Burning The Ground Exclusive
A Strange and Brilliant 12-Inch Experiment From L.A.’s Most Eccentric New Wavers
Before Wall of Voodoo became synonymous with their cult breakthrough “Mexican Radio,” the L.A. art-punk outfit had already built a reputation for creating quirky, cinematic, and sharply experimental new wave. Their 1982 12-inch “Two Songs By Wall of Voodoo” captures the band at a fascinating moment—caught between underground obscurity and the sudden visibility that MTV would soon bring them. More than just a maxi-single, this release plays like a compact sonic experiment.
The A-Side: Mexican Radio – From Underground Curiosity to MTV Staple
The 12″ opens with the familiar 3:56 version of “Mexican Radio,” later released as a single from Call of the West in early 1983. Even in this earlier context, the track stands out: Stan Ridgway’s wry, deadpan vocals, Marc Moreland’s spaghetti-western guitar twang, and the band’s fascination with shortwave transmissions all combine into something both catchy and wonderfully eccentric.
Although “Mexican Radio” wasn’t a massive chart hit, it made a notable impact. It broke into the Billboard Hot 100, performed particularly well in Canada and New Zealand, and even in countries where it didn’t chart—like the UK—it quickly became a cult favorite. Much of that success came from its surreal, low-budget music video, a quirky, dusty fever dream that became an early MTV staple. The video’s DIY charm and oddball imagery ensured Wall of Voodoo stood out in the rapidly expanding landscape of ’80s music television.
The B-Side: A Continuous Sound Collage
The creative heart of this 12″ lives on the B-side.
“There’s Nothing on This Side” begins as an atmospheric instrumental built on echoing percussion, pulsing synth lines, and disembodied bursts of radio chatter. It unfolds slowly, like a transmission drifting in from another world—moody, immersive, and distinctly Wall of Voodoo.
What makes this side particularly compelling is the seamless transition that follows. Without a break, the piece gradually bends and reshapes itself until it emerges as the unlisted “Mexican Radio (Limited Edition Special Dub Mix).”
This mix isn’t a standard dance-floor dub. Instead, it deconstructs the original track into:
- warped and echo-soaked vocal fragments
- sparse drum-machine rhythms
- swirling pockets of reverb and space
- manipulated bits of the A-side stitched into new patterns
Because the segue is continuous, the B-side plays as a single extended sound collage—a compact nearly 11-minute suite that highlights the band’s experimental instincts and studio playfulness. It’s a fascinating contrast to the more structured A-side and a reminder of how adventurous the early lineup truly was.
Why This 12″ Still Matters
This release captures Wall of Voodoo standing at the crossroads of cult experimentation and unexpected mainstream attention. The unlisted dub mix, the conceptual flow of the B-side, and the presence of what would become their signature song all make this 12″ a standout in the band’s catalog. For collectors and fans of early ’80s new wave, it remains one of the most intriguing—and rewarding—artifacts from the era.
Music Video
The music video for “Mexican Radio” became a regular fixture on MTV shortly after the single’s release, giving Wall of Voodoo a level of visibility they’d never had before. It was the first music video directed by filmmaker Frank Delia—formerly the frontman of the Bruthers and a longtime friend of the band. His work on the clip made an immediate impression; the Ramones were so taken with it that they hired Delia to direct several of their videos soon after.
The video itself is packed with strange, memorable imagery: Stan Ridgway’s face rising out of a bowl of beans, disorienting close-ups, and sun-baked desert scenes. Some of the footage was filmed on location in Tijuana, including sequences shot at the bullfights. Actor Carel Struycken even makes a brief appearance, playing the role of the video’s director amid the organized chaos.
Final Thoughts
Two Songs By Wall of Voodoo is much more than a simple promotional single. It’s a compact statement of the band’s idiosyncratic vision: part new wave, part soundtrack, part art-punk collage. While “Mexican Radio” would soon carry them into the MTV spotlight, this 12″ shows the deeper, stranger ideas bubbling underneath.
For fans, collectors, and anyone fascinated by the left-of-center edges of early MTV-era new wave, this release is absolutely worth revisiting.
For fans, collectors, and anyone fascinated by the left-of-center edges of early MTV-era new wave, this release is absolutely worth revisiting.
SIDE A:
Mexican Radio 3:56
SIDE B:
There’s Nothing On This Side /
Mexican Radio (Limited Edition Special Dub Mix) 10:46
VINYL GRADE:
Vinyl: Near Mint
Sleeve: Near Mint
| Chart | Peak Position | Date |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard Hot 100 | #58 | 1982 |
| UK Singles (OCC) | #64 | 1982 |
| Canada Top Singles (RPM) | #16 | 1982 |
| Australia (ARIA) | #33 | 1982 |
| New Zealand (Recorded Music) | #21 | 1982 |
RELEASE INFORMATION:
Label: I.R.S. Records – SP 70407
Format: Vinyl, 12″, 33 ⅓ RPM
Country: US
Released: 1982
Genre: Rock
Style: New Wave, Experimental
CREDITS:
- Design – Carl Grasso
- Engineer – Jess Sutcliffe, Robert Battaglia
- Guitar – Marc Moreland
- Keyboards, Bass – Chas T. Gray
- Lacquer Cut By [Runout Etching ⚇] – Frank DeLuna
- Percussion – Joe Nanini
- Photography By [Back] – Scott Lindgren
- Photography By [Front] – Jules Bates
- Producer – Richard Mazda
- Vocals, Keyboards – Stannard Ridgway*
- Written-By – WOV*
NOTES:
Pressed at Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute as indicated by 1T etched in both runouts.
Lacquer cut by Frank DeLuna as indicated by ⚇ symbol etched in runouts.
Side B is only credited as one song, “There’s Nothing On This Side,” at a duration of 10:08, but there is a split between B1 and B2; the tracks segue into each other.
Buy the 12″ at DISCOGS
VINYL TRANSFER & AUDIO RESTORATION:
-DjPaulT
for BURNING THE GROUND

THE GEAR:
Turntable: Technics SL-1200MK7
Cartridge/Stylus: Ortofon Concorde Music Black
Turntable Isolation Platform: ISO-Tone™ Turntable Isolation Platform
Platter: Pro Spin Acrylic Mat
Stabilizer: Pro-Ject Record Puck
Phono Pre-amp: Pro-Jec Tube Box DS2
Tubes: Genalex Gold Lion 12AX7 ECC83/B759 Gold Pins Vacuum Tube – Matched Pair
DAC: Alpha Design Labs GT40a USB DAC
Record Cleaning: VPI HW 16.5 Record Cleaning Machine
Artwork Scans: Epson Workforce WF-7610 Professional Printer/Scanner
SOFTWARE:
Recording/Editing: Adobe Audition 25 (Recording)
Down Sampling/Dither: iZotope RX Advanced 2
Artwork Editor: Adobe Photoshop CS5
Click Removal: Manual
FLAC/MP3 Conversion: dBpoweramp
M3U Playlist: Playlist Creator
RESTORATION NOTES:
All vinyl rips are recorded @ 32bit/float
FLAC (Level Eight)
Artwork scanned at 600dpi
**24bit FLAC Only Available For Seven Days!
Password: burningtheground
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I did a few stints on college radio in the 80s and the guy who did the folk show after the middle of the night punk show was always always always late. You can’t have dead air and the booth was on the 4th floor of the building and you had to go downstairs to let Mr. Late in. Always put on side two of this single to give me enough time to play Carlton the Doorman.
Another thought from this era: The (English) Beat were on I.R.S. Records at the same time as WOV, and it always baffled me how The Beat’s “Save It For Later” sounded more like an obvious hit than “I Confess”, yet was virtually ignored by the promotion department for pop radio. `It never charted here, yet as odd as “Mexican Radio” sounded at the time, it managed to get to #59 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Paul, thanks for spotlighting Mr. RIdgway and the band! I saw them at the US Festival in 1982 and they did not disappoint! There is a rare video in ((stereo)) of their set on YT as well as others if you are interested. This 12” is notable as the A-side is the superior hit single and video version that contains the “disembodied bursts of radio chatter” that are NOT on Call Of The West. The other difference is the intro is edited tighter than the rambling album cut. The quirky sound effects and other studio fun they had make this… Read more »
I’m a huge WOV fan and I have never heard this b-side. Thank you so much.
I’m working on my own extended mix of this now. Starting with the first part of the b-side, easing into the original song, and then drifting into the dub version. 14 minutes of WoV oddness. Thank you so much!
Wow, I am really impressed by the rarities you have been unearthing lately Dj Paul!
Always liked how off center Wall Of Voodoo was, and I have to say, this is off center of off center! And I love that this is literally called “Two Songs By Wall Of Voodoo.” Talk about truth in advertising.
Thanks for the great share as always, and thanks for expanding my 80’s music adventure someplace unexpected!
Thanks so much, JP! I’ve really been enjoying digging deeper into the corners of the 12″ universe lately, and Wall of Voodoo definitely fits that “off-center of off-center” sweet spot. This one has always cracked me up too—Two Songs By Wall Of Voodoo might be the most literal title ever pressed on vinyl.
I’m glad it took your 80s adventure somewhere new! That’s exactly why I love sharing these odd gems. Appreciate you being along for the ride, and thanks as always for the kind words!
Wall of Voodoo was my introduction (in no particular order) to :
etcetera…
I’ve led quite the colorful life, while it lasted. And to think, I can trace all that craziness back to Mexican Radio.
Thanks PaulT for the Wall of Voodoo 2fer.
Wow, that is one legendary origin story, Muff Diver! 😂
Only Wall of Voodoo could be the soundtrack that launches someone into a whirlwind of alky-hol, speeding tickets, public nudity, ZZ Top serenades, and life lessons learned the hard (and hilarious) way.
It sounds like “Mexican Radio” was the gateway drug to an entire era of chaos — and honestly, that feels perfectly on brand for Wall of Voodoo.
Thanks for sharing your colorful saga, and I’m glad this little 2-fer could bring back all those… adventurous memories! Always great seeing you here.
I’m overwhelmed by your response. Thank you!
Muff Diver, you are INTENSE!! Thanks for sharing these wild experiences with us!! You are too cool!! As an enthusiastic cunnilinguist myself, I love the name you’ve christened your self! Again, you’re so cool 😎
Have a good one!!
Jeff
Thank you for your wonderful compliments, Jeff.
The truth is that I’m just a guy with a lifetime of experiences, some extraordinary, many of them x-rated for family-friendly audiences, but most of them are old, boring stories by a boring dude. I’ve mellowed severely since the 80s-90s.
Still, it’s nice to know that I can still entertain people, even unintentionally. I always strive to make people laugh, and I love children. Laughter is good, natural therapy for the body, most especially in deeply troubling times.
ps – I have a double-jointed tongue. That’s my secret weapon!
MUFF DIVER!!!! Dude, thanks for a phenomenal response! You are EXTREMELY COOL, my friend!! I admire folks like yourself because I almost like to live vicariously through others who seem to have or had extraordinary life experiences. Yes, we all mellow out, but, damn, what memories you’ve lived!! From your first comments on Paul’s Blog, your name just hit me!! Human sexuality is the best in all its forms!! And, WHOA and WOW!!!!!!!! A double-jointed tongue!!!! This fact about you is INTENSELY arousing! I bet you made a lasting impression on the ladies!! I’m guessing soaked panties and drenched sheets… Read more »
I wish I was in Tiajuana eating barbequed iguana!
“Same here, Mikey! If only we could all escape to Tiajuana for some barbequed iguana and a little Wall of Voodoo ambiance. 😂 Thanks for stopping by — always great to see you here!”
Woe! MIND BLOWN AGAIN, PAUL!!! Thank you so much for sharing these ultra-rare releases. I have never heard of this, but I just listened to the B-side and it’s AMAZING! I wish more bands had the guts to deconstruct their songs like that!
I found Wall Of Voodoo after Stan Ridgway released “Camouflage”. There is something about his vocal delivery that really emphasizes the emotional elements of these songs.
“Axel, I love hearing that! This little oddity really is a mind-bender, and that B-side is such a wild deconstruction — I’m right there with you wishing more bands would take those kinds of risks. Stan Ridgway’s vocal delivery is truly one of a kind; he can make a song feel cinematic with just a few lines. Glad this one hit the spot for you, and thanks as always for the enthusiasm!”
A gem of New Wave/Post-Punk. It’s the soundtrack to the disillusionment of the ’80s. Featuring the one-hit wonder “Mexican Radio,” a song that transports you to a bleak atmosphere in the middle of the desert. The lyrics are full of irony and dark humor, and feel very real when you analyze them.
Thanks Paul.
“Ruben, beautifully said — ‘Mexican Radio’ really does capture that dusty, disillusioned edge of the ’80s in a way few songs ever managed. The irony, the humor, the bleakness… it all hits differently when you sit with the lyrics. Wall of Voodoo were masters at painting entire worlds with just a few off-kilter lines and textures. Glad this one still resonates with you, and thanks for sharing such a great take.”
Thanks Paul! I had completely forgotten about this song! But when I heard it, I knew it! Thank you for sharing this long lost gem!
“You’re welcome! I love when a track you haven’t heard in ages suddenly comes rushing back the moment it kicks in. Wall of Voodoo definitely had a way of lodging themselves in the memory. Glad this one found its way back to you — thanks for listening and for the kind words!”
What an awesome song! Played it to death back in the day. Wish they had put out more 12 inch singles. The band (and Stan solo) were one of my favorite parts of the early 80’s. Thanks for a fantastic share.
“Totally agree — this one never gets old. Wall of Voodoo had such a unique sound, and I also wish we’d gotten more 12-inch mixes from them. Stan’s solo work kept that spirit alive, but there’s just something special about those early-’80s tracks. Really glad you enjoyed the share, and thanks so much for stopping by!”
An 11-minute dub mix of Mexican Radio? My wife loves you forever for this (she’s a big fan of Stan the Man). Thank you so much!
“An 11-minute dub of ‘Mexican Radio’ is definitely one way to win someone’s heart! 😄 Please tell your wife I’m honored to contribute to the Stan-the-Man fandom. Enjoy the long ride on the airwaves — and thanks so much for the kind words!”
thanks! what a great single.
You’re very welcome.
I was in college at Rutgers University in NJ, Mexican Radio really gained traction at the local campus clubs in ’82, brings back many great memories, thanks!!
“Rutgers in ’82 must’ve been a fantastic place to hear ‘Mexican Radio’ blasting through the campus clubs — what a memory! I’m glad this brought you back to that moment again. Thanks so much for sharing, Raymond!”
This record pressed all the right buttons with me, Paul. Growing up with top 40 radio, then, Disco radio, then on to New Wave, rock of the 80s radio, shaped my musical preferences. I didn’t have cable, so no MTV. I had to rely on video clip shows, and browsing through the 12-inch disc record sections at mall music stores. I do remember this cover for the record. I later would fall in love with this music through late night radio shows. It’s so awesome in how you bring my memories back in glorious, almost, cinematic ways!! Your site is… Read more »
“Jeff, this absolutely made my day — thank you. I love hearing how you discovered music piece by piece, from Top 40 to disco to New Wave, and especially how those late-night radio shows filled in the gaps when MTV wasn’t an option. It’s amazing how those old record bins and video clip shows shaped so many of us. Knowing the blog helps bring those memories back (and even uncover a few you might’ve missed) means more than I can say. Please tell Karen she’s in no danger of being replaced — but I’m honored to be a close second!… Read more »
Anything obscure 80s with dub delay and TR-808 beats always gets my vote. Thanks for sharing.
You’re welcome, Alex. Did you change your email all of a sudden? I had to approve your comments.
Oh wow! You know I had completely forgot about this song until I turned on 80’s at work the other day. It came on over the store and was thrilled to hear it again from such a long time ago that had been forgotten.
As always, thank you for all the backstory and info (Story Book Info)
I am going to go search for the video because I don’t remember it and see if it brings back some memories from the eighties.
“That’s awesome, Dwain! There’s something magical about hearing a long-forgotten track unexpectedly — it’s like time traveling back to the ’80s. I’m glad the backstory added a little extra context, and I hope tracking down the video brings back even more memories. Enjoy the trip down memory lane!”
Very cool find!
Thank you, Dean.