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Sunday, March 29, 2026

Mel and the Tall Boys

The Frontier of Love

(Lacy Records)



A 12-chaptered disc for all seasons, and a sterling one, on top. The sprightly step of "Fall a Little Faster'" assures brighter hours lie ahead for its melancholic protagonist. Those already of good cheer will likely juke away to big, bawdy strutter "Every Night About This Time;" assembled instrument-wielders collude to amass good-hours ruckus of the type that causes rooftops to sail away. "Runnin' Around" tells starkly of a woman scorned, who just plain ain't gonna take no shit. Trumpet gilds generously, far and near, but truly takes marvelous wing during the steamy "Don't Try." 

Noirish titular track "Frontier of Love" soothes and is delightsome. Atmosphere is deepened by appropriate echoes. (Changes bring to mind Johnny Rivers' "Secret Agent Man" in low-gear. Too, the break's bass-string guitar figure recalls 1970s' Marlboro commercials, which, in turn, owed to Cliff Richard's "No Turning Back.") Mel's incandescent cries of an artist torn betwixt temporal l'amour and the creative calling's siren raises gooseflesh, in a very good way.

Recommended: "Fall a Little Faster," "Baby Blues," "Frontier of Love," "Make Room," "Every Night About This Time," "Runnin' Around," "Don't Try to Cover Your Tracks," "Guilty"

Videos: "Fall a Little Faster"   "Every Night About This Time"   "Don't Try to Cover Your Tracks"


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The Coal Dust Cowboys

Beneath the Old Slag Heap

(Western Star)



Quite what could be anticipated from spry-rattling Stage Frite refugees Steve D'Ath, Joe Mason, and Clive Perchard, plus erstwhile Shark/present Western Star major domo Alan Wilson. By which is meant rangy, trad-bent Psycho, boasting equal quantities jocularity, merry rashness, and snickered smuttiness. Surprise springs when sensitivity makes respectful cameo. In its brief wake, though, jolly madness returns at fun gallop. And all is well, in haunts of quiff and razor.

Recommended: "The Jolly Collier," "Resurrection Men," "Waffle Stomp," "Hard Love," "Porn in the Woods," "Three-Holed Electric Love Doll," "You're My World," "Creeper Van," "I've Had Enough of You," "Dead Man's Drape"

Videos: "The Jolly Collier"   "Resurrection Men"   "You're My World"   "Porn in the Woods"


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Rough Trade

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Ragged Revue

The First Rodeo

(Self-issued)



World analysts and the hipper in global grassroots populaces, alike, need to dig flames bursting brightly in Slovenia: Rock'n'Roll, often in its alarm-lights-flashing, rampageous, Neo-rockabilly and Cowpunk vestments, is shouting notice that matters are volatile in the Eastern region. All instruments/songs must be credited to right-spirited firestarters Joni Järlstrӧm and Joonas Hiltunin; the pair give incendiary accounts of themselves in crackling fashion. Listeners with cinematic minds' eyes will find closer "Kick, Stitches, and Two Broken Bones" evokes eyes-locked, crouching brawlers, circling slowly...

Recommended: "Texas Tuxedo," "Guys at the Gas Station," "Ne'er-Do-Well," "It's All About Rock'n'Roll," "Ain't No Crime," "Kick, Stitches, and Two Broken Bones"

Videos: "Texas Tuxedo"   "Guys at the Gas Station"  "It's All About Rock'n'Roll"  "Kicks, Stitches, and Two Broken Bones"


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Back in the Day, 1979

Ray Campi

Rockabilly Rebellion

(Rollin' Rock)


Each time you drop a needle on gone wax, remember that Ray and Rollin' Rock's Ronny Weiser were very much among 1970s (and beyond) Rockabilly Rebels whose indefatigable toils helped the wildcat sound rise again. Since his 1950s Texas ramblings, Ray bore feral witness to homestyle Country's prominence in the glorious Red White and Blue story - often with hot-rodded, handerchief-waving abandon that dug the cool things possible when Sol sinks. Tracks compiled on this platter are good-time, good-humored evidence that the bar on the corner of Sunset, where Country and Rockabilly met up and shook hands, was one fractured destination. Indie label-maven Rockin' Ronny and the King of Rockabilly threw hellacious Van Nuys bashes - ones we still can and should dig.

Recommended: "Tore Up," "Ballin' Keen," "Don't Get Pushy," "Pinball Millionaire," "Eager B-B-Beaver Boy," "Georgia Slop," "You Don't Rock'n'Roll At All," "One Part Stops Where the Other Begins," "Dual Wheels No Brakes," "Rockin' and Rollin' Towards Tennessee"

Videos: "Ballin' Keen"   "Pinball Millionaire"   "Dual Wheels No Brakes"   "Rockin' and Rollin' Towards Tennessee"


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Ronny Weiser

Sick Shooters

Punk and Pop meld into Willy Shake's "beast with two backs." Group members surely had a running launch, even before the starting flag fell. All jets forward in headlong incautiousness that captures exactly the not-specifically-focused urgency of kids scrambling madly to jump toward kicks - NOW!

Video: "Evacuation"


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Lilith & the Noise Boys

Doghouse-flailing Lilith busies herself with both Clockworth Psycho and the roughneck passel under present examination, luckily, that leaves scant moments for contemplation of how dreary life would be without Chords of Mayhem.

Videos: "Late Night"   "Hearts on Fire"   "I Spit On You" (live)


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Bettie Page: Dream girl unlaced


She had style. She had nerve. She had the most captivating and poetic of beauties. And she never took a bad picture.

Bettie Mae Page was born in Nashville, in 1923. Like so many girls fate locates in unexceptional surroundings, she imagined a more glamorous life. Hollywood. Though she never realized that dream, Bettie held it tight through adult years.

She had from an early age turned heads, attracting without intent such attentions as nature affords leggy bombshells. Bettie relocated to New York City in 1951, and soon earned favor as a pin up tease. Her potent blending of girl-next-door loveliness with the voluptuous aspects of a bad girl fed the fortunes of such fine girlie newsstand imprints as EyefulBold, and Chicks and Chuckles.

Quite popular with both lensmen and readers, she reached professional acme in the mid-50s. Her saucy 1955 Playboy pull-out, in which she kneels beside a Christmas tree while winking broadly at her anonymous adorers, is now legendary.

In the same moment, Bettie was a favorite among New York's camera clubs. Now mostly forgotten cultural relics, these underground associations often convened in make-shift apartment studios. Amateur shutterbugs (some of whom doubtless hefted filmless cameras, intent only on exploiting the opportunity to ogle fleshly charms unclad) were happy to finance these fun sessions. 

To the gratitude of contemporary collectors of all-things-Bettie, myself in that number, many of these scarlet photos have since emerged from private libraries.

Even were these her only resume credits, Bettie would be savored as a singularly stunning lass. But enduring notoriety became hers thanks to Irving Klaw.

While he usually sold silver screen stars' posed shots, Irving did meet another market's needs. Bettie certainly wasn't the only model to endeavor in posing for Klaw's 'specialty' photos, which sold briskly from under newsstand counters and as brown-paper wrapped, mail-ordered b/w treats. But wickedly delicious leathers, rope-and-pulley networks, whips and laced knee boots with 6-inch, spiked heels were entirely outside the polite cultural mainstream. 



While these daring wares brought Movie Star News and Bettie abundant fan favor, they also lured governmental bloodhounds. 

The year was 1955. Tennessee Democrat Senator Estes Kefauver was an opportunistic political scold that on occasion donned coonskin caps to pretend at commonness. He had previously courted public applause by asserting a causal link between comic books and juvenile delinquency. And he sensed similar headline potential in hearings on 'obscenity.'

Kefauver's silly circus of the straight-laced made a stop in New York City. And on May 24, Irving Klaw was summoned to appear before grim, office-holding inquisitors at the U.S. courthouse on Foley Square. 

The deck was stacked to Klaw's disadvantage. Kefauver's subcommittee had already branded the Movie Star News proprietor "one of the largest distributors of obscene, lewd, and fetish photographs throughout the country by mail." Considerable condemnation, for a man who'd never been charged with a crime, much less convicted of one.

Bettie, too, was called to testify. She was, after all, the magnetically marvelous star of many popular Movie Star News photos. And also of that small company's mail-order film loops, as well as of three full-length burlesque films (one of which also featured baggy-pants one-liners from Joe E. Ross, later of Car 54, "Ooh! Ooh!" television fame.)

A pair of subcommittee representatives turned up on Bettie's doorstep one day. They hoped to intimidate her into testifying against her employer. Exuding menace, the two stressed their intention to subpoena her.

A shaken Bettie duly appeared at Foley Square. But accounts differ as to whether she ultimately testified.

After the finger-wagging sideshow, Klaw was legally untouched but damaged professionally. Distributors and film processing labs with whom he'd worked previously were no longer interested in doing business with him. 

He destroyed numerous prints and negatives, including ones of Bettie. Paradise lost.

For her part, an embittered Bettie turned her back to New York City. She relocated to Florida, in the hope that the geographical change might reinvigorate her career. Kefauver's stunt hadn't completely killed her professional fortunes, but it did hasten her modeling's third act.

She continued cheesecake posing for another two years. And her photos from this period, taken by erstwhile pin up Bunny Yeager, do number among her finest. Yeager's assorted color and b/w beach, amusement park, and boudoir shots present a fresh and vibrant Bettie in an aspect range including fun-loving and steamily sultry.

And then it ended. Bettie withdrew from pin up celebrity. 

Ask most people to name a 1950s cultural benchmark and they'll probably cite the revolutionary birth of Rock'n'Roll. Perhaps the growth of television. Maybe McCarthyism, or the bomb hysteria that led to fallout shelters and second graders ducking under schoolroom walnut desks.  



Bettie's photo work and her showdown with clucking moralists, though, also are worth remark. And her impact has effects, still.

Recent decades have seen further appreciation for the statuesque lovely from Tennessee. A new generation of admirers found her a toothsome distraction meriting their full consideration -- something their fathers could have instructed from experience. 

Vintage snapshots and 16mm loops, once stashed away from the sunshine, were repackaged in contemporary technologies and rushed to eager customers. Bettie's story was reimagined in books and comics. Fan clubs were initiated. 

Her one-of-a-kind looks were reproduced on t-shirts, poster art, and CD cover graphics. Numerous freshly-crafted songs swooned over her. Innumerable Rockabilly gals of contemporary fascination emulate her bangs, naughty kitten attire, and mesmeric style that locked generations of bird-dogs into blissful bondage.

And in 2005, Hollywood produced The Notorious Bettie Page, featuring Gretchen Mol in the titular role.

Bettie Page, the once-taboo, leather-and-lace southern belle in whose sublime aspect light and dark met and became one and were good, offers a time-defying example worthy of modern lovers of retro glamour and wildcat sex appeal.

Besides, who the hell even remembers Estes Kefauver?

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FORMER staff writer for Rockabilly and Pin Up America magazines. FREELANCE credits include Daily Caller, American Thinker, Free Republic, Huffington Post, Counterpunch, Dissident Voice, Independent Political Report, USA Today, Des Moines Register, Iowa City Press-Citizen, Waterloo Courier, Cedar Falls Times, Marshalltown Times Republican, Cincinnati.com, IndyStar, Arizona Republic, No Depression, Goldmine, Blue Suede News, Rock and Rap Confidential, Crackerjack, Blues News, Wrecking Pit, Punk Globe, Prairie Sun, Music and Sound Output, BAM, New Music, and 1980s NYC fanzines Shake, Rattle, and Roll, Rebel Rouser, and Off the Wall. AUTHOR: Shake, Rattle and Rocket!, Ghost Saucers in the Sky!, Stratosphere Boogieman!, Flesh Made Music, That a Man Can Again Stand Up: American spirit vs, sedition during the incipient Trump Revolution, and Ideas Afoot: Political observations, social commentary, and media analyses. WORKED as 2004 Iowa coordinator for Ralph Nader independent presidential campaign; co-founded Iowa Green Party, also served as statewide media coordinator; press coordinator, 2002 Jay Robinson (Green) IA gubernatorial effort. Wrote extensively re Trump campaign..