Sunday, June 11, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, June 11, 2023
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Cautious by Anton Terrell
I'm Shakin' by Little Willie John
Nchiwewe by Keturah
Good Night For A Heart Attack by Nashville Pussy
I Stopped The Duke Of Earl by The Upfronts 
Praying For A Miracle by The Syncopates
TTT Gas by The Gourds
Chicksvile U.S.A. by Jimmy Gray

Bop, Man, Bop by Doug Amerson & His Dude Cowboys
He's A Mighty Rock by The Joy Harmonizers
It's Just Not True by The Goldstars
Bring It Down To Jelly Roll by John Fogerty 
Mr. Gasser by Mr. Gasser & The Weirdos 
Drag Hag by The Weird-ohs
Lethal Love by Eilen Jewell 
You Knock Me Out by The Tenants 
Jimmy Joe, The Hippybilly Boy by Ed Sanders
Twice as Bright by Nick Shoulders

Ring The Bell by True Believers 
Bad News by Alejandro Escovedo & Jon Langford
Homemade Pie by Johnny Dowd
Mi Saxophone by Al Hurricane
Crazy Love by Joey Dee & The Starliters
Psychotic Reaction by Brenton Wood 
They Call It Rock by Rockpile
I'm Cramped by The Cramps
Be Off To The Moon by Dr. Strange Love

Just Like A Bird Without A Feather by Samuel L. Jackson
The Creeper by Al Duvall 
Wildebeest by The Handsome Family 
Is That You in the Blue? by James Leg
Lost Generation by The Lost Generation
Your Song by Love Psychedelico
Little Trouble Girl by Sonic Youth
The Beast In Me by Nick Lowe
(Weather alert pre-empted my closing theme, so I didn't even get to say goodbye! )





Wednesday, June 07, 2023

WACKY WEDNESDAY: Challengers of the Duke


 

Nothing can stop the Duke of Earl. 

That's what Eugene Dixon, better known as Gene Chandler, proclaimed in his 1962 hit "Duke of Earl." 

You gotta admire the guy's regal confidence: "As I walk through the world nothing can stop the Duke of Earl ..." 

And that confidence is contagious. Sometimes I sing that verse on my afternoon walks as I survey my own Dukedom.

Back in the early '60s "Duke of Earl" was the kind of song that was bound to inspire answer songs. Chandler himself might have been the first, quickly releasing "Walk On With the Duke" as a follow-up just a few months later. Of course it wasn't nearly as successful as the original "Duke."

On the original song, Chandler told his girlfriend, "And when I hold you /You'll be my Duchess, Duchess of Earl/ We'll walk through my dukedom /And a paradise we will share ..."

Apparently Bobbie Smith of the Dream Girls wanted to take the Duke up on this offer:

However, a group called The Pearlettes begged to differ over who was the true Dutchess of Earl:

Meanwhile, Dorothy Berry -- who was married to Richard Berry (the "Louie Louie" composer, not the former mayor of Albuquerque) claimed to be "The Girl Who Stopped the Duke of Earl." I sense a doowop catfight in the air!

However, a male group called The Upfronts claim that they are the ones who stopped the Duke of Earl -- perhaps by including riffs from The Monotones' "Book of Love" as well as the original "Duke".

Somehow not even the Duke of Prunes," (which appeared on The Mothers of Invention's second album, Absolutely Free) could stop the Duke of Earl:


Sunday, June 04, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

 



Sunday, June 4, 2023
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
You Got Good Taste by The Cramps
How Many Days Till Summer by Råttanson
Wodka by Kult
Ring Around The Moon Tonight by Churchwood 
Shock Collar by Killer Kin
Jibba Jab by Tic & Toc
There Goes The Neighborhood by The Bus Boys
My Money by The Goldstars

Lightning's Girl by Nancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra by Bottle Rockets
Nancy Sinatra by Johnny Dowd
Gumby Heart Song by Frank Sinatra,  Jr.
Motorway To Roswell by The Pixies 
Isolation by Urban Junior
Always Horses Coming by Giant Sand 
Queen Elizabeth's Corgis by Robert Shredford

Bumble Bee by Lavern Baker 
Buzz-Buzz-Buzz by The Hollywood Flames 
Call The Plumber by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
I Caught Me A Squirrel by Jon Wayne
The Roaring '20s by Archie & The Bunkers
Let Him Talk by Virgil & The Vi-Tones
Lonely Wolf by The Mullens
Secret Agent Man by Devo
Lili Marleen by Venneskond
Prostitution by Tiger Sex

Clementine by Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Give My Love to Rose by Willy Tea Taylor
A Lonely Man by The Chi-Lites
Come Home Soon by Eilen Jewell
Baby It's You by Elvis Costello & The Attractions with Nick Lowe
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis




Sunday, May 28, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

 



Sunday, May 28, 2023
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
United Strike Back by Gogol Bordello & Friends
No Hootenanny by L.A. Brown
It's Dark by The Thanes
Have Love Will Travel by Thee Headcoatees
Nite Owl by Frank Zappa
You're No Rock N' Roll Fun by Sleater-Kinney
Voodoo Voodoo by LaVern Baker 
Follow That Dream by Elvis Presley
A Fool In Love by Ike & Tina Turner
Acid - The Story Of L.S.D.  by A/V Geeks

Sisters Of The Moon by Fleetwood Mac
Sara by Camper Van Beethoven
Dixie Fried by Carl Perkins
Mud River Slide by Waco Brothers
Wiggling Fool by Jack Hammer
Young Girls, Young Girls by T. Valentine & Daddy Long Legs
$#@?!! by Unband
Something New by The Jack Cades 

In Praise of Sha Na Na by The Dead Milkmen
Rock 'n' Roll is Here to Stay by Sha Na Na
Today by Urban Junior 
Cool It by Flash Terry
Follow The Leader by Wiley Terry
The Return Of The Pretty One by Lord Sundance
Don't Hang Up by The Orlons
Alcohol by The Kinks
The Owl by Angry Johnny & The Killbillies

A Man Like Me by Deano & Jo
Cheater's World by Amy Allison & The Maudlins
If You Were A Bluebird by Butch Hancock
I Don't Need You Around by Jackie Wilson
The Young, Tough and the Terrible by The Lost Generation 
Winter Garden by Steve Leon & The Accusations
The Three Bells by Johnny Cash & The Carter Family
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis



It's Almost Make Music Day, 2023!



In what might be seen as a “return to normalcy” move, Santa Fe’s Make Music Day celebration will return to the Santa Fe Railyard for the first time since before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Make Music Day – which features free music events in more than a thousand cities in more than 120 countries across the globe – including Santa Fe – takes place annually on summer solstice, June 21.

“It goes without saying that we all suffered huge losses during the pandemic,” longtime Santa Fe musician Busy McCarroll – as well as a member of the state Music Commission and a longtime Make Music Day organizer – said recently. “Live music gatherings were just one of the important things that we lost. As we start going back out into the world for social events (with precautions of course), it’s time to celebrate the important impact that music has in our lives and in our community.”

Because of the pandemic lockdown, there was no public Make Music Day celebration in Santa Fe in the nightmarish year of 2020. Though public gatherings weren’t on the menu basically anywhere that year, the official website for the Make Music Alliance urged musicians and bands to share videos and live-streams and encouraged music teachers to do online lessons.

With the help of Make Music North America, “we came up with creative ways to bring music into our lives for this global event, McCarroll said. Local participants that year were “online, on porches, in trucks, in boats and in our living rooms,” she said.

The event returned to Santa Fe in 2021 with various performances, free music lessons and other musical activities scattered around town. The same approach was true last year for Make Music Day. It was an attempt, organizers said, to honor the original concept of the event with musical activities and performances happening simultaneously across the city. 

Nigerian drummer Akeem Ayanniyi
However the Make Music Day crew found that participants were finding it hard to attend all the events because they were spread out so far from each other.

“So basically the people spoke and we listened,” said organizer Francesca Jozette Tharpe. “This year everything is still spread out enough to honor the original concept, but they are all within walking distance for our attendees to enjoy all the fun!"

Having a centralized location in the Railyard “feels like a full circle event,” McCarroll said, noting that the first Make Music Day Santa Fe that was organized by the Santa Fe Music Alliance (of which she is president) also was held in the Railyard.

“The Railyard represents a new, fresh and ever growing, piece of Santa Fe’s heart and soul,” McCarroll said. “Surrounded by local businesses, it’s become somewhat of the hub of our city.” And, she noted that the Railyard has been very supportive of Make Music Day from the beginning.

One change from past Make Music Days in the Railyard is that instead of having an all day concert, McCarroll said, this year will be “more of an interactive event to show that anyone can make music. It’s also a way to encourage people who don’t make music, to make music.” 


So far, scheduled highlights of this year’s Make Music Santa Fe at Railyard Plaza include:
Jammin' with Jono

Jammin’ with Jono: Veteran Santa Fe musician and recording studio owner Jono Manson kicks off the event with an hour-long group folk jam. 

Crash Romeo karaoke.

West African drum music featuring Akeem Ayanniyi.

Circle Singing led by Joseph Ewatuya.

Group harmonica lesson conducted by Phil Arnold (with 100 harmonicas being given away).

Songwriting workshop taught by Lucy Barna.

Ukulele strum-along with Brian Nelson from Queen Bee Association.

Original songs performed by The Thunderstorm Club, a kids singing/songwriting club, led by Busy McCarroll.

An “Instrument Petting Zoo” supplied by The Candyman Strings & Things.

Petting zoo?

“It’s an educational event that allows visitors to explore a variety of musical instruments in a hands-on, engaging environment,” Cindy Cook, co-owner of The Candyman explained. “Multiple instruments are set out to be touched, handled, and played. Guide sheets and information for each instrument will be provided.”

And no, there’s no danger of the instruments biting.

Lucy Barna

“Participants can discover which instruments they enjoy and which they think sound and feel the best to them,” Cook said. “The goal is to spark an interest in music and expose visitors to instruments they may want to learn to play in the future.”

And besides the performers onstage, there will be live music by local artists at establishments up and down the entire Railyard district. 

If musicians and venues want to do something outside of the Railyard area, organizers say, they can use the “matchmaking” feature on the local Make Music Day website (www.makemusicday.org/santafe) to become part of the day’s festivities and get listed on the official calendar.)   

A full schedule of events will be posted on that website and at several locations on the day.

A little history of Make Music Day:

The event originated in the government of France. In October 1981, French Culture Minister Jack Lang appointed Maurice Fleuret, a composer and music journalist, as director of music and dance.

A national study had shown that showed that half of France’s young people played a musical instrument. That gave Fleuret an idea – creating a national festival dedicated to giving professional and amateur musicians – no matter what age, genre or skill level – the opportunity to perform. Fleuret’s “Fête de la Musique” featured hundreds of performances “everywhere in the streets, squares, kiosks, courtyards, gardens, stations, squares …” 

In 1983 the culture minister said. “We needed an event that would allow us to measure what place music occupied in individual and collective life. A spectacular movement of awareness, a spontaneous impetus to alert public opinion and perhaps also … the political class.”

Within a few years the idea spread to other countries, including these United States.

A 2019 article in the online publication Vox explained the significance of having the festival on June 21:

“The date isn’t just significant for being the summer solstice. It’s also close to the Feast of Saint-Jean-Baptiste, or St. John the Baptist, a day that was historically marked by a major celebration in France (and is still a national holiday in Quebec), and which itself was partly chosen by the church to coincide with summer solstice celebrations. So the inclination to celebrate around this date has existed for centuries …”

McCarroll was partly responsible for bringing Make Music Day to Santa Fe in the 1990s.

She said she got a call from a French friend who asked her “to play at this global music event that started in France and happened on summer solstice.” Specifically, she wanted McCarroll to play some tunes in front of a local Starbucks. Other local musicians were asked to perform in other places around town.

McCarroll played in front of the coffee shop with local cellist Michael Kott. But, more than 20 years later, the singer recalled, “We had to pay for a buskers license which cost $35, we didn’t get paid and made about $5 in tips.”

So that was the first Make Music Day in Santa Fe, as well as its last for several years. But in 2012, Bruce Adams, former owner of The Santa Fean magazine, and Mary Bonney brought the celebration back to town. The two produced the event for two years before asking the Santa Fe Music Alliance to take over. 

One year that McCarroll probably rather forget was the 2015 Make Music Day show in the Railyard. That was the year in which she suffered sun stroke. She still has vivid memories of sitting inside the nearby Violet Crown theater, with ice on her neck, directing the show via text messages to helpers outside.

Let’s hope that this June 21 is nice and sunny – but not as brutally sunny as it was that year.

Here in Santa Fe, organizations and businesses helping this year’s local celebration include the The Santa Fe Arts and Culture Department, The Candyman Strings & Things, the Santa Fe Music Alliance, Kludgit Sound,  the New Mexico Music Commission Foundation, Hutton Broadcasting,  KSWV (Que Sauve) Radio Le Lecheria Craft Ice Cream, the Coco-Cola Bottling Compnay of Santa Fe and Artisan Santa Fe. 

The team organizing Make Music Day in Santa Fe this year includes Busy McCarroll, Cindy Cook, Francesca Jozette Tharpe, David Swartz, who is New Mexico Arts Foundation’s board and Erminia Tapia, project specialist for the Santa Fe Arts & Culture Department.

If you’d like to donate to Make Music Day Santa Fe, please email santafe@makemusicday.org .

For more information, Contact: Francesca Jozette Tharpe, francescajozette@gmail.com 

Me with Cindy Cook, Amado Abeyta &
Busy McCarroll. following interview for Make 
Music Day 2021 at KSWV

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

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