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Sunday, April 5, 2026

Hotrod Hillbillies

25th Anniversary 2000 - 2025

(Self-issued)



As of this April 2 review, the Hotrod Hillbillies' Cowpunkabilly + collection can be acquired exclusively at stage fronts and via the trio's website. Long-famed Xavier Ortiz, who spurs the lead stallion, is skilled at both clod-kicker pickin' and muscular chording that brands airspace at high speeds, while firing off mohawked-cowpoke-on-the-next-barstool drawling that assures no sissified slickerisms will sabotage the kick-ass evening.

Recommended: "Why Can't You Love Me," "Disrespectful and Mean," "Big and Tall," "Redneck Girl," "Folsom Prison," "Backseat," "You Wanna Race?," "Texas Sky," 

Videos: "Why Can't You Love Me"   "Disrespectful and Mean"   "Big and Tall/Redneck Girl"   "You Wanna Race?"   "Texas Sky"


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The Troubled

Fever Dream

(Self-issued)



That we're even able to hear these PsychoPunk snarls proves "a guitar is more important than a machine gun," as Alex Harvey once insisted. For several years, this neck-vein-bulging Kyiv group's members intermittently paused recording the presented hyper-velocitous bursts, having found studio efforts stymied by warfare, blackouts, and personnel disruption. Fortunately, they told challenges to go fuck themselves. ("Nothing ever gonna bring us down!") And that's cause for helter-skelter jubilation. Because the product they ultimately wrought is furiousness in song forms, likely to leap up and axe-handle denne svitlo out of anyone who looks at it funny.

Recommended: "Stargazer," "Hated," "We Stand," "This Summer," "Я ropю," "Stilletos"

Video: "Hated"   "This Summer"   "Stilletos"


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The Tru-Tone Trio

Western Potluck Party   digital album

(Self-issued)



A back-country hayride, in which two guys and a gal (previously billed as the Bear Flag Trio, and adept at roping Hillbilly bounce), remind that voices raised in plain-tooled ditties animate true hearts and boots. Music-makin' dinguses are manipulated prettier than a peacock snail flyin' over a petunia patch at sunset. And the big-grin airs that bloom from them do jigs like to make folks shout, stomp, and clap hands.

Recommended: "Roomnesia," "Catawampus Romp," "Rise and Wine," "Weird Note Boogie," "Hold On Think Twice," "Rock Wren Serenade," "Roll and Rock," "Hillbilly Time Machine"

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James Oliver

James Oliver's Rhythm & Blues Revue

(Self-issued)



A head-cutting warrior who knows his weapon damn well. Yes, James has long been hailed as the "Master of the Blackwood Boogie" (Blackwood having the distnction of being the man's place of origin). And his knowing touch, as pertains to fretboards and notes of Blues heredity, has robust impact here, given the similarly topflight gentlemen with whom he's surrounded himself.

Their dedication to sounds spectacular dips a hip in each compelling measure.

But James is as much an Ambassador of Cool, as anything else. Armed with his red, 1954 Tele dubbed "Brenda the Fender," he's preached the raw gospel of visceral intensity in over 2000 gigs, to adherents in the U.S., Norway, Sweden, France, Holland, and Ireland, as well as his own U.K. home.

Grooves put to wax here explain why those crowds surely abandoned themselves to earthy indulgences. This is exactly what heart-and-soul devotion rocks like.

Recommended: "T-Bone Shuffle," "I'm a King Bee," "Hoochie Coochie Man," "Got My Mojo Working," "Mind Your Own Business," "Rocket in My Pocket," "Can't Be Satisfied," "The Sky is Crying," "No Particular Place To Go," "Don't You Lie to Me"

Videos: taster   (the following are brief, non-LP clips)   "The Sky is Crying"   "?"   slide astonishment


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The Star Mountain Dreamers

Rawboned humanity thrashes in roots pugnacity; studio tech contrivances scramble down the road, lest they be stomped flat.

Video: "Trail Burnin'"  


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The Honkytonk Wranglers + Jake Vaadeland

This reviewer believes fools turning deaf ears to such gently gladsome, family-and-friends musicalizing (that climaxes in Old Time Religion uprightness) can just run up an alley and holler fish. 

Video: "Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (and Loud, Loud Music)" / "I Saw the Light"


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Elvis Presley: To smear a king     


With Little Junior and Bobby "Blue" Bland

It has become something of a tradition, albeit a regrettable one. Each year, as the August anniversary of Elvis Presley's 1977 death approaches, self-righteous hectors vilify him as racist.

It is a false claim, though for some, one not requiring that examinable evidence ever be produced. But putting one's hands on contrary testimony is easily done.

In Race, Rock, and Elvis, Michael T. Bertrand found that the April 1957 issue of Sepia magazine contained the article, "How Negroes Feel About Elvis." The piece noted that, "colored opinion about the hydromatically-hipped hillbilly from Mississippi runs the gamut from caustic condemnation to ardent admiration." It then offered views allegedly collected from both celebrities and "people in the street."

This article is considered the source of a contrived quote falsely attributed to Presley: "The only thing Negroes can do for me is shine my shoes and buy my records."

Sepia sought input from African-American Minister Milton Perry. He told the magazine, "I feel that an overwhelming majority of people who know him speak of this boy who practices humility and a love for racial harmony. I learned that he is not too proud or important to speak to anyone and to spend time with his fans of whatever color, wherever and whenever they approach him."

It was not long, though, before the anonymous, fictitious "people in the street" comment was being wrongly laid upon the singer, himself. Myth-busting Snopes once observed that, "The rumor grew and spread throughout 1957." 

It mattered not that the story came cloaked in impossible details, such as Elvis supposedly making the statement in Boston (a city he had never visited) or on Edward R. Murrow's Person To Person television program (on which Elvis never appeared)."

Unable to definitively source the rumored comment, Snopes records, Jet magazine sent reporter Louie Robinson to interview Presley on the "Jailhouse Rock" set. ("The 'Pelvis' Gives His Views On Vicious anti-Negro slur" Jet, August 1, 1957)

"I never said anything like that," Presley told Robinson. "And people who know me know I wouldn't have said that."

A number of fellow musicians, whites and blacks, came to Presley's defense at the time. Notable among them was rhythm and blues singer Darlene Love. She had backed Presley with vocal group the Blossoms. "I would never think that Elvis Presley was a racist." 

Cox News Service quoted Love in 2002: "He was born in the South, and he probably grew up with that, but that doesn't mean he stayed that way." ("False Rumor Taints Elvis," Cox News Service, August 16, 2002)

Other contradictory direct evidence exists on Charly Records' 2006 "The Million Dollar Quartet, 50th Anniversary Special Edition." Sun Records alum Elvis joined Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny Cash at the Memphis studio for an impromptu 1956 session. 

With Billy Ward

Prior to a loose, collective retelling of his then-chart hit, "Don't Be Cruel," Elvis related seeing a Billy Ward and the Dominoes cover performance of it. "Much better than that record of mine," Presley conceded. 

He described the lead singer's onstage energy: "He was hittin' it, boy!" Jerry Lee responded, "Oh man, that's classic!" 

The 'Elvis was racist' mantra is an offshoot of the larger fiction holding against evidence that Rock'n'Roll is exclusively black in origin. 

But Tennessee rockabilly guitar man Carl Perkins did not sound like venerated shouter Big Joe Turner, nor did the frantic storms of Jerry Lee Lewis recall the risible and urbane stylings of Fats Waller -- though all helped develop the music.

With Fats Waller

In his invaluable volume, 
Unsung Heroes of Rock'n'Roll, veteran music writer Nick Tosches noted that the sound began in regional pockets and was of mixed parentage.

"Rock'n'Roll was not created solely by blacks or whites," wrote Tosches.  

"One could make just as strong a case for Jews being the central ethnic group in Rock'n'Roll's early history," he added. "For it was they who produced many of the best songs, cultivated much of the greatest talent, and operated the majority of the pioneering record companies."

Difficult as it would be to construct an exhaustive review of early Rock'n'Roll without citing Doc Pomus, Mort Schuman, Les Bihari, or Syd Nathan, it is telling that many of today's race-as-creative-qualification theorists might not even be able to identify those men, significant though they were to the style's development.

Elvis was one of many talented men and women whose music helped American popular culture become representative of all the country's people. To ignore that today, and instead proffer slanderous myths, is an affront not only to his contributions and the prize of racial unity, but to the intellectual ideals of honesty and reason.


With Mahalia Jackson and Barbara McNair

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Killer Tone Jones

Electric

(Planet X)



KTJ issues pronouncements in unnerving hush. Lyrics slash-paint grim tableaus, seemingly nightmared in some decaying, lightning-illuminated, hilltop mansion. And stoic accompanists represent the cream of unspeakable dimensions. Just as one is happily stunned by morbidity that snakes through tracks, so, too, does obvious creative intellect rise for recognition. Movements were constructed with bloodshot eyes ever to effect. Unclear is the manner in which this taboo document was smuggled from behind Monster World lines.

Recommended: "Sharknado Apocalypse (Redux 26)," "Crush the Bone (Redux 26)," "Godzilla Rock," "Dead Stick (Redux 26)," "Formaldehyde," "Bad Barbie," "Knuckle Muscle"

Videos: promo (:38)   "Sharknado Apocalypse (Redux 26)"   "Formaldehyde"   "Bad Barbie"   


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Rory Justice

"Take Me To That Place" b/w "Think it Over"

(Self-issued)



Dig what's become of the JD howler that Golly Gee's Mel Spinella hailed as "The Rockabilly Kid," when he waxed his 2004 maiden platter of the identical sobriquet: An imposing, full-throated rocker, whose youthful need to shout down all Creation, in the style of pioneering gutbox insurgents like Johnny Burnette and Ray Harris, has matured into kool mastery. Rory's straight-from-the-fridge 2026 cuts illustrate Country-rooted Rockabilly's nonpareil heart, one which Mischief firecrackers Paddy, Daze, and Richard put down like nobody's damn business. Crash would pound Rory on the back.

Videos: "Take Me to That Place"   "Think it Over"


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Ploegendienst

"Asfalt"   "Surinaamse Broodjes"   singles

(Excelsior Recordings / Ploegendienst)



Blastforce singer Ray Fuego (SMIB) throws in with have-a-go heroes from Adolf Butler and Aux Raus to crank volume and lay waste to all creatures great and small. "Figuratively, it is a band that wants to destroy every venue in as short a time as possible," brags Excelsior, home base for these "anti-everything" flaying Dutchmen. Hurtling from grooves' hidey-holes is Oi! that greets with roundhouses and thrives on kindled chaos while decrying annoyances systemic and mundane. Crank volume and have an ambulance on speed dial.

Videos: "Asfalt"   "Surinaamse Boodjes"   live (PinkPop 34:36)


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Monkey Madness

"You Can't See My Eyes"   digital single

(Self-issued)




Anyone not swinging and stomping as this old-class, land of Felipe VI Psycho reels about circumstance, throwing chairs and smashing panes, has likely expired. (Although, given the madman music at hand, that is no excuse.) Tattooed agitators raise spring-heeled ruckus.

Videos: "You Can't See My Eyes"   live (2:22)


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Sam Ghezzi Blues Band

Initially put to Savoy vinyl in 1957 by the Jive Aces, the elegant tune - lovingly recreated by glad-rags crooner Sam and his majestically voiced vriends - stretches its stylishly slacked legs in imperturbable courtliness.

Video: "Bad Boy"


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Bamboozle

It's a difficult undertaking - reinterpreting cartoon themes as jazzy instrumental excursions - but it's one Bamboozle pulls off with dash. Innocent fun and learned dexterity clasp hands and spin in playdate circles.

Video: "Inspector Gadget / Spiderman"


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Wayne 'the Train' Hancock flips off Nashville


Too seldom do any of us shake hands with juke nobility. So when it does come through the door, we all should savor the moment.

At this writing, Wayne is enthusiastically undertaking a honky-tonk, barnstorming stampede. Beginning last January, he and joint-jumping brothers-in-rhythm have delighted crowds throughout the land. Further swing-your-partner exploits are on calendars.

Texas Rockabilly scramble has always figured in Wayne's music. Rip-rollicking Country Swing jollity gulps oxygen, too. Whirling dancers don't worry about genre strictures any more than does the man at the microphone, himself. 

Much was made of Wayne's significance, when he first landed shoes in national consciousness with 1995's top-drawer "Thunderstorms and Neon Signs" (produced by Lloyd Maines). 

"Wayne the Train," as he was soon hailed, personified buoyant juke joint rhythm slinging. His battered and furiously downstroked acoustic, rough hewn everyman drawl, and the mischievous, toothy, sideways grin he flashed - as slap bass walked the line, electric lead-picking stung, and steel caromed off jump-bop rhythms - earned broad renown. Lofty expectations became hand-tooled truths.

He has a hell of a ball - as do all who hear him.

Great things have since come from the starkly rustic raconteur, in whose twangy voice seemed to lurk the limber-limbed ghosts of every time-lost honky-tonk under the risen troubled moon.

Accompanists have entered and exited, across decades of shows and miles of road doggery. But all have been players of awe-striking caliber. They drew deeply from Country Swing and Jazz pools, eager to sit in on the man's merriment.

When Wayne slips into swaybacked, mid-tempo Country Blues, he evokes Hank Williams, Sr. - a genuine touchstone for all who would tread this unadorned path. And he relaxes still further, now and again, delivering sonorous, back-porch plaints of universal melancholia.

Amid interchangeable, corporate cut-outs who illegitimately claim kinship with bygone radio and Opry luminaries - genuinely talented folks who serenaded generations of calloused-hands Americans - "Wayne the Train" poses a threat both natural and needed.

"Man, I'm like a stab wound in the Country Music of Nashville," the paradoxically rebellious traditionalist once laughed. "See that bloodstain slowly spreading? That's me!" 


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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..