Sunday, October 23, 2011

Big Show at Aztec Cafe!!!!

I'm opening for ex-Angry Samoan Gregg Turner and his new band THE MIND PARASITES at the Aztec All Hallow's Hell Performance Party.

A splendid time is guaranteed for all!

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Re: My Hacker

Goddamn it to hell! Even my blog was hacked! I've deleted the post that was here and thanks to my friend Ginger for alerting me to it.

Someone hackied my old MSN email account. It sent out SPAM to everyone on my old contact list -- including the address that allows me to post here from my email. (Which I haven't done in years.)

I hope none of you clicked on the link that was here. Sorry.

Friday, October 21, 2011

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST

Friday, October 21, 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
Undertaker by Southern Culture on the Skids
Power Lines by The Ugly Valley Boys
Road Bound by Bob Wayne
I'm Gonna Strangle You Shorty by All the King's Men with Joe Ely & Lee Rocker
Drinkin' With My Friends by Honky Tonk Hustlas
Memories of You Sweetheart by Scott H. Biram
I'm Barely Hangin' On by Johnny Paycheck
White Dress by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Trouble in Mind by Jon Langford
Earl's Breakdown by Josh Graves

Chickenflow by Olendario Chucrobillyman
I'm the Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World by Loudon Wainwright III
Ponder Why I Ponder Why by Dale Watson & The Texas Two
John Hardy by The Gun Club
Bang a Gong (Get it On) by Danny Barnes
Do You Know Thee Enemy? by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
You'll Never Again Be Mine by Levon Helm
Okie Boogie by Johnny Tyler & The Riders Of The Rio Grande

The Times They Are a Changin' by Rick Brousard & Two Hoots and a Holler
Chevy Beretta by Jonny Corndawg
Bad Luck Man by Delaney Davidson
Wait'll You Get a Whiff of My Aftershave by Al Hendrix
Mr. Motorcycle Man by The Riptones
Drunk Drunk Again by Billy Brown
Remember the Alamo by Johnny Cash
The Voo-Doo Man Johnny Perry
None of Your Business by Marvin Paul
Murderer's Home Blues by Blind Willie McTell

Have I The Right? by Tav Falco & Panther Burns
Weakness in a Man by Waylon Jennings
Johnny's Not Here by Joe West
Waiting For The "103" by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Ghost Stories by Eric Hisaw
Codeine by Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit
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

Dawn's Highway Screening Today!!!!

Brad Durham at the accident scene

Dawn's Highway, a documentary about the fatal accident in New Mexico that The Doors' Jim Morrison witnessed as a child, is screening TODAY in Santa Fe.

It's at the Santa Fe Independent Film Festival. It's showing 1:45 pm this afternoon at Warehouse 21.

I few years ago I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing Brad Durham, the Tennessee director who researched the accident at Santa Ildefonso Pueblo near Espanola. We even went out to the scene of the wreck, which Durham makes a pretty convincing case is the one young Jim Morrison saw as a child.

You can read  that story HERE.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Can't Stop the Soul

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 25, 2011


The great American soul revival, which has probably been going on since about three days after most commercial radio stations stopped playing real ’60s-to-early-’70s soul music, continues to rage. The latest warrior to pick up the torch is Chicago shouter JC Brooks, who — with his band, The Uptown Sound — is releasing a jumping little album called Want More on Tuesday.

Beside Sharon Jones and artists of the Daptone stable, it’s mostly talented codgers (guys my age or older) such as Charles Bradley, Charles Walker, and Herbert Wiley (of Wiley & The Checkmates) who have been at the forefront of the retro-soul movement in recent years.

So Brooks is one of the few notable young faces in this crowd. Another young soul man is Austin’s Black Joe Lewis (who is coming to Santa Fe Sol Stage & Grill next month with his band The Honeybears). Brooks’ musical heritage — like that of Lewis — includes punk as well as funk. In both performers’ music you hear a lot of Otis as well as a little Iggy.

I first became aware of Brooks a couple of years ago listening to a song of his that was floating around the internet. It was his cover of Wilco’s “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart.” I am happy to hear it on Want More.

While Jeff Tweedy’s weirdo lyrics like “I am an American aquarium drinker” sound a little strange in a soul context, Brooks’ Stax/Volt-like arrangement of the tune works just fine, making me appreciate the song even more.

In fact, I can’t see how Tweedy could listen to it without it having the same effect on him that Jimi Hendrix’s “All Along the Watchtower” had on Bob Dylan. Dylan changed the way he did “Watchtower” in his live shows to make it more like the Hendrix version. I wouldn’t be surprised if Wilco started putting a little JC Brooks into its stage version of this song.

But that’s not even my favorite song on the album, at least not at the moment. That honor would go to “Baaadnews” — a raw little minimalist funk workout that reminds me of James Brown’s “Super Bad.” Another standout is “Sister Ray Charles,” an obvious play on the classic Velvet Underground song. It doesn’t really sound either Lou Reed or the Genius of Soul, though it does have a prominent electric piano. It actually sounds more like Marvin Gaye’s “Got to Give It Up.”

The best material here is bare-boned and sweaty. But Brooks shows his “uptown” side on the string-sweetened “To Someone (That Don’t Love You),” which he sings in a falsetto. It’s one that will stick in your head.

While most of the songs here are upbeat, there are good down-home ballads like “Missing Things,” which sounds like a lost Van Morrison tune. The album ends with “Awake,” a slow gospel-tinged tune with lyrics that talk about revolution and never-ending war and references the spiritual “This Train” as well as “The Glory of Love,” a Benny Goodman standard that Otis Redding turned into a soul weeper.

I get the feeling that Brooks has a lot on his mind and wants to say it. I hope he keeps making records this fine. Like the title says, I want more.


Also recommended:

* Blues Comes Yonder by L.C. Ulmer. This album brings back happy memories of the glory years of Fat Possum Records.

That was back in the mid-to-late ’90s, when that scrappy little label, then based in Mississippi, turned the blues world on its head by introducing a new generation — and for that matter, a bunch of us in the older generation — to rough-and-rowdy Hill Country Records blues brawlers like R.L. Burnside, Junior Kimbrough, T-Model Ford, and Paul “Wine” Jones.

L.C. might not be R.L., but this 80-something former truck driver from Stringer, Mississippi, is a tough old bird who knows his way around the frets — mainly guitar, but also banjo and mandolin — and loves to sing good basic gutbucket blues.

Recorded live, the music here is kept simple — Ulmer, a bass, and drums. Hill Country Renaissance man Jimbo Mathus handles drum duty on most of the tunes, but it’s Ulmer’s show. Some of my favorite tunes are “Hake” (not Slim Harpo’s tune but similar), “Roundin’ Up Girls All Day” (featuring some hot slide guitar), and “Hams & Peas.”

There’s also a crazy banjo version of “Get Along, Cindy,” which Ulmer begins by singing the chorus of “Oh Susanna.” Then he turns Hank Williams’ “I Saw the Light” into one of the most primitive-sounding gospel stompers recorded in who knows how long.

Ulmer records for Hill Country, along with an impressive array of talent including Mathus, country songwriter Robert Earl Reed, and Afrissippi — a band with a strange and wonderful blending of West African and Mississippi sounds.

* Give the drummer some! The percussion festival know as The Drum Is the Voice of the Trees is back for the first time in seven years. This year’s show is held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22, at the Armory for the Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail. Tickets are $15 in advance, available at the Candyman (983-5906) or by calling 474-6381, and $20 at the door.

Blog Bonus:
Enjoy some videos





UPDATE: I corrected a bone-headed typo that refered to L.C. Ulmer covering Hank Williams' "I Saw the Light." I originally had "I Saw the Night." (Thanks to reader Michael who spotted it and forwarded the video below. In my own defense, Hank saw THE NIGHT clearer than almost anyone.

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...