Friday, July 19, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, July 19, 2013 
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
Cover of the Rolling Stone by Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
You Bet I Kissed Him by Myrna Lorrie
Rainbow Stew by Jason Ringenberg
Don't Want Me Too by James Hand
Museum of Love by The Meat Purveyors
Cowboy in Flames by the Waco Brothers
Pool Cue by Two Tons of Steel
Bullfrog Blues by Legendary Shack Shakers
You Make Me Feel More Like a Man by Mel Street

The Devil's at Red's by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Two Whoops and a Holler by Jean Shepard
Dreams of Clay by Dwight Yoakam
Act Like a Married Man by Robbie Fulks
Pretty Boy Floyd  by Halden Wofford & The Hi-Beams
Hey Joe by Carl Smith
Too Much Month at the End of the Money by Marty Stuart with Merle Haggard
California Hippie Murders by Red River Dave
I'm Movin' On by Charlie Feathers

Pass the Bottle by Black Eyed Vermillion
Dixie Fried by Carl Perkins 
Jesus in the Waiting Room by The Goddamn Gallows
Naco Jail by Mose McCormack
Cluck Old Hen by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
God Loves the Hickoids by The Grannies
Cowboys are Frequently Secretly Fond of Each Other by Willie Nelson
Big River by Earl Poole Ball
(Say) You're My Girl by Roy Orbison

One Tear Drop at a Time by Wanda Jackson
You Always Come Back to Hurting Me by Johnny Rodriguez
A Drunk Can't Be A Man by George Jones
House of Earth by Lucinda Williams
There's a Bright Side Somewhere by Ry Cooder
Shenandoah by Tom Waits & Keith Richard
Georgia Peach by Don Rich
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

All background music during my yacking tonight are from the newly released CDs That Fiddlin' Man by Don Rich and The Buckaroos Play Buck and Merle.

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TERRELL'S Tuneup: Fully-Loaded Country Rock

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
July 19, 2013

There’s an old New Mexico legend about a bar and restaurant in Española that’s been closed for a couple of years or so. According to the tale, which has been told for decades, the devil himself was once spotted at Red’s Steakhouse dancing with an unsuspecting lass during Lent.

Satan reappears at Red’s in a song on Hell to Pay, the new album by country rockers Anthony Leon & The Chain. Actually, the first time I heard “The Devil’s at Red’s” was at a gig Leon did a few years ago with The Imperial Rooster at (you guessed it) Red’s Steakhouse. It became an instant favorite of mine.

But Leon’s song — which doesn’t identify Española as the location — isn’t about a poor girl who is shocked when she learns the true identity of the mysterious stranger with whom she shares a sinful Holy Season dance. It’s about an instant of insane jealous rage.

“Well, Mario pulled his gun, he had shot everyone/And there was Evangeline on the floor./Well, the devil said son, you can’t undo what you have done/And he smiled and walked right out the door.”

Indeed, Hell to Pay is not for the gun-shy. With several songs dealing with pistol-packing antiheroes, it’s almost like a more rocking version of Marty Robbins’ Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs.

“And I live with a six-gun by my side just trying to stay alive,” Leon sings in the song “Down in Lonely.” The narrator is a guy who flees a bad love after his woman pulls a gun on him, telling him, “You’re better off dead than alive.”

And “Aim to Please,” which has an equally pretty melody, starts out, “Hold me only ’fore I run/Baby, I got a gun/Walk away slowly, now run/Baby. I got a gun.”

“How the West Was Won” also deals with firearms. “Now there are laws in this town about where a man can hang around/And what he can and cannot do with his gun,” Leon starts out, speaking rather than singing. Naturally, the story is about an ill-fated caper.

No, the music doesn’t sound like the soundtrack of that 1962 Western with the same name, but it does have an epic feel. It’s got a nice long introduction with some fine heavy-handed jungle drums by Daniel Jaramillo. Later some harmonica by Freddy Lopez that sounds like an organ adds subtle drama to the sound.

And “The Sinner” also has an Old West feel. Leon sings, “Well I made my way with a six-gun and I made my way with an ace.” The guy’s in trouble and has to leave a wife and children behind. It’s not exactly clear what’s befallen him, but it’s apparent that he’s in a tight spot he can’t shoot his way out of.

Not all the songs on Hell to Pay earn a 100-percent NRA rating. There’s “Alcohol and Drugs,” long a favorite at The Chain’s live gigs. “Alcohol and drugs have kept me alive, when life was empty and I felt like I was dyin’,” Leon sings.

And after all this alcohol, tobacco, and firearms, the album ends with a rousing cover of Hank Williams’ “I Saw the Light,” played with a souped-up Johnny Cash-style chunka-chunka beat. (This track has harmonica man Lopez’s finest solo on the album.)

Leon and the band play at 8 p.m. Friday, July 19, at Taos Mesa Brewery (20 ABC Mesa Road, El Prado, 575-758-1900, $5 cover) and at 10 p.m. Saturday, July 20, at the Palace Restaurant and Saloon (142 W. Palace Ave., 428-0690, $5 cover).

These concerts and a Santa Fe Bandstand show last Tuesday are billed as the group’s “Final Showdown.” I hope this isn’t true. After hearing this fine album, I think Leon and the boys have a few shots left in them.


Also recommended:

* Unraveled by Two Tons of Steel. Unlike Anthony Leon’s most recent album, this new record by this San Antonio band has no gun songs.

But my favorite tune here is in fact about a weapon — the pool cue, which they call “the great equalizer/For the long-neck Budweiser wielded by some drunken fool … A long-range headbanger/A wild redneck tamer.”

The first song I ever heard by Two Tons of Steel, probably at least 10 years ago, was their honky-tonk cover of “I Wanna Be Sedated.” They did it in a way that both country fans and Ramones fans could get behind. (And I felt somewhat justified because years and years before, I once made an admittedly oddball comparison of Joey and the boys with Buck Owens & The Buckaroos.)

There’s nothing quite as remarkable as “I Wanna Be Sedated” on this album, but, as evidenced by “Pool Cue,” there are plenty of good-time country-rock tunes.

Unraveled was produced by Lubbock ace Lloyd Maines. One of the best tunes is “Hellcat,” a bluesy, boozy tom-tom-heavy romp about a woman who walks like a woman but fights like a man. Another is “Crazy Heart,” a simple but catchy country love song.

And there are a couple of good covers here. “One More Time” was written by Texas soul rocker Roy Head (“Treat Her Right” was his big hit), though I know this song mainly through Joe “King” Carrasco’s version from the early ’80s.

Two Tons also does an excellent take on “Busted,” written by Harlan Howard and covered by Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, and probably thousands of others. Here the band plays with the melody, throwing in some minor chords and making it their own.

UPDATE 7/21/13: I corrected the above text to clarify that there is no organ in Anthony Leon's "How the West Was Won." That was Freddy Lopez making his harmonica sound like an organ.

Enjoy some videos:







Tuesday, July 16, 2013

R.I.P. T-Model Ford

Mr. Ford with my son Anton August 1999
T-Model Ford died today. His age isn't certain. The Associated Press is reporting estimates between 89 and 93.

He played Santa Fe several times beginning in the mid '90s, including at least twice at The Thirsty Ear Festival.

Once back in the '90s he played with his drummer Spam at a backyard barbecue hosted by my friend Scott. After a couple of hours some neighbors, who somehow didn't appreciate authentic Mississippi blues on a hot summer's night -- called the police. We took the party inside, but not long after, the police were back again.

Some people ...

Here's my favorite part of the AP obit:


Ford had six wives and 26 children, (friend Roger) Stolle said. When Ford’s fifth wife left him, she gave him a guitar as a parting gift.

“He stayed up all night drinking white whiskey,” or moonshine, “and playing the guitar,” Stolle said. “He kind of went on from there.”

I hope they have a big rowdy funeral for him. And I hope nobody calls the cops.

Here's my review of his album Taledragger, which he recorded with the band GravelRoad.

And here's some videos of T-Model in action:





Monday, July 15, 2013

BAD CRAZINESS: Chambers Brother Attacked After Trayvon Remark

Lester Chambers, of the The Chambers Brothers was physically attacked by a woman at show in Hayward, Calif. Saturday night after he dedicated a song to the late Trayvon Martin.
Photo posted on Facebook by Chambers' son

Police arrested 43-year-old Dinalynn Andrews Potter of Barstow, who, witnesses yelled, "It's all your fault!" after Chambers dedicated the song "People Get Ready" to Martin. Andrews Potter allegedly jumped on the stage and shoved the 73-year-old Chambers. 

According to The Contra Costa Times:

Chambers was performing at the Hayward Russell City Blues Festival downtown when around 5:15 p.m. he dedicated Curtis Mayfield's hit "People Get Ready" to Martin, the 17-year-old shot and killed by George Zimmerman. 
A Florida jury acquitted Zimmerman on all charges Saturday. 
Chambers told the audience if Mayfield were around today, he'd change the lyrics "there's a train a comin'" to "there's a change a comin,'" his wife Lola Chambers told this newspaper Sunday.
Eyewitnesses and Hayward police said people on stage subdued Andrews Potter after she allegedly shoved Chambers. Though the police investigation into a motive continues, family members believe the attack was racially motivated and was a result of Chambers' mention of Martin. The family is pressing police to file hate crime charges.

Chambers, 73, was treated and released. "His son said Chambers had a `bruised rib muscle and nerve damage and he is sore all over.'," the newspaper said.

"People Get Ready," written by the late Curtis Mayfield, was a hit for Mayfield's group The Impressions in the mid '60s. But The Chambers Brothers also did a great version. Here's a live recording.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

O
Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, July 14, 2013 
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
One Track Mind by Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers
Dance Like a Monkey by New York Dolls
Teenage Maniac by The Spook Lights
The Devil Writhed in by The Mobbs
Rats in My Kitchen by The Fleshtones 
Shoot it Up, Baby Doll by The Terrorists
The Snake by Johnny Rivers
Oh No/Orange County Lumber Truck by The Mothers of Invention
Heart Attack and Vine by Tom Waits
El Dedo by El Compa Chuey

Good Night for a Heart Attack by Nashville Pussy
I Got a Right by Iggy Pop
Use It or Lose It by The Deadly Vibes
Jesus Christ Twist by Rev. Beat-Man
Crazy Country Hop by Johnny Otis
Saved by Lavern Baker

Intro/Vato Perron by Piñata Protest
The Boys Are Back by Dropkick Murphys
Hu Hayoshev  by Yidcore
Malandrino by Gogol Bordello
Who Stole the Kishka by The Polkaholics
If I Should Fall From the Grace of God by The Pogues
Looking for a Girl by Stinky Lou & The Goon Mat
Buke e Kripe ne VaterTone / Kalaxhojne by 3 Mustaphas 3
Horse Thief by Kulture Shock
La Cucaracha by Piñata Protest

Demon in Here by Fishbone
Whiskey Ghost by Buddy Guy
Wonderful Girl by Jack Mack & The Heart Attack
When the Boys Come Out to Play by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
Johnny Mathis' Feet by American Music Club
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, July 12, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, July 12, 2013 
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
I'm Walking the Dog by Webb Pierce
Road to Ruin by Anthony Leon  & The Chain
No Way Pedro by Van Morrison & Linda Gail Lewis
Baby Baby Don't Tell Me That by James Hand
Thanks a Lot by Lucky Tubb & The Modern Day Troubadors
Busted by Two Tons of Steel
Uppers by Two Ton Strap
Alligator Man by Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Old Dan Tucker by Bruce Springsteen

Life, Love, Death and The Meter Man by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
Gorgeous George by Ronny Elliott
Be Not Afraid by The Dirt Daubers
Too Many Snakes by Trailer Bride
Stump Grinder by Sanctified Grumblers
Pigsville by The Waco Brothers
Old Devils by Jon Langford
Hillbilly Town by Mose McCormack

Nature of the Beast by The Goddamn Gallows
Shadow Fallin' Down My Face by The Dinosaur Truckers
Get What's Coming by The Defibulators 
So Long It's Been Good to Know Yuh by Del McCoury Band & Tim O'Brien
Soldier Boy Johnny by The Imperial Rooster
Take This Hammer byThe Howlin' Brothers
Wind's Gonna Blow You Away by Joe Ely & Joel Guzman

Evening Breeze by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
I Want to Be a Cowboy's Sweetheart by Lynn Anderson
Teacher's Pet by The Prairie Dogs
Peaceful Country by Michael Martin Murphey
Don't Let 'em Get You Down by Joe West  
Dust on Mother's Bible by Buck Owens
You Coulda Walked Around the World by Butch Hancock
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Ethno Punk for the Soul & Spirit

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
July 12, 2013

Punk rock started out as an irreverent poke in the eye — and ears — to most musical traditions (especially the bloated rock royalty and grandiose prog-rock of the ’70s). So it might seem odd that strains of punk that embrace various ethnic music traditions have arisen through the years.
Pinata Protest, March 2012

It started with The Pogues, I suppose, back in the mid-’80s. They took traditional Irish sounds, sped them up, and played mad jigs of drunkenness, decay, and despair.

No, they weren’t always reverent, but they could play the music — even at 90 mph. In their wake came a whole Mulligan’s stew of successors — The Men They Couldn’t Hang, Flogging Molly, The Tossers, Blood or Whiskey. The band Black 47 celebrated the whole scene and even name-checked some of those groups a few years ago in their song “Celtic Rocker.”

But ethno-punk isn’t just for the Irish. Right now I’m anxiously awaiting the upcoming release from Gogol Bordello, a band that coined the phrase “Gypsy punk.”

There was a Jewish punk band from Australia called Yidcore, whose EP The Great Chicken Soup Caper included a raucous version of “Vehi She’amda” and a 21-second take on “The Dreidel Song.”

There are all sorts of varieties of blues-punk (from The Gun Club to The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion to early White Stripes and lots in between). I’ve written about punk polka bands like the The Polkaholics and Polkacide in this column.

Here are a couple of (relatively) recent examples of this phenomenon.

* El Valiente by Piñata Protest. Here’s a hard-rocking quartet from San Antonio, led by singer Alvaro Del Norte, who also plays accordion and trumpet when the spirit says trumpet. Piñata Protest plays what the group calls “Norteno punk.”

Following up on the band’s 2010 debut album, Plethora, El Valiente (named for a masked luchador from Mexico) is actually an EP — nine songs, three of which clock in at less than a minute. The whole record is just over 15 minutes long, but some fine sounds are packed in this small package.

After a short introduction track in Spanish, El Valiente kicks off with a frantic tune called “Vato Perron.” Here Del Norte declares, “I’m in a gang, I also do voodoo.” The melody reminds me of The Pogues’ “Fiesta.” Another instant addition to Piñata Protest’s greatest hits is the hard-driving, minor-key “Life on the Border.”

There are two numbers that casual listeners of popular Mexican music should recognize. First there’s “Volver Volver,” a 1976 hit for Mexican crooner Vicente Fernandez. It’s been covered by American stars like Ry Cooder, Los Lobos, The Mavericks, and Linda Ronstadt. (One of my personal favorites is a live version in a medley with “Wasted Days and Wasted Nights” sung by the late Chris Gaffney with Billy Bacon & The Forbidden Pigs). Piñata Protest does a fairly straight version of “Volver Volver.” That is, until the last verse, when the musicians turn it into an insane slam dance.

And then there’s “La Cucaracha” — yes, the old Mexican corrido about that lovable weed-smoking cockroach. Lyrics: “La cucaracha, la cucaracha/Ya no puede caminar/Porque no tiene, porque le falta/Marijuana que fumar.” The Piñata boys attack this tune with blaring ferocity. It was one of the highlights when I saw them play the Española Plaza a couple of years ago.

(Humorous aside: In 2001, Cecil Adams in his column “The Straight Dope,” wrote of the song, noting that a Mexican restaurant in Minneapolis was called La Cucaracha, “Somebody really ought to clue these people in.” But I just Googled it. and the restaurant named for the cockroach is still going today.)

While El Valiente is a blast from start to finish, the EP ends too soon. Hopefully Del Norte and the guys will grace us with a full-length album pretty soon.

* Signed and Sealed in Blood by The Dropkick Murphys. This Boston band of wild Irish (-American) musicians has been around for nearly 20 years. Of all the current-day Celt-rockers, the Murphs are the best in my book — I’ve believed it since Shane McGowan, original vocalist for The Pogues, bestowed his blessing by singing “The Wild Rover” with Dropkick Murphys a few years ago. They’ve got the good-time, hard-drinking, loud-shouting, uilleann pipe-wailing, penny- whistle-blowing Irish singalong bit down pat.

And they’re also perfectly capable of playing slow, pretty tunes, as they prove here with “End of the Night.” No, I wouldn’t describe singer Al Barr’s weather-beaten tenor as pretty, any more than I would the voices of Tom Waits, Janis Joplin, or Bob Dylan. But the song itself, dealing with barroom denizens who don’t know what to do after last call, is quite touching.

Among the highlights are “Rose Tattoo,” a minor-key tune with a ringing mandolin. The narrator sings of the art permanently etched on his body: “This one’s for the mighty sea/Mischief, gold, and piracy/This one’s for the man that raised me/Taught me sacrifice and bravery/This one’s for our favorite game/Black and gold, we wave the flag/This one’s for my family name/With pride I wear it to the grave.”

While there are no traditional Irish songs, which the Murphs have been known to do, on this album, there is a song about a Boston Irish hero. “Jimmy Collins’ Wake” is about the former manager of the Red Sox (back when they were called the Boston Americans), who led the team to a World Series pennant in 1903.

And there’s even a wicked Christmas song. “Some families are messed up, while others are fine/If you think yours is crazy, well just look at mine. … My nephew’s a horrible wise little twit/He once gave me a nice gift/Box wrapped full of …”

In terms of songwriting, the Murphs are no match for The Pogues, or, to be more precise, McGowan. But they’re more fun than a barrel of Guinness on a St. Patrick’s night.

Ethno videos

Here's a live "Vato Perron" from Pinata Protest



I shot the one below in Espanola a couple of years ago. Look in the crowd and you'll spot various members of The Imperial Rooster, who opened that night.



And here's some Murphs

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Albums Named for Unappetizing Food

O.K., I'll admit this is a pretty dumb idea.  It came to me yesterday after I ran into my friend Dan during my afternoon walk along the ...