Saturday, March 31, 2012

Playlist for tonight's show with a special 5 tune tribute to Earl Scruggs


by 'Rebel' Rod Ames

It has been one hell of a busy day for the old ‘Rebel’ today, but that is okay. It was good busy. Spent the day with my 18 year old son Kyle. He had asked me if I’d like to go to ASU (Angelo State University) in San Angelo.

These days I rarely if ever say no when he asks me to do something with him. At one time we were inseparable, but they get older and as they get older, we (the parents) grow dumber.

Long story short, I spent the day with him when usually I’d spend the day producing my show. Point is – I did it yesterday [Friday]. Good for me!

Not so!

I get back from ASU at 8 pm and try and burn the damn show to CD. The damn burner won’t work. Some IS dude told me once that a re-boot will fix 75% of your problems. Luckily, this little problem fit into that 75% bracket! The show is on disc and will go on! I just had a little extra stress to go along with it.

Tonight’s playlist is a – well – you judge for yourself –



Steely Dan – East St Louis Toodle-Oo (as always)

Earl Scruggs 5 in a row – may he RIP –

     Foggy Mountain Breakdown
     The Ballad of Jed Clampett
     Down The Road
     Stash It
     I Still Miss Someone – with Johnny Cash

T. Tex Edwards – Crazy Date from his latest record – “intoxicated”

Bob Dylan – Queen Jane Approximately

Byrds – Hickory Wind from Sweethearts of the Rodeo

Mary Gauthier – I Drink

Countrycide – Different Country (from Seattle)

Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen – Watch My .38

Jerry Jeff Walker – Get It Out – From Viva Teralingua

Claude ‘Butch’ Morgan – God Knows I’m Human

Robert Earl Keen – Oh Rosie from his album Picnic

Wilco from their 1995 release “AM” – Box of Letters

Spoon via Austin/Portland – The Underdog from their record “Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga”

Meat Puppets – Mindless Idiot

Frank Zappa – from Weasels Ripped My Flesh – Toad of the Short Forest

Tom Waits – Raised Right Men

Southern Culture on the Skids – King of the Mountain



Hope you enjoy the show – You know the drill – click on the button near the top of the page to listen online, or if you live in Junction – tune in to KOOK 93.5 - or if you’re in Kerrville – KERV 1230 AM.

See ya in about an hour on the radio…..RR

Friday, March 30, 2012

RIP Earl Eugene Scruggs (January 6, 1924 - March 28, 2012)


His Music says it all!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

NEW ALBUM BY MARLEY’S GHOST, JUBILEE, FEATURES LEDENDARY PRODUCER/SONGWRITER COWBOY JACK CLEMENT AT THE HELM


Stellar list of guest performers include Emmylou Harris, John Prine,
Old Crow Medicine Show, Marty Stuart, Larry Campbell,
 Byron House and Don Heffington.

Along with six band originals, songs include covers of Kris Kristofferson,
Levon Helm, Bobby & Shirley Womack and others.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Marley’s Ghost — a virtuoso aggregation composed of singer/multi-instrumentalists Dan Wheetman, Jon Wilcox, Mike Phelan, Ed Littlefield Jr. and Jerry Fletcher — celebrates its 25th anniversary with the scintillating roots-music tour de force Jubilee (Sage Arts, street date: June 5, 2012).

The album, produced by legendary Nashville cat Cowboy Jack Clement and recorded at the city’s venerable Sound Emporium, which Clement built, features guest performances from Emmylou Harris, John Prine, Old Crow Medicine Show, Marty Stuart, Larry Campbell, Byron House and Don Heffington.

“One of the things that we were really clear on with this record was that we wanted it to be a Marley’s Ghost album with friends sitting in, not guest stars with us as the backing band,” Wheetman explains. “And it worked.”

Like its nine predecessors, Jubilee is wildly eclectic, its 13 tracks drawn, with unerring taste, from the songbooks of Kris Kristofferson (“This Old Road”), Levon Helm (“Growin’ Trade”), Bobby and Shirley Womack (“It’s All Over Now”), Katy Moffatt and Tom Russell (“Hank and Audrey”), John Prine (“Unwed Fathers”), Butch Hancock (“If You Were a Bluebird”) and Paul Siebel (the closing “She Made Me Lose My Blues”), along with the traditional “Diamond Joe.” These deftly interpreted tunes blend seamlessly with the six originals on the album.

Marley’s Ghost is nothing less than a national treasure, the capable inheritors of the archetypal Americana blueprint drawn up by The Band. As the L.A. Weekly aptly put it, “This West Coast [group] deftly, and frequently daffily, dashes across decades of American music to create a sound that’s steeped in tradition but never bogged down by traditionalism.” These guys can sing and play anything with spot-on feel, from reggae (hence the double-entendre moniker) to blues to stone country, which is what they’ve been doing — to the ongoing delight of a fervent cult that includes many of their fellow musicians — throughout their first quarter century as a working unit.

“The band has always been eclectic, and that’s one of the reasons we’ve stayed together for this long,” Wheetman explains. “I’ve said this before, but instead of having to be in a Delta blues band, an a cappella singing group, a country band, a reggae band, and being a singer/songwriter, I’m in one band and we just do all that. It’s very convenient.”

When they started thinking about this album project more than a year ago, the band members agreed to each bring songs to the table that they wanted Marley’s Ghost to record. “That’s the way the band has generally operated,” says Wheetman, “and then some things naturally stick.

I brought ‘The Blues Are Callin’’ for Mike because I thought it would be a good duet song, although he wound up singing it by himself — and he sang the shit out of it, by the way. And when I heard Kris Kristofferson’s last album a couple of years ago, I thought the title song would be great for Jon, so I brought that one along as well. Jon brought ‘Growin’ Trade,’ which Eddie ended up singing.”

Phelan describes “Growin’ Trade,” written by Larry Campbell and Levon Helm, as “an emblematic Band song that was never recorded by The Band. Loving The Band and being able to make something that sounds like The Band without imitating The Band is kinda tricky, and I think we pulled it off with this one, so we’re really proud of that.” Wheetman’s “South for a Change” has a Bob Wills feel, while Phelan was thinking of Buck Owens when “Lonely Night” came to him.

The new record is the band’s second straight project with Clement, who turned 80 last year. Clement first heard Marley’s Ghost in 2009, when a mutual friend brought him to a performance at Nashville’s Douglas Corner. “Afterwards, Cowboy came up to tell us how much he liked the band,” Phelan recalls. “He said, ‘You got a lot of bang,’ whatever that means. It was love at first sight all around. He liked that we were a real band and not a bunch of session musicians who get together for one project. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but he knows a lot of those guys; he doesn’t know a lot of real bands who play and sing together and have a sound. About a month later, he sent us a letter — not an email — saying that if we wanted to come down to his place, he’d really like to make a record with us. We thought about that for two or three seconds — ‘Let’s see, do we want to make a record with a living legend, the guy who produced Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Roy Orbison and Carl Perkins? Okay.’ So this was a unique opportunity for us to do something with him while he’s still at the height of his powers.”

They first worked with Clement on 2010’s Ghost Town, which in turn followed 2006’s Van Dyke Parks-produced Spooked. “Working with Van Dyke was like grad school in producing, says Phelan, “whereas Cowboy is a much more subtle guy. He’d be sitting there in the control room with these gigantic speakers cranked up listening to us do a take, and we’d hear him like the voice of God over the talkback, ‘Liked that one.’ Or he’d go, ‘That kinda sucked. You got a better one in ya.’ He guided the process, but not in any way similar to what Van Dyke had done. So it was a wildly different experience. But when you ride out the whole process, you can see why he’s got so many gold records on his walls.”

“Jack brings a state of mind, a perspective about why you’re there in the first place,” Wheetman says of Clement’s production approach. “Then he lets things happen. When he started working at Sun, everything was cut live, and it was all about feel, not precision, and that’s how he still approaches it. And as you get basic tracks done, he’s got ideas about what to add. Jack really wanted Jerry on piano for the basic tracks because he’s such a great piano player, and up to this point, he’d been playing drums and piano at the same time, believe it or not. So we asked our old friend Don Heffington, who played on Spooked, to play the drums on the album. And I generally play bass in the band, but we asked Byron House come in and play bass on the sessions.”

According to Phelan, they brought in House and Heffington to serve as the rhythm section on the album “because we wanted that feel you get when the whole band plays together. We wanted to get as much in the live session as possible and change as little as possible to the record — it just feels better that way.”

Marley’s Ghost had brought in guests on several of their previous records — “friends who happened to be in the neighborhood,” according to Wheetman — but nothing approaching the all-star cast that graces Jubilee. “That was all Jack,” says Wheetman. “As we were doing ‘Unwed Fathers,’ he said, ‘That one needs a girl’s voice —it needs an angel on there.’ So he called Emmylou. Marty Stuart used to live at Jack’s house back when he was still playing mandolin with Johnny Cash. And Jack produced a couple of records for John Prine. We had sent Prine a CD of ‘This Old Road,’ and he really did his homework — he came in ready to go. They were all incredibly wonderful to work with — really giving and friendly. With every one of them, it was, ‘Is that what you want?’

“Emmy was in the studio trying to work out the harmony part for ‘Unwed Fathers,’ and because I’ve got a low voice, she was figuring out where to put it in her range to make it work. She said, ‘I’ll be out here ’til the cows come home,’ and I got on the talkback and asked her, ‘What time do the cows come home?’ She said, ‘As soon as I get this part!’”

The lone non-Nashville guest was Woodstock-based guitarist and fiddle player Larry Campbell, a former key member of Bob Dylan’s band, Levon Helm’s producer and musical director, and the co-writer, with Levon, of “Growin’ Trade,” one of the highlights of Helm’s Grammy-winning 2009 LP Electric Dirt. “We wanted some fiddle and some electric guitar on a couple of things, so we invited Larry down,” says Dan. “He came into the studio and cranked for two day and just killed it. He played hellacious guitar on ‘Hank and Audrey,’ and he was great fun to work with.”

With each album, the band’s mastery of all manner of roots forms becomes more captivating, and more seamless in its variety. “When you’ve been together for 25 years, there’s an approach, and that just automatically puts a certain spin on everything you do,” Wheetman points out. “One thing that’s always been important in the band is that you do what you can to serve the song, and that creates a cohesiveness from song to song.”

“We’re five singers who don’t think genres mean much,” says Phelan. “If you connect with the song and the song connects with you, that’s what’s important, and that’s a real core belief of the band. When I go to a performance, I want to hear passion; I want to hear somebody up there doing it because they can’t not do it. That’s what we’re going for with everything we tackle. We have so many diverse feels, and we can pull them off in an authentic way — and after all this time, we’re playing the best we ever have.”

One listen to Jubilee will confirm that assertion. In every note, and every measured silence, you can hear the miles they’ve traveled together, the jaw-dropping closeness they’ve attained, and the magical place where the men of Marley’s Ghost now reside.

About the Album Cover

“I suggested a Thomas Hart Benton piece for the cover and found that the band loved his work,” says manager Michael Nash. “The Sources of Country Music combines all the elements we were looking for — Benton’s trademark style coupled with the depiction of musicians and a distinct Americana vibe. It speaks to all the musical sources of American roots music, and in that respect we felt it mirrored well what Marley's Ghost is all about. This was Benton’s final work. One story is that he died standing in front of it, as it was never signed. It now resides at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, appropriately enough. That ties into Cowboy Jack and where we recorded the album. All told, a perfect fit.”

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For more information about Marley’s Ghost, please contact Conqueroo:
Cary Baker • (323) 656-1600 • cary@conqueroo.com







Wednesday, March 28, 2012

LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM Taking His Solo Act On The Road Starting May 3 In Solana Beach, CA


Photo Courtesy of Jeremy Cowart
March 27, 2012 -- Legendary guitarist, singer/songwriter/producer, Grammy® Award winner and Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame member LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM is gearing up for a new round of tour dates beginning May 3 in Solana Beach, CA and concluding Monday, May 21 in Spokane, WA.  More shows throughout the U.S. will be announced in the coming weeks.

In his intimate-one-man show, Lindsey will showcase his distinctive guitar picking style and instantly recognizable voice in his usual awe inspiring form, captivating his audience with songs from his recent album, Seeds We Sow as well as performing a combination of favorites from his previous solo albums, along with a variety of Fleetwood Mac classics.

Regarding the new tour Buckingham says, "As I've grown as an artist, I've gotten more and more in touch with my center, and that center is voice and guitar. Over time it has become increasingly vital to express more with less; that is my touchstone now, and the embodiment of that philosophy is what will be largely represented in the new show. I've been thinking of doing this kind of tour for a while, and am quite excited to be doing something new, something outside my comfort zone."

Check out Lindsey Buckingham at any of the following tour stops:

DATE        CITY                VENUE

Thur 5/3    Solana Beach, CA        Belly Up Tavern
Fri 5/4        Los Angeles, CA        The Wiltern
Sat 5/5        San Juan Capistrano, CA    Coach House
Sun 5/6        Thousand Oaks, CA        Fred Kavli Theatre/Thousand Oaks Civic Arts
Tues 5/8    San Luis Obispo. CA        Fremont Theatre
Wed 5/9    Fresno, CA            Tower Theatre
Thur 5/10    Carmel, CA            Sunset Central Center
Fri 5/11        Santa Cruz, CA            Rio Theatre
Sun 5/13    Sacramento, CA        Crest Theatre
Mon 5/14    San Francisco. CA        The Fillmore
Tues 5/15    Redding, CA            The Cascade Theatre
Thur 5/17    Bend, OR            Tower Theatre
Fri 5/18        Portland, OR            Aladdin Theatre
Sat 5/19    Seattle, WA            The Neptune
Mon 5/21    Spokane, WA            Bing Crosby Theatre


www.lindseybuckingham.com
www.facebook.com/lindseybuckingham


Tuesday, March 27, 2012

CONCORD MUSIC GROUP ANNOUNCES RECORD STORE DAY EXCLUSIVES



LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Concord Music Group will offer up a diverse array of exclusive Record Store Day releases for artists ranging from Paul McCartney and Little Richard to Dave Brubeck and Esperanza Spalding to Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker, Yim Yames (New Multitudes).

National Record Store Day, which falls on April 21 this year, celebrates the culture of the more than 700 independently owned records stores in the U.S. The event celebrates its fifth anniversary this year. Participating stores will host in-store events, performances, signings, and the release of special product exclusives. For more information, visit www.recordstoreday.com.

Concord Music Group’s 2012 Record Store Day releases will be:

The Dave Brubeck Octet: Distinctive Rhythm Instrumentals [10” red vinyl /
8 tracks / RSD exclusive / limited edition]
This special exclusive Record Store reissue pressing faithfully reproduces the original 10” vinyl package right down to the red colored vinyl! Originally released on Fantasy in 1952, the recording features legendary sidemen Bill Smith, Paul Desmond, David Van Kriedt, Dick Collins, Bob Collins, Ron Crotty, and Cal Tjader.

Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker, Yim Yames: Let’s Multiply [10” vinyl / RSD exclusive / limited edition]
An intimate interpretation of American icon and musical legend Woody Guthrie’s unrecorded lyrics from a dream team of Americana torchbearers: Jay Farrar (Son Volt), Will Johnson (Centro-matic), Anders Parker (Varnaline), and Yim Yames (a.k.a. Jim James of My Morning Jacket). The collaborators seamlessly converge the sepia-toned essence of the time-honored past with the risks needed to forge the future. This exclusive Record Store Day 10” includes two previously unreleased demo tracks and an additional two tracks not available for purchase anywhere else.

Little Richard: Here’s Little Richard [red vinyl reissue of Little Richard’s 1957 Specialty Records classic / RSD exclusive / limited edition]
A limited edition Record Store Day exclusive red vinyl 12” LP reissue of Little Richard’s 1957 Specialty Records classic, ranked by Rolling Stone as #50 in “The Greatest 500 Albums of All Time.” Remastered from the original analog tapes, this LP includes such immortal classics as “Tutti Frutti," "Rip It Up,” “Slipin’ & Slidin’,” and "Jenny Jenny." A must-have for all collectors and the perfect complement to the expanded, deluxe edition compact disc that’s being released on the same day!

Paul McCartney: “Another Day”/“Oh Woman, Oh Why” [7” vinyl single/ RSD exclusive / limited edition]
A classic McCartney vinyl single reissue manufactured exclusively for Record Store Day! “Another Day” was first recorded in 1970, during the sessions for the album Ram. It was the first single of his solo career, originally released February 19, 1971 with "Oh Woman, Oh Why" as the B-side. Upon its initial release “Another Day”/“Oh Woman, Oh Why” sold over a million copies worldwide. It was a #1 hit in France and Australia, in the U.K. it reached #2, in the U.S. it reached #5. This exclusive reissue single is featured on the forthcoming Paul McCartney Archive Collection edition of Ram coming this spring!

Esperanza Spalding: Radio Music Society [2LP, 180g, audio + video download card / early vinyl release (4 week exclusive window)]
Best New Artist GRAMMY® Award winner Esperanza Spalding delivers her most diverse, ambitious and masterful recital yet with the release of Radio Music Society. The young bassist, vocalist, and composer from Portland, Oregon proves to be the real deal, with a unique and style-spanning presence, deeply rooted in jazz yet destined to make her mark far beyond the jazz realm. This limited edition 180-gram double-gatefold vinyl configuration is being released early exclusively to Record Store Day outlets on April 21, 2012. The two-LP set also includes a download card for access to both audio and video content from the album and will be made widely available four weeks after April 21.

About Concord Music Group:
Concord Music Group is one of the largest independent record and music publishing companies in the world and owner of a rich and historically significant catalog of recordings. Concord Music Group’s legendary family of labels — Concord Records, Concord Jazz, Fantasy, Stax, Milestone, Riverside, Specialty, Telarc, Peak, Heads Up, Prestige and the most recent acquisition, famed American roots label Rounder Records — includes titles from among the most admired and enduring names in music, including Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra, John Coltrane, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Isaac Hayes, Little Richard, and Thelonious Monk. The group’s current roster of world-class artists includes: Paul McCartney, Chick Corea, Paul Simon, Kurt Elling, Carole King, Christian Scott, Robert Plant, Esperanza Spalding, and Alison Krauss. In 2007, Concord partnered with Starbucks Entertainment to form Hear Music. Hear Music has released records from James Taylor, Joni Mitchell, John Mellencamp, and Elvis Costello.
 
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**NOTE: There are no promotional copies of the above special products. Please buy them as a means of supporting your local record store!

For more information about Concord Music Group’s Record Day exclusives, please contact Conqueroo:
Cary Baker • (323) 656-1600 • cary@conqueroo.com