Playlist Date & Time: 11/15/2009 12:00AM - 3:00AM
Program: Blues in the Night with Jamie Dell'Apa
Thanksgiving is by far the nation's worst holiday.
Gorging on turkey? It tastes like plywood. The second and third place finishers, potatoes and stuffing, are only edible if mixed with 50% butter and covered in gravy fat.
Even the idea of the holiday is bogus. Celebrating a pre-genocide meal between native Americans and their machinery of conquest? This is as pretentious as Susan Stamburg's tired cranberry recipe joke.
Oh, you scoffers! Don't pin me down as a whiner. This is coming from an objective music library researcher. There are simply too few Thanksgiving songs for a Saturday midnight radio show. No Screaming Jay Hawkins. No monster / UFO invasion songs. There may be billions and billions of Christmas songs but who's been inspired by Thanksgiving? Nobody.
Tonight we ask you to suggest a replacement holiday. Something more fun and that doesn't advance the nation's obesity problem. For those who are protective of Thanksgiving, if you can suggest any song about Thanksgiving, I'll play it. To accompany you in your fruitless search, over fifty songs about topics related to Thanksgiving,
The big leg syndrome from over-eating,
Too many songs about potatoes, and
Beer advertisement songs (might as well shape the food belly into the classic beer belly bulge).
Since we tend to do everything inside-out and backwards, we'll start with a set of music about slow time. You know, that feeling that settles in after the binge-a-thon but before the annual Detroit Lions boredom contest.
Oh yeah. A follow up set of music illustrating the consequences from those NASA brutes who shot the moon with their $79 million dollar Saturday Night Special. Bastards made her cry buckets of tears. We'll do a set for the moon too.
See also:http://www.wwoz.org/node/68561
Box Score
Ingestion Report From Last Week's House Guests
1/2 Muffaletta
1 Go cup beer while walking the dogs
1 Separator from Good Friends instead of t-shirt shopping with the wife
1 Pecan waffle at Clover Grill
2 Lucky Dogs
3 orders of Blue Cheese Fried Oysters appetizers from Elizabeth's
1/2 loaf of St. Joseph bread from Dogniacs with salami from Central Grocery
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Johnny Cale
Ain't That Lovin You Baby
A follow up song to Peggy Lou's JJ Cale song. Back from a time when JJ was known professionally as Johnny.
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Jr. Parker
Funny How Time Slips Away
From the youtube link:
Junior Parker, also known as Little Junior Parker or "Mr Blues"[1] (May 27, 1932[2]November 18, 1971) was a successful and influential Memphis blues singer and musician.[3] He is best remembered for his unique voice which has been described as "honeyed," and "velvet-smooth".[4] He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2001.[,,Junior Parker was born in either Clarksdale, Mississippi[6] or West Memphis, Arkansas[7] as Herman Parker, Jr. He sang in gospel groups as a child,[8] and played on the various blues circuits beginning in his teenage years. His biggest influence as a harmonica player was Sonny Boy Williamson,[9] with whom he worked before moving on to work for Howlin' Wolf in 1949. Around 1950 he was a member of Memphis's ad hoc group, the Beale Streeters, with Bobby 'Blue' Bland and B.B. King.
In 1951 he formed his own band, the Blue Flames, with guitarist Auburn 'Pat' Hare.[10] Parker was discovered in 1952 by Ike Turner, who signed him to Modern Records. He put out one single on this record label, "You're My Angel."[11] This brought him to the attention of Sam Phillips, and he and his band signed onto Sun Records in 1953. There they produced three successful songs: "Feelin' Good" (which reached # 5 on the Billboard R&B charts), "Love My Baby," and "Mystery Train" ,with Floyd Murphy (Matt "Guitar" Murphy's brother) on guitar, later covered by Elvis Presley.[12] For Presley's version of "Mystery Train", Scotty Moore borrowed the guitar riff from Parker's "Love My Baby".[13]
Later in 1953, Parker toured with Bobby Bland and Johnny Ace, and also joined Duke Records. Parker and Bland headed the highly successful Blues Consolidated Revue, which became a staple part of the southern blues circuit. He continued to have a string of hits on the R&B chart, including the smooth "Next Time You See Me" (1957); re-makes of Roosevelt Sykes' songs, "Sweet Home Chicago" (1958) and "Driving Wheel" (1961); Guitar Slim's "The Things That I Used to Do" (1963); Don Robey's "Mother-in-Law Blues" (1956); and his own "Stand by Me." (1961)
His success was limited after he left the Duke label in 1966. He recorded for various labels, including Mercury, Blue Rock, Minit, and Capitol.
Parker died on November 18, 1971, aged 39, in Blue Island, IL [14] during surgery for a brain tumor.
[edit] Tributes
On his 1974 album ...Explores Your Mind, Al Green dedicated his original version of the song "Take Me To The River" to Parker, who he describes as "a cousin of mine who's gone on, and we'd kinda like to carry on in his name."
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tinyHUGE w/ Mark Joyce
Times Slippin' Away
Hi-Fi Candy
Ed Morrill - Drums
Bob Enik -Bass
Mark Joyce - Keys/Vocal
tinyHUGE
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Allen Toussaint
Southern Nights
Southern Nights
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Lenny McDaniel
Southern Rain
The Blues Side
Not enough video on Lenny but I like that a Spanish speaker tuned into Lenny's song; "Rosa."
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The Subdudes
Time For the Sun To Rise
Behind the Levee
I like the Subdudes' version of this song but Earl King belting this out on his early afternoon sets at Jazz Fest - great memories.
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Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks
It's Not My Time To Go
Last Train to Hicksville
Blue Thumb
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Fred Neil
Fools Are A Long Time Coming
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Blue Lu Barker
Bow Legged Daddy
I sat outside Danny and Blue Lu's place today eating a muffaletta. Something about New Orleans...
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Del Tones
Bow Legged Annie
See also http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIU0RMV_II8
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Bull Moose Jackson
I Want A Bow-Legged Woman
King R&B Box Set
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Jeff Beck
Crazy Legs
Crazy Legs
This was some of Jeff Beck's finest work.
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Lloyd Price
Frog Legs
Creole Kings of New Orleans
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Taj Mahal
Big Legged Women Are Back in Style
Mean Old World
Taj with Jorge Ben
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Walter Jacobs
Crazy Legs
Greasy Rock and Roll
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Joe Hill Louis
Big Legged Women
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Dr. Ross
Turkey Legged Woman
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Dave Bartholomew
Good Jax Boogie
link is to the 1970s fire at Jax Brewery
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Billy Wright
Man's Brand Boogie
Dixie Beer factory tour
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Clarence Gatemouth Brown
Pale Dry Boogie
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Earthworms
Mo' Taters
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Guitar Red Orchestra
Hot Potato
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Amos Milburn
French Fried Potatos and Ketchup
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Gene Krupa
Lyonaise Potatoes and Some Pork Chops
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The Elite
One Potato
Link is to an instructional video prerequisite for watching the next two videos.
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Link Wray and the Wraymen
Mashed Potato Party
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Rufus Thomas
Mashed Potatoes
Link is to the Soul Train dancers doing the Break Down.
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Larry Bright
When I Did the Mashed Potato
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Washboard Sam
Diggin My Potatoes
Chess Story
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Little Jimmy Dickens
Take an Old Cold Tater and Wait
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Trashmen
Bird Dance Beat
This link will soon be restricted so watch it now.
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Renaud Veluzat
Race Track Boogie
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Chuck Williams
Hopahula Boogie
Swingbillies
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Speedy West
Stratosphere Boogie
Swingbillies
From the youtube link description;
The incomparable duo of Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant burning the Hometown Jamboree down with their own number, which would later be recorded as 'Cotton Pickin'. Hold on to your hats!
Also http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sc-6bx_jW9A&feature=related
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Clarence Samuels
Boogie Woogie Blues
Chess Story
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Fats Domino
Hey! La Bas Boogie
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King Curtis and Al Caiola
Guitar Boogie Shuffle
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Ray Sharpe
Gonna Let It Go This Time
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Joe Maphis
Water Baby Boogie
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Billy Mure
Tiger Guitar
Supersonic Guitar
Billy had his scorching guitar hits back in the days of black and white television but look at him in this clip form 2008
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Astronauts
Wine, Wine, Wine
Surfin With
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Astronauts
Kuk
Surfin With
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Fats Domino
Valley of Tears
Spirit of New Orleans
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Ernie K Doe
I Cried My Last Tear
Absolutely the Best
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Johnny Adams
I Have Cried My Last Tear
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Ruth Brown
Teardrops From My Eyes
Jackie Wilson with Billy Preston
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Barbara Lynn
You Left The Water Running
Barbara playing at home
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Jackie Wilson with Dick Jacobs
Lonely Teardrops
Jackie live
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Modern Lovers
96 Tears
link to a super 8 home movie about a cross country trip
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Creedence Clearwater Revival
It Came From Out of the Sky
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Bo Diddley
Moon Baby
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Sparkletones
Rocket
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Jo Beecham
Take A Trip on Cruise
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Aimee Mann
Momentum
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Golden Gate Quartet
My Time Done Come
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