Sunday, September 23, 2012

Enjoy the Fall with a New Big Enchilada Podcast


THE BIG ENCHILADA



All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray. Fall is falling. Here's some sweet rocking sounds to comfort you as the world around you decays.


Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Beginning of Autumn by Capra)
Bloody Mary by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
There is a Mall by Dennis Most & The Instigators
The Heretic's Song by The Blue Giant Zeta Puppies
Ain't Dumbo by The Night Beats
Horror Asparagus Stories by The Driving Stupid
Lightning's Girl by Lydia Lunch

(Background Music: Memphis Heat by Memphis Slim & Canned Heat)
Bang Your Thing at the Ball by Bob Log III
Can't Get Right by Jehoshaphat Blow
They Grew Wild for You by Goshen
The Young Psychotics by Tav Falco & Panther Burns
Feel Allright by The Oblvians
Don't Kick My Dog by Andre Williams

(Background Music: Autumn Sweater by Yo La Tengo)
Lucky Boy by Alien Space Kitchen
Drugs, Guns, Hookers by The Angel Babies
The Beat by Thee Vicars (R.I.P. Chris Langeland)
The Girl From Kook a Monga by Tommy Ridgely
Pretty Thing by Nightlosers



Friday, September 21, 2012

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 21, 2012 
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
Pretty Polly by Bone Orchard
Birthday Cake by Bobby Fuller Four
Oh Lonesome Me by Janis Martin
Chug a Lug by Mojo Nixon & The World Famous Blue Jays
Hard Luck and Old Dogs by Nancy Apple
Little Alma by Mose McCormack
Downtown Boogie by The Milo Twins
Wildcat Mama by Hank Penny
Drunkard's Blues by Kelly Hogan with The Pine Valley Cosmonauts

I Want to Buy Your Truck by Fred Eaglesmith
Duquesne Whistle by Bob Dylan
I Just Can't Be True by Webb Pierce
Sadie Green (The Vamp of New Orleans) by Roy Newman & The Boys
Payday Blues by Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
You Don't Want My Love by Roger Miller
Long Gone Lonesome Blues by Hank Williams
Yearn 'n Burn 'n Heart by DM Bob & The Deficits

Moonlight Midnight by Old & In the Way
Coochie Coochie by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Too Close to Heaven by The Dad Horse Experience
The Mortuary Bop by The Misery Jackyls
Blood on the Saddle by Tex Ritter
Birthday Boy by Drive-By Truckers
Betty Ford by Patterson Hood
Between the Ditches by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band

Midnight Stars and You by Wayne Hancock
Nobody to Love by World Famous Headliners
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues by Sir Douglas Quintet
Dying Breed by Lonesome Bob with Allison Moorer
Green Green Grass of Home by Ted Hawkins
Goodnight Captain by Ronny Elliott
While My Guitar Gently Weeps by Rosie Flores
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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eMUSIC SEPTEMBER

* Undercover by West Hell 5. On my recent trip to Amsterdam, I planned to go to a party put on by The Amsterdam Beat Club at a Club called Paradisio. (I was alerted to this by fellow GaragePunk podcaster Suzanne of Rock 'n' Roll Rampage.)

One of the bands playing was West Hell 5, an instrumental group featuring sax, guitar and organ. They call their sound "Mod & Crime," which is inspired by "old spy-fi & crime-soundtracks, 60's groove jazz, Vegas Grind and early rhythm 'n blues." It's a cool, greasy sound.

And I like their album cover.

Most the tracks are original though they do cover The Man from U.N.C.L.E. theme and "Secret Agent Man" (though I still like Junior Brown's cover of that one the best.)

Long story short, I missed the show at Paradisio. For some reason I thought it was on Friday. It was on Thursday. At least I have this album.


* Live in the Red by Pussy Galore. Before he detonated the Blues Explosion, Jon Spencer was the frontman for this rocking little unit from Washington, D.C.

They reveled in crazy noise, but they were far more fartsy than artsy. Listen close enough and you can hear strains of rockabilly and Rolling Stones but all on distorted overdrive. (Don't listen too close or you'll blow an eardrum.) Every song they ever tackled was a party out of control.

This was Pussy's last concert, recorded at CBGB's in 1989. If there was any petty onstage bickering that night, they left it off this album. But Spencer and the boys don't sound like a group at the end of its rope here. They play their songs, more than half of which are from their greatest album Dial "M" for Motherfuckerwith pride and spirit.

* Memphis Heat by Memphis Slim & Canned Heat. One of Canned Heats most remembered records was the double album they did with John Lee Hooker, 1971's Hooker 'n' Heat. Far less known is this team-up with piano man Memphis Slim.

"I want everybody to know just who I am," Slim sings in the title song. "Me and the Canned Heat are gonna have a little jam." And indeed they did.

This collaboration includes two sets of sessions in Paris, (where Slim was living at the time) in 1970 -- Heat at its prime -- and 1973, which includes contributions from The Memphis Horns.

While the horns add an extra dimension, they represent a departure from the guitar-centric boogie usually associated with Canned Heat. Still, the interplay between Slim's piano and Henry Vestine's guitar makes this a treat for any blues fan.

Slim handled all the vocal responsibilities except on "Five Long Years." (I'm not sure who sang it. It doesn't sound like Slim or Bobby "The Bear" Hite, the band's lead singer during those years.)

The best tracks here are One of Slim's best-known songs, "Mother Earth" -- much more upbeat than other versions I've heard him do -- and "Paris" an snazzy little ode to his adopted home. (He moved there in 1962 and would die there in 1988.)

Now I've got to get my hands on Gates On the Heat, Canned Heat's album they did with Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown.

* Between the Ditches by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band. You might think that a trio consisting of a crazy slide guitarist, his wife on the washboard and his cousin playing a bass drum and junkyard percussion might be little more than a fun little novelty act.

But those who have enjoyed the recordings and/or the live shows of The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band, know that this group from rural Indiana goes way beyond the novelty spectrum.

Sound familiar? Yes, I just reviewed this album in Terrell's Tuneup not long ago. Read the whole thing HERE

Plus:

3 Nancy Sinatra covers (I played these in my Nancy tribute in a recent Terrell's Sound World):

"Lightning's Girl" by Lydia Lunch & 8-Eyed Spy
* "Some Velvet Morning" by Firewater
* "How Does That Grab You Darlin' " by Empress of Fur

All three are fine tributes in their own peculiar ways. But I still prefer Nancy's originals.


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Rest Easy Grievous Angel: 39 Years Ago Today

Thirty nine years ago today, Gram Parsons died in Joshua Tree, California.

I was in Columbia, Mo. when I learned about it. It was during my first great hitchhiking trip across these United States. I'd been a fan since the first Flying Burrito Brothers album, Gilded Palace of Sin, a few years before.

I still get sad thinking of his death. I wish he was still around and I was reviewing his 34th album.

Here's a couple of grainy film clips of Gram singing with Emmylou Harris.


Monday, September 17, 2012

Fred Eaglesmith in NM

Canadian country rocker Fred Eaglesmith and his Traveling Steam Show are coming to the good old Mine Shaft Tavern in Madrid, N.M. on Sunday.

Eaglesmith also is appearing at Albuquerque's Low Spirits next Monday and, even though I don't really cover the Tucumcari music scene that much, he's playing there at the Pow Wow Inn Restaurant and Lizard Lounge this Friday night.

Here's a sample of the man's music:





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...