Tuesday, April 21, 2026

THE THOUGHT - "Every Single Day" (1985)

 
This doesn't happen often but the song I wanted to use from this 1985 self-titled album by The Thought was actually not available on YouTube, but it's okay, this song is almost as good! 
 I don't know why, but I thought that The Thought was from L.A., but they are really from from Broek op Langedijk, Noord-Holland.
It's all starting to make sense now. 

Monday, April 20, 2026

Two New Releases for 2026 from Pumf Records!

 
Well, it's that time of the year and pStan Batcow and his Pumf Records label are back in the headlines again with two new releases.
First off is Volume 28 in the Godspunk compilation series featuring a gazillion artists
 
Second is a new release from pStan's own band Howl In The Typewriter titled "Primalore."
It would behoove you to check them out, and here's the place to do it!

Sunday, April 19, 2026

CINDY LEE BERRYHILL - "Who's Gonna Save The World?" (1987)

 
I first heard the music of Cindy Lee Berryhill on a Rhino Sampler CD back in the day, and it was a song from her debut album in 1987 titled "Who's Gonna Save The World." I've been a fan ever since.
Damn, what a great talent, and what a great tune!

Saturday, April 18, 2026

THE 88 - "Kind Of Light" (2003)

 
Life is too short to listen to boring music or the same old oldies over and over ad nauseam like they play on the radio, and that's why I do this to try and bring a little light and enjoyment into your life.
Here's another prime example!
The Los Angeles band known as The 88 released this album in 2003 called "Kind Of Light," and you just can't go wrong with something that's not just the same old fodder!

Friday, April 17, 2026

BUKKA WHITE - "Mississippi Blues Vol. 1" (1964)

 
The Blues!
Ain't nobody did it better than the originals, and Bukka White is truly an original.
A lot of modern blues is too clean, sanitary, and lifeless despite all the pedals and effects, and it just can't hold a candle compared to one guy and a 1933 National Duolian resonator guitar of the past.
This is the kind of stuff that makes you want to tap your foot, stand up and holler, jump, and shout!
This 1964 album titled "Mississippi Blues Vol. 1" by Bukka White should be in every person's record collection. It's that good!
"Aberdeen is my home,
But the men don't want me around,
They know I will take these women,
An take them outta town." 
I literally can't sit still listening to this song, and that's all I need to say!

Thursday, April 16, 2026

MONSTERS UNDER THE BED - "When I Die" (1997)

 
Rich here to relate a more personal note than usual because I have known Lance Morgan (aka Monsters Under the Bed) since the mid-'80s when he first responded to an ad I'd placed in Seattle's leading rock 'n' roll newspaper, looking for a singer/guitarist for my new band. In Lance, not only did I discover someone whose voice blended perfectly with mine, but I also discovered a prolific singer/songwriter who seemingly wrote more songs in a week than I could in several years. To this day, Lance continues writing and recording at a dizzying pace. 
 
In the early '90s, a few years after our band had run its course, Lance decided to record an album under the fictitious band name Monsters Under the Bed, and he invited me to participate. The album, "Neighborhood of Reality," was full of Lance's introspective lyrics and approachable melodies and harmonies and hooks where you might not expect them. As we approached the end of that recording project, I challenged Lance to write a song with different kinds of chord progressions than he normally used, and he came up with the amusing and catchy "When I Die," a song where he imagines a time when he can "stop writing introspective songs." It was also released as a single, and it's my favorite song from the album.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

STRANGEWAYS - "Show Her You Care" (1978)

 
Strangeways were a UK Power Pop band from Wakefield, West Yorkshire. This 1978 single was pretty much their whole catalogue, and if you can find a copy, it's going to cost you around $100.00 or more.
As seen here, they were also known as Æ§trangeways!

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

THE HEPTONES - "Night Food" (1976)

 
In my humble opinion, some of the best Reggae music ever recorded was in the 1970's. There were just so many bands that were at the top of their creative game, and The Heptones were one of them, and here's a perfect tune to prove my point!

Monday, April 13, 2026

THE MIGHTY BLUE KINGS - "Meet Me In Uptown" (1996)

 
I'm in the mood to just listen to some good fun music these days, and this release from the 1996 CD titled "Meet Me In Uptown" by The Mighty Blue Kings does the trick. 
Take a load off, forget all the BS, kick back and have a good time!

Sunday, April 12, 2026

TAJ MAHAL - "Satisfied 'N Tickled Too" (1976)

 
There are so many great songs in Taj Mahal's repertoire over the years that it was difficult to just pick out one. The song I was looking for, his version of  "Nobody's Business But My Own" that was recorded live at Big Sur, I couldn't find on YouTube for some reason, but that's okay, this song is almost just as satisfying.
So here you go, it's the title tune from this awesome 1976 album.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

JIM KWESKIN AND THE JUG BAND "Beedle Um Bum" (1963)

 
There was a time many many years ago when Skiffle music was very big in the UK, and Jug Band music was fairly popular in the states, but then Rock music overshadowed both of them in both countries and bands like Jim Kweskin And The Jug Band pretty much virtually disappeared.
Kazoos are probably the cheapest musical instrument a person can buy, so maybe it's time for a Jug Band music revival. 
This very fun self-titled album was released in 1963, and is chock fully of nutty stuff like this.

Friday, April 10, 2026

FLAMIN' GROOVIES - "Shake Some Action" (1976)

 
The Flamin' Groovies are the epitome of a rock and roll band. Musically, all their dots are connected, and I'm really not quite why they are not more popular than they are.
"Shake Some Action"  made in 1976 was their 4th studio album, and it's just good from beginning to end, and the title song is a really good example of what they do best, and that is rock! 
Sometimes they were The Flamin' Groovies, and sometimes they were just Flamin' Groovies, but it really doesn't change anything, they were still great either way!

Thursday, April 9, 2026

List Songs, Part Five - "We Didn't Start The Fire"

 
Rich here to bring my series about songs that are comprised of lists to a conclusion, this one featuring Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire" (1989). Billy Joel gets a tough rap a lot of the time. He could be self-absorbed and overbearing and glib. But he was one of the best songwriters of the past 50 years, and when he addressed social issues, he was usually spot-on. 
 
In the late '80s, after nearly 10 years of Reagan conservatism, idealistic young people started marching in the streets again, protesting economic inequality, human rights abuses ignored by America, the ongoing AIDS crisis, the menace of nuclear energy, the injuries to the environment, and the ineffectuality of neoliberalism. 
Just like we Baby Boomer had done to our parents, the youth in the streets blamed our generation for the risks to the country and to the planet. A Baby Boomer himself, Billy didn't dispute the accusations but denied that our generation had "started the fire" -- that history of the previous 50 years was filled with both cool cultural highs as well as terrible and horrific lows, and that the fire had been burning for a long time before the Baby Boomers came around.
 
Some might argue that REM was making a roughly similar point with "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)," but their song wasn't as succinct a "List Song" as Joel's, which is a culturally and historically excellent list of post-World War II history:

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

MEAT PUPPETS - "Up On The Sun" (1985)

 
What can you expect from a band with a name like Meat Puppets?
Actually, you can expect a lot, and that's exactly what you'll get from this 1985 album of theirs titled "Up On The Sun." 
Listen to this song, and I think you'll agree.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE - "One Nation Underground" (1967)

 
New York's ESP-Disk' label was founded in 1963 and was created to promote Avant-Garde and Free-Jazz music, and eventually also started producing 'Rock' music if you want to call it that. A better description would be something like 'Not Jazz,"or 'Sloppy Folk Rock,' and out of that emerged groups like The Fugs, The Godz, and Pearls Before Swine.
The Fugs are probably the most well known, but Pearls Before Swine fronted by Tom Rapp were probably the most talented.
Top Rapp went on to have a solo career before retiring from music in 1976. He later would go to school and end up being a civil rights lawyer.
In 1967, Pearls Before Swine released this LP called "One Nation Underground." 
For the cover, they used the panel that depicted "The Last Judgement" from Hieronymus Bosch's famous triptychs titled "The Garden Of Earthly Delights."  

Monday, April 6, 2026

PIÑATA PROTEST - "Necio Nights" (2018)

 
In my humble opinion, you can never have too many Punk Rock Tex-Mex bands, and Piñata Protest is out to prove it!
Unlike the awesome Carne Asada, these guys ARE a real band! 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

CANDYPANTS - "I Want A Pony" (2000)

 
I guess it's time to lighten up some, so here's a hilarious, catchy, and  incredibly foot stompin' tune by the band Candypants from their self-titled album in 2000.
I think it's perfect, and why this fantastic band only ever had one album, I will never understand!
 
 
This is the greatest spoiled rotten kid's song since Jimmy Boyd and Frankie Laine's annoying 1953 hit "Tell Me A Story."
 

Saturday, April 4, 2026

THE MOTHERS OF INVENTION - "Freak Out!" (1966)

 
Sixty years later, and this groundbreaking album by The Mothers Of Invention is just as fresh as it ever was, and there's a song on this album that has a message that still sends shivers down my bones!
 "Well I'm about to get upset from watchin' my TV, been checkin' out the news until my eyeballs fail to see, I mean to say that every day is just another rotten mess and when it's gonna change, my friend Is anybody's guess."
 Even though this song was written about the Watts Riots back in 1966, the message conveyed is still as strong as ever, and maybe even more so. 
"Who could imagine that they would freak out in Minnesota? . . ." 

Friday, April 3, 2026

TRINI LOPEZ - "Lemon Tree" (1965)

 
It's probably not hip or cool to like the music of Trinidad Lopez, III, aka Trini Lopez, but back in the early 60's he made some real feel-good music that was needed back then. I'd probably listen to the radio again if they started playing music like this today.
In the late 1950's, William Holt wrote this song. It was inspired by the Brazilian song, "Meu Limão Meu Limoeiro," that was originally written in 1930. 
In 1965, this version by Trini Lopez made it to number 20 on The Billboard Hot 100 charts. 
 
 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

List Songs, Part Four - "California Girls"

 
Rich here. You might not think of The Beach Boys as a band that would engage in lyrical list-making. But they actually recorded a few songs that were comprised of lists, such as "Busy Doing Nothing," in which the singer lists the directions to his house and all the steps he takes to call up his girlfriend on a pay phone, and "I Went to Sleep" in which the singer lists all the things he did that day before going to sleep. 
 
Both are fairly minor songs in the Beach Boys catalog, but one of their most popular and famous songs includes a list of the girls the singer finds attractive in every part of the country before saying he wishes they could all live in California, where he lives. 
 
(An aside: "California Girls" was a big step in Brian Wilson's musical evolution as the first 20 seconds of the song is comprised of an instrumental passage that has nothing to do with the rest of the song before seamlessly transitioning into the romping rhythm of the rest of the song. It was a perfect example of a song with two movements, the kind of thing that Brian would refer to as his "Teenage Symphonies to God.")

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

SPIKE JONES & HIS CITY SLICKERS - "A Course In Musical Depreciation" (1955)

 
It's been 71 years since the release of this record by Spike Jones And His City Slickers titled "A Course In Musical Depreciation" and for me this stuff is still as hilarious as the first time I heard it.
This is kind of a greatest hits compilation, and the song I have here for you was actually first released in 1944. 
There was a time when comedy and novelty records were the rage, and sadly those days are way behind us, but at least we've still got access to all this great stuff from the masters of the past!