[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]
The Subdudes — All The Time In The World
Album: Primitive Streak
Avg rating:
7

Your rating:
Total ratings: 1457








Released: 1996
Length: 4:31
Plays (last 30 days): 0
I've got all the time in the world
I've got a sweet loving daddy's little girl
You need a minute just take your time
You need an hour you can borrow mine
I've got all the time in the world

Buying time they is a dangerous thing
You never know exactly what the time will bring
Move along, but not too fast
You've got to make the good times last
I've got all the time in the world

Leaving town on a slow freight train
I should know from the sound of your sad refrain
You need some cash, you got to go
How 'bout a slow game of dominoes
I've got all the time in the world

I've got all the time in the world
I've got a sweet loving daddy's little girl
You need a minute, take your time
You need an hour you can borrow mine
I've got all the time in the world
I've got all the time in the world
I've got all the time in the world
Comments (121)add comment
I want some fast food and eat it slow......
GOOD TUNE!   It is the 1st time that I have heard them.  That is why we come here. Thanx RP!  
I miss The Subdudes.
Sweet set!
Andy Bernard song
 skindy wrote:

Oh man, does this bring back memories! The ex and I were HUGE fans of the subdudes (lower case!) when the original group was together and touring. Saw them live multiple times. Such musicianship, and hard not to smile, tap yer feet (or all-out dance) when listening to them!



for sure. i've seen them a few times early/mid 90s, so fun live. 
Wow.  Thought I was gonna hear "Wild Thing" when this started.
Kinda surprised that -- among all the "sounds like" comments -- no one mentioned Honky Tonk Women.  Not a bad sound to have...
if ya play these guys...

yous should play sonia dada
 passsion8 wrote:
 
Not exactly the end of the story. I was set free for a reason. The next morning I got a call from my father's wife (not my mother) that my father had hit his head and was in a coma. I flew down to see him one last time. He passed 3 days later.

I needed to be free to deal with that scenario, and No, correlation is not causation here. No bad juju. Besides, I had been the Art Director for the '88 Olympics already, won 4 Emmys and knew EXACTLY what I was missing! I went on to a very lucrative freelance career thereafter.




As somebody who has been working in the marketing/design business for over 20 years I have to say, good for you! Sometimes life forces you to make a change...it can be funny like that.
 surfrider4life wrote:


Littlefeet


They were very heavily influenced by NOLA and some vice versa
 horstman wrote:
passsion8 wrote: I'm a Landscape Architect. My summers are like this all the time and my winters aren't much better. We do what we love and endure the hours as hubris for our craft. You missed out on a great life changing event because you couldn't deal with it. Poor fella!


No one ever proclaims on their deathbed that they wished they worked longer hours.  Live your one life while you have it.  The olympics are a horrible scam - set pieces for autocrats and multi-national corporations.  I'd consider a badge of honor to quit them.
The solo reminds me of ol' Lowell George.
 carmelmik wrote:

a great band. vocals, musicianship and stage presence is great.  a special sound.



Littlefeet
Still sounds like Sonia Dada.

Not to be confused with the Dadist movement in the 1920s. 

That album cover looks like Dadist art.
a great band. vocals, musicianship and stage presence is great.  a special sound.
This song is so great!
Don't know how I missed these guys, but never to late to learn...
 siandbeth wrote:
passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
Great story! Thanks for sharing
 
Posting to an 8 year old post?... talk about a message from the past. For all the people who've felt like this listener in '96 working for the man... Thanks for sharing your story.  And thanks to PR for their wonderfully eclectic mix that just WORKS and simply defies an algorithm. K
It's got a modern Allman Brothers vibe, for me, and the song JUST ROCKS!
Most Excellent.
Pretty fitting at the moment.
The hook is the guitar riff at 4:12. Kind of a diminished 5th or some such, AKA the Devil's chord. 

The Devil's chord is a chord that has the root note of a minor scale, the flatted fifth of the same scale and the root note of the scale an octave higher.

Perfect.

 idiot_wind wrote:
Sure sounds like the band, Sonia Dada. 
 
Sounds like something I'm deeply familiar with yet had no idea it was the Subdudes….cool name there too....and this has a nice swamp rock sound making me think ABB or Little Feat....I like it!  It's an 8 with room to grow; Long Live RP!!
**Going +1, call it a 9, has a great 'lets-have-some-brews-vibe' to it....LLRP!!
 doc1968 wrote:
I love hearing this. Herman's Hideaway, Denver, circa 1994 .
Good times!  
 
Don't forget the Little Bear. Saw them many times there as well and later at the Gothic. new self produced album coming out soon!
Sure sounds like the band, Sonia Dada. 
I love hearing this. Herman's Hideaway, Denver, circa 1994 .
Good times!  
 OceanBlue wrote:
Awesome band name, awesome song, awesome comment by an awesome listener of an awesome radio station.

 
Nothing more to add to this.
Sounds alot like the band, Sonja Dada.

Ahh....to be a Dadaist, once again! Oh the pain and anguish of the aesthetics of art!!!! 
Thanks for playing this great band. One of my favorites. They have many good songs.
Morning Glory, Fair Weather Friend, Strangers, Brightest Star
Would love to hear them more often.
Still a great show even now. See em if you can!
 92024daveb wrote:
Such a great band and I dare you not to tap your foot to this!

 
Well I kept one foot from tapping, but then the other one started on its own!  {#Eek}
Such a great band and I dare you not to tap your foot to this!
 horstman wrote:
passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
I'm a Landscape Architect. My summers are like this all the time and my winters aren't much better. We do what we love and endure the hours as hubris for our craft. You missed out on a great life changing event because you couldn't deal with it. Poor fella!


Not exactly the end of the story. I was set free for a reason. The next morning I got a call from my father's wife (not my mother) that my father had hit his head and was in a coma. I flew down to see him one last time. He passed 3 days later.

I needed to be free to deal with that scenario, and No, correlation is not causation here. No bad juju. Besides, I had been the Art Director for the '88 Olympics already, won 4 Emmys and knew EXACTLY what I was missing! I went on to a very lucrative freelance career thereafter.


{#Chillpill} love this , climax blues band does a great version as well from their 70's release rich man
 passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
 
Love this story. {#Clap}
Oh man, does this bring back memories! The ex and I were HUGE fans of the subdudes (lower case!) when the original group was together and touring. Saw them live multiple times. Such musicianship, and hard not to smile, tap yer feet (or all-out dance) when listening to them!
Awesome band name, awesome song, awesome comment by an awesome listener of an awesome radio station.
This song brings to mind a thought of sitting on a big, covered front porch of a late-nineteenth century farmhouse out in the country, jamming out with a bunch of friends on an early-October evening. A slow, relaxing time with good people.
{#Dancingbanana_2}
 Webfoot wrote:

Agreed.  I prefer scotch.

 
Don Julio is my friend....
 WonderLizard wrote:
The aural equivalent of two fingers of Jack Daniels.

 
Agreed.  I prefer scotch.
 bb_matt wrote:
Got a Hoooonkey tonk wooomaaaan ...
 
Ouch! My ears! {#Crashcomp}
Got a Hoooonkey tonk wooomaaaan ...
Knockin it OUTTA THE PARK today!!
Hehe! I got all the time in the world for some 'Dudes" tunes, Bill!

S'more, please! 
 WonderLizard wrote:
The aural equivalent of two fingers of Jack Daniels.
 
Well said, well said!
I was living in Duluth Minnesota when this song came out.  It was the perfect overture for that town.  

Damn I miss that life sometimes.
            {#Notworthy}
Luv this band!!  {#Daisy}
i had the pleasure of seeing these guys live a few times. so very much fun. love this song.
Mean guitars ! #8 {#Bananajam}
 Toke wrote:

Likewise heard this track once and went straight and bought the Album all tracks are Brilliant, Great Band Great Lyrics Just a Magic Album Full marks RP {#Dancingbanana}

 

If you love this, then you could also check out "the Band of Heathens". A great band from Austin, Texas. A very, very similar sound with a couple of great albums...
The aural equivalent of two fingers of Jack Daniels.
I just love a good Subdudes tune chased with something by vintage Little Feat (wish that could happen here.) {#Sunny}
 eastcoast wrote:
I remember hearing a cut from this album and bought it on a whim...man was I impressed.  A great album through and through.
 
Likewise heard this track once and went straight and bought the Album all tracks are Brilliant, Great Band Great Lyrics Just a Magic Album Full marks RP {#Dancingbanana}

{#Dancingbanana_2}
 horstman wrote:


 I'm a Landscape Architect....  We do what we love and endure the hours as hubris for our craft.... 


I read this hummus....ummmm.....hummus. Now that's what I love!
Oh yeah, and this song too! {#Moon}{#Sunny}
The only time I feel good
is with some dirt beneath my LITTLE FEAT


A great great live show - had the crowd on its "Feat" the entire time.  Hot damn! {#Bananajam}
 nigelr wrote:
Reminds me of Lowell George and co..........high praise indeed!
 
Very "Feat-like" indeed.  Nice!!

Reminds me of Lowell George and co..........high praise indeed!
I have seen these guys live at least half a dozen times. They are always a great show!


I remember hearing a cut from this album and bought it on a whim...man was I impressed.  A great album through and through.
My buddy saw these guys in the early 90s. I remember how impressed he was with their sound and that the one dude didn't so much hit his tamborine with his hand as use a big billy-club device to get that extra impact, I guess. Good stuff! 9.
wanna have some high times and live 'em low
Funky white boys!
DAMN these guys are good. Local paper (Albany NY) rated them the best concert of the year. Very dissapointed that nothing from their new album Street Symphony is playing here. Sound and Vision mag (Stereo REview) reviewer called it the best album of the century so far. I should post it, but have never done it before. Like a reviewer noted below about a different Subdudes album, I would consider it a "stranded on a desert Isle" album. Prob the best Album I have listed to in 5 years or so. Obviously I recommend it... :)
One of the best concerts ever! A little bar in Vail, Colorado. Small wood dance floor. There were so many of us rocking out that the wood floor was rolling like a wave sending all of us into the air. What a blast!
horstman wrote:
I'm a Landscape Architect. You missed out...you couldn't deal with it.
What a condescending/arrogant attitude! I'm an architect but agree with passion8 that there are are many things...I repeat, many things...more important than doing a good job! I don't know how you feel about your friends, health & family, but I sure hope your satisfied with your paycheck. I'm sorry if this comes across strongly but I was p*ssed by the way you trashed passion8. PS - I've now bumped this tune from a 9 to a 10.
Oh, and I talked to a guy in Birmingham AL who said Atlanta gave ALL their homeless people one way bus tickets to Birmingham right before the Olympics. Birmingham sent them right back.
passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
Great story! Thanks for sharing
This really hits the mark. Nice job.
passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
I'm a Landscape Architect. My summers are like this all the time and my winters aren't much better. We do what we love and endure the hours as hubris for our craft. You missed out on a great life changing event because you couldn't deal with it. Poor fella!
radiojunkie wrote:
"I want some fast food And eat it slow" What a great line.
"I want some high times And live 'em low" Poetry. With a funky beat. Go 'Dudes! c. ps. Passion8's story is awesome. Good for you!
passsion8 wrote:
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
A former roommate worked for Coca-Cola (volunteered, actually) during the '96 Olympics in Atlanta. She worked 16 hour days for over a month BUT got tickets to all the best events - good tradeoff, but not as a permanent gig!
Jacksonstat wrote:
thanks for sharing your story passsion8.
Yes indeedy. Been there myself. No more TV work for me...
wiley1st wrote:
Reminds me of Little Feat. Nice.
With more than a small dash of Delbert McClinton thrown in.
thanks for sharing your story passsion8.
I was the art director for the NBC Olympics in '96. They were working me to death & I was doing 14 hour shifts, missing time for friends & exercise & home-cooked meals. Taking naps under consoles to stay awake. One day (July 6th, actually), I walked in and they had replaced all the chairs with crates since the furniture had to be sent ahead to Atlanta to be set up. I asked how long we were expected to sit on crates and they said about a month. And they said no more days off for the remainder of the job. (3 months!) That did it. I quit. Went out to Central Park in NYC and played Frisbee for hours on a sunny day. Loved it. This song was playing on a boom box nearby. REALLY loved it then. I had all the time in the world......
I wonder if it was March 4th, 1982 for them, too.
"I want some fast food And eat it slow" What a great line.
Good drinking music ... great BBQ music some real good blue-eyed soul there
Reminds me of Little Feat. Nice.
Is a "subdude" anything like a "sublieutenant" in the British military? I mean, might they someday get promoted from "subdudes" to full dudes? Like the song, BTW.
Never heard this before, but I like it...
Heh heh. I always thought the intro to this song was "Wild Thing."
Just got their new CD "Behind the Levee." It is excellent.
that spoken word bit sounds almost like bill clinton. that makes me laugh. :)
Nice seque from Wild Thing into this.
What a set! I have to admit that this kind of set seems to be rather absent (at least in my experience). A nice (better?) counter point to the Ryan Adams tendency on RP.
A lot of nice 'borrows' from various good artists. Nice 'own' sound coming out at the end.
Heh first time I hear this song and I'm singing along already. Great tune.
I would like to hear these guys billed with The Radiators back in New Orleans when it gets rebuilt and EVERYBODY gets to go backand reopen they're po'boy shops. Thanks RP for the exposure to NOLA
New year, time to straighten up some misconceptions: Jeffrey wrote:
And no drums--that's just a tambourine.
Not exactly. The percussionist, Steve Amedee, has perhaps the most unique drumming style you will ever see. He includes a tamborine in his method, but also has some more conventional equipment as well. Very minimalist though. His style is so different that about ten years ago they put out an instructional video just to show how to do it. String_Chess_Incident wrote:
* buys the CD *
Actually, if you like their sound, the CD I highly recommend getting is Annunciation. Song for song, this is one of the best albums I have ever heard. (I consider it a "deserted island" CD.) You will not be disappointed. ChardRemains wrote:
A buddy of mine swears these guys are THE live show...
They do put on a fantastic show, heightened by the fact that they play venues which keeps you close to the band. It's almost like they're playing in your living room. There is a very intimate/comfortable vibe between the band and the audience. lily34 wrote:
seen them twice. FABULOUS band. so much fun live. :nodhead: so happy to hear them on RP. did they regroup? i think they disbanded and then started calling themselves tinytown (or something) with the remaining members....but i'd love it if they were back to being the subdudes. does anyone know?
Around 1996 the original band did a farewell tour, tired of ten years on the road and in hopes of pursuing individual projects. A few years later 3 of the 4 got back together (all but the bassist Allen - IMHO the least critical to the subdudues sound) and toured briefly as "The Dudes," although it was clearly the subdudes music. {Historical backdrop: This is around the time that the Grateful Dead sans Jerry set the fashion by playing as "The Other Ones."} Some change of heart took place and in 2002 the band reemerged as the subdudes once again, with 2 new members recruited from their old New Orleans circles to replace Allen.
I think I"ll tune into Folk Alley.com, they play folk music all day long, kinda like this station does occasionally.
Occasionally this station sounds like some oldies channel, what gives, other times it's awesome.
brandog wrote:
I bet these guys would be great live- but the studio stuff doesn't move me at all.
A buddy of mine swears these guys are THE live show...
Reminds me a bit of Eric Clapton.
This song showed up on HBO's "The Wire", to accent the fact that someone was being tossed in jail. The "Live At Last" version is great, also.
* buys the CD *
If you like this, just buy the album. It's great. And no drums--that's just a tambourine.
F-Man wrote:
Sounds a lot like Little Feat, at least on this song. (That's a good thing)
My first thought when I went to check out on playlist!
I just ordered a Subdudes cd. I've liked everything of their's that I've heard played on here.
Sounds a lot like Little Feat, at least on this song. (That's a good thing)
Glad to hear they're back together. I believe I'd heard that they had broken up for a while. Maybe it was just a year or two sabbatical... Love the little spoken part in the middle!
Hooray for Looziana music and for the subdudes!
I dig this tune and this whole CD. Everytime I play it someone asks, WHO is this? Nice to hear it on RP. :sunny.gif:
Thought they were launching into The Troggs' "Wild Thing" at first. Cool tune.
Great band live. From New Orleans originally. Then to Ft. Collins for a couple of years in the late 80's. Then moved back to New Orleans.
seen them twice. FABULOUS band. so much fun live. :nodhead: so happy to hear them on RP. did they regroup? i think they disbanded and then started calling themselves tinytown (or something) with the remaining members....but i'd love it if they were back to being the subdudes. does anyone know?
BillG wrote:
New Orleans, I believe.
I stand corrected! They've played live in Austin so much, I just figured they were a Texas band. They sure have the N.O. feel and funk, though!
kctomato wrote:
I think they are part NO and part Colorado I sure wish I could figure out what is wrong with my system so i could up load some more to ya'll.
TOTALLY New Orleans.
BillG wrote:
New Orleans, I believe.
I think they are part NO and part Colorado I sure wish I could figure out what is wrong with my system so i could up load some more to ya'll.
Jimmy likes Subdudes
Pyro wrote:
This Austin band is SMOKIN'!
New Orleans, I believe.
funky groove!
This Austin band is SMOKIN'!