Sunday, February 12, 2017

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST





Sunday, Feb. 12,  2017
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Valentine by Concrete Blonde
Geraldine by The A-Bones
Lost All Day by Dinosaur Jr.
That's Life by James Chance & The Distortions
Excercise Man by Dean Ween Group
I Want What You Got by The Plimsouls
Nosebleed Boogie by King Salami & The Cumberland 3
A Request for Closeness by by Gregg Turner

You Did Wrong by Reigning Sound
Call the Police by The Oblivians
Modern Girl by Sleater-Kinney
Outer Space by The Sex Organs
New Kind of Kick by The Cramps
I Am Not Sexy by Hang on the Box
Everybody is In Love With You by Lynx Lynx
The Savage Beat by The Dictators
Cupid by Sam Cooke

S.O.B. by Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Land of The Freak by King Khan & The Shrines
Rock 'n' Soul Music by Country Joe & The Fish
Big Booty Woman by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Like a River by St. Paul & The Broken Bones
Everybody Free by Alex Maiorano and The Black Tales
Wonderful Girl by Jack Mack & The Heart Attack

Flowers in My Hair Demons in My Head by The Mystery Lights
Big Black Mariah by John Hammond
Infected by Simon Stokes & The Heathen Angels
Star Dream Girl by David Lynch
Should Have Been Home WIth You by James Leg
Tomorrow Night by Lonnie Johnson
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, February 10, 2017

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST



Friday, Feb. 10, 2017
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
3 Pecker Goat by Jesse Dayton
The Most Wanted Woman in Town by Dale Watson
Just Like Geronimo by Dashboard Saviors
Treat Her Right by The Riptones
I Can't Be Myself Without You by Merle Haggard
Someone to Give My Love To by Johnny Paycheck
Boney Fingers by Hoyt Axton
In the Pines by Dolly Parton
But You Like Country Music by Brennen Leigh &Sunny Sweeney

Baby, It's Alright by Beth Lee & The Breakups
Some of Shelly's Blues by Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
You Don't Know Me by Susana Van Tassle
We Live in Two Different Worlds by Red Allen & The Kentuckians
Free to Go by Dwight Yoakam
Jackpot by Nikki Lane
Alone and Forsaken by Social Distortion
I Can't Tell the Boys From the Girls by Lester Flatt

We Deserve a Happy Ending by The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
Red Wine by Scott H. Biram
Pickles by The Gourds
Is This My Happy Home by Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks
Nobody Wins by Kris Kristofferson
Don't Let Her Know by Buck Owens
Kentucky / Bowling Green by The Everly Brothers

Roswell Town by Jack Clift & His Illuminati Assassination Orchestra
All Around You by Sturgill Simpson
Permanently Lonely by Willie Nelson
Storms Never Last by John Prine & Lee Ann Womack
A Couple More Years by Waylon Jennings
The Last Word in Lonesome is Me by Roger Miller
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: Dinosaur Jr, James Chance, Dean Ween

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Feb. 10, 2017

Even though it’s been four years or so since their previous album, despite any rumor to the contrary, Dinosaur Jr.  has not gone extinct.

In fact, more than 30 years after they first roared, they’re back with another doozy of an album, Give a Glimpse of What Yer Not, released late last year. Though they’re getting old enough to be called “Dinosaur Sr.”,  singer /guitarist/ songwriter J. Mascis, bassist Lou Barlow (who contributes two tunes here), and drummer Murph all are in prime form, sounding revitalized as they tear through 11 new songs.

Basically, if you’ve liked this band during any point in their career — the original Mascis/Barlow era (mid to late ’80s), the post-Barlow grunge era (early to mid-’90s), or the post-reunion era (2007 to the present) — you’re bound to like Glimpse too. Mascis’ screaming guitar — those mud-soaked solos that seem to hurl effortlessly into some cosmic storm — and shaky vocals are front and center on most of the songs.

They kick off the album with a wild ride called “Goin Down,” which reminds me of another great high-energy Dinosaur Jr. opener, “The Wagon” from 1991’s Green Mind. “Goin Down” immediately draws you into the record. But the next song, “Tiny,” is even better. Though the music is strong and confident, the lyrics tell a different story: “Coming out I’m deep in doubt I’ll meet you/Calling out it’s always with a stare/I can’t give you less than what I mean to/I’ll pretend that I don’t see you.”

The song “Knocked Around” is a cool sucker punch. It starts off slow and mellow with Mascis singing in a gentle falsetto. But about two and a half minutes into it, Dinosaur erupts and pounds the holy hell out of the song, ending it with a classic Mascis guitar solo.

Barlow’s songs are powerful as well. “Love Is,” a minor-key rocker, would fit in well with Barlow’s ’90s band, Sebadoh. (Actually, Sebadoh still is around, but I digress.) And “Left/Right,” which closes the album, is a terse little snarler. Barlow’s voice sounds hauntingly similar to The Byrds’ Roger McGuinn’s in this song about love redeemed.

For those of us who have loved this band, Give a Glimpse of What Yer Not is like a visit from an old friend — an old friend who’ll blow out your eardrums and shake the plaster off your walls. Long may Dinosaur Jr. roam the Earth!

Also recommended

* The Flesh Is Weak by James Chance & The Contortions. Speaking of bands you thought might have gone extinct, no-wave champ and certified sax maniac James Chance also returned with an impressive album late last year.

Chance, playing in bands including James White and the Blacks, committed random acts of musical weirdness during the late ’70s and early ’80s, combining punk, funk, and avant-garde jazz. Along with bands like Lydia Lunch’s Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, Arto Lindsay’s DNA, and Mars,

The Contortions contributed several songs to the influential No New York compilation of the wild experimental no-wave scene. Flesh shows Chance still has his unique discordant vision and his chops on both sax and vocals.

The first song, “Melt Yourself Down” (a song he’s been doing live for years), starts out with a jarring electric-organ blast before the band comes in with their lively James Brown-meets-Captain Beefheart funk groove. Chance screams and squeals. “We’re gonna take that night train to Auschwitz!” he sings at one point. That’s followed by the title song, which is just as funky in its own peculiar way.

Though most of the songs here are original, Chance gives us three worthy cover songs. One is an intense version of an intense tune called “I (Who Have Nothing),” which has been a hit for Ben E. King, Shirley (“Goldfinger”!) Bassey, and Tom Jones. There’s also “Home Is Where the Hatred Is,” a harrowing drug tale written by Gil Scott-Heron.

But the best cover here is Chance’s reimagining of Frank Sinatra’s “That’s Life.” Fans of this song might not even recognize it on first listen with its probing bass line and wah-wah guitar straight out of Shaft and its Zappa-like time-signature change in the bridge, with Chance’s horn screaming for mercy. And yet in the last minute the song springs back into a more recognizable swing.

Not a note on this record sounds dated. I hope Chance continues to release his amazing sounds.

* The Deaner Album by Dean Ween Group. Ween was one of the strangest bands to ever get a video on MTV in the ’90s. They were a wickedly clever experimental duo who somehow captured the imagination of the (then) music channel with a quirky Bizarro World ditty called “Push th’ Little Daisies” that amazed and baffled the masses.

Ween hasn’t done a studio album in 10 years or so, but singer Dean Ween (Mickey Melchiondo Jr.) is back with a new band.

So how does this outside-the-box visionary start off his new record? With a bona fide Southern rock instrumental titled “Dickie Betts” and sounding a lot like the former Allman Brothers guitarist. Not what you’d expect, but in a strange way, it works. There’s also an instrumental, “Garry,” inspired by Parliament-Funkadelic guitarist Garry Shider.

But it’s the vocal tracks that carry this album. “Exercise Man” is a brutal and actually obscene tirade against some third-rate Jack. “Nightcrawler” is a nasty little nugget that could almost pass for classic rock if not for the distorted vocals and sci-fi guitar effects.

But my favorite at the moment is “Gum,” with heavy bass and what sounds like a toy piano tinkling away as the singer shouts lyrics about enjoying gum, ice cream, and McDonald’s. This could almost be an ode to … the band called Ween.

OK, let's see some videos!

First, let's roller derby with Dinosaur Jr.!



Here's James Chance & The Distortions playing "That's Life" live at Beerland in Austin last November.



We'll give Mr. Ween the last word ...




Thursday, February 09, 2017

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday Lonnie Johnson

Alfonzo "Lonnie" Johnson, one of the most respected singers, guitarists and stylists to ever come from the world of the blues, was born Feb. 8, 1899 in New Orleans.

He started playing guitar and violin in his family's band, doing gigs at weddings and banquets. In 1917 he joined a traveling revue that toured England. When he returned home two years late he learned that his entire family, except his brother James Johnson, had died in a flu epidemic. He and his brother moved to St. Louis, where the two got music gigs on riverboats.

In 1925, Lonnie won a blues contest sponsored by Okeh Records. Part of his prize included a recording contract.

That turned into a good deal for everyone.

Johnson died in 1970. But he left us some glorious music.

Here is one of Johnson's early records, "Ball and Chain Blues," recorded in 1926.



"Racketeer Blues" from 1932 might be called "Gangsta Blues":  "When the gang is out to get you, it don't do no good to run," Lonnie sings. "It's true you can dodge the law, but you can't dodge them slugs out the machine gun"



Johnson recorded jazz as well as blues. He played in bands fronted by Duke Ellington and Louis Armstromng. Here is a 1929 record by Louis Armstrong & The Hot Five, featuring Johnson on guitar.



This is one of my favorites, a hit from 1948. Elvis Presley later recorded "Tomorrow Night" at Sun Studios.



Here's a 1963 performance from The American Folk Blues Festival, a package show featuring some of the greatest blues stars of the ea -- and previous eras. Sonny Boy Williamson introduces Lonnie, who is backed by Otis Spann on on piano, Willie Dixon on bass and Bill Stepney on drums








Wednesday, February 08, 2017

WACKY WEDNESDAY: A Musical Birthday Card to Classy Freddie Blassie



If he were still alive, Classy Freddie Blassie would be celebrating his 99th birthday today.

Happy Birthday, King of Men!

Blassie was born Frederick Blassman in St. Louis, the only child of his German immigrant parents. He started his wrestling career working in carnivals.

In the 1950s became known as one of the toughest heels in the wrestling racket. And one of the greatest showmen in a business that thrives on showmanship.

Though he was well beyond his wrestling years in the mid '70s -- by this time, he was a "manager" whose clients included Hulk Hogan and future Minnesota Gov. Jesse "The Body" Ventura -- his oversize personality would make him a pop-culture star.

He and Andy Kaufman starred in My Breakfast with Blassie, a hilarious spoof on a popular "art" movie of the era, My Dinner with Andre.

But even before then, Blassie made records.

Dr. Demento made Blassie's single "Pencil Neck Geek" a novelty classic. Recorded in the mid '70s, Billy Zoom of X played guitar. Blassie released an EP Called King of Men in 1978. It featured "Pencil Neck Geek" and three other songs.

And in 1983, Rhino Records released a full Blassie album called I Bite The Songs.

Blassie died in 2003. But the joy and music he created live on.

Here's that song that made us all fall in love.



And here's another tune from both King of Men and I Bite the Songs.



Blassie also covered this song written by Jerry Reed and covered by Elvis, "U.S. Male"



And if you need more, here's the whole durn I Bite the Songs album (caution ... this apparently came straight off vinyl and it skips in some places.)

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Come for the Shame, Stay for the Scandal

  Earlier this week I saw Mississippi bluesman Cedrick Burnside play at the Tumbleroot here in Santa Fe. As I suspected, Burnsi...