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Sunday, March 25, 2012

The Ballad Of Roger Miller



Homer & Jethro - The Ballad Of Roger Miller (2:33)

You know you've really made it when Homer & Jethro point their satirical daggers at you.

Weeki Wachee

Marlin and the Mermaids - At Weeki Wachee 

More!

Roger on Tour

My late friend Kurt Neiburg, former proprietor of Sound Trax Records in Clemson, SC, once told me about seeing Roger Miller live at an outdoor show on Bowman Field there when he he was a teen-ager*. As he described it, Roger was pretty drunk, and played his whole set while sitting precariously balanced on a stool. Thanks to Billboard's Music on Campus special issue (3/19/66; apparently not included in Google Books' Billboard archives) I can now confirm that Kurt attended this show on Monday, March 28, 1966. He would have been 13 at the time (Kurt, not Roger). It seems odd that they would have held an outdoor event like this on a Monday, but that's what he told me, and I'm afraid that follow-up questions aren't an option. I did check to see if I could find any corroborative evidence, but neither the local nor the college paper there are archived online, and I don't feel like traveling 80 miles and back again to check the microfilm for you folks. Sorry.

*Kurt also saw the Electric Prunes at the Anderson (SC) Civic Center, but I have no corroborative evidence to share at this time.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Live From The Admiral

DJ. Filth and Greg Cartwright


Tonight from 10 PM - until:  DJs Greg Cartwright & Dr. Filth spin live on WFMU's Rock 'n' Soul Ichiban.

All the way from Asheville, NC!!

The Asheville Two, live every Saturday night.  Set your Radioshift app.

Suspense


Johnny Brown and the Joy Boys - Suspense

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Roger Miller on the Grand Ole Opry, Part One



     Today's selection comes from the record library of WCON in Cornelia, GA, where it was presumably played once, filed away, and forgotten until a few years ago, when I bought it in a stack of 50 or so Opry episodes at the J&J Flea Market in Athens.
     While neither the record nor the track listing sheet are dated, in his introduction, Bill Monroe says that Roger will have a TV show in the Fall, which dates this to somewhere between January and September 1966. I've never found a lot of information about this syndicated version of the Opry, so I welcome any further data from you folks out there in Radioland.
    Next week, we'll be presenting his segment from a return engagement three weeks later. Stay tuned!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Higher We Get The More Informal We Are

Do Wacka Do!
Roger Miller hamming it up on TV in 1966.
Complete with genius Thumbs Carlisle sportin' a nifty Batman shirt!!!

(Excuse the picture-less first 10 seconds or so)

Editor's note: see the entire show here!

Batwoman Lucha Libre!!

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Tassel Twirler Tuesday!







Who,_Me?

Monday, March 19, 2012

Mr. Fine Wine Live



Our own Mr. Fine Wine has been entertaining patrons every Wednesday night at Botanica Bar in NYC for 16 years!!!  We will be celebrating this Wednesday night with a cavalcade of guest soul spinners.  Stop by in person to raise a glass or listen online on the Ichiban webstream.  Action starts at 10 PM EST and goes all night long.   Follow us on Twitter for an up to the minute account of the DJ schedule.  

Ikettes - Camel Walk

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Happy Birthday, Country Charley Pride!

Almost forgot to observe the 74th birthday of veteran Negro League baseball player and Member of the Grand Ole Opry Charley Frank Pride, born this day in 1938 in Sledge, Mississippi.  His late '70s- early '80s "crossover" material didn't do much for me, but if I can forgive Charlie Rich and Dolly for their excesses of the period, I can certainly overlook Charley's. Here's to another 74 years!




Roger Miller - "Husbands and Wives"

So... once more, I got scooped by our Beloved Ringleader, who already posted the song in question while I was busy digitizing some upcoming surprises for you that haven't been heard by the public in 46 years (stay tuned for further details!), but I've still got more to offer on this particular subject: to wit, the document below.


I like this one a lot, but maybe not as much as Debbie. I do recall a conversation with Mr. William Orten Carlton in which he cited this as his favorite Miller lyric. In matters of a musical, Ort is rarely wrong (or succinct!)

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