Virgil

The Hot Rollers

The Hot Rollers- Got Your Number

Sweaty Betty Records SB002 [2005]
You Don’t Do It – Black And Blue – Mileage – Hooker – Got Your Number – Casper Guido – Wild Man – Hello Vapid – You May Be Right – Ice Princess – Bad Word For A Good Thing -. I Wanna Go Home – Wrap Your Heart

hot rollers

This girl band comes from Seattle and includes Kirsten Ballweg from The Donettes and the Black Crabs on bass, Lori Campion from The Poontwang on guitar and vocals, and drummer Heidi Jessup. Their music mixes 60’s garage with some Billy Childish influences (Headcoatees, Delmonas), punk rock, power-pop, and a touch of Pixies. Engineered by Kearney Barton (who worked with The Sonics), their sound is wild and powerful, yet they maintain a good balance between the bass and the guitar distortion while emphasizing melody. Lori’s versatile voice can shout, scream, and sing with scorn when needed, as you can hear in “Got Your Number.” Talking about The Pixies, this one has a bit of Kim Deal style in the bridge (and a direct reference in the lyrics).
Casper Guido” has a nice Farfisa played by bass player Kirsten, and I’d love to hear more of that. As I mentioned, Billy Childish and the girl bands he led are also apparent influences. That’s why they cover The Tamrons’ “Wild Man,” also covered by the Headcoatees on Girlsville. I’m still trying to figure out which version inspired them, but theirs is the best. But the best cover is yet to come, as they play Billy Joel’s “You May Be Right.” If you’re a Rock’n’Roll geek, you can’t help but turn the volume up to 11 and play it repeatedly. Their cover of “I wanna Go Home” by Holly and the Italians is equally good, with excellent backup vocals and handclaps.
Beware, this album is very addictive, and once you’ve finished listening to it, you just want to hear it again.

Debbie & Jackie

Demented Are Go

Demented Are Go – Demented Are Go Present… The Demon Teds – The Day The Earth Spat Blood

Link Records LINK MLP 084
Country Woman – Brain Damaged Chile (Slight Retard) – One Sharp Knife – Flight 103 – Termite Man -Skitzoid Brain – Now She’s Dead (Warp Mix) Life’s A Bitch/Demon Ted Boogie/Now She’s Dead

demented are go

In 1989, Mark Phillips decided to revive Demented Are Go, which had broken up some time before due to the departure of Lex Luther followed by the double bassist. Faithful Ant Thomas (drums) and Simon Cohen (violin) returned, and the lineup was completed by Billy Favata (double bass) and Mike Pannell (guitar), both from the Court Jesters. The group was quickly offered the opportunity to record an album by Link Records. Despite not having any songs ready and without having rehearsed, Demented Are Go entered the studio to record what would become “Demon Teds… The Day The Earth Spat Blood.” Considering the large quantity of alcohol (and likely other substances) consumed, it’s quite surprising that Link Records was able to release an album at the end of the recording session.
The album includes several filler tracks such as Flight 103, Termite Man, and Life’s A Bitch, which quickly turn into aimless guitar demonstrations with a poor metal sound that borders on bad taste. These are interspersed with various noises and effects seemingly for no reason other than to fill up time. Despite this, there are still some good tracks on this record. When Demented Are Go are at their best, they are truly impressive. With Country Woman, the band creates a new genre that blends country music and Psychobilly with a wild and frantic violin and jaw harp. With its intro that sounds lile a zombie version of the Beach Boys, Brain Damaged Chile is a pure blast of madness, and One Sharp Knife is one of the group’s best songs. This version has a much heavier sound than the first version that appeared on Hell’s Bent On Rockin’! in 1985. Both versions are excellent, but I have a soft spot for the first, which is scarier. Skitzoid Brain is also a good song that captures the band’s signature Psychobilly sound.
It’s unfortunate that the mediocre songs drown out the good ones because these four tracks could have made for a great EP.

The Radioactive Kid

Trixie Smith

Trixie Smith – Vol 2 1925 – 1939

DOCD-5333
Everybody loves my baby (take 6) – How come you do me like you do? (take 6) – You’ve got to beat me to keep me – Mining camp blues (take 1) – Mining camp blues (take 2) – The worlds jazz crazy and so am I (take 1) – The worlds jazz crazy and so am I (take 2) – Railroad blues (take 1) – Railroad blues (take 2) – Everybodys doing that Charleston now (take 1) – He likes it slow (take 2) – Black bottom hop – Love me like you used to do – Messinaround (take 1) – Messin around (take 2) – Freight train blues – Trixie blues – My daddy rocks me – My daddy rocks me no. 2 – He may be your man (but he comes to see me sometime) – Jack I`m mellow – My unusual man – No good man

Trixie Smith

The first two tracks, recorded in January 1925, feature Phil Napoleon on trumpet, Miff Mole on trombone, Jimmy Lytell on clarinet, Frank Signorelli on piano, and Jack Roth on drums. The result is two lively versions of “Everybody Loves My Baby” and “How Come You Do Me Like You Do.”
The following month she recorded the next session with a new lineup of her Down Home Syncopators, which included Charlie Dixon on banjo, Fletcher Henderson on piano, Buster Bailey on clarinet, Charlie Green on trombone, and Louis Armstrong on cornet.
This session and the next one (March 1925) with the same backing band are more in a blues vein. Next to Mining Camp Blues, Railroad Blues, and The World’s Jazz Crazy And So Am I, you’ll find the unsettling and masochistic “You’ve Got To Beat Me To Keep Me.” Written by Porter Grainger, composer of the blues standard “T’ain’t Nobody’s Business If I Do” it features disturbing lyrics like “You’ve got to beat me to keep me, ’cause Mama loves a hard-boiled man / So don’t you let no man cheat me if he’s got a good right hand. / Beat me up for breakfast, knock me down for tea, / Black my eye for supper, then you’re pleasing me. / You’ve got to beat me to keep me cause Mama loves a hard-boiled man. / Mama don’t want no diamond rings, and she don’t want no swell clothes / Wail me daddy til it stings across my mouth and nose. / I don’t want no hug and kiss, / I don’t want no love and smile, / Beat me with your hand or fist, Papa like I was your child.” As you can see, it’s not your average “I woke up this morning, and you left me” kind of blues.
At the end of the year, she collaborated with Fletcher Henderson’s Orchestra to record four songs. These includes the lively “Everybody’s Doing That Charleston Now” and the excellent “He Likes It Slow.” Other tracks from the session were “Black Bottom Hop” and “Love Me Like You Used To Do,” which is quite similar to “Baby Won’t You Please Come Home.”

The song “Messin’ Around” was recorded in July 1926 with Johnny Blythe and his Raggamuffins. This lively and joyful number showcased Trixie Smith’s vocals and featured a top-notch band including Freddie Keppard and Johnny Dodds.
After a twelve-year hiatus, Smith returned to the studio in 1938, backed by Sidney Bechet, Sammy Price, O’Neil Spencer, and Teddy Bunn, among others. Better recorded and preserved, this session allows listeners to clearly hear Smith’s fantastic voice (and elocution) and one can regret she stayed far from the studios for so long. The material contains new versions of songs she recorded decades earlier (see Volume 1) and ranges from blues (Freight Train Blues, Trixie Blues) to swing (Jack I’m Mellow) and featured high-class performances from the band (Teddy Bunn’s guitar chorus on “Trixie Blues” is worth mentioning). In 1939, she recorded “No Good Man” with Sid Catlett, Red Allen, and Barney Bigard before disappearing and passing away four years later.

Available here.

Fred “Virgil” Turgis

Brian Setzer

Brian Setzer – The Devil Always Collects

Surfdog Records – 90869-1 [2023]
Rock Boys Rock – The Devil Always Collects – Girl On the Billboard – The Living Dead – What’ll It Be Baby Doll? – Black Leather Jacket – She’s Got A Lotta…Soul! – Play That Fast Thing (One More Time) – A Dude’ll Do (What a Dude’ll Do) – Psycho Suzie – One Particular Chick

Brian Setzer

In an interview given to promote his new album, Brian Setzer declared that he had written more than thirty songs to keep only the best, namely the eight that make up The Devil Always Collects, to which he added three covers.
The result is an album that is rich and varied but nonetheless coherent.

The album begins with Rock Boy Rock, a whole program in itself. On this song, Setzer does what he does best: he takes a classic rock’n’roll structure (here, the tune is reminiscent of Gene Vincent and his guitarist Cliff Gallup) and, while combining classicism and modernity, transforms it into a timeless tune.
The album’s title track opens with a frantic Johnny Kool-style riff, but the song takes a new direction when the quasi-gospel choruses kick in. We dream of a Setzer/Reverend Horton Heat duet on such a song.

Setzer had already dabbled with Country-rock with 59 in 2001 (Ignition). This time, he returns to it by covering Del Reeves’ The Girl On The Billboard. He does perfect justice to the song, helped by the round and warm bass of Jimmie Lee Sloas. The Living Dead is also a cover, although lesser-known (the song was recorded in 1961 by Jim Burgett). The original version was already excellent and quite weird, but Setzer takes the song even further by adding to the “B horror movie” vibe, an arrangement that gives the song a “James Bond movie song” feel.

There are, of course, typically Setzerian Rockabilly tunes instantly recognizable, such as What’ll It Be Baby Doll? Or A Dude’ll Do (What a Dude’ll Do) (the latter, so Setzerian that it resembles Cock-A-Doodle Don’t). With Black Leather Jacket, Setzer seems to reconnect with the style of his solo albums from the 1980s, Live Nude Guitar in particular. We often border on bad taste, but strangely, the energy, the rhythm and the song manage to get the point across, and the song quickly becomes addictive.

She’s Got A Lot Of Soul is probably the weakest track of the set. His kind of Soul with horns struggles to convince, and the whole thing seems very artificial. It’s a shame since the song, which sounds a bit like Who Could Really Love This Car But Me, would benefit from being recorded with a bluesy, dirtier and rougher sound. Let’s move on quickly to Play That Fast Thing. Written by Nick Lowe and initially recorded by Rockpile (a group that included Nick Lowe and legendary Stray Cats producer Dave Edmunds), it can be seen as a nod to the Stray Cats’ early days in London and a tribute to Dave Edmunds.

Psycho Suzie sounds like a powerful, big-sounding version of Blast Off with a great country/rockabilly-inspired solo. The album closes with One Particular Chick, which could be described as Jazz-noir for lack of a better term. This piece, if we imagine it with the Brian Setzer Orchestra, would have its place on the excellent (and vastly underestimated Lonely Avenue).

There you have it: in just eleven almost-perfect pieces, Setzer offers an album that sounds both modern and current but also like a retrospective of his career, revisiting the styles and the best moments of some of his key albums.

Available here.


Brian Setzer – Gotta Have The Rumble

Surfdog 68102 [2021]
Checkered Flag – Smash Up On Highway One – Sytack my Money – The Wrong Side Of the Tracks – Drip Drop – The Cat With 9 Wives – Turn You On, Turn Me On – Rockabilly Riot – Off Your Rocker – One Bad Habit – Rockabilly Banjo

brian setzer gotta have the rumble

Brian Setzer has a new album out after six years of silence (well, not really, since he reformed and toured with the Stray Cats during this time.)
This new album is produced by Julian Raymond, whose credits include, among others, Cheap Trick and Glenn Campbell. One could fear that having someone coming outside the Rockabilly/Rock’n’Roll circle could not work. But to the contrary, I find that it forces Setzer to reinvent and challenge himself. Also, Setzer didn’t call back his usual crew but chose to play with session men, namely Victor Indrizzo on drums and David Roe Rorick on bass. Rorick toured with Johnny Cash and played bass on John Mellencamp, Dwight Yoakam, and Billy Joe Shaver’s albums. Indrizzo recorded with Sheryl Crow, Meat Loaf, Depeche Mode and Boyzone (ouch! I can hear some Rockabilly teeth cringe from here).
Against all odds, this eclectic mix works fairly well.
Co-written with Slim Jim Phantom, Checkered Flagg features heavy pounding drums and a menacing riff. Not the most original nor the best of the set, so it’s good to have it as an opener so that you can fully enjoy the rest of the disc. Smash Up On Highway One is far more original, a wild tune, with a riff inspired by Dick Dale. Stack My Money is pure Rockabilly gold and proves if needed that Setzer’s bag of rockabilly licks is bottomless.
The Wrong Side Of the Track is one of the highlights of the album. The melody reminds me of Ghost Radio, Setzer’s collaboration with Joe Strummer. But Setzer totally turns the song into something different by adding strings, and the result wouldn’t be out of place on Songs From Lonely Avenue. Drip Drop is more lighthearted, even though the singer laments about lost love, and when you didn’t expect it, bam!, a stunning Rockabilly solo. The Cat With 9 Wives is pure Swingabilly with Setzer’s guitar all over the place. What happens when you mix Hot Rod music with Bo Diddley’s Who Do You Love? The answer is Turn You On, Turn Me On. Despite its name, Rockabilly Riot is almost Punkabilly. It’s a full-throttle rocking charge. One Bad Habit sounds like an outtake from Ignition, and as usual, Setzer’s solo takes you to places you’re not used to. Both Off Your Rocker and Rockabilly Banjo were penned in collaboration with Dibbs Preston of the Rockats. I was thrilled to see two of my favourite artists collaborate. Off Your Rocker is different from the Rockats song of the same name. It’s a middle paced rocker featuring female backing vocals, and Rockabilly Banjo is, of course, a banjo-led ditty also featuring Paul Franklin on pedal steel guitar.
Setzer delivers a superb album, supported by a solid set of originals and a perfect production. Not for the purists, but they already know that, but more for those curious to see how you can add modern ingredients in a 70-year old genre.


Brian Setzer – Rockabilly Riot! Live from the Planet

Surfdog 253147 [2012]
Ignition – ’49 Mercury Blues – This Cat’s On A Hot Tin Roof – Drive Like Lightning (Crash Like Thunder) – 8-Track – Slow Down / Folsom Prison Blues – Put Your Cat Clothes On – Blue Moon of Kentucky – Pickpocket – Rumble in Brighton – Runaway Boys – Cry Baby – Great Balls Of Fire – Red Hot – Seven Nights to Rock

Brian Setzer - Rockabilly Riot! Live from the Planet
Brian Setzer – Rockabilly Riot! Live from the Planet

Though his recent studio albums vary in quality, Brian Setzer remains one of the top rockabilly acts when on stage. His latest live album, recorded during a tour that took him, two drummers (including Slim Jim Phantom), tow bassists and a pianist from Europe to Australia with Japan and North America in between is another proof, if needed that he’s still the king of modern rockabilly.

The first good surprise comes from the set-list. Setzer has dropped songs like Stray Cat Strut, Gene & Eddie and Rock This Town to make room to rare covers (Great Balls Of Fire, Seven Nights To Rock) or lesser played songs like Cry Baby or 49 Mercury Blues, the latter in a trio version way more powerful than the studio version with the Orchestra. Two songs from his latest release (Instru-Mental) are also included and though I had major reserves about the studio versions, they take all their sense on stage (partially due to the excellent recording work). the other good surprise is simply the performance. You have to go back to Ignition in 2001 to find him in such a good form. The band is tight and Setzer’s playing is inspired and creative and what you hear is a band that works together, not a singer/guitarist and a backing band. This is particularly audible on Slow Down/Folsom Prison Blues on which you can hear the pleasure that Setzer has to trade licks with Kevin McKendree on acoustic guitar. An excellent album from start to finish, more than that a lesson of Rock’n’roll.
Rock This Town, Stray Cat Strut, Sexy & 17 and Fishnet Stockings are available in mp3 format.


Brian Setzer – Setzer Goes Instru-Mental

Surfdog 233291 [2011]
Blue Moon Of Kentucky – Cherokee – Be-Bop-A-Lula – Earl’s Breakdown – Far Noir East – Intermission – Go-Go Godzilla – Lonesome Road – Hillbilly Jazz Meltdown – Hot Love – Pickpocket

Brian Setzer goes Instru-mental
Brian Setzer goes Instru-mental

Well, fine, Brian Setzer is a damn good picker but how I wish I could have loved this album more. This is not bad but it just sounds like a missed opportunity.

Some songs are just quick reworking of classics that Setzer plays for years and really don’t bring anything to his glory. Seriously who wants to hear another version of Blue Moon Of Kentucky or Be Bop A Lula, even by Brian Setzer? And when he picks his banjo you can expect something new, why not a real bluegrass number with mandolin or dobro or whatever. Instead of that what you have is a clean (in the sense of “sterile”) version of Earl’s Breakdown a song he plays live since 1983. Cherokee is a bit better but reveals the major flaw of the album: its production. The sound is way too clean, totally disembodied and for the most part evokes a cd one can find with guitar methods. And the lack of interaction between the rhythm section and the solist doesn’t help either. Let’s quickly forget Go-Go Godzilla that sounds like a self-parody to concentrate on the few good numbers of the albums. “Far Noir East” seems to have been written for the Brian Setzer Orchestra album “Songs From Lonely Avenue” like a cross between Harlem Nocturne and the Stray Cats little known jewel Jade Idol. Intermission is really jazzy, with a strong Charlie Christian feel and a guest vibraphonist and you regret that there aint no more guests on this album to enhance the final result. For example Lonesome Road is really good too, more or less in the Jimmy Bryant style and it’s too bad that there is not a guest steel guitar on that tune (or why not, Setzer on both as we all know that he plays steel too). And though enjoyable, the remaining songs seems to have been improvised on the spot around a single riff.
It seems that this is not this time that my dream to hear him do an instrumental album with a small jazz combo will come true.


Brian Setzer – Red Hot & Live

Surfdog Records  [2007]
Red Hot – This Cat’s On A Hot Tin Roof – Get It Off Your Mind – Slow Down – Put Your Cat Clothes On – Take A Chance On Love – Broken Down Piece of Junk – Peroxide Blonde (In A Hopped Up Model Ford) – Tennessee Zip – Mini Bar Blues – Runaway Boys – Stray Cat Strut – Rocket Cathedrals – Fishnet Stockings – Rock This Town – Gene & Eddie

Brian Setzer - Red Hot & Live
Brian Setzer – Red Hot & Live

To be honest, although I’m a huge Setzer fan I didn’t really know what to expect with this live album recorded in 2006 in Japan with Robbie Chevrier on piano, Ronnie Crutcher on bass and the great Bernie Dresel on drums.
On one hand the idea of an album made for one third of Setzer classics heard many times before on live records (both official and bootlegs), one third from the pleasant but not very original “Tribute to Sun Records” and the remaining third from the highly disappointing “ 13” had nothing to excite me.
On the other hand I was more than curious to hear those classics played with a new arrangement with piano or a second guitar (a configuration not used by Brian Setzer since The Knife Feels Like Justice era 20 years ago) and maybe the tunes from “ 13” would sound better on live than on the studio takes.
And I must admit that once again, Setzer caught me.
This album is nothing less than excellent. It manages to capture perfectly the excitment of the live performance, and it’s amazing how much a piano or a second guitar can change the sound compared to the trio format. The sound is full and pure rock’n’roll. The Rockabilly/Sun tunes are all excellent with sparkling guitar and real rockabilly piano courtesy of Robbie Chevrier. What could sound sterile on record takes here its real dimension, one of the best exemple being “Put Your Cat Clothes On”. The songs from “ 13” sound raw and good when they are played live with this this line-up, especially the glam “Rocket Cathedrals” (do I hear a electric bass on this one?) and the instrumental tour de force “Mini Bar Blues” quoting Les Paul and Jimmie Bryant.
But the real surprise to come from this album is the way they inject new life in those classics that are “Stray Cat Strut”, “Runaway Boys” (one of the best version I heard and believe me I have quite a few bootlegs) and “Rock This Town” which starts like a good ol’ boogie woogie to quickly evolve into a pure rock’n’roll gem.
This album proves (if needed) that when he doesn’t waste his talent in Christmas albums or pre-marketed album for Japanese audience, Setzer can rock like nobody else.


Brian Setzer – Rockabilly Riot Vol. 1 A Tribute To Sun Records

Surfdog Records 44068-2 [2005]
Red Hot – Slow Down – Real Wild Child – Rockhouse – Put Your Cat Clothes On – Lonely Weekends – Get It Off Your Mind – Just Because – Glad All Over – Flatfoot Sam – Rock N Roll Ruby – Blue Suede Shoes – Tennessee Zip – Mona Lisa – Peroxide Blonde (In A Hopped Up Model Ford) – Get Rhythm – Stairway To Nowhere – Boppin’ The Blues – Rakin’ & Scrapin’ – Sweet Woman – Flyin’ Saucers Rock N Roll – Lonely Wolf – Red Cadillac & A Black Moustache

Brian Setzer - Rockabilly Riot a Tribute to Sun records
Brian Setzer – Rockabilly Riot a Tribute to Sun records

Brian Setzer’s  idea for this album is simple, and lays in the title, it’s a tribute to the greatest rockabilly label, the one that started it all: Sun records.
One can wonder what the use of recording such a record, especially with tracks like Blue Suede Shoes, Boppin’ the Blues, Just Because and Red Hot. Setzer claims that he made it to introduce these songs to a new generation. Well, this is a noble cause, so let’s give him credit for that, and we know that he didn’t make it for money, NOBODY makes money with rockabilly.
The recording itself is very good. What you have is a very inspired Brian Setzer, and if you want to compare to another all cover album it’s far better than Stray Cats’ Original Cool. His voice is very strong and it goes without saying that his guitar play is top notch. Though the fans of his flashy style could be deceived, Setzer serves the songs rather than his own glory. He’s perfectly supported by Mark Winchester on double bass and Bernie Dresel on drums (the best rhythm section Setzer ever worked with) and Kevin McKendree adds a solid pumping piano to the ensemble. Even the Jordanaires join in on a couple of songs. They remain very faithful to the original versions which is both a strenghth and a failing. Sure there’s no betrayal, and if you dig the originals you’ll like Setzer’s but in the end this album lacks of originality (which is often the case with tribute albums). At leats it proves that Rockabilly and Rock’n’roll are the kind of music that Setzer plays the best.


Brian Setzer – Nitro Burnin’ Funny Daddy

Surfdog Records 44022-2 [2003]
Sixty Years – Don’t Trust A Woman (in A Black Cadillac) – When The Bells Don’t Chime – That Someone Just Ain’t You – Rat Pack Boogie – Ring, Ring, Ring – Drink Whiskey And Shut Up – Smokin” n Burnin’ – Wild Wind – St. Jude – To Be Loved – When The Bells Don’t Chime (banjo Mix)

Brian setzer

Recorded with Johnny Spazz Hatton on bass and Bernie Dresel on drums and released just after the fabulous Ignition, Nitro Burnin’ Funny Daddy came, at first, as a disappointment. Only years later, I gave this album a second chance, and boy, was I right to do so. Nitro Burnin’ Funny Daddy deserved to be rediscovered.
The first two tracks, Sixty Years and Don’t Trust A Woman, sound like Live Nude Guitar with a hint of ZZ Top blues in the guitar for the former. Setzer also achieved a similar sound with songs like Can’t Go Back To Memphis on Choo Choo Hot Fish. More or less in the same vein is Drink Whiskey and Shut Up. This tune, propelled by a powerful jungle drum beat, wouldn’t be out of place on a George Thorogood album.
When The Bells Don’t Chime is a country song with a sixties feel and lovely harmony vocals. One can find two versions of this song; the second one puts the banjo to the fore, giving the song a more bluegrass feel.
That Someone Just Ain’t You dates from the early ’90s. The Stray Cats demoed the song for Let’s Go Faster, but it never was recorded for the album. It’s nice to have it resurrected, for it’s an excellent Doo-wop inspired song like the Stray cats could do.
Rat-Pack Boogie is an instrumental, with Setzer demonstrating his massive talent on the fretboard, mixing Jazz, Country picking and Rockabilly all into one song.
Ring Ring Ring is a perfect example of Setzer’s brand of Rockabilly, similar to Slip Slip Slippin’ In. Smokin’n’ Burnin’ sounds like Carl Perkins’ Matchbox revisited by the 68 Comeback Special. Not very original, but terribly efficient. Wild Wind is a slight adaptation of Frankie Laine’s Cry of the Wild Goose, a cinematic tune that creates pictures of wide-open spaces in your mind. It would have been a perfect tune for a western.
The next tune, St. Jude, is the album’s weak point. This gospel-tinged number is way too much, both musically and lyrically. Fortunately, To Be Loved, a cover of a Doo-Wop tune by the Pentagons is way better.The Japanese version features a bonus instrumental titled Jumpin’ at the Capitol with Tony Garnier (Robert Gordon, Bob Dylan) on double bass, Greg Bissonette on drums and Sid Page on violin. It’s a hot Jazz tune with echoes of Gypsy Jazz. Also, a two-Cd edition exists with Setzer singing Sinatra’s Luck Be A Lady backed by the Brian Setzer Orchestra on the second CD.


Brian Setzer ‘68 Comeback Special – Ignition!

Surfdog SD67124-2 [2001]
Ignition – 5 Years, 4 Months, 3 Days – Hell Bent – Hot Rod Girl – 8 Track – 59 – Rooster Rock – Santa Rosa Rita – (The Legend Of) Johnny Kool (part 2) – Get Em On The Ropes – Who Would Love This Car But Me – Bue Café – Dreamsville – Magualena

Brian Setzer 68 Comeback Special

After releasing four albums with his seventeen-piece big band, Brian Setzer decided to return to basics in 2001. He put his guitar back at the center of the stage with his new trio, the 68 Comeback Special. The title is a nod to Elvis Presley, and like the King’s show, it is a return to the guitarist’s roots. Backed by the rhythm section of the orchestra, including Mark Winchester (Planet Rockers) on double bass and the lively Bernie Dresel on drums, Setzer delivers an album that sounds like a Rock’n’Roll party, his best work since the debut album of Stray Cats twenty years earlier (although all albums linked to Brian Setzer are essential). John Holbrook, who had previously collaborated with the guitarist on the successful “Dirty Boogie,” once again managed to capture the group’s raw energy in the studio without taming it. The theme is a simple and proven recipe: girls and cars.
The album starts with the title track, a powerful explosion of sound. If any song can be described as Hi-octane Rockabilly, it’s this one. Setzer takes you on a thrilling ride, relentlessly pounding until you’re knocked out (the piece even lasts three minutes, just like a boxing round.) Thankfully, the following song, “5 Years, 4 Months, 3 Days,” gives you a chance to catch your breath. It’s a blend of country rock with a sixties vibe, featuring a fantastic baritone guitar solo and plenty of twang. The break is short-lived as “Hell Bent” overwhelms the listener with intense and menacing guitar. The rhythm section is just as wild, and Setzer’s performance seems to channel the spirit of Reverend Horton Heat, delighting all. The next song, “Hot Rod Girl,” is more traditional in style but still incredibly effective.
In a more traditional style, 8-Track features the upbeat train-beat rhythm of Bernie Dresel. The song is a mix of Rockabilly and joyful Hillbilly, with some yodeling and a brilliant guitar part. “59” is a reflective tune in a more country-rock style that could have been sung by Robert Gordon.
Setzer shows his confidence in his rhythm section by letting Mark Winchester perform “Rooster Rock,” a song he wrote. This song brings out a classic vibe similar to Gene Vincent’s Blue Caps, but with a more modern touch, which is Setzer‘s trademark.
With its Spanish guitar and lyrics, Santa Rosa Rita sounds like a modern counterpart to Marty Robbins’ El Paso. (The Legend Of) Johnny Kool (part 2) is perhaps the weakest track on the album due to its lack of originality, but it remains very effective, and I challenge you not to scream “Johnny Kool” with the record on the chorus.
We continue in the same vein with the energetic Get’ Em On The Ropes, which sounds downright Punk and evokes the Clash (besides, I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the title sounds almost like Give “Em Enough Rope). Speaking of Clash, we find Joe Strummer, who had already collaborated with Setzer on Guitar Slinger, as co-writer of the bluesy Who Would Love This Car But Me? which allows the guitarist to play slide, something he hadn’t done since You Don’t Believe Me on Gonna Ball. Blue Café was initially written for Hot Rod Lincoln and was released on the Lee Rocker-produced album of the same name. It is another very good bouncy Rockabilly that highlights Winchester’s double bass. The penultimate song on the program, Dreamsville, is perhaps the album’s hidden gem. It adds to the collection of superb slow songs by Setzer, and we know that the man is more than talented at this game (I Won’t Stand In Your Way, Sammy Davis City). Doo-Wop backing vocals (by the Brianaires) complete the song. It would have deserved to be placed in the middle of the setlist.
The album closes with the instrumental Malaguena, a stylish mix of Mexican inspiration and Dick Dale-style sound. Overall, if you wrap these 14 Hot Rod songs in a superb cover, you have a perfect record from start to finish.


Brian Setzer - The Knife feels like justice
Brian Setzer – The Knife feels like justice

Brian Setzer – The Knife feels like Justice

EMI [1986]
The Knife Feels Like Justice – Haunted River – Boulevard Of Broken Dreams – Bobby’s Back – Radiation Ranch – Chains Around Your Heart – Maria – Three Guys – Aztec – Breath Of Life – Barbwire Fence

In 1984, Setzer came to a point in his career where he felt too limited with the labels “Rockabilly” and “Guitar Hero” sticked to him. He wanted to show and prove he was more than a Grestch guy who sings about Cadillacs an Pin-Ups. With a more ambitious vision in mind he parted way with the Stray Cats and reinvented himself as a heartland rocker (on a side note it was also the beginning of the mullet period). He was helped in this process by Don Gehman the man behind the sound of John Mellencamp’s Scarecrow and, according to his own words, by a “real band” (understand two guitars, a full drumkit, a keyboard and an electric bass) including members of Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, Kenny Aronoff (John Mellencamp) and Tommy Byrnes who was for a brief period the fourth Stray Cats.
After an apparition at the first Farm Aid, the debut album from the “new” Setzer was released in 1986. If the result is not entirely convincing and really sounds dated by moment (especially that typical 80’s drums sound), the curious and open-minded listener will find a couple of good things.
The title track opens brillantly the disc and sets the pace (though the lyrics are still obscure to me). “Bobby’s Back” is a dip into R&B (via MTV) and was already present in the Stray Cats setlist in 1984, as is “Barbwire Fence” another highlight of the album. “Radiation Ranch” is a solid rocker based upon a simple but efficient guitar riff, later recycled to write “Drive Like Lightning (Crash Like Thunder)” more than ten years later.
But the real good surprises come from “Aztec” (co-written with Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell) and “Maria” (another collaboration, this time with Steve Van Zandt) both with a strong social comment revealing a new side of Setzer. Even though some stuff is just average, the whole album remains coherent. But Setzer didn’t pursue in this way and without a clear vision of what to do of his “freedom” (without a pre-definite musical genre) he oriented himself toward FM rock on the catastrophic “Live Nude Guitar”, but this is another story.

Brian Setzer Radiation Ranch


Brian Setzer – Live Nude Guitar

EMI Manhattan [1988]
Red Lightning Blues – Rockability – Rebelene – Nervous Breakdown – Every Tear That Falls – Temper Sure Is Risin’ – When the Sky Comes Tumblin’ Down – She Thinks I’m Trash – Love Is Repaid by Love Alone – Rosie in the Middle – So Young, So Bad, So What – The Rain Washed Everything Away

After The Knife Feels Like Justice failed to convince the audience (but was he really convinced himself?), Setzer knew he had to return to familiar territories. He dropped the second guitar and the keyboards and reduced the line-up to a power trio. With the faithful Tommy Byrnes switching on bass and Jerry Angel on drums, Setzer put back his guitar up to the fore. If he couldn’t be considered as a serious songwriter, he could still play the rocker card.
Ironically, if Setzer left the Stray Cats in 1984 to be free from the Rockabilly image, it appeared that he didn’t know what to do with that newly acquired freedom. If its predecessor showed some coherence, trying to follow the steps of John Mellencamp and Bruce Springsteen, Live Nude Guitars is a collection of songs that go in every direction possible. For better and mostly for worse.
Things begin not that bad with Red Lightnin’ Blues (a heavy rocker) and Rockability that could have been a Stray Cats track. Rebelene is still good though a bit wasted by the production. On Nervous Breakdown, Setzer sounds like a parody of himself. How Setzer, who claimed his love for Cochran everywhere, can miss this cover? It’s beyond me.
Every Tear is even worse; it’s one of the worst songs of the album: a pop ballad with an awful FM production.
Temper Sure Is Risin’ gives you hope. It’s not great, but it’s a boogie-rock with a hot guitar solo and Bruce Willis on harmonica.
But these hopes vanished instantly with When the Sky Comes Tumblin’ Down. It’s not enough that the song is terrible, but the production is awful, and the synthesizer horns nearly made my ears bleed.
Once again, the terrible production waste the few qualities one could find in She Thinks I’m Trash.
Love Is Repaid By Love Alone is a good song. It’s too much on many aspects (the strings, Setzer who tries to put as many notes as he can) but, somehow, it works.
With just a light guitar and an accordion, Rosie In the Middle seems a bit out of place. It’s without a doubt the best song of the album, and one can regret that Setzer didn’t go more in that direction for that record. But it’s not enough to save Live Nude Guitar. Especially when it’s followed by So Young So Bad, So What (can you do something more cliché? I don’t think so.) and The Rain Washed Everything Away. After all these years I still wonder if it’s a joke or not.
Setzer toured briefly during the Summer of 1988, but by the end of the year, the Stray Cats were back on tracks.

Brian Setzer Live nude guitar


Brian Setzer Collection 81-88
Brian Setzer Collection 81-88

Brian Setzer – Brian Setzer Collection 81-88

EMI
(She’s) Sexy + 17 – Rock This Town – Summertime Blues – The Knife Feels Like Justice – Boulevard Of Broken Dreams – Echo Park – When The Sky Comes Tumblin’ Down – Cross Of Love – Every Tear That Falls – Thing About You – Waitin’ For Desiree – Bobby’s Back – Keep Your Lovin’ Strong – Living Souls – The Rain Washed Everything Away – I Won’t Stand In Your Way – Runaway Boys – Chains Around Your Heart
EMI released this compilation album when, call that a coincidence, Setzer was toping the charts with his 17-piece big band and the excellent Dirty Boogie album.
Chances are the newly converted to the sound of the Orchestra might have been surprised by the stuff included in that album. With the exception of four Stray Cats songs that sound a bit out a place, the songs date from a period when Setzer tried to reinvent himself as a serious rocker closer to Tom Petty, John Mellencamp or Bruce Springsteen. Nothing wrong with that, and despite a production that sounds terribly dated now,  there’s a lot of good things on the two albums recording during that era (the Knife Feels Like Justice and Live Nude Guitar) but they lacked of that little something that made the difference with the Stray Cats or his later solo stuff.
What really makes this compilation worthwile, especially for Setzer hardcore fans, are the the B-sides  and the many unreleased outtakes, some being very good like the Springteen-esque Waiting For Desiree. Some of the songs from that period (Cross of Love and Thing About You) would later be recorded by the Stray Cats. It also includes the version of Summertime Blues than the one recorded for the movie La Bamba.


Fred “Virgil” Turgis

 

 

Carl “Sonny” Leyland

The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio Meets Nathan James and Ben Hernandez

515 Miles – Don’t Know What You Did – Take a Girl Like You – Sweet Little Woman – Hooray Hooray (These Women is Killing Me) – City Blues – Early Tuesday Mornin’ – Run Me Ragged – Worn Out Wagon – Make Your Own Mind – Wonderful Time – Black Rattler – One Thing I Don’t Understand – Oh Red – Sending Up My Timber – The Prisoner’s Song – Mystery Train – Nightmare Blues – Jumpin at The Jamboree

The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio Meets Nathan James and Ben Hernandez

This must be one of the two best blues albums I’ve heard in ages (the other being CW Stoneking’s King Hokum). The master of blues, jazz, and boogie-woogie piano and his always perfect and tight rhythm section (Hal Smith on drums and Marty Eggers on bass) join forces with Ben Hernandez and Nathan James for a record that sounds like a party.

They play blues from the late 30s to the early 50s, when Delta blues was no longer the primary genre, but when Chicago blues had not yet replaced everything. A vibrant brand of blues that didn’t hesitate to incorporate elements of jazz, like Leyland’s piano and James’ guitar. It reminds us of Tampa Red, Jazz Gillum, Big Bill Broonzy, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, or Sonny Boy Williamson (the first). Half of the songs are written by Leyland, James, or Hernandez (and the three of them sing, too), and they are so well crafted you can’t tell which ones are from the 40s and which come from the 21st century until you read the credits.

They achieve this authentic sound without any recording tricks, like “let’s use the poorest microphone we have to sound vintage.” The authentic sound simply comes from the players, and the bright recording allows us to hear each solo and instrument clearly.


The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio – Wild Piano

Komodo Records KR1005
Music Hall Stomp – My Old Man – Stalking The Lion – Blowing Bubbles Boogie – Almond Joys – Yancey On State Street – Jimtown Blues – Last Of The Sawmill Boogie – Green Diamond Boogie – Blues For Bill Field – Possom & Taters – Mr Freddy Blues – If I Had My Way – Tripling The Bass – Body & Soul – Baby Won’t You Please Come Home – Early Hours – Witches Kitchen – The Lonesome Road – Boogie Woogie Stomp

Carl is a well-known musician who appeals to fans of various music genres such as blues, boogie, rockabilly, western swing, and jazz. He has recently released his latest solo album, the first since “Gin Mill Jazz” four years ago. Recorded at The Old Town Music Hall, this album features Carl alone with his piano, capturing the perfect sound for this style of music. Half of the songs on the album are Carl’s original compositions, paying homage to old-time piano masters like Jimmy Yancey and Willie “The Lion” Smith. The album also includes a new, faster rendition of Carl’s impressive piece “Witches’ Kitchen,” as well as classic tunes like “Body & Soul” and “Baby Won’t You Please Come Home.” Not only is Carl an amazing piano player, but he also showcases his vocal talent on this album. Additionally, the album features “Boogie Woogie Stomp” by Albert Ammons and “Possom & Taters,” a ragtime tune from the 1900s. The liner notes hint at the possibility of a volume 2, as this CD represents only half of the recording session, leaving the listener eager for more.


The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio – Studio Session

Komodo Records 1002
Margie – Cabbage Greens – One Sweet Letter From You – Memphis Blues – B Flat Boogie – Good Gravy Rag – St. Louis Blues – Body & Soul – My Old Kentucky Home – Argyle Avenue Breakdown – Slow Blues – Blame It On The Blues – Kansas City Southern – Two Key Boogie – Swipesy Cakewalk – Come Day & Go Day – Pancake Charlie – Final Cut Boogie.

carl leyland trio studio session

If you enjoyed the live album, there’s no reason not to like the studio one. The album consists of eighteen tracks, with almost half of them credited to Carl. This is a strong point because Carl is a talented songwriter and musician. The CD opens with a fantastic instrumental rendition of “Margie,” followed by a blues track “Cabbage Greens” (by Champion Jack Dupree and Big Bill Bronzy). The album also pays homage to WC Handy, the Father of the Blues, with covers of “Memphis Blue” and “St. Louis Blues” (featuring some Latin beats). While these covers are great, the real strength of the album lies in Carl’s original songs, especially the final track, aptly named “Final Cut Boogie.” Eggers and Smith also shine on this album. I’ve heard that a third album with this lineup has been released, and I’m looking forward to listening to it.


The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio – Broadway Boogie

Komodo Records 1001
47th Street Jive – Farrish Street Jive Don’t Lie To Me – Swanee River Boogie – Song of the Wanderer – Kansas City – Flying Crow Blues – Rocking the House – Pipeliner’s Blues – Stack o’Lee – Shreveport Fairwell – Spo-Dee-o-Dee – Yearning – Black Hearted Woman – Broadway Boogie – Old Fashion Love

carl sonny leyland trio

Following Carl Leyland’s career can be a bit challenging because he has recorded many albums on various labels from different countries: England (No Hit), Finland (Goofin’), France (Honky Tonk), and the USA (Piano Joys, Hightone). His latest album is on his bassist’s own Komodo Records. The first one is a great live album, very well recorded. Even though I was impressed by his rhythm section on Farrish Street Jive (Kevin Smith on bass and Shaun Young on drums), I must admit that this one blew my mind. “Veteran” Hal Smith is everything someone can ask for from a swing drummer, and his team, along with bassist Marty Eggers, is quite effective. As I’m not a boogie-woogie specialist (although I like it), I won’t go into stylistic remarks and comments. This album mainly consists of instrumentals, a few vocals (Don’t Lie to Me, Kansas City, and a superb rendition of Stack O’Lee).


Carl “Sonny” Leyland – Hot Rhythm Blue Love

Rock-A-Billy R 113
Hot Rhythm, Blue Love – Beat Up Ford /Air Conditioner Blues

This superb single from Carl Sonny Leyland was recorded in 1989 for Rock-A-Billy Records, Willie Lewis’ label. Leyland is accompanied by Joey Torres (drums) and Brad Smith (double bass).
Hot Rhythm Blue Love is a different version from the one that appears on I Like Boogie Woogie. While the album version had a country blues touch, this one is a raw Rock’ n’ Roll that Jerry Lee Lewis would not have denied during his Sun period.
Beat Up Ford is just as Rock’ n’ Roll but closer to Chuck Berry, somewhere between Maybelline and You Can’t Catch Me with a great dose of Johnny Johnson in it. Great art.
As its name suggests, Air Conditioner Blues is a superb blues that lasts over four minutes and leaves Leyland’s subtle pianistic touch plenty of room to expand.


carlleyland_ilikebwCarl “Sonny” Leyland – I Like Boogie Woogie

On The Hill

Carl “Sonny” Leyland likes BoogieWoogie and plays it like no one else today, but not only, this is what this cd proves. It features the many sides of the english piano player : hillbilly, rockabilly, rural and city blues, and of course some boogie-woogie too.
Ten of the tracks included here have been previously released on Willie Lewis’ Rock-A-Billy records, which proves that Leyland is a serious cat about his music.
You’ll find Leyland playing harmonica, guitar and piano. The other musicians listed are Walter Leyland (Carl’s father), Ashley Kingman, Joey Torres, and some tracks are from the Krewmen, when they played the meanest rocking blues you could hear in 1985, before Carl left and their psychobilly era.
Historical (you’ll find some of Carl’s early sides) and musical value.


Carl “Sonny” Leyland – From Boogie to Rock’n’Roll

Honky Tonk Productions HT104 [1995]
Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie – Cat And Mouse Boogie – The Axe Is Falling – New Yancey Stomp – Back To The Boogie – Beat Me Daddy Eight To The Bar – Jook It Jook It – End Of The Road – Rock And Roll Ruby – Gulf Stream Special – Night Time Is The Right Time – Tuesday Struggle – Drinkin’ Wine Spodee-Odee – Pig Foot Pete – Jimmy’s Stuff – Brown Skin Girls – Couscous Boogie – Chattanoogie – What’d I Say

The name of this album says it all. Leyland recorded this platter in France on a grand Steinway, either alone or with Matt Radford on bass and Brian Nevill on drums. He plays classics from the boogie-woogie era (Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie, Pig Foot Pete), Rock’n’roll (Jerry Lee Lewis’ End of the Road, Drinkin’ Wine Spodee-Odee, Rock’ n’ Roll Ruby) with plenty of blues in between (Big Bill Broonzy’s Brown Skin Girls, Leyland’s the Axe is Falling.) Ray Charles’ What’d I Say ends the selection. Among the 19 tracks, seven are Leyland originals that proudly stand near the classics.

Fred “Virgil” Turgis

Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys

Bob Wills – Ida Red Likes The Boogie

Bear Family – BCD 17647
There’s not a hundred miles left in me – Nothin’ but the best for my baby – Charlie changed his mind – Steamboat stomp – Keep knocking (but you can’t come in) – Don’t be ashamed of your age – I didn’t realize – Ida Red likes the boogie – Trouble, trouble blues – Talkin’ bout you – So let’s rock – Bottle baby boogie – The devil ain’t lazy – Twin guitar special – Snatchin’ and grabbin’ – I’ll have somebody else – Yearning (just for you) – What’s the matter with the mill – Texas drummer boy – Cadillac in model ‘A’ – Sugar baby – Hubbin’ it – Nothing but trouble – Whoa babe – Jolie Blond likes the boogie – I laugh when I think how I cried over you – Bring it on down to my house – Rock-a-bye baby blues – Pray for the lights to go out – I won’t be back tonight

Bob Wills

When I come across a new Bob Wills record, I have an almost Pavlovian reflex: I must buy it. Not to mention that this one is part of the excellent series Gonna Shake This Shake Tonight from the German label Bear Family.
At first glance, this compilation seems a bit unbalanced and shaky. The first period, from the first recordings of the Texas Playboys until 1947, is considered the richest by many, yet only seven songs represent it. It’s not much, given the catalog variety, especially since none come from the Tiffany Transcriptions, but perhaps it’s a question of rights. However, it’s a shame to miss out on the dirty and sparkling guitar parts of the great Junior Barnard, which prefigure Rock’n’Roll. Even this selection, for a compilation more oriented towards stirring pieces, forgets phenomenal instrumentals such as “White Heat” or “Playboy Stomp.” But let’s not shy away from our pleasure and enjoy Wills’ vocals on “Yearning,” the Shamblin/McAuliffe duel on “Twin Guitar Special,” or this demonstration of Swing that is “Woah Babe.”
The next part of the collection features 18 titles from the MGM period, which is a great addition. Wills’ MGM period is often underestimated, mainly due to Tommy Duncan’s departure in September 1948. After Duncan left, Wills never found a singer as good or charismatic. The post-war period marked the end of large orchestras. But the Texas Playboys almost reinvented themselves by replacing brass instruments with new guitar, steel guitar, and electric mandolin arrangements, taking their music to new heights and sometimes foreshadowing the emergence of Rock’n’Roll.
Songs like “Ida Red Likes The Boogie,” “Bottle Baby Boogie,” and “Rock A Bye Baby Blues” show the influence of Billy Jack, Bob’s younger brother, who was more in touch with the music of his time. These songs are reminiscent of what Bill Haley would later do with the Saddlemen. The selection also includes blues like “Trouble Trouble Blues” (sung by Bob, not by his brother Luke as erroneously credited in the discography), two excellent songs written by Cindy Walker (“Don’t Be Ashamed Of Your Age” and “Hubbin’ It”), and Western Swing gems that can stand up to comparison with the Okeh sides (“I Didn’t Realize,” “I’ll have Somebody Else”).
Unfortunately, things took a downturn when Wills moved to Decca after MGM. The January 1956 session produced “So Let’s Rock,” an attempt to ride the emerging Rock wave that is rather embarrassing. “Sugar Baby,” sung by Darla Darett, is only marginally better.
In 1960, Wills joined Liberty and reunited with Tommy Duncan. From the April 21, 1960 session, Bear Family selected “What’s the Matter With The Mill.” Despite being slightly weighed down by a heavy electric bass, it is nevertheless an excellent swinging song with brilliant solos.
Dating from 1968, “There’s Not A Hundred Miles Left In Me,” is an excellent Honky Tonk. However, it’s not easy to recognize the richness of Bob Wills’ music behind the Nahsvilian production.
“Talkin’ Bout You” comes from one of the last recording sessions by Wills and gives the impression of a man diminished by illness. Fortunately, Bear chose not to present the songs chronologically, which prevents this good compilation from ending on a somewhat sad note.
This compilation may not be the best to showcase Wills’ genius and rich musical career. A selection from the first period or the Tiffany Transcriptions might be preferred. However, for those who would like to hear lesser-known and different tunes, these thirty titles will provide what they are looking for.

Buy it here.

Fred “Virgil” Turgis

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