Friday, April 04, 2014

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, April 4, 2014 
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
Prison Town by Kern Richards
Why Don't You Love Me by Steve Train & His Bad Habbits
Playboy by Buck Owens
She's a Killer by Gal Holiday
Late Bloomer by Karen Hudson
I Deserve a Drink by. The Beaumonts
Charleston Chew by The Howlin' Brothers
Mayberry by I Can Lick Any SonofaBitch in the House
Tall Tall Trees by Roger Miller
Nitty Gritty by Southern Culture on the Skids

Beatin' on the Bars by The Travelin' Texans
Halfway Through by The Dinosaur Truckers
I'll Be There If Ever You Want Me by John Fogerty
Dirty Thoughts and Busted Hearts by Pat Todd & The Rank Outsiders
The White Trash Song by Shooter Jennings with Scott H. Biram
When I Die by Scott H. Biram 
How Can I Still Be Patriotic (When They've Taken Away My Right to Cry) by Neil Hamburger

One Helluva Weekend by T. Tex Edwards
The Lovin' Machine by Johnny Paycheck
Raise a Glass by Michael O'Neill 
To Love Somebody by Lydia Loveless
We'll Be Together Again by Dex Romweber Duo
A Girl Don't Have to Drink to Have Fun by The Stumbleweeds
Booze Farm by Boris McCutcheon & The Saltlicks
The Gypsy by Cornell Hurd

Doghouse Blues by Wayne Hancock
Apache Tears by Los Dugans
Poor Black Mattie by Rest^rant
See You Later Alligator by Flaco Jimenez y Max Baca
Get That Fiddle Fired Up by Hezekiah Goode
Letter from a Birmingham Jail by Ronny Elliott
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: New Sounds from Dex Romeweber Duo plus Kern Richards

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
April 4, 2014

The Dex Romweber Duo — singer/guitarist Dex and his sister Sara on drums — are back with another rocking album, blending all the musical elements that make up Dex Romweber’s vision — rockabilly, country, surf music, blues, avant-garde spook-show soundtracks, jazz, and show-stopping sleazo-profundo ballads.

Like the North Carolina natives’ previous albums on Bloodshot Records, Images 13 is a minimalist affair. For the most part it’s just Dex and Sara, though some tunes are augmented by guests, including a couple of North Carolina musicians: Mary Huff of Southern Culture on the Skids and Melissa Swingle, late of Trailer Bride and The Moaners.

Though I believe he’s done some of his best work during the past few years with the Duo, Dex probably is best known as the frontman for Flat Duo Jets — another rockabilly-fueled two-person band that was active in the '80s and '90s. The current Duo probably isn’t as frantic as the Jets were. But that wild spirit still remains. Dex said in a recent interview that his sister is the best drummer he’s ever worked with. And I believe him. She’s getting more impressive with each album.

The album starts out with a metal-edged rocker called “Roll On.” That’s followed by “Long Battle Coming,” a hopped-up, doom-laden, minor-key stomper. Then comes “Baby I Know What It’s Like to Be Alone,” a pensive tale of a loner who sounds as if he’s about to crack and roams the street at night. A listener isn’t quite sure whether the singer is stalking the woman he’s singing about. The lyrics are vague but more than a little creepy: “The tombstone mind watching the street sign/I hope to find you there/At night in my neighborhood I stroll around/the snow fallin’ on the ground.”

"So Sad About Us" is an obscure song by The Who, but the Romwebers perform it as an uptempo, jangly folk-rocker that wouldn't have been out of place on an album by The Byrds or The Beau Brummels. That’s Huff singing background harmonies here.

Dex shows his country/rockabilly chops with "Beyond the Moonlight," in which the only percussion is snappy handclaps. Another country-sounding tune is "One Sided Love Affair." That’s a Johnny Burnette song — though I had to check the credits, because I could have sworn that it was something Nick Lowe had written. On this version, the duo actually is just Dex and his acoustic guitar.

But the Romweber songs I love the most are the slow, intense ones. The best one of these here is "I Don't Want to Listen," a slow dance that sounds like it came from a sock hop in hell. That's also the case with the soulful "We'll Be Together Again." Dex’s crooning is especially powerful on this song, which was co-written by Jackie DeShannon and Sharon Sheeley for Sheeley’s boyfriend, rockabilly great Eddie Cochrane, who died in a car crash in 1960.

The album includes four instrumentals, which is probably too many (I'd rather just hear Dex's voice more), though each one is enjoyable. "Prelude in G Minor" is a noirish little number, on which Sarah proves her worth on the drums. It's followed by "Blackout!," which sounds like a close cousin of the Peter Gunn theme. Here the duo is joined by a horn section. "Blue Surf" is a fast, furious surf tune. And then there's the aptly-titled "Weird (Aurora Borealis)," which features Swingle on musical saw. It’s from the soundtrack of the supernatural TV drama One Step Beyond from the late '50s and early '60s.

While digital versions of Images 13 can be found wherever music downloads are sold, there’s one nifty surprise that makes it worth opting for the CD version. That’s a piece of art inside the CD package, a reprint of an album cover from one of those campy teen-hop compilation album covers — the kind you find these days at Goodwill. This one is Hits A’ Poppin’: Radio and TV Favorites. (You can find a used copy of this 1957 record on Amazon for $10.) What makes this relevant to Dex and Sara Romweber is that the young dark-haired woman holding a bunch of LPs on that cover is their mom, whose is also named Sara Romweber. It seems rock 'n’ roll is in the Romweber blood.

Check out a podcast with Dex Romweber playing some of the music that’s influenced him, with songs by Johnny Cash, Eddie Cochran, and Tav Falco, and more obscure sounds, including some bizarre pipe-organ music. 

Also recommended:

* Anywhere But Home by Kern Richards. This is a collection of tough-minded roots-rock tunes by a singer-songwriter from southern California with a deep, ragged, world-weary voice who sings from the gut and writes from dark regions of his soul. He’s a former Orange County punk rocker who was in a band called Pig Children. His sound is softer now, but it still hits hard.

The first song that grabbed me by the throat here is “Prison Town.” With an arrangement and a guitar hook that reminds me of Steve Earle’s “Guitar Town,” Kern sings about living in a place where the main industry is the corrections system and “the air’s so thick I thought I’d drown.” In this town, everyone seems like some sort of inmate. “Saw prisoner’s kin with broken lives/where guards all braggin’ they beat their wives/It’s only pain that makes us sound/There ain’t no love in a prison town,” Richards growls.

The ravages of liquor is a theme that pops up in various tracks. The title song starts out with the line “Monday drunk in Barstow, Tuesday couldn’t care/Wednesday night, sick with fright and headin’ for nowhere.” And “Alcohol Dreams” starts off, “Woke up standing against a bar somewhere, time was standing still.” And, of course, it gets worse: “If the bartender could read my mind, man he’d call the police/They’d put me in a straitjacket, nobody here would sign my release.”

Richards shows a glimpse of dark humor on the blues-rocker “Down on Blues,” which starts out, “I got a job, I hate my job. I got a girl, she hates me.” Later he complains, “I’ve got swine flu, I’ve got jungle rot/Ain’t no disease exist that I don’t got.”

Richards is backed by a highly capable band that includes former Santa Fe resident Tony Gilkyson, (who’s picked his guitar with Lone Justice, X, Chuck E. Weiss and others) and John Bazz of The Blasters. The album is on a label run by Stevie Tombstone, who knows a thing or two about dark, mournful roots sounds. All in all, it’s an impressive solo debut album by an artist who deserves a wider audience.

Here's some video:




Sunday, March 30, 2014

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, March 30, 2014 
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
Samson and Delilah by Edison Rocket Train
Don't Slander Me by Luanne Barton
You Don't Love Me Yet by Roky Erikson with 27 Devils Joking
No Me Veras Caer by Wau y Los Arrrghs 
Perverts in the Sun by Iggy Pop
Milwaukee's Best by Slab City
Burn in Hell by The Ponys
Join the Gospel Express by Little Marcy
Let Lose the Kracken by The Bald Guys

Oblivion by Mudhoney
Money by The Backbeat Band
I'm a No Count by Ty Wagner
Godzilla is a Punk by 99ers
Concentration Moon by Frank Zappa
Blue Eyed Hexe by The Pixies
Boys in the Wood by The Black Lips
I Just Wanna Make Love to You by Wild Billy Chyldish & CTMF 
Walls Are Shaking by Jonah Gold &. His Silver Apples

Fear by Junk 
Eviler by The Grannies
Make You Wild by Lynx Lynx
Heebie Jeebies by Nick Curran & The Nightlifes
A Word From Our Sponsor by Figures of Light
That's Your Problem by Mal Thursday & The Cheetahs
Roll On by Dex Romweber Duo
Cool Arrow by Hickoids
Mexican Radio by Wall of Voodoo

Sufisurf by Pray for Brain
Największa armia świata wzywa cię by Kult
Fever by Leon Russell 
Govinda by Radha Krsna Temple
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, March 28, 2014

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, March  28, 2014 
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
Between the Ditches by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
Cuckoo Bird by Pine Hill Haints
Home to Me by Eilen Jewell
Bless Your Heart by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
What Did You Do in the War by Jon Langford & Skull Orchard
I Told You Who it Was by Johnny Cash with Minnie Pearl
Walpole Prison by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies
LSD Made a Wreck Outta Me by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
A Fool Such As I by Marti Brom
Don't Rock the Jukebox by Petty Booka

Never Did No Wanderin' by The Folksmen
Take This Job and Shove It by Johnny Paycheck
Too Many Bills by Figures of Light
I Like It Like That by Michael O'Neill
Sometimes I Do by Ernest Tubb
Let's Don't Get Married by Brennen Leigh & Noel McKay
The Wolfman of Del Rio by Terry Allen
Second Fiddle by Buck Owens

The Death of Country Music by The Waco Brothers
May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose by Little Jimmy Dickens
Done on Blues by Kern Richards
Ain't Got No Dough by Peter Case
Head by Lydia Loveless
Four Leaf Clover by Old 97s with Exene Cervenka
Don't Fall in Love With a Girl Like That by The Boxcars
I Can't Give Up on You by Country Blues Revue
Down I. Dixieland by Leon Russell
Dark town Strutters Ball by Howard Armstrong

Where I Fell by Robbie Fulks
The Face of a Fighter by Willie Nelson
Perfect Stranger by Eleni Mandell
Where Does All the Time Go by Possessed by Paul James
Sunshine by Shooter Jennings, Jamey Johnson & Twiggy Ramirez
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Black Lips Get Rootsy, Figures of Light Say "BUY!"

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
March 21, 2014

 
I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that “Drive-By Buddy,” the first song on Underneath the Rainbow, the new album by The Black Lips, has a hint of country twang. After all, the Lips, garage-punks or “flower-punks” (their own label) that they are, covered Willie & Waylon’s “Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys” a few years ago.

No, this isn’t a country or “alt-country” album, by any means. In fact, on closer listen, the guitar riff of “Drive-By Buddy” sounds a lot like George Harrison playing “Honey Don’t” or other Carl Perkins songs in those early Beatles years. (I read another review that compared it with the guitar riff of The Monkees’ “Last Train to Clarksville.” That works, too.)

But the Southern roots of the Georgia-based Lips are much more apparent here than on previous efforts. When they sing “we’re hanging on a broken T-Bird hood” in the refrain, it sounds like good redneck fun — probably more than it would be in real life.

You can hear these roots in the bouncy “Justice After All,” with its Neil Young guitar hook, and you can even hear it in the jittery mutated early rock ’n’ roll sound of “Dorner Party,” which is about spree-killer rogue cop Christopher Dorner.

You can especially hear the South in the slow, menacing “Boys in the Wood,” a song Lynyrd Skynyrd might have done had Ronnie Van Zandt survived that plane crash. The lyrics tell of moonshine, mayhem, vehicle theft, and a harrowing backwoods world that’s part Deliverance and part Thunder Road.

 “His ghost lives in the trailer/It was his foster home/Pall Malls and an inhaler/His girl’s nagging on the phone/The pain his body’s feeling/Will leave you accident prone/Cause the car he was stealing/Drove to the unknown.”

Another cool thing: The Black Lips’ official video, full of violence, sex, and debauchery, is actually worthy of the song. Check it out below.

While this is not a concept album by any means, there does seem to be a common thread running through several tunes — jail and running from the police. “Waiting,” for instance, has a verse about getting paranoid about cops while driving on the interstate. “Smiling” deals directly with a night singer Jared Swilley spent in the slammer. If somebody ever makes a punk-rock version of The Dukes of Hazzard, they’ll have to get The Black Lips to do the soundtrack.

Some say that Underneath the Rainbow is the most polished Black Lips album to date. Actually, I think some people said the same thing about their previous album, the Mark Ronson-produced Arabia Mountain.

Truth is, you can detect some not-so-subtle touches by Patrick Carney, the drummer of The Black Keys, who produced most of the tracks here. For example, the electro bass sound on “Dandelion Dust,” a hard-edged boogie, is right out of The Black Keys playbook. Other tunes were produced by Tom Brenneck, the guitarist for Sharon Jones’ Dap-Kings and the New York Afrobeat group The Budos Band.

“Polished” is a relative thing. For the most part, The Black Lips, except for a few moments when they get sucked in too far into the Black Keys dimension, retain the slop, fury, and dumb jokes that made me love them in the first place.

They prove this with the scary-sounding “Do the Vibrate,” complete with wolf howls and an almost metallic “Rock Lobster” guitar riff. Beneath the threatening atmospherics, the song is actually about an alternative use for cellphones.

Also recommended:

Buy Before You Die by Figures of Light. As an old rocker myself, it’s always enjoyable to see a band that faded away decades ago get a second breath and start rocking again. That’s definitely the story of Figures of Light, a pre-punk group that never came anywhere close to achieving the fame of The Stooges or The Velvet Underground, but they were right there in New York City in the early’ 70s, smashing TV sets onstage and cranking out raw, screeching, feedback-filled guitar rampage with sardonic, angsty lyrics.

The Figures hung up their rock ’n’ roll shoes before the end of the Me Decade. But they rose again in 2008, when they were rediscovered and reconstituted by Norton Records. Singer Wheeler Winston Dixon and guitarist Michael Downey made a couple of fine albums with Norton (Smash Hits and Drop Dead), keeping their basic rough-edged sound, but apparently that only whetted their appetites.

In the past year or so they’ve self-released several EPs of new material, including one of my favorite FOL follies, a “country” song (though actally they don't even sound as "country" as The Black Lips) called “Too Many Bills, Not Enough Thrills” as well as a compilation called Lost and Found, which included rarities, remixes, and even a screaming death-metal cover of their first “smash hit,” “It’s Lame,” by a band called Belladonna & The Decimators.

But Buy Before You Die is definitely the best thing Dixon and Downey have done since Drop Dead. It’s only seven songs long, but every one of them is a doozy.

All the selections are sandwiched between songs lampooning mindless consumerism: the title song (”You’re buying this, you’re buying that/You’re getting stupid, dumb, and fat.”) and “A Word from Our Sponsor,” a phony ad in which the band plays a Velvet-like musical backdrop as Dixon shills for some unspecified surreal, horrible-sounding food product (ingredients include rabid squirrel meat, dehydrated cow’s head, old coffee filters, toothpaste, and insect repellent).

Maybe that’s how the narrator of “Swollen Colon Lament,” another song here, ended up with his condition.

While the above-mentioned songs feature the basic up-tempo minimalist guitar rock the Figures do so well — as does the rockabilly-influenced “Pauline” — some of tracks here are, well, pretty. “Killers From Space” has breezy, jazzy chords. “The Winter of Our Discontent” is slow minor-key number with a spooky tremolo guitar. And “Streets of Rain” is a minor-key dirge with strong bass and lyrics about hopelessness.

I hope Dixon and Downey keep at it, because they’re only getting more interesting. .

Enjoy some videos



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...