Monthly Archives: December 2009

How It’s Made

Via a tip on the Pedal Steel Guitar forum, here a video of–I believe–Eddie Fulawka making a pedal steel guitar. At one point in the incredibly concise clip from the Discovery Channel’s How It’s Made, the narrator mentions that in getting the pick-up level, “There’s no room for error.”

Hmmm, there’s not a lot of room for error elsewhere. The modern pedal steel guitar is a wonder of craftsmanship, and with the top-of-the-line guitars, each is the product of a lot of handcraftsmanship.

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Christmas Mix – I Wish it Could Be Christmas Everyday



1 Reverend Horton Heat – Jingle Bells 2:19
2 The Crystals – Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer 2:33
3 Byron Lee and The Dragonaires – Winter Wonderland 2:32
4 Lolas – Little Drummer Boy 3:17
5 Davie Allan & the Arrows – Frosty The Snowman 2:23
6 Smithereens – Christmas (I Remember) 3:35
7 NRBQ – Christmas Wish 2:49
8 Huey “Piano” Smith – All I Want For Christmas
(Is A Little Bit Of Music) 3:03
9 Redd Kross – Mary Christmas 3:32
10 The Chevelles – Come All Ye Faithful Surfer Girls 2:21
11 Beach Boys – The Man with All the Toys 1:30
12 George Jones & Tammy Wynette – Mr. & Mrs. Santa Claus 2:21
13 Fountains of Wayne – The Man In The Santa Suit 2:39
14 Loretta Lynn – To Heck With Ole Santa Claus 2:02
15 Lynyrd Skynyrd – Santa Claus Wants Some Lovin’ 3:37
16 The Ravens – Blue Christmas 1:57
17 Syd Straw – (I’m Always Touched By Your) Presents, Dear 3:49
18 Imperial Drag – Please Leave Me Home For Xmas 3:27
19 Bruce Springsteen – Merry Xmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight) 4:29
20 Devil Dogs – I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday 3:39″ />


I Wish it Could Be Christmas Everyday – 2009 Holiday Mix by Dub Collision

Download tagged for iPOD – MP3 320kbs

Enjoy…have a great and musical holiday and new year!

xx

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Skin Break

This trailer is self-explanatory. The beat goes on. . .

(Hat tip to the fine mp3 blog everythinginmyipod.)

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Dub Collision mix – Cheap Blues

All over the place blues, so cheap for you.
1 Jay McShann – Some Kinda Crazy 2:41
2 Bob Brozman & Djeli Mousa Diawara – Maloyan Devil 5:59
3 Kelly Joe Phelps – Little Family 3:57
4 Imperial Kings – Love Blues 4:20
5 Geoff Muldaur & The Texas Queens – Hard Time Killin’ Floor 4:19
6 Papa Mojo – Bunkie Boogie 3:01
7 Jim Dickinson & Chuck Prophet – Down In Mississippi 4:07
8 John Campbell – Lockdown 3:51
9 Tab Benoit – What I Have to Do 5:00
10 Joe Barry – Rollin’ Bones 2:15
11 Eric Clapton & Steve Winwood – Driftin’ 5:41
12 Better Days – New Walkin’ Blues 6:17
13-14 Robert Randolph – You Got to Move-Goin’ In the Right Direction 12:48
15 The White Stripes – Death Letter -> Motherless Children -> Death Letter 8:01
16 The Black Keys – When The Lights Go Out 3:13


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<- a taste


Cheap Blues – mp3 via Rapidshare (tagged for iPOD and ready to go!)

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Mr. Grinch

Aimee Mann – Mr. Grinch

Highly recommended from two years ago:

Aimee Mann - One More Drifter In the Snow

My own xmas podcast comp is in the works.

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Graham Parker – the year, 1976

33 years ago, 1976, was the bicentennial year, but for me it was mainly the year I latched onto a dream job running a record department in the back of a book store in the college town of Middlebury, Vermont. Very soon after my arrival I struck up a friendship with a like-minded jazzbo and began sitting in on his weekly radio show on the college station, WRMC. One way or the other, I would spend one radio slot a week there for nine years, mostly presenting jazz on Tuesday nights under the title Groovin’ High. Tidbit: for two years CNN’s Frank Sesno read the news after my show.

So, this was the background for 1976. Graham Parker released two superb recordsHeat Treatment and Howlin’ Wind in the same year! I have to confess too: to my tastes, both records wiped away my fascination with the Boss, who had released Born to Run the previous year. To place these records in context, both Elvis Costello and the Sex Pistols would issue their debut records the next year. Meanwhile, the FM radio dial was increasingly dominated by corporate rock.

Parker recorded for Mercury, yet their hype machine fell short with his one-two punch in 76. There really wasn’t a place for pub-rock driven singer-songwriter rock and roll on the stateside dial. I didn’t need any extravagant pitch. As soon as I learned that Parker had hired en-mass the legendary Brinsley Schwarz outfit to be his back-up band I was off my rocker. They were my favorite countrified import from the isles, and Silver Pistol (1971) and Nervous On the Road (1972) remain among my favorite listens in the down home vein of The Band and Better Days and Bobby Charles. Okay, as it turned out: guitarist Schwarz and keyboardist Andrews, and they picked up buddy Martin Belmont from Ducks Deluxe.


Billy Rankin-drummer
Bob Andrews-piano
Nick Lowe-bass
Ian Gomm-guitar
Brinsley Schwarz-guitar

Only a little of that flavor is in the mix of Parker’s two opening shots. Parker is a ferocious soulman and one of the great rock-and-roll songwriters, and the Brinsleys morphed into The Rumour so as to match the ferocity with their own fervor. No hits was the reward for two statements of fierce rock and roll. Only surprising—since the era’s trends were unkind to so much terrific music—in that the two records have nary a bad cut, and, including lots of hit-worthy cuts.

(I count Heat Treatment, Black Honey, Pourin’ It All Out, and Fool’s Gold, just from Heat Treatment.) It was the same result for Squeezing Out the Sparks, released in 1979, albeit at least it is considered one of the great rock records. However, it came out in even more ungenerous times: 1979 was the year disco broke through, and, punk ruled most muso’s hearts.

Quality wins out in the end. Graham Parker has been churning out grown-up rock and roll ever since that bicentennial year–enough so that he is one of the masters.

Graham Parker tells the story himself on his defunct blog Chairman Parker. It’s an amusing and edifying read.


Graham Parker (home page | Wikipedia)
Essential:

All-time favorites


Brinsley Schwarz – Silver Pistol
Brinsley Schwarz – Nervous On the Road

Graham Parker – Howlin’ Wind
Graham Parker – Heat treatment

Desert island worthy:

Graham parker – Squeezing Out the Sparks

New and likely fab:

Graham Parker & the Rumour – Live in San Francisco

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Captain Beefheart’s Rules for Guitarists

6. NEVER POINT YOUR GUITAR AT ANYONE Your instrument has more power than lightning. Just hit a big chord, then run outside to hear it. But make sure you are not standing in an open field.

There’s nine more. See Music Thing.

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