(Background Music: Dog Breath in the Year of The Plague by The Mothers of Invention)
Deputy Dog by The Great Gaylord & The Frigss
Motor Pyscho by Rattface
Bomb Squad by Gas Huffer
Saint Dee by The Bloodhounds
You Bring Me Down by Jonny Manak & The Depressives
Hound Dog by '68 Comeback
(Background Music: Taylor's Rock by Hound Dog Taylor)
Sunday, May 24, 2015 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
Here's the playlist below;
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
After the Rain by Mission of Burma
God is a Bullet by Concrete Blonde
Goo Goo Muck by The Cramps
Miniskirt Blues by Simon Stokes
Suicide in a Bottle by Evil Idols
Baby Doll by Horror Deluxe
Don't Slander Me by Roky Erikson
Spider and Fly by Motobunny
Milkshake 'n' Honey by Sleater-Kinney
Whammy Kiss by The B-52s
Inside Looking Out by Chesterfield Kings
Time Will Tell by Handsome Jack
Take Me to Our Place by Jonny Manak & The Depressives
Mean and Evil by Juke Joint Pimps
Total Destruction to Your Mind by Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires
Oh Wendy, Let's Stay Out All Night by The A-Bones
Do the Get Down by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Designed to Kill by James Chance
HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB DYLAN
Maggie's Farm by Bob Dylan
The Wicked Messenger by The Black Keys
Thunder on the Mountain by Bob Dylan
Don't Think Twice by Mike Ness
Dignity by Bob Dylan
Every Grain of Sand by Giant Sand
Baby Let Me Follow You Down (Reprise) by Bob Dylan & The Band
That Knucklehead Stuff by Chuck E. Weiss
Borracho Mark Lanegan
That Lucky Old Sun by Bob Dylan
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis
Friday, May 22, 2015 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
Here's my playlist below:
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens
Vengeance Gonna Be My Name by Slackeye Slim
Daddy Was a Preacher, Mama Was a Go-Go Girl by Southern Culture on the Skids
Hard Times by Jon Langford
Tulsa by Wayne Hancock
Trailer Mama by The Bottle Rockets
Big Ol' White Boys by Terry Allen
What Kinda Guy? by Steve Forbert
The Rubber Room by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
Hey Mama My Time Ain't Long / Snake Farm by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Falling Off of the World by Chipper Thompson
Give Back the Key to My Heart by Uncle Tupelo
The Devil Ain't Lazy by Asleep At the Wheel with The Blind Boys of Alabama
Ditty Wah Ditty by Ry Cooder
Liquor and Whores by The Misery Jackals
Kansas Women by Two Ton Strap
Don't Give a Damn by Honky Tonk Hustlas
Ready to Run by Jimbo Mathus
The Hoover Farm Exorcism by The Imperial Rooster
The Road Goes On Forever by The Highwaymen
Don't Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes by The Rizdales
I'll Be There (If Ever You Want Me) by John Fogerty
There's No Fool Like an Old Fool by Ray Price
The Genitalia of a Fool by Cornell Hurd with Justin Trevino
Legend in My Time by Don Walser
Train of Life by Merle Haggard
When Two Worlds Collide by Roger Miller
The Last Kind Words by David Johansen & The Harry Smiths
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican May 22, 2015 Ray Wylie Hubbard’s Twitter feed (@raywylie) isn’t anywhere as essential as his music, but it’s often pretty entertaining. Early in May, after some ticket agency apparently had referred to him as a “country” singer, Hubbard tweeted, “i ain’t country..use ‘cool ol low down dead thumb groove badass folkie halfass blues poet with a young rockin band’ instead.”
That tweet could be read as a darn good self-evaluation of his latest record, The Ruffian’s Misfortune. Once again, Hubbard has given the world a swampy, blues-soaked collection of tunes in which, in his trademark Okie drawl, he tells stories of sin and salvation; gods and devils; women who light candles to the “Black Madonna;” undertakers who look like crows (“red-eyed and dressed in black”); and hot-wiring cars in Oklahoma.
And I wasn’t kidding about “essential.” Somehow in the last decade or so, Hubbard has clawed his way from being an interesting survivor of the early-’70s-Texas-cosmic-cowboy scene to one of the most important unsung songwriters in the music biz today. And I don’t say that lightly. Last time I reviewed one of Ray Wylie’s albums, I said, “Hubbard’s albums of the last 10 years are even more consistently brilliant than Tom Waits’ output since the turn of the century.”
That’s still true. And Ray Wylie is more prolific than Waits, too.
He’s using the same basic band he’s used on his last few albums, including his son Lucas Hubbard on guitar, George Reiff on bass, and Rick Richards on drums. Together they’ve crafted a distinctive sound, and, like Hubbard himself, they keep getting better.
Hubbard grabs you by the throat immediately in “All Loose Things,” the first song on The Ruffian’s Misfortune. Raw guitar chords explode over a harsh drum beat. Then Hubbard begins to sing, though he’s giving voice to a blackbird looking down on pitiful humans: “Storm is comin’, rain’s about. To fall/Ain’t no shelter ’round here for these children at all. ... Now the dirt is splatterin’ it’s turning into mud/Erasing all traces of broken bones and blood/All loose things end up being washed away.”
Hubbard with son Lucas at 2012 SXSW
Listening to Hubbard, you might start to get the feeling that, like some grizzled oracle, he’s gently imparting secrets of the universe. At the start of the song “Hey, Mama, My Time Ain’t Long,” he sings matter-of-factly, “Now children let me tell you about the songs a bluesman sings/Comes from a woman’s moans and the squeak of guitar strings/Some say it’s the devil jingling the coins in his pocket/I say it sounds more like a pistol when you cock it.”
Hubbard name-checks some of his rock ’n’ roll forbearers — the Rolling Stones, the Allman Brothers, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top – in “Bad on Fords,” a song he co-wrote with country star Ronnie Dunn -- and previously recorded by Sammy Hagar.
He’s trying to convince some “pretty thing” to go on some crazy joyride from Abilene to L.A. “We’ll stop at The Sands in Vegas and bet it all on black 29,” he sings.
The song “Down by The River” is a frenzied tune that might remind you of James McMurtry’s “Choctaw Bingo.” Hubbard’s tune is about a bunch of El Paso kids crossing the Santa Fe Bridge into Juárez to “sip a little poison.” Violence lurks everywhere – gunfire, bloodstains, those crowlike undertakers burying bodies down by the river.
Sister Rosetta
He’s basically describing a real-life hell in that song. But in a later song, “Barefoot in Heaven,” Hubbard sings of the other place, “where there ain’t no end of days.” The groove is similar to some long-lost Pops Staples tune. But the lyrics speak of another gospel titan: “When I get to Heaven, all the preachers tell me, I get a halo, some wings and a harp/That’s well and good, but what I want to hear is Sister Rosetta Tharpe.”
Two of the songs here are named for Hubbard’s blues heroes. “Mr. Musselwhite’s Blues” tells the story of harmonica shaman Charlie Musselwhite and how he was born in Mississippi and moved to Chicago, where Little Walter himself bestowed a harp on him. Musselwhite even gets some advice for the lovelorn from Big Joe Williams. “Big Joe said, ‘I’ve seen that woman, and Charlie, you’re better off with the blues.”
Then there’s “Jessie Mae,” a slow groover about the late Ms. Hemphill. “Every time you sing, black angels dance,” Hubbard sings. Praising her guitar style, he notes Hemphill had that “dead thumb groove” he admires, “like hammerin’ nails/On the low E string.”
Undoubtedly there’s a little bit of Jessie Mae Hemphill in the singer with the “short dress, torn stockings” who is subject of “Chick Singer, Badass Rocking.” Hubbard probably sounds a little lecherous here, but even if that’s so, it’s far outweighed by the sheer admiration he has for this unnamed belter, carrying on a sacred American tradition at her midnight gig at some dive.
Hubbard wouldn’t look that great in a short skirt and torn stockings, but he’s carrying on a noble tradition himself.
Check out these videos:
Here's one with an authentic chick singer/badass rocker
And here's another song from The Ruffian's Misfortune, performed with the co-writer Jonathan Tyler.
And making his debut on The Stephen W. Terrell (Music) Blog, I give you Mr. Sammy Hagar
Correction: The earlier version of this incorrectly called my favorite James McMurtry song as "Cherokee Bingo." The real title is "Choctaw Bingo." Sorry, wrong tribe. It's been corrected in the text.
Last week when eulogizing B.B. King, I included "See That My My Grave Is Kept Clean," the title song, sort of, from his final studio album. It's a song known by at least three names -- the one King used; "Two White Horses," and "One Kind Favor" -- which was the actual title of King's last album.
Blind Lemon Jefferson, a bluesman from Texas, recorded the song in 1928, but I first heard it in the version by Canned Heat. The song, part of Heat's 1968 album Living the Blues, wasn't a huge hit. But it was the flip side of "Going Up The Country," which probably was their biggest hit. They played it on KVSF here in Santa Fe ever so often and I liked it right off.
But I didn't really get into it until the early '70s, when, as a college kid I started making trips to Juarez, Mexico with my buddies. it was always on the jukebox at El Submarino nightclub, and I always played it several times as my friends an I sat there loading up on 35-cent margaritas. The crazy energy of the song -- not to mention the fatalistic, somewhat morbid lyrics with strange images of white horses coffin sounds and graves in need of cleaning -- seemed to capture the Juarez spirit of those happier times.
Blind Lemon died two years after recording "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean." But the song is allive and well. Blind Lemon's version was included on Harry Smith's more-than-influential Anthology of Folk Music in 1952.
Even before then, it was recorded by a bunch of other blues artists including fellow Texan Lightnin' Hopkins, Furry Lewis and Mississippi Fred McDowell. And it keeps popping up in the realms of folk, rock, soul and the blues.
Here are some of the better versions of the song. Let's start with Mr. Jefferson's:
Bob Dylan, whose career owes a lot to Harry Smith's Anthology, was one of several folk revivalists who recorded it. His fiery version of "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean" was on his first album. (Notice on this one, the two white horses aren't just "in a line" as in most renditions of the song. In Dylan's, the white horses are "following me.")
Dylan's version inspired this electric rendition by The Dream Syndicate in 1988.
Lou Reed performed a growling, menacing take on the tune at a Harry Smith tribute concert in 2001.
Mavis Staples did it in the "Lightning in a Bottle" concert at Radio City Music Hall in 2003
Also in the early part of the century, folkie Geoff Muldaur (a former member of Jim Kweskin's Jug Band), recorded a haunting two-part saga in which he and some pals take literally Blind Lemon's odd request.
Here's Part 2
But still the best version of "One Kind Favor" is the version that brought the boogie to El Submarino. Viva Canned Heat!
There was so much rain in Santa Fe last weekend, I hate to think how many would-be BBQers were discouraged. So I'm going to try to work a little magic here and try to appease the rain gods with some great songs about barbecue.
The art of barbecue has been linked to American music since the early part of the last century.
In 1927 Louis Armstrong & The Hot Five recorded a tune called "Struttin' with some BBQ." But as the Onion A/V Club pointed out a couple of years ago, Satch's song probably wasn't about pork ribs. Cab Calloway's Jive Dictionary defines "barbecue" as "the girl friend, a beauty."
Also in 1927, one of the first musicians to sing about smoked meat was an Atlanta bluesman named Robert Lincoln, a chef in a high-class BBQ joint who recorded under the name Barbecue Bob. His very first record, recorded in 1927 was called "Barbecue Blues."
But I prefer another Barbecue Bob song recorded in the same session, "It Won't Be Long Now," credited to Barbeque Bob and Laughing Charley (Charley Hicks, Bob's older brother.)
Jas Obrecht, editor for Guitar Player magazine for 20 years and the founding editor of Pure Guitar magazine, writes that the song "began with a spoken dialog about Bob’s job as a barbecue chef; this was pure minstrel shuck-and-jive. This was also the first record to feature Charley’s signature laughter. It was an old shtick dating back at least to George W. Johnson’s 'Laughing Song' cylinders of the 1890s, but it was a good way to get Charlie’s name out there. Near the end of the song, the brothers sang a verse in unison."
"Shuck and jive" or not, I've always loved this dialogue, how Bob tries to explain his cooking technique ("I'm makin; it good and juicy. That's the way people like it these days, you know with gravy runnin' out") before the conversation turns to their women who have left them. ("Same dog that bit you must have snapped at me ...")
And thus, barbecue forever became intertwined with the blues, with the smoke blowing over into the fields of jazz, country, rockabilly and rock 'n' roll.
So here's a Spotify playlist of BBQ songs, beginning and ending with Barbecue Bob -- and a lot in between: Satch, ZZ Top, Mojo Nixon, Lucille Bogan, Pere Ubu and more.
So hear these songs, gods of rain, and let there be some sunshine, at least for the coming weekend.
And to you, the reader: If you get the chance to grill outside Saturday or Sunday, be sure to play this then.
Sunday, May 17, 2015 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
Here's the playlist below
OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Daddy Rockin' Strong by The Dirtbombs
Heavy Honey by Left Lane Cruiser
Save the Planet by The Sonics
Amazons and Coyotes by Simon Stokes
She's the Bad One by The Rezillos
Funeral by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
The Crab-Grass Baby by Frank Zappa
You Don't Love Me Yet by Roky Erikson
The Strip Polka by The Andrews Sisters
Shake Me by Motobunny
Mo' Hair by The Hickoids
Old Folks Boogie by Jack Oblivian
Watching My Baby by The Reigning Sound
Die in the Summertime by Manic Street Preachers
Crackpot Baby by L7
Rock 'n' Roll Murder by Leaving Trains
B.B. King Tribute: All songs by B.B. King
Please Love Me
Paying the Cost to Be the Boss
Saturday Night Fish Fry
Old Time Religion
Early Every Morning
How Blue Can You Get?
Three O'Clock Blues with Bobby "Blue" Bland
When Love Comes to Town
Who Stole the Kishka by The Polkaholics
My Shadow by Jay Reatard
You're the Only One, Delores by Cub Koda
Little Rug Bug by NRBQ
To Bring You My Love by PJ Harvey
Port of Amsterdam by David Bowie
Precious Lord by B.B. King
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis