975 I visited my pals Dick and Joe who were in Kansas City. I convinced them to take me to the corner of 12th Street and Vine. Unfortunately, it didn't exist. Vine intersected with other nearby numbered streets, but there was a housing project where the intersection of 12th and Vine should have been. (I later forgave Leiber & Stoller for that.) Now there's some kind of park there commemorating the song and the hot jazz scene that was centered there all those decades ago.



Shout out to the Twin Eagle Drum Group of Zuni Pueblo, NM who appear on this.












Sunday, August 14, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, August 14, 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
Suspect Device by Stiff Little Fingers
Little Girl by Hollywood Sinners
I Must Be the Devil by Glambilly
I Hate My Job by Butthole Surfers
I Wanna Know About You by The International Noise Conspiracy
I Had A Dream by The Gibson Bros.
Nights in White Satin by The Dickies
Slow Lightning by Junior Kimbrough & The Soul Blues Boys
Green Eyed Lady by Thinking Fellers Union Local 282
Juke Joint In The Sky by The Juke Joint Pimps

Stop Using Me by Howlin' Wolf
Stop Trying to Break Me Down by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Cannibal Girl by The Hydes
Born With a Tail by The Supersuckers
Rock City by Joe Buck Yourself
Bulldog by Doo Rag
My Shark by King Automatic
Nobody But You by The Dead Heats
Wild About That Thing by Sharon Jones

Noc-a-homa by The Black Lips
Scrap Collectin' Man by Crankshaft & The Geargrinders
Bomb Squad by Gas Huffer
The Dozens by Eddie "One String" Jones
Devil's Motorcycle by The Chocolate Watchband
Savior City by Death of Samantha
Bingo Master by The Fall
I've Got The Devil Inside by Rev. Beat-Man
Seasons in the Sun by Too Much Joy
West Of The Wall by Toni Fisher & The Wayne Shanklin Orchestra

Ballad Of Dwight Fry/Sun Arise by Alice Cooper
The Throne by The Pussywarmers
Ngol Jimol by Afrisippi
It's Not My Birthday by They Might Be Giants
Lucky Day by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Saturday, August 13, 2011

My Spotify Playlists

I was just getting used to the Amazon and Google music clouds when along comes Spotify. For the past couple of weeks or so, this is where I've been listening to most of my music.

And creating playlists has become one of the most addictive internet time-wasters I've ever  indulged in.

Basically Spotify allows you to stream about 15 million (!) songs. The whole song, not just 30-second clips. And not just well known groups -- lots of bitchen obscurities.

If you're on the free plan, which I am at this point,you have to endure an occasional audio ad. (Most of these currently are house ads telling you about various features of Spotify and urging you to upgrade to a pay plan. A few spots by record companies turn up

Other people have written better beginners' guides to Spotify than I could do. (Here's one).

I just wanted to post links to my playlists. Subscribe to your favorites. Most of them will be evolving as new stuff is added. Here they are:

* Big Enchilada Super Smashes:  A sampling of songs that have been played on The Big Enchilada podcast.

* Psychedelic '60s: An hour or so of late '60s psychedelia, mainly stuff they played on the radio in 67-68.

Psychobilly Madness: Greasy punks with stand-up basses. Hotrods! Switchblades!  Zombies!

* Rock 'n' Soul: Everywhere I go from Kansas City up to Maine, Rock 'n' Soul Music's driving people insane!

* Frank Furter's Fave: A tribute to the American hotdog.

* The Great Country Albums: From Marty Robbins to The Waco Brothers, some of my favorite country albums of all time. (No "greatest hits" compilations here. These are all albums that were meant to be heard as such.) 11 hours of music here!

*  Country Underground : Call it underground country, call it XXX country, call it the music Nashville does NOT want you to hear (hey, that sounds familiar!) Here's an hour or so of the stuff

* '70s Country Jukebox: An hour's worth of country classics (and some shoulda-been classics) that they actually used to play on AM country stations.

* Alt Country, The First Generation: This is country rock from the mid '60s through the mid 70s.

* Gospel Glory: I went nuts with this one. Six hours of Lord-praising, soul-saving Black gospel, mostly from the 40s and 50s, though I've got some great Staples Singers tunes in here.

* Remember the Fabulous '90s: Grunge and more. Mostly early '90s stuff.

* Songs I Heard on My Transistor Radio: I almost called this my "Measles Mix" because when I caught the measles in the early '60s (I was in third grade) I found solace and discovered a whole new world of music in a little transistor radio my mom gave me. It wasn't much bigger than my iPod is now. At first it was just a way to escape the boredom of having to stay home from school but being too sick to hang out with friends. The music became an obsession. Come to think of it, it still is. Here are some of the songs from the pre-Beatles '60s that led me to become the rock 'n' roll maniac I am today.

Update: 8-14-2011 I just created Waiting for Waits, a collection of Tom Waits covers. (Unfortunately the Richie Cole song of that name wasn't available on Spotify)


Friday, August 12, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, August 12, 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

Look at That Moon by Carl Mann
FBI Top 10 by DM Bob & The Deficits
Tobacco Road by Tav Falco
Drop What I'm Doing by The Gourds
Jesse James Boogie by Jesse James
The Gold Rush is over by Hank Snow
I Want Some Lovin' Baby by Jimmy & Duane
Good Country Girls by Pokey LaFarge & The South City Three
Bachelor Man From Del Gaucho by Lucky Tubb
City Lights by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
Road to Hattiesberg by Robert Earl Reed

Silver City by Ugly Valley Boys
Don't Lose Your Mind by Lukas Nelson
Country Girl With Hot Pants On by Leona Williams
You Drive Me Crazy by Ray Scott
Crystal Chandeliers by Charlie Pride
Bulldozers and Dirt by Drive-By Truckers
Lead Me On by Conway & Loretta
Uh-Huh-Honey by Autry Inman

Goin' Down to Kessler's by Joe West
Devil Came A Knockin' by Liquorbox
Tomorrow Morning's Gonna Come by Slackeye Slim
Farmer Had Him Rats by Black Jake & The Carnies
My Brand of Blues by Bloodshot Bill
Hillbilly Fever by Little Jimmy Dickens
Mad by Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys
Buick City by Whitey Morgan & The 78s

Take Advantage of Your Chances by Bob Livingston
Girl on the Billboard by Eddie Spaghetti
Moonshine Man by Alford's Band of Bullwinkles
Honey Don't by Mike Cullison
Is That You In The Blue by Dex Romweber Duo
Honky Tonkin' by The The
Nails in the Pine by Poor Boy's Soul
Feel Like Goin' Home by Charlie Rich
Get Along Little Cindy by L.C. Ulmer

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 11, 2011

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: ROOTS PUNK RENEGADES

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
August 12, 2011



Many of us — fans and critics alike — have groaned for decades about the fact that the music the general public calls “country” has grown more slick and corporate. At the same time, the blues has lost much of its original gutbucket raunch, becoming smoother, safer, and mainstream-friendly.

One natural antidote to the corporatization of American roots music has come from country punks and blues punks. Call it “roots punk.” Various strains of it have been around for years and years. The term “cowpunk,” for instance, has been around since the late 1970s. The Cramps deserve a big hunk of credit for this. And people have been calling The Gun Club “punk blues” since its first album, Fire of Love, was released in 1981.

Besides The Gun Club, this crazy trail was blazed by pioneers like The Meat Puppets, Jason & The Scorchers, Flat Duo Jets, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, The Gories, and many others.

My favorite paradox of roots punk is that while it was healthily irreverent, playing upon and making fun of the negative stereotypes associated with country and blues, it seemed far less "sacrilegious" than most of the “country” and most of the “blues” that you hear on commercial radio or see on television.

Punk country and blues are still rocking the juke joints and honky-tonks of the underground, judging by a couple of recent records out of Europe from bands that take the raw, primitive essence of American music — one a “country” band of sorts, the other a “blues” unit — and spit it out with a little punk fire and good-time slop.

* They Called Us Country by DM Bob & The Deficits. Robert Tooke, aka DM Bob, is an American, a native of Louisiana. I’m not sure why, but he immigrated to Germany years ago. (The “DM” stands for Deutsche mark.)

He formed The Deficits in the mid-’90s. The band lasted until about 2002. It was a trio that included DM on guitar and vocals, a woman named Reinhardt — reportedly the grand-niece of Gypsy-jazz great Django Reinhardt — on slide guitar, and a drummer named Tank Top.

This album, a collection of unreleased material from The Deficits’ heyday, begins with the song that inspired the title of this collection. “They Call Me Country” is about some hillbilly picker who makes it big: “I only get my hair cut once a year, and they call me country / If I did any work, it ain’t been around here, and they call me country.”

It sounds like a close relative of “Dang Me.” In fact, I assumed it was an obscure Roger Miller tune until I checked the credits and learned that it was written by Lee Hazlewood. It was originally recorded by an Oklahoma country singer named Sanford Clark in the 1960s, and his version sounds like Miller too.

Hazlewood, who wrote “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ ” and most of Nancy Sinatra’s other hits, is also responsible for another song on this album, “Dark in My Heart.”

Another songwriter is represented by two songs on this album. Glen Sherley is best known for writing the song “Greystone Chapel” for Johnny Cash’s classic At Folsom Prison album. At the time Cash recorded it, Sherley was in the audience serving time for armed robbery. (He recorded an album while still in prison and later toured with Cash after his release. But, ultimately, music didn’t provide salvation. Sherley committed suicide in 1978.)

The Deficits cover Sherley’s “(Step Right This Way) I’m Your Man,” a joyful little love song. But even better is “FBI Top 10,” a crime song about a sexy fugitive. “She’s free to kiss but she heads the list of the FBI’s Top 10.”

DM and pals do a sweet, harmonica-honking take on Buck Owens’ “Yearn ’n Burn ’n Heart.” And they do a surprisingly good country version of Lou Reed’s “Satellite of Love.” I’ll bet the legendarily cranky Reed would chuckle if he heard this.

After The Deficits, DM Bob went on to play drums with the Watzloves, a fun German group that specializes in trashy Cajun-flavored tunes. They Call Us Country, however, shows why DM needs to be in the forefront of a band.

* Boogie the Church Down by The Juke Joint Pimps featuring The Gospel Pimps. Don’t be confused. This is only one band, a dynamic duo from Cologne, Germany, featuring singer/guitarist T-Man and drummer/harmonica man Mighty Mike. The title of the album is a play on the title of their 2008 debut, Boogie the House Down Juke Joint Style.

As the title implies, many of the songs on this new album have elements of old-time gospel music. In the title track, T-Man imitates an old-time preacher. “I want to make love,” he says, “and I’m gonna make love to all you sisters!”

There’s “The Pimps Don’t Like It,” which was inspired by Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s “God Don’t Like It,” and “Juke Joint in the Sky,” which has the simple refrain “I’m going home to the juke joint in the sky, juke joint in the sky when I die.”

One of my favorite songs here is “Sweetest Hymns,” which has a sound similar to another song by a punk blues duo, “Stack Shot Bill The Black Keys. In the grand rock ’n’ roll tradition of self-referential songs (going back at least to “Hey, Hey, We’re the Monkeys”), the Pimps sing,

 “The angels have the greatest sound / But they don’t play it down in the ground. ...The angels singin’ the sweetest hymns / But I prefer the Juke Joint Pimps.”

Not all the tracks have gospel overtones. “I Feel Guilty” sounds like it’s built around a stray Howlin’ Wolf riff. At the end of each line, a background chorus does an eerie falsetto moan that sounds like a police siren.

When I reviewed the group’s first album, I noted that blues purists “undoubtedly will turn up their snoots.” That goes double for gospel purists with the new album. In fact, if these guys weren’t so far below the radar of popular consciousness, this blasphemous boogie would probably spark a few (literal) bonfires from religious groups.

But like I said about the earlier work, this music has spirit.

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...