Showing posts with label '70s Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label '70s Music. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The A.R.R.O.H. (American Rock n' Roll Oral History) Project



The A.R.R.O.H. (American Rock n' Roll Oral History) Project

DONATE HERE:

http://www.gofundme.com/68jbe4


Phil Everly died recently, and his death emphasized a sad reality: every year, we lose more of the great musicians who made the music that changed the world in the '50s, '60s, and '70s. The American Rock n' Roll Oral History (A.R.R.O.H.) Project is an attempt to capture first hand, on audio and video, the living history of American Rock n' Roll.


In my 25 years as a broadcaster and podcaster, the shows that have had the most impact have been the episodes that featured musicians telling their own stories, relating the history of their old bands and long-lost 45s. While these stories all have certain elements in common, each one is unique. Through my regional rock n' roll history shows, "Florida Rocks Again!" and "Mal Thursday's Texas Tyme Machine," I have featured first-person narratives from such artists as Ray Charles, Roy Head, and Joe "King" Carrasco, as well as the true tales of '60s garage bands like The Nightcrawlers, We The People, and The Wig.

The A.R.R.O.H. Project  hopes to interview over 100 musicians from the rock n' roll era, individually and in groups, in 2014. Our $40,000 goal represents the minimum amount needed for a two-person crew to travel the highways, byways, and backwaters of this vast country for three months. Also, the budget will allow for stipends to be paid to local documentarians who may have easier access to a given subject. The end result will be a permanently archived collection of living testaments to rock n' roll told by the people who made the music.

Your donation will help to ensure that this vital oral history will be recorded for posterity, for future generations, and for the love of rock n' roll.

Mal Thursday

 

Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Mal Thursday Show #53: Mass Pike Memory Lane


Mal Thursday takes a trip in time and space to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for "Mass Pike Memory Lane," an episode featuring 30+ Bay State bands 1964 to now. Dedicated to the Rodney Sinclair Defense Fund, raising money to help pay the legal fees in a case where an old friend of Mal's finds himself in the crosshairs of America's misguided war on drugs, on trial for his freedom. There will be a benefit concert on October 4, 2013 at J.J.'s in Florence, Massachusetts, featuring a reunion show by the Unband, with special guests Playtopia, The Nice Try, and Unagi/Jack Falcon. The PayPal address to donate to the cause is middlefinger@comcast.net.

Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

Playlist:
THE REAL KIDS: Better Be Good
THE REMAINS: Once Before
THE BUGS: Slide
THE BARBARIANS: Hey Little Bird
THE BOLD: Gotta Get Some
COBRAS: I Wanna Be Your Love
THE ROCKIN' RAMRODS: She Lied
THE MODERN LOVERS: Roadrunner
BARRENCE WHITFIELD & THE SAVAGES: Ramblin' Rose
THE NEIGHBORHOODS: The Prettiest Girl
THE HOPELESSLY OBSCURE: She's My Best Bette
THE BROOD: In and Out
THE FLIES: In the Dark
THE ODDS: I'll Make You Sorry
THE PRIME MOVERS: 1-2-5
THE TIME BEINGS: Why Don't You Love Me
CLASSIC RUINS: Geraldine (I Need Money)
LYRES: Tear You Up
KENNE HIGHLAND CLAN: Everybody's a Lyre
PRESTON WAYNE FOUR: Kumbaya (bed)
RICHIE'S RENEGADES: You're in the Pepsi Genration
DMZ: The First Time (Is the Best Time)
THE MALARIANS: Good Times
THE VOODOO DOLLS: Bad Feeling
THE UNBAND: We Like to Drink, We Like to Play Rock n' Roll
TAG SALE: Why You Smilin' (Live at the Pulaski Club)
SCUD MOUNTAIN BOYS: Midnight Cowboy (bed)
MISSION OF BURMA: That's When I Reach for My Revolver
SEBADOH: Skull
NEW RADIANT STORM KING: I Am a Scientist
BUFFALO TOM: Going Underground
THE PIXIES: Ed Is Dead
MORPHINE: Cure for Pain
MUCK AND THE MIRES: Gone, Gone, Gone

 

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Mal Thursday and the Cheetahs: 'It's All Going By Too Fast' mp3 album

2013 is the year of the Cheetah. Mal Thursday and the Cheetahs, that is. After 21 years, Mal and the Cheetahs' 'It's All Going By Too Fast' album finally sees the light of day, and unleashes upon the world "an unholy marriage of the Music Machine and Guns 'N Roses." Contains selections from "C.J. Sorrow, A Garage Rock Opera." Featuring Nelson Bragg (Brian Wilson Band) and Jeff Conolly (Lyres, DMZ).
  

Friday, June 29, 2012

Kashmere Stage Band at Antone's Tomorrow Night


People get ready! Saturday night, it's an evening of Texas Thunder Soul and titanic Fifth Ward funk as Antone's and Mal Thursday proudly present the legendary Kashmere Stage Band. The 25-piece ensemble features original members of the 1970s line-ups that produced the classic KSB recordings, which ultimately led to the acclaimed 2010 documentary film THUNDER SOUL.

Doors at 8 p.m. Austin funk masters Hard Proof AfroBeat play at 9, with DJ sets from Soul Happening throughout the night. Kashmere Stage Band headlines at 10:30. A funky good time is guaranteed for all.

Antone's is located at 213 W. Fifth Street in Austin.  

Advance tickets on sale now: http://ticketf.ly/M1QCov

Thursday, May 24, 2012

The Scoot Inn Summer of Soul: Clarence “Blowfly” Reid

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Scoot Inn Summer of Soul: Clarence “Blowfly” Reid

Austin, Texas (May 24, 2012) – The Scoot Inn Summer of Soul series continues Saturday night June 9th, when legendary soul vocalist/producer/songwriter Clarence Reid brings both sides of his public persona to the Scoot Inn Bier Garten stage with a set of his '60s R&B hits followed by a full set of the funky, filthy rhymes of his alter ego, the one, the only, the legendary godfather of Hip Hop, Blowfly.

According to his Wikipedia entry, “as Blowfly, Reid has recorded numerous albums, mostly of sex-based parodies of other songs, as well as original raps themed around sex. Reid started off writing songs for artists including Betty Wright, Sam & Dave, Gwen McCrae, and KC & the Sunshine Band. He also recorded many songs of his own in the '60s and '70s including the hit ‘Nobody But You Babe.’

“Reid would write sexually explicit versions of current hit songs for fun, but only performed them for his friends at parties or in the studio. In 1971, he recorded a whole album of 'dirty' songs under the name Blowfly. At the time, no record label would release profane material so he distributed the records himself on his own independent record label, Weird World.”

This will be Blowfly’s first Austin appearance since his sold-out show at Emo’s during South by Southwest 2010, when Reid was in town to promote the internationally-acclaimed documentary The Weird World of Blowfly.

D-Madness Project opens the show at 9, with Subkulture Patriots playing the after-show set inside at 12:30 a.m. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door. Presented by Mal Thursday, in association with The Scoot Inn, Atomic Jukebox, Black Media Council, Fleshlight, and Blowfly International.

The Scoot Inn Summer of Soul continues July 14th with Texas soul legend Roy Head (“Treat Her Right”). The Scoot Inn is located at 1308 East Fourth Street in Austin.

CONTACT:
J.M. Dobies
Industrious Media, Austin, Texas

Friday, March 26, 2010

The Mal Thursday Show #25: Kim Fowley's Trainwreck a Go Go

The Mal Thursday Show #25: Kim Fowley's Trainwreck a Go Go

Mal Thursday welcomes legendary producer, provocateur, and scenemaker Kim Fowley to the program for the first of two episodes dedicated to the wildest recordings in his massive back catalog, which contains over 5000 songs. Currently being portrayed by Oscar-nominated actor Michael Shannon in the big screen rock 'n roll biopic The Runaways, Fowley is, in his own words, "a jerk, a genius, and a pig." Sit back and immerse yourself in the man and his music, the legend and the lunacy.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NOW!

Tracklist:

KIM FOWLEY: Motorboat/ Animal Man/The Trip/Underground Lady/Reincarnation/Bubblegum

THE N’BETWEENS: Security
THE SEEDS: Wild Blood
THE BUSH: To Die Alone
SPIDER: The Comedown Song
THE BELFAST GYPSIES: Secret Police
THE GRAINS OF SAND (THE WAILERS): Golden Apples of the Sun
ST. JOHN GREEN: Canyon Woman

THE MODERN LOVERS: Government Center
HOLLYWOOD STARS: King of the Night Time World
KISS: Do You Love Me
THE RUNAWAYS: Cherry Bomb/Born to Be Bad
DAKOTA FANNING & KRISTEN STEWART: California Paradise

VENUS & THE RAZORBLADES: Punk-a-Rama
THE DEAD BOYS: Big City
THE QUICK: No No Girl
MUCK & THE MIRES: Doreen
KIM FOWLEY: A Message to the Youth of the 21st Century

Monday, February 15, 2010

RIP Dale Hawkins, Doug Fieger


Dale Hawkins, best known for his 1957 hit "Suzie Q" (also known as "Suzy-Q"), has died in Little Rock, Arkansas at the age of 73, of complications from colon cancer.

He had been undergoing treatment at the Arkansas Hospice Center at St. Vincent's Doctors Hospital in Little Rock.

READ MORE

Doug Fieger, lead singer, guitarist, and prime mover behind '80s hitmakers the Knack ("My Sharona," "Good Girls Don't") has died at the age of 57, following a lengthy battle with cancer.

READ MORE

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Kim Fowley to Guest on The Mal Thursday Show

Legendary rock 'n roll animal man Kim Fowley is among the extra special guests slated to appear on upcoming episodes of the award-winning GaragePunk podcast The Mal Thursday Show.

The iconoclastic and fantastic recording artist, producer, and scenemaker will be the subject of an hour-long ineterview on the program, accompanied by selections from various stages of his storied career, including cuts from Norton Records' boss Fowley collections One Man’s Garbage and Another Man’s Gold!, to coincide with his appearance at the South by Southwest festival in Austin this March.

Also in the works are guest DJ segments from the Higher State and the Ugly Beats.

The latest episode, "Texas Tyme Machine," is available for download on iTunes and at the GaragePunk Hideout. Other episodes of the series that are scheduled for the first half of the year include "Requiem for Big Ray," "Texas Tyme Machine, Volume 2," "Songs the Lyres Taught Us, Volume 4" and "Songs I Taught the Malarians."

Friday, December 4, 2009

Of Birthdays, Bootlegs, and Alice

Yesterday was my sister Beth's 50th birthday, and I sent her this tasteful e-card featuring the late, great Jack Lord in full-on McGarrett mode:
Note: "Mike" is the "M" in "JM." Well, actually, it's "Michael," but I digress.

Anyway, she wrote me today that she doesn't feel a day over 16. I can relate, although I've had to move on from playing the eternal adolescent, what with fatherhood and trying to keep the wolves from the door and all that. Emotionally, I'm at least 18 now.

Growth!

My sister's birthday yesterday reminded me that today is the birthday of my best friend from grade school, John Portolese. I will always be grateful to John for having hipped me to the early work of Alice Cooper (the band, that is, with the original, classic line-up of Alice, Glenn Buxton, Michael Bruce, Dennis Dunaway, and Neal Smith).

Of late, I've been digging a couple of bootlegs from their early '70s heyday, Live at the Paramount, Seattle 1971 (the Love It to Death tour) and Killered in Pittsburgh '72 (featuring live renditions of the songs from my all-time fave Alice LP, Killer, hence the title), and waxing nostalgic about skipping school on Ash Wednesday '73 to purchase Killer at the local drugstore, and writing my first play, Alice Cooper Versus the Blob, under its influence.

Rock on, dudes.

Monday, November 16, 2009

The Biggest Sucker in the World

That'd be me.

How else to explain my continuing obsession with rock 'n roll music, which, as I was quoted in The Miami Herald earlier this year, has been going steadily downhill since 1966?

Beats the hell out of me. In more ways than one.

First, I eschewed grad school in favor of playing with my band, the Malarians, after I graduated from college. Not the greatest career move, J.M.

There was a brief period in the middle of the last decade when I actually made a living from rock 'n roll, when I was running the show at the semi-legendary Bay State Hotel and putting out vinyl with Chunk Records, my independent label ("Medium Fidelity, Extreme Quality"). I got fucked over by the band I'd groomed for bigger things, thanks to my naivete, stupidity, and R.E.M.'s lawyer. I lost my appetite for the whole thing overnight, and Chunk died a protracted death over the last few years of the '90s. At least I missed out on the downfall of the record industy, but then again, if I'd only managed to hold on to all of the back stock, I'd be an Ebay millionaire by now, or at the very least make my car payment every month from selling my old records (see "The Chunk Records Story, Part Four" for the grisly details).

And then there's radio. I'm told I'm a brilliant DJ with a great voice and impeccable taste. That and $2.95 will get me a small coffee at Starbuck's. I love the medium itself, if not the current state of the industry, and the internet has provided me a worldwide audience for my current projects, The Mal Thursday Show and Florida Rocks Again! Terrestrial radio has been less than kind to me, however, and here's hoping against hope that will change with my new show. The Sisyphean quest continues.

Why all the gloom, doom, and self-laceration, you ask?

It's mainly because I've been re-reading Mainlines, Blood Feasts, and Bad Taste: A Lester Bangs Reader the past couple of days, and I keep flashing back to when I was 16 years old, and had subscriptions to both Creem Magazine and The Village Voice. I loved reading Lester's stuff back then, and reading it again thirty years on, I have been getting little pangs of sadness and regret for all of the wasted energy and lost years spent on such an unworthy mistress.

Bangs, like me, was a true believer against his better judgment, and his stuff is still compelling 25 years after his death. I share more than a few parallels with him (for one, I'm writing this from Austin, where he once lived), and agree with his stance that "listening to music made 20, 30 years ago [now it'd be 40 or 50 years ago] is not living in the past, is not nostalgia...it's good taste."

Of course, in the very same piece ("Bad Taste is Timeless"), he also asserts that "I can guarantee you that there will be no Throbbing Gristle repackages from Japan in the year 2000."

Actually, I think most of the Throbbing Gristle import boxed sets, of which there are at least five, came out in 2003-2004.

Anyway, I could go on and on, but I won't. Suffice to say, I still love the music. Even if it doesn't love me back.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Classic Rerun: Florida Rocks Again! #20


By popular demand, our classic rerun for the holiday weekend is Florida Rocks Again! #20: Florida Time. Originally posted March 3, 2007, this episode features the all-time greats from the Sunshine State singing songs about Florida, and places like Miami, Daytona Beach, Tampa, and Tallahassee.

Hosted by Mal Thursday, produced by JM Dobies and Jeff Lemlich, and presented in Living Monophonic Sound on the GaragePunk Podcast Network.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN NOW!

Playlist:

THE BEACH BUMS (BOB SEGER & THE LAST HEARD): Florida Time
LARRY & THE LOAFERS: Let's Go to the Beach
THE CORONADOS: Florida Sun
THE CONSERVATIVES: Miami
WAYNE COCHRAN: Goin' Back to Miami
ELVIS PRESLEY: Ft. Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce
RONNY ELLIOT: Elvis Presley Didn't Like Tampa
THE IMPACS: Cape Canaveral (bed)

JERRY SEINFELD: Florida
BING CROSBY with THE ANDREWS SISTERS: Appalachiacola, Fla.
THE FLAMIN' GROOVIES: Tallahassee Lassie
MUDDY WATERS
: Deep Down in Florida
BUTTHOLE SURFERS: Movin' to Florida
NOBLE "THIN MAN" WATTS: F-L-A

FLOYD MILES: Goin' Back to Daytona
THE PREMIERS: Daytona
DENNIS WHEELER
: Down in Daytona
SANDY & THE BEACHCOMBERS
: Daytona Darlin'
ROOT BOY SLIM & THE SEX CHANGE BAND
: In Jail in Jacksonville
MOFRO:
Florida

Be sure to dig our latest episode, Florida Rocks Again! #40: Anyhere But Here (click on image to launch podcast):



Florida Rocks Again! is sponsored in part by Zazzle.com, where millions of people create, buy, and sell billions of customized items every day. Get 10% off orders of $50 or more by using the discount code MALTHURSDAY1 or save 20% on orders of $75 or more (an even better deal) by using the code MALTHURSDAY2;

And by CCS.com, where you can find the largest online selection of authentic skateboarding gear, from CCS, Volcom, Vans, Von Zipper, Nike SB, and more. Get free shipping on orders of $30 or more by using the discount code AFTHURFS, or 15% off of orders over $75 by using the code AFTHUR15.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Florida Rocks Again! Online Superstore

Now available at

The Florida Rocks Again! Online Superstore:


30% OFF LIST PRICE! Essential two-volume illustrated encyclopedia of Florida-related rock, soul, and dance music covering the years 1955 to 1985, the product of over 20 years of writing and research (and over 40 years of record-collecting) by the late DJ/music historian Kurt "K.O.T.O" Curtis. They're all here: Ray Charles, Sam & Dave, the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, 38 Special, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, and many, many more. If you're a fan of the Florida Rocks Again! radio shows, you'll love this invaluable resource on Florida music. Published by Florida Media Inc., two book set, 1024 pages total.

This is your last chance to get an original copy of Florida Rocks Again! Co-Producer Jeff Lemlich's great book about Florida Garage Bands, Pop Stars, Soul Singers, and AM Radio Stations. An invaluable source work, and a must have item for fans of Florida rock 'n' roll and soul music. 416 Pages, signed by the author.

Kelly Rouse's award-winning feature length documentary about the legendary Daytona Beach garage band, the Nightcrawlers, who had a regional and national hit with "The Little Black Egg."

Beautifully packaged two-disc set of Gram Parsons and the Flying Burrito Brothers recorded live at the Avalon Ballroom in the fall of '69 by Grateful Dead sound engineer Owsley "Bear" Stanley. Along with classic Parsons originals like "Sin City" and "Hot Burrito #1," the band busts out a bunch of cool country covers, including "Mental Revenge," "A Town Without Memories," and the rousing opener "Close Up the Honky Tonks." Essential stuff for any Gram fan.

Also at
The Florida Rocks Again! Online Superstore:
The Allman Brothers Band, the Birdwatchers, Blues Image, the Nightcrawlers, James & Bobby Purify, Sam & Dave, We The People,
and Psychedelic States: Florida, Volumes 1-3.

And don't forget to pay a call on the Florida Rocks Again! Swag Shack at CafePress.com for official Florida Rocks Again! T-Shirts, Trucker Hats, BBQ Aprons, Hoodies, and more.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Keith Moon Was Here


About ten years ago, filmmaker Alex Cox (Repo Man, Sid and Nancy, Straight to Hell) was commissioned to write a screenplay based on the life of Keith Moon, the Who's legendary drummer and destroyer of hotel rooms.

From AlexCox.com: "Co-written by me and Tod [Davies] for American and London-based producers. The life of Keith Moon, whose antagonist we decided should be Peter Sellers. Sellers first appears as a giant spider, then as himself, then as Harry Nilsson, in whose London apartment rock stars invariably die. Supporting cast includes the other members of The Who, The Beatles, and Steve McQueen. Of all the scripts the two of us wrote together, this is the best."

In an interview with the Austin Decider, Cox describes why the film wasn't made:

"I think Roger Daltrey was the executive producer, and so maybe it didn’t fit his recollection of events or vision of the story [Daltrey is also portrayed as a bit of a wanker in the script] ...I think that the people who wanted to make the film were expecting more of a mainstream biopic — which is really hard, to make a guy like that sympathetic. I mean, the guy’s a serial wife beater, you know? It’s really hard to make a guy like that conventionally sympathetic."

Here's the screenplay for Keith Moon Was Here, which, despite a few anachronisms and other minor inaccuracies, would have made a great film, especially with someone like Colin Farrell in the part (and not Mike Myers, who was long rumored to be playing Moon):

http://www.alexcox.com/pdfs/MOON_1.pdf

Monday, June 15, 2009

Tin House at Wolfy's in Sanford, FL

Tin House, the Orlando-based power trio best known for their Rick Derringer-produced 1971 LP on Epic, has been reincarnated as a five-piece and will be appearing at Wolfy's, 520 N. Palmetto Avenue in Sanford, Florida on Saturday night at 8:30 p.m.

In addition to Tin House classics like "Silver Star" and "I Want Your Body," the band will be performing songs from their new CD Winds of Past. I got to witness the first Tin House show in 35 years at the Orlando Reunion Concert in 2006, and if you dig early '70s heavy rock like I do, you're in for a treat.

Check out Florida Rocks Again! #18: Orlando Rocks Again! for a set of Tin House classics with commentary from original members Mike Logan, Jeff Cole, and Floyd Radford.

www.myspace.com/tinhouseband

www.myspace.com/floridarocksagain