GO Mechanism Number Twenty Six

This is is the program notes for the corresponding GO Mechanism Number Twenty Six as it premiers on the Luxuria Music web-O-net as a Saturday Night Special on January 18 (or, as a podcast the next day). The GO Mechanism is an audio Odyssey that is hosted by Phast Phreddie. It is scientifically engineered and programed in the secret laboratory of Boogaloo Omnibus Productions incorporating ultra-phonic techniques not available to other broadcast entities. The G stands for GROOVE, and there will be plenty of GROOVE in each GO Mechanism. The O stands for O’ROONY, an intricate and complex attitude that is incomprehensible to those who possess standard-issue precepts. Listen and you will hear.

Half way through the program, there is a segment called The Science Corner in which a musical subject is explored and illustrated with three songs. For this Science Corner we have featured three songs written or co-written by George Clinton but performed by other artists.

The Parliaments

George Clinton is known internationally as a pioneering funkateer. His acts, Parliament, Funkadelic, solo recordings, and other assorted side projects, have all been devised to move funk music forward. In the late fifties, George Clinton formed a doo wop group in Plainfield, New Jersey and called it The Parliaments. They cut a few records that went largely unnoticed. At some point, in the mid sixties, Clinton was hired to write songs for Motown. The arrangement didn’t work out, but while in Detroit, he connected with other fledgling Motor City record companies, such as Golden World (who issued a Parliaments single), Ric Tic and Solid Hit. Some of these seemed to share ownerships. Revilot Records signed The Parliaments and were rewarded with a hit called “(I Wanna) Testify.” Clinton wrote and/or produced several records by other artists on these labels and we have a few of them here in The Science Corner.

The first song is “Hey Mama, What’cha Got Good for Daddy” by The Flaming Embers, a local Detroit rock group that first recorded for the legendary Fortune Records Company. This was the first of six singles they issued on Ric-Tic Records in 1967 and 1968. The following year the group signed to Hot Wax Records, a company owned by songwriters Brian Holland, Eddie Holland and Lamont Dozier after they left the Motown fold. In 1970, the group would score a Top Thirty pop hit with “Westbound #9.”

Pat Lewis started her career as a member of Detroit girl group The Adorables that recorded for Golden World. When she went solo, her first five singles featured a song written or co-written by George Clinton. We picked “Look At What I Almost Missed” from 1966. By 1967, she was a back-up session singer at Motown, then worked on the road with Aretha Franklin before becoming a member of Hot, Buttered & Soul, a vocal group that worked with Isaac Hayes. In the eighties, George Clinton enlisted her for several projects that he worked on, including his solo records and an album by The Red Hot Chili Peppers. In 1968, The Parliaments released their own version of “Look What I Almost Missed.”

The last song we have is highly significant in the George Clinton sphere of influence. It’s called “Whatever Makes My Baby Feel Good” by Rose Williams and it marks Clinton’s first use of the word Funkadelic—the record was issued on Funkedelic Records (it’s only release) and shows the backing band as George Clinton and the Funkedelics (note the spelling!). This was released in 1968, when Clinton was in a legal battle over the Parliaments name and the Funkadelic concept was just forming. During the seventies, Rose Williams would join Pat Lewis in Isaac Hayes’ backing band.

During this period, Clinton was also recording his own group—still called The Parliaments—and those records are really good examples of non-Motown Detroit soul music. In 1969, Clinton formed Funkadelic, a sort of separate entity whose music was different from Parliament. Both groups would tour together and become very popular during the seventies.

Liquid Liquid was a product of the art/punk scene of lower Manhattan during the early eighties. Here at The GO Mechanism we enjoy presenting works of folks banging on shit and screaming. The screaming part on this is a bit subtle, but the banging-on-shit is perfect!

Hank Jacobs was a Los Angeles keyboard player who cut some cool records for Sue Records and the Call Me label. He also did some arrangements for artists for Money Records (“Doin’ the Thing” by The Question Marks is a fave.). He cut an album for Sue called So Far Away and that’s where we found his fantastic rendition of “Summertime.” Obviously a talented individual, it’s a shame that he didn’t record more.

Los Sirex was a rock band from Spain, based in Barcelona. Here we have the band’s take on “Train Kept A’Rollin’,” a song first recorded by the R&B bandleader Tiny Bradshaw. In 1956, the song was reworked as a rockabilly raver by the Johnny Burnette Trio. That version became the template for the rendition by The Yardbirds in 1965. Los Sirex version, called “El Tren de la Costa,” also comes to us from 1965, and it is possible that they never heard the one by The Yardbirds or they surely would have copped the boss riff that Jeff Beck came up with—just as every garage rock band has done ever since. Still, Los Sirex delivers an exciting and unique rendition of Tiny Bradshaw’s fabulous tune.

Jon Hendricks came to prominence in the late fifties with his jazz vocal group, Lambert, Hendricks and Ross. He would write lyrics to famous jazz compositions, including the solos, and the group would sing them. In GO Mechanism Number Twenty Two, he was heard singing the Thelonious Monk composition “In Walked Bud.” “No More,” his song selected for our program today, was only released as a single on Verve in England in 1968. Hendricks must have had a fond attachment to the song, because he re-recorded it for albums in 1975 and 1982.

Freek’s Garage

Freek’s Garage is a band made up of musical mechanics who perform mostly organ-driven instrumental music: a sort of cross between Booker T & the M.G.’s and The Meters. They hail from the Kingston/Woodstock area in the Hudson Valley of New York State and they’ll play at any setting they’re allowed to set up at. We’ve seen them at a beer garden in Kingston, a restaurant up in the Catskills and a tavern in Bearsville. The group has also performed at concert venues in Woodstock and at car shows. Recently, Freek’s Garage recorded a few tracks and “Meter Made” is a fair representation of what this band can do.

If you only know about Andy Griffith from watching The Andy Griffith Show, then his appearance as Lonesome Rhodes in the movie A Face in the Crowd will be a revelation. On the TV show he is a warm, good-hearted country sheriff who is kind and thoughtful. In the movie, Griffith plays a clever country bumpkin who becomes mean-spirited and obsessed with power once his schtick becomes popular. “Mama Guitar” is a song from the film—probably re-recorded for single release.

The Street Cleaners were a one-off project by songwriters/producers P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri. Around the same time (1964) they were enjoying a little success as The Fantastic Baggies with a song called “Tell ‘Em I’m Surfin.” The GO Mechanism presents “Garbage City” by The Street Cleaners, the flip-side and remixed instrumental version of “That’s Cool, That’s Trash.” The latter is used as the opening theme song for one of our favorite Luxuria Music programs, No Condition Is Permanent. Hosted by Count Reeshard and his dog Le-Roy, the show is an eclectic mix of rock and rhythm and is produced in an original manner. The show first airs weekly immediately after the Saturday Night Special (which presents The GO Mechanism, when there is one) and it is highly recommended by The GO Mechanism producers.

The GO Mechanism closing theme has always been “Freddie’s Dead” by Curtis Mayfield—a hit song from the movie Super Fly. The GO Mechanism producers recently uncovered an answer song called “Freddie’s Alive and Well” by an obscure funk group called Spirit of Atlanta. So, because The GO Mechanism producers are wisecrackers, they put it in the show preceding the closing theme.

The Dave Clark Five often get lumped in with the so-called British Invasion rock groups of the mid-sixties. Indeed, they are British and their popularity peeked during that period, but to think of them as just another band would be doing a disservice to yourself for not paying attention. The DC5 made a lot of fantastic, exciting records and we close this GO Mechanism with one of them, “I Need Love.” This song was issued as a flip-side to “Nineteen Days” in European and Asian territories, but never in the U.S., where it only appeared on the I Like It Like That album. The song has the same amazing, pounding rhythm that the best DC5 records are known for, thus The GO Mechanism producers consider it one of the Greatest Records Of All Time and it closes the show. (For extra credit, check out this fantastic video of the song!!)

The artist who provided the graphic for our poster is Sunshine Dunham. The GO Mechanism producers first met her in the late eighties when she was employed at the Rhino Records Store in Westwood, CA. They have stayed in touch ever since. During the nineties she ran Fiasco Records that issued records by Congo Norvell, Kendra Smith, The Karl Hendricks Trio and several others. Since then, she’s gotten into other businesses, but she’s always had a toe in the art scene. Her work is unique and exquisite. This particular painting is titled Oil and Cold Wax #8. Dig her website for more information and to view—and perhaps purchase—her work.

The GO Mechanism is produced whenever we feel like it and it incorporates exclusive, copyrighted Vitaphonic, Ultra-sonic and Quasi-Tonal methods in order to provide a higher standard of standardness. Legacy GO Mechanisms may be found on the Mixclouds as well as here in the Boogaloo Bag.

The GO Mechanism originates on the Luxuria Music interweb streaming hustle as a Saturday Night Special. We thank the Luxuria Music powers-that-be for giving us the opportunity to present this program over their deluxe electronic audio delivery system for your edification. Please support Luxuria Music any way you can. We suggest you get as much money as you can—preferably unmarked tens and twenties—load it all into a shoe box and send it to Luxuria Music. Or just go to the Luxuria Music web site and buy something from the store.

Here is a complete list of all the songs played on GO Mechanism Number Twenty Six:

  • Earl Bostic—Lester Leaps In (King)
  • Charles Mingus—Gunslinging Bird (from LP Mingus Dynasty; Columbia)
  • Gentleman June Gardner—Mustard Greens (from LP Bustin’ Out; EmArCy)
  • Chuck Berry—Butterscotch (from LP Chuck Berry In London; Chess)
  • Junior Byles—Fade Away (from soundtrack to Rockers; Island)
  • Liquid Liquid—Bellhead (99)
  • Riccardo Chailly: Asko Ensemble—Déserts – 1st Interpolation Of Organized Sound (from album Varèse: Complete Works; London)
  • Patti Smith—Oath (February 10, 1971)
  • Hank Jacobs—Summertime (from EP So Far Away; Sue; UK)
  • Lee Fields—Steam Train (from album Let’s Get a Groove On; Desco)
  • Tito Puente—Take the “A” Train (from album The Complete RCA Recordings Volume 1; RCA)
  • Lord Buckley—The Train (edit) (from LP A Most Immaculately Hip Aristocrat; Straight)
  • Los Sirex—El Tren de la Costa (Vergara; Spain)
  • Jimmy Nicol and the Subdubs—Night Train (Mar-Mar)
  • Manfred Mann—Last Train to Clarksville (from album The Ascent of Mann; Fontana; UK)
  • Bo Diddley—Down Home Special (Checker)
  • Big Jay McNeely—Ice Water (from LP Big J in 3-D; King)
  • The Lollipops—Busy Signal (RCA Victor)
  • The Bar-Kays—A Hard Day’s Night (Volt)
  • Climaco Sarmiento y su Orquesta—La Cigarra (from album Cumbias y Gaitas Famosas; Discos Fuentes; Colombia)
  • Ernie K-Doe—A Certain Girl (Minit)
  • Sam & Dave—I Thank You (Stax)
  • Pee Wee Crayton—Do Onto Others (Imperial)
  • The Stoned Soul Picnic—Crosstown Traffic (Stoned Soul Picnic; UK)
  • The Zodiacs—Caravan (from EP The Primitive Instrumental Sounds of The Zodiacs; Norton)
  • Pierre Boulez: Ensemble InterContemporain—Varèse: Intégrales (from album Varèse: Arcana, Amériques, Ionisation, Etc.; Columbia Masterworks)
  • Jon Hendricks—No More (Verve; UK)
  • The Flaming Embers—Hey Mama (What You Got Good for Daddy) (Ric Tic)
  • Funkadelic—Maggot Brain (excerpt) (from LP Maggot Brain; Westbound)
  • Pat Lewis–Look at What I Almost Missed (Solid Hit)
  • Rose Williams, George Clinton and the Funkedelics–Whatever Makes My Baby Feel Good (Funkedelic)
  • Freek’s Garage—Meter Maid (unreleased)
  • Freedom Sounds featuring Wayne Henderson—Respect (from LP People Get Ready; Atlantic)
  • Wes Dakus—Hobo (Capitol; Canada)
  • Lawrence Beauregard—Density: 21.5 (from album Varèse: Arcana, Amériques, Ionisation, Etc.; Columbia Masterworks)
  • Nancy Wickwire—I Taste a Liquor Never Brewed (from LP The Poems of Emily Dickinson; Spoken Arts)
  • Iron Butterfly—In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida (edit) (from LP In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida; Atco)
  • The Drifters—If You Don’t Come Back (Atlantic)
  • Bobby Land with Ralph Sayho & His Calypso Singers—Knock the Bongos (Tico)
  • The Destroyers—Compass (Cotillion)
  • Andy Grifith—Mama Guitar (Capitol)
  • Ozz & His Sperlings—Somebody to Love (M.I.O.B.)
  • The Street Cleaners—Garbage City (Amy)
  • Marlowe Morris—Tropical Madness (Epic)
  • Lalo Schifrin—End Game (Paramount)
  • Les DeMerle—I Am the Walrus (United Artists)
  • Spirit of Atlanta—Freddie’s Alive and Well (Buddah)
  • Curtis Mayfield—Freddie’s Dead (Boogaloo edit, closing theme) (Curtom)
  • Dave Clark Five—I Need Love (Odeon; Japan)

This edition of The Go Mechanism will be available as a podcast on the Luxuria Music website after its initial air-date of January 18, 2025 as a Saturday Night Special. After a few weeks it will be posted on the Mixclouds and then it will magically appear below…

Direct link to the Luxuria Music podcast is here!!! GO 26

Now also on the Mixclouds:

Lee Fields kicks off the New Year!!

New Year’s Eve is always a gas; big party night. I mean big PAR-TAY night! Right? Last year, Dj Pete Pop and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus turned it out at Bar 190 in Newburgh. Although the owners of the joint admitted to Pete Pop that it was the absolute best New Year’s Eve event that they ever witnessed, for some reason the dynamic DJ duo were not asked back!

That’s okay, though, because Pop and Phast were enlisted to DJ a gig at the Bearsville Theater in Woodstock. That’s right, they were the opening act for the fantabulous Lee Fields!!!

Lee Fields has got to be one of the last great classic R&B singers still standing. He’s been around the block several times, having started his recording career in 1969 when he was only 18 or 19 with the single “Bewildered” an old swing era ballad that was made popular by Billy Eckstine and, subsequently, James Brown; (the flip “Tell Her I Love Her” is a very cool funk number). Fields has been working in and out of music ever since. Before the nineties, he had several singles but only one album to his name. Thirty years ago he hooked up with a rejuvenated Ace Records—the company from Jackson, Mississippi that issued boss records by Huey “Piano” Smith and Frankie Lee Sims in the fifties. Mr. Fields reached his full potential soon after that, when he began recording for Desco Records—the Brooklyn label that eventually splintered into Truth & Soul Records and Daptone Records. Since he began this phase of his career, he has been making great soul and funk records for Truth and Soul, Daptone as well as Big Crown Records.

On New Year’s Eve at the Bearsville Theater, Lee Fields was on fire! He is totally a classic soul singer. His ballad singing will melt you. His uptempo R&B numbers will make you jump and shout. Plus, his band was hot and included a couple of our friends, saxophonist Freddy DeBo and bass player Benny Trokan. The show was fantastic. At midnight a bunch of balloons dropped from the stage. It was a wonderful way to spend New Year’s Eve.

For their part, Pete Pop and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus played a mixture of mostly soul and funk records, along with a bit a reggae and latin boogaloo things, trading mini three-song sets. Here’s a list of all the records played by The Phast One:

None of these records are for sale!

Swingin’ at Untouchable!

Newburgh, New York has a brand new old night club—Untouchable Bar and Restaurant. “Old” because the place has been there for a long time—in fact, it has a bit of a history. “New” because it has been taken over by the folks who own Quinn’s in Beacon. This means that most likely DJ Pete Pop will be playing his records there regularly. That also means there’s a good possibility that Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus will be doing likewise fairly often.

This new Untouchable Lounge—as we like to call it—opened in October. It has a cozy bar in the front and in back is a small concert hall—about as big as The Mercury Lounge, if you know your Big City rock clubs—complete with a stage and sound system. DJ Pete Pop already spun there once—on November 23. On December 5 the local rock band Decent Colors became the first act to appear on the stage. Other acts were scheduled, including one of our favorite surf bands, The Time Surfers, but they all got cancelled and the club had to close for a while as it dealt with red tape before it could reopen. That was all cleared up by Friday December 27, when DJ Pete Pop and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus worked their magic in the front room.

Pete and Phast kept the attendees boppin’ all night, with their eclectic mix of funk, soul, mambo, boogaloo and reggae. The two traded twenty-minute sets until it was time to close, around midnight.

Untouchable is bound to be a popular addition to the ever-growing scene on Liberty Street in Newburgh, where several new bars, boutiques and restaurants have been popping up lately. It seems the locals are determined to make Newburgh as groovy as Beacon or Kingston. Let’s wish them luck in that regard.

Here’s a list of all the songs played by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus at the Untouchable Lounge party:

None of these records are for sale!

The Sham and the Shimmy!

The Shim Sham Shimmy at the Salt Box in Kingston is the newest addition to the Pete Pop DJ hustle. It is supposed to take place on the first Saturday of the month—but for two months it has been on the second, due to conflicting DJ schedules. Mr. Pop is a very busy man. In December it was the Benny Trokan show at Tubby’s. So for this month the event was held on the 14th, the day after Do The 45 in Beacon—another wild weekend!

Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus and DJ Pete Pop swing at the Shim Sham Shimmy!

For the Shimmy, Pete Pop and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus bring out their rockin’ stuff: early R&B, rockabilly, rock’n’roll, doo wop, rockin’ blues and all sorts of reet music. They trade off playing sets of three records the whole time. Sometimes the three records played are related in some way. Often they are not. However, the music was boisterous and folks were jumping all night long. Somehow the old building didn’t crumble to the ground!

Pete and Phast were pleased that several of their friends came by to swing; plus there were plenty of other locals who ventured up the stairs to the famous Salt Box Rumpus Room and they all joined in on the fun and excitement, which went into the wee hours of the next morning.

Here is a list of records played by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus at the December Shim Sham Shimmy:

None of these records are for sale.

Benny Trokan Band and The Ar-Kaics Rock!

The Benny Trokan Band rocks Tubby’s!

A Shim Sham Shimmy was scheduled for Saturday December 7—the first Saturday of the month. However, host Pete Pop got the call from our pal Benny Trokan: his band was to play that night at Tubby’s in Kingston, can he and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus be DJs for the event? What to do! Pete and Phast moved The Shim Sham Shimmy from the first Saturday to the second Saturday in November—now they need to move it in December!

So it was moved. We’ll see you at The Shim Sham Shimmy on December 14—the day after Do The 45 in Beacon, again!

The Ar-Kaics rockin’ at Tubby’s!

Anyway, not only did Benny Trokan’s great band play, but so did The Ar-Kaics, a cool band from somewhere down in Virginia. Both bands have made some excellent records for Wick Records, a subsidiary of our favorite record company, Daptone. Also, between the bands there was an appearance by the writer Lucy (nee Luc) Sante who read from her new book Six Sermons for Bob Dylan. Another added bonus to this show was that our buddy Mikey Post, a significant DJ himself, plays drums in Benny’s band.

The whole event went fantastically well. What even made it better was the presence of our friend Bruce Bennett. He was the guitarist for The A-Bones and a side-kick to The Hound when he had his radio show. We haven’t seen Bruce in a mighty long time and we were very happy to see his smiling face. He now lives somewhere up in the Hudson Valley and dropped by the joint to dig the heavy rock scene at Tubby’s.

Miss Nancy, a guy with tattoos on his face, Bruce Bennett and Phast Phreddie swing at Tubby’s!
DJ Pete Pop swings at Tubby’s rock show!

Due to the type of music of this big rock show, DJs Pete Pop and Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus mostly played some super rockin’ stuff—spiced with a few exotic beats. The took turns playing three-song sets. All the records played by The Phast One are listed here:

None of these records are for sale!

The Funky Chef & Nogood Nick!

The November Funky Kingston affair was the most fabulous one yet! Funky Kingston is held on the fifth Saturday of the month—when there is one—at the Salt Box in downtown Kingston, NY and hosted by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus. He encourages his guest DJs to play funk, soul, reggae, ska, boogaloo and assorted rhythmic beats as the Bat Signal is displayed on the ceiling. This particular Funky Kingston featured two incredible guest DJs that most definitely delivered the goods: Jeff the Chef and Nogood Nick.

Nogood Nick and Jeff the Chef swing at the Funky Kingston!

Jeff the Chef is a legend. He was one of the movers and shakers behind the Empire State Soul Club—the grandpappy of sixties soul music DJ nights in New York City during the late eighties and through the nineties and even a bit into the new millennium. The others involved with the ESSC were the late, great Warren Lee, Brother Weems (who is now the official MC of the Keystone State Soul Weekender) and Connie T Empress—who continues her fantastic DJ activities in New York City. This was a coming out party of sorts. Jeff the Chef hasn’t spun his great records for anybody in about eight years, and before that, probably five years. The Funky Kingston hosts were proud of themselves for being able to coax this fellow out of DJ retirement! What a spectacular job he did, too, playing all sorts of extremely funky tracks for the Funky Kingston faithful. Among those in attendance were his ESSC co-hostess Connie T Empress—the Empress of Soul. Glad to see her smiling face in the Box!

Although happy to be out and about and spinning his records again—Jeff the Chef succumbed to geezerdom and insisted on going home early. He was gone before midnight when the original version of our theme song is played. That’s okay, though, because warming up in the bull pen was Nogood Nick.

Nogood Nick has been one of our favorite DJs for a long, long time. He was a regular guest DJ at the Subway Soul Club (in fact, he guested at the last one a month ago) and nearly every DJ night that was hosted by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus, including The Dynagroove, The Wham-O-Watusi and other assorted events. Nick hosted his own Rip! Rig! Panic! mod jazz night and recently has a show that runs occasionally on the WFMU Give the Drummer Radio web stream called Electric Lazy Susan. He knows his stuff, that’s for sure, and he played some wonderfully funky records for the crowd at the Funky Kingston.

The entire night went very well: Miss Nancy made some yummy snacks, dancing people didn’t knock over turntables, the sound system never cut out and some glasses were smashed! All-in-all, a very successful event.

Here’s a list of all the records played by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus at the Funky Kingston, including a series of ‘hot pants’ and ‘thing’ records:

None of these records are for sale.

Party with Pogo!!

On November 8, Do The 45 rolled into Quinn’s—that fabulous rock ’n’ ramen joint in Beacon, NY. Host Pete Pop gathered some DJs together and, along with regular guest DJ Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus, produced a dynamite presentation for all who attended—which was many! Also on the bill were Go-Go dancers Bella Bombora and Sheba Shake. Ms Shake had a health situation and couldn’t make the scene, but Ms. Bombora danced the night away, often accompanied by several of her friends on the raised dance floor.

The guest DJs who appeared were Peter Aaron, Marty Shane and James Pogo. Mister Aaron we’ve seen before. He’s a rocker, a radio personality and a writer—and he’s got great records which he proceeded to play. He had the joint jumpin’ with a bunch of New Wave hits, much like the records he plays at his Smash Crash Bash at the Salt Box on the last Friday of the month.

Marty Shane is another cat we are familiar with. He runs the Mod Tiki Market at the Bennington Antique Center in Montgomery, NY. He played some cool records and made the place swing.

James Pogo is someone we just met. We don’t know a lot about him, except that he’s an artist and he plays in an art-punk band called The Armedalite Rifles based in Pine Bush, NY (home of the Pine Bush UFO Fair). On this night he played some fantastic records and we hope Pete Pop asks him back soon!

Miss Nancy made some yummy vittles: pumpkin bread and a chex mix she calls Spap Oop! All of it was gone by the end of the night.

If that wasn’t enough, we celebrated the birthday of Miss Deneane, a fine artist and a good friend.

It was an evening of fabulous music and jumping around and we thought it would never end. But somehow, it did.

Here is a list of all the records played by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus at this particular Do The 45:

Bella Bombora

None of these records are for sale

GO Mechanism Number 25

The GO Mechanism is an audio Odyssey scientifically engineered and programed in the secret laboratory of Boogaloo Omnibus Productions incorporating ultra-phonic techniques not available to other broadcast entities. The G stands for GROOVE, and there is always plenty of GROOVE in each GO Mechanism. The O stands for O’Roony, an intricate and complex attitude that is incomprehensible to those who possess standard-issue precepts. Listen and you will hear.

The GO Mechanism is first aired on the Luxuria Music web streaming hustle as a Saturday Night Special. It will then be available as a podcast on the Luxuria Music web site for a few weeks, then it will sit in that limbo called the Mixclouds. This one will first air on November 16, 2024.

In order to achieve total comprehension of this GO Mechanism, it is strongly suggested that the listener follow along with this blog post as he or she listens to the program. This blog will act as a guiding light, with a track listing and information regarding some of the songs featured in the show.

An hour into the GO there will be a Science Corner—a segment of the trip where we discuss a topic of musical importance. This Science Corner we will listen to three songs that feature Bo Diddley playing the violin.

Bo Diddley actually studied the violin when he was a boy. When he decided he wanted to play that instrument, the parishioners of Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church took up a collection to buy him one. He took lessons, then he joined the Sunday school band. The teacher made him play hymns and classical pieces, but he wanted to see if he can play blues on it. He took violin lessons until he was 15. Around that time he was given a guitar as a Christmas present and that instrument took him places.

We have found three instances where he recorded with his first instrument. The sound he gets out of his violin is eerie, and not like any violin sound you’ve heard. This is clearly not Itzhak Pearlman!

“The Clock Strikes Twelve” starts like a typical Bo Diddley song, with the “I’m a Man” beat, but then soon morphs into a slow blues instrumental with the pianist Lafayette Leake and Willie Dixon on bass, and of course, Jerome Green on maracas. The song was first issued as the B-side to the 1959 novelty hit “Say Man,” then it appeared on his second album, Go Bo Diddley.

“To Each His Own,” was written for the movie of the same name in 1946. At one point that year, the song held five different spots on the Pop Top Ten chart by five different artists. Notably, one of the artists was The Ink Spots, whose version also placed high in what was then called the Most Played Juke Box Race Records chart. Bo Diddley’s violin playing is, again, very eerie, and half way through he plays it pizzicato. This track was recorded in 1959, but not issued—maybe it was deemed unworthy of release because of the plodding beat that the musicians lend to the song. But Bo’s violin playing is unique and may even be called avant-garde, especially for the time.

After that we will hear “Call Me.” It was recorded at Bo Diddley’s home studio in Washington, D.C. in February 1961 and it was issued as the flip-side to “Pills.” For some reason it was called “Bo’s Blues” on the album Bo Diddley Is a Lover. It’s another slow blues, with Bo singing, this time. On this track, Bo’s violin playing almost sounds like Little Walter’s harmonica playing! It really must be heard to be believed, and we will hear it in The GO Mechanism.

Along with B.B. King and Freddy King, Albert King is considered one of the “Three Kings of the Blues.” (People tend to forget the great Earl King, who made tremendous records in New Orleans—but that’s another story; perhaps even a Science Corner). Albert King was born in Mississippi and eventually moved to the Chicago area to further his career in music. He played drums in Jimmy Reed’s band, including on some of Reed’s earliest recordings. King cut a record for Parrot that did not sell well, then he moved to the St. Louis area. It is there that he became a popular draw in the thriving nightclub scene. He cut some records for Bobbin Records, a label partially owned by Little Milton. When his first single, “Don’t Throw Your Love on Me So Strong,” started to make some noise, it was picked up by King Records. The platter topped out at Number 14 on Billboard’s Hot R&B Sides chart in early 1962. In this GO Mechanism, we hear “This Morning,” an instrumental that was the flip side of “Don’t Throw…” The King Records marketing people added a little note on the white label promo copies that went out to radio stations that stated: “Attn: Disc Jocks, This instrumental will be liked by The Teenagers!” Most likely this inscription was placed there because of it’s uncanny resemblance to “Last Night” by The Mar-Keys, a smash hit during the summer of 1961. Interestingly, The Mar-Keys record was issued on Satellite Records—a Memphis company that soon renamed itself Stax Records. Five years later, Albert King was signed to Stax and it is there that his legacy was created.

Mike Laure (pronounced mee-kay loo-ray) was one of the first Mexican musicians to perform cumbia music. In the late fifties, he formed a Rock’n’Roll group and named it “Los Cometas” after Bill Haley’s band. By 1960, he had added tropical rhythms and instruments that are more closely associated with cumbia of Colombia. Laure’s records have a more pronounced beat than most cumbia records, which employed several percussion instruments, but not a drum set. “Tabaco Mascao” is a traditional cumbia, first recorded by the Colombian group Combo Los Galleros in the late fifties. Mike Laure’s version is from 1965 and it swings with an accented beat.

Howlin’ Wolf’s “No Place to Go” is often confused with “You Gonna Wreck My Life.” In fact, one is the alternate take of the other, but with different lyrics. On the original releases—“Place” in 1954 and “Wreck” in 1959—they showed different songwriters, too: Willie Dixon for the former and Chester Burnett (AKA Howlin’ Wolf) for the latter. Confusing matters more is the fact that they both were issued with the exact same matrix number—a number that is usually small on the label and also etched into the dead wax of the record in order that the right label is attached to the correct side when the records are assembled. Usually, a dash after the number will indicate which take is used, but no dash numbers were added to either release so, at this late date, it’s hard to tell which came first. Confusing things further is the fact that when “Place” was issued on 78 it listed Willie Dixon as the writer, but on the back cover of Howlin’ Wolf’s first album it lists the writer as C. Burnett. “Wreck” has always listed Burnett as the writer. In GO Mechanism Number 19, we played Guitar Ray’s version of “You’re Gonna Wreck My Life,” but he sings the “No Place to Go” lyric!

Are we confused yet? If not, consider also that the first line of both songs is “How many more years;” which is also the title of an earlier Howlin’ Wolf song that is only slightly related to these two! Whatever, Howlin’ Wolf is one of the all-time greats of music and we’ll be sure to hear more of his stuff in future GO Mechanisms.

Preston Love, 1943

Preston Love was a saxophonist who came out of the big band tradition. He was born and raised in Omaha, Nebraska and he worked in several territory bands. These were orchestras that barnstormed through the South and the Midwest—many went unrecorded but all contained talented musicians that the name bands would lure to their own bands. One day, Count Basie came calling for Preston Love. During his career, Preston Love played with many of the great jazz and R&B stars of the late forties and fifties. During the sixties, Love hooked up with Motown Records and he led the bands for Motown acts when they played on the West Coast. He also made some great funk records.

Preston Love was close friends with the bandleader Johnny Otis whose long career is legendary. Otis helped Love whenever he could. During the mid fifties, when Love was unable to record, Otis issued a few records under Preston Love’s name just to keep it in the spotlight. “Ali Baba’s Boogie,” heard in this GO Mechanism, is one of those songs. The saxophonist on the record is Jackie Kelso.

Love would eventually move back to Omaha, where he became a local legend. The singer Laura Love is his daughter, his youngest son Richie Love continues the saxophone tradition and Preston Love, Jr. is a civil rights activist and recently ran for U.S. Senator in Nebraska.

Big Jay McNeely was one of our favorite saxophonists in the world. His big, honking sound was very powerful. Also, like Preston Love, he came to prominence with the help of Johnny Otis—McNeely’s first recording was with Otis in 1948. In December of that year, Big Jay recorded “Deacon’s Hop,” which topped out the R&B charts in 1949. Twenty years later, McNeely cut the record again and that’s the version heard on this installment of The GO Mechanism. As fabulous as the original version is, this is much more greasy, the beat is heavier and McNeely’s big fat tone is still in evidence—if not more so! The GO Mechanism producers were hesitant to pick up this record when it was initially offered to them, since it is on the Modern ‘Oldies Series’ label, thinking it was some sort of reissue—a Bozo no-no in the collectors’ world. However, our research shows that this is the only way it was ever available.

The Time Surfers, with Bella Bombora!

Time Surfers are a rockin’ surf-type instrumental trio based out of Newburgh, NY. The GO Mechanism producers recently witnessed one of the band’s shows at the Upper Depot Brewing Company in Hudson, NY and were able to capture its version of “The Peter Gunn Theme” on tape. Bella Bombora, one of the Go Go dancers for Pete Pop’s Do The 45 DJ night, is often seen shaking her tail feathers with the band. The Time Surfers are good and fun and deserve the attention of the GO Mechanism faithful.

Bobby Graham is considered the greatest British drummer nobody has ever heard of. During the sixties, he was the first-call session drummer in London and it is estimated that he played on about 15,000 recordings! Apparently, he’s the drummer on most, if not all, the Dave Clark Five records—not Dave Clark. He also played on records by such artists as Peter & Gordon, The Kinks, Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield, John Barry, Shirley Bassey, Joe Cocker, Rod Stewart, Petula Clark, Brenda Lee, Van Morrison and many more. In the London studios, he often played with Jimmy Page, who also worked as a session musician before he joined The Yardbirds. Here in the GO we present Graham’s super boss record “Zoom, Widge and Wag,” which was co-written with Page and the guitarist provides one of his best solos toward the end.

Freddy DeBoe is another contemporary musician worthy of consideration. He is a saxophonist from Milwaukee who made his way to New York City in order to further his career. He has worked with artists on the Daptone Records roster, including Sharon Jones, Lee Fields, Charles Bradley and James Hunter. His own band has a cool, mod jazz vibe, as heard in “Savage,” a song released on Fine Wine Records—a company owned by our friend Mr. Fine Wine, the popular WFMU disc jockey.

Once again, The GO Mechanism ends with one of the Greatest Records Of All Time: “The Ostrich” by The Primitives. Pickwick Records was a company that made its mark by selling cheesy budget albums to unsophisticated teens. Often, an album would consist of a few songs by a current popular artist, usually recorded before that artist was famous, then fill out the rest of the LP with an unknown singer from the Pickwick stable. Also, the company would issue albums of original material capitalizing on some teen fad, like hot rods or surfing. One of the musicians involved in this operation was Lou Reed. He worked for Pickwick for about a year, starting in September 1964. One of the tracks he worked on was “The Ostrich”—an amazing example of folks bangin’ on shit and screamin’ in a Rock’n’Roll context. One of the things that make this record so unique is that when Reed cut the track, he had all six of his strings tuned to the same note. By the summer of 1965, Lou Reed met John Cale at Pickwick and the two left the company to form The Velvet Underground. This story is best told in issue 60 of Ugly Things Magazine as well as in the Ugly Things podcast, where publisher Mike Stax interviews Velvet Underground expert Phil Milstein regarding this period of Lou Reed’s life. Also note that 25 tracks associated with Lou Reed during his Pickwick period have just been reissued by Light In The Attic Records on an album called Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964 – 65 and it is highly recommended. There is no doubt in our mind that “this”The Ostrich” is the best record Lou Reed ever made!

A very special shout-out and ‘thank you’ goes to our friend Mike Minky, who gave a copy of “The Ostrich” to the Go Mechanism producers about 35 years ago!

Here is a complete track list of all the songs played in GO Mechanism Number 25:

  • Earl Bostic—Lester Leaps In (King)
  • Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk—In Walked Bud (from LP Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk; Atlantic)
  • Michael McClure—For Monk (spoken bit)
  • Albert King—This Morning (King)
  • Al Duncan—Bawana Jinde (Stacy)
  • Billy Larkin and the Delegates—Pigmy (Part 1) (Aura)
  • Ahmet Koç—Surf Rider (from album Paradoks; Doğan Müzik Dağıtım; Turkey)
  • Mike Laure y sus Cometas—Tabaco Mascao (Musart; Mexico)
  • The Ventures—Wack Wack (from LP Guitar Freakout; Dolton)
  • The Zodiacs—Caravan (from EP The Primitive Instrumental Sounds of The Zodiacs; Norton)
  • Tito Puente —Eléquana (from LP Top Percussion (RCA Victor)
  • Jackson Five—I Want You Back—backing track (Motown)
  • Howlin’ Wolf—No Place to Go (Chess)
  • Johnny Cale—Shock Hop (Mercury)
  • Preston Love & His Orchestra—Ali Baba’s Boogie (Ultra)
  • Jimmy Haskell—James Bond Theme (Capitol)
  • Susan Lynne—Don’t Drag No More (Capitol)
  • Beauregard and the Tuffs—Ramblin’ Rose (Decca)
  • Lee Fields—Let a Man Do What He Wanna Do (from LP Let’s Get a Groove On; Desco)
  • The Eloise Trio—Anna Ba Coha (from LP The Eloise Trio; Decca)
  • Big Jay McNeely—Deacon’s Hop (Modern Oldies)
  • Eddie Kirk—Them Bones (Volt)
  • Oquesta Monteria Swing—La Pua (Discos Fuentes)
  • King Kong Itself—The Mothers of Invention (from LP Uncle Meat; Bizarre)
  • Charles Mingus—Cumbia Jazz Fusion (edit from LP Cumbia Jazz Fusion; Atlantic)
  • Aaron Neville—Hercules (Mercury)
  • ——Science Corner
  • Bo Diddley—Clock Strikes Twelve (Checker)
  • Bo Diddley—Diddling (Checker)
  • Bo Diddley—To Each His Own (from album Road Runner – The Chess Masters 1959-1960; Chess/Geffen)
  • Bo Diddley—Call Me (Bo’s Blues) (Checker)
  • Screamin’ Jay Hawkins—Africa Gone Funky (London)
  • The Time Surfers—Peter Gunn Theme (live recording)
  • Captain Beefheart & the Saxons—Golden Birdies Camel Walk (Boogaloo exclusive mash-up)
  • Bobby Graham—Zoom, Widge, Wag (Fontana; UK)
  • Symarip—These Boots Are Made for Stompin’ (Harlem Shuffle; UK)
  • Junior Wells—(I Got A) Stomach Ache (Vanguard)
  • Joe Simon—The Whoopee (Vee Jay)
  • Charly Antolini—Charly’s Drums (BASF/Coronet; Germany)
  • Wanderlea—Vou Lhe Contar (CBS; Brazil)
  • The Maytals—Do the Boogaloo (Trojan; UK)
  • Ornette Coleman—Free Jazz (edit) (from LP Free Jazz; Atlantic)
  • Dylan Thomas—Should Lanterns Shine (spoken bit)
  • Johnny Zorro—Bongo Guitar (Infinity)
  • Freddy DeBoe—Savage (Fine Wine)
  • Bo Jr.—Coffee Pot (Part 1) (Tail-Gate)
  • Perez Prado—Moliendo Cafe (RCA Victor)
  • Curtis Mayfield—Freddie’s Dead (closing theme/Boogaloo Edit) (Curtom)
  • The Primitives—The Ostrich (Pickwick City)
  • Peter Case’s important message (edit from Peter Case: A Million Miles Away documentary)

Once again we thank the groovy people at Luxuria Music for allowing us to present The GO Mechanism over their web-streaming hustle. Luxuria Music is a listener supported entity and can not exist without your help. Please visit the Luxuria Music website and figure out how you can send them some money.

This edition of The Go Mechanism will be available as a podcast on the Luxuria Music website after its initial air-date of November 16, 2024 as a Saturday Night Special. After a few weeks it will be posted on the Mixclouds and then it will magically appear below…

Keystone Soul Weekender Number 8

The Keystone Soul Weekender family

Each fall for the last several years, the Keystone State Northern Soul Weekender has been held in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Fantastic DJs from around the world head there to play their very best records. The first seven events were held at the Elks Lodge but this one took place at the Moose Lodge—also in downtown Lancaster. Although slightly smaller, the Moose Lodge had an equally fabulous wooden dance floor and there was the ability to order food from the private club downstairs. The Weekender is hosted by Julio Fernandez, a Spaniard now living locally and, sometimes, David Raistrick, a British fellow whose history with Northern Soul events goes back to the seventies. He wasn’t around last year, but he made a return this year and we were all happy to see him.

Returning DJs included Chey Frazier (Easton, PA), Scott Boyko (Garden State Soul Club), David McDaniel (Nor’easter Soul Club), Debbie Benjamin-Koller (Heart of Chicago Soul Club), Eric Svirida (Long Island, NY), Mod Marty Emanuel (On Target podcast, Winnipeg, Manitoba), Eric Zimmerman (Philly Soul Club), Paula Carrillo (Minneapolis), Sean Connors (Philly Soul Club), Mr. Fine Wine (Downtown Soulville, WFMU), Mike Post (Daptone Records), Yana Lil’ Jerk (Soul, Soul, Soul, NYC), Cher Gingras (Slow Fizz, Toronto), George Rodriguez (Hipshaker, Minneapolis), Jay Boxcar (Garden State Soul Club), and Connie T Empress (Soul Finger, NYC).

Also returning after a few years away was Vincent Ebb aka The Soul Chef (Fufu Radio) who now lives somewhere in Texas. Another was our friend Greg Tormo. He was a DJ at the very first Keystone Weekender, but soon after moved to Palm Springs where he has continued his record spinning activities. His return was welcomed by the Boogaloo Bag writers as he plays some of our favorite records that we’ll never own!

One of the highlights of the event was newcomer Aret Sakal. He hosts the Windy City Soul Club in Chicago. During his Saturday night set he played some incredible records that had our heads spinning!! He was a very welcome newcomer to the Keystone family.

MC for the event—as every year—was Brother Weems, a member of the late great Empire State Soul Club. He now lives somewhere about an hour north of Lancaster and has become a fixture at the Keystone Weekender.

For this event, Miss Nancy made some double chocolate cookies and her special chex mix. Both were devoured with glee. During the Saturday break, Vincent Ebb and his wife Leslie renewed their wedding vows at a Napalese restaurant. A cake was baked that honored them, as well as Connie T Empress and Phil DePaolo who were wed earlier this year.

Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus has been asked to appear each of the eight years it has been operating (with a year off during the pandemic). This year, host Julio Fernandez asked the Boog if he minded if his DJ time was shortened. With so many great DJs available, it seemed only fair. Heck, Julio and David Raistrick didn’t even play records until the very end, in order to give more DJs some time at the decks. Thus, the Phastman only had a chance to play twelve records all weekend. For him, being asked to play even one record is a great honor—plus, the camaraderie among the DJs gives him the warm and fuzzies!

MC Brother Weems!

On Saturday afternoon, Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus split the half hour allotted by tag-teaming with Yana Lil’ Jerk. The Boog only played dance numbers; here they are:

Sunday afternoon saw the Phast Man sharing the decks with Mikey Post, who played spooky monster records due to the close proximity of the event to Halloween. The Boog played these six instrumentals:

Next year, the Keystone Northern Soul Weekender will swing again. Hopefully, some of our British and European friends will be able to return. See ya there…

Subway Soul Club back in action!!

Although it is not as regular as it once was, Subway Soul Club is the longest running sixties soul music dance party in New York City. After several years of dormancy, it raised it’s swingin’ head again last spring and it came back to life on November 5th for an autumnal edition. If things go as planned, we’ll be jumping around at the Subway Soul Club twice a year for the near future.

The fall Subway Soul Club returned to the Francis Kite Room in the East Village of Manhattan—the scene of the spring event. The hostess with the mostest Lady Dawn was in the house, greeting people and making sure that folks on the dance floor were dancing—which wasn’t too hard, since the great records the DJs played kept the dance floor crowded all night. And what DJs!! Joining resident disk spinner Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus was Julio Fernandez and Nogood Nick.

Julio Fernandez swings at Subway Soul Club!

Julio Fernandez (also known as DJ Apollo XII) is a Spaniard who now lives in the States, but he still travels the world as a sought-after song selector. We know him from the fantastic job he does hosting the Keystone State Northern Soul Weekender held every year since 2016. That event is one of the most fabulous soul music events in the country and we urge each reader to attend the next Keystone Soul Weekender—which will be happening October 25 through 27 in Lancaster, PA. Señor Fernandez has fantastic records and really knows how to make them go round; he did a most excellent job at Subway Soul Club and folks couldn’t get enough of his jams.

Nogood Nick picks another boss record to spin at Subway Soul Club!

Nogood Nick has been a guest at Subway Soul Club for many years and we were happy to have him back. He has also hosted events such as Rip! Rig! Panic! and recently had a show on WFMU’s Give the Drummer Some webstream called Electric Lazy Susan. His records are second to none and he plays them like a pro. When Nogood Nick is at the controls you just know the records are going to be bitchen!!

As noted above, the dance floor was full of folks who quite appreciated the music. As it turned out, there was another soul music event that took place the night before. Called Soul Soul Soul, it has been in operation for a couple of years. The great minds behind this operation are our friends Yana Lil’ Jerk the resident DJ and it’s host Steve Myers. There was some concern that one event may detract from the other, however, any worries that may have been generated (mostly by the Boogaloo Bag writer!!!) were all for nothing as both events were very successful. Perhaps in the spring we can actually get it together to co-host a weekender in The City! That would be something, eh?

Meanwhile, back at the Francis Kite Room, the real grief took place early in the evening when the club wasn’t able to produce the promised mixing board. Instead they had some contraption that looked like a console from a Star Trek space ship that included two CD players and all sorts of effects, switches and flashing lights. It was very complicated and it took a full hour for the club’s sound man and the Phastman to figure it out—by fooling with every switch and nob on the thing!!! Luckily, all was figured out before the doors opened, but the thing was long—the two turntables seemed to be in different zip codes!! However, once it was figured out, all went well.

The Subway Soul Club crew: Lady Dawn, Julio, Nogood Nick, Phast

For this Subway Soul Club event, Miss Nancy made some chex mix snack (she calls them doo dads) and vegan brownies for our friends that swing that way.

Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus in a pensive mood at Subway Soul Club!

Since the turntables were ready, and folks were starting to show up before the official start time of 8pm, the resident DJ started the evening off by playing some cool instrumentals, before he got into the hot sauce. Here’s a list of every record played by Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus at the autumn Subway Soul Club event:

None of these records are for sale.