1. Sir Doug

    As if I needed more reasons to worship the man, here’s a passage from Texas Tornado, Sahm’s recently released biography:

    Doug once explained his itchiness that often overtook him in Austin, his adopted hometown. “I can’t stand to get bored here. When you get bored here, and nothing’s happening, you can get pretty weirded out. But if you can keep some kind of edge going-that’s why I leave all the time. You know, jump in the car, get in my Cadillac and drive to Seattle, drive to Minneapolis, see the Dead, go to spring training. It keeps you going.”

    The Dead of his reference were his old friends of the Grateful variety, and he was an ardent baseball fan. His favorite team was the Chicago Cubs, though he also was known to cheer for the New York Yankees, the Houston Astros, and Toronto Blue Jays. He used to drive band members to distraction by blowing off regular gigs and arranging his life so he could go to Florida or Arizona to watch spring training. One year a casting representative of George Lucas, the famous producer of Star Wars, called Doug and offered him a part in a sequel to American Graffiti. Eventually it worked out, and he landed a nice role in the movie, but friends who witnessed the conversation were thunderstruck. At first Doug told the caller from Hollywood that he didn’t think it was possible-the shooting schedule cut into too much of baseball season. During the spring training jaunts he drew on his stature as an entertainer to outwit gatekeepers and hang out with the big leaguers in the clubhouses and dugouts. He spouted major league stats until people rolled their eyes, and his kids would moan with boredom and embarrassment when he spotted a night game in some town, any town, and stopped to watch teams of strangers play a few innings. He was like an insect drawn to the lights.

    Doug’s trademark mode of transportation was a Cadillac or Lincoln Continental. One of his Lincolns was a model that had been used in the TV series Hawaii 5-0. Before hitting the road, he would load a variety of instruments and small set of amps, the little gourmet coffeemaker he carried everywhere, and about a dozen suitcases. He’d tie up hotel elevators, trapping other guests in the cramped space, because suddenly he had to stop and count the bags carefully, making sure he had them all. In transit he was always writing, scribbling down a line of conversation or a highway sign that caught his fancy. He might linger in Lincoln, New Mexico, gathering material for a song about the murderous jailbreak of Billy the Kid, or stop and pay his respects in an old Spanish mission the highway offered up. He was know to drive from Texas to California to get a haircut or relieve a toothache.

  2. …And he said, ‘Play the guitar like you don’t know how to play.’

    — John Mclaughlin remembering Miles Davis’s direction on Bitches Brew (via bigmuff)

    (Source: bigmuff)

  3. Variety Playhouse (Taken with instagram)

    Variety Playhouse (Taken with instagram)

  4. pjmix:

(via jyuenger » KIT)

    pjmix:

    (via jyuenger » KIT)

  5. Daniel Presnell on the short-lived but exceptional MoWest label →

  6. laphamsquarterly:

flavorpill:

therichgirlsareweeping:

carlovely:

25 years ago today, kurt cobain (age 19) was arrested for spray painting “god is gay” on pickup trucks.



Celebrity mugshots. The new Celebrity With Typewriter? 

    laphamsquarterly:

    flavorpill:

    therichgirlsareweeping:

    carlovely:

    25 years ago today, kurt cobain (age 19) was arrested for spray painting “god is gay” on pickup trucks.

    Celebrity mugshots. The new Celebrity With Typewriter? 

    (Source: nymphetgarden)

  7. My Top 5 Artists Played This Week (Week Ending 2009-7-26) →

    1. Billy Bragg & Wilco (55)
    2. The Sir Douglas Quintet (39)
    3. The Beatles (34)
    4. Doug Sahm (33)
    5. Bob Dylan (27)

    Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by JoeLaz

    Technically not “my” top 5 for the week as the missus hijacked my ipod and dialed up mucho Mermaid Ave. & The White Album.

  8. Dylan on Newman & Prine

    BF: Randy Newman?

    BD: Yeah, Randy. What can you say? I like his early songs, “Sail Away,” “Burn Down the Cornfield,” “Louisiana,” where he kept it simple. Bordello songs. I think of him as the Crown Prince, the heir apparent to Jelly Roll Morton. His style is deceiving. He’s so laid back that you kind of forget he’s saying important things. Randy’s sort of tied to a different era like I am.

    BF: How about John Prine?

    BD: Prine’s stuff is pure Proustian existentialism. Midwestern mindtrips to the nth degree. And he writes beautiful songs. I remember when Kris Kristofferson first brought him on the scene. All that stuff about “Sam Stone” the soldier junky daddy and “Donald and Lydia,” where people make love from ten miles away. Nobody but Prine could write like that. If I had to pick one song of his, it might be “Lake Marie.” I don’t remember what album that’s on.

    Full Interview

  9. Sir Doug mood boards for a packaging project at school.

  10. My Top 5 Artists Played this Week (Week Ending 2009-7-19) →

    1. Bobby Bare (38)
    2. Minutemen (34)
    3. Randy Newman (29)
    4. Alabama (16)
    5. Merle Haggard (15)

    I have no idea what’s up with the Bobby Bare. I mean I love him and all but I didn’t listen to him 38 times last week. Last FM must have a glitch. Now the rest of the list I can solidly attest to. Maybe Bare’s version of Dylan’s “Don’t think twice” got caught in a loop in my bag or something.

    Woe is me on that Alabama quantity too. I had no idea. It’s impossible to be hip with Last FM, which is why it’s great.

    Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by JoeLaz

  11. Dylan takes over a theater to rehearse for tour →

  12. [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

    ladoublure:

    Circle X - Onward Christian Soldiers

    Moral stalwarts like Bob Jones I, II, and III, Jimmy Falwell, and Pat Robertson have advocated, endorsed, and mobilized a sizable southern militia whose charge is to restrict young men and women to a life of christian servitude, and to silence, maim or kill anyone attempting to defect to more liberal enclaves and/or godless lifestyles. Thier plan has been a resounding success.

    But if you’re prone to stalk the “Other” archives, you may well know that despite the armies, the punishments, a few folks with odd haircuts and devilish inclinations shuttle past the border guards, and take up life in places like San Francisco, and New York, whereby they unleash their campaign of moral degradation upon the nuclear family and sink America even further south of heaven.

    Well, Circle X is the result of such a process, having slithered through the blue grass state on their bellies, dodging landmines left by tent revivalists, and Ralph Reed mortar fire, only to wind up in New York City, where they’d most likely drop out of art school, do drugs, and cultivate a strong distaste for the hegemony of middle class values. Who could blame them? Certainly not La Doublure.

    So taking this all in stride, it is perfectly plausible for the chaps to detourn the old battle hymn of baptists, “Onward Christian Soldier,” with its connotations of spiritual colonization, biblical plague, and moral militarism, and transform the tune into a lurching, church fire sing-a-long.

    Care for the sacrement?

  13. Space Rock Motherfuckers!