WSND set list: Deep Dive of Barbara Mandrell

Thanks to all who spent part of their Christmas night with me and my deep dive of Barbara Mandrell. Here’s the playlist:

  1. Barbara Mandrell – Sleeping Single in a Double Bed
  2. The Pilgrim Travelers – Gospel Boogie
  3. Joe Maphis – Guitar Rock and Roll
  4. Johnny Cash – Delia’s Gone
  5. Patsy Cline – Why Can’t He Be You?
  6. Barbara Mandrell – Steel Guitar Rag (live)
  7. Red Foley – Smoke on the Water
  8. “Little” Jimmy Dickens – I’m Little but I’m Loud
  9. Tex Ritter – Froggy Went A-Courtin’
  10. The Beatles – Eight Days a Week
  11. Barbara Mandrell – I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (to Stop Now)
  12. Barbara Mandrell – Playin’ Around with Love
  13. Roy Head – Treat Her Right
  14. David Houston – Almost Persuaded
  15. David Houston and Barbara Mandrell – How Can It Be Wrong (When It Feels So Right)?
  16. Barbara Mandrell – The Midnight Oil
  17. Barbara Mandrell – Standing Room Only
  18. Barbara Mandrell – If That’s What Friends Are For (live)
  19. Shirley Brown – Woman to Woman
  20. Barbara Mandrell – Years
  21. The Mandrell Sisters – Instrumental medley (live)
  22. The Mandrell Sisters – 1989 reunion medley (live)
  23. Barbara Mandrell – I Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool (live)
  24. Barbara Mandrell – Loveless
  25. Barbara Mandrell – Operator, Long Distance Please
  26. Barbara Mandrell – He Set My Life to Music
  27. Barbara Mandrell and Lee Greenwood – To Me
  28. Barbara Mandrell – There’s No Love in Tennessee
  29. Barbara Mandrell – Where Are the Pieces of My Heart?
  30. Barbara Mandrell – I Won’t Be Home Tonight

The next deep dive will be of Gang of Four. Don’t miss it.

Keep your mind open.

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Wrecka Stow: Wooden Tooth Records – Tucson, AZ

Located at the corner of 7th and Hoff, Wooden Tooth Records is a cool place for vinyl, CDs, cassettes, books, and other groovy stuff in Tucson, Arizona.

I love that they have a small section of books that includes local zines and underground comics. They have a bunch of wild stuff on vinyl, too, such as these gems I spotted there.

Calling Dr. Freud.
Seriously, I might need this.
And this.

That’s a great, and yet small example of their eclectic wares. Krautrock, electronic, ambient, folk, and children’s records in the same area!

Be sure to stop by when you’re in Tucson.

Keep your mind open.

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WSND playlist for December 18, 2022

Thanks to all who listened to my first show of the 2022 Christmas break on WSND. Here’s my playlist:

  1. Louis Armstrong – Zat You Santa Claus
  2. Shopping – All or Nothing
  3. The Breeders – Saint
  4. Bad Religion – Let It Burn
  5. IDLES – Gram Rock
  6. Doug Gillard – For What I’ve Done
  7. The Smithereens – Crazy Mixed-Up Kid
  8. Promo for the Big Jack TV show featuring The Buckinghams, Selective Seven, and Critters
  9. The Buckinghams – Kind of a Drag
  10. Mavis Staples – Who Told You That (live)
  11. Osees – The Dream (live)
  12. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Muddy Water (live)
  13. Muddy Waters – Louisiana Blues
  14. The In-Sound interviews The Chicago Loop
  15. The Chicago Loop – This Must Be the Place
  16. Screaming Females – Ancient Civilization
  17. Los Straitjackets – Jingle Bell Rock
  18. The Cramps – Garbage Man
  19. Teenage Tramp radio ad
  20. Devo – Puppet Boy
  21. J Rocc – Stay Fresh
  22. De La Soul – Eye Know
  23. Hprizm – What’s Worth What
  24. Miss Red – Rollercoaster
  25. Ibibio Sound Machine – I Need You to Be Sweet Like Sugar (Nnge Nte Suka)
  26. Anton Newcombe – I’ll Be Home for Xmas
  27. Robert Plant – Santa Claus Is Back in Town (live / requested)
  28. Aaron Frazer – Love Is
  29. The Proclaimers – Letter from America (requested)
  30. Blood Feast radio ad
  31. The Jeff Beck Group – You Shook Me (requested)
  32. Goat – Goathead
  33. Pat Benetar – Please Come Home for Christmas

Tune in on Christmas night for two hours of obscure Christmas music!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND playlist: Deep Dive of The Rolling Stones

This Deep Dive of The Rolling Stones focused a lot on Keith Richards, as I was celebrating his birthday during the show (December 18, 2022).

Here’s the playlist:

  1. The Rolling Stones – (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction (mono version)
  2. Muddy Waters – Rollin’ Stone
  3. Bo Diddley – Bo Diddley (live)
  4. Chuck Berry and Keith Richards – Nadine (live)
  5. Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated – Up Town
  6. The Rolling Stones – Come On
  7. The Hollies – Little Lover
  8. The Rolling Stones – I Wanna Be Your Man (mono version)
  9. The Rolling Stones – Not Fade Away (acoustic)
  10. The Rolling Stones – Tell Me
  11. The Rolling Stones – The Last Time (mono version)
  12. Tina Turner – Under My Thumb
  13. The Rolling Stones – Mother’s Little Helper
  14. The Rolling Stones – We Love You
  15. The Rolling Stones – Sympathy for the Devil
  16. The Rolling Stones – Midnight Rambler (live)
  17. The Rolling Stones – Street Fighting Man (live)
  18. The Rolling Stones – Casino Boogie (requested)
  19. The Rolling Stones – Can’t You Hear Me Knocking
  20. The Rolling Stones – Happy (live)
  21. The Rolling Stones – Little T&A
  22. The Rolling Stones – Dirty Work
  23. Keith Richards – Take It So Hard
  24. Keith Richards – Run Rudolph Run

Next week is a deep dive of Barbara Mandrell!

Keep your mind open.

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Skull Practitioners set to release first full-length album in January 2023.

Credit: John Bottomley Photography

Proving once again that “power trio” isn’t just a descriptive handle from the distant past, but a louder-than-God 21st Century reality, New York’s Skull Practitioners release their first full-length album, Negative Stars, for In the Red Records on January 20th. The album is the second release for Los Angeles-based In the Red by the trio — guitarist Jason Victor, bassist Kenneth Levine, and drummer Alex Baker, following the band’s acclaimed EP, Death Buy, issued in 2019.

Previously, Victor had established himself as the dazzling co-lead guitarist for Steve Wynn and the Miracle Three -when Wynn revived his ‘80s L.A. Paisley Underground consortium The Dream Syndicate in 2017, Victor took the guitar chair previously occupied by Karl Precoda and Paul Cutler.  Levine was playing in DBCR, a three-piece unit. “We wanted to go to a five-piece, and needed a drummer and another guitar player,” he says. “We put an ad out on Craigslist and met Jason and Alex that way. Alex was just two weeks into living in New York. We played together for a while, and then it just sort of dissolved. Jason, Alex, and I actually had more of a shared, common musical perspective, and the three of us decided, ‘Let’s stick together with just us three.’”

Skull Practitioners recorded a limited cassette-only debut, st1, which they self-released in 2014. The four-song collection, on which Baker was the lone band member to take a vocal, marked the start of a long hunt for the right voice. “We kept looking for a new singer, and that person never came,” says Victor. “None of us wanted to sing at all. After a while, we had been together as a three-piece for so long that we had our thing, and it became difficult for someone to fit into it. So we pulled a Genesis! The best thing about it is that now all three of us will sing, and that takes the pressure off just one of us.” Levine adds, “Whoever writes, sings. It’s their expression, so they should say what they have to say.”

On Negative Stars, Levine performs “Dedication” and “What Now,” and Victor sings “Exit Wounds,” “Leap,” “Intruder,” and “Ventilation.” The album’s expansive instrumental tracks are “Fire Drill” and Skull Practitioners’ longtime club highlight “Nelson D,” which first appeared on st1 in a live version. You can hear a multitude of influences coming off each other in Skull Practitioners’ music, ranging from The Gun Club to Sonic Youth to Joy Division, Black Flag, and beyond. Each player brings something uniquely his own to the mix.

“Black Flag was huge for me,” says Victor. “There is that element of improv, and of aggression, that I was attracted to in that band. With our band, there’s definitely an aggressive angle there, and absolutely an improvisational one. We’re all willing to give everyone the space for contributing ideas. This band really does function as a democracy, which is nice.” Levine adds, “All of us were into different things, and there’s some kind of overlap and we kind of influence each other, and there’s stuff that we turn each other on to.”

Everything on Negative Stars coheres so seamlessly, but like with so many others, its recording was hampered, and protracted, by the COVID-19 pandemic.“The main album session was a few years ago,” Baker says. “That was when we went into the studio for a couple of days with our friend, engineer Ted Young, and we tracked the bulk of the album there. We recorded the instrumental parts first, then started vocal tracking in January of 2021. It took us so long to decide that all the instruments were done at that point. The vocals were actually done at our practice space. We just set up the mics and did that ourselves.”

Levine adds, “The record was in mid-flight, and then the pandemic hit, so we were just sitting around for six months or a year, and we said, ‘Well, we may never finish this.’ So we wound up literally sitting in a room with masks on during most of the vocal tracking. If we’d waited to go into a real studio, it would have come out even later. Alex did all the engineering on that, and we’re very appreciative of all his engineering prowess.”

With their album finally complete and the pandemic lifting, Skull Practitioners have begun to take to the stage more regularly: they have opened shows for Lydia Lunch, Hammered Hulls, Live Skull, and In the Red label mates the Wolfmanhattan Project (Kid Congo Powers, Mick Collins, and Bob Bert). They plan to get on the road in the near future. 

Says Levine, “I think the band is represented at its best in a live setting. That’s where we’re in our element. Playing live, we’re out for blood.” Victor adds, “With the live thing, we just want to destroy, in the nicest, most friendly way — we’re nice people. Someone said about us, ‘These guys look like a bunch of accountants.’ People don’t really know what to expect before they hear us. I think they’re all a little surprised, maybe, and we like having that element of surprise — ‘We’re gonna blow your minds a little.’”

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Jo Murray.]

Greg Puciato releases his first live album December 20, 2022.

Photo credit: Stephen Odom

Greg Puciato, who has released both his critically-acclaimed debut and sophomore solo albums in the short span of two years, has set a Dec. 20 release date for his inaugural live album, 11/11/22 Los Angeles.

“You don’t get many first shows,” says Puciato of his Nov. 11 outing at Los Angeles’ Don Quixote. “Having the ability to properly document one and get high quality audio and video…I didn’t wanna regret not doing that. It’s gonna be killer to look back at this 100 or even five shows from now and see how much further along the live versions of these songs are. When I hear these recordings, I instantly feel transported to that room, that night, with my bandmates onstage and friends and everyone there in attendance. A lot of love and support and passion and hard work and talent in the room. I hope it does the same for you if you were there, and resonates as strongly for people who weren’t able to attend. I can’t wait to do more of this and see everyone again and more of you in other places down the line.”

A preview of the 11-song collection arrives today with the Jim Louvau and Tony Aguilera directed video for “Deep Set (Live)” (https://youtu.be/6U3IGUQmV1o). Puciato noted: “’Deep Set’ feels good to lead with. One of my favorite memories of the tracking of Child Soldier: Creator of God were the vocals to this song…incidentally recorded at the same time of year as this show. The song was always meant to feel loose and live; the recorded vocal was a front-to-back one-take that we did in a shed in Nick Rowe’s (producer and live guitarist) backyard…so bringing it to life onstage with him, and Chris (Hornbrook) for the first time felt like a nice, symbolic full circle.”

11/11/22 Los Angeles will be available exclusively via Bandcamp, with the album streaming on Dec. 20, and vinyl pre-orders launching the same day. The collection will arrive on additional streaming services following its vinyl release in the Spring.

Joining Puciato for the live performance, and featured in this video, are the aforementioned Nick Rowe (guitar), Chris Hornbrook (drums), James Hammontree (guitar), and Jeff “Manwolf” Geiser (bass).

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Monica at Speakeasy PR.]

Bass Drum of Death announces 2023 North American tour.

Photo: Steve Gullick

Having just completed shows in the UK, Ireland, Europe and North America playing select dates and as main support to The LemonheadsBass Drum Of Death (John and JIm BarrettIan Kirkpatrick) announce a US headline tour beginning February 8thin support of their forthcoming album, Say I Won’t, released January 27th via Fat Possum Records

The band have revealed three tracks/videos from the album so far; the Zeppelin-esque Head Change’the midtempo bruiser ‘Say Your Prayers (a collaboration with Mike Kerr of Royal Blood) and the hi-octane ‘Find It‘ (the video features live footage from the band’s sold out New York show in June of this year). Today, to accompany the tour announcement, they share a blistering live version of ‘Head Change’, to give a taste of what to expect on the road.

Say I Won’t is the first Bass Drum of Death album written, demoed, and recorded with the touring band, instead of bandleader John Barrett doing everything on his own. He found a freedom in working with collaborators that wasn’t available to him before, opening different aspects of the songwriting. It was a process of live recording, layering on different parts and overdubs, and then stripping it all back to the bones of the song, keeping the raw wild heart of the music intact. “My first two records were made entirely by me alone with my gear, my laptop, and a Snowball USB mic,” says Barrett. “They were just made quickly, cheaply, as an excuse to tour. I wanted to take my time with this record. Make something good that I was proud of in itself.”

The band recorded the new record with Patrick Carney of The Black Keys at Audio Eagle Studios in Nashville and the result is a groove-oriented, 1970’s-indebted collection of rock songs, with tempos set for cruising and scuzzy guitars galore. There’s an energy and vitality to the music that feels in line with the best of the Bass Drum songs, but with an added boost that comes from new bandmates and a new perspective.

The albumfinds a reinvigorated Barrett firing at all cylinders, backed by his best band yet. It’s Bass Drum of Death at their loosest and scuzziest and most tuneful, a true rock record in all the right ways. It’s a throwback by way of moving forward, sporting a maturity and swagger that comes from a decade of playing music on the road and surviving to tell about it. More than anything, Say I Won’t is a blast to listen to, music built for driving with your stereo cranked.

2023 dates are below – tickets can be found on the band’s website

Feb 08 New Orleans LA House of Blues Parish 

Feb 09 Houston TX House of Blues Bronze Peacock  

Feb 11 Austin TX Empire Garage & Control Room

Feb 12 Dallas TX House of Blues Cambridge Room 

Feb 14 Tucson AZ 191 Toole 

Feb 15 Phoenix AZ Rebel Lounge 
Feb 16 San Diego CA Casbah 

Feb 17 Las Vegas NV The Usual Place
Feb 18 Los Angeles CA Zebulon 

Feb 19 Santa Ana CA Constellation Room 
Feb 21 Santa Cruz CA Moe’s Alley 
Feb 22 Sacramento CA Goldfield Trading Post

Feb 24 Portland OR Mississippi Studios 

Feb 25 Seattle WA Tractor Tavern 

Feb 26 Spokane WA Lucky You 

Feb 28 Boise ID Neurolux 
Mar 03 Denver CO HQ
Mar 24 Oxford MS Proud Larry’s *

Mar 25 Birmingham AL Saturn *

Mar 26 Asheville NC The Grey Eagle *

Mar 28 Raleigh NC The Pour House *

Mar 29 Washington DC Union Stage *

Mar 30 Philadelphia PA Concourse *
Mar 31 Brooklyn NY Music Hall of Williamsburg *
Apr 01 Jersey City NJ White Eagle Hall *

Apr 03 Boston MA Brighton Music Hall *

Apr 05 Buffalo NY Buffalo Iron Works *

Apr 06 Cleveland OH Beachland Ballroom *
Apr 07 Ferndale MI Magic Bag *

Apr 08 Indianapolis IN HI-Fi *

Apr 10 Grand Rapids MI The Pyramid Scheme *

Apr 14 Chicago IL Riot Fest Presents at Cobra Lounge *

Apr 15 Chicago IL Riot Fest Presents at Cobra Lounge *

Apr 16 Louisville KY Headliners Music Hall *

* w/ Dead Tooth 

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Jo Murray.]

Mosswood Meltdown announces its first 2023 lineup members and early bird ticket pricing.

The epic Mosswood Meltdown is returning July 1st and July 2nd, 2023 to Oakland’s Mosswood Park. Today, the festival announces its first wave of the lineup, which features Le Tigre for their only Bay Area appearance of the year, Gravy Train!!!!The Rondelles, and Tina & the Total Babes for their exclusive, only shows of 2023, Quintron & Miss Pussycat, and more. And of course, it wouldn’t be a Mosswood Meltdown without our iconic and punkeriffic host, John Waters. The lineup thus far can be found below and early bird tickets for the festival (for a holiday special pricing) are on sale this Friday at 9am PST/noon EST.

 
MOSSWOOD MELTDOWN 2023 TEASER
Le Tigre (1st Bay Area gig in 15 years!)
Gravy Train!!!! (Only gig 2022/2023)
Tina & the Total Babes (Only gig 2022/2023)
The Rondelles (Only gig 2022/2023)
Quintron & Miss Pussycat
 
And more to be announced soon!
 
PURCHASE TICKETS HERE
 
Ticket Prices (Holiday Special)
GA Weekend Pass – $99
VIP Weekend Pass – $179
(VIP comes w/ VIP seating, swag bag, ins & outs)

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[Thanks to Jaycee at Pitch Perfect PR.]

Holy Water shares their first single from upcoming debut album.

Austin band Holy Water share the first single single today from their forthcoming self-titled debut album via Metal Injection. Hear and share “Waterest Him With Tears” HERE. (Direct Bandcamp)

Heavy music is experiencing a renaissance of innovation and creativity, while most of contemporary music genres have stagnated in recent years. 

Case in point: Holy Water, a powerful new step merging heavy doom guitars, stoic experimentalists like Caspar Brötzmann Massaker and Khanate mixed with early 80s proto-industrial sounds like Psychic TV and The Leather Nun, metalgaze melodies and hints of Wovenhand’s gothic folk. Yes, that’s a wide range of styles, but it shows just how deftly Holy Water, the nom-de-tune of vocalist/guitarist Jasper den Hartigh cuts its own sonic space. 

Jasper den Hartigh was previously a member of critically praised New Orleans post-punk band Heat Dust, which released a handful of recordings on The Flenser label and toured with Thou and The Body

Holy Water’s 11-song eponymous album was self-recorded in 2021, at home and at den Hartigh’s Austin rehearsal space. Help on drums came from Andrew Stevens, guitar from Neckbolt’s Ben Krause, and vocals from den Hartigh’s wife, Sarah Contey. 

“The album came after an extensive creativity exercise I did called Compost-Turn,” den Hartigh explains. “In which I put out 7 releases from friends and myself as physical bookmarks. When it came time to work on a self-titled solo project, this helped the songs appear rapidly. This album was my attempt at making a pop-record, while trusting my gut, using lessons learned over the course of my entire musical life. From being in punk bands, to playing slowcore, to ambient noise, and heavy metal. The songs all have references to Dutch fairy tales but also contain more personal writing.” 

Holy Water will be available on cassette and digital on February 3rd, 2023, LP to follow in summer. Cassette preorders via Primal Architecture, digital via Bandcamp and LP via Time Release.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Dave at US / THEM Group.]

Rewind Review: The Psychedelic Furs – Made of Rain (2020)

The Psychedelic Furs came back strong in 2020 with Made of Rain, their first album of new material since 1991’s World Outside. Richard Butler‘s voice and songwriting hadn’t lost a step and the rest of the band had plenty of pent-up pandemic energy to release.

“The Boy That Invented Rock & Roll” launches the album with shoegaze guitars and Richard Butler singing about himself to some degree (The Furs are one of the most influential UK post-punk bands still going.) and probably about others he’s seen in his long career who burned out (“the suicidal drunk dance, the sense that things will fall apart”) too soon. “Don’t Believe” has stadium-level grandeur with its expansive sound courtesy of Rich Good‘s guitars.

“When the new black is white and the new lows are high, in the ticking of the time, you’ll be mine,” Richard Butler sings on “You’ll Be Mine” – a gorgeous track with string instruments, alto saxophone work from Mars Williams, and celestial synths from Amanda Kramer. The chorus increases in power every time Butler sings it. Speaking of Butler’s power, it’s on full display on “Wrong Train” – a song about walking away from a relationship and the mixed emotions that come with it. “This’ll Never Be Like Love” continues this theme.

Paul Garisto‘s drums on “Ash Wednesday” seem all over the place but are actually loaded with highly technical fills. “Come All Ye Faithful” isn’t a cover of the traditional Christmas song, but rather a bit of a goth track, as is “No-One,” which has some Cure-like guitars behind Tim Butler‘s heavy, growling bass. A harpsichord plays the role of clock chimes on “Tiny Hands” – a song that seems to be about how time often gets away from us before we realize it’s gone.

“Hide the medicine from the kids,” Butler sings on “Hide the Medicine,” a sad tale of someone trying to hide their depression from their children hidden in a lush rock song. “Turn Your Back on Me” is just as lovely, with Good’s guitars seeming to echo from the back of a workshop behind the studio. “Stars” starts slow and then builds into a big, screeching song that drops out in a quick distorted plunge.

The Psychedelic Furs had a lot to get out of their heads when making this record, and the end result is a fine piece of work.

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