Crashing The Party EVERY SUNDAY

We know we said Crashing The Party would be here every other Sunday but we can’t wait that long, so join us here on thehoundnyc.com tomorrow for Crashing the Party #2: JUMP CHILDREN(And we do know how high).

Join Marc and Miriam on another wild ride through the Doo-Wop tanglewood with two solid hours of killers and chillers running the gamut from the audacious (Flamingos – Jump Children) to the bodacious (Five Royales- Laundromat Blues) to the salacious (Blenders – Don’t Fuck Around) and all points between. Seatbelts fastened, please.

Outage Tonight

Tonight at 7 pm (after the Aerial View replay) thehoundnyc.com hosts will perform maintenance. We don’t know how long we’ll be down but will get things up and running ASAP.’

Hound Howl #002 TODAY!

TODAY: 3-5 PM EST, The HOUND, live and in poison.

Tons of great records never heard on radio: Moronic Obscurities, Hedgehog Hop, Rhythm & Booze, Greaseball Classics and more…

Catch the live feed right here.

You can hear last week’s show here.

The Hound Howl will be followed by Crashing The Party with Mark Miller & Miriam Linna, musical doo wop chop shop 5-7 PM.

Crashing The Party debuts!

CRASHING THE PARTY is set to blow the doors off thehoundnyc.com Sun., Jan. 13, 5 pm Eastern time, right after the live Hound Howl (3-5 PM). A new episode will blast off for two-hours every Sunday night, with replay throughout the week from 1 – 3 pm Eastern time.
Dedicated to the wildest wax in the Doo-Wop universe, CRASHING  THE PARTY is hosted by wax n’ shellac collector mavens Marc and Miriam.
CRASHING THE PARTY focuses on original vocal group harmony records – from the sublime to the savage – including  favorite desperate, dreamy, deranged and pure dynamite group sounds from the late 1940s to the early ’60s.
The show fans the flames with original collector kingpins who will be “crashing the party” with their own rare wax and stories of “the days” that will blow a hole into your idea of the way things were. Discover where and how small unknown records were forged into chartbusters by teenage record nuts who shared the music with their friends and ended up changing the way we listen to music, collect records and live our lives.
Marc and Miriam have featured collector legends like Times Square owner Louie Silvani (first time ever interview) and have another godhead collector slated for a new CRASHING.
Catch all the action every other Sunday, 5- 7 pm, at thehoundnyc.com

Hound Howl #001: Aircheck & Playlist

Show #1 (Partial)
Aired 01/06/2019
Length 1:21:36

– Set List –

Instrumental

1) Tony Lee & His Quintet – Suicide
2) Ben Leonard & The Fury’s – Congo Bongo
3) Ernie Fields – Teen Flip
4) Reekers – Don’t Call Me Flyface
5) Tommy Blake & The Rhythm Rebels – Mister Hoody
6) Shadow Lake 8 Orchestra – Power
7) T. Carl Adams – Guitar Safari

Set Break
15:08 – 19:05

2nd Set

1) The Fabulous Swing Tones – Geraldine
2) Sonny Burgess – Ain’t Got A Thing
3) Big Walter Price & His Thunder Birds – Calling Margie
4) Frantic Freddie & The Pro-Teens – Charmaine
5) Rocketeers – Gonna Feed My Baby Poison
6) Boogie Ramblers – Cindy Lou
7) Junior Dean & The Avalons – Chick Chick
8) Earl Brown & His Band – Shake Your Shimmy

Set Break
39:39 – 45:35

3rd Set

1) Little Benny & The Stereos – Drinking Wine, Spodie Odie
2) Little Many with Ricky Aguary Band – Chuké Baby
3) Don & Bob – Good Morning, Little Schoolgirl
4) Big Chenier & His Night Owls – Let Me Hold Your Hand
5) Fabulous Rockets/Billy Costa – No Flirtin’ No Foolin’
6) Truitt Forse – Chicken Bop
7) Montereys – You Said That You Loved Me

Set Break
1:01:30 – 1:06:28

Blues Hangover

1) Blanche Thomas – You Ain’t So Such A Much
2) Lightnin’ Hopkins – Jake Head Boogie
3) Sidney Maiden/Slim Green & The Cats From Fresno – Hand Me Down Baby
4) Woodrow Adams with Boogie Blues Blasters – Wine Head Woman
5) Eddie Kirkland & His House Rockers – I Need You Baby
6) John Lee Hooker – 609 Boogie

Technical Difficulties

Hound’s Short Return (Mixed Audio)
1:20:50 – 1:21:36

End

The Hound Is Back On The Air…

After a short 20 year breather, I’m back on the radio, well, sort of radio, I broadcast live every Thursday from 6-8 PM Eastern Standard Time (NYC time) and the shows eventually wind up in the archive, listen at http://www.littlewaterradio.org (look in the archive), or at Mixcloud (their search engine is pretty funky, search for The Hound Show). The latest posted on is here: https://www.mixcloud.com/littlewaterradio/the-hound-show-7-march-30-2017-littlewaterradiocom/
I’m playing nothing but original 45’s from my collection– crude blues and R&B, moronic, obscure rock’n’roll, brain dead hillbillies on amphetamine and the like…don’t ask why, but like all good things, it can’t last long….

Some old WFMU shows are still archived at www.thehound.net for you listenng pleasure….

Friday’s 5 45’s — Guitar Slingers (and big dick swingers…)





Okay, I’ll take you commenter’s suggestion and try and make this a weekly feature. Five 45’s. Here’s this week’s stack.
Since I’m a lazy shit, this week I just leaned over, from the reproduction of the couch that Sigmund Freud had in his own office, if I lay backwards on the one in my own office I find myself at eye level directly in front of the instrumental section of the 45 shelves. Easy enough. I love rock’n’roll instrumentals, especially guitar instrumentals. For seventeen years I opened my radio show with five instrumentals (take a listen here). I didn’t exactly grab these randomly, I wanted to give you some discs that hadn’t been re-issued, at least not on CD as far as I  know, and by guys who you might’ve heard of, if it not heard of, at least heard (and maybe didn’t know it). And I wanted ’em to be great records. I think these past the test.
Roy Buchanan was amazing in his early days, he contributes some truly ominous guitar sounds to Dale Hawkins sides like Cross-Ties, early fuzz wackiness on Cody Brennan’s version of Ruby Baby and even made a handful of great 45’s under his own name. By the time his ship came in via a PBS documentary which portrayed him as the great, lonesome blues  man, he’d turned into a bore, but this platter, a rendition of Erkstine Hawkins’ After Hours for the Philadelphia based Bomarc label illustrates just how cool he once was. Buchanan himself had long credited the Jimmy Nolen (guitarist with the Johnny Otis Show and James Brown, see the Dec. Johnny Otis I for more on him) waxing of After Hours (Federal, you can hear it on the Johnny Otis I posting) as his all time favorite and most influential disc. Here, Buchanan adds a few of his own tricks, including using the volume knob on his Telecaster as a primitive Wah Wah pedal (or as Hasil Adkins called it– the Bow Wow pedal), and some almost tasteful use of feedback. Quine used to say Buchanan was the only guitarist whom he couldn’t tell if he was black or white, on this disc he sounds grey with red pinstripes.
J.J. Cale is somebody I used to file in the same part of my brain as Jimmy Buffet, but the aforementioned Quine re-introduced me to Cale’s stuff and damned, if you really listen he’s almost the white Jimmy Reed. Ask Eric Clapton, who stole Cale’s sound, songs and band and durn near modled himself after the lazier than hell Okie trash genius (when told he had a hit record and should go out and tour to promote it Cale asked his manager “if I got a hit, why do I have to promote it”? Turns out Cale has a long history and appeared on quite a few  great rockabilly and hillbilly discs back in Oklahoma before setting out for L.A. where he recorded as the Leather Coated Minds for Sidewalk in 1968 before returning to Tulsa and laid back near stardom. This instrumental, Shock Hop he’s billed as Johnny Cale, it is from ’63 and could sit proudly next to such classics as the Frantics’ Werewolf (see Halloween I posting) as instro-spook rock’n’roll at it’s best.

Lafayette “The Thing” Thomas wielded the Stratocaster on many great Jimmy McCracklin records including The Walk. McCracklin found him playing in Jimmy Wilson’s band where he can be heard on such monsters as Big Wheel Rollin’ (Goldband) as well as a few great records under his own name for Peacock (Jumpin’ In The Heart Of Town being the best). This VG- R&B instrumental with the snappy title of Cockroach Run saw life as the only issue on the Jumping label out of God knows where (the flip was a dumb break in record called The Trial credited to nobody). Thomas ended life working as a hose fitter. There’s a lesson in all this but I don’t know what it is. Great record, pops, clicks and all.
Jody Williams- Lucky Lou (Argo). Jody Williams started out in Bo Diddley’s band when they were called the Langley Ave. Jive Cats or something like that. He can be heard soloing on Bo’s Who Do You Love. As a session man he’s on dozens of incredible Chess/Checker/Argo discs including many by Howlin’ Wolf. He only got his due recently, and as of a few years ago was still playing at top of his game. I have fond memories of the first Ponderosa Stomp (when it was still called the Mau-Mau Ball) at the Circle Bar in New Orleans when Jody played a killer set with blues steel player Freddy Roulette. On this Argo disc, his only solo record for the Chess brothers, he displays all his best tendencies. Great record, no bout a doubt it.
Jimmy Dobro (James Burton)- Swamp Surfer (Phillips). This is of course James Burton, hero of countless fine rockabilly records by Dale Hawkins (Suzi Q), Bob Luman, Ricky Nelson, as well as sides by Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Gram Parson and even John Denver. He’s probably one of the most deservedly praised guitar players in history but his solo work (an LP for A&M in ’72 and a duet LP with Ralph Mooney for Capitol in ’66) are good but never quite click into high gear. This, my favorite of all his solo sides, was cut under the name Jimmy Dobro because the a-side is a corny dobro-novelty called Everybody Listen To The Dobro that really isn’t worth posting. I love the vibe of this one, especially the way the rhythm section modulates south without breaking tempo. Swamp Surfer isn’t so much a monster as a real sleeper, in the best sense of the term.