In 1981, after
Joe "King" Carrasco proved there was still an audience who wanted to hear Texas-style garage rock in the manner of the
Sir Douglas Quintet,
Doug Sahm reasonably figured he could do it as well as anyone, and he put together a new edition of the
Quintet, featuring original keyboard man
Augie Meyers and drummer
Johnny Perez. The
Quintet cut a fine comeback album, Border Wave, and hit the road, with
Sir Doug and Company cranking out plenty of loose-limbed rock & roll, seasoned with the R&B, norteño, and blues accents that always informed
Sahm's music.
Nuevo Wave Live is a reissue of the 1983 live set Live Texas Tornado, preserving highlights from
SDQ shows in Los Angeles and Austin, and this album captured the group in its element, conjuring a loose but powerful Texas groove while the audience whoops it up and the band boogies right along with them. It's hard to say why this was supposed to be considered new wave, since it sounds like the same music
Sahm and
Meyers had been making for almost 20 years at this point, but that doesn't make any less sense than anyone believing
the Sir Douglas Quintet were British in 1965, and this short but sweet set is a hoot, with
Sahm sounding fully engaged (even when he can't remember the lyrics to "Wolly Bully"),
Meyers' organ as gloriously trashy as ever, and Alvin Crow adding some country and rockabilly to the mix (and leading the charge on a ragged-but-right cover of
Buddy Holly's "Oh Boy!"). Closing with a swinging version of "The T-Bone Shuffle" that is probably the work of another of
Sahm's bands,
Nuevo Wave Live is a stylistically mixed bag, but fans of
Doug Sahm would expect nothing less from one of his live sets, and the music is a loosely tight delight. ~ Mark Deming