Friday, September 20, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 20, 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

Shine on Harvest Moon by Laurel & Hardy
Train in Vain by Dwight Yoakam
Brand New Cadillac by Wayne Hancock
Your Friends Think I'm the Devil by The imperial Rooster
How Far Down Can I Go by T. Tex Edwards & The Swingin' Kornflake Killers
My Life's Been a Pleasure by Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard & Ray Price
Heartaches, Meet Mr. Blues by Loretta Lynn
TJ by Hickoids

Midnight Shift by Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen
Damaged and Dangerous by Rob Nikowlewski 
Playin' Hide Go Seek by Eddie Daniels
Rainwater Bottle by Chipper Thompson
She's My Neighbor by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
Devil's at Red's by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Buena by Joe "King" Carrasco & El Molino
Lonesome Onery and Mean by Waylon Jennings
One Day a Week by Johnny Paycheck

I'm Headed Back to Austin by Junior Brown 
Superbird by Halden Wofford & The Hi- Beams
Let's Do Wrong Tonight by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
Waiting Around to Die by The Goddamn Gallows
Texas Talking by Shineyribs
Cracklings by The Gourds

Don't Let 'em Get You Down by Joe West & The Santa Fe Revue
Buffalo Hunter by J. Michael Combs
Saginaw, Michigan by Left Frizzell
Borrowed Car by Tom Adler
Your Conscience by Bobby Crown & The Kapers
Streets of Laredo by Webb Wilder
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, September 19, 2013

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Too Much Clash for Just One Stash

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Sept. 20, 2013

Back in the late ’70s and early ’80s, when The Clash was a living band — “The Only Band That Matters” according to the hype — you never would have guessed that they would be joining Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, and The Beach Boys as one of the most repackaged, rereleased, reissued, and recycled musical acts of the 20th century.

Indeed, Joe Strummer, Mick Jones, and Paul Simonon seemed to the very embodiment of rock ’n’ roll rebellion, combining the passion of protest music with the crazy fire of punk rock, colored by the righteous rage of reggae.

But its true, even though The Clash’s discography is modest compared to those others. In their career, The Clash only made six albums (though London Calling was a double record and Sandinista! contained three LPs).

Even so, it seems every time you turn around, there’s a new Clash compilation or box set popping up. There was The Story of The Clash Vol. 1, a double CD set from 1988; Clash on Broadway, an impressive three-CD set released in 1991; and The Singles, just one disc, from the same year. Skip ahead to 2003 and you’ll find the double-disc The Essential Clash. In 2006 there appeared another collection called The Singles, a box set with replicas of every commercially released single as well as a stray EP.

And now, in the second week of September, come three more. There’s The Clash Hits Back, a double-disc collection based on a set list from a July 1982 show in Brixton. (It’s not the concert itself. These are are the studio versions of the songs played there, plus a bunch of bonus songs.) There’s a compilation called The Clash 5 Studio Album Set (omitting the band’s much-reviled final album from 1985, Cut the Crap, made after Mick Jones was kicked out of the band, isn’t here)
Sound System spread out

And then there is the massive 11-CD-plus-a-DVD Sound System, which includes all the albums (again, minus Cut the Crap) plus a deluge of non-album singles, songs from EPs, live material, demos, outtakes, and oddities, including some tunes I’d never heard before like “The Beautiful People Are Ugly Too” and “Idle in Kangaroo Court” ( both outtakes from what would become the album Combat Rock).

Sound System is selling for $177 and change at Amazon ($100 for the MP3 version of the songs). All these new products strike me as serious overkill. I can’t help but imagine the late Strummer rolling over in his grave at the idea of such an expensive extravaganza with his band’s name on it.

And yet, I also worry about the fact that, despite the endless stream of Clash compilations, there are those who never knew the pleasures of “White Riot” or “London’s Burning” or “This Is Radio Clash” or even “Should I Stay or Should I Go.” It tugs at my conscience that there are bored kids in the U.S.A. who have never heard “I'm So Bored With the U.S.A.” So if these new Clash products stir up some attention for this glorious band and help lead new generations to them then heap on the hype. Kids, heed the call and pick up a copy of The Clash Hits Back (truly a bargain at $10) or better yet, the Clash’s first, self-titled album, Give ’Em Enough Rope, and/or London Calling, and prepare for revelation.

Listening to several hours of The Clash in preparation for this column inspired me to compile a couple of lists.

Clash covers: a Magnificent Seven (and no, The Clash’s song of that title was not a cover of the Elmer Bernstein Western theme).

1. “I Fought the Law.” The original was by The Bobby Fuller Four, written by Sonny Curtis, one of Buddy Holly’s Crickets. Fuller’s version was great, but The Clash actually topped it. The refrain is the same: “I fought the law and the law won.” But Strummer and crew sound like they want a rematch.

2. “English Civil War.” This is a blazing update of “When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” which was written during the American Civil War by bandleader Patrick Gilmore, an Irish immigrant. According to the Library of Congress’ online Performing Arts Encyclopedia, Gilmore wrote the song in 1863, when he was posted at occupied New Orleans, serving as a Grand Master of the Union Army, with the duty of reorganizing the state military bands. Though “When Johnny Comes Marching Home” was an upbeat “support the troops” song that became popular in both the North and South, its melody is based on an old Irish anti-war protest song, “Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye,” which is as mournful as The Clash’s mutation of the song is ferocious.

3. “Brand New Cadillac.” First recorded by British rockabilly Vince Taylor in 1959, one of my favorite versions is the rockabilly/swing cover by Wayne Hancock.

4. “Junco Partner.” This is a New Orleans staple about a junkie who was “knocked-out loaded,” first recorded by James Waynes in 1951, though I’ve always been partial to the Professor Longhair version.
Junior Murvin

5. “Police and Thieves.” One of several reggae songs The Clash covered, this was first recorded by Jamaican reggae singer Junior Murvin a year or so before The Clash included it on their first album. Murvin’s version is much slower and featured falsetto vocals. Apparently the Jamaican was not happy with the cover by these upstart punks. His reaction was reportedly, “They have destroyed Jah work!”

6. “Wrong ’Em Boyo.” This was a rewrite of a song — “Wrong Emboyo” by a Jamaican band called The Rulers — which in turn was drawn from the classic early-1900s outlaw ballad “Stagger Lee.” Both The Rulers and The Clash start out with a verse that sounds like Lloyd Price’s hit R&B version of the song.

7. “The Man in Me.” Bob Dylan did this on his 1971 album New Morning. The Clash’s lo-fi, reggaefied version wasn’t released until 2004 as part of “The Vanilla Tapes,” an old reel of demos that became Disc 2 of the 2004 London Calling 25th-anniversary reissue. I’ll admit this isn’t in the same stratosphere as any of the previous covers. I include it just to show the range of The Clash’s influences.

My favorite versions of Clash songs by other artists.

Racid Taha
1. “Rock el Casbah” by Rachid Taha. Algerian-born singer Taha’s take on “Rock the Casbah” is sung in Arabic and is even heavier on percussion than The Clash’s original.

2. “Lost in the Supermarket” by Afghan Whigs (from Burning London: The Clash Tribute). This soulful take with Gregg Dulli on lead vocals and Harold Chichester doing a trademark falsetto response, was the best track on this various-artists album.

3. “Train in Vain” by Dwight Yoakam. This is Bluegrass Clash! And yes, that’s Dr. Ralph Stanley himself playing banjo and singing on a Clash song.

4. and 5. “Should I Suck or Should I Blow” by Thee Stash. This actually is a parody of the Clash hit by an ad hoc Billy Childish band in the early ’90s. Childish was angry that a Clash song was being used in a Levi’s commercial. The flip side of this single showed Childish wasn’t so bored with Clash parodies. It was titled “We’re Selling Jeans for the U.S.A.”

THIS IS VIDEO CLASH

Two of their greatest




Here's Racid Taha, The Clash's Mick Jones and Brian Eno rockin' the Cashbah



Billy Childish puts it in perspective

Shine On Harvest Moon



Last night I saw a couple of tweets from astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson:

Harvest Moon tonight -- the full moon that lands closest to the September equinox. There's nothing special about it. At all

Harvest Moon tonight. Enjoy it as you would any of the other dozen full moons in a year. No more. No less.
Well, you can believe that.

Or you can believe Oliver Hardy.



Tuesday, September 17, 2013

THE BLEEDING WALL OF TAOS

Here's an event early next month that's worth driving to Taos for: Terry and Jo Harvey Allen are presenting The Bleeding Wall of Taos which they describe as a "unique evening of music, poetry and tall tales of love, blood, mystery and adventure" for SOMOS Storytelling Festival.

They'll be doing this at the Taos Center for the Arts on Oct. 5.

"Love, blood, mystery and adventure ..." As one of my favorite songwriters (Terry Allen) might say, "Ain't no Top 40 song ..."

Terry's been a favorite musician of mine for years. Here's a profile I wrote about him for the old No Depression magazine more than a few years ago. And here's my review of his latest album, Bottom of the World.

His wife, Jo Harvey is a major talent also. She's an actress, writer and performer of  one-woman shows. My favorite Jo Harvey role was that of "The Lying Woman" in David Byrne's movie True Stories. She also was the force behind Chippy, Diaries of a West Texas Hooker, a musical based on the actual diary Jo Harvey found at some Texas pawn shop or garage sale. (Terry showed me the actual diary once.) The 1994 album Songs From Chippy, which featured, the Allens, Joe Ely, Butch Hancock, Wayne Hancock, Robert Earl Keen and Jo Carol Pierce currently tops my list of criminally out-of-print CDs.

Terry and Jo Harvey will do the at the Taos Center for the Arts.

Tickets are $10 for the Storytelling Festival's StorySlam on Friday, October 4th, and $20 for the Terry and Jo Harvey Allen performance the next night. ($45 for a special VIP event on October 5th .This includes admission to the performance).

Tickets are available at the Taos Center for the Arts or at SOMOS at somos@somostaos.org. Please call 575-758-0081 for more information.

Here's a classic Terry Allen song.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Sept. 15, 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
Sewer Fire  by Thee Oh Sees with Lars Finberg
Seething Psychosexual Conflict Blues by Figures of Light
Jesus Christ Twist by Rev. Beat-Man
The Wolf Song by LoveStruck
Hey Jackass by Geek Maggot Bingo
Love All of Me by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion 
Negative and Hostile by The Grannies
The Cutester Patrol by The Grandmothers
No More Rainy Days/ Interlude by The Dirtbombs
Vampire by Black Joe Lewis

Lockdown Blues by The Angel Babies
Head-On Collision by Big Ugly Guys
Drug-Stabbing Time/Sean Flynn by The Clash
Another Toe by The Pixies

Journey to the Center of the Mind by The Ramones
Don't Be Angry by Nick Curran & The Nightlifes
Baby Doll by The Del Moroccos
The Corner Man by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Dreaming by The Go-Wows
Like a Pill by The Nevermores
She Said Yeah by The A-Bones
A House is Not a Motel by Marshmallow Overcoat
Stoned by The Black Lips
Trash Truck by TAD
Lumumba Calypso by E. C. Arinze

The Sky is a Poisonous Garden by Concrete Blonde
Weight by Chief Fuzzer
Night of Broken Glass by Jay Reatard
The North Seas by Thee Verduns 
Malandrino by Gogol Bordello
Too Dry to Cry by Willis Earl Beal
Lonesome Stranger by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, September 13, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 13, 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
Single Girl by The Dirt Daubers
You Knee'd Me by The Hickoids
Truck Drivin' Son of a Gun by Dave Dudley
Trashy Women by Jerry Jeff Walker
Too Much by Rosie Flores
White Freightliner Blues by Halden Wofford & The Hi Beams
Gimme a Ride to Heaven Boys by Terry Allen
Honey, Do You Love Me, Huh? By Hank Williams with Curley Williams
 
Pig Fork by The Imperial Rooster
Road to Ruin by Anthony Leon & The Chain
Everybody's Getting Paid But Me by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
I Can't Make It Without You by The Haddix Family
11 Months and 29 Days by Johnny Paycheck
Warmed Over Kisses. By Dave Edmunds
One Swell Foop by The Honkey Tonk Merry Go-Round
The Rains Came by The Sir Douglas Quintet
Sleepless Nights by The Mekons

Artificial Flowers by Cornel Hurd featuring the Sex-Sational Blackie White
Highway Cafe by Kinky Friedman & The Texas Jewboys
Empty Bottles on a Broken Shelf by Jayke Orvis
Crazy Date by T. Tex Edwards
Down in the Flood / Little Sadie by Bob Dylan 
Wish You Would Kiss Me by James Hand
Boogie Woogie Lou by Zeb Turner
River in the Rain by Roger Miller

Rainy Days by Ashleigh Flynn
The Many Disguises of God by Robbie Fulks
Tonya's Twirls by Loudon Wainwright III 
I Trained Her to Love Me by Nick Lowe
Gauzy Dress in the Sun by Richard Buckner
Precious Time by Broomdust Caravan
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Thursday, September 12, 2013

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Pop That Bubblegum!

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Sept. 13, 2013

An actual bubblegum album by a serious grown-up band in 2013?

Yes indeed. Ooey Gooey Chewy Ka-blooey is a bubblegum album by The Dirtbombs, long promised by the group’s singer and guitarist Mick Collins.

The Dirtbombs are a serious band, right?

In my book they are. Started by Collins in the ’90s following the demise of his previous group, The Gories — an inspired blues/punk/slop band — The Dirtbombs were the best (if not the most famous, which would be The White Stripes) group to come out of the Detroit garage scene.

But bubblegum? Those of you who weren't around when bubblegum ruled the AM airwaves might not know what the term means. Sometimes “bubblegum” is used to describe any vapid teen pop, but that’s not what The Dirtbombs are doing on this album.

According to the All Music Guide, “Bubblegum is a lightweight, catchy pop music that was a significant commercial force in the late ’60s and early ’70s. Bubblegum was targeted at a preteen audience whose older siblings had been raised on rock & roll. It was simple, melodic, and light as feather — neither the lyrics or the music had much substance. Bubblegum was a manufactured music, created by record producers that often hired session musicians to play and sing the songs.”

The true giants of the genre were Buddha Records groups like The Ohio Express (known for hits like “Yummy Yummy Yummy” — yes, there was love in their tummies — and “Chewy Chewy”); The 1910 Fruitgum Company (“1, 2, 3, Red Light,” “Simon Says”); The Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus (“Quick Joey Small”); and made-for-TV bands like The Partridge Family, The Banana Splits, The Archies, and Lancelot Link & The Evolution Revolution.

Now technically, The Archies weren’t human. They were, in fact, cartoon characters. And the Banana Splits were human, but they were humans dressed like cartoon animals.

But even more out-there is the fact that Lancelot Link and his band were trained chimpanzees dressed in wigs and hippie costumes who appeared on Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp, a live-action Saturday-morning kiddie show in the early ’70s. An album of their music was actually released back then, and a video of the Lancelot Link song “Wild Dreams (Jelly Beans),” posted in a recent Ooey Gooey preview piece on Spin.com, shows these chimps indeed sounded a little like the Dirtbombs do on their new album.

Back during the great bubblegum scare, I was a little older than the target age group for this stuff, and for the most part I didn't share Collins’ affection for it. In fact, I hated the stuff. But little by little, I began to see at least a little value in the genre. Wilson Pickett had a hit with The Archies’ “Sugar Sugar.” A few years later, The Talking Heads covered “1, 2, 3, Red Light.” Meanwhile, The Dickies, an L.A. punk group, did a magnificent version of The Banana Splits theme song. And The Cramps covered “Quick Joey Small.”

And now The Dirtbombs have bubblegum on the soles of their shoes. They didn’t do covers of bubblegum hits. Instead, as Collins explained in an interview in Ghetto Blaster, “I wasn’t trying to make a period piece; I was more seeing if I could pick up where bubblegum left off ...”

If nothing else, Collins and crew capture the weird essence of many bubblegum elements. Just look at the song titles: “Sunshine Girl,” “We Come in the Sunshine,” “Sugar on Top,” “No More Rainy Days,” “Hot, Sour, Salty, Sweet,” “Hey! Cookie,” etc. I don’t know whether I’m in more danger of sunstroke or a diabetic coma after listening to this.

There are several songs that — apart from the candy-coated lyrics — don’t sound like a big stretch for The Dirtbombs. “Hot, Sour, Salty Sweet” is one of those, and so are “Sugar on Top” and “It’s Gonna Be Alright.” Collins’ guitar is righteously raunchy in these songs, even if the melodies are poppier than your usual Dirtbombs tune. And “Hey! Cookie” sounds like, well, a garage-rock number. It would have fit seamlessly in early Dirtbombs albums.
Mick Collins playing with The Gories
Lincoln Center, NYC, 2010

But other tunes sink deeper into the bubblegum goo.

“We Come in the Sunshine” owes a big debt to “Good Vibrations,” but there also are strange components such as the Bobby Sherman-style horns and vocal harmonies that sound closer to The Cowsills than The Beach Boys. “The Girl on the Carousel” is a dreamy slow dance featuring an oboe.

But the biggest leap is “No More Rainy Days,” which, after a minute or so of what sounds like an Oompa Loompa march, goes into a weird interlude featuring the voice of the sun. That’s right, the actual sun, whose droning rumble was recorded by a solar observatory run by Stanford University.

I’ll admit, these tunes all are fun and catchy, even if the childlike lyrics and lollipops and rainbows start to wear down a listener used to grittier themes. My main beef is that this is the second genre exercise in a row for the Dirtbombs — the previous album, Party Store, being a tribute to Detroit techno bands. I just hope the next album by this band I love so much is less gooey and has more ka-blooey.

Also recommended: 

* Electric Slave by Black Joe Lewis. This is the hardest-edged record so far in the short but thrilling catalog of Lewis, an Austin native who, according to a recent piece in his hometown paper, recently moved to Montreal.

Unlike his previous two albums, this one is released under Lewis’ name alone, not with his band The Honeybears. The horn section is still there, but the soul and funk elements of Lewis’ early work are less apparent.

Also missing are any obvious crowd-pleasers, such as the funny spoken-word segments like “Mustang Ranch” from previous albums. I’m not saying crowds won’t be pleased. Electric Slave is raw, punk-infused electric blues rock. Less jive and more wallop.

The album starts out with “Skulldiggin’,” which has such a distorted, fuzzed-out bass that in a just world, every obnoxious kid with a weapons-grade car stereo would be blasting this at every intersection in America.

Black Joe in Santa Fe
“Guilty” is a frantic rocker with tasty guitar-sax interplay. The nearly seven-minute “Vampire” sounds like a stripped-down cousin of Concrete Blonde’s “Bloodletting (The Vampire Song).” Screamin’ Jay Hawkins could have done this one.

Two other standouts are the highly-caffeinated “Young Girls,” which reminds me of Barrence Whitfield & The Savages, and “The Hipster,” a ferocious cruncher built on a mutated “Everybody Needs Somebody to Love” guitar riff and incorporating some lyrics of “Wang Dang Doodle.”

I bet the Electric Slave song that gets the most airplay is “Come to My Party.” I hope a lot of new fans respond to that invitation. Black Joe Lewis always throws an amazing musical party.

Blog bonus: Lotsa videos this week





And a little history for you, kiddies:
Talking Heads liked bubblegum when bubblegum wasn't cool


These chimps rock!

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...