Thursday, June 23, 2016

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: Garage Rock for Today’s Active Seniors

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
June 24, 2016


I don’t know. Am I getting too old for this stuff? I mean, what does it say when I discover a new — well, relatively new — album from an obscure garage band I like via the AARP?

Garage rock for today’s active seniors?

That’s right, the latest magazine of the AARP (formerly known as the American Association of Retired Persons) has a feature on The Sloths, a Los Angeles band that started out in the mid-1960s.

No, I don’t subscribe. But maybe I ought to. After all, the AARP magazine last year published the first actual Bob Dylan interview in years and sent copies of his album Shadows in the Night to 50,000 random AARP the Magazine subscribers.

But while it’s easy to see that Dylan’s collection of Frank Sinatra standards (and by the way, he recently released a similar album called Fallen Angels) would appeal to the oldsters — which I define as people maybe three or four years older than me — The Sloths, as shown by their wild new record Back from the Grave, are still loud, raw, and sometimes even snotty. They’re a rocking band, not a rocking-chair band. The Sloths are definitely not for the "early-bird special" crowd.

Some ancient history of The Sloths: The group started in 1965 out as a band of high schoolers. They started getting gigs during that riotous era at Sunset Strip clubs like Pandora’s Box, The Whiskey a Go-Go, The Sea Witch, the Hollywood Palladium, sharing stages with groups like The Animals, The Doors, and The Seeds.

The Sloths recorded only once. It was a 45 whose A-side featured a primitive, angst-ridden, hormonal, Bo Diddley-fired tune called "Makin' Love."

Never heard of it? Don’t feel bad. It never was a hit. According to the present-day Sloths, radio stations wouldn’t play it because the idea of high-school kids expressing their burning desire to “make love” was too risqué to risk. I’m not sure why the flip side, a more innocent-sounding “You Mean Everything to Me” never went anywhere. I don’t think I’ve ever even heard it.

Soon after “Makin’ Love” flopped, The Sloths broke up. Some members formed a new band called The May Wines that included a singer named Tom McLoughlin. They didn’t last long either. But though “Makin’ Love” didn’t sell much when it first came out, it became something of a holy grail for fanatical garage-rock record collectors. The song was included on one of the influential Back from the Grave compilations of the 1990s. (And yes, that was where they got the title for their new album.)

Getting included on the compilation stirred up new attention to the band. At one point the original single of “Makin’ Love” in its original picture sleeve reportedly was selling on eBay for $6,550.

Apparently that was one of Rummans’ inspirations for re-forming The Sloths. Rummans, the only original Sloth in its 21st-century version, recruited McLoughlin — who, since his May Wines days, has worked as a film director and writer (and early on, he actually studied the art of mime) — and other past musical pals.
Father Tom McLoughlin preaching to his flock at
the 2013 Ponderosa Stomp in New Orleans 

I got to see the new Sloths three years ago. They played at the Ponderosa Stomp in New Orleans on a bill with several other garage-rock greats including The Sonics and The Standells. Though not as crazily intense as The Sonics (who are in the same basic age range), The Sloths played a credible and fun-filled set at Ponderosa. McLoughlin’s stage presence was remarkable.

At one point he was wearing a priest’s collar, then later a Mexican flag as a cape. During the instrumental break of the song “Never Enough Girls,” (which kicks off the new album) he tried to blow up a cheap plastic sex doll, but ran out of time (or breath) before he had to start singing the next verse.

As for Back from The Grave, it’s a fine collection of good basic rock ‘n’ roll that’s almost as good as The Sloths’ live show. Songs like “Never Enough Girls,” “Lust,” “A Cutie Named Judy” and a new recording of “Makin’ Love” show how smooth a transition from horny high school kids to dirty old men can be.

But the most interesting songs here are the ones in which The Sloths’ maturity is a major strength. There’s “One Way Out,” in which every verse is a brutal little story about a drug-addled teenaged girl, a divorcing couple, a soldier who snaps and commits an atrocity, and a suicidal kid who ends up preaching on the streets for some cult. McLoughlin tells the stories in a voice that’s sympathetic but not about to pull any punches.

And even better is “Before I Die,” in which McLoughlin turns on its head that famous youthful declaration by The Who. “I wanna be old before I die,” he sings to a chugging Yardbirds-like beat. Here the singer isn’t selfishly yearning to cram more sex, drugs, and money into his life, or to achieve some immortality. Instead he’s wanting more time to apologize to people he’s hurt, pay off his debts, and “say things I should have said long ago.”

Here’s hoping for a long second life for The Sloths.

Also recommended:

* Some of This is True by Alien Space Kitchen. Here is a tough-rocking but ultimately catchy-sounding Albuquerque trio who describe their sound as “garage-punk space-pop.” (They previously described their sound as "hot interstellar space punk for consenting adults.")

This, their second album (scheduled for release in July) is a strong follow-up to their 2012 debut, Just ASK.

In fact, the music on the new one is probably a little stronger. On Just ASK, the band basically was a duo, featuring singer-guitarist Dru Vaughter, and drummer (and singer) Noelle Graney. The new album is the first with bassist Mess Messal.

Like their first one, Some of This is True is full of songs full of inspired nonsense about spaceships and even space people.

The opening cut is called “Alien Agenda,” which starts off with a slow guitar riff that sounds like some serious Brit-folk-rock is about to be committed. Instead, the song explodes with one of the stronger rockers on the album. There are also the conspiracy-soaked “How to Fake a Lunar Landing” and “Welcome to Star 65,” which goes back and forth between funky/jazzy verses sung by Graney and a crazy punked-out response sung by Vaughter.

At the moment, my favorite songs here are the delightfully paranoid “The Decline and Fall of Western Civilization” and the raging song that follows it, “Better Daze.”

All in all, this would be a cool soundtrack for an alien abduction.

Alien Space Kitchen plays Friday, June 24, at Burt's Tiki Lounge in Albuquerque, with a lineup that includes Weedrat and The Dying Beds; music starts at 9 p.m.

Video time!

Here's a song from the Sloths set I saw at the  Ponderosa Stomp



This is the official video for "One Way Out."



And this is the original "Makin' Love."



And here are a couple from Alien Space Kitchen.

"Losing My Mind is on the new album.



This one originally was by an African psychedelic group, Witdh



And for all you AARP rockers, here's a message from Stan Ridgway ...





THROWBACK THURSDAY: She's Gone with the Gypsy Davey

A rich girl meets up with a band of Gypsies -- or sometimes just one lone Gypsy -- in the woods. Or sometimes he / they come to her house and abduct her -- or cast a magical spell on her or just charm the pants -- or at least her boots of Spanish leather -- off her. She decides to forsake her wealthy husband, her comfortable house, her goose-feather bed and -- yes -- her baby to sleep out in the woods in the arms of her new lover.

It's a song that's been known by several names -- "Johnnie Faa," "Raggle Taggle Gypsy," "Gypsy Davey," "Blackjack David" and others -- sung for centuries, first published under the name of "The Gypsy Laddie" 276 years ago and undoubtedly sung by the folks years before that.
Nick Tosches, in his book Country: The Twisted Roots of Rock 'N' Roll, argues the ballad has roots going back to the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice.

Writing in the Journal of American Folklore in 1980, the late Christine A. Cartwright said the song was first collected in Scotland in 1740. "The ballad's narrative tension,' Cartwright wrote, "seems to spring from a two-edged threat presented by the Gypsies: their invasion of and imposition  upon Scottish culture, with all their disturbing, foreign values and ways, as well as their potentially threatening attractiveness."

More than 100 years before "The Gypsy Laddie" appeared in print, apparently some Scottish politicians wanted to make Scotland great again. No, they didn't build a wall and make the Gypsies pay for it. But in 1609, the Scottish parliament passed a law ordering the Gypsies out of their country.  And there are records of Gypsies being sentenced to hang. No wonder someone wrote a song about these dark-skinned invaders running off with white women.

Robert Burns said the song was about the cuckolded Earl of Cassilis whose wife was said to have run away with a man named John Faa. Cartwright however argues there is no evidence this actually ever happened.

An early version of the song was called "Raggle Taggle Gypsy" Here's a version by a raggle taggle band called Planxty (done as a medley with a beautiful Irish air "Tabhair Dom Do Laimh."



Here's another clip from the '70s, The Incredible String Band singng "Black Jack Davy."



And of course the mighty British folk-rock band Steeleye Span did an excellent rocking version. Introducing the song, Maddy Prior says, "I used to think that ths next song was about the triumph of true love. But I've recently come to the conclusion that it's really about a bit of rough." (Click the link. Don't be afraid!) In an interview last year with Chris Braiotta of WBUR, Prior makes the same joke, and elaborates. And now I see [the protagonist] as a totally unsuitable young man for my daughter."



In early versions of the song, there is a confrontation between the wronged husband and the Gypsy, sometimes ending with a lynching and the runaway wife forced to return to her life of luxury. Most "Black Jack Daveys" I've heard though end up with the woman happily forsaking her old life.

Indeed, this ending has virtually disappeared in versions of the song that popped up in America. And that's not all that changed. Gone is any magic spells the Gypsies used to seduce the lady. In fact, in most American versions, there is no abduction at all. The Gypsy and the lady meet by chance in the woods and spontaneously decide to  run away together.

Cartwright says, "The lady's choice, in every aspect but the adulterous, is in fact the choice that settled America. Where a land must be settled, the love of adventure and the willingness to roam become positive cultural values for women as well as for men, and the lady's decision to leave the established society for the wilderness cold no longer be seen as a choice that only a bewitched woman would make."

Below are some American takes on this classic ballad. First, The Carter Family.



Rockabilly Warren Smith, in Tosches' book, claims to have written "Black Jack David." He may well have written the "I come from a farm" verse.



Taj Mahal did a bluesy version



And The White Stripes made it rock



For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook



Wednesday, June 22, 2016

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Cool and Crazy Music from Around the Globe


Once again, let's go around the world in a daze with some wild and wacky tunes from foreign lands.

Let's begin with  Van Anh, a Vietnamese dan bau artist, playing "Ghost Riders in the Sky." (A dan bau player named Van Anh Vo is scheduled to play this year's Globalquerue on Sept. 24. However, Neal Copperman, one of the head honchos of this wonderful event says he thinks it's a different Van Anh.)



It's a wonderful night for a Romanian bear dance



A few years ago, my daughter, sent me this video of Kali Bahlu singing "Cosmic Telephone Call." It must be a Buddhist version of the old gospel classic "Jesus on the Mainline."



The late Jovica Petković was a revered accordion player from Sarajevo. I'm not sure why he and most of his audience are in their underwear. Must be some quaint Baltic custom.

 


Sunday, June 19, 2016

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, June 19, 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
A Cutie Named Judy by The Sloths
Baby Doll by The Del Moroccos
You'll Never Take Us Alive by The Dwarves
Minute Man by New Mystery Girl
It's You Time by The Weeds
Kremlin Dogs by Gregg Turner
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolfe by New Bomb Turks
All Leave Cancelled by The Fall

Better Daze by Alien Space Kitchen
Bangkok by Jello Biafra & The New Orleans Rauch and Soul All-Stars
Eviler by The Grannies
Two-Lane Blacktop by Rob Zombie
Hanged Man by Churchwood
Reelin' and Rockin' by The Frogs
Cosmic Two-Step by The Barbaraellatones 
The Lover's Curse by The A-Bones

Beer Hippie by The Melvins
Witch in the Club by Quintron & Miss Pussycat
The Pusher by Left-Lane Cruiser
Sugar Farm by Lonesome Shack
Boundless by The Blues Against Youth
She Lives in the Jungle by O Lendario Chucrobillyman 
Daddy Logg's Drive in Candy Hoppin' Car Babes by Bob Log III

'Tis a Pity She Was a Whore by David Bowie
I Wanna Go Back to Detroit City by Andre Williams
Koroborri by Cankissou 
Psychedelic Afro Shop by Orlando Julias
Poison by Susan James
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, June 17, 2016

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Friday, June 17, 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
Hi-Billy Music by Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
Cocaine Blues by Johnny Cash
Do What I Say by The Waco Brothers
Dirt Queen by Trailer Radio
Might as Well Get Stoned by Chris Stapleton
My Next Ex-Girlfriend by Old Man Kelly
Creek Between Heaven and Hell by Jesse Dayton
Three Days by Dallas Wayne
Begging to You by Marty Robbins
The End of the World by Cyndi Lauper

I Don't Know by Dex Romweber
Gunter Hotel Blues by Paul Burch
Memphis Yodel by Jimmie Rodgers
If You Could Touch Her at All by Whitey Morgan
There Must Be Another Way to Live by Amber Digby
Gone, Gone, Gone by Carl Perkins
Wrong John by Jim Stringer
Beans and Make Believe by Mose McCormack
Ida Red by Merle Haggard

True Lovin' Woman by Steve Train & His Bad Habits
Drinkin' Wine and Staring at the Phone by Dave Insley
He Ain't Right by Legendary Shack Shakers
Broken Down Gambler by The WIlders
Tall Tall Trees by Roger Miller
When Someone Wants to Leave by Dolly Parton
Yodel Sweet Molly by Ira Louvin
You Don't Get Me High by Beth Lee & The Breakups
Maria Maria by The Blasters
Coffee Baby by Alex Maryol
Lovin' Ducky Daddy by Carolina Cotton

24 Frames by Jason Isbelle
The Last Pharoah by The Dave Rawlings Machine
The Heat by Jaime Michaels
It Had to Be You by Bob Dylan
My Rosemarie by Stan Ridgway
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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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...