Showing posts with label rockabilly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rockabilly. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Tail Gators Two-fer from TWILIGHTZONE!

"...Don Leady the leader of the band is the singer, songwriter, guitarist, accordianist & producer with a vision. He puts together an audio gumbo of Gulf Coast styles blended with rock seasonings. A native of Cool Valley, Missouri, Don Leady continues to experiment with the guitar to find new techniques and sounds. It certainly doesn't stop with the guitar, he's gone into fiddle, steel guitar & most recently the accordian..."

TWILIGHTZONE!
JUST FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE

http://twilightzone-rideyourpony.blogspot.com/2009/07/tail-gators-swamp-rock-1985.html

WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 2009

The Tail Gators "Swamp Rock" 1985
A burning mixture of R&B and rockabilly, it's recommended to all rockers.


Tail Gators:
Gary Smith: Percussion, Drums, Triangle, Vocals, Rubboard / Keith Ferguson: Bass / Don Leady: Fiddle, Vocals, Lap Steel Guitar, Guitar, Violin



traxfromwax:
1) Pick Up The Deck 2) Brown Eyed Girl 3) No One Else Will Do 4) They Call Me Rockin' 5) Cajun Honey 6) Mamou Two Step 7) Rock And Roll Till The Cows Come Home 8) Zydeco Waltz 9) Little Darlin' Be Mine 10) All Night Worker 11) Rock Bayou Baby

...originally served by Philo...
GEPOSTET VON RYP UNTER 11:22 AM

KOMMENTARE:
RYP said...
The Tail Gators "Swamp Rock"
gitit! pw: rideyourpony
http://rapidshare.com/files/258653058/2t3a0i-0l.rar
JULY 22, 2009 11:35 AM


http://twilightzone-rideyourpony.blogspot.com/2009/07/tail-gators-tore-up-1987.html

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2009

The Tail Gators "Tore Up" 1987
"Strap on those dancin' shoes, 'cause tonight the Tailgators are telling everybody It's a Hog Groove!"



Tail Gators are:
Keith Ferguson (Bass), Don Leady (Fiddle, Guitar, Vocals), Gary Smith (Drums), Steve Berlin (percussion, keyboards), South Austin Natives (jungle noises) recorded at Arlyn Studios; Austin, Texas



traxfromwax:
1. Ballad Of Stagger And Lily 2. Diggin' And Datin' 3. Colinda 4. Jungle Rock 5. Fatback 6. Guitar Boogie Shuffle 7. Allon's Rock And Roll 8. Don't Do It 9. Back Door 10. Tore Up

GEPOSTET VON RYP UNTER 10:58 AM

KOMMENTARE:
RYP said...
The Tail Gators "Tore Up"
gitit! pw: rideyourpony
http://rapidshare.com/files/259044111/t3a8-il71.rar
JULY 23, 2009 12:02 PM



Don Leady the leader of the band is the singer, songwriter, guitarist, accordianist and producer with a vision. He puts together an audio gumbo of Gulf Coast styles blended with rock seasonings. A native of Cool Valley, Missouri, Don Leady continues to experiment with the guitar to find new techniques and sounds. It certainly doesn't stop with the guitar, he's gone into fiddle, steel guitar, and most recently the accordian. His education came from masters of the art, Chet Atkins, Les Paul and later BB King, because their music was readily available. He heard the Ventures and Duane Eddy a bit further down the line and loved their style. "Have Guitar, Will Travel" by Duane Eddy freaked him out totally, it was amazing. He caught Joe Maphis and the Collins Kids on the TV show, Ranch Party, and Joe Maphis made a huge impression on him. Joe Maphis became one of Don Leady's idols. Hearing Joe Maphis play the boogie woogie guitar and thinking to himself that the guy was picking the guitar ten times faster than Duane Eddy, Don Leady was star-struck. The Tailgators began in 1984 and continued into 2000, with a charismatic style of music that is very contagious. Don Leady, Jean-Jacques (JJ) Barrera and Chico Oropeza, are the Tailgators that are cookin' up the tunes on their 1996 release, It's A Hog Groove. Billy Gibbons, of ZZ Top, calls the trio from Austin Texas his favorite American band. The trio is one that should not be missed at a live venue, if there are any tickets left, they generally sell out fast. Some of the other names the Tailgators have been rumored to use in and around the Austin scene are, Zydeco Loco and Gators Del Norte. Whatever name they use, the end product is the same, It's A Hog Groove. - Larry Belanger, All Music Guide

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Country: The Twisted Roots Of Rock ‘n’ Roll - Nick Tosches

"...reveals a wild shadowland of history that encompasses blackface minstrels and yodeling cowboys; honky-tonk hell and rockabilly heaven; medieval myth and musical miscegenation; sex, drugs, murder; and rays of fierce illumination on Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, and others, famous and forgotten, whose demonology is America’s own. Profusely and superbly illustrated..."

http://www.amazon.com/Country-Twisted-Roots-Rock-Roll/product-reviews/0306807130/ref=cm_cr_dp_all_helpful?ie=UTF8&coliid=&showViewpoints=1&colid=&sortBy=bySubmissionDateDescending

Country: The Twisted Roots Of Rock ‘n’ Roll - Nick Tosches


INSIDE: http://www.amazon.com/Country-Twisted-Roots-Rock-Roll/dp/0306807130/ref=sr_1_20/185-4542574-6395216?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247430691&sr=8-20?ie=UTF8&tag=fg0f-20

From Publishers Weekly
A historical look at the seedy underbelly of country music. Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Description: Celebrating the dark origins of our most American music, Country reveals a wild shadowland of history that encompasses blackface minstrels and yodeling cowboys; honky-tonk hell and rockabilly heaven; medieval myth and musical miscegenation; sex, drugs, murder; and rays of fierce illumination on Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, and others, famous and forgotten, whose demonology is America’s own. Profusely and superbly illustrated, Country stands as one of the most brilliant explorations of American musical culture ever written.


“Country: The Twisted Roots Of Rock ‘n’ Roll”
Most Helpful Customer Reviews


20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Irreverent Yet Loving!, May 15, 2000
By Ralph Quirino (Keswick, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
Tosches displays not only a historian's love for the eras he writes about, but a gossip columnist's passion for irreverence and shock. That makes this book and its companion (Unsung Heroes of Rock & Roll) completely essential reads for anyone who loves popular twentieth century music. And, it blows the lid off country's origins in a way guaranteed to outrage country's often-times "holier-than-thou" patrons. Obscure names, obscure songs, obscure facts all mesh to create a living, breathing historical time-capsule that speaks as much about the era the music was recorded in as the music itself. And the writing is dry yet never condescending, witty yet never demeaning, sincere yet unafraid to point out "the truth" no matter how ugly and undignified it may be. But you'll learn to love the heroes that pepper this book for the pioneers they were. And, when the last page is read, you'll come back to it again and again. Part of the pleasure of reading a great book is rereading it and learning much more than you did the last time you read it... Tosches manages that feat thanks to an unflinching eye for detail and a poet's way with words.



14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Fun but Flawed and Faulty, September 18, 2006
By Ronald Forbes-roberts "emperoroficcream" (Northwest) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
Tosches is an entertaining and skillful writer and the premise of this book is an important and timely one. Country music has been diluted, softened and stripped of what once made it great and is now in the hands of the pallid "new country" gang of cheeseballs. Tosches saw this coming way back in the mid-70s, resented it and wrote this book. Unfortunately Country is full of misconceptions, omissions and serious factual errors. Yes, country music did have a dark side but it's always had a family and religious side as well and even in its earliest stages could cross over into sentimental and mawkish pap. This didn't start in the 50's as Tosches insists but was present in the music of the Carter Family and Jimmy Rogers (Tosches barely mentions either) who between them invented the genre. Their music embraced both sides of the coin as did every great country artist who ever lived including Hank Williams and Johnny Cash. (Tosches unfairly savages Cash in this book for his lightweight songs which is odd because in an article written 15 years later, Tosches praises him to the skies although Cash had written no groundbreaking tunes in the intervening years)
Tosches makes much of how the British murder ballad tradition disappeared completely from early country music, ignoring (or perhaps being unaware of) songs like Banks of the Ohio or Knoxville Girl--both of which were major country hits in the 30s and 50s respectively and are both taken directly from the murder ballad tradition as are many, many other country songs.
His chapter on the development of the dobro and steel guitar is potentially interesting but is full of major errors. Tosches seems unaware of the major differences between dobro, slide guitar, steel guitar, pedal steel guitar and so on and at times it sounds like he thinks they're all the same instrument with only minor alterations. For example, he doesn't mention the difference in the number of strings between dobro and pedal steel nor the very different tunings used. This would be acceptable if the discussion were brief but considering the space he devotes to the topic, these omissions are glaring. It would be a bit like saying that the piano is just a big harpsichord.
At one point he strongly disagrees with musicologists who claim that many country guitarists were influenced by jazz guitarists. He claims that the guitarist from Milton Brown's band couldn't have been influenced by Django Reinhardt because--he says--Reinhardt's records didn't reach the states until the late 30's. Wrong, Nick. Try 1933. Eddie Lang, who had a huge influence on country guitarists is never mentioned nor is Charlie Christian whose work was the source of the style of every gutiarist who played with Bob Wills.
But the most unforgiveable mistake is his insistence that Maybelle Carter's guitar playing had as much influence on country music as "Rudy Vallee." Read the history of the Carter Family, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" and the many testimonials from the greatest country guitarists ever recorded who all say that their primary influence was Mother Maybelle. This is so evident simply by listening to classic country music rhythm guitar playing that one wonders if Tosches has actually heard any.
Also, Tosches can't resist proving to us once again that he is a scholar of Greek and Roman literature and history and his references to this subject are sometimes laughably incongruous, clearly designed to convince us that his scholary credentials are unimpeachable. Usually these tedious asides have nothing to do with the subject at hand.
Still, Tosches is a good writer, full of irreverence and wit and great turns of phrase. This is a fun book to read and Tosches makes a few good points. But if you want to read truly well researched books on country music, forget this and pick up Bill Malone's Country Music USA and Rich Kienzle's excellent book Southwest Shuffle, a fantastically researched book which says more about the real roots of "New Country" in one chapter than Tosches says in this entire poorly realized mess of a book.



5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book belongs in every home, July 22, 2003
By Tony Thomas (SUNNY ISLES BEACH, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
In a reader review of Tosches' book on Emmett Miller, whose real origins are in the imaginary chapters of the first edition of this book, this book belongs in every home. The writing is this book alone is worth the price. He's a vigorous wise ass and elegant literary dynamo. If you just read the writing, and dont give a hoot about country music, you will enjoy yourself.
So much of music writing is devoled to haigiagraphy and confirming ignorant common places, whereas Tosches is concerned with the dirty nasty truth, and the wild side of things. You aren't going to learn that Roy Acuff who appointed himself a great country music icon, decades after he had had a hit, began his work in music with a group called "the Bang Boys" that specialized in X rated songs.

His description of a Jerry Lee Lewis recording session sometimes in the 1970s is really masterful and still rings in my mind 20 years after I first read it. Likewise, you will love Tosches' description of the dark end of Spade Cooley. Cooley torutured and murdered his wife because Cooley believed she had banged Roy Rodgers--and Cooley got into show business a double for Roy Rogers in the movies!

There is so much uncovered about the real origins of rock and roll.

No one can live without the first book that wasn't afraid to let you know that Hank Williams was bald!

If you don't have this book in your house, buy it, or move in with someone who's got it!

Dont forget his great book on Jerry Lee Lewis, Hellfire.
This man knows how to write!



0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Be aware!, October 25, 2006
By Bruce London - See all my reviews

A great read with terrific pictures of many past greats, BUT, the same book has been re-issued under three diferent titles!



20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
Irreverent Yet Loving!, May 15, 2000
By Ralph Quirino (Keswick, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews

Tosches displays not only a historian's love for the eras he writes about, but a gossip columnist's passion for irreverence and shock. That makes this book and its companion (Unsung Heroes of Rock & Roll) completely essential reads for anyone who loves popular twentieth century music. And, it blows the lid off country's origins in a way guaranteed to outrage country's often-times "holier-than-thou" patrons. Obscure names, obscure songs, obscure facts all mesh to create a living, breathing historical time-capsule that speaks as much about the era the music was recorded in as the music itself. And the writing is dry yet never condescending, witty yet never demeaning, sincere yet unafraid to point out "the truth" no matter how ugly and undignified it may be. But you'll learn to love the heroes that pepper this book for the pioneers they were. And, when the last page is read, you'll come back to it again and again. Part of the pleasure of reading a great book is rereading it and learning much more than you did the last time you read it... Tosches manages that feat thanks to an unflinching eye for detail and a poet's way with words.



7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
Masterpiece!, October 21, 1998
By CoolCrosby@aol.com (Cleveland, OH) - See all my reviews
I loved this book. I read it when it was called COUNTRY: THE BIGGEST MUSIC IN AMERICA which I thought was perfect in an ironic sense then and now. This is the thinking person's guide to why C&W matters.



5 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
Nick Tosches is one of our most important writers, February 27, 1998
By A Customer
Greetings from Bella Bella, BC and thank you for providing a forum for readers to express their admiration and awe for the writers and publishing houses who support them. I am sorry to intrude on this review station for his other book; however, I believe this may help all parties rooting for Mr.Tosches. I have re-read Nick Tosches' "Trinities" now for the third time. If you have not read this novel, wind sprint to your nearest bookstore and pick it up. Nick Tosches has unleashed hell on earth with this powerful, brutal and unapologetic story about men killing each other off to control the worldwide herion export/import business. I think Nick Tosches is a man who knows way too much and I am glad his publisher gave him the support to publish this book. I want, however, to give the publisher heck for using possibly the worst cover I have ever seen on any book. That's right! The first cover on the mass trade paperback was horrible and really revealed nothing about the true power and wisdom waiting to be told in the following pages. I am glad to see a new cover on the novel. I have no doubt this will increase sales and perhaps spur more great reviews for Mr. Tosches. I cannot find any of Nick's other books in Canada and am desperately trying to find them. Can anyone out there help me? Nick Tosches, you have written one of the most powerful books I have ever read. You managed to capture the strangest beauty in your brutal, bloody story. I do not know how you did it, but you did. Congratulations and please hurry up and come out with another great novel. Your fan, Richard Van Camp



1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Makes punk and gangsta look tame, May 15, 2006
By Earth that Was - See all my reviews
Anyone who thinks country music is boring needs to read this book. A great warts and all treatment of the dark underbelly of C & W. Fascinating trivia and insights for anyone familiar with the great country music of the 1930s to 1950s. The twisted roots of Country makes punk and gangsta look tame.



0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
The Master of purple prose and truth stikes again!, December 22, 2005
By Oscar Stern "Dock Oscar" (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews

OK, I'm a big Tosches fan BUT here Nick gets religion and digs deep into the seamy underbelly of country music. Roy Acuff singing dirty songs? The devil in Jerry Lee Lewis? The sacred and profane all wonderfully exposed and written by Nick (the devil himself) Tosches. Great stuff.



3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
The most informative ever written on early Country Music, October 16, 2005
By DBH (Canyon Country, CA USA) - See all my reviews
I have bought 6 copies of this books since 1988, for friends and for the two copies I wore out. Before reading this I was already a fan of early Country Music, but this book opened my eyes and ears to a multitude of artists that I wasn't aware of but who had helped shape the direction of Country Music. The only negative thing I can say about this book is that after reading it, I ended up spending a small fortune purchasing LPs, and later CDs, of the obscure artists he makes reference to.



1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
A book to be savoured, September 1, 2005
By Lord Rockingham "Pop culture vulture" (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
Extraordinary. The only way to describe this book. Tosches' astonishingly intricate and challenging look at the arcana and history of this great American art form is incredible. If you're looking for a straight chronology of country music then this ain't it. But it's even more the fascinating for that: a collection of essays and (possibly) fictional pieces on the convoluted road to rock 'n' roll via country, jazz, blues and R&B. Connections are made while words, thoughts, facts tumble onto the page in abandon and Tosches' breadth of knowledge and handling of his material is simply breathtaking.

(THANKS TO MR JYN & DUI CURE KIT BLOG FOR THE REFERRAL)

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

TheHoundBlog: Billy Lee Riley needs our help

"...Billy Lee Riley, one of the remaining original Sun Records artists,is in VERY bad need of help! Billy has had his share of health problems & is now battling Stage FOUR bone cancer. Altho musicares is helping with house payment, car & such, he & Joyce are totally out of money & can barely afford to eat. This is a CALL FOR HELP to all musicians and fans..."

http://thehoundblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/billy-lee-riley.html

THEHOUNDBLOG
PUT THAT IN YER PIPE AND SMOKE IT!
TUESDAY, JULY 7, 2009

Billy Lee Riley



Billy Lee Riley ...
one of the remaining original Sun Records artists, Is in VERY bad need of help! Billy has had his share of health problems, and is now battling Stage FOUR bone cancer. Although musicares is helping with house payment, car and such, He and Joyce are totally out of money and can barely afford to eat. This is a CALL FOR HELP to all musicians and fans. Please remember, twenty bucks from all of us would make a HUGE difference in Billy's life! What if this was you? Let's all get together and send something today to Billy and Joyce and show them that he means alot to us. If you have a website, a facebook or myspace, please post this need for help on it! We can't save the world, but it will mean alot in Billy Lee's life!
His Address is:
Billy Lee Riley
723 Crest Drive
Jonesboro, Arkansas 72401

The above was re-printed from Rockabilly Hall Of Fame site. Billy Lee Riley's Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll was one of the first rockabilly 45's I ever heard, it totally changed my life.
Some of his other classic Sun 45's were Red Hot (this is an alternate take), and his first record, one of my very favorites-- Rock With Me Baby b/w Trouble Bound. I saw him play at the Circle Bar Christmas Party in 2003 and he was incredible. If anyone of these old guys had the whole package to make it, it was Billy Lee Riley, unfortunately Sam Phillips only had the money to promote a couple of artists, so he chose Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis, leaving Riley on the back burner. He managed to stay in music as a session man, then gradually staged a comeback and was a big draw on the international rockabilly circuit. Give the poor fella a hand.

POSTED BY THE HOUND AT 12:07 PM

Monday, June 8, 2009

Big D's own, the great Gene Summers still out there rockin...

(My older brother, Dan, used to play in Gene Summers' band, and he received this recently from Gene)



Hi, friends: Thanks to all of you who have emailed with concern for my wife Dea who suffered a stroke a year ago. We appreciate your thoughts and kindness and we hope that soon she'll be back up rockin' & rollin'!! Best - Gene Summers and Family

I Hope to see some of you in Pakefield (UK) on July 4th!

http://www.tennesseeclub.net/events/wildcats09.htm

Saturday, May 16, 2009

New Miriam Lenna Blog - KICKSVILLE 66

http://kicksville66.blogspot.com/2009/05/my-first-band-cramps-1976-pt-1.html

KICKSVILLE 66

FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2009
MY FIRST BAND : THE CRAMPS 1976 (Pt. 1)

"Erick Purkhiser, better known as Cramps leader Lux Interior, died on February 2. Long ago, and for one year, he was my friend. I was the drummer in the first Cramps lineup which played forty-odd dates over an eight month period from the first show on All Saints Night 1976 through July 13, 1977, the date of the NYC blackout. With his passing came a mess of calls asking about the early days. After years of avoiding a backward glance, I was suddenly dropped headlong into the well. A moldering box of old stuff materialized from way back of the closet, and old friends began sending in decades-old snapshots, clippings, bits of correspondence. That first year in New York was my coming of age, at least in calendar years. It was also my first year behind the traps, on the flipside of fandom. It provided a hazing that alternately galvanized and confused my head, so these few words and pictures will seem sad and funny at the same time. I hope this helps clear the cobwebs for those who care. Walking through my dreams, like the Pretty Things would say. RIP, Lux. "



"...That first run-in was at a small Sixth Avenue eatery called Chicken & Burger World, located right by Bigelow’s Pharmacy and a stone’s throw from Village Oldies and Discophile, where Helen and I had been trawling for records. A familiar looking tall guy with long hair and a velvet jacket had sidled over to our table to say that he’d seen us at a show at the Piccadilly Inn in Cleveland a few weeks earlier, and then he told us that he and his girlfriend Ivy (who waved from their table and then came over to say hi, a tiny lady with billowing sandy curls) in the middle of moving to New York to form a band, and that I should play drums with them. I was shocked. I told him I’d never played at all and that seemed to be a selling point. I’m guessing they had come from California to Ohio not long before that to see Lux’s family—he was originally from Stow, five miles from Kent, and I understood his family was in Akron. As he was talking, I realized that I had seen him at a Kinks show-- the Schoolboys tour- I remembered he had been wearing turquoise shoes. Subtle. We exchanged addresses and soon after I got back home to Ohio, there was a letter from Lux saying that they’d be stopping by when they came back to move their stuff to NYC. ..."



"... Bryan’s sister Pam had arrived in NYC a couple weeks earlier, and she had filled in a couple rehearsals in the record store basement, just for laughs. Regardless, another band photo had been snapped and another handbill hatched. There’s also a great early cameo flyer of just Bryan, gazing over his shoulder. So here I was now, not knowing what I was getting into, and not knowing which end up was up on a drumstick, in with this snap-happy trio with a name, and a selection of photos, and zero experience, or musical ability for that matter. Lux handed me a brand new pair of sticks and pronounced me the world’s greatest drummer. Let’s go. Just like that. No audition, no test run, no lessons, no suggestions of what to play or how fast..."



"...Around the same time, we were messing with the Troggs’ Night Of The Long Grass. That still is a personal fave. God bless Reg Presley and all he stands for, crop circles and all. Somebody get Reg on Coast To Coast AM, please! That spring, my Ohio pal Peter Laughner came to visit at the apartment above a hardware store on 12th Street and First Avenue that I was by then sharing with Buffalo’s best, Miss Lydia Lunch and nutty Cleveland import Bradley Field, who was fresh out of jail in Ohio. (The pair would go on to bang a gong as Teenage Jesus and the Jerks.) Peter arrived with Lester Bangs and Richard Lloyd in tow, and we hung around listening to records and a demo Richard had just cut, solo; finally taking a cab to pick up photog Stephanie Chernikowski. It was a perfect late spring day, the windows were down and the taxi was going fast. I remember it clearly, as it was the last time I would see Peter. He phoned right before his death in June. .."

GREAT STUFF, CHECK IT OUT...
http://kicksville66.blogspot.com/2009/05/my-first-band-cramps-1976-pt-1.html

Monday, May 11, 2009

A New Week & New Good Borrowed Images

From Next Big Thing:



From Tom Sutpen at If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger...:

Artists in Action #505- Dean Martin hones his act


From Sophie D:



From Tom Sutpen at If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger...:

The Art of Jazz #90- Music for Tired Lovers (Woody Herman and The Errol Garner Trio) (Columbia Records; 1954)


From Tom Sutpen at If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger...:

Viceroys, Prophets and Hillbilly Cats #7- Lorrie and Larry Collins


From Bacchus at ErosBlog:

Ann-Margaret
My movie guy tells me this is from a 1969 movie called “The Swinger”.


From Texasisgay: