Monthly Archives for July 2009
Headneck Bonanza: Doug Sahm live in 1972 with Leon Russell and the Dead
Sir Doug and Jerry Garcia, onstage in Austin. Photo: Steve Hopson
Our celebration of recently departed hippie-country music pioneer John “Marmaduke” Dawson of the New Riders of the Purple Sage’s legacy started a conversation about the history of “headneck” music: tunes beloved in equal measure to cowboys, hippies, bikers and all varieties of stoner hicks, country heads and longhaired rednecks.
Beyond the New Riders and the Dead, the consensus seems to be that Commander Cody, Asleep at the Wheel and Doug Sahm (in his many incarnations, from dusty Texas boogie, accordion-flecked Tex-Mex and sun-dappled Mill Valley country) represent some of the pinnacles of this rowdy sound. After a bit of digging around in the Google crates, we found one of the holy grails of headneck history over at The Adios Lounge: a bootleg recording of an impromptu 1972 Doug Sahm, Leon Russell, Jerry Garcia and Friends show at the Armadillo World Headquarters in Austin, Texas.
On Thanksgiving weekend in 1972 the Dead were in Austin, on tour of course, and they joined Sir Doug and country-time piano genius Leon Russell — you know his rollicking keys from session work with The Byrds, The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan, his oft-covered song “Superstar”; and you really should seek out the riches of his 1971 solo album, Leon Russell and the Shelter People, as the psych-out cover art is just the beginning — on stage for a couple hours of once-in-a-lifetime country grooves.

Genuine Texas groover Sahm with spliff and brew
At our request, Lance — the gracious proprietor of The Adios Lounge — has re-upped the whole two-and-a-half hour jam session full of songs from Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson, Robert Johnson, Bob Dylan and Hank Williams, among many others. It’s a soundboard recording (A-/A for the tapers out there) full of Garcia’s lush pedal steel, Phil Lesh’s noodly bass, and fiddle duties handled by Marty Mary Egan and Thirteenth Floor Elevator (!?) Benny Thurman. Vocals are traded between Sahm, Garcia, Russell and what sounds like a room full of rowdy Texan headnecks having the time of their lives. “Holy shit” is right.
This is music for hot afternoons, sitting shirtless in the sun, chasing shots of green dragon with econo-brews and popping off at the empties with your “blaster of choice.” Many thanks to Lance for the re-post. Click here to go download yourself a copy.
Now who’s got the hook up on some vintage Commander Cody bootlegs? And “muchas Garcias” once again to longtime Arthur compadre Michael Simmons for initiating my search for this music.
Also: BONUS HEADNECK JAM after the jump …
Continue readingTuesday's Sarah Palin Poetry Jam
We don’t post all that many videos from “old-folks bedtime-lullaby program” The Tonight Show, but we’ll make an exception this time for beef-necked beatnik Captain Kirk reading Alaskan poetry. (via Wonkette)
UPDATE: DANG! YouTube video appears to have been removed. Click here to watch Shatner’s reading of Palin. Apologies for the pre-roll car advertisement, and thanks to Bill S. for the update.
Grant Morrison on practicing magic, in 50 words or less
Lot #171: Bob Dylan "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" Handwritten Working Lyrics
Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint — Marcel Duchamp

July 28– MARCEL DUCHAMP
French dadaist and surrealist, cultural iconoclast.

Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase.
JULY 28, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
*Brussels, Belgium: Kermesse. A 600-year-old spectacular parade featuring elaborate floats and enormous balloon creatures and characters.
*Virgin Islands: Hurricane Supplication Day.
ALSO ON JULY 28 IN HISTORY…
1794 — French Reign of Terror plotter Robespierre goes to the guillotine himself.
1804 — German Christian socialist Ludwig Feuerbach born, Landshut, Bavaria.
1887 — Dada post-artist Marcel Duchamp born, Blaineville, France.
1922 — Anarcho-Marxist theorist Jules Guesde dies, Saint Mandé, France.
1945 — B–52 bomber flies into Empire State Building in a fog.
2006 — American anarchist illustrator Richard Mock dies, Brooklyn, New York
Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective
Monday evening gentle music: Hush Arbors
[audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/sand.mp3%5D
Download: “Sand” – Hush Arbors
From the Hush Arbors album, released last October through Ecstatic Peace Records + Tapes of Massachusetts. Go there, get it cheep!
Great news: Playing in the dirt increases serotonin levels in your brain!

The results so far suggest that simply inhaling M. vaccae—you get a dose just by taking a walk in the wild or rooting around in the garden—could help elicit a jolly state of mind.
You now have a new reason to make mud pies — and lick the spoon if you feel like it! A recent study has revealed that ingesting soil bacteria (or Mycobacterium vaccae) not only makes your immune system more capable of handling allergens like bee pollen and cat dander, but also increases the release of serotonin into your brain. This means that playing in the dirt induces a natural happiness high that could help to combat depression, bodily pains and other common ailments. So don’t give in to washing your hands multiple times an hour in fear of catching the next swine flu — go stick them in a pile of dirt instead!
Read more about this exciting news in the article “Is Dirt the new Prozac?” from Discover Magazine.
The Diggers Papers No. 10: "Approximately Public Explanation/FUCKIT"/"The Diggers Gladly Accept"
Arthur is proud to present scans of essential documents produced by and about the San Francisco Diggers, who were in many ways the epicentral actors in the Haight-Ashbury during the epic, wildly imaginative period from late ’66 through ’67. The Diggers’ ideas and activities are essential counter-cultural history, sure, but they are also especially relevant to the current era, for reasons that should be obvious to the gentle Arthur reader.
Most of the documents that we are presenting are broadsides originally published on a Gestetner machine owned and operated in the Haight by the novelist Chester Anderson and his protege/sidekick Claude Hayward, who used the name “Communication Company,” or more commonly, “Com/Co.” According to Claude, these broadsides were then “handed out on the street, page by page, super hot media, because the reader trusted the source, which was another freaky looking hippie who had handed it to him/her.”
The two scans below are from Chester’s collection—that’s his handwriting on the top of the first page. The authors are unknown, the pub dates are unknown: late January 1967 is our best guess.
Click on the images below to see them at full size…
Monday music: new Yo La Tengo

[audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/Yo-La-Tengo-Here-To-Fall.mp3%5D
Download: Here To Fall – Yo La Tengo (mp3)
From Yo La Tengo’s forthcoming album Popular Songs, here’s a classy slab of orchestral pop that somehow merges Loren Connors deepstar guitar tingle with Curtis Mayfield keys-and-strings and typical YLT laidback vocal cool. Spacious, yet intimate! More info from Yo La Tengo’s record label, Matador Records of New York City.



