TuneIn
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Wayne Douglas aka Doug Sahm
Wayne Douglas - Be Real
Released under a half-hearted pseudonym (he inverted his first & middle names), Be Real is an interesting gem from the Doug Sahm archives. Sahm recorded it in Nashville with some Music City studio aces and it came out on Mercury, which was handling Doug at the time. Unfortunately the record went nowhere but it's solid Texas honky-tonk shuffle that's sure to please any hard country fan.
Posted by Greg G at 9:30 PM 0 comments
Labels: Country, Doug Sahm, Doug Sahm Month, mp3s
Is Anybody Goin' To San Antone?
Posted by Debbie D at 7:42 PM 4 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Doug Sahm Month
Sir Douglas Quintet: Who'll Be the Next in Line?
On this, the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones first gig, it seems fitting to present this version of the Kinks' "Who'll Be the Next in Line" from Austin City Limits in 1981. Doug starts out on guitar but after about a minute puts it away and "does his best Jagger".
Posted by Mr. Soul Motion at 5:14 PM 0 comments
Labels: Austin City Limits, Doug Sahm, Kinks, Rolling Stones, Sir Douglas Quintet
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Timothy Carey Double Bill @ Fool's Paradise Twin
THEN...
The Violent Beatnik
FULL SERVICE SNACK BAR
featuring:
Tasty corndogs! Refreshing beverages! Savory BBQ!
and
- all season long -
ONLY THOSE OVER 17 ADMITTED • LEGIBLE PROOF OF AGE REQUIRED
Posted by count reeshard at 9:20 PM 1 comments
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Dottie Cambridge He's About a Mover
While the Crazy Cajun clearly had a good idea on his hands with the recharged version, the single never garnered much airtime on the radio and failed to be a mover off the record store shelves.
Cambridge would later rechristen herself Dorothy Moore in the seventies and find her place on the charts with "Misty Blue."
Dottie Cambridge "He's About a Mover"
Posted by Brett Koshkin at 3:01 PM 2 comments
Where Life's Such A Groove You Blow Your Mind In the Morning...
In 1969, Hugh Hefner called upon the Sir Douglas Quintet to play live on his Playboy After Dark show, so Doug and the guys showed up and delivered this electrifying performance of Mendocino, providing some pretty solid evidence that Doug was the greatest hippie ever. Admittedly, the competition may not have been all that stiff, but the clip really is a great deal of fun to watch.
Posted by Greg G at 10:09 AM 1 comments
Labels: Doug Sahm Month, Greg, Hippies, Playboy
Otis Clay Agrees
The very first 45 released by Cotillion Records (1968)
Posted by Shouting Thomas Torment at 8:11 AM 0 comments
Monday, July 9, 2012
Doug Sahm: You're Doing It Too Hard
You're Doing It Too Hard
Posted by Mr. Soul Motion at 4:55 PM 1 comments
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Sir Douglas Quintet, 1981
Even in the early 80s, the Sir Douglas Quintet had the Midas Touch, in terms of quality if not necessarily commercial success. I Keep Wishing For You comes from noted Texas songwriter Butch Hancock, a member, along with Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Joe Ely, of the Flatlanders. This one gets my vote for 1981 Song Of The Year.
Posted by Greg G at 6:33 PM 2 comments
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Doug Sahm - She Purt The Hurt On Me
Doug Sahm - She Put The Hurt On Me
Juke Box Music has to be one of my favorite Doug Sahm LPs. Released on Antone's Records in 1988 out of Austin, it gives Sahm the opportunity to send a big wet kiss to the classic R&B and doo-wop sounds that he loved.
She Put The Hurt On Me comes from the pen of Otis Redding and if you'd like to hear his version, here you go.
Posted by Greg G at 3:52 PM 0 comments
Labels: Doug Sahm, Doug Sahm Month, Greg, mp3s, Otis Redding