Saturdays 9pm-11pm PST via luxuriamusic.com • Your Weekly Exotic Party Mix from DJ's Reeshard & Lee-Roy

Pictured: The Ohio Players & friend.
The new sound was born sometime in the mid-1890s, in the working-class black clubs and honky-tonks near the poor Uptown neighborhood soon to be known as Black Storyville. You could hear it in the venues on and around South Rampart Street—at Dago Tony’s, the Red Onion, Odd Fellows Hall—or farther afield in the “Negro dives” on the other side of Canal. For a time, the music was known only to those who flocked to such places, the so-called ratty people — “the good-time, earthy people,” as one musician of the day defined them. But before too long, the new sound was also being heard in parks, on street corners, in dance halls, and in places well beyond the confines of the city’s destitute black neighborhoods. And that, naturally, was when the trouble started.
— Gary Krist, Empire Of Sin
So, potential listener: Have you turned up for the archive of this past Saturday’s broadcast from the Purple Bat Lounge expecting a radical departure from codified podcast fare? The sound of two driven souls boldly shattering the formal constraints of online music presentation? Sorry to disappoint you. It’s the same old crap…BUT, you can dance to it. Hear for yourself, simply by clicking just a few pixels south of here…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 236 of No Condition Is Permanent:
Ohio Players — “Love Rollercoaster” — Honey
Rock Town Express — “Tell Me My Life” — Rock Town Express
Los Holys — “Melodia Encanta” — Sleazy Surf! Vol. 2
Dave Barker — “Prisoner Of Love” — Clint Eastwood
Lil’ Bob — “I Got Loaded” — Souvenirs Of The Soul Clap Vol. 1: Jonathan Toubin’s New York Night Train
Chacalón Y La Nueva Crema — “Ven Mi Amor” — Grandes Éxitos 1976-1981
Roosevelt Fountain — “Red Pepper” — Mod: The Early Years Vol. 2
Erol Büyükburç — “Hop Dedik” — Love, Peace & Poetry: Turkish Psychedelic Music
Davie Allan And The Arrows — “The Stompers And The Souls” — Savage Pencil presents Angel Dust: Music For Movie Bikers
Satellite Band — “Party At Vern’s” — The Music City Story
Orquestra Harlow — “La Contraria” — Orchestra Harlow Presenta A Ismael Miranda
Link Cromwell — “Crazy Like a Fox” — Ork Records: New York, New York
Matata — “I Feel Funky (Alterative Version)” — Air Fiesta
Cupit — “Squeeze Your Knees” — MFSB: Mutha Funkin Sonofabitch: The Truth Behind The Philly Legend
Malavoi — “Ti Nain L’en Morue” — Souvenirs Créoles Celini, Vol. 2 (1964-1978)
Ritchie & The Squires — “Beat Party” — Las Vegas Grind! Vol. 5
A. Halim & De’fictions — “Kembali Lagi” — Pop Yeh Yeh: Psychedelic Rock from Singapore and Malaysia 1964-1970 Vol. 1
Al Casey With The K-C-Ettes — “Guitars, Guitars, Guitars” — Girls With Guitars
Joe Gibbs & The Professionals — “Fashion ‘One’” — African Dub All-Mighty Chapter 4
Roxy Music — “Street Life” — Stranded
Roong Petch Laem Sing — “Kob Kanong Fon” — Siamese Soul: Thai Pop Spectacular Vol. 2
James Brown — “The Popcorn” — Soul Pride: The Instrumentals 1960-1969
Tala A.M. — “Arabica” — African Funk Experimentals 1975-1978
Eddie Warner — “K.O.” — Alexis Le-Tan & Jess Presents Studio Ganaro: Space Oddities (1972-1982)
Nahid Akhtar — “Aisi Chalo Na Chaal Ke Dil Mera” — I Am Black Beauty
Family — “Stop For The Traffic – Through The Heart Of Me” — A Song For Me
Omar Khorshid — “Wadil Muluk (Valley of the Kings)” — Guitar El Chark
101 Strings — “Space Odyssey” — Astro-Sounds From Beyond The Year 2000
Exuma — “Exuma, The Obeah Man” — Exuma
Les Fleurs De Lys — “Circles” — Immediate Mod Box Set
Errol Brown & The Revolutionaries — “Melodious Dub” — Dub Expression
Ahab & The Wailers — “Neb’s Tune” — Highly Strung: Vol. 1 – British 60’s Instrumentals
Sonopop — “Vanguardia Y Jeventud” — Si Para Usted Vol. 2: The Funky Beats Of Revolutionary Cuba
The Slits — “Earthbeat” — Return Of The Giant Slits
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Ennio Morricone — “A Lidia (Finale)” — Scusi, Facciamo l’Amore? OST


Pictured: Gram Parsons.
The service was impersonal and cold; it seemed the priest knew nothing about Clarence. His friends questioned whether Clarence would have even wanted a religious burial. The mood at the graveside was somber and confused. The musicians stood by the grave, packed shoulder to shoulder, looking at one another. No one thought Clarence was being given a proper send-off, but no one knew how to respond.
Suddenly, Gram opened his mouth and began to sing “Farther Along”…
The moment crystallized why Gram Parsons is a legendary figure and should be. Grief-stricken, irritated by the priest, heartbroken over Clarence White’s death, and loaded on pills, liquor, and likely heroin, Gram remained the one person at the grave who knew how to illuminate that precious moment. When all around him were paralyzed—and when all were likely far more competent in day-to-day problem-solving than Gram—Gram alone understood what the soul of the moment required. He understood the poetry necessary to deal with the pain. With his own profound connection to grief and loss, Gram understood how to grant the assembled throng catharsis, and Clarence White release.
— David N. Meyer, Twenty Thousand Roads.
Here’s last Saturday’s episode of No Condition Is Permanent, far livelier than the service described above, no less dissolute and so much the better for being so. Hear for yourself! Just click… right… down… there…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 235 of No Condition Is Permanent:
Eddie Kendricks — “Let Me Run Into Your Lonely Heart” — Keep On Truckin’: The Motown Solo Albums, Vol. 1
Super Wings — “Someone Will Show Me The Way” — My Love Is For You
The Jesters — “Arab” — The Surf Creature
Sharhabil Ahmed — “El Bambi” — The King Of Sudanese Jazz
The Fleshtones — “Comin’ In Dead” — Blast Off
Dennis Alcapone — “It Must Come” — Guns Don’t Argue: The Anthology ’70-77
Joey Pastrana And His Orchestra — “My Shingaling” — Broasted Or Fried: Latin Breakbeats, Basslines & Boogaloo
The Magics — “Zombie Walk” — Murder On Your Ears
Roxy Music — “Trash” — Manifesto
Livy Ekemezie — “Friday Night” — Friday Night
Vic Pitts And The Cheaters — “Loose Boodie (Unreleased Version)” — The Lost Tapes
Đàn Bầu Việtnam — “Chinese Song” — Hồ #1 Roady Music From Viêtnam
Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant — “Cotton Pickin’” — Stratosphere Boogie: The Flaming Guitars of Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant
Joe Cuba — “Sock It To Me” — We Got Latin Soul
The Cramps — “Domino” — File Under Sacred Music: Early Singles 1978-81
Dönüşüm — “Osman Pehlivan” — Saz Beat Vol. 3: Turkish Rock, Funk, And Psychedelic Music Of The 1960s And 1970s
The Isley Brothers — “Tell Me It’s Just A Rumour Baby” — This Is Northern Soul! The Motown Sound, Vol. 1
Oriental Funk — “Come Together” — Thai Beat A Go Go Vol. 3: Groovy 60’s Sounds from the Land of Smile!
Dave Hamilton — “The Deacons” — Dave Hamilton’s Detroit Funk
Grupo Los Caneyes — “Oye Oyea” — Revolucion! Original Cuban Funk Grooves 1967-1978
The Soulettes — “It’s Alright” — Basement Beehive: The Girl Group Underground
Los Orientales De Paramonga — “Lobos Al Escape” — Cumbías Chichadélicas (Peruvian Psychedelic Chicha)
Andre Williams & His Orchestra — “Soul Groove” — Rib Tips & Pig Snoots: Rare & Unreleased Au-Go-Go Soul 1965-1971
Les Gypsies De Petion-Ville — “Passe Le Temps” — Patience
The Enchanters — “Native Love” — Jungle Jive
Ngalle Jojo — “Ngigna Loko” — Africa Airways Six (Mile High Funk 1974-1981)
Freedom Five — “To Save My Soul” — Last of the Garage Punk Unknowns Vol. 2
Pamelo Mounk’a — “Amour De Nombakele” — Pamelo Mounk’a
Suicide — “Keep Your Dreams” — Suicide
The Prophets — “South West Block” — King Tubby’s Prophecies Of Dub
The Velvet Underground — “Temptation Inside Your Heart” — Peel Slowly And See
Ali Hassan Kuban — “Daiman (Always Again)” — Real Nubian: Cairo Wedding Classics
Gram Parsons — “Las Vegas” — Grievous Angel
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Ennio Morricone — “Punto e basta” — Ad Ogni Costo (Grand Slam) OST

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Pictured: Ennio Morricone (1928-2020).
There’s a moment in The Harder They Come when Jimmy Cliff and his fellow rude boys sit through a spaghetti western, enthralled by its images of retribution. Other people in this Kingston crowd are concentrating on the soundtrack — Ennio Morricone is the line that runs from Puccini to dub.
…His western scores draw attention to the glib sentimentality of the western myth, to its shallow, ahistorical treatment of violence. But Morricone’s music meets another Brecht criterion, too: it is not just clever, it is also popular and funny. There is, unfortunately, not much other music like it.
— Simon Frith, “Sound & Music & Film” Collusion Vol. 1 No. 1.
The Outdoor Patio™ is still off-limits, owing to a lingering whiff of tear gas. And while you might think the ongoing inconvenience might upset co-host Lee-Roy, you wouldn’t be giving the dog sufficient credit. The programmers at the Madison have organized just the thing to buoy a young pit bull’s spirits: a double bill of Russ Meyer movies! And if the Buxotics are in town, Lee-Roy cares not who writes the nation’s laws. Learn more about what ensued, specifically why Reeshard keeps antacid near the DJ booth, all without mussing your ensemble. Just click down there…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 234 of No Condition Is Permanent:
MFSB — “Sexy” — Philadelphia International Records: 40th Anniversary
Rock Town Express — “Peaceful Solution” — Rock Town Express
The Ebb Tides — “Big Noise From Waimea” — Lost Legends Of Surf Guitar, Vol. 1: Big Noise From Waimea!
Mas Ka Kle — “Lese Yo Pale” — Sofrito: International Soundclash
Ramones — “I Just Want to Have Something to Do” — Road To Ruin
Juaneco Y Su Combo — “Un Shipibo En Espana” — Masters Of Chicha 1
Link Wray — “Run Chicken Run” — The Rumbling Guitar Sound Of Link Wray ‘58-‘62
Max Romeo — “Wet Dream” — Trojan Box Set: X-Rated Box Set
Jan Davis — “Snow Surfin’ Matador” — Jungle Exotica
Sharhabil Ahmed — “Argos Farfish” — The King Of Sudanese Jazz
The Easybeats — “Sorry” — Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts From The British Empire & Beyond 1964-1969
Grotto — “Wait… No Hurry” — Grotto II: ”Wait … No Hurry”
Duralcha — “Ghet-To Funk” — Eccentric Funk
The Latinaires — “Ya Llegaron” — Camel Walk
Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band — “Dirty Blue Gene” — Doc At The Radar Station
The Revolutionaries — “M.P.L.A” — Revolutionary Sounds
The Shadows — “Dance On” — Shadows Are Go!
Willie Colon — “Skinny Papa” — El Malo
The 13th Floor Elevators — “Fire Engine” — The Psychedelic Sounds Of The 13th Floor Elevators [Mono]
Koes Plus — “Kelelawar (The Bats)” — Dheg Dheg Plas Vols.1 & 2
Andre Williams & His Orchestra — “Loose Juice” — Rib Tips & Pig Snoots: Rare & Unreleased Au-Go-Go Soul 1965-1971
The Upsetters — “Upsetters Shuffle” — Lee Perry And His Upsetters Present Roaring Lion
Iggy & The Stooges — “Tight Pants” — Raw Power Sessions
Devil’s Anvil — “Shisheler” — Saz Beat: Turkish Rock, Funk, And Psychedelic Music Of The 1960s And 1970s
Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant — “Railroadin’” — Swingin’ on the Strings: The Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant Collection Vol. 2
Monomono — “Tire Loma Da Nigbehin” — Nigeria 70: The Definitive Story of 1970’s Funky Lagos
Felix & His Fabulous Cats — “Hey Tiger” — Twistin’ Rumble Vol. 9
Shango Dance Band — “I Need Your Love” — Shango Dance Band
Vic Pitts And The Cheaters — “The Trip” — The Lost Tapes
The Techniques — “Gambling” — Techniques In Dub
The Dootones — “Ay, Si, Si” — Ai! Si! Si!: Mambo & Latin Flavoured Rhythm & Blues
Nil’s Jazz Ensemble — “Reflexions” — Peruvian Funk
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Ennio Morricone — “L’Assoulto Naturale” — L’Assoulto Naturale OST


Pictured: The Ronettes.
Cut in mono, parts of Spector’s big orchestrations were obscured or lost completely. Phil willingly parted with them. His sound was an overview, a primordial feel of joyful noise, although many technical people in the business could not comprehend it. In New York, removed from Larry Levine and his unspoken command, engineers would jump on Phil about his decibel level and the resulting distortion of sound, to little avail. “He’d say, 1 don’t care if the dials jump off the meters, I want it to sound distorted,’ ” Arnold Goland said, “so what would happen is, on the master the needle would literally jump out of the grooves, that’s how loud it was cut. Sometimes there’d be recalls on his records and he’d have to do them all over again. But he didn’t care. He was going after what he wanted.”
— Mark Ribowsky, He’s A Rebel: Phil Spector, Rock’n’Roll’s Legendary Producer.
No one could enter the Outdoor Patio™ at the Purple Bat Lounge last Saturday (it still reeked of tear gas), so the action was bottled up indoors. Feel the intensity! Smell the spilled Lee-Roy cocktails! Experience an evening on Brush St., without fear of personal harm! All by clicking immediately below…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 233 of No Condition Is Permanent:
The O’Jays — “Shiftless, Shady, Jealous Kind Of People” — Back Stabbers
Gabo Brown & Orchestre Poly-Rythmo — “It’s A Vanity” — African Scream Contest
Enchanters 4 — “Like Tuff” — Strummin’ Mental! Part 3
The Chosen Few — “Funky Buttercup” — Soul Power Funky Kingston 2: Reggae Dancefloor Grooves 1968-74
Jimmy McConville — “Scorpion” — Farrall 45rpm
Gülden Karaböcek — “Bana Gercekleri Söyle” — Psych Funk A’ La Turkish Vol. 2
The Coasters — “Bad Detective” — 50 Coastin’ Classics
Los Golden Boys — “La Negra Celina” — The Afrosound of Colombia Vol. 1
The Tornados — “Jungle Fever” — Vampires, Cowboys, Spacemen And Spooks: The Very Best Of Joe Meek’s Instrumentals
Ron Rogers — “Yaya” — Mutant Disco #3: Garage Sale
Trio Select — “Ensemble Select En Action” — Haiti Direct: Big Band, Mini Jazz & Twoubadou Sounds 1960-1978
The Combinations — “Voodoo” — Whip! Wobble & Grind! 1962-1964
Los Ovnis De Jorge Chambergo Porta — “Corazón Herido” — Bailando Con Los Ovnis
Shoes — “Do You Wanna Get Lucky” — Black Vinyl Shoes
Inner Circle & The Fatman Riddim Section — “Fidel At The Control” — Heavyweight Dub
The Ronettes — “Keep On Dancing” — Phil Spector: Back to Mono 1958-1969
Edikanfo — “Blinking Eyes” — The Pace Setters
Wire — “Options R (5th Demo)” — Chairs Missing [Special Edition – Studio Demos]
Trinity — “School Days Version” — Well Cha’rged Channel One
Rose Royce — “Mid Day DJ Theme” — Car Wash OST
Lisandro Meza — “Acordeon Pitador” — Rey Sabanero Del Acordeon: Folclor Costeño De Colombia
James Carpenter — “Party Time” — Dave Hamilton’s Detroit Funk
Mulatu Astatque — “Assiyo Bellema” — Assiyo Bellema: Golden Years of Modern Ethiopian Music
Sparks — “Here In Heaven” — Kimono My House
Franklin Boukaka Ses Sanzas Et Son Orchestre Congolais — “Kue Tu Kuenda (Pachanga-Lari)” — Survivance [Bolibana Collection]
The Jokers — “Moscow Guitar” — Guitar Boogie
Charanjit Singh — “Chhailla Babu [From “Chhailla Babu”, 1978]” — Jonny Trunk & Joel Martin Present Bollywood Funk Experience
Bobby Parker — “Gimme A LIttle Lovin’” — East Coast Guitar Killers Vol. 1
The Cramps — “New Kind Of Kick” — File Under Sacred Music: Early Singles 1978-81
Salim Abdulla With The Cuban Marimba Band — “Ndio Hali Ya Dunia” — Africa Dances
Little Johnny And The Silvertones — “Rock ‘Til The End Of Time” — I Still Hate CD’s: Norton Records 45 RPM Singles Collection
Lena Lim And The Stylers — “Luna, Luna” — Singapore A-Go-Go Vol. 1
Alan Vega and Martin Rev (Suicide) — “Mr. Ray” — Suicide (Second Album)
Camilo Azuquita — “Borombon” — Panama! 2: Latin, Calypso & Funk On The Isthmus 1967-77
The Equals — “I Cant Let You Go” — Greatest Hits
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Peppermint Harris — “I Got Loaded” — Rhythm ‘N’ Blues Vol. 2


Pictured: The Bar-Kays.
Before the turn of the century – the nineteenth century, that is – there was an underground craze that swept through black America. Someone came up with a catchy AAB twelve-bar structure with melancholy melodic intervals which provided the perfect frame on which to hang lyrics about heartbreak, natural disasters, evil white bosses and every other aspect of life at the end of a century that had falsely promised a road to freedom. Blues itself was an innovative craze that swept away decades – perhaps centuries – of folk traditions. We hear echoes of what disappeared in the recordings of Henry Thomas and Charlie Patton, but it is like trying to reconstruct a Cherokee city from a few arrowheads and beads unearthed at a construction site in downtown Atlanta. The destructiveness that comes with innovation is a process as old as history.
— Joe Boyd, White Bicycles.
Another Saturday night at the Purple Bat Lounge, no less and certainly no mo’. If that’s your idea of fun, just click a few pixels below…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 232 of No Condition Is Permanent:
First Choice — “Armed And Extremely Dangerous” — Sweet Soul Music: 23 Scorching Classics From 1973
Honny & The Bees Band — “Psychedelic Woman” — Ghana Soundz: Afro-Beat, Funk & Fusion In ’70s Ghana
The Majestics — “Big Noise From Makaha” — The Surf Creature
Joey Pastrana — “King Of Latin Soul” — Explosivos: Deep-Soul From The Latin Heart 1966-70
Billy Vaughn — “Boss” — Dot 45rpm
Ansel and the Meditations — “Tricked” — Jamaica Funk: Original Jamaican Funk And Soul 45s
The Gap Band — “Bad Girl” — Magicians Holiday
Davie Allan And The Arrows — “Mind Transferral” — Savage Pencil Presents Angel Dust: Music For Movie Bikers
Buari — “Karam Bani” — Buari
The Fleshtones — “Atom Spies” — Blast Off
Daniel Delord — “Maria” — Moris Zekler: Fuzz & Soul Sega From 70’s Mauritius
The Bar-Kays — “Knucklehead” — Sock It To ‘Em Soul: 60’s Club Soul Classics From The Vaults Of Atlantic Atco, Loma Reprise, Stax & Warner Bros. 1963-1968
Ersen — “Kara Yazi” — Love, Peace & Poetry: Turkish Psychedelic Music
Louisiana Red — “Seventh Son” — Shadrach And Boomstix!: Exotic Blues & Rhythm Vol. 9 & 10
Perez Prado — “Estoy Acabando” — Concierto Para Bongo
Roxy Music — “The Thrill Of It All” — Country Life
Sangthong Seesai — “Luck Luck Luck” — Thai Funk ZudRangMa Vol. 2
The Five Blue Notes — “Somethin’ Awful” — Onda 45rpm
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics — “Many Questions” — Pleasure Dub
The Modern Lovers — “She Cracked” — The Modern Lovers
Hanan Bulu Bulu — “Alamy Wa Shagiya (My Pain And Suffering) [Live]” — Two Niles To Sing A Melody: The Violins & Synths Of Sudan
Incredible Casuals — “She’s Got Tony” — Your Sounds
Armando Sciascia — “Circuito Chiuso” — Psych Funk 101: A Global Psychedelic Funk Curriculum
The Barrino Brothers — “I’ll Take My Flowers Right Now” — The Detroit Funk Vaults: Funk & Soul from Dave Hamilton 1968-1979
Moncho Leña Y Los Ases Del Ritmo (con Mon Rivera) — “Bailando Plena” — ¡Saoco! The Bomba And Plena Explosion In Puerto Rico 1954-1966
The Versatones — “Tight Skirt Tight Sweater” — Beat From Badsville, Vol. 1
Sexteto Electronico Moderno — “Soul Limbo” — Sounds From The Elegant World: Groovy Night Club Music From Uruguay (1968-71)
Sugar And Sweet — “Do The Dive” — ‘Black’ Rock ‘n’ Roll / Savage Kick Vol. 10
Rabbit’s & Carrot’s — “Las 4 Vulturas’ — Movers!
The Cramps — “Zombie Dance” — Songs The Lord Taught Us
Sarı Zeki — “Dom Dom Kurşunu” — Uzelli Elektro Saz (1976 – 1984)
BIg Walter & The Thunderbirds — “Watusi Freeze” — Rock’N’Roll Versus Rhythm And Blues
Verckys et l´Orchestre Vévé — “Oui Verckys” — Congolese Funk, Afrobeat & Psychedelic Rumba 1969-1978
The Rolling Stones — “Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)” — Goat’s Head Soup
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Houston & Dorsey — “Ebb Tide” — You’re Not From Around Here OST


Pictured: Lee Perry (r.) & The Upsetters.
Were you to look skyward while inside the Purple Bat Lounge, you could not help but note the similarity shared by the bar’s aged ceiling tiles and the hide of a dying animal. Pock-marked by random bullet holes, stained with smoke and bearing the affect of malign neglect by the bar’s owners, were that ceiling to speak of all that transpired beneath it, the reputations of many alive and dead would be sullied beyond repair. Mostly, we suspect, that ceiling would complain of its tiles being loosened by the 3 dozen (plus) tunes played by DJ’s Reeshard & Lee-Roy last Saturday evening. Click immediately below to hear whether this complaint is justified…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 231 of No Condition Is Permanent:
The Three Degrees — “Dirty Ol’ Man” — Philadelphia International Records: 40th Anniversary
Segun Bucknor — “Dye Dye” — Who Say I Tire
Kiriae Crucible — “Salem Witch Trial” — Badger A-Go-Go
Sadistic Mika Band — “Hei Made Hitottobi” — Kurofune (Black Ship)
The Velvet Illusions — “Hippy Town” — Acid Head
Mehmet Pekün — “Dinle Arkadaş” — Saz Beat Vol. 3: Turkish Rock, Funk, And Psychedelic Music Of The 1960s And 1970s
The Pretty Things — “Rosalyn” — Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts From The British Empire & Beyond 1964-1969
The Swallows — “Bunga Berachnin” — Steam Kodok: 26 A-Go-Go Ultrarities from the 60’s Singapore & Southeast Asia Underground
Freddie & The Hitch-hikers — “Sinners” — Sin Alley Vol. 2
Los Camaroes — “Boo A Nun Muna” — A Journey Into Cameroonian Music
Kevin Ayers — “Didn’t Feel Lonely Till I Thought Of You” — The Confessions Of Dr. Dream And Other Stories
Afrosound — “Cachuca Bacana” — The Afrosound of Colombia Vol.1
The Young Generation — “Running Mod” — Local Customs: Downriver Revival
I-Mo-Jah / Phillip Fullwood — “Reorganize The Race (Marcus Say)” — Words In Dub
‘Frantic’ Johnny Rogers — “Sassy” — Granpa’s Gully Rock: 26 Dynamite R&B Gems Vol.4
Noppadol Duangporn — “Yaak” — Luk Thung! The Roots Of Thai Funk: Zudrangma Vol. 3
New York Dolls — “Pills” — New York Dolls
Joby Valente — “Disque La Rayé” — Disque La Rayé: 60’s French West-Indies Boo-boo-galoo
The Kinks — “I Took My Baby Home” — The Kinks [mono]
Papa Wemba — “M’Fono Yami” — Papa Wemba
John Cougar Mellencamp — “Authority Song” — Uh-Huh
Los Ovnis De Jorge Chambergo Porta — “Linda Colegiala” — Bailando Con Los Ovnis
Ike Turner & His Kings of Rhythm — “Trackdown Twist” — Ike’s Instrumentals
The Upsetters — “Future Dub” — Voodooism
Latin Playboys — “Same Brown Earth” — Latin Playboys
Abdou El Omari — “Zifaf Filfada” — Nuits D’été Avec Abdou El Omari (Red Album)
Brother JT — “T. Rex Blues” — The Svelteness of Boogietude
Bootsy Collins — “Mug Push” — Ultra Wave
The Strangers — “Onye Ije” — Wake Up You! Vol. 1: The Rise & Fall Of Nigerian Rock Music, 1972-1977
Muvva ‘Guitar’ Hubbard — “Congo Mombo” — Dr. Boogie Presents Bear Traces: Nugget’s From Bob’s Barn
Jimmy Radway & The Fe Me Time All Stars — “Back To Africa” — Dub I
Suicide — “Johnny” — Suicide
Pan Ron & In Yeng — “Sralanh Srey Chnas (I Love Mean Girls)” — Cambodian Rocks
The Googie Rene Combo — “Smokey Joe’s La La” — Sock It To ‘Em Soul: 60’s Club Soul Classics From The Vaults Of Atlantic Atco, Loma Reprise, Stax & Warner Bros. 1963-1968
Bobby Pauneto — “Aqui Voy Yo” — Boogaloo Pow Wow: Dancefloor Rendez-Vous In Young Nuyorica
The Jaguars — “Roundabout” — Epic 45rpm
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
The Paris Sisters — “Lonely Girl” — Jack Nitzsche: His Restless Days


Pictured: Peter Cook & Dudley Moore.
They walked by the river, such as it was. A few hundred years ago and the Don had probably been a waterway worth a mention in the then town guide. But its trickle today was simply a means for ducks to get from one side of the overgrown village to the other. Joe did not feel duty-bound to respect his community. The gorgeous Regency terraces, wide streets and mansions set back from the roads behind ancient, high stone walls did nothing for him. The famous seats of learning disgusted him; education was an ‘out’ thing in his mind. The sedate way of life which attracted a steady flow of tourists to the town bored him rigid. The lack of discos, night places for kids and the ever-alert fuzz patrols only increased his boredom.
— Richard Allen, Mod Rule.
Tear gas lingered in the air outside the Purple Bat Lounge, forcing management to delay opening the bar’s Outdoor Patio™. Which put DJ Lee-Roy in a dour state but, broadcast professional that he claims to be, the dog & his co-host/minder/bail-bondsman Reeshard stepped up and entertained last Saturday evening’s crowd with nearly three dozen storming selections. Hear for yourself, simply by clicking on the big arrow immediately below…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 230 of No Condition Is Permanent:
Orgone — “Don’t Say Stop” — New You, Part 1
Akwassa — “Be Yourself (And Don’t Let Nobody)” — Africa Airways Six (Mile High Funk 1974-1981)
The Jaguars — “Jaguar” — Epic 45rpm
Claudio Veeraragoo — “Qui Fine Arrive” — Moris Zekler: Fuzz & Soul Sega From 70’s Mauritius
Hasil Adkins — “Peanut Butter Rock and Roll” — Peanut Butter Rock and Roll
Dennis Alcapone — “Forever Version” — Forever Version
The Emperors — “Karate [mono 45 rpm version]” — Penniman 45rpm
Kenny Owen — “I Got The Bug” — Lux Lives
Orchestre Elegance Jazz — “Ngalula Marthe” — Compilation Musique Congolaise 1962-1973
The Cramps — “The Mad Daddy” — File Under Sacred Music: Early Singles 1978-81
Dur-Dur Band — “Keene Gardaran” — Dur Dur Of Somalia Volume 1, Volume 2 & Previously Unreleased Tracks
Vernon Harrel — “Slick Chick” — Twistin’ Rumble Volume Ten
Willie Colon — “Che Che Cole” — Cosa Nuestra
The Astors — “Candy” — Sock It To ‘Em Soul: 60’s Club Soul Classics From The Vaults Of Atlantic, Atco, Loma, Reprise, Stax & Warner Bros. 1963-1968
Chacalón Y La Nueva Crema — “Mala Mujer” — Chacalón Y La Nueva Crema
P.E. Hewitt Jazz Ensemble — “Bada Que Bash” — Spiritual Jazz: Esoteric, Modal + Deep Jazz From The Underground 1968-77
Jack Ashford — “Las Vegas Strut [from Blackjack, 1978]” — Can You Dig It? The Music and Politics of Black Action Films 1968-75
Aura (Aspiritual Emanation) — “She Can Turn You Loose” — Spiritual Conection
Smacks — “Nobody Else Is Gonna Go” — Aliens, Psychos and Wild Things: Rare and Unissued Virginia Garage 1964-1967
The Revolutionaries — “Everywhere (Version)” — Roots From The Yard 45rpm
Gino Parks — “Same Thing” — That Cat Was Clean! The Mod Side Of Jazz
Bariş Manço — “Derule” — Turkish Delights: 26 Beat, Psych & Garage Ultrarities from Beyond the Sea of Marmara
Dave Davani Four — “The Jupe” — Capitol 45rpm
Riz Ortolani — “Decimazione Amanti” — Library Of Sound Grooves: Obscure Psychedelic Manuscripts From The Italian Cinema (1967-1975)
Joe Johnson — “Rattlesnake, Baby, Rattlesnake” — Jump And Shout!
Mister Lof — “La Main Noire” — Souvenirs Créoles Celini Vol. 4 – 21 Grands Succes Antilles 1964-1978
The Stooges — “Loose” — Fun House
Chuito Velez — “Descarga” — Boogaloo Pow Wow: Dancefloor Rendez-Vous In Young Nuyorica
Lightnin’ Rod — “Four Bitches Is What I Got’ — Hustlers Convention
Fadoul — “Bsslama Hbibti” — Habibi Funk An Eclectic Selection Of Music From The Arab World
The Lushes — “Drunken Guitar” — Las Vegas Grind! Vol. 2: Louie’s Limbo Lounge
Linval Thompson — “Jam Down Rock” — Strong Like Samson Dub
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Peter Cook & Dudley Moore — “The L.S. Bumble Bee’ — Decca 45rpm


Pictured: James Brown.
The joint’s band drifted in and started tootling and blowing a few practice riffs on a bandstand beside the bar.
Single mud-kickers, black players and their interracial stables, started to park far-out pimpmobiles up and down the block. They peacocked into Pretty Phil’s all decked out in psychedelic threads.
Phil introduced me to the strangers. Many of the players I knew. The inside of my mitts were flaming from the palms I slapped. It was phantasmagoria. They wantonly danced to the funky band’s erotic pound. In the red-lit murk, there was the counterpoint bedlam of profane ribaldry as they loaded their skulls with cocaine and the bubbly. The mirrored globes revolving in the ceiling speckled their faces with flashing light. The meld of their perfumes was a near suffocating cloud. It was like Dante’s Inferno updated.
By four A.M. the joint was claustrophobic. I had gotten several ho licks and birthday wishes galore. But I felt lonely and blue, like a joker in a haunted house. I was in the basement of a pit. The superfox ho target hadn’t shown, and I was still just a welfare case of Phil’s.
— Icebeg Slim, Airtight Willie & Me.
Ordinarily, ‘themes’ don’t figure into No Condition Is Permanent. We document the atmosphere within the Purple Bat Lounge — a reality-averse zone in an especially bad part of downtown Detroit — on a given Saturday evening, whatever that might be, for better or worse. And that’s it. Having said as much, the events of the past fortnight couldn’t help but influence the most recent broadcast, and should our listeners detect as much in the evening’s playlist, so be it. Judge for yourself. It’s only a few pixels to the south of these words, awaiting your click…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 229 of No Condition Is Permanent:
The Impressions — “Make A Resolution (from Three The Hard Way, 1974)” — Can You Dig It? The Music and Politics of Black Action Films 1968-75
Blo — “Beware” — Chapters and Phases (The Complete Albums 1973-1975)
The Royaltones — “Black Lightning” — Sleazy Surf! Vol. 1
Culture — “Black Starliner Must Come” — Two Sevens Clash
Joe Simon & the Eugene Blacknells Band — “Just Like Yesterday” — Souvenirs of the Soul Clap Vol. 3
Lisandro Meza — “Shacalao” — Black Man’s Cry: The Inspiration of Fela Kuti
S.O.U.L. — “Tell It Like It Is” — Black & Proud: The Soul of the Black Panther Era Vol. 1
Marijata — “Black Beautiful Race” — Pat Thomas Introduces Marijata
The Brothers of Hope — “Nickol Nickol” — Funky Crimes
Bill Paul — “Am I Black Enough for You?” — 360 Degrees of Billy Paul
The Equals — “Police On My Back” — Greatest Hits
The Bobby Fuller Four — “I Fought The Law (mono version)” — Never To Be Forgotten
Yol Aularong & Liev Tuk — “Sou Slarp Kroam Kombut Srey” (Rather Die Under The Woman’s Sword)” — Cambodian Rocks
Link Wray And The Raymen — “Law Of The Jungle” — Mr. Guitar
Jah Lion & Junior Murvin — “Soldier And Police War” — Colombia Colly
Boris Policeband — “Tow Away” — New York Noise Vol. 3: Music From The New York Underground 1979-1984
Guido & Maurizio De Angelis — “New Special Squad” — Beretta 70: Roaring Themes from Thrilling Italian Police Films
The Last Poets — “Black Thighs” — The Last Poets
James Brown — “Soul Power Pts. 1 & 2” — Star Time: Soul Brother No.1
The Upsetters (& The Heptones) — “Serious Time (Dub)” — Party Time [Deluxe Edition]
Henry Flynt & The Insurrections — “Goodbye Wall St.” — I Don’t Wanna
The New Swing Sextet — “Revolucionando” — Monkey See, Monkey Do
Black Merda — “Cynthy-Ruth” — Black Merda
Peace — “Black Power” — Can’t You Hear Me? 70’s African Nuggets & Garage Rock from Nigeria, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
The Winners — “Cops And Rodders” — Boss Drag ’64
Duongdao And Chailai — “Mia Rai Duen” — Thai Pop Spectacular 1960s–1980s
Danny “Run Joe” Taylor — “You Look Bad” — Stompin’ 15
Black Rock — “Yeah Yeah” — Chains & Black Exhaust
Jimmy Sabater — “Times Are Changing” — El Barrio: Sounds From The Spanish Harlem Streets
Sly & Family Stone — “Family Affair” — There’s a Riot Goin’ On
Kako Y Su Combo — “Cool Jerk” — Boogaloo Pow Wow: Dancefloor Rendez-Vous In Young Nuyorica
Wire — “Fragile” — Pink Flag
Fela Kuti — “Ako” — The ’69 Los Angeles Sessions
MC5 — “Over And Over” — High Time
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Marvin Gaye — “What’s Going On (Rhythm & Strings Mix)” — What’s Going On [2001 Deluxe Edition]


Pictured: Gil Scott-Heron.
Socrates didn’t have to look around to see the boarded-up businesses and stores; the poor black faces and brown faces of the men and women who didn’t have a thing. Iula’s diner and Tony’s garage were the only working businesses on that block.
And he hated bringing bottles and cans to the Ralph’s supermarket on Crenshaw. To get there he had to walk for miles pulling as many as three grocery carts linked by twisted wire coat hangers. And when he got there they always made him wait; made him stand outside while they told jokes and had coffee breaks. And then they checked every can. They didn’t have to do that. He knew what they took and what they didn’t. He came in twice a week with his cans and bottles and nobody ever found one Kessler’s Root Beer or Bubble-Up in the lot. But they checked every one just the same. And they never bothered to learn his name. They called him “Pop” or “old man.” They made him wait and checked after him like he was some kind of stupid animal.
— Walter Mosely, Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned
As doubtless you will note, with the merest gloss of what lies south of this sentence, still another stellar (given prevailing circumstances) Saturday night at the Purple Bat Lounge has been documented for your listening pleasure. Though ‘stellar’ might not be the most appropriate descriptor to quantify DJ Lee-Roy’s interaction with bartender/dominatrix LaWanda through much of the evening. It’s kind of a story. I’d say you had to have been there but now you can be, in the comparative safety of your own home. G’head, click down below and hear for yourself…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 228 of No Condition Is Permanent:
The Salsoul Orchestra — “Chicago Bus Stop” — The Anthology
The Sahara All Stars — “Take Your Soul” — Nigeria Disco Funk Special: The Sound Of The Underground Lagos Dancefloor 1974-79
Aki Aleong & The Nobles — “Body Surf” — The Surf Creature
The Aggrovators — “I & I Land” — Rockers Almighty Dub
The Mar-Keys — “The Dribble” — Stax 45rpm
La Logia Sarabanda — “Cajon De Castañas” — Movers!
The Sonics — “The Witch” — Here Are The Sonics!!!
Guitar Red — “Disco From A Space Show” — Personal Space: Electronic Soul 1974-1984
JK Mandengue — “Kosa Mba” — Africa Airways Six (Mile High Funk 1974-1981)
Flat Duo Jets — “Ooh My Head” — Safari
Susan Cadogan — “Dub It” — Clocktower 45rpm
The Small Faces — “My Mind’s Eye” — Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts From The British Empire & Beyond 1964-1969
Wild Fire — “Living On a String” — Tropical Disco Hustle
The Undecyded — “Make Her Cry” — Dearborn 45rpm
M. Ishak Dengan Five-55 — “Oh! Salina” — Let’s A Go-Go! Singapore And Southeast Asian Pop Scene 1964-69
Chuy Castro and His Orchestra — “Swahili Baby” — Baronet 45rpm
Les Loups Noirs — “Pele Rien” — Tanbou Toujou Lou: Meringue, Kompa Kreyol, Vodou Jazz & Electric Folklore from Haiti 1960-1981
The Rascals — “See (Single Version)” — All I Really Need: The Atlantic Recordings (1965-1971)
Los Turistas Del Mantaro — “Agua Dulce” — Andina: Huayno, Carnaval And Cumbia – The Sound Of The Peruvian Andes 1968-1978
Ohio Untouchables — “Your Love Is Real” — Hot Stuff
The Organization — “Smokey Feeling” — Hugo Mendez Presents Tropical Funk Experience: Island Jump Up – Caribbean Funk, Soul, Reggae, Calypso and Afro Grooves 1968-1975
Bee Bee Queen w/Teacho’s Orch. — “Wanna Be Loved (All Nite Long)” — I Hate Cherries: Serious ’50s Female Jivers
Winston ‘King’ Cole — “Black Magic Woman” — Impact! Rare And Unreleased Reggae, Funk & Soul From The Vaults Of Impact! And Randy’s Records
The Contours — “Whole Lotta Woman” — In The Beginning: The Mod Story
Salah Ragab — “Egypt Strut” — Welcome To The Party
Wire — “Options R” — Pink Flag
Gasper Lawal — “Kita-Kita” — Ajomasé
Angie — “Peppermint Lump” — Stiff 45rpm
Very Be Careful — “La Furgoneta” — Escape Room
The Rolling Stones — “You Better Move On” — The Rolling Stones
Prince Far I — “Things Nuh Bright” — Silver And Gold
The Sidewinders — “Jaguar” — Greasy Rock ‘N’ Roll Vol. 2
Chai Muansing — “Pee Koe Pee Ork (Ghosts Come And Go)” — Thai Beat A Go Go Vol. 2: Groovy 60’s Sounds from the Land of Smile!
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
Gil Scott-Heron — “Whitey On The Moon’ — Small Talk At 125th & Lenox


Pictured: The Treniers.
The Choke was a Pachuco invention. The Pachucos were what we called kids who spoke with Mexican accents whether they were Mexican or not and who lived real lives. The Choke looked like a completely Apache, deadly version of the jitterbug only you never thought of the jitterbug when you watched kids doing the Choke. There was no swing in the Choke, it was staccato. It was Pachuco, police-record, L.A. flamenco dancing.
It was all done on the heels.
And the knees, unlike in the dirty boogie, were irretrievably glued together. The arms, instead of being swung were just, when not being used for some split-second-clue maneuver, forgotten about. So the arms fell where they might, as though they belonged to a dead person. The shoulders were hunched up and never relaxed once during the dance so the contrast between the dead arms and the hunched shoulders was kind of sinister like the villain in the movie smiling with a knife in his hand.
— Eve Babitz, Eve’s Hollywood
Immediately below these pixels lies the key to experiencing yet another Saturday night at the Purple Bat Lounge, that most frabjous spot in a decidedly vorpal neighborhood. Get down with your bad self, and click now…
Here’s what we played in Ep. 227 of No Condition Is Permanent:
Rose Royce — “You’re A Winner” — Greatest Hits
Marijata — “Mother Africa” — Ghana Soundz: Afro-Beat, Funk & Fusion In ’70s Ghana
The Challengers — “Satan’s Theme” — Lost Legends Of Surf Guitar Vol. 3: Cheater Stomp!
Orchestra Harlow — “Freak Off” — El Exigente
The Cramps — “Jungle Hop” — Psychedelic Jungle
Gianni Marchetti — “Night In Saigon” — Library Of Sound Grooves: Obscure Psychedelic Manuscripts From The Italian Cinema (1967-1975)
The Chimes — “Zindy Lou” — Rumba Doowop ’55
Ike Turner & the Kings of Rhythm — “Thinking Black” — Funky Crimes
Orchestre Negro Success — “Nakota Zebola” — Les Merveilles Du Passé
Love — “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale” — Forever Changes
Los Dandy’s — “Tu Cucu” — Lindo Amorcito
The Shells — “Whiplash” — Souvenirs of the Soul Clap Vol. 2
Gharbi Sadok & Georges Garzia — “Lala Tibki” — Habibi Funk An Eclectic Selection Of Music From The Arab World
Idle Race — “Hurry Up John” — Idle Race
Rockers All Stars — “Peaceful Man Dub” — Augustus Pablo Presents Rockers International Vol. 1
Curley & The Jades — “Boom Stix” — The Madness Invasion Vol. 2
Life — “2001” — West Indies Funk 3
Hot Chocolate — “You Sexy Thing” — Super Hits Of The 70’s: Have A Nice Day Vol. 15
Mario Ortiz All Star Band — “Güiro y Pandereta” — ¡Saoco! The Bomba and Plena Explosion in Puerto Rico 1954-1966
The Ebonettes — “Wild Man Walk” — Beat From Badsville Vol. 1
Unknown — “Unknown” — Cambodian Cassette Archives: Khmer Folk and Pop Music Vol. 1
The Treniers — “Rockin’ Is Our Bizness” — Go! Go! Go! A Proper Introduction To The Treniers
Bossa 70 — “Si Voce Pensa” — Peruvian Funk
Reigning Sound — “You Got Me Hummin’” — Too Much Guitar
Mieko Hirota — “Nagisa No Tenshi” — Nippon Girls 1: Japanese Pop, Beat & Bossa Nova 1966-70
Bob Haggart & Ray Bauduc — “Big Noise From Winnetka” — Rumba Jazz 1919-1945: A History Of Latin Jazz & Dance Music From The Swing Era
The Chosen Few — “Collie Stuff” — Darker Than Blue: Soul From Jamdown 1973-1980
Les Loups Noirs — “Pile Ou Face” — Haiti Direct: Big Band, Mini Jazz & Twoubadou Sounds 1960-1978
Keetie & The Kats — “Way Out” — Dancehall Stringbusters Vol. 2
Kazi Aniruddha — “Main Hoon Pyar Tera” — Bollywood Steel Guitar
Thunderclap Newman — “Holllywood Dream (Instrumental)” — Hollywood Dream
The Congos — “Fisherman” — Heart Of The Congos
LORD BUCKLEY’S WEEKLY BENEDICTION…
The Pretty Things — “Grass” — Parachute









"The compensation for the loss of innocence, of simplicity, of unselfconscious energy, is the classic moment... It's there on record. You can play it any time."
- George Melly, Revolt Into Style
"Reciprovocation ees the spites of life, M'sieur"
- Mlle. Hepzibah, Pogo


