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    • February 21, 2009 9:02 AM CST
    • A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican February 20, 2009 Bet you didn't know that one of the original Rolling Stones used to live in Taos. No, not Mick or Keith or any of those other limeys who popped up in the '60s. I'm talking about Andy Anderson, the founder of a first-generation rockabilly band by that name, which sprang out of Clarksdale, Mississippi, in the mid-1950s; he sang songs like "Johnny Valentine" and "Tough, Tough, Tough." He never sold a fraction of the records the latter-day Stones did. But Mick Jagger can't say he helped build a New Mexico state fish hatchery, now can he? I recently received a package of CDs with a personal note from Andy. "Many of these songs were written when we lived in Taos. Many great memories from Santa Fe and the area." He went on to write that he lived in Taos between 1976 and 1988. The CDs he sent are all titled One Man's Rock & Roll. My favorite is subtitled The Early Years 1955-1965. The other two, which also include some dang good tracks, are more recent recordings. They are subtitled Anthology Vol. 1 and Anthology Vol. 2: Party Down. Like many ascended masters of the blues, Anderson grew up on a Mississippi plantation. One big difference: he wasn't a sharecropper. His parents owned the plantation. The liner notes for The Early Years say that as a child he actually went to live shows featuring the likes of Howlin' Wolf, John Lee Hooker, and B.B. King. Anderson formed The Rolling Stones during his college years at Mississippi State University. A 2005 interview with The Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Mississippi, quotes the singer talking about his early years with The Stones: "Nobody drank. We were clean livin' rock 'n' rollers, good old boys who just wanted to make music and took everything for granted. We didn't want a million dollars, we wanted more gigs." Clean living? That doesn't sound like the Rolling Stones most of us know. The group cut a lot of records, even some at Sun Studio with Jack Clement as producer. Alas, those songs have yet to be released. The Early Years, however, is a great sampler of Anderson's Rolling Stones years and of his work with his next band, The Dawn Breakers (from 1959 on). Though you never hear them on oldies radio, Anderson had some extremely cool tunes. There's "Johnny Valentine" — three versions of which are included in this collection — a song about a rockin' Romeo who "goes out with the girls all of the time/He's in love with 'em all; he goes out every night/He's got about a hundred; he likes to hold 'em tight." "I-I-I Love You" is simple and greasier than Kookie's comb. And "Tough, Tough, Tough," is a punchy little rocker that lives up to its name. Unlike the golden gods of rockabilly whose names we all cherish, Anderson had some regional hits, but he never quite caught on. He kept his day job as manager of an electrical- supply store and kept recording through the late '60s. The later songs on The Early Years show Anderson progressing beyond rockabilly, incorporating elements of soul, R & B, and country. He worked the business end of the music biz too. During a stint in California in the late '60s, he was part of a management company whose clients included Jefferson Airplane, The Seeds, and Canned Heat. Anderson had all but given up on music by the early 1970s. But then he hooked up with a songwriter named J.J. Hettinger and started a band called The Eagle and the Hawk. The group relocated to New Mexico in the mid-'70s — perhaps because they heard our music industry was for the birds. Not only did Anderson play music in Taos, he also sold real estate. And though he didn't mention it in his note to me, he spent some time in Albuquerque building custom homes. Shortly after moving to Taos, Anderson lost a finger in a mishap with a hydraulic lift. That was the end of The Eagle and the Hawk. Anderson started a construction company called Big Valley Land & Construction. According to his biography in the Rockabilly Hall of Fame Web site, the company was subcontracted to help build the state fish hatchery near Questa. But Anderson's hard luck continued. "The general contractor on the project went bankrupt," the Web site says. "This cost Andy his profit from the job and forced him to liquidate his company to pay off all of his debts." By this time, Anderson was doing some gigs and even some recording with local musicians. But he returned to Mississippi by the end of the '80s, reportedly so he could work with hard-core Southern rockers. The two anthologies are from his post-New Mexico period. While they aren't as much fun as the '50s and '60s recordings on The Early Years, there are some great blues-drenched boogie stompers here. These include "Wichita Watchita Omaha Cowboy," "Red Dog Cider," "Sweet Imogene," and "Damned Old Ford." Then there's "Fuzzy Stuff," which starts out "I went on down to the fabric store." Anderson's voice has gotten rougher and gruffer with age, and it suits these songs well. Never has a trip to the fabric store sounded more fun or nastier. Unfortunately, too many slow ballads on these albums are sappy. Andy's more convincing as a tough old rocker than an old softie.

    • February 19, 2009 12:17 PM CST
    • Sounds like you're probably missing an audio player-type plugin for your browser (something like QuickTime or RealPlayer). But all that will do is open the file and start it playing in a new window for you. If you're trying to download the file, then you'll need to right-click on the "DOWNLOAD" link, which should give you a menu for you to select a way of saving the file to your computer. At least that's the way it is on a Mac! ;) Leister Crow said:

      well I was trying to have them downloaded in that manner however the browser kept coming up saying "Internet Explorer can't read page". I'm still living in an analogue age and this computer stuff is still kinda foreign to me, I'll give it another go hopefully it works. Thanks for your help.

    • February 19, 2009 2:51 AM CST
    • If you find you struggle with a song try to change the key you play it in... And try eating some extra strong mints... They open up yah lungs fer extra power...

    • February 18, 2009 11:20 AM CST
    • drink rotgut whiskey. chainsmoke.

      ad nauseum.

    • February 18, 2009 5:40 AM CST
    • Some punk singer dude told me to pull your set of songs thru when you rehearse - either with your band or alone - just in one go, like you would do at a show live. Take time, go wild, jump around, mess up, go crazy, yell! Put in more calm tones, high, low, grunts, everything you can think off. Breath the max outta your lungs.
      If you are so inclined you can record that stuff on a tape or something, to hear how you sound.

      It's about seeing how your voice reacts in all the circumstances you put yourseld thru. You'll see what's possible and where you can go and where you wanna push yerself for where you wanna go.

      I hope this is somewhat helpfull!

      IDON

    • February 16, 2009 7:14 PM CST
    • Well, at the moment I'm a pretty terrible singer, which I know in the world of trash is far from the end of the world.

      However, as we are going into the studio soonish, I'd like to improve somewhat.

      Any useful tips out there? Any exercises? All I do atm is sing pretty much all day. Makes me look crazy as shit.

      Thanks in advance

    • February 17, 2009 6:25 PM CST
    • Gun Club - Miami
      I lived in Fredericton New Brunwsick, with my girlfriend ( now wife ) while she attended school. I listened to that record every day.... and if Fredericton ain't all but a desert island, I don't know what is.
      ~T

    • February 17, 2009 10:15 AM CST
    • The Electronic Hole album - raw, droning, hypnotizing and chock-full of fuzz - but housed in a an Electric Ladyland cover (you know which one).

    • February 16, 2009 6:08 PM CST
    • "living on an island" by status quo(but don't ask me how it got there,ok!!!)

      then with all the empty bottles i've emptied,i'd be writing a thousand messages for each and lobbing them back in the sea..
      the quo song will drive me to a permanent alcoholic daze,and drive me to drink and write even faster than ever!

      what would happen first?
      would i die of alcoholic poisoning,exhaustion,or be saved?
      only smarties have the answer.

    • February 15, 2009 9:51 PM CST
    • i said the witch the first time but maybe it would be concrete sea by terry jacks. i'd then kill myself after hearing too many times

    • February 15, 2009 11:46 AM CST
    • <<Cream Puff War>> Dang straight. The Dead's first album was downright garagey! But Christ, I'm way too fickle to think of one desert isle record. Maybe the first Nuggets box set? Sam the Sham's SECOND ALBUM, the one with "Ju Ju Hand" and "The Gypsy" ? Las Vegas Grind Vol. 1? STAY SICK by The Cramps? THE CRAMPS GRACE THE NM CAPITOL NEWSROOM

    • February 16, 2009 5:21 PM CST
    • THE CAVALIERS from France.
      They're THE best, and really handsome, and really mad, and mean and really cute!!

    • February 16, 2009 7:44 AM CST
    • Friends, squires and noblemen... lend me yer cult-ivated ears. I am putting together a cool little Canadian zine focusing on '60s teen-beat, group sounds and degenerate adolescent rock'n'roll from past decades! I am currently looking for contributions and submissions for articles, interviews, record raves, useless babble, recent reviews of the re-ish scene, etc. Anything that's remotely interesting and befitting of our little digs! It will be distributed throughout Central Canada (Quebec/Ontario), and I would really love to feature writing from the many wise and talented garage gurus of the GaragePunk forums. We're not snobs to fuzz, screams and tambourines either... pop-psych, UK Invasion, early combo sounds, surf music, folk-rock and other related content is more than welcomed in our printed yellow payges! We're especially in need of submissions for more reviews right now. If you run a reissue label or would like to send in promos of your discs, comps, whatever... Please drop me a p.m. or email at oliverbesner@sympatico.ca if there's any interest! Also taking space for adverts now! Again: oliverbesner@sympatico.ca and I hope you cats will write in!

      Rave on! TEENBEAT TAKEOVER

    • February 16, 2009 7:44 AM CST
    • Friends, squires and noblemen... lend me yer cult-ivated ears. I am putting together a cool little Canadian zine focusing on '60s teen-beat, group sounds and degenerate adolescent rock'n'roll from past decades! I am currently looking for contributions and submissions for articles, interviews, record raves, useless babble, recent reviews of the re-ish scene, etc. Anything that's remotely interesting and befitting of our little digs! It will be distributed throughout Central Canada (Quebec/Ontario), and I would really love to feature writing from the many wise and talented garage gurus of the GaragePunk forums. We're not snobs to fuzz, screams and tambourines either... pop-psych, UK Invasion, early combo sounds, surf music, folk-rock and other related content is more than welcomed in our printed yellow payges! We're especially in need of submissions for more reviews right now. If you run a reissue label or would like to send in promos of your discs, comps, whatever... Please drop me a p.m. or email at oliverbesner@sympatico.ca if there's any interest! Also taking space for adverts now! Again: oliverbesner@sympatico.ca and I hope you cats will write in!

      Rave on! TEENBEAT TAKEOVER

    • February 15, 2009 4:16 PM CST
    • Sadly, Estelle of the Ronettes passed away few days ago. She was sister to Veronica (Ronnie Spector).

    • February 14, 2009 2:41 PM CST
    • I agree that it would be interesting to know where he's buried... unless he's being cremated, which is a possibility.

    • February 13, 2009 1:27 PM CST
    • The cramps official website states that a donation to animal society www.bestfriends.org should be left instead of flowers, so I made a donation there.

    • February 13, 2009 1:17 PM CST
    • Thank you for your response. The ceremony was yesterday. I hadn't plan on attending the actual ceremony only to leave flowers afterwards, which I would still like to do.

    • February 13, 2009 3:03 AM CST
    • a press release on their official website states that his funeral service will only be attended by his closest family, and wish it to be of the utmost privacy.
      with all due respect, i think you should leave it at that.

    • February 12, 2009 4:07 PM CST
    • Does anyone know where Lux Interior's final resting place will be? A friend of mine says his burial is today and seems to think it's in Los Angeles/So Cal area somewhere but doesn't have the dets. If anyone has any info. I would very much appreciate it. Thanks! -I.D.

    • February 13, 2009 12:39 PM CST
    • Oh yea enjoy that vid too of Firewater which is not on the Competition Coupe LP!

    • February 13, 2009 12:37 PM CST
    • ' />

      THE ASTRONAUTS, 1964 LP reissue Title: Competition Coupe Sundazed Bear with me all; this is my first attempt at a record review.... So I bought this sucker because my mom when to college in Boulder and would always talk about the Astronauts along with every other old fogy I met from Colorado. I'll keep it short and simple... This record was kind of 50/50 for me. All the vocal tracks pretty much reminded me of early beach boys, which I played out when I was about 6. So if thats your thing you'll love it because all the instrumental songs are pretty freakin solid! Only wish there were more instroson the LP. It make me want to get more of thier stuff just for the instros. Check out the website to explore the tunage: http://www.sundazed.com/product_info.php?products_id=961 Track Listings: 1. Little Ford Ragtop 2. Competition Coupe 3. The Hearse 4. ’55 Bird 5. Devil Driver’s Theme 6. Happy Ho-Daddy 7. Our Car Club 8. Devil Driver 9. Chevy Scarfer 10. 4:56 Stingray 11. El Aguila (The Eagle) 12. 650 Scrambler -Sumiji

    • February 10, 2009 11:26 PM CST
    • Now that my family is settled in, and I know that we will not have any more children... I have decided to start MAGPIE again. Bring it out of the hole, though, I still have a lot of The Lobsters' 45's left over. I was wondering if anyone wanted to help me get rid of them. Heh? Come on, it's a great idea. If ya want just one, or two, or three... you can purchase them off of our myspace. www.myspace.com/magpierecords1 Thanks!

    • February 10, 2009 6:24 AM CST
    • Unique (and rockin');
      I wanna be...
      Ivan