Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Free Biram, SCOTS MP3s

Scott H. Biram
Scott H. Biram is giving away a free MP3 of his song "Don'tcha Lie to Me, baby" from his upcoming album Bad Ingredients.

Hear it and download it HERE

The release date is Oct. 11.

And coming up Sept, 27, in plenty of time for Halloween season, there's Zombified by Southern Culture on the Skids. Check that out below. (More info HERE )



Sunday, September 11, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 11, 2011
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M.
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time

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


Special Post Labor Day Songs For the Workin' Man
Guest co-host Stan Rosen

OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Plenty Tuff and Union Made by The Waco Brothers
Joe Hill by Paul Robeson
Boiling Frog by Pat Wynne
We Shall Not Be Moved/ I Don't Want Your Millions, Mister by The Union City Criers
The Death Of Mother Jones by Gene Autry
Yo Estoy Con Chavez by Ramon "Tigre" Rodriguez with Los Lobos
Gary Indiana 1959 by Dave Alvin

Corrido de Doleres Huerta #39 by Carmen Moreno with Los Lobos
Pie In The Sky by Utah Philips & Ani DiFranco
Corporate Welfare Song by Anne Feeney
Union Song by Carter Falco
Do Re Mi by John Mellencamp
How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live by The Del-Lords
Talking Union by Pete Seeger

September 11 Set
Let's Roll by Neil Young
It's the Day of Atonement, 2001 by Dayna Kurtz
Far Away by Sleater-Kinney

You Ain't Done Nothin' If You Ain't Been Called a Red by Faith Petric
Big Boss Man by Jimmy Reed
We Were There by Brooklyn Women's Chorus

Working for the Man by Roy Orbison
Working Man by Bo Diddley
Working at Working by Wayne Hancock
Damned Right I Got the Blues by Buddy Guy
Standing on the Shoulders by Charles Bernhardt
May the Work That I Have Done by Bruce Thomas
Working At The Gas Station by Scruff with Go Freddy Go
(Substitute) CLOSING THEME: This Land is Your Land by Pete  Seeger, Sweet Honey in the Rock and Doc Watson

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Friday, September 09, 2011

No SF Opry Tonight, Special Sound World on Sunday

I won't be doing my regular Friday night Santa Fe tonight because I'll be attending festivities for my 40th (!) high school reunion. On Demons, down that field ...

But please tune in anyway The lovely Laurell Reynolds will be substituting for me -- probably the last time she ever ewill because, sadly, she's leaving town. My other frequent SF Opry sub, Tom Adler, also one of the revolving Acoustic Explorations hosts, will be taking over Laurell's Sunday morning show, Folk Remedies.

On Sunday I'll be joined by my pal and labor historian Stan "Rosebud" Rosen for out annual, well almost (we missed last year) "Songs for the Working Man" post-Labor Day special.

KSFR is 101.FM in the Santa Fe/Northern New Mexico area and streams online HERE

Here's a preview of the kind of stuff we'll be playing Sunday night.





TERRELL'S TUNEUP: RAT CITY, HERE I COME

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
September 09, 2011


The Oblivians were a crazy little garage/punk trio from Memphis in the mid-’90s who earned a rabid national following though barely a peep of recognition from the mainstream. (That’s the story of about 95 percent of the musical acts I love, but what can you do?)

They were ferocious. They were funny. They were obscene and politically incorrect. They were beautiful.

One member, Greg Oblivian (Cartwright) went on to form another bitchen band called Reigning Sound, while Eric Oblivian (Friedl) is best known these days for running Goner Records, a Memphis music store and label.

That leaves Jack Oblivian (Yarber), who never hung up his rock ’n’ roll shoes. Since The Oblivians dismantled, he’s done solo records; he’s led bands, including The Tennessee Tearjerkers; and, for a while with Cartwright, he reformed The Compulsive Gamblers, a band that was around before The Oblivians.

And next week, he’s releasing a new solo album called Rat City. It’s sweet, sweaty rock, some of which is graced with understated pop sensibility.

It starts off with the title song, a crunchy blues-punk workout introduced with a mournful harmonica. And speaking of blues, a subsequent tune, “Old Folks Boogie,” sounds like John Lee Hooker filtered through a meat grinder. Between the two is “Mass Confusion,” a hard-driving tune with touches of funk plus — surprise, surprise — hammering drums that suggest disco. (Maybe I shouldn’t be surprised. A previous Jack O album was called The Disco Outlaw.)

But a more melodious side of Yarber comes out in “Dark Eyes.” This one sounds like an early Strokes song with just a touch of Billy J. Kramer & The Dakotas. The following song, “Kidnapper,” has a Motown edge to it, while “Girl With the Bruises,” a song about an abused woman, could almost be a lost Paul Westerberg song.

You might hear echoes of “Tumblin’ Dice” in the song “Caboose Jump.” And Oblivian fans might hate me for saying this, but I hear a little Tom Petty and even — don’t hit me! — Springsteen in “Jealous Heart.”

Most of the songs here are originals, but there are some fine covers. There’s a fairly faithful version of Billy Swan’s “Lover Please” (my favorite cover still being Clyde McPhatter’s). And there’s an obscure Tommy James tune called “Moses and Me,” complete with warbly, distorted “Crimson and Clover”-style vocals.
Basically this is just excellent, gut-level rock ’n’ roll.

Do yourself a favor and take a little trip to Rat City. You might find yourself seeking out music from the Gamblers and the Tearjerkers and, of course, The Oblivians.

Also recommended:
* White BBQ Sauce by Glambilly. Somewhere there’s an alternative universe, a parallel world in which New York Dolls arose from Texas instead of New York. In that world, those Dolls sounded a whole lot like Glambilly, which specializes in hard-hitting, pre-punk style, blues-informed and booze-fueled rock ’n’ roll full of humor, tales of sex and substance abuse, and wry commentary on the decadence and decay they see around them.

With just a hint of Lone Star twang.

This San Antonio power trio, originally known as Hans Frank & The Auslanders, reportedly got its name from an unfriendly heckler. Though meant as an insult, singer-bassist Frank embraced the name and the whole concept it implied.

There are some outstanding tunes here: “I Must Be the Devil” is a spoken-word boogie in which Frank boasts of his similarities with the prince of darkness, including a fondness for Plymouth Valiants and 18-year-old blondes.

“Bite the Bed,” a Zep-like tune featuring a nasty slide guitar, is the tale of a guy who spends 11 years in prison then gets out and informs his lover that she has gained weight. But he’s not complaining. “That’s the way I like it,” the narrator says. Most of the tunes are original, but a cover tune nearly steals the show.

Glambilly does a menacing, minor-key version of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys’ “Stay All Night.” Ol’ Bob didn’t do it this way, but Glambilly makes it howl.

While many of the songs seem to be smirking at the hapless, deeply flawed characters who inhabit the Glambilly mythos, on the final song, “Firefly,” Frank proves he can write a truly moving, poignant musical tale. It’s about a homeless girl who comes to a tragic end. This tune sounds like a sad update of the title song, which dealt with various young women with “faraway looks” in their eyes, such as the girl being “passed around” by guys in a pickup truck.

Sunday, September 04, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 4, 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
Scotch and Water and You by Monkeyshines
Threw My Girl a Party by BBQ
Best Napkin I Ever Had by Black Lips
Dark as a Dungeon by The Tombstones
The Dealer, The Peeler And The Stealer by Andre Williams With The Compulsive Gamblers
Rat City by Jack Oblivian
Do The Milkshake by The Oblivians
Move Mr. Man by The Del-Gators
Boggie 65 by Juke Joint Pimps

White Rabbit by The Frontier Circus
Just Dropped In To See What Condition My Condition Was In by Mojo Nixon
Samson and Delilah by Edison Rocket Train
She's Like Heroin to Me by The Gun Club
Stay a Little Longer by Glambilly
Johnny Voodoo by Empress of Fur
Death of Mighty Joe by The Devil Dogs
Bottle Of Wine by The Fireballs

Bad Whiskey and Cocaine by David "Honeyboy" Edwards
Hip Shake by L.C. Ulmer
It Hurts Me Too by Hound Dog Taylor
Bad Dog by Boogie Bill Webb
Fox Hunt by Little Freddie King
Here Comes Papa by T-Model Ford
Hoodoo Man Blues by Junior Wells
Riding the Rails by David "Honeyboy" Edwards

Zozobra by A Hawk And A Hacksaw and The Hun Hangár Ensemble
Burn The Flames by Roky Erickson
Wang Dang Doodle by PJ Harvey
Infected by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
Weeping Song by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Stormy Weather by Reigning Sound
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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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...