Showing posts with label Texas Tyme Machine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas Tyme Machine. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Mal Thursday Show #35: Texas Tyme Machine Vol. 5

The Golden Dawn Story

Even though Mal Thursday's Texas Tyme Machine has been spun off into its own 'cast, here's the fifth volume of the series presented one last time on The Mal Thursday Show, in case you missed it. This show has a lot more subscribers at the moment, and this episode needs to be heard!

Mal Thursday pays a visit to the rock n' roll ranch of George Kinney of pioneering Texas psychedelic band The Golden Dawn. Also in the show, recent releases from Amplified Heat, White Dress, and The Black Angels, and '60s fuzz classics from The Zakary Thaks, Sweet Smoke, and The Bubble Puppy. The Texas Tyme Machine floating concert series is organizing a series of benefits for the George Kinney Medical Fund, to raise money for Kinney's cancer treatments. The next one is Saturday March 19th at Uncle Billy's Lake Travis from Noon to 8 p.m. Central Time. To donate, the mailing address is George Kinney, P.O. Box 51, Cedar Creek, Texas 78612 USA. PayPal donations can be made to kinney777@gmail.com.

Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NOW!







Playlist:

THE GOLDEN DAWN: I'll Be Around
THE MOVING SIDEWALKS: 99th Floor
SWEET SMOKE: Morning Dew
THE LEMON FOG: Summer
KENNY AND THE KASUALS: See Saw Ride
THE ZAKARY THAKS: Green Crystal Ties
THE BUBBLE PUPPY: Hot Smoke and Sassafrass

THE GOLDEN DAWN: My Time
THE SPADES: You're Gonna Miss Me
THE GOLDEN DAWN: Evolution/Tell Me Why/Starvation
GEORGE KINNEY: How Could I Ever Say Goodbye

THE MULLENS: Don't Treat Me Cold
AMPLIFIED HEAT: What's It Gonna Be Will Be
WHITE DRESS: No Solid State
THE BLACK ANGELS: Haunting at 1300 McKinley
THE SONS OF HERCULES: Shakin' Street
THE PIRATES: I'm Cuttin' Out

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The Mal Thursday Show #32: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 4

The Mal Thursday Show #32: Texas Tyme Machine Vol. 4
Mal Thursday is back at the controls of the Texas Tyme Machine, taking you on a trip to the '60s teen scene of Houston. In addition to such H-Town heavies as the Moving Sidewalks, Fever Tree, and the Chancellors Ltd., this episode features The Thursday's Children Story as told by their electric piano/organ maestro Ezra Charles. The 13th Floor Elevators, The Golden Dawn, Leo & the Prohets, and The Ugly Beats represent for Austin. Yea-yuh!

Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

Playlist:

THURSDAY'S CHILDREN: Help, Murder, Police
KENNY AND THE KASUALS: Revelations
13th FLOOR ELEVATORS: Levitation
THE GOLDEN DAWN: Starvation
MOUSE & THE TRAPS: A Public Execution
LEO & THE PROPHETS: Tilt-a-Whirl
THE UGLY BEATS: You'll Forget

THE MOVING SIDEWALKS: Every Night a New Surprise
THE FEVER TREE: I Can Beat Your Drum
THE CHAPARRALS: I Tried So Hard
THE CHANCELLORS LTD.: You Be the Judge
PURE JADE GREEN: How's He Gonna Find Me
PURPLE SUN: Doomsday

THURSDAY'S CHILDREN
: Dominoes/Try Girl/You'll Never Be My Girl/Air Conditioned Man/You Can Forget About That/A Part of You

THE SOULPHONICS: All I Want for Christmas is a Job

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Mal Thursday's Texas Tyme Machine Live on Stage

Mal Thursday brings the "Texas Tyme Machine" series from The Mal Thursday Show to the stages of the Lone Star State with the premiere event taking place at Austin's Lucky Lounge on Thursday December 9th at 7 p.m. The all-star line-up features Austin's #1 garage outfit The Ugly Beats, playing selections from their latest Get Hip release MOTOR!, Jesse Sublett of The Skunks and The Murder Ballad Show, and special added attractions The Soulphonics. Mal will emcee and provide the music between sets. Admission is free (donations are appreciated).

Sponsored by Independence Brewing Company. $2.50 pints of Stash I.P.A all night long.

If you live in Central Texas, please try to make the scene at this wild event. Mal's future as a rock n' roll impresario is riding on it!


RSVP HERE.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Monday, October 18, 2010

The Mal Thursday Show #30: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 3

The Mal Thursday Show #30: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 3

Once again, Mal Thursday sets the controls for the heart of the Lone Star State to take you on a wild trip in a Texas Tyme Machine. This particular journey finds Mal on the dusty streets of Austin circa the late '70s, as special guest Jesse Sublett tells the incredible true tale of Texas punk legends the Skunks. Along the way, there are stops in the present day with a track from the new Ugly Beats long-player Motor! and a fistful of smokin' 45s from the psycho-delic '60s.

Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NOW!

THE UGLY BEATS: Things I Need to Know
SHADES OF KNIGHT: Fluctuation
THE CHEVELLE V: Come Back Bird
DESTINY'S CHILDREN: Fall of the Queen
THE SHERWOODS: I Know You Cried
THE MODULATION CORPORATION: What to Do
THE GOLDEN DAWN: My Time

MYSTIC EYES: Enough of What I Need
THE UNTOLD FABLES: It's a Cryin' Shame
THE TELL-TALE HEARTS: Crackin' Up
THE HIGHER STATE: You Can Forget About That
LYRES: We Sell Soul
THE MALARIANS: Good Times
SONS OF HERCULES: Gimme Some

The Skunks Story:
THE SKUNKS: Earthquake Shake/Television Lover/Memphis/Cheap Girl/Can't Get Loose/Jackie O/Dancing on My Grave

THE TWILIGHTERS: Nothing Can Bring Me Down

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Saturday, April 3, 2010

Mal Thursday: The Texas Psych Interview

Last month, I sat down for an interview with Kiloh Smith of the Texas Psych blog. Now that SXSW is over, and I've recovered for the most part, I finally remembered to re-post it here.

How did you get involved in radio?
I started doing college radio at WMUA in Amherst, Mass., back in '87, after I got out of college. I was the lead singer in a local band, the Malarians, and got invited to do a guest DJ thing where I brought in a bunch of garage records, and said stupid things on the air. After that, they gave me my own show, which was the original incarnation of "The Mal Thursday Show." I would mix it up, playing new releases as well as the old buried shit that was my bread and butter, and segue from a Sinatra record to Iggy & the Stooges doing "Louie Louie." By the way, both of my old bands, the Malarians and Mal Thursday & the Cheetahs, are reuniting in June to do a tour of Massachusetts to support the CD reissues of our LP catalog. It's pretty much of tour of Route 9: Boston, Worcester, Northampton, and Amherst. We're doing Boston and Worcester with Lyres, who have done some great Texas covers in their day: "We Sell Soul," "Enough of What I Need," etc.

Where does your interest in sixties psych stem from?
I was a little kid in the '60s, but thanks to AM radio and my older sisters, I got early exposure to not only the Beatles and Paul Revere & the Raiders, but also the Doors, Hendrix, and Vanilla Fudge, as the decade wore on. Like I said in an interview with The Miami Herald last year, "As far as I'm concerned, music's been going downhill since 1966." As John Lennon said, referring to Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis, "That's my period and I'll never leave it."

Sixties psych doesn’t seem like a great career move. Why?
Neither is radio, for that matter. And when I was working in commercial radio, I found it pretty much impossible to divorce myself from what I was playing. If I couldn't get off on it, it seemed dishonest to pretend that I did for the benefit of the listening audience. With the podcasts on GaragePunk, I may be preaching to the choir, but I know the audience is digging it. One reason that '60s garage and psych isn't a great career move is that the records were made over 40 years ago, which is to the present day what the roaring '20s were to the '60s. While the baby boomers' death grip on pop culture, combined with the fact that there was more great rock 'n roll made between '64 and '69 than there has been in the four decades since, has kept the music alive, there's no getting around the fact that it's ancient history. Pretty soon it'll be like Doo-Wop, totally marginalized. But not yet, thankfully.

Why Texas Psych?
I don't know if there was something in the water here, or what, but there was more good music coming out of Texas in the '60s than almost every other state in the U.S. Sure, New York and California had the major record companies, and San Francisco got all the hype, but the Texas psychedelic bands not only had a certain purity, they also rocked. Hard. Listen to the 13th Floor Elevators 1966 show at the Avalon Ballroom - none of the San Francisco bands could come close to that intensity. Of course, Janis and Chet Helms gave that scene the Texan flavor that helped put it over the top.

How did the "Texas Tyme Machine" come about? Is the show going to enter into syndication?
When I moved down to Florida in the fall of 2001, I created the "Florida Rocks Again!" radio show. It was my way of giving back to the culture, to show Floridians that so much great music had come from there, that Florida was more than just a national joke about rednecks, retirees, and hanging chads. It also allowed me to play a bunch of great garage and psychedelic records along with the Skynyrd, Tom Petty, and Sam & Dave stuff. Although we had a couple of lengthy runs on commercial radio, there was resistance on the part of most programmers to the overall obscurity of the show. There's also the unavoidable fact that a large percentage of the population wasn't even there in the '60s and '70s. They were in New York or Cuba.


In Texas, it's a different story. People take pride in their culture here, especially in Austin. I wanted to do a Texas version of "Florida Rocks Again!" even though there are already a couple of all-Texas music shows on the local airwaves ("Lone Star State of Mind" on KGSR and "Texas Music Matters" on KUT), I figured there was room for a more rockin' variation on the formula. Again, I could play all those great local '60s records, and give airtime to people like George Kinney, Roky Erickson, and others. I came up with the title "Texas Time Machine," and I even had some investors and a host, Dickie Lee Erwin, who had the right persona. I encountered difficulty in the fact that corporate-controlled commercial radio is not at all receptive to new ideas or specialty programming, which they consider to be an "audience-killer." So if you manage to get your show on the air, you're stuck with a late-night time slot or Sunday mornings, which is not going to attract much in the way in the way of sponsorship. Then I found out that the University of Texas has the trademark on the name "Texas Time Machine," which is some kind of a geographical mapping project. What a waste of a great title! So I changed it to "Tyme" with a Y, like Kenny & the Kasuals' "Journey to Tyme," and rather than wasting a year of my life trying to get the show syndicated for chump change, I decided to make it a regular part of "The Mal Thursday Show," which already has a built-in worldwide audience. And unlike a radio show or streaming internet show, a podcast is available indefinitely, 24/7, and it's free on iTunes.

What has the feedback been like so far?
There have been two all-Texas episodes so far, and I've gotten great feedback not only from the listeners, but from bands and labels here in Texas. The promo CDs have been pouring in, which is great. Also, I'm reaching out to the guys in the '60s bands, and giving them an opportunity to tell their stories. On Volume 3, the surviving members of the Wig are going to tell their tale, accompanied by their 45s and live tapes from the Jade Room.


If no syndication, are any individual stations interested in broadcasting "Texas Tyme Machine." Has there been any interest from the University of Texas at Austin’s student radio station?
I'd like to take a shot at it, but what's more likely is that I'll do "The Mal Thursday Show" on KOOP, the local community FM station, which shares a frequency with the UT student radio station. The UT station is limited to enrolled students, and going to grad school isn't in the cards at the moment! Part of the problem is that I've got a family to support, including two little kids, Liam, 5, and Lola, who's almost 4. I've got to hustle every day just to pay the rent. And I got laid off from my hated Microsoft job last July, so it's not easy. I take whatever gigs I can get. For instance, I'm writing a Classic Movies column for the Austin Examiner, a Celebrity Headlines column for the Dallas edition, in addition to my blog, and I'm up for a featured extra role in the Coen Brothers' remake of True Grit. Luckily, I can ride a horse and I'm growing my hair out for the Malarians reunion tour, so I've got properly Wild West sideburns going on.

Are you going to focus on cities/regions per show? That could be cool.
Oh yeah. The current episode has a segment on the Dallas/Fort Worth area circa '65-'67, taken from Norton Records' great Fort Worth Teen Scene series. Of the new bands I'm playing on the "Texas Tyme Machine" shows, I'm showing a huge bias towards Austin and San Antonio bands, but those are the bands I've seen and heard, and more importantly, that I've gotten promos on. If any bands from the rest of Texas are reading this, send me your stuff. LPs, CDs, mp3s, whatever you've got.

Ten years ago hardly anybody, outside Texas, had heard about this genre on music. What do you attribute the (late) rise in popularity to?
Well, the first renaissance in the genre was in the '80s, when you had all those semi-legit garage and psych comps, and people like Doug Hanners, David Shutt, and Dave Baldwin doing those vinyl releases like Texas Flashbacks, Fire in My Bones and Houston Hallucinations. In the early 2000s, there was a revival of interest in the music when garage rock was declared the Next Big Thing, and Little Steven started doing his "Underground Garage" show, and later his Sirius channel. There have been some great documentaries, like You're Gonna Miss Me and Dirt Road to Psychedelia, and all the fine work of the Roky CD club. There's also the undeniable fact that good music is good music, and people will listen to it if they get the chance. And thanks to the internet, that's easier than it was back in the days of scouring the Goodwills in hopes of finding some obscure psych 45 or waiting around for Pebbles, Vol. 69.

Are you uncovering any new gems? If so, tell us about it.
While most of the records from that era that haven't been completely lost have already been documented, there's still a lot of stuff that remains unheard, that was unissued, or only exists on acetates collecting dust in someone's attic. Researching the show, I'm always hearing great stuff for the first time. Or stuff I haven't listened to in 25 years. And although I'm something of a dinosaur, I'm hearing a lot of new bands that are really incredible. Austin has the Ugly Beats, the Jungle Rockers, Love Collector, the Black Angels, and I'm trying to put a new band together to do some live shows. There's a great band from the UK, the Higher State, who do a killer version of the Golden Dawn's "My Time" on the new episode.

What’s the future of Texas Tyme Machine?
It's going to be more or less a quarterly feature on "The Mal Thursday Show," and if I can get it on the airwaves here in Texas, that will be a bonus. In the meantime, I just want it to be heard by as many as people as possible, especially fans of Texas music, like your readers.

Monday, March 1, 2010

The Mal Thursday Show #24: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 2

The Mal Thursday Show #24: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 2

Mal Thursday sets the controls for the heart of the Lone Star State, as he takes y'all on another trip in a Texas Tyme Machine. The second volume in the series features tracks from Norton Records' essential Fort Worth Teen Scene series, killer cuts from bands out of Austin, Tyler, Sherman, and San Antonio, and a set of songs by Texas artists reinterpreted by bands hailing from Boston, Pittsburgh, the UK and elsewhere.

Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NOW




Tracklist:
THE BOTUMLESS PIT
: 13 Stories High
THE BOURBONS: Of Old Approximately
THE FIVE CANADIANS: Writing on the Wall
SIR DOUGLAS QUINTET: It’s a Man Down There
THE GRAVEN IMAGE: Take a Bite of Life
ZAKARY THAKS: Won’t Come Back
THE WIG: DRIVE IT HOME
THE PASSIONS: Lively One
THE SENSORS: Rumble (bed)

LARRY & THE BLUE NOTES: In & Out
MARK V: Night of the Phantom
THE BARONS: Live and Die
THE CHOCOLATE MOOSE: Chocolate Moose Theme
THE ROOTS: It’s a Long Journey
THE BARDS: Alibis
THE CHOCOLATE MOOSE: Half-Peeled Banana (bed)

13th FLOOR ELEVATORS: I’m Gonna Love You Too
DMZ: You’re Gonna Miss Me
THE HIGHER STATE: My Time
THE BROOD: I Need You There
THE CYNICS: I’m in Pittsburgh (And It’s Raining)
THE CHESTERFIELD KINGS: 99th Floor
AMPLIFIED HEAT: Neighbor, Neighbor

THE UGLY BEATS: Take a Stand
THE FREDDIE STEADY 5: Cavestomp 2001
THE SONS OF HERCULES: Brain Dead
THE JUNGLE ROCKERS: Shake it
THE TEXREYS: Cave Girl
THE HICKOIDS: The Talking Hot Pants Blues

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Texas Monthly: Three Chords and a Station Wagon

collage by Andi Beierman

Texas Monthly, by far the best regional publication of its kind, has a great feature by Michael Hall in its upcoming issue entitled "Three Chords and a Station Wagon," detailing the ups and downs of local 60s bands, including the Novas (Dallas), The Livin’ End (Abilene), Christopher & the Souls (McAllen), and the legendary Zakary Thaks (Corpus Christi).

You have to be a subscriber to read the story online, but it will be on the newsstands next week.

READ MORE

The Texas Monthly site also has a mini-documentary, "Texas Nuggets: The Secret History of Garage Rock in the Lone Star State."

For some appropriate musical accompaniment, tune in The Mal Thursday Show #23: Texas Tyme Machine, which features such blazin' Texan combos as the Wig (Austin), the 12 A.M. (San Antonio), the Reddlemen (Angleton), Mouse & the Traps (Tyler), as well as the aforementioned Zakary Thaks.


Friday, January 29, 2010

The Mal Thursday Show #23: Texas Tyme Machine

The Mal Thursday Show #23: Texas Tyme Machine

Mal Thursday initiates a quarterly series of episodes dedicated to Texas rock 'n roll past and present and the music of "the all-time greats from the Lone Star State." The first installment features mind-blowing tunes from 60s legends Kenny & the Kasuals, 13th Floor Elevators, and the Wig, as well as modern practitioners like Amplified Heat, the Sons of Hercules, and the Ugly Beats. It's the sonic equivalent of smoked brisket, presented in Living Monophonic Sound.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NOW!




Playlist:
KENNY & THE KASUALS: Journey to Tyme
THE WIG: Crackin’ Up
13th FLOOR ELEVATORS: Thru the Rhythm
ZAKARY THAKS: Face to Face
THE OUTCASTS: 1523 Blair
MOUSE & THE TRAPS: Lie, Beg, Borrow, & Steal
ELECTRIC LOVE: This Seat is Saved
THE MOVING SIDEWALKS: Flashback/Headin' Out
THE GENTLEMEN: It’s a Cryin’ Shame (alt. version)
THE ELITE: My Confusion
THE 12 A.M.: The Way I Feel
THE HEADSTONES: 24 Hours Every Day
THE REDDLEMEN: I’m Gonna Get in That Girl’s Mind
THE LAVENDER HOUR: I’ve Got a Way with Girls
THE EXOTICS: Come with Me
KNIGHT’S BRIDGE: Make Me Some Love
JUNGLE ROCKERS: Love Trap
THE UGLY BEATS: Let Me Through
THE SONS OF HERCULES: Misunderstood
LOVE COLLECTOR: Tell Me
AMPLIFIED HEAT: Rambler
THE SIR FINKS: Heart Full of Soul
JON WAYNE: I’ve Got Texas
THE RACONTEURS: Headin’ for the Texas Border
LOCO GRINGOS: Texas Ranger Man
DEAN MARTIN: Houston
MAL THURSDAY &THE CHEETAHS: Get Outta Dallas
THE IGUANAS: Leaving You Baby

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The Wig, Austin, Texas 1966



Thursday, May 14, 2009

ISO Texas Bands for The Mal Thursday Show and Texas Tyme Machine

I am seeking out Texas bands, both past and present, for my Austin-based radio shows Texas Tyme Machine and The Mal Thursday Show, which are part of the GaragePunk Podcast.

Texas Tyme Machine, which will also be heard in a regionally syndicated broadcast version, is seeking out Texas artists from the past 50+ years, as we feature the wildest rock 'n' roll, rockabilly, outlaw country, blues, garage, and psychedelic music the world has ever known. We will be featuring contemporary bands as well as "the All-Time Greats from the Lone Star State."

Interested parties can contact me at jmdobies3000 [@] gmail [.] com.

 - Houston Hallucinations

Friday, May 8, 2009

Garage Hangover

Garage maniac Chas Kit has a great music blog that's right up my alley, and if'n you like '66 garage-type sounds like I do, you will dig it the most.

Garage Hangover features stories and soundfiles of various North American '60s combos, sorted state by state and province by province. As the writer/producer of Florida Rocks Again! and the upcoming Texas Tyme Machine radio series, I always appreciate a regional approach, and as someone who could never afford to collect that many original 45s, I appreciate the cool label shots.

Thanks to the rock scholarship and intrepid sleuthing of Chas and his fellow contributors, many of the original band members have supplied priceless photos and incredible oral history.

There are so many great bands represented on the site, but just for a taste, here's an excerpt from the post on local garage legends the Wig:

Here are a few tracks by the famous Austin, Texas band. The 45 of "Drive It Home" is phenomenal, but the live version makes the studio cut seem tame in comparison! The Wig were Rusty Weir, Benny Rowe, John Richardson, Jess Yaryan and Billy Wilmont.

The Wig - Crackin' Up


The Wig - Drive It Home


The Wig - Drive It Home (live at the Jade Room)

For more, visit Garage Hangover at http://garagehangover.com