Sunday, May 15, 2016

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, May 15, 2016 
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

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Rock a Go Go by Alien Space Kitchen
My Family by Jay Reatard
Want Some by Sex Hogs II
Pedigree Scum by Demented Are Go
Mama Look at Sis by The Oblivians
Baby Let's Play House by Arthur Gunter
Erotica Laguna Lagurna by The Bonnevilles
Can't Find Pleasure by Thee Mighty Caesars
The Land of Milk and Pony/ Move Your Arse by A Pony Named Olga
Facebook Troll / No Xmas for John Quay by The Fall 

Treat Her Right by The Bluebonnets
Around and Around by The Flamin' Groovies
Rat's Nest by The Gories
Pockets by Sulphur City
Yes I'm Down by Coachwhips
Burn to Breath by Night Beats
Lexicon Devil by The Germs
Hang On by The Gears

Duct Tape Love by HeWhoCannotBeNamed
The Got the Rock in My Underpants by Lightning Beat Man
She's My Witch by The Monsters
Rambling Man by San Antonio Kid
Dirty Traveler by Lonesome Shack
You Can't Judge a Book By the Cover by The Sonics
Red Riding Hood by Bunker Hill with Link Wray
Got Blood in My Rhythm by The Blues Against Youth
It Came From Beyond by The Barbarellatones

When Doves Cry by Patti Smith
Gett Off by Prince
I Wanna Go Back to Detroit City by Andre Williams
Sean Gibley by King Khan & The Shrines
Enigma by Bettye Stuy
Innocent When You Dream by Tom Waits
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, May 13, 2016

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Friday, May 13, 2016
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 :

OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens
I Can't Help It If I'm Still in Love with You by Hank Williams
Guacamole by Augie Meyers with Freddy Fender
East Bound and Down by Jerry Reed
Building Our Own Prison by The Waco Brothers
Everything Must Go by Dave Insley
Want One by Al Scorch
Two Roads by Butch Hancock & Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Call to Arms by Sturgill Simpson

Too Many Rivers by Webb Wilder
Big Train From Memphis by Mary & Mars
Have You Heard the Gossip by Charlie Brown, Jr.
Note to Self by Jim Stringer
Runner by The Yawpers
A Picture from Life's Other Side by Johnny Dowd
Double A Daddy by Wayne Hancock
Catch Me a Possum by The Watzloves
Fishin' Blues by Taj Mahal

Never Come Home by Robbie Fulks
I Hit the Road and the Road Hit Back by Dallas Wayne
I Push Right Over by Rosie Flores
Where I Fell by Hiss Golden Messenger
Baby Rocked Her Dolly by Robbie Fulks
Loser's Gumbo by Michael Hearne & Shake Russell
Roses by Alice Wallace 

How the West was Won by Anthony Leon & The Chain
You Don't Get Me High by Beth Lee & The Breakups
The Bad Wind by Tony Joe White
Downey Girl by Dave Alvin & The Guilty Women
Painting Box by Incredible String Band
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: Let Us Now Praise Robbie Fulks (and Sturgill Too)

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
May 13, 2016

Once again Robbie Fulks has graced this troubled land with a seemingly subdued, but actually powerful acoustic album.

Like 2013’s Gone Away Backward, Fulks’ new Upland Stories took me a few plays and more than a couple of weeks before the full impact whacked me over the head. Both albums sound nice and pretty from the get-go — Fulks’ voice has never sounded sweeter and his guitar-picking keeps getting better. But it’s the lyrics that, at least in my case, had to sit with me awhile before they sneaked up on me.

Several of the songs here were inspired by James Agee, who documented the lives of Depression-era Southern sharecroppers in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941). The opening song, “Alabama at Night,” for instance, is about Agee’s trip to the South in 1936. (“The old men at the roadhouse weren’t too polite to stare. ...The camera ’round my neck drew suspicious eyes to me/We were not there to talk, we were only there to see.”)

More pointed is the stark “America Is a Hard Religion,” on which Fulks is accompanied only by banjo and, in the refrain, a fiddle. “Sent to a savage land, mother knows not why/Plant a seed in rocky soil and perhaps to die,” he sings.

In a recent interview with The Bluegrass Situation, Fulks cautioned against drawing exact comparisons between modern poverty and the lives of 1930s sharecroppers. But still, he explains, the song “articulates the harsh life and mind-set of a resourceless person whose body hurts from work, who sacrifices children to war, who can’t hope to change his or her prospects, who takes pleasure in a fantasy of being happier after death, and whose stoic complaints are a sort of art form.”

As he sings in the song, “America is a hard religion. Not just anyone can enter/America is a hard religion. Some never do surrender.”

Not everything on Upland Stories is so heavy. There is sweet, if understated, humor in “Aunt Peg’s New Old Man,” a celebration of an elderly relative finding a new beau. “Katy Kay” is a devilish hillbilly love song that probably would have fit in on earlier, funnier Fulks albums. Here he confesses, “When I see a pretty girl weeping, I run to her and fix it. When I see a pretty girl smiling, I run for the nearest exit.” The song “Sarah Jane” is another love song, this one featuring a melody and fingerpicking evocation of Mississippi John Hurt.

But let’s get back to the heaviness. One of the saddest songs here is Fulks’ cover of Merle Kilgore’s nostalgic “Baby Rocked Her Dolly,” the story of an elderly man in an “old folks” home who spends his time reliving sweet memories of his children, who he rarely hears from these days, as youngsters.

There is nothing sweet or nostalgic about “Never Come Home,” inspired by an Anton Chekhov story, which tells of a dying man who returns to his old family home and immediately regrets it.

“I had scarcely laid my bag down when my misjudgment hit me square/I was welcomed like a guilty prisoner, old grievances fouled the air.” He feels nothing but contempt for a bunch of religious relatives who come to visit, and he silently seethes as he hears family members getting drunk and bad-mouthing him. It’s clear he’s going to die in helpless bitterness. “This land is run down and ragged. I should have never come home.”

Hard religion and hard truths. Upland Stories is bursting with both. It’s heartening how Robbie Fulks continues to grow as an artist.

Also recommended


* A Sailor’s Guide to Earth by Sturgill Simpson. After his breakthrough album, Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, Simpson had to have been under incredible pressure to produce another equally amazing CD. I’m not quite sure whether he’s done that. Metamodern Sounds took traditional honky-tonk/outlaw country and put it through a psychedelic filter. And it worked, thanks mostly to Simpson’s sincere delivery.

Wisely, he didn’t attempt to create "Metamodern Sounds Volume II". While there are scattered psychedelic touches on A Sailor’s Guide, this is a whole new animal. It’s a concept album, a collection of songs dealing with being a new father — that would be Simpson — advising his newborn son on how to navigate the metaphorical stormy seas of this planet.

Sturgill saved the worst for the first.

The first couple of songs on the album prevent me from giving A Sailor’s Guide an unqualified squeal of approval. The first half of “Welcome to Earth (Pollywog)” goes for baroque, sweetened with strings that come off pretentious in a Moody Blues kind of way.

The good news is that on the second half, Simpson’s new pals, the Dap-Kings (yes, Sharon Jones’ band) turn the song into a soul workout. But the strings slither back on the next song, “Breaker’s Roar,” and that initially made me wonder if the whole project was going to be a Kentucky-fried Days of Future Past.

Fortunately not. On the next track, “Keep It Between the Lines,” not only do the Dap-Kings’ horns sound funky, the steel guitar solo is downright cosmic. This song might be one of the finest fusions of country and soul since Al Green sang Kris Kristofferson’s “For the Good Times.”

And there are plenty of tasty tracks here. “Oh Sarah” is a fervent love song that’s perfect for Simpson’s voice; there’s a cover of Nirvana’s “In Bloom” that’s closer to Muscle Shoals than Seattle; and a rocking five-minute “Ball of Confusion”-type protest song, called “Call to Arms,” decrying endless war and idiocy. (“Nobody is lookin’ up to care about a drone/All too busy lookin’ down at our phone.”)

Hopefully Sturgill will continue his experimentation, keeping his feet on the ground and his head in what Patti Smith called the “sea of possibilities.”

Enjoy some videos! First a couple of live versions of Upland Stories songs from Fulks





And here are a couple of new Sturgil videos



(10-15-16 I just noticed that the original Sturgill video I posted here got zapped, probably by Russian hackers. So I'll try this one.)

Thursday, May 12, 2016

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Celebrating Hank Snow

Monday, May 9 would have been the 102nd birthday of the greatest country singer to ever come down from the Great White North.

I''m talking of course about Nova Scotia-born clarence Eugene Snow, better known as Hank Snow, whose love for Jimmie Rodgers and early country music helped him escape a life of poverty and an abusive childhood home.

Snow by the mid 1930s established himself as a country radio star and recording artist in Canada, signing up with RCA Canada.

He started being noticed by American country fans. In 1945 he took the plunge and moved to Nashville and eventually joined the Grand Old Opry.

And it didn't take long before he became recognized as one of country music's great.

Snow died in 1999. But his music lives on, so let's enjoy some of Snow's classic tunes, starting with his first single, "The Prisoned Cowboy," released in Canada in 1936.



Here's a song that Elvis later recorded. (Early in Elvis' career he was managed by Snow and Col. Parker. The evil colonel would squeeze Snow out of that picture. Ain't show biz grand?)



Here's the hit:



This song, along with "I'm Movin' On," became Snow's signature songs.


Finally, here's the greatest song about squids in the history of country music. Snow didn't write "The Squid Jiggin' Ground" -- a Canadian named Arthur Scammell did back in the late '20s. But snow was no stranger to this world. He actually worked on fishing boats for several years in his youth.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

WACKY WEDNESDAY: More Karaoke Nightmares

Amanda, light of my life

Believe it or not, karaoke is still legal in many states and municipalities. What can you do?

It's been more than a year since my last Wacky Wednesday excursion into the karaoke netherworld. So brace yourself, Bridget, we're going back in.

Trouble ahead, lady in ... orange! This John Legend song never stood a chance against the power that is Amanda:




I understand this guy is banned from Boston Red Sox games. He should call this "Sour Caroline."

[Update, Sept. 2020: Looks like this one has been yanked from Youtube. Here's a substitute:]




Here's Bob & Bev covering A System of the Down. They've got a couple of hundred of these karaoke clips on their YouTube Channel. where their motto is "it's all about having fun, not perfection!!!" And by God, they do look like they're having fun!



Finally, here's a bad "Bad to the Bone" performed by ... The Hamburglar?

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...