Showing posts with label Brothers Steve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brothers Steve. Show all posts

Friday, February 16, 2024

10 SONGS: 2/16/2024

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1220. This show is available as a podcast.

WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

Back in the '90s, Wonderboy was a fantastic SoCal rockin' pop combo fronted by our old pal Robbie Rist. I've never even seen a copy of Wonderboy's eponymous 1992 debut album, but follow-ups Abbey Road To Ruin (1994) and Napoleon Blown Apart (1997) have been in my CD library since the proverbial ever. We've played Wonderboy on TIRnRR, we've played the esteemed Mr. Rist singin' with Popdudes, Quint, Ballzy Tomorrow, the Test Pressings, and solo, and we've played our Robbie working as an integral component of a number of other acts. The official record demonstrates that we, y'know, like Robbie Rist records.


But we did not know that Wonderboy recorded another album after Napoleon Blow Apart

The revelation came to us via The Spoon, the weekly podcast this Rist guy co-hosts with Chris Jackson and Thom Bowers. A recent Spooncast closed with a taste of "Girl Songs," a friggin' magnificent li'l gem from Wonderboy's originally unreleased album Hero Isle. Wonderboy recorded Hero Isle in (I think) the late '90s, working with studio magician Christian Nesmith; Christian and his wife Circe Link have also been fixtures on this little mutant radio show's playlists. Alas, Hero Isle was never released. Never released at all...

...wait.

What?

WHAT THE ACTUAL...?!!

Robbie did a digital self-release of Hero Isle. Well, that's good! Finally! Musta just been released, right? Right...?

It came out in 2018. 

We need better minions. Or, I guess, some minions. A minion. The buck stops somewhere over there. WAY over there.

Better late than...dammit, I wish we'd gotten to this sooner. But we're on it NOW! "Girl Songs" is a picture-perfect embrace of essential non-essentialness, eschewing weightier lyrical topics in favor of writin' catchy pop tunes about girls. 'Cause girls mean a lot to me!

We get the meaning, Robbie, and we agree. "Girl Songs" at long last makes its TIRnRR debut this week. We'll hear another Hero Isle track this Sunday night.

AND we'll hear "Girl Songs" again on Sunday, too. We have a big stack of time to overcompensate for. Girl songs? We're in.

[NOTE: Since this was posted, we have learned that Hero Isle was recorded before Napoleon Blown Apart, not after.]

BO DIDDLEY: Ooh Baby

It might not be strictly accurate to say I've been on a Bo Diddley kick, but it's true that a spin of the Diddley Daddy's incongruous (but swell!) bubblegum single "Bo Diddley 1969" on January 15th led to more Bo on each succeeding week. It's BO time!

Other than a spin of Diddley's "Background To A Music" (a song I learned from Cub Koda), all of the rest of my Bo picks in January and February have come from my 2-CD Bo Diddley compilation The Chess Box. From The Chess Box, we've heard "Bo Diddley 1969," "Pills," "Diddy Wah Diddy," and this week's bodacious Bo cut "Ooh Baby." We'll go back to The Chess Box for another relatively obscure Bo Diddley treat on our next show. 

And people say we don't know Diddley. Liars!

THE MC5: High School

In fact, I was a high school student when I first heard the MC5. The introduction occurred some time around my senior year, seven or eight years after the 1969 release of the group's incendiary classic "Kick Out The Jams." The track was included on a weird 2-LP various-artists set called Heavy Metal. I wrote about that album here. In that piece, I gave specific praise for the MC5:

"The album opens with 'Kick Out The Jams.' That was the revelation for me. I'd never heard the MC5 before, never heard of the MC5 before. This was the censored version, with brothers and sisters standing in for the unexpurgated original incitement to kick out the jams, muthafuckas. I knew nothing about any of that; I just knew this track rocked, and I discovered its raucous, ragged splendor just before I discovered the concept of punk rock. Within less than a year, I would be an enthusiastic punk fan."

"High School" was my second MC5 track, delivered to my eager ears on July 6, 1979, as I witnessed the Ramones' irresistible film Rock 'n' Roll High School. "High School" was on the movie's soundtrack, but not on the movie's soundtrack album. Within the next two or three years, I tracked down used copies of each of the MC5's three albums, Kick Out The Jams, Back In The USA, and High Time. The Back In The USA track "Shakin' Street" scored a lot--a lot--of turntable time in my apartment in the early '80s.

MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer left our mortal Shakin' Street behind at the beginning of this month. There was no doubt that we would close this week's show with "Kick Out The Jams," and I confess I was tempted to program the uncensored version for play during the safe harbor period, then sub in the cleaner-language edit for replay. But: Too much work. We kick out the jams in the fashion we choose.

And during our opening set, we chose the MC5's "High School" to salute the late, great Wayne Kramer. The kids want a little action. The kids want a little fun. The kids all have to get their kicks before the evening's done.

It's been a long, long time since high school. The lesson was learned, and it remains in place. Rah rah rah. Sis boom bah.

BLUE ÖYSTER CULT: Godzilla

I associate Blue Öyster Cult's song "Godzilla" with a specific memory of someone I knew decades ago. We were friends, but we did not part as friends. Our eventual estrangement had nothing whatsoever to do with either "Godzilla" or the band that performed it, but my mind tethers the track to a former friend, and my recollection of that friend playing the song and dedicating it to a former flame, someone I didn't really know. 

They also did not part as friends. 

Music is larger than its intrinsic details, and it can affect us in ways far beyond the artists' intentions. For all that, I don't hate the song at all. I do still dig it, and it makes a welcome addition to the TIRnRR playlist. I was amazed to look at our all-time stats and discover we'd never played the damned thing before. Well! There goes Tokyo! Go, go Godzilla!

MAD MONSTER PARTY: No Matter What I Do

When Dana programmed the Blue Öyster Cult song, I couldn't resist following that mad monster Godzilla with Mad Monster Party. Categorical imperative, people. Mad Monster Party included Gwynne Kahn and (at times) Bambi Conway, both of whom had been in the Pandoras, whose way fab 1984 track "It's About Time" merits a chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1)

Mad Monster Party released one single and recorded an album's worth of absolutely ace material in the '80s; if the album had come out, it would have been one of my tippy-top records of the decade, probably Top Three (challenging On Fyre by Lyres, falling just short of my # 1 pick Drop Out With The Barracudas). One of its tracks, "Can't Stop Loving You," appeared on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 3 in 2013, and the whole album (or at least an approximation of it) was briefly available as an authorized digital download. It is no longer available in any legit form.

And that's a shame. I have wav masters of the album, provided to me by the band when we were putting together the above-mentioned TIRnRR compilation. This stuff cries out for wider attention, wider release, and I hope some visionary record label will strike a deal to put Mad Monster Party on the shelves in physical form.

"No Matter What I Do" is from that album, and it rocks. Hey, Godzilla! Wanna party? Mad monsters gotta stick together.

SLADE: Do We Still Do It

Before radio playlists became so numbingly homogenized across the breadth of everywheresville, it was possible--common, even--for Top 40 stations in different parts of the USA to play records not being played in other markets. 

For example:

1970s stompmeisters Slade were huge in their native UK, largely unknown (or at least underappreciated) here in the colonies. But I knew 'em, because Syracuse's WOLF-AM decided Slade's "Gudbye T' Jane" was a goddamned hit, and played the track accordingly. Over time, I eventually snagged the Slade best-of LP Sladest, and sniffed imperiously at Johnnys-come-lately who discovered Slade material through Quiet Riot's meatball covers in the '80s. Poseurs.

For all that, I have to concede that it was an '80s cover version that hooked me on Slade's "Do We Still Do It." Slade's original version appeared on their 1974 album Old New Borrowed And Blue. In 1988, Flashcubes guitarist Paul Armstrong covered the song with his group 1.4.5. on their album Rhythm n' Booze. Thus indoctrinated, I kept ears open for Slade's OG rendition, and finally grabbed a copy of Old New Borrowed And Blue at a record show. We have played the Slade and the 1.4.5. records at various times on this show over the years.

And we still do it.

THE COCKTAIL SLIPPERS: St. Valentine's Day Massacre

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You


From power pop legend Paul Collins' new album Stand Back And Take A Good Look, "I'm The Only One For You" just might be my favorite new track of 2024 so far. We've now played it three weeks in a row. Spin # 4 will come this Sunday night. Stand back? NO! Dive in, man. Dive in.

THE BROTHERS STEVE: Songwriter


The mighty Brothers Steve released two albums with the good folks at Big Stir Records: # 1 (an independent release in 2019, reissued by Big Stir in 2020) and Dose (2021). If they do another album, I continue to insist it's gotta be called Dry.

I will not explain this joke to you.

Meanwhile, it was high time we played another Brothers Steve number (GET IT?) on the show, and we went back to # 1 for our choices. From that album, "We Got The Hits" has become something of a TIRnRR Fave Rave, so we figured we'd mix it up a bit, deciding between "Beat Generation Poet Turned Assassin" and "Songwriter." We went with the latter.

When it comes to programming the best stuff, you can always count on us.

THE MC5: Kick Out The Jams


Also The Greatest Record Ever Made. Godspeed, Wayne Kramer. Kick out the jams, brother. Kick out the jams.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!! https://rarebirdlit.com/gabba-gabba-hey-a-conversation-with-the-ramones-by-carl-cafarelli/

If it's true that one book leads to another, my next book will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Stay tuned. Your turn is coming.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Thursday, January 13, 2022

10 SONGS: 1/13/2022

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1111.

LAURIE BIAGINI: Hey Mr. DJ

Man, it has been way too long since we've heard from singer-songwriter Laurie Biagini. Laurie's been a long-time TIRnRR Fave Rave, and we're delighted to hear that she's hoping to release her new album Stranger In The Mirror in 2022. HuzZAH! This week, Laurie graced us with this teaser from Stranger In The Mirror, a giddy li'l single called "Hey Mr. DJ." Hey Mr. DJ, play me a song. These DJs are happy to comply. Welcome back, Laurie.

DAVID RUFFIN: Anything That You Ask For

I've been writing a book called The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). I'm pretty sure I've mentioned it here at some point (or a billion), fighting my natural shyness about self-promo...skip it. David Ruffin's fascinating version of the Jackson Five's "I Want You Back" earns its own entry in that long-threatened GREM! tome. Ruffin recorded the track in the early '70s, but it remained in the vaults, unreleased, for decades. As maddening as that is, it's even more flabbergasting that David, the proposed 1972 album for which "I Want You Back" was intended, likewise remained unissued and unheard. I finally heard the whole album last week, and it's fantastic, easily the best stuff Ruffin did after leaving the Temptations. I cannot fathom why in the world Motown refused to release this record. "Anything That You Ask For" offers a fine taste of the great Motown album that Motown didn't want you to hear.

THE BROTHERS STEVE: Electro-Love

Both Dana and I are adamantly on board the Brothers Steve bandwagon. While we continue to fixate on the irresistible "We Got The Hits" from their debut album # 1, we also wanna keep heaping radiophonic electro-love on their superswell 2021 record Dose. "Electro-Love" is the latest Big Stir Records single off Dose, and none can deny its divine right to sovereign airplay space. So much to love! 

(And we remind the intrepid Steves: first album was # 1, second album is Dose, and third one really oughtta be Dry. We humbly suggest the title of SUZI!! for your fourth album. Sink and Sicks can follow that. This has been a public service from This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl.)

PETULA CLARK: Colour My World

Although I remember hearing and digging Petula Clark on the radio when I was a kid--especially with her wonderfully ubiquitous 1964 smash "Downtown"--I don't have any recollection of this song. It (very) belatedly caught my fancy when Rich Firestone gave it a spin on his own essential show Radio Deer Camp some time back, prompting me to finally purchase a Petula Clark best-of CD for my collection. Radio's job is to sell records. And loyal TIRnRR listeners should be sure to catch Rich's Radio Deer Camp every Sunday from 5 to 7 pm Eastern, right here on SPARK! Your wallet will hate you, but that's okay. Radio's job, man. Radio's job.

TAMAR BERK: In The Wild

One of the first-world problems of co-hosting a rockin' pop radio show is that there are always so, so many wonderful tracks to consider and a finite amount of time to play them each week. We received Tamar Berk's album The Restless Dreams Of Youth in 2021, played its fab track "Skipping The Cracks" precisely twice, with the intent of playing more, and more often. It took us this long to get back to it. My trusty iPod recently shuffled its way to Tamar's track "In The Wild" and I cursed myself for not playing the damned thing here sooner. We remedied that oversight on this week's playlist. So much great music. So little time. We'll try to play more Tamar Berk in 2022.

THE TROGGS: Lost Girl

TIRnRR has begun its 24th year as The Best Three Hours Of Radio On The Whole Friggin' Planet. But like the Golliwogs before Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Superman-Batman team before they became the lead feature in World's Finest Comics, the Dana & Carl radio partnership began well before its current mutant incarnation. On January 15th, 1992, Dana and I visited a fly-by-night radio studio in Syracuse to pitch our idea of a rock 'n' roll radio show; our 90-minute audition went on the air that same night as the inaugural edition of our show We're Your Friends For Now, with subsequent three-hour shows to follow each week thereafter (until we succeeded in bringing the whole station down with us by summer).

More radio collaborations continued sporadically throughout the '90s, eventually leading to This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio's debut on December 27th, 1998. You can read about our weird history here. But that history did not start in 1998. We're Your Friends For Now was an embryonic version of TIRnRR, with time, title, location, and experience the only real differences between our Golliwogs then and our CCR now. 30 years of Dana & Carl. We're still here, and we're celebrating our inexplicable longevity with a 30th anniversary blowout show this Sunday.

We're Your Friends For Now did have a greater emphasis on theme shows than TIRnRR has retained (though we've still done our share of those, too). One theme show idea we were kickin' around before the old place imploded was "Debut Singles And Demo Tapes," which would have been a three-hour presentations of...debut singles and demo tapes. This ain't rocket surgery, people. That theme was directly inspired by our love of the Troggs, and a specific wish to spotlight their beguilingly ornery introductory side "Lost Girl." I don't know what other songs we would have wound up playing in this never-realized theme show. But I can guarantee you we would have played "Lost Girl." 

POPDUDES: Share The Land

Popdudes is/are/am the long-standing (mostly) covers combo featuring my former Goldmine magazine colleague John Borack on drums, joining various other ace musicmakers to capture that pop music sound you crave. Michael Simmons is almost always one of John's fellow Popdudes, and sundry line-ups of Popdudes have supplied original songs to three out of the four This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation CDs. This capable cover of the Guess Who's "Share The Land" includes Robbie Rist, and was the virtual B-side to Popdudes' 2020 Big Stir Records single cover of the Five Stairsteps' "O-o-h Child." Worth sharing.

THE FLASHCUBES: Alone In My Room

Oh, those Flashcubes. I tell ya, they're up to something. We know they're working on a new archival release called Flashcubes On Fire, preserving an incendiary 1979 live show for eventual consumption by an eager power pop public. And they did two new tracks in 2021--covers of Pezband's "Baby It's Cold Outside" (recorded with Pezband's Mimi Betinis) and the Dwight Twilley Band's "Alone In My Room"--both of which made the countdown of TIRnRR's most-played tracks of the year. The former was released as a Big Stir Records digital single, while the latter was officially unreleased as of this week's show (with a digital single release now due Friday). Comments from [source redacted] indicate cause for anticipation regarding these Cubic rockin' pop covers, and the arrival this week of a third newly-recorded pop cover by the Flashcubes further ratchets the anticipation up and up and up. That newest cover will open next week's show. In the mean time, here's another spin of the Flashcubes' version of "Alone In My Room." 

And keep an eye (and ear) on those Flashcubes. They're up to something, they are.

THE RAMONES: I Don't Want To Grow Up

My January song, every year. A Greatest Record Ever Made! celebration of this song is set to appear in a book I wrote, a book that is NOT the still-homeless GREM! book. This other book is tentatively planned for publication late this year. I hope. For now, I repeat my dismissal of the silly and pointless prospect of growing up: Don't wanna, won't need to, ain't gonna.

LULU: To Sir, With Love

I'm not 100% certain that the late Sidney Poitier was my lovely wife Brenda's all-time favorite actor, or if his film To Sir, With Love is her all-time favorite movie, or if that flick's title theme song is her all-time favorite individual track. In each category, though, I'm positive Brenda would rate Sidney, To Sir, With Love, and the plaintive voice of Lulu singing of crayons and perfume at or near the toppermost of her poppermost. We had already recorded this week's TIRnRR when we heard that Poitier had passed, but Dana had time to add this live BBC performance of "To Sir, With Love" at the end of the show. Brenda appreciates it. I appreciate it, too. Thank you, Sir.

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You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:

Volume 1: download

Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

Friday, November 19, 2021

POWER POP Q & A (Crib Notes From The Modern Pop Underground)


As mentioned yesterday, my friends (and fellow pop addicts) Bruce Brodeen, John M. Borack, and I were each interviewed by writer S. W. Lauden for his just-published piece "Notes From The Modern Pop Underground." For deeper background, here's the complete text of my conversation with the esteemed Mr. Lauden. And I thank him once again for inviting me to participate.


S.W. LAUDEN: How do you personally define power pop?

CC: I always go back to writer Gary Sperrazza!'s words in Bomp! magazine in 1978: "Power pop means pop with POWER! Not some whimpering simp in a Beatles haircut." Guitar, bass, drums, vocals, la-la-las, and CRUNCH, all leaning forward. Infectious pop music with aggressive intent.

How did you discover power pop? Who are three of your favorite all-time power pop artists? Why?

Before hearing the phrase, I already liked AM radio rockin' pop designed for high volume, especially Badfinger and the Raspberries. Bomp! magazine preached a Gospel, connecting the early Who and Kinks to Raspberries and Ramones. I already loved all of these acts, so I was already a power pop fan.

My favorite power pop act is the Flashcubes, who embody the Bomp! power pop equation of Shaun Cassidy + the Sex Pistols = the early Who. Great songs, great excitement, hell of a live band. The rest of my top 2 rotates (unless I just say Beatles, Ramones, Flashcubes).


Looking around the global power pop community—who would you say are 2-3 of the best bands making modern power pop music these days?

Ignoring my strict view of what is or isn't power pop, there are tons of great, great acts making fabulous new music within the broad parameters of rockin' pop. The Flashcubes are still recording. The Grip Weeds are still at it. Pop Co-Op is terrific. Just about anything released by Big Stir Records, Kool Kat Musik, Futureman Records, Jem Records, Red On Red Records, and a bunch of other worthy labels is at least worth a listen, and some of it's freakin' transcendent. 

What are one or two outlets (DJs, authors, platforms, record stores, magazines, labels, etc.) that you rely on to discover modern power pop music?

It's all internet. A lot of stuff gets sent to us for airplay on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl, and we pay attention to what friends, fans, and other DJs and pundits are saying.


If I use one or more of your quotes 
(no promises!), how would you like to be credited? 
Example: S.W. Lauden, co-editor of the power pop essay collections Go All The Way and Go Further

Carl Cafarelli, writer, blogger, and co-host (with Dana Bonn) of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl

TIP THE BLOGGER: CC's Tip Jar!

You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:


Volume 1: download

Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl.

Thursday, November 18, 2021

S. W. LAUDEN: Notes From The Modern Pop Underground

Writer S.W. Lauden recently interviewed me (along with my fellow power pop fans Bruce Brodeen and John M. Borack) for an article on power pop/the modern pop underground. The result has been posted by the good folks at Paloma Media, and is available for your reading pleasure here: NOTES FROM THE MODERN POP UNDERGROUND

Lauden, aka Steve Coulter, is well-known to readers of this blog for his work on Go All The Way: A Literary Appreciation Of Power Pop and Go Further: More Literary Appreciations Of Power Pop, a pair of power pop books edited by Lauden and Paul Myers. Steve/S.W. is likewise near 'n' dear to listeners of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio as the drummer for TIRnRR Fave Raves the Brothers Steve. Steve also did me a personal favor by introducing me to...er, I can't tell you about that yet. But I can direct fans of pop with POWER to check out "Notes From The Modern Pop Underground." It was a pleasure and honor to have my views heard alongside those of recognized pop experts John and Bruce, and I'm grateful to have been included in this. 

TIP THE BLOGGER: CC's Tip Jar!

You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:

Volume 1: download

Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl.