Sunday, October 13, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Oct. 13, 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
Satan's Bride by Gregg Turner
Prostitution by Tiger Sex
Rock 'n' Roll Deacon by Screamin' Joe Neal
Rat King by The Night Beats
The Rats' Revenge Part 1 by The Rats
Juice to Get Loose by Left Lane Cruiser
Everybody Loves Somebody by Hasil Adkins 
Spooks by Ghost Bikini
I'm Mr. Big Stuff by Jimmy Hicks
Ooh Poo Pah Doo by Jessie Hill

He's Waitin' by The Sonics
The Witch by Los Peyotes
Psycho by The Swamp Rats
Strychnine by Barrence Whitfield
Shot Down by The Sonics

Stick with Her by The Gaunga Dyns
Great! Now We've Got Time to Party by Figures of Light
Ted by The Amputees
Hook and Sling by Eddie Bo

Wife Sitter by Swamp Dogg
Gettin' Plenty Lovin' by The Lyres
Don't Look at the Hanged Man by Big Foot Chester
Shrimp and Gumbo by Dave Bartholomew
Black Sheep by The Reigning Sound
Don't Try It by Devil Dogs
Seven and Seven Is by Love
Blues From Phyllis by the Flamin' Groovies

Makin' Love by The Sloths
You Always Hurt the One You Love by Clarence " Frogman" Henry 
Killer Diller by Kid Congo & The Pink Monkeybirds
If He Walked Today by Wolf Moon
Sunny by Johnny Rivers
Afflicted by Charles Brimmer
You Look Like a Flower by Richard Caiton
I Wish I Was In New Orleans by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, October 11, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Oct. 11, 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
Drinkin' Wine Spo Dee O'Dee by Jerry Lee Lewis
Don't Wanna Wash Off Last Night by The Gaunga Dyns
Bloody Mary Morning by Willie Nelson & Wynonna Judd
Meanest Jukebox in Town by Whitey Morgan & The 78s
Cool Arrow by Hickoids
Country Hixes by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
Cajun Joe (Bully of the Bayou) by Doug & Rusty Kershaw
New River Train by Jackie Powers
Your Sugar is All I Want by Pat Todd & The Rank Outsiders
Hobos Are My Heroes by Legendary Shack Shakers

Slaughterville iWreck by Family Lotus
Hometown Shit Beer by Joe West
Wish You Would Kiss Me by James Hand
Sweet Georgia Brown by Johnny Gimble with Merle Haggard
She's My Five Foot Five by Joel Savoy
Mississippi Showboat by Powder Mill 
There Stands the Glass by Webb Pierce
Firewater Seeks Its Own Level by Butch Hancock & Jimmie Dale Gilmore 

But Not Now by Augie Meyers
Boney Fingers by Hoyt Axton
Beans and Make Believe by Mose McCormack
Liquor Store by. The Meat Purveyors
Out There Aways by The Waco Brothers
Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends by Joan Osborne
Wildwood Boogie by Charley Gracie
Wine, Women and Loud Happy Songs by Ringo Starr
Guitar Man by Junior Brown

Long I Ride by Robbie Fulks
This Ain't a Good Time by Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys
Carlene by Robert Earl Reed
Alberta #3 by Bob Dylan 
Last Date by David Bromberg
Don't the Girls All Get Prettier at Closing Time by Mickey Gilley
Maverick by George Thorogood
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: One Last Look at Ponderosa Stomp 2013

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Oct. 11, 2013


Dr. Ike with The Gaunga Dyns
"Dr. Ike" Padnos, founder of Ponderosa Stomp with
The Gaunga Dyns 
A few months ago, when I decided I wanted to go to the Ponderosa Stomp, a music festival in New Orleans (named for a song by Louisiana bluesman Lazy Lester) I didn’t consciously realize that I was giving myself a slightly belated birthday gift — and it was a very appropriate gift, too.

I just turned 60, which could make a guy start to feel old. However, at the Stomp, the vast majority of the headline performers were well into their 60s, some even beyond that. And nearly all of them were full of energy and crazy grace. And some of them rocked like madmen. Suddenly 60 didn’t feel so old.

(What followed in this column, published today in The Santa Fe New Mexican were thumbnail reviews of my favorite performances, based on what I wrote last week in this very blog HERE and HERE. You can read the entire Tuneup column at The New Mexican's Pasatiempo site.

Blog Bonus

Here's some Youtubes from The Ponderosa Stomp. First, The Sonics.


The fabulous Gaunga Dyns covering Roky:


Chris Montez performs his first hit:


His first time on stage for decades, Richard Caiton


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Family Lotus Reunites for Joe West Psychedelic Folk & Bluegrass Festival

Back in late August, 1971, the week I moved to Albuquerque to attend the University of New Mexico, I saw a poster, very similar to the one above, advertising the "Second Annual King Kong Memorial Stomp" starring Bo Diddley and a Santa Fe band called Family Lotus at the Student Union Building Ballroom. I went to the show to see Bo, and, of course, he was fantastic. (He was living down in Los Lunas, N.M. at the time.)

Some version of Family Lotus with Pete Seeger at
Paolo Soleri amphitheater, date unknown
But that night I became a fan of Family Lotus. They looked like a bunch of Cerrillos hippies -- and there was good reason for that. They had a happy aura of hillbilly anarchy about them onstage. But they actually could play and sing. And they did mostly, if not all, original songs. Their banjo player Jim Bowie at one point performed what he called a "banjo raga." I was hooked. I tried to catch them every time they played Albuquerque during the next few years.

Years later, when I became a freelance music writer for The Santa Fe Reporter, the other music freelancer there was none other than Lotus-man Jerry Faires. I always felt honored to be sharing a stage with him -- even though that "stage" was a newspaper.

Faires, Bowie and other members of the Family Lotus family are reuniting for an appearance this Saturday at Joe West's Psychedelic Folk & Bluegrass Festival in Madrid this Saturday. The show, which will be in a tent outside the Mineshaft Tavern starts at noon. Here's the schedule:

NOON Joe's Opening speech (Will he announce that he's running for governor?)
12:05 Will and the Won'ts
12:45 The Rio Grande Family Band
1:30 Pa Coal and The Clinkers
2:15 Sage and Jared's Happy Gland Band
2:45 Todd And The Fox
3:30 Janice Mohr-Nelson The Kentucky Humdinger
4:00 Joe West and the Santa Fe Revue (with guest Laurainne Fiorentino and Archie West)
4:45 Hillstompers
5:15 Hot Honey
5:45 FAMILY LOTUS (THE SECOND COMING)
7:00 Hillstompers (The Exit Procession)
8pm Broomdust Caravan (In the Tavern)

Tickets are $10 in advance (available at The Mineshaft and The Candyman) and $15 on the day of the show.

Joe says parking is atrocious in Madrid. "Best to park out above the old ball park and walk into town."

Sunday, October 06, 2013

PONDEROSA STOMP: The Finale

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Tom McLoughlin of The Sloths preaches the Gospel of Garage
After Friday night's crazy performance at the Rock 'n' Bowl in New Orleans by The Sonics, I had this nagging fear yesterday that the second night of The Ponderosa Stomp might be something of a letdown. How could anyone match that level intensity and wild abandon?

Well, here's the deal. It's still obvious that the best show of this festival was The Sonics.

But Saturday night's lineup, especially The Standells and The Sloths -- the latter band being joined for a couple of tunes by the mysterious Ty Wagner -- was nothing short of amazing.

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The Standells impressed me last night even more than they did when they first twisted my head off when I was in 7th grade. Of all the 2013 Ponderosa Stomp lineup they were the most commercially successful (except maybe Chris Montez. More on him later.) Is there anyone around my age who doesn't remember "Dirty Water" or, my favorite, "Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White" ?

They played these hits as well as others from that era -- "Riot on Sunset Strip" (the title song of a teen exploitation movie from the mid 60s. Standells singer Larry Tamblyn said at a panel discussion a couple of days ago that he truly enjoys that film. The same way he enjoys Plan 9 From Outer Space) -- and some of my favorites from the Dirty Water album like "Rari" and "Medication."

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Cyril Jordan (center) with The Standells
Late in the set they were joined onstage by Johnny Echols, a former member of Love (The Standells' John Fleckenstein also was a Love man in that group's early days), and Cyril Jordan of The Flamin' Groovies. They played some Love songs, including a fiery "Seven and Seven Is," "Little Red Book" and "Hey Joe," which both Love and The Standells covered (as did about 98 percent of all American bands in the mid '60s)

All too often when you hear old bands play their old songs from decades past, it's sad and cheesey. But these Standells aren't ready for the casino circuit, and hopefully they never will be. They play like they could start a real riot on Sunset Strip.

And the reconstituted Sloths were no slobs either. Unlike The Standells, they never had a massive "Dirty Water"-level hit, but their song "Makin' Love," featured on one of the Back from the Grave compilations a few years ago is one of the finest examples of snarling minimalist, primitive angst-rock you'll ever hear.

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Waving the flag
They're fronted these days by singer Tom McLoughlin, who was with a '60s L.A. garage band called The May Wines with some members of The Sloths (I can't keep up with this cross-pollination) He's got more of a "rock star" aura than most the other garage-band performers I saw this weekend.

He also has a weird knack for silly props. During The Sloth's rendition of "Hey Joe" (I told you, all the bands back then did this song) he held up a hand-written hitchhiker sign that said "Mexico" as he sang "I'm goin' way down south to Mexico ..." Then he whipped out a Mexican flag, which he wore as a cape. In one song he tried to blow up a cheap plastic sex doll, but ran out of time before he had to start singing the next verse.

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After their own raucous set, The Sloths were joined onstage by Ty Wagner, another L.A. garage-rocker whose most famous song is "I'm a No Count." He sang that one as well as one by his rock 'n' roll hero Eddie Cochran, "Come On everybody." My only complaint about Wagner is that I wish he's have done more. He's got a moody intensity about him and sings every word as if his life depended on it.

Other music of note Saturday night was The Gaunga Dyns, a New Orleans garage group who had a local hit in the late '60s with "Rebecca Rodifer," a sad tale about a girl who died from an illegal abortion. This group recently reformed and are a tight outfit with hints of folk-rock, featuring three guitarists. My only gripe about them is that they opened with not one, not two, but three songs of The Animals. Each one sounded good, especially "I'M Cryin'," but for a while I thought it was an Eric Burdon cover band. On the other hand, their version of Paul Revere & The Raiders' "Just Like Me" was a complete delight.

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Charley Gracie, a rockabilly from Philly, was a complete delight. Backed by a band that included guitarist Deke Dickerson, Gracie really shined in his cover of "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody."

Dickerson and company also backed Chris Montez. Though Montez is best known for late '60s pop hits like "Call Me" and "The More I See You," he wisely concentrated on music from his early, Ritchie Valens-influenced days. "Let's Dance" with its spot-on Farfisa organ, can't help but make you smile.

I wish I would have stayed for R&B shouter Eddie Daniels. But after Ty Wagner and The Sloths, I was afraid I was going to end up like this guy below.

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All Stomped Out





But it was a fantastic festival.

Stomp on!







More Ponderosa Stomp Coverage:

* First Report: CLICK HERE
* Second Report: CLICK HERE

Photos (of the Stomp and other New Orleans craziness) CLICK HERE

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...