Friday, May 05, 2017

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST



Friday, May 5, 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
F the CC by Steve Earle
Wooly Bully by Ry Cooder
Still Not Dead by Willie Nelson
Don't Get Above Your Risin' by Ricky Skaggs with Elvis Costello
Ragtime Sinner by The Goddamn Gallows
Mad Cow Boogie by L.A. Rivercatz
The Lost Cause by Legendary Shack Shakers

Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle by Iron Horse
In Bloom by Sturgill Simpson
You're Lookin' at Country by Loretta Lynn
Lead Me On by Conway Twitty & Loretta Lynn
Sittin' and Thinkin' About You by Dale Wtson and Ray Benson
Town by The Dashboard Saviors
The Way it Goes by Gillian Welch
Building Our Own Prison by The Waco Brothers

When Sinatra Played Juarez by Tom Russell
Fiesta by The Pogues
One Time, One Night by Los Lobos
Soy Chicano by Flaco Jimenez
Guacamole by Augie Meyers & His Valley Vatos
Stay Lover Strong by Stephanie Hatfield
TJ by Hickoids
Volver Volver by Pinata Protest

Lady Killin' Papa by Deke Dickerson
That's What Daddy Wants by Wayne Hancock
Nothin' Feels Right But Doin' Wrong by Sarah Shook & The Disarmers
Hobo's Meditation by Audrey Auld
I Knew It All Along by Shinyribs
Given to Me by Southern Culture on the Skids
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Thursday, May 04, 2017

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Four Dead in Ohio


Mary Ann Vecchio, 14, kneels over the body of Jeffrey Miller, killed by the Ohio National Guard on May 4, 1970

Today, May 4, is the 47th anniversary of the Kent State Massacre. That's when Ohio National Guardsmen shot and killed four students -- Allison Krause, 19, Jeffrey Miller, 20, Sandra Scheuer, 20 and Bill Schroeder, 19 --  during a protest of President Richard Nixon's invasion of Cambodia.

Neil Young wrote a song, "Ohio" that raged against the killings. It, more than any news report I've read, sums up the tragedy.

"Tin soldiers and Nixon coming, 
We're finally on our own. 
This summer I hear the drumming 
Four dead in Ohio.

Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground

How can you run when you know?"

Young recorded it as part of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young on May 21, just a little over two weeks after the killings. It was released as a single in June -- basically an "instant" murder ballad, a protest song ripped from headlines that still were fresh.

As Ken Bigger wrote in the Murder Ballad Monday blog a few years ago, "Ohio":

delivers a sharply honed emotional point, with scant reference to the details of May 4. “Ohio” does not tell a complete story–as if it could. The theme it mines lies principally within the lines “we’re finally on our own” and “four dead in Ohio.” The song is both dirge and protest anthem, plaintive wail and drumming a beat for a counterculture response.

I'm assuming that everyone is familiar with the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young version of the song. (If not, CLICK HERE)

But there are other versions. The Isley Brothers combined it with Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun" for a smoldering emotional punch in the gut.



And Devo did a quirky take on "Ohio." But while it's jarring, it's not irreverent. Singer Mark Mothersbaugh and bassist Jerry Casale were students at Kent State when the shootings occurred. Casale actually witnessed the shootings and personally knew Allison Krause and Jeffrey Miller. Mothersbaugh talked about the shootings on Marc Maron's WTF podcast this week.



There is so much political bile and violence in n the air these days, I worry that another Kent State could happen. I pray it doesn't.

UPDATE: Jerry Casale of Devo will discuss Kent State tonight on CNN's Soundtracks.


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

Wednesday, May 03, 2017

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Music from the Found Footage Festival

The Found Footage Festival, the brainchild of Joe Pickett and Nick Prueher, collects old VHS tapes that, according to website "were found at garage sales and thrift stores and in warehouses and dumpsters across the country."

Pickett and Prueher collect these and sell DVD compilations -- Volume 8 is about to be released. They also do live tours in which they play the best of these VHS treasures.

We're talking about unintentionally hilarious footage of exercise lessons; dating and self-help advice; religious sermons; bad celebrity interviews; corporate training; magicians; home movies, terrible public-access shows ... and, of course, music.

If you ever laughed at the Dave's Video Collection segments on the old David Letterman show, you'll probably love the Found Footage Festival. Prueher worked for five years as a researcher for Letterman and last year, and after Letterman retired, some of his staffers bestowed all the old tapes from Dave's Video Collection upon Pickett and Prueher "to be the stewards of this archive of weird videos. Rest assured, we’ll give it a good home."

Pickett and Prueher also are notorious pranksters. They recently were in the news for posing as a "strongman duo" -- Chop & Steele-- and tricking a Wisconsin morning TV show into having them on to show their amazingly mundane feats of strength. Last month the company that owns the TV station actually sued the two for copyright infringement, fraud and conspiracy,

Some people have no sense of humor.

Hopefully you won't sue after watching these music videos from The Found Footage Festival website.

Let's start with singer/songwriter Nicki Rose. Mama, he's one of a kind. The songs called "Personality Crisis," but I don't think The New York Dolls done it this way,



This'll get your Irish up. As Frank says "In the lit of Irish laughter you can hear the angles sing ..."



This is from a tape called Attracting Today’s Woman. 



Harvey Sid Fisher has written songs about all 12 of the signs of the zodiac. This is a sampling. You can find more from Harvey Sid HERE



Finally, here's a special Mother's Day rap from Mr. T




What's your sign, Harvey Sid Fisher?


Monday, May 01, 2017

Start Your Week Off with the Classy New Big Enchilada Podcast

THE BIG ENCHILADA




This is the classiest podcast episode you'll ever hear.  I handpicked only the most elegant music from the most sophisticated musicians to use on this show. Then I washed my hands. You're probably not classy enough to appreciate these fine sounds. But try. With a little practice, you too can be elegant.


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Here's the playlist:

(Background Music: Tango by The D,J, Bonebrake Trio)
Highfalutin' by The Upper Crust
Mini-Skirt Blues by The Cramps with Iggy Pop
Get Your Pants Off by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Dirt Preacher by Destination Lonely
Time is Right by The Vagoos
I Wanna Get You Off by The Darts 

(Background Music: Gevurah by John Zorn & Bar Kokhba Sextet)
I'd Kill for Her by The Black Angels
Valley of the Wolves by The Ghost Wolves
Pizza by Double Date with Death
Oh No Ton Ton Macouts
Keep Your Kitten Inside by Dirty Fences
Asylum Seekers of Love by The Bonnevilles
Slander by Ty Wagner 

(Background Music: LSD Partie by Roland Vincent)
Billy by Boss Hog
Eye by Audio Kings of the Third Wolrd
Wine, Wine, Wine by Classic V
Tura Satana Tribute Song by The Dustaphonics
Don't Know Why You Go Away by Weird Omen

Play it here:

Sunday, April 30, 2017

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, April 30, 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
Things I Seen by Cool Ghouls
Too Many Girls by Mystery Lights
Tonight by The Sex Organs
Death of an Angel by Destination Lonely
Death's Head Tattoo by Mark Lannegan
Frightened by The Fall
Kill My Baby by Nick Curran & The Lowlifes
Hooky Wooky by Lou Reed

VOODOO SET
Must Be Voodoo by The Vagoos
It's Your Voodoo Working by Samantha Fish
Voodoo Woman by Bobby Goldsboro
Voodoo Queen Marie by The Du-Tells
Evil Hoodoo by The Seeds
Papa Legba by Pops Staples with The Talking Heads
Mojo Mama by Wilson Pickett
Voodoo Party by Tabby Thomas
(You like Voodoo songs too? CLICK HERE)

Stubsaugerbaby by Blind Butcher
Dance Commander by Electric Six
Cosmic Shiva by Nina Hagen
My Roommate by Village People

Sunday Routine by Boss Hog
Can't Wake Myself Up by Laino & Broken Seeds
Grab as Much as You Can by The Black Angels

Black Feather by Lynx Lynx
Whettin' My Knife by The Ghost Wolves
The Point is Overflowing by Left Lane Cruiser
Bad Attitude by Lisa Germano
Hell Yeah by Neil Diamond
Lumpy Gravy by The Persuasions
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE

Friday, April 28, 2017

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST



Friday, April 28, 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
Snowflake by Jim Reeves
Highway Patrol by Junior Brown
My Life's Been a Pleasure by Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson & Ray Price
Children of the Lord by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Snatch It and Grab It by Deke Dickerson
Tub Gut Stomp and Red-Eyed Soul by Shinyribs
Keep the Home Fires Burnin' by Sarah Shook & The Disarmers
The Way We Are by Jesse Dayton
Winterlude by Bob Dylan

Diesel Smoke Dangerous Curves by Red Simpson
Out of Control by Last Mile Ramblers
Shotgun Boogie by Sleepy LaBeef
Don Houston by Slackeye Slim
7 Devils by The Goddam Gallows
$30 Room by Dave Alvin
Silver Tongue by Modern Mal
Every Night About This Time by Rachel Brooke
Blind Man's Penis by Ramsey Kearney

Feed the Family by Possessed by Paul James
Queen of Skid Row by Luke Gibbons
The Fastest Growing Heartache in the West by Ringo Starr
It's Not Right by John Wagner
Big Mouth By Nikki Lane
Desperate and Depressed by Margo Price
Thirty Nine and Holding by Jerry Lee Lewis
Horny by Zeno Tornado & The Boney Google Brothers
OK Cupid by Phoebe Legere
As Soon As I Hang Up the Phone by Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty

Digital Radio by Lauria
I'm Tellin' You by John Prine & Holly Williams
Talking to the Dead by Stephanie Hatfield
Tall Buildings by John Hartford
You Coulda Walked Around the World by Butch Hancock
Same God by Calamity Cubes
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets


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Subscribe to The Big Enchilada Podcast! CLICK HERE
Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

TERRELL'S TUNE-UP: Six New Ones from Voodoo Rhythm and Off-Label

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
April 28, 2017




With all the recent news of right-wing nationalism coming out of Europe, it’s refreshing to know that good old-fashioned garage-punk and other subversive stuff is still going strong on the old continent. In fact, my two favorite European music labels — Voodoo Rhythm from Switzerland and Off Label Records from Germany — have been flooding the market with wild, rocking trashy sounds.

Here’s a look at six albums I’ve been enjoying lately — and no, there are few, if any, overtly political songs among this batch. Just songs of love, sex, fun … all those things the authoritarians hate.

*  Heat Wave by The Vagoos. This fuzz-loving Bavarian quartet is a prolific bunch. This is their
third Off Label release since 2014 and, like their self-titled debut and their six-song EP follow-up, Love You, it’s full of raging, no-frills, hook-heavy guitar rock.

My favorites here include the opener, “Fidget,” which sets a properly urgent pace; “Must Be Voodoo,” partly because I tend to like songs with “voodoo” in the title; “Mint Island,” which features a Yardbirds-style rave-up guitar solo; and “Golden Key,” maybe the fastest and most furious number in an album full of frantic songs. Just listening to it makes me sweat.

But though the breakneck rockers are their specialty, The Vagoos also can play it slow and (kind of) pretty, as they prove on songs like “Hideaway” (somebody’s been listening to The Pixies) and “The Order of Laissez Faire,” which reminds me of The Black Lips (who should be releasing a new album any day now).

*  The Dust I Own by Laino & Broken Seeds. Andrea Laino is a guitar-playing, harmonica-blowing Italian fellow, but on a trip to New York four years ago in which, according to his press material, he spent some time “in a smoky blues bar on the Upper West Side,” he became obsessed with American blues.

With that inspiration still burning, he came up with a stripped down, blues-based rock sound to amaze and delight. On the Off Label release Dust, Laino is backed by drummer Gaetano Alfonsi and occasional guests.

The song “Fate of a Gambler,” with its distorted guitar and primitive beat, is in itself worth the price of admission. I’m also fond of “Can’t Wake Myself Up,” which Laino himself describes as an “homage to psychedelia. An homage to the fascinating and terrifying sensation you have when you’re convinced that dreams can go on during the daytime.” It sounds as if this “dream” was highly influenced by Bo Diddley. On the mellower side, the album ends with a sweet cover of Mississippi John Hurt’s “Pay Day.”

*  7  by Lynx Lynx. This is another garage-bred German quartet. While many of their tunes are just as unrelentingly thunderous as those of their Off Label labelmates, The Vagoos (I’m talking about songs like the opener, “Get Straight,”  “99 Things,” and, best of all, “Who Shot the Druggies”), Lynx Lynx also has a distinct softer side.

You can hear that on the folk-influenced “Coast of Wasted Youth,” the almost two-minute instrumental called “Swörds, Part II” (a soundtrack to some imaginary German horror movie?), and the heavy reverb of “Black Feather,” which features what the band accurately calls “cheap ’70s drum computer noise” behind what sounds like a classic ’60s slow-dance melody.

* Death of an Angel by Destination Lonely. When I describe the sound of this French trio as “monstrous,” that’s a compliment. They sound a lot like their Voodoo Rhythm stablemates and veteran (30 years and going strong!) garage-punkers, The Monsters. I’m sure that fact didn’t escape head Monster and Voodoo Rhythm chief Reverend Beat-Man when he signed them.

Like The Monsters, Destination Lonely is fast, loud, and raunchy, with a sincere affection for distorted vocals and guitar. Plus, they’ve got a good sense of rock ’n’ roll history.

Besides covering a song by 1990s Ohio psychobillies, The Gibson Bros (the opener, “Dirt Preacher”), the title song is a cover of a spooky 1955 hit by Donald Woods and The Vel-Aires.  (I first heard the song as performed on a live album by The Kingsmen.) This new version has a spookhouse electric organ that sounds like it’s being played by Del Shannon’s zombie.

Alawalawa by Blind Butcher. Back in the late ’70s, I believed, deep in my heart, that disco sucked
— except for maybe a few songs like Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” and The Village People’s “My Roommate.”

But this album by a Swiss duo is making me rethink that. Actually, Blind Butcher sounds like an illegitimate demon offspring of disco and punk.

I’m reminded of bands like Electric Six (remember the song “Danger! High Voltage” from 2003?) as well as some ’80s New Wave acts like Nina Hagen. Blind Butcher, I bet, could do an amazing cover of “Cosmic Shiva.” They’ve already got the German language down. And the irresistible opening track, “Staubsaugerbaby” (“Vacuum Cleaner Baby”), is cosmic in itself.

*Intergalactic Sex Tour by The Sex Organs. OK, so this a shtick-laden goof — two guys, a guitarist and a drummer, dressed up like cartoon or perhaps Cubist versions of actual sex organs. (They’re not realistic looking. I don’t think the drummer is in any danger of being grabbed by President Trump.)

“They traveled light-years across the universe on a mission to planet earth to bring YOU their special inter-galactic brand of SEX & ROLL,” their press release says. Most of the songs are introduced by dramatized radio reports of the invasion. And many of the song titles can’t be printed in a family newspaper like ours.

Yeah, The Sex Organs are dumb. But they’re good, dumb, dirty fun. They’ve got the two-man band sound down as they bash away at these catchy, if filthy, tunes. And the last song, a five-minute instrumental that slowly builds from a primitive stomp into a cosmic-orgasmic free-jazz-like frenzy is actually pretty impressive.

Some videos for yas

Here's The Vagoos from Heat Wave.



My favorite Laino song



From the new Lynx Lynx



The title song from Destination Lonely's new album



Blind Butcher with their trashy disco



Hey hey, we're The Sex Organs!


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...