Sunday, September 25, 2011

The Big Four-Oh For The Big Enchilada!

THE BIG ENCHILADA





We've reached the Big Four-Oh here at The Big  Enchilada. Welcome to the magical 40th episode. This month I'm going to clobber you with some crazy rock ' n' rhythm 'n blues and just enough cowpunk to get you mooing. And, yes, by the end you'll be slobberin'.


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Here's the playlist:
(Background Music: El Mitote by Eddie Dimas)
Crime of Love by Jack Oblivian
Ain't Crawlin' Back by The Monsters
Bursting Love by The Bloody Tomahawks
Killed a Chicken Last Night by Scott H. Biram
San Quinten Bait by Charles "Boogie Woogie" Davis & His Orchestra
Psychodrama City by The Frontier Circus
Knockout by Ron Haydock & The Boppers

(Background Music: Dance of the Dream Man by Angelo Badalamenti)
My Slobbering Decline by Ross Johnson & OFB
Hey Suzette by The Bon
Likkered Up by The Tombstones
Everbody's Whalin' by Huey "Piano" Smith
Black Train by The Gun Club
Psychedelic Woman by The Vibes
Last Kind Words by Geeshie Wiley

(Background Music: The Bumble Beat by Orchester Charles Blackwell)
He Knocks Me Out by The Del Moroccos
Rough Treatment by Little Hudson
Your Secret Face by Scott "Deluxe" Drake
The Best Liquor Store by The Hickoids
I'm a Lover Not a Fighter by John Schooley
Stay a Little Longer by Glambilly

Play it here:

Friday, September 23, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday,  September 23 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
Lotta Lotta Women by Robbie Fulks
Sweet Sarah Blues by Jimmie Tarlton & Tom Darby
Wreck of the Old 97 by Johnny Cash
Pistol Blues by Ray Cashman
Funnel of Love by T. Tex Edwards & The Swingin' Kornflake Killers
Have You Ever Loved A Woman? by Scott H Biram
Carlene by Robert Earl Reed
Bella Donna by Goshen
I Hate Your Goddamned Trains by Kell Robertson

Placebo Love by The Broadway Elks
FBI Top 10 by DM Bob & The Deficits
Mental Cruelty by Buck Owens & Rose Maddox
Heavy Breathin' by Cornell Hurd
The Gravy Shake by The Defibulators
DWI Marijuana Blues by The Imperial Rooster
Wabash Blues by The Delmore Brothers
Samson & Delilah by Devil in the Woodpile
Guacamole by Freddy Fender with Augie Meyers
Chpadero by Feliz y Los Gatos

Waitin' on the Sky by Steve Earle
She's Acting Single (I'm Drinkin' Doubles) by Gary Stewart
Breaking Up Party by Arty Hill
Wait Until I Get My Hands On You by Joe Swank & The Zen Pirates
Head to Toe by Pokey LaFarge & The South City Three
Deisel Smoke, Dangerous Curves by The Last Mile Ramblers
Marginalized by The Gourds
Hootchie Kootchie Man by Jerry Mc Gill

Do Right by Lydia Loveless
Alota Guns by Ugly Valley Boys
You Turned Your Back by Toni Brown
Lonely Road by Eric Hisaw
I'd Rather Be Gone by Merle Haggard
Lonesome for You by Rachel Brook
I Was the One by Elvis Presley
Turtle Dove by Grey DeLisle
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: Hoist the Wild Flag plus Ancient Mekon Culture

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
September 24, 2011



When Sleater-Kinney folded its proverbial tent five years ago, the Olympia, Washington, trio pretty much was at the top of its game. (My favorite S-K album, One Beat, came out in 2002, but the ladies’ last album, 2005’s The Woods, was excellent as well.)

Though frequently linked to the “riot grrrls” scene, S-K quickly and seemingly easily transcended the limits of that subgenre. The best Sleater-Kinney material is wild and timeless rock ’n’ roll with brawn and brains.

I’ve missed the band. I was hopeful at first, because the breakup was initially announced as a “hiatus.” Then, as I realized the hiatus was appearing to be more and more permanent, I feared the group might be using such weasel language in preparation for careers as political campaign flaks.

Sleater-Kinney isn’t doing a reunion. But the new band Wild Flag could be considered two-thirds of one. Guitarist/singer Carrie Brownstein and drummer Janet Weiss from the original band are together again.

But wait, as the late-night TV ads say, there’s more!

This band also includes singer/guitarist Mary Timony, who fronted a 1990s indie band called Helium. (Reviewing Helium’s album The Dirt of Luck back in 1995, I wrote, “Like the band name implies, this is light, bouncy music. And yet it’s got a powerful undertow.” I’ll stand by that.) Timony and Brownstein have worked together on various projects through the years, and it shows on this album.

I’m not familiar with the life and career of the fourth Flag, keyboard player Rebecca Cole. But who cares? She was in a band called The Minders. She adds a lot to Wild Flag’s self-named first album.

To answer the first obvious question, no, Wild Flag doesn’t quite measure up to Sleater-Kinney’s best work. But still, it’s good stuff, especially the songs that Brownstein sings. (I like the album much better than former S-K singer Corin Tucker’s surprisingly mellow solo album last year. Tucker herself described it as “middle-aged mom” music. I’m starting the approach to senior citizenship, but I’m not ready for “middle-aged mom” stuff.)

Wild Flag starts off with a big bang — an upbeat, catchy tune called “Romance.” Brownstein sings it like she’s excited to be there, and the rest of the group complies. Things slow down a little bit for Timony’s “Something Came Over Me.” But Wild Flag comes back with a fierce little Brownstein rocker appropriately called “Boom.” It’s colored by Cole’s garagey organ.

And this is followed by one of the album’s high points, “Glass Tambourine,” a Timony song that starts off slow and sturdy but explodes with psychedelia and echoes of New Wave goofery. It’s five and a half minutes long, and these gals jam shamelessly and gloriously on it.

But even better is “Racehorse.” The song starts out with guitar riffs that sound almost bluesy. “I’m a race horse, yeah, I’m a race horse,” Brownstein sings. It sounds like lines from some old forgotten blues tune from the 1930s. And again the jamming commences, Brownstein and Timony on guitars, Cole on electric piano (and later organ).

This isn’t the rebirth of Sleater-Kinney. But it’s definitely some of the most satisfying rock ’n’ roll you’ll hear this year.

Also noted:
* Ancient & Modern by The Mekons. This album, the Mekons’ first in four years, is for the most part somber and pensive. Much of the music could be called “mellow.” But you can’t call it “easy listening.”

Take the first song, a foreboding little tune called “Warm Summer Sun,” which starts off with the narrator coming home from a game of cricket. He’s describing “soft green grass” and thinking in terms of “firelight and toast.” But something happens: “Great furnace doors are open.” And by the end of the song, he’s repeating these lines: “I look out on corpses / Skeleton trees / An unimaginable hell in front of my eyes.”

Ancient & Modern, subtitled 1911-2011, is a strange concept album dealing with the Edwardian period (did I mention the Mekons are British?) in the years leading up to the beginning of World War I. It’s a world that’s about to change for the worse.

It took me a couple of listens to start appreciating this album. It’s the Mekons, so I figured the effort was probably worth it.

My first reaction was that it was too slow, with only a couple of real rockers (“Space in Your Face” and “Honey Bear”).

But soon the charms of Ancient & Modern started sinking in — the off-kilter blues of “Calling All Demons,” which Jon Langford sings in a strained falsetto; the sad dreaminess of “I Fall Asleep,” which Tom Greenhalgh sings like a cracked hymn (“I fall asleep when I should pray”), first over a simple piano, and later joined by Sally Timms’ vocal harmonies and Susie Honeyman’s sweet violin.

But the real treat here is Timms’ minor-key music-hall blues “Geeshie.” (Langford has said that the melody of this came from a song called “Last Kind Words,” by an obscure Mississippi blues queen named Geeshie Wiley.) Timms sings it sultry, like a temptress in a speakeasy near the gates of hell.

At the end of their historical excursion, the Mekons cast doubt on history itself. In “Arthur’s Angel” with a melody that in a subtle way reminds me of The Band, Langford sings, “We named the guns, the manufacturer / The towns and countries they are made / Deep in the mud historical footprints / The national treasures of their age.”

But by the end, Langford and Timms repeat the line, “But it’s really just a story that’s been sold.”
Once again, the Mekons have me sold.

This album is set for release Tuesday, Sept. 27.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, September 18, 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
Rat City by Jack Oblivian
Jungle Drums by Dex Romweber Duo
Secret Agent Man by Frontier Circus
Boom by Wild Flag
Baby Vampire Made Me by Helium
Rollercoaster by Sleater-Kinney
Bompa My Bones by The Del-Gators
Sex Beat by The Gun Club

I Want My Mojo Back by Scott H. Biram
You, or You and You, and Me by Bob Log III
Boogie 65 by The Juke Joint Pimps
Give it up by Joe Buck Yourself
You Are Not Your Job by Gas Huffer
Miss Monster by Modie Bones
Shanky Puddin' by Soledad Brothers
The Past Is Tense by The Jack And Jim Show

She Wolf by Jessie Mae Hemphill
Kitchen Sink Boogie by Hound Dog Taylor
There Go All My Dough by L.C. Ulmer
Gone Dead Train by King Solomon Hill
Kissing in the Dark by Memphis Minnie
Sporting Life Blues by Champion Jack Dupree
Goin' Mad Blues by John Lee Hooker
Skinny Mama by Floyd Jones

Run Conejo Run by Dave Alvin
The Car She Used to Drive by Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians
Honey Bear by The Mekons
Ship of Fools by The Persuasions
Stuck on a Hatcheck Girl by Al Duval
Sight For Sore Eyes by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
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Saturday, September 17, 2011

Happy Birthday, Hank!!!!!!!!

Hiram King Williams: September 17, 1923 – January 1, 1953.

The guy wrote some songs.







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...