Hound Howl #106 – 20260412

Originally aired April 12, 2026 on thehoundnyc.com. The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Amazon Music PodcastsApple Podcasts and Google Play.

SET 1

  1. Johnny C. & the Blazes- Inferno (Chattahoochie)1
  2. Bob-Chords- High Voltage (Sioux)
  3. Orbit Rockers- Rock-It (Willamette)
  4. Harold & Bob- Jungle Beat (Delta)
  5. Rhythm Rockers- Count Down (Copper)2

ON MIC

SET 2

  1. Sonny Jones- Is Everything Alright (Specialty)
  2. Milton Beasley with Country Cowboys- Mississippi Boogie (Delta)
  3. The Clickettes- Jive Time Turkey (Dice)3
  4. Jay Richards- Gosh Dog Baby (Hollywood)
  5. John Lee Hooker- She’s Mine (Vee Jay)4

ON MIC

SET 3: Blues Hangover

  1. King Solomon- Yodeling This Morning (Magnum)
  2. Sunny Blair- 5 Foot 3 Blues (RPM
  3. John Brim & his Gary Kings- Go Away (Chess)
  4. K.C. Douglas Trio- Mercury Boogie (Down Town Recording)
  5. Lowell Fulson w/Leon Blue & his band- Stop and Think (Movin’)

ON MIC

SET 4

  1. Lil’ Ray & the Premiers- Soul & Stomp (Impact)5
  2. Down Beats vocal by Roy Nixon- Hard-Rockin’ Daddy (Dee-Cee)
  3. Rhythm Rockers- Lollipop Baby (Faro Productions)6
  4. Kid Tanner- Wino (Modern)
  5. Del Rays- You Know I Love You (Riff)
  6. Cal Green- The Search Is Over (Federal)7

ON MIC

SET 5

  1. Larry Dale- Poison Ivy (Ram)
  2. Johnnie Allen- Let’s Do It (Jin)
  3. Phil Flowers- (The Story Of) Johnny Bon Bonnie (Almanac)
  4. Little Freddie & the Gents- Betty (Showcase)
  5. Elton Anderson- Roll On Train (Vin)
  6. Andy Anderson- You Shake Me Up (Apollo)

ON MIC

SET 6

  1. The Crazy Girls & the Javelins- Hey Hey Ha! Ha! (Capitol)
  2. Jerry & Mel- Cannibal Stew (Boss-Sound)
  3. Lonnie Mack- I’ve Had It (Fraternity)
  4. Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton & Johnny Otis’ Band – Just Like A Dog (Peacock)8
  5. Dave Atkins & his Offbeats- Shake-Kum-Down (Big Beat)
  6. Eddie Alston- I Just Can’t Help It (Barry)

ON MIC

SET 7

  1. Leroy Washington- Hello Baby What Do You Know (Rocko)
  2. Jet-Tones- Henry (Pix)9
  3. Bobby Sanders- I’m On My Way (Kaybo)
  4. The Escorts, Roger Booth- vocal- I Wanna Do It (Fredo)
  5. Del Prados- Oh Baby (Lucky Four)
  6. Skee Brothers- That’s All She Wrote (Okeh)10
  7. Barbara Lynn- Sugar Coated Love (Copyright)

ON MIC

SET 8

  1. Big Will Stevens with Buddy T & his T-Men- Saturday Night (Corvet)
  2. Floyd Smith with the Montclairs- Grandpa’s Hully Gully Rock (Fortune)
  3. Colemanaires- This May Be The Last Time (Apollo)11

  1. Johnny C. & the Blazers, arranged by transplanted Okie Leon Russell, who is also heard on the organ, and produced by Kim Fowley is that fellow Okie JJ Cale on guitar? Nobody’s talking these days, but I’m pretty sure it is. On Chattahoochee, 1963. ↩︎
  2. Rhythm Rockers. Wonder how many groups called Rhythm Rockers. there has been?. These particular Rhythm Rockers were from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and cut two singles for the Copper label, this one was the first in 1962. ↩︎
  3. The Clickettes- aka The Click-ettes, from Harlem, the gals seem to have lost the hyphen that separated Click and Ettes after their first two Dice 45’s. Bronx based Dice was owned by Johnnie Richardson (of Johnnie & Joe fame) and her mom Zell Sanders (1922-1976), a woman so tough even scary gangsters named Moishe, Corky and Wassell gave her some wide slack. Zell also had J&S, Tuff, Zell’s, Scatt (!) and probably a few more labels under her belt. The original group is on “Jive Time Turkey”- lead singer Barbara English along with sisters Charlotte and Trudy McCartney and Sally Hammond. English would carry on the name with a different bunch of Clickettes in a year’s time. The new group also recorded as the Avalons for one 45- ‘You Broke Our Hearts’ (Dice) and then became the Fashions and finally Barbara English & the Fashions. Barbara English finally went solo and weathered on into the disco era. When I encountered her in the 80’s she was working as the receptionist for Aaron Schroeder Publishing in the Brill Building. ↩︎
  4. John Lee Hooker. That’s the alliterated Motown rhythm section of James Jamerson (bass) and Benny Benjamin (drums) playing ‘Tequilla’ behind Hooker. From Vee Jay, 1961. I’m guessing Ewart Abner produced this, and may have even been wearing his much discussed velour jumpsuit which was he was first spotted wearing around this time… ↩︎
  5. Lil Ray & the Premiers. Recorded live at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, 1960. Ray Jimenez would join East L.A. legends Thee Midnighters (“Whittier Blvd”, “Love Special Delivery”) shortly after this. He quit. ‘em n ’64 (replaced by Little Willie G). When G. quit Thee Midnighters he and Lil Ray teamed up as God’s Children. In the 70’s Ray lived in New York City and worked for Seymour Stein, at Sire Records, even tried to sign Chain Reaction, the band that eventually morphed into Aerosmith. Last seen, circa 2012 Lil Ray was singing in Salvado Santana (Carlos’ son)’s band Starfire. The Premiers went on to have a hit with their version of Don & Dewey’s “Farmer John”, another live recording. ↩︎
  6. Rhythm Rockets. One of the few non-Pachuko groups on Faro Productions, this trio were white kids from Downey, sorta like the Carpenters, except great. ↩︎
  7. Cal Green (1935-2004)- Born in Dayton, Texas, the 17 year old Green replaced Alonzo Tucker as the guitarist with the Detroit’s first rock’n’roll stars- the Midnighters (later Hank Ballard & the Midnighters) when Tucker was drafted in 1955. In 1959 Green was busted in Texas for possession of marijuana and served 21 months in the penitentiary. Upon release he rejoined the Midnighters briefly, then moved to Los Angeles finding work with Lou Rawls and Brother Jack McDuff, and playing sessions, mostly jazz and later funk. This 45 is the only example of his singing voice. ↩︎
  8. Willie Mae Thornton- That’s Pete “Guitar” Lewis on… guess? The underrated and unheralded Lewis. Otis fired Lewis that year due to his chronic alcoholism and Lewis disappeared from music history. Otis said he last saw Lewis the night of the Watts uprising in 1966 when he spotted him laying on the street on skid row dead drunk. He was replaced by Jimmy “Chank” Nolen, who later got his playing style down to one chord as a key element of James Brown’s band. This was Thornton’s final disc for Peacock. ↩︎
  9. Jet-Tones aka the Jet Tones from Lorain County, Ohio cut both sides of this 45 twice, first for the Plaid (1959) and then Pix (1960) labels. The Jet Tones also backed Rocky Olsen on Jet Tone Boogie b/w Kansas City (Chess) in ’59. This is the first time I’ve played the Pix on the air, the Plaid I played a lot over the years… ↩︎
  10. Skee Brothers- From Pontiac Michigan, the brothers- real names Thomas Joseph and James Shedlowsky, aka TJ & Jim, were still at it as late as 2013 when they were documented doing the “Back Door Boogie” at the Roscommon Knights of Columbus by the Houghton Lake Resorter newspaper. This one was issued by Okeh in 1959. T.J. died in September 2025, Jim is still alive as far as I can tell… ↩︎
  11. Colemenaires. From Newark, NJ, were related to the gospel duo the Coleman Brothers. The female voice is Cynthia Coleman who soon changed her name to Ann Cole and is best remembered for the original version of “Got My Mojo Workin’” (Baton) in 1954 that Muddy Waters learned from whilst touring together, as well as “Easy Easy Baby” which Magic Sam cut for Cobra. My promo copy of this is stamped 1957 which means it was released after her Baton sides, but evidently it was recorded earlier, around ’53, probably at the same session as the Colemanaires sides for Timely (which was later acquired by Apollo). From the time of her secular Baton sides she toured widely, playing The Apollo in Harlem, the Howard in D.C., the Uptown in Philadelphia, et al. Her career took a down turn after a 1957 pot bust in Detroit. After that she was constantly harassed by the law, mostly in the Hartford, Ct. area where she had relocated— charges include writing bad checks, B&E, shoplifting, all fairly minor stuff still she was incarcerated at State Farm and Prison for Women at Niantic. There, she escaped several times. Her Roulette single, “Have Fun” was recorded during one of these AWOL periods. Eventually she was extradited from NYC back to the farm and served out her sentence. Shortly after being paroled she had a car wreck and spent her final days in a wheelchair, finally dying in 1986 at age 52. ↩︎
Holly & Kit Dancing to the Hound

Hound Howl #105 – 20260208

Originally aired Feb. 8, 2026 on thehoundnyc.com. The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Amazon Music PodcastsApple Podcasts and Google Play.

SET 1: Instro-mental

  1. Challengers – Deadline (Tri-Dex)
  2. Jordan Brothers – Basin Street Rumble (Jordan)
  3. Frank Virtue Combo – Manhunt (Joy)
  4. Royal Rockers – Jet II (Bee)
  5. The Knights – Night Train (Feldsted)1

ON MIC

SET 2

  1. Jerry Thomas – You Don’t Have To Worry (Modern)2
  2. Jimmy Kinder & the T-Tones – Hangover Blues (Blue Hen)
  3. Phil & Marie Love Doctor(Sway)3
  4. Mack Vickery – Going Back To St. Louis (Gone)4
  5. Larry Dale –You Better Heed My Warning (Groove)5

ON MIC

SET 3: Blues Hangover

  1. Johnny Lee Hooker – Boogie Rambler (J-V-B)
  2. Cousin Leroy – I’m Lonesome (Ember)6
  3. Big Bill Broonzy – Hey Hey (Mercury)
  4. Floyd Jones & his Trio – Skinny Mama (J.O.B.)
  5. Les Vendor & his Boys – Goin’ Away Baby (Vendor)7

ON MIC

SET 4

  1. Lee Mitchell &his Combo – Rootie Tootie Baby (Sharp)
  2. Bo & Joe & the Niteriders – Jungle Rock (Sandy)
  3. Little Sonny Jones – Goin’ Up The Country (Imperial)
  4. Del-Reys – Fannie Mae (Delreco)
  5. Earl King – Eatin’ & Sleepin’ (Specialty)
  6. Kenny Spivey – Woke Up This Morning (Smokey)

ON MIC

SET 5

  1. Ashton Savoy – Denga Denga (Hollywood)
  2. Bobby Dean & the Amazons – Amazon Dance (Scarlet Target)
  3. Curley Moore – They Gonna Do What They Wanna Do (Teem)8
  4. Rhythm Rockers – Jukebox Help Me Find My Baby (Sun)9
  5. Johnny Wright – Wine Head Baby (Magnificent)
  6. Mickey Gilley – Down The Line (Astro)

ON MIC

SET 6

  1. Jim San & the Montclairs with Ted Walker’s Band – Dream Boat Rock (Hi-Q)10
  2. Divots – Diddy Wah Diddy (Savoy)
  3. Kip Anderson – I Want To Be The Only One (Vee Jay)
  4. Del-Heirs – Cradle Rock (Yucca)11
  5. Wynonna Carr – I’m Mad At You (Specialty)
  6. Bill Strickland – The Shape You Left Me In (Fabar)

ON MIC

SET 7

  1. Kine Morgan We’re Gonna Rock (Johnson)
  2. Rick West – Cop Car
  3. Vel-tones – Fool In Love (Satellite)12
  4. Duals – Wait Up Baby13
  5. Chuck Martin – Emma Lee (Nasco)

ON MIC

SET 8

  1. Tobie Pride & the Masters Of Rhythm Combo – Dark Shadows (Carter)
  2. Vince Maloy – Wine Bop Bop (Web)
  3. Jiving Juniors – Come On Honey (Crystal)14
  4. Scotty McKay – Mess Around (Desk)15
  5. Bayou Boys – Bamalaya (Checker)16

Dr. C.J. Johnson – This Is A Mean World (Savoy)

  1. The Knights – Unmistakably, that is Roy Buchanan on guitar. Felsted, 1962, prolly recorded in Philadelphia. ↩︎
  2. Jerry Thomas = Lafayette “The Thing” Thomas (born Lafayette Jerl Thomas) From the Bihari brothers Modern label circa 1955. When Ace (U,K.) re –issued this on the 1987 LP Bay Area Blues Blasters they changed the song title to “Jumpin In The Heart Of Town”. Thomas was guitarist with Jimmy McCracklin’s Blues Blasters and his then boss McCracklin is on piano and fellow Blues Blaster Johnny Parker on tenor sax. ↩︎
  3. Phil & Marie. Love Doctor. Phil is Phil Flowers, great DC area rocker who also waxed sides as Chris Allen, Skip Manning, and a variety other names. Sometimes billed as “the Back Elvis” and/or “The Man With 1,000 Voices”, he recorded for an equally bewildering variety of labels including Mercury, Hollywood, Domino, Josie, Dot, Bell, A&M, this one being on Sway. He even performed at the White House for LBJ in 1968 with his psychedelic group The Flower Shop and later toured everywhere and anywhere including Saudi Arabia. He died in 2001. I have no idea who Marie is. ↩︎
  4. Mack Vickery. This one features Wild Bill Emerson on guitar. Vickery who would go on to write “Meat Man” and “Rockin’ My Life Away” for Jerry Lee Lewis and hits for Waylon Jennings and George Strait later recorded an album live at the Alabama Women’s Prison. ↩︎
  5. Larry Dale On RCA’s Groove subsidiary, that blazing guitar is ex –pimp Mickey “Guitar” Baker. Any list of great R&R guitarists without Baker’s name near the top has been written by an idiot. Baker would go have a major hit with Sylvia Robinson (“Love Is Strange”) and then emigrate to France where he produced records and wrote guitar instruction books. He appears in Godard’s Masculin –Feminin (1965) as himself. ↩︎
  6. Cousin Leroy (Leroy Rozier). From Al Silver’s Ember imprint, with Champion Jack Dupree on piano and Larry Dale on guitar. His two sessions for silver produced two singles for Ember and on on Herald. A rare example of raw, juke joint blues recorded in New York City. He also cut a single for Groove. ↩︎
  7. Les Vendor= Joe Hill Louis (born Lester Hill 1921 –1957), on the Vendor label, this was a private pressing done by the white family, the Vendors, whom employed him at their Memphis home as a handyman. Louis died of tetanus later that year (anti –vaxxers take note). Only 100 copies were pressed, or so said the guy who wanted 9k for an admittedly cleaner copy than this one (but it was only $63…). ↩︎
  8. June “Curley” Moore joined Huey “Piano” Smith & the Clowns around 1960 and can be heard on most of their Imperial sides, he also cut a duet w/Huey as Huey & Curley on Ace in ’63. Curley later worked the road pretending to be Marvin Gaye and would go on to make soul and funk singles for a handful of New Orleans based labels (Nola, Sans, Hotline, Scram, House Of Fox). Moore hit the skids by the 70’s and did time at Angola Prison. In 1982 he got himself murdered in an alley cross river in Algiers, he was 42.
    “They’re Gonna Do What They Wanna Do” is on Teem, a subsidiary of Johnny Vincent’s Ace label, released (or maybe escaped) 1963. It was written by fellow dope fiend Earl King and produced by Jehovah’s Witness Huey ‘Piano’ Smith. ↩︎
  9. Rhythm Rockers. Sun Records, 1956 This one is Sidney “Hardrock “ Gunter (1925 –2013) his second single for the label, and despite it’s beautiful slapback echo sound it was not recorded at Sun but leased from Gunter who had pressed some copies on his own Cross County label. That version has a short bass solo that Sam Phillips edited out. Gunter is one of those names put forth as one of the inventors of rock & roll, and I guess he’s as good a choice as any, but my opinion since nobody asked is that nobody invented nuthin’ and never did. Rock & Roll has always been around – Cavemen had it. Like war, rock & roll was already here waiting for us before humans even existed. Charles Dickens describes seeing a 19th century rocker wailing and stomping away in a rough beer hall in Ohio. ↩︎
  10. Jim San with the Montclairs and Ted Walkers Band – “Dreamboat Rock.” Released in ’59 on Hi –Q, a subsidiary of Detroit’s Fortune Records, this tune (and it’s flip side) was released twice, with consecutive catalog’s #’s – Hi –Q 5009 and 5010, both sides of both releases are totally different takes. The 5009 release is rawer, and better. This number was retitled “We’re Gonna Rock” upon its second issue and had a more prominent flute, anticipating the inexplicable rise of Jethro Tull by a decade. ↩︎
  11. The Del –Heirs – Cradle Rock (Yucca) . The Del –Heirs – Chicano sisters – Virgie and Evelyn Galleges of Boyle Heights, East L.A. along with music biz hustler and songwriter Art Wheeler. ended up in New Mexico on Yucca Records, home of Long John Hunter and early Bobby Fuller. How? I’d assume by car. This tune was later covered by L.A. R&B group the Heartbreakers on Donna, that one was produced by Frank Zappa, a noted collector of 50’s R&B 45’s. The flip side “Strange World” (based on the old gospel dirge “This is A Mean World”) was covered by Gene & Eunice on Aladdin. ↩︎
  12. Vel-Tones. Released in 1959 by Satellite (which soon changed it’s name to Stax), this is an early Chips Moman production, He also wrote and played guitar on it. Dig that space age tone! The Tornados surely did. It’s seem too much of a coincidence for UK producer Joe Meek to have not heard this. It’s nearly identical to his hit “Telstar” which he wrote and produced for The Tornados in 63. It was eventually leased to Mercury, so it must of sold a few copies. Oddly enough Meek was sued by a guy called Jean Ledrut who accused him of stealing “Telstar” from his tune “La Marche d’Austerlitz” Ledrut lost his suit (Meek was already dead by the time it was all settled, killing his landlady and himself in 67). Moman never bothered sueing. He had bigger fish to fry like producing hits for Elvis and the Box Tops. The Vel –Tones were the first black group recorded by Satellite. Jerry “Satch” Arnold of “Race For Time” infamy is on drums. ↩︎
  13. The Duals. One of the few, maybe only white groups on Bobby Robinson’s Fury label. These greaseballs – Richard Martin and L. Russell Brown were from Bricktown — Newark, N.J – and Brown would go on to write “Open Up Your Door” for Richard & the Young Lions and “Sock It To Me” for Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels, not to mention Tony Orlando & Dawn’s “Tie A Yellow Ribbon” and “Knock Three Times” ↩︎
  14. Jiving Juniors – Derrick Harriot, Eugene Dwyer, Herman Slang and Maurice Winter formed in Kingston, Jamaica in 1958 and started making hit R&B records for Duke Reid, Coxsone and Bluebeat labels. Lead singer Derrick Harriot then emigrated to the Bronx, worked in a factory and formed his own Crystal label in 1961. The first release was a cover of the Starlites’ “Valerie”, the second was this rocker in ’62. He went solo in 1965 racking up a string of hits in Jamaica in the rocksteady style. By the 70’s he was one of the top producers on the Island. He’s still around, and splits his time between Jamaica and New York. ↩︎
  15. Scotty McKay aka Max Liscomb was a time clapper boy with Gene Vincent’s Blue Caps. He can be seen in the 1966 film The Black Cat. ↩︎
  16. Bayou Boys – Bamalaya. From Checker records in 1954, the Bayou Boys were Lloyd “Fatman” Smith (Louis Jordan’s road manager) and jazz singer Eddie Jefferson. The fat guy was later a dj on phili’s WHAT, he eventually grew to 300 pounds before stroking out in 1989.
    Eddie Jefferson, one time singer in jazz star James Moody’s band, writing the lyrics and singing Moody’s big hit “Moody’s Mood For Love”. was shot and killed outside of Baker’s Keyboard Lounge in Detroit in 1979. A former dancer who had worked for Jefferson called William Perryman aka Amber Al –Mumeet Mujakid was arrested, tried and acquitted. ↩︎

Hound Howl #91 – 20210502

Originally aired live May 2, 2021 on thehoundnyc.com. The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Amazon Music PodcastsApple Podcasts and Google Play.

Link Wray Birthday Tribute
Birthday Salutes to Hasil Adkins and Little Walter
Hound Rants on the Pitfalls of Modern Technology

Instrumental – Link Wray Covers

  1. Sundowners – Rumble
  2. Vikings – Rawhide
  3. Continental Four – Jack The Ripper
  4. Invaders – Rawhide 1965
  5. Jack Nitzsche – Rumble

On Mic
11:13 – 12:58

2nd Set

  1. Link Wray – Good Rockin’ Tonight
  2. Chuck Higgins – Here I’m Is
  3. Cosmo & The Carnations – I’m A Little Mixed Up
  4. Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band – Kansas City Blues
  5. Hasil Adkins – Truly Ruly

On Mic
26:15 – 28:32

Blues Hangover

  1. Joe Hill Louis – Gotta Go Baby
  2. Sidney Maiden & His Ramblers – Hurry, Hurry, Baby
  3. Bobo Jenkins – Nothing But Love
  4. Papa Lightfoot – Mean Old Train
  5. Big Mac – Rough Dried Woman (Part 2)
  6. Little Walter & His Jukes – I Hate To See You Go

On Mic
44:00 – 46:18

4th Set

  1. Johnny Powers with Stan Getz & Tom Cats – Long Blond Hair, Red Rose Lips
  2. Bunker Hill – The Girl Can’t Dance
  3. Jerry Arnold & The Rhythm Captains – Race For Time
  4. Ronnie Branam – Puppy Dog Love
  5. Five C’s – Whoo-Wee Baby
  6. Link Wray & His Ray Men – Mashed Potato Party

On Mic
1:00:35 – 1:03:10

5th Set

  1. Amos Milburn & His Aladdin Chickenshackers – Birmingham Bounce
  2. Lucky Wray with Link & Doug Wray – Teenage Cutie
  3. Blanders – Jitterbug
  4. Joe Therrien Jr. & The Sully Trio – I Aint Gonna Be Around
  5. Willie Egan – Rock & Roll Fever
  6. Howard Chandler – Wampus Cat

On Mic
1:17:56 – 1:19:57

6th Set

  1. Eddie Cochran – Skinny Jim
  2. Blue Notes – A Good Woman
  3. Vern Pullens – Bop Crazy Baby
  4. Johnny Wright with Ike Turner – Suffocate
  5. Dale Hawkins – Take My Heart
  6. Nite Riders – Women And Cadillacs

On Mic
1:34:29 – 1:36:29

7th Set

  1. Link Wray & The Raymen – Hidden Charms
  2. Roy Brown – Ain’t Gonna Do It
  3. Dean Carter – The Rockin Bandit
  4. Platters – Maggie Doesn’t Work Here Anymore
  5. Sid King & The Five Strings – Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight
  6. Rusty Bryant & The Carolyn Club Band – Pink Champagne

On Mic/Outtro
1:51:38 – 1:53:02

  1. Link Wray – Girl From The North Country
  2. Link Wray & The Wraymen – Ain’t That Lovin’ You Babe

Hound Howl Historic – 19860329


Originally aired March 29, 1986 on WFMU. Features Hasil Adkins in-studio performance and interview.
The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Apple Podcasts and Google Play.

Hasil Adkins – Chicken Walk

1st set
Mickey Hawks & the Night Raiders – Cotton Pickin’
Kip Tyler & the Flips – Rumble Rock
Little Richard – I’m in Love Again
Larry Collins – Whistle Bait
Amos Milburn – Chicken Shack Boogie
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview

2nd set
Hasil Adkins – She Said
Upsetters – Upsetter Rock
Chuck Willis – Loud Mouth Lucy
Art Carney – Song of the Sewer
Willie Brown – Easter Bunny Boogie
Hasil Adkins Live in the Studio
Hasil Adkins – The Hunch
asil Adkins – She’ll See Me Again

4th set
Ralph Nielsen & the Chancellors – Scream!
Hank Snow – The Golden Rocket
Hasil Adkins in the Studio (part 2)
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 2
Hasil Adkins – Punchy Wunchy Wicky Wacky Woo
Cramps – She Said
Going to New York
Bill Smith Combo – Tough
Hasil Adkins – Chicken Flop
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 3

6th set
Jimmie Rodgers – Never No Mo’ Blues
Carter Family – Worried Man Blues
2Hasil Adkins – I’m Happy
Back in the Studio with Hasil Adkins
Hasil Adkins – Do the Hot Pants with Me
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 4
Hasil Adkins – Donohoe Boogie
8th set
Bo Diddley – Hey Mama Keep Your Big Mouth Shut
Muddy Waters – She’s Nineteen Years Old
Frankie Lee Sims – Walkin’ with Frankie
Fats Domino – Don’t You Lie to Me
Hasil Adkins – California Blues (partial)
Jimmy Rodgers – California Blues

9th set
Elvis Presley – Yoga is as Yoga Does
Bob “Froggy” Landers – Cherokee Dance
Papa Lightfoot – Jump the Boogie
Jerry McCain – Cutie Named Judie
Rosie & the Originals – Angel Baby
Hasil Adkins – Turning Off a Memory (live in NY)

10th set
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 5
2Hasil Adkins – Dottie Dottie
Ray Harris – Come On Little Mama
Sonny Burgess – We Wanna Boogie
Jerry Lee Lewis – What’d I Say

11th set
Equadors – Sputnik Dance
Del Royals – A-Bomb Bop
Jimmy Reed – Rockin’ with Reed
Roy Hall – One Monkey Can’t Stop the Show
Hasil Adkins in the Studio (part 3)
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 6
Hasil Adkins – Shake That Thing
Hasil Adkins – Mean Woman Blues
Hasil Adkins – She Said (live)

13th set
Georgia Gibbs – I Want You to Be My Baby
Al Downing & the Poe Kats – Down on the Farm
1howmen – It Will Stand
Johnny Buckett & his Cumberland River Boys – Griddle Greasing Daddy
Hasil Adkins – No More Hot Dogs
Hasil Adkins – 1986 interview 7

14th set
Dr Ross – Boogie Disease
Charlie Feathers – That Certain Female
JB Hutto – Combination Boogie
Hasil Adkins – I Need Your Head

 

Hound Howl Historic – 19860322


Originally aired March 22, 1986 on WFMU.
The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Apple Podcasts and Google Play.

1st set
Rock-A-Teens – Woo-Hoo
Ritchie Valens – Ooh! My Head
Jerry Lee Lewis – I’m on Fire
Upsetters – Upsetter Rock

2nd set
Johnny “Guitar” Watson – Space Guitar
Wild Jimmy Spruill – Scratchin’
Frankie Lee Sims – She Likes to Boogie Real Low
Memphis Slim – Rockin’ This House
Muddy Waters – She’s Nineteen Years Old

3rd set
ZZ Top – I’m Bad, I’m Nationwide
Hound Dog Taylor & the HouseRockers – What’d I Say
Bo Diddley – Roadrunner
Eddie Kirkland – Train Done Gone
Bobby “Blue” Bland – Honey Bee

4th set
Chuck Berry – Little Queenie
Phantom – Love Me
Rhythm Rockers – Weird
John Latorre – Kid With the Atomic Bounce
Kai-Ray – I Want Some of That

5th set
Hasil Adkins – Chicken Walk
Elvis Presley – No Room to Rhumba
Elvis Presley – Burnin’ Lov
Wanda Jackson – Funnel of Lov
Hasil Adkins – Dottie Dottie
Hasil Adkins – Sex Crazy Baby

6th set
Saxons – Camel Walk
Nervous Norvus – Ape Call
Nat King Cole – Straighten Up and Fly Right
TV Slim – Juvenile Delinquent
Andre Williams – Jail Bait

7th set
Prisonaires – That Chick’s Too Young to Fry
Diablos – Jump Shake and Move
Robins – The Hatchet Man
Continentals – Don’t Do It Baby
Relations – All Nite Long
Slades – You Cheated
Dion & the Belmonts – Baby What Do You Want Me to Do

8th set
Rockin’ Sydney – You Ain’t Nothing But Fine
Bobby Fuller Four – A New Shade of Blue
Vaqueros – 80 Foot Wave
Crazy Teens – Crazy Date
Kirby St Roman – Oh Baby Doll
Chuck Berry – Tulane

9th set
Stick McGhee – Double Crossin’ Liquor
Jimmy Liggins – Drunk
Smiley Lewis – Lost Weekend
Marvin Phillips – Wine Woogie
James Brown – Nite Train

10th set
Wanda Jackson – Fujiyama Mama
Charlie Feathers – That Certain Female
Mackey Beers – That Jim
Twisters – Kat Walk
Hasil Adkins – I’m Happy
Ba Ba Thomas – Miss Shake It

11th set
Ricky Nelson – Fools Rush In
Reverend Anderson Johnson – God Don’t Like It
Little Walter – Roller Coaster
Duane Eddy – Peter Gun
Catalinas – Catalina Push

Sonny Boy Williamson – Your Funeral and My Trial

Hound Howl #054

The Hound Howl is also available as a podcast on Apple Podcasts and Google Play.

Aired 03/08/2020
Length 1:53:52

– Set List –

Instrumental

1) Wailers – Mashi
2) Lenny & The Star Chiefs – Warpath
3) Jerry Warren & The Tremblers – Rompin’
4) Rocky Curtis & The Harmony Flames – Crossfire
5) Bees – Terror

Set Break
10:58 – 13:39

2nd Set

1) Smiley Lewis – Ain’t Gonna Do It
2) Los Locos Del Ritmo – Chica Alborotada (Tallahassee Lassie)
3) Texas Red & Jimmy – Comin’ Home
4) Mel Robbins – Save It
5) Fats, Jr. – Dream Girl
6) Bobby Lumpkin & The Kapers – One Way Ticket

Set Break
26:24 – 30:11

Blues Hangover

1) Howlin’ Wolf – Well That’s Alright
2) Les Vendor (Joe Hill Louis) – I Cried For Love
3) Sam “Lightning” Hopkins – Big Mamma Jump
4) D.C. Bender – Boogie Children
5) John Brim & His Stompers – Gary Stomp
6) Doctor Ross – New York Breakdown
7) John Lee Hooker – Dimples

Set Break
49:11 – 53:43

4th Set

1) Tony Mason with The Starfires – Woe Is Me
2) Emmet Davis – You Changed My Night Into Day
3) Hasil Adkins – Is That Right
4) Dominoes featuring Clyde McPhatter – Do Something For Me
5) Lynn Pratt – Tom Cat Boogie
6) Classie Ballou & His Tempo Kings – Loving Huggin Kissin My Baby

Set Break
1:10:43 – 1:13:55

5th Set

1) Al & Nettie with Al Smith Orchestra – Move Baby Move
2) Johnny Lane & The Hot Rodders – Rocking On The Dragstrip
3) Del Victors – Oh Lover
4) Link Wray – Girl From The North Country
5) Johnny Brooks – Pig Latin
6) Charles Page – Able Miss Cable

Set Break
1:30:38 – 1:34:17

6th Set

1) Edgar Blanchard & Prince Royal – Somebody’s Doing Me Wrong
2) Marty Roberts & His Nightriders – Baby
3) Veltones – Fool In Love
4) Bobby Roberts with Highpockets’ Delta Rockets – Big Sandy
5) Richard Berry – Yama Yama Pretty Mama
6) Scotty McKay – Rollin’ Danny
7) Socialites – The King Tut Rock
8) Eddie Burns – Hello Miss Jessie Lee

Set Break/Outtro
1:52:50 – 1:53:52

Hound Howl #048 – Aircheck & Playlist

Aired 01/19/2020
Length 1:58:42

– Set List –

Instrumental

1) Night Raiders – Cottonpickin’
2) Dale Hawkins – Cross-Ties
3) Nick & The Jaguars – Ich-I-Bon #1
4) Jet Tones – Twangy
5) Jades – Lost Train

Set Break
11:38 – 13:56

2nd Set

1) Ben Harper with The Penetrators – Which-A-Way
2) Don Willis – Boppin’ High School Baby
3) Joe & Ursula with Joe Morris & His Orchestra – The Good Book
4) Jim Myers & Tex Regan with The Gems – Pretty Baby Rock
5) Bobo Jenkins – Tell Me Who
6) Gene Criss & The Hep Cats – Hep Cat Baby

Set Break
29:28 – 32:17

Blues Hangover

1) Jimmy Reed & His Trio – High And Lonesome
2) TV Slim & The Soul Bros. – Juvenile Delinquent
3) School Boy Cleve – New Kind Of Loving
4) John Lee Hooker – Curl My Baby’s Hair
5) Cousin Leroy – Waitin’ At The Station
7) John Lee – Rythm Rockin’ Boogie

Set Break
51:26 – 55:47

4th Set

1) Lee Cole & The Beau Jesters – Cool Baby
2) Good Rockin’ Sam with Kid King’s Combo – Funny Funny Feelin’
3) Eddie Daniels – Hurry Baby
4) Ray Sharpe – Gonna Let It Go This Time
5) Turner Moore with Charley Moore & The Crystals – I’ll Be Leavin’ You
6) Billy Stewart & Michael Graham Crackers – I Want A Sweet Little Girl
7) Charles Christy & The Crystals – Cherry Pie

Set Break
1:13:39 – 1:16:26

5th Set

1) Guitar, Jr. – Knocks Me Out
2) Freddy Cannon – Buzz Buzz A-Diddle-It
3) Tiny Grimes & His Rocking Highlanders – Ho-Ho-Ho!
4) Tommy Lomonte – Yeah, Yeah, Yeah
5) Stomp Gordon – What’s Her Whimsy Dr. Kinsey
6) Scotty McKay – Midnight Cryin’ Time
7) Roy Brown – Ain’t No Rocking No More

Set Break
1:34:23 – 1:36:45

6th Set

1) H Bomb Ferguson & His Mad Lads – Little Tiger
2) 5 Chavis Brothers – Baby, Don’t Leave Me
3) Phil Flowers with The T.N.T. Tribble Combo – Twistin’ Beat
4) Chuck Dallis – Moon Twist
5) Roy Wright & The Rockin’ Blues Combo – I’m Going Crazy
6) Cokie & The Ty Rones – Josephine
7) Gary & Green with Rhythm Aces Band – Baby, Baby Doll
8) Lafayette – Yarborough – Cool Cool Baby

Set Break/Outtro
1:56:04 – 1:57:18

Rick Kay & His Shades Of Today – Red Man – White Man

End

Hound Howl #047 – Aircheck & Playlist

Aired 01/12/2020
Length 1:18:31 (Partial Aircheck)

– Set List –

Instrumental

1) Night People – The Troubled Streets
2) Jim Myers & His Gems – J & D Hop
3) Nightbeats – Nightbeat
4) Rel-Yea’s – The Rugged Rock
5) Ronnie Hawkins – There’s A Screw Loose

Set Break
10:13 – 11:42

2nd Set

1) Ivory Lee – Alley Oop!
2) Jimmy Williams – You’re Always Late
3) Jaguars – Picadilly
4) Tommy Moreland – Bang, Bang
5) Ruth Brown & Her Rhythmakers – Oh What A Dream
6) Jimmy Witter & The Shadows – If You Love My Woman

Set Break
25:57 – 28:23

Blues Hangover

1) John Lee Hooker – 609 Boogie
2) Lee Jackson – Fishin’ In My Pond
3) Clifford King – Want To Jump With You Baby
4) Dr. Ross – Come Back Baby
5) Dixie Blues Boys – My Baby Left Town
6) Mo-Jo Buford – Whole Lotta Woman
7) Sam “Lightning” Hopkins – Big Mamma Jump
8) Eddie Burns – Hello Miss Jessie Lee

Set Break
50:56 – 54:27

4th Set

1) Wayne Williams & The Sure Shots – Red Hot Mama
2) Shamans with William Powell Group – Shubby Dubby Doo
3) Jim Morrison – Ready To Rock
4) Sevilles – Charlena
5) Rufus Shoffner & Joyce Songer – Orbit Twist
6) ‘June Bug’ Bailey – Louisiana Twist
7) Hasil Adkins – Chicken Walk

Set Break
1:11:19 – 1:15:33

5th Set

1) Bo Diddley – Let Me In (Alternate Take) | (Aircheck End, 1:18:31)
2) Rebel Rousers featuring Doug & Terry – Red Headed Woman
3) Shirley Gunter & “The Queens” – Why
4) Eddie Cochran – Pretty Girl
5) Guitar Gable featuring King Karl – Walking In The Park
6) Chris Cerf & The Harvard Lampoon Tabernacle Choir with Gordy Main & The Maniacs – The Penguin
7) Vernon Green & The Phantoms – Sweet Breeze
8) Tommy Castle – Wanderlust
9) Billy Wright – The Question (Wha’Cha Gonna Do?)

Set Break

6th Set

1) Ronnie Hawkins – Hey! Bo Diddley
2) Royals (Midnighters) – Get It
3) Pat Cupp – Long Gone Daddy
4) Nite Riders – Women And Cadillacs
5) Storey Sisters with Al Browne & His Orchestra – Bad Motorcycle

Set Break/Outtro

Joker (Pete “Mad Daddy” Myers) – What Is A Fisterris?

End

Hound Howl #045 – Aircheck & Playlist

Johnny Otis Birthday Tribute
Salute to Sleepy LaBeef

Aired 12/29/2019
Length 1:58:48

– Set List –

Instrumental
1) Celts – Confusion
2) Chancellors – Weird
3) Black Dynamites – Ready To Rock
4) Billy & The Echoes – Bodacious Twist
5) El Cobras – Oh Yeah (Last Night)

Set Break
13:14 – 15:17

2nd Set
1) Johnny Otis – Tough Enough
2) Scotty McKay – Rollin’ Dynamite
3) Joe Weaver with The Don Juans – Looka Here, Pretty Baby
4) Billy Bonny – Bootleg Rock
5) Johnny Otis – Hand Jive One More Time

Set Break
28:26 – 33:13

Blues Hangover
1) Pete “Guitar” Lewis – Back Door Troubles
2) Sidney Maiden with Slim Green & The Cats From Fresno – Hand Me Down Baby
3) Slim Green & The Cats From Fresno – My Woman Done Quit Me
4) “Sugarcane” (Don Harris) – Elim Stole My Baby
5)  Moose John – Talkin’ ‘Bout Me
6) Sailor Boy – What Have I Done Wrong (Part 1)
7) Abe Moore – S And J
8) Al Simmons with Slim Green & The Cats From Fresno – Old Folks Boogie

Set Break
56:06 – 58:20

4th Set
1) George ‘Mr. Blues’ Jackson – Hold Me
2) Fred Mick with The Kingsmen – Baby What Do You Want Me To Do
3) Little Victor – Papa Lou And Gran
4) Tommy Blake with The Rhythm Rebels – Lordy Hoody
5) Johnny Otis Orchestra with Mel Walker – Rockin’ Blues
6) Billy Harlan – I Wanna Bop
7) Snatch & The Poontangs – Hey Shine (Rated XXX)

Set Break
1:18:19 – 1:21:45

5th Set
1) Johnny Otis Show – Shake It, Lucy Baby
2) Arlie Miller & The Bullets – Lou Ann
3) Billy Stewart – Billy’s Heartache
4) Ric Cartey with The Jiva-Tones – Oooh-Eeee
5) Fats Domino – Don’t You Hear Me Calling You
6) Tommy Cassel – Rockin’ Rock And A Rollin’ Stone
7) Joe Swift with Johnny Otis & His Orchestra – That’s Your Last Boogie

Set Break
1:42:04 – 1:44:37

6th Set
1) Sleepy LaBeff (LaBeef) – & His Versatiles- Turn Me Loose
2) Lightning Junior & The Empires – Somebody Changed The Lock
3) Blue Echoes – Cool Guitar
4) Five Dollars – Harmony Of Love
5) Hank & The Electras – Women Train

Set Break/Outtro
1:55:58 – 1:57:18

Johnny Otis – One Nighter Blues

End

Hound Howl #044 – Aircheck & Playlist

Santa Hound’s Xmas Trash
Frank Zappa Birthday Tribute
Little Esther Phillips Birthday Salute
Aired 12/22/2019
Length 1:58:58

– Set List –

Instrumental

1) Rotations – The Cruncher
2) Skipper Hunt Combo – Scalded
3) Merrylanders – Rattlesnake
4) James Mills with Bailey’s Nervous Kats – Cobra
5) Persuaders – Grunion Run

Set Break
10:56 – 14:10

2nd Set

1) Johnny “Guitar” Watson – Love Me Baby
2) Night Hawks – Sock Bop
3) Penguins featuring Cleve Duncan – Memories Of El Monte
4) Savoy’s – I Love My Baby
5) Al Downing with The Poe Kats – Down On The Farm
6) Cordell Jackson – Rock And Roll Christmas

Set Break
28:40 – 32:43

Blues Hangover

1) Kid Thomas – The Wolf Pack
2) Guitar Slim – The Story Of My Life
3) “Sugarcane” (Harris) & His Violin – Elim Stole My Baby
4) Little Junior’s (Parker) Blue Flames – Love My Baby
5) Otis Rush – Keep On Loving Me, Baby
6) Junior Brooks – Lone Town Blues
7) Mercy Baby – Pleadin’

Set Break
53:59 – 55:41

4th Set

1) Three Clicks – 38 Slug
2) Piano Slim – Whammy In The Gizzmo
3) Orangie Ray Hubbard – Is She Sore
4) Benny Ingram – Jello Sal
5) Nathaniel Mayer – Mr. Santa Claus (Bring Me My Baby)

Set Break
1:07:38 – 1:10:33

5th Set

1) Little Esther – Cherry Wine
2) Kip Tyler & His Flips – Jungle Hop
3) Lloyd Price – Walkin’ The Track
4) Roy James & The Rhythm Rockers – Rock & Roll Mama
5) Heartbreakers – Everytime I See You
6) Three Aces & A Joker – Sleigh Bell Rock

Set Break
1:24:04 – 1:28:04

6th Set

1) Ron Holden & The Thunderbirds – Who Sez There Ain’t No Santa Claus
2) Ray Gentry & The Rovin’ Gamblers – Willie Was A Bad Boy
3) Medallions – The Letter
4) George Fleming – I’m Gonna Tell On You
5) Magic Sam – 21 Days In Jail
6) Mr. Clean – Mr. Clean
7) Andre Williams – Poor Mr. Santa (Andre Williams Is N-N-Naughty!) (Rated XXX)

Set Break
1:46:17 – 1:47:47

7th Set

1) Hal Page & The Whalers – Thunder Bird
2) Baby Ray & The Ferns – The World’s Greatest Sinner
3) Bobby Jameson – Gotta’ Find My Roogalator
4) Canned Heat & The Chipmunks – The Chipmunk Song

Set Break/Outtro
1:57:47 – 1:58:42

Sonics – Don’t Believe In Christmas

End