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We Recommend We Recommend

monday, may 21st

And speaking of writers, former Memphian Hampton Sides will be signing copies of his new book, Ghost Soldiers: The Forgotten Epic Story of World War II s Most Dramatic Mission, at Burke s Book Store today at 5 p.m.

Categories
News The Fly-By

DOGFIGHT

There is an old saying among writers, that curious breed of human known for borrowing one another s intellectual property with relative impunity: If you are going to steal, steal from the best. It appears that The Commercial Appeal s marketing department has taken this old saw to heart. A recent ad on the back cover of the Memphis Air Show s program depicts a page from the CA cleverly folded into a paper airplane along with the caption, Cleared for landing at your house. Our hearty thanks to the CA for helping brand the Flyer s simple but easily recognized logo.

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We Recommend We Recommend

sunday may 20th

This afternoon s Ernest Withers Film Series feature in conjunction with the incredible exhibit of his photos that is on view right now at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is At the River I Stand, the story of the 1968 sanitation workers strike and based on the book by Memphian Joan Beifuss. Also, it s Sangria Sunday at Melange, with live Latin music in the tapas bar.

Categories
News News Feature

FALLING INTO DISGRACELAND

It started with a little experimentation in college. Nothing major, really, my roommates would be sitting around our living room and from time to time I would join them. But too soon it began to take its toil. I got caught in an ugly web.

I’m talking, or course, about the WB. I know, I’ve mentioned it in this column before, but that was back when I was a recreational user. Now, I’ve moved onto the big time — setting the VCR every night, scouting web sites for teasers every day. I think it’s sucking my life away.

The whole thing began with Buffy, the Vampire Slayer. A couple of my college roommates really liked it and, in an effort to avoid any semblance of work, I began watching, too.

It quickly became a ritual. Tuesday nights the roommates gathered around, friends came over, we all bonded.

But I confess: I’m a TV junkie. And while all my friends could keep their habits under control, I couldn’t. Seeing promos for other shows made me want to find out if Felicity would ever get together with Ben, if Jill would dump his new girlfriend for Jack, if the aliens on “Roswell” were on the verge of being discovered.

I became obsessed. Because, let’s be honest, the WB has discovered a niche. Sure, I’m a member of their target audience (female 18-24) so I’m biased, but they’ve also found a few key formulas that, if ratings are anything, seem to be working out for them. First off, the supernatural crime fighter (“Buffy,” “Angel,” “Charmed,” “Sabrina”). Then, there’s the continual love triangle between soul mates and could-be soul mates (think Pacey, Joey, and Dawson, or Felicity, Ben, and Noel). As well as the combination of the two (“Roswell”). Throw in some family values programming (7th Heaven, Gilmore Girls), as well as Steve Harvey and Jamie Foxx, and you’ve got yourself a network.

Oh, and did I mention that on the WB everyone is really attractive. Okay, well, on the WB everyone is really attractive. They might not always be able to act, but that doesn’t matter if you’re Scott Speedman. Not that he can’t act, but you get the point. Hot. Watching the WB made me want to watch more Ñ I felt like I loved everybody. But then the credits would roll, and I wasn’t as pretty as those WB people. I don’t have super powers or a could-be soul mate. The highs just got higher, the lows just got lower.

Of course then I moved to Memphis. At first it was really hard. I knew that Channel 24 played WB shows during their late night programming, but I could never remember to set my VCR. The fevers, the chills, the sweating, it all got to me. And then I got through it.

Slowly I forgot that Felicity and Ben ever existed (in that way that Felicity and Ben “exist”). I spent evenings contributing to society. I was rehabilitated.

Then I heard from friends of mine, as well as a television critic at Salon.com, that the writing and acting on Buffy was surpassing all the other shows on television. I thought it would be okay, I’d just watch and that’d be it. I remembered to set the VCR.

Suddenly I was sucked back in. I decided that if I was going to tape Buffy I might as well tape Angel, the spin-off that comes on after it. I mean, the VCR’s already set up. And then I’d sneak glances at the tape the next night and see previews for Dawson’s Creek. Dawson’s going to lose his virginity with Pacey’s sister? And Joey wants him back? I better tape that, too. And Charmed, yeah, okay.

Now season finales are looming on the horizon and cliffhangers are in sight. And me, I’m firmly back on the junk, just wondering about my next fix.

( Mary Cashiola writes about life every Friday @ memphisflyer.com. You’re invited to come along.)

Categories
News The Fly-By

DOGFIGHT

There is an old saying among writers, that curious breed of human known for borrowing one another s intellectual property with relative impunity: If you are going to steal, steal from the best. It appears that The Commercial Appeal s marketing department has taken this old saw to heart. A recent ad on the back cover of the Memphis Air Show s program depicts a page from the CA cleverly folded into a paper airplane along with the caption, Cleared for landing at your house. Our hearty thanks to the CA for helping brand the Flyer s simple but easily recognized logo.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

saturday may 19th

If you want to get out and enjoy Memphis in the springtime, tonight s Symphony in the Gardens II at The Dixon Gallery and Gardens is a good bet. And if you want to help celebrate one of the best things that s happened in this city in a long time, go to today s Studio on the Square First Birthday Party at noon, where there will be a wine tasting, live jazz, birthday cake, and a Studio Screening Party, with proceeds benefiting WKNO. Later, Filthy Diablo, RWAKE, and Hog Jowls are playing at the Map Room. And last but certainly not least, let s all give it up for the beautiful and multitalented Ms. Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends, who ll be at the Blue Monkey tonight.

Categories
Music Music Features

Out Of the Shadows

“I felt sort of like Dirk Diggler,” Cory Branan jokes about accepting the Phillips Award for Best Newcomer at this year’s Premier Player Awards.

Branan’s emergence on the local music front may not have been as swift and scene-changing as that Boogie Nights protagonist’s rise through the film’s ’70s porn milieu, but it has been a very real occurrence nonetheless. Not that Branan himself thought the award was that big of a deal.

“My mom loved it,” Branan says about the award. “It was cool, but I know what it is. Not that many people know me, but not that many people vote, and I happen to know enough people in NARAS. I got to play The Pyramid, but I still got the feeling that maybe 10 people in the crowd knew who I was. But I have other things that’ll make me happy. My CD in a jukebox. That’ll make me happy.”

Well, if the city’s jukebox operators have much of a clue, Branan may be on the verge of fulfilling at least that dream. This week Branan will celebrate the local release of his startlingly assured debut album, The Hell You Say — the best record yet from the local label MADJACK.

Cory Branan is a 26-year-old singer-songwriter from Southaven who started playing on his own four or five years ago — singing covers at the Daily Planet — and didn’t start writing original songs until a couple of years ago, around the time that he began to discover the songwriters that now serve as his prime influences.

“Not long after I first started putting my own songs together, someone gave me a John Prine record,” Branan says. “It wasn’t pretentious. It was pretty good ol’ boy but still poetry — and conversational. And then Tom Waits and Leonard Cohen. I pretty much discovered them all in a few-months stretch.”

Like those songwriters and others Branan speaks warmly of — Randy Newman, Freedy Johnston — Branan’s songs are literary but colloquial, suffused with compassion, humor, and an intentional edge that rejects those elements that can give the term singer-songwriter a bad reputation — the confessional solipsism, the sentimental poesy, the folkie puritanism.

The Hell You Say is a glorious showcase for Branan’s inspired wordplay, with the troublesome girls who populate the album lavished with the most vivid imagery. The Hell You Say introduces us to women who “come around at midnight like a Sunday afternoon/with a purpose and a manner like a needle and a spoon.” Who are “a stained-glass window on a back-door screen.” Women with “eyes as black as a police boot with a $3.50 shine” who inspire memories that stick like shivs.

The verbal facility displayed on The Hell You Say is no surprise — anyone who’s seen Branan perform live lately knows his way with words — but the musicality of the album is a bit of a shock. Produced by Branan and Pawtuckets guitarist Kevin Cubbins, The Hell You Say is remarkably as much a musical triumph as a verbal one, with Branan’s own sharp guitar work leading the way.

The album was recorded half at Posey Hedges’ Memphis Soundworks (the full-band tracks) and half at Jeff Powell’s Humongous Studios (the mostly acoustic cuts) and has the semi-intentional side-effect of showcasing not only Branan but much of the city’s roots-rock scene. The album features bountiful assistance from members of Lucero, the River Bluff Clan, and, most crucially, the Pawtuckets. Pawtuckets bassist Mark Stuart is a mainstay. The River Bluff Clan’s Richard Ford punctuates “Pale Moon On Paper Town” with perfect steel guitar. Other guests make essential contributions: Eric Lewis gives “Troublesome Girl” a Western feel with lovely, whimsical Spanish guitar. Kim Richardson adds harmony vocals to “Crackerjack Heart,” “Love Song 8,” and “Closer.”

The group-effort feel of the record is most prominent on the sinner’s prayer “Wayward and Down,” a sort of local roots-rock “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” where Branan swaps verses with the River Bluff Clan’s Jimmy Davis, Lucero’s Ben Nichols, and the Pawtuckets’ Andy Grooms and enlists a group chorus that includes local singers Nancy Apple, Scott Sudbury, and Wayne LeeLoy.

But the real musical triumph of The Hell You Say is in the diverse, imaginative scenarios Cubbins and Branan concoct to put across Branan’s songs.

The album opens with its sure shot — the rousing, word-drunk “Miss Ferguson.” A catchy blast of heartland rock with sneaky-smart lyrics (“The angle of her cheek is the math of persuasion”), “Miss Ferguson” is like a great John Mellencamp single as rewritten by John Prine. Organ and percussion come blaring out of the opening verse while Branan’s own deft guitar carries the melody and the song piles up sly come-ons (“Ain’t got no Purple Heart/no blue ribbons/blow out them candles and I’ll show you where I’ve been”), dumb-fun sha-la-la-las, and antsy, overactive vocals.

“Crush” follows as an unintentional — though perhaps subconscious — update of Big Star’s “Thirteen,” a song Branan has covered live. “Crush” occurs three years later, after the hormones have really kicked in, resulting in a love letter from a “16-year-old Hitler with a troubled, lovesick mind.” The song erupts in the middle with a wild, unexpected, and deeply funny “surprise party” of mandolin, banjo, kazoo, stray voices, and barking dogs.

The spare “Spoke Too Soon” is driven not so much by words as by a drum beat so unwavering it sounds looped and a guitar line inspired by indie bands like Yo la Tengo and Ida. The high point of the song is a drum break recorded in such a way that it sounds like it exists outside the world of the song, thus carrying a different emotional resonance. It sounds like an echo of the past — a blast of wistfulness and regret that works brilliantly with the song’s evocative and mysterious lyrics.

On “Green Street Lullaby (Dark Sad Song),” the false reassurance of “There’s still time/you’re still young/and there’s always tomorrow” is greeted with a feedback-laden rebuke. The song is an album centerpiece, an ode to a Memphis where “Mosquitos hum like window units/but you gotta move if you want a breeze.”

“In ‘Dark Sad Song,’ I was trying to be really specific about what it is about Memphis that’s different,” Branan says. “The thing about Memphis is that I could see myself relaxing and becoming a drunk and settling in. It’s a real laid-back comfortable town. The laid-backness is one of the town’s charms, but if you’re not self-starting it’s real easy to fall into a rut.”

That song rhymes with “Pale Moon On Paper Town,” which invokes the same dark, sad song by asking, “Am I the only one who hears that sound?” and contains the observation “It’s never a good sign/when the whole state line is outlined in chalk.”

But the heart of this honestly extraordinary debut is its delicate, prickly love songs: “Tame,” which juxtaposes “40 days and 40 nights of hard-candy snow” with “The center of the girl I love is the 23rd Psalm”; the hushed “Crackerjack Heart,” a signature tune at once elegant and playful; the harsh but beautiful “Love Song 8.”

Branan will unleash this album on Sunday, May 20th, with an afternoon performance at Shangri-La Records and an official release party at the Hi-Tone Café. It’s good enough to make him a star, at least on the semipopular level where this kind of music now operates. But Branan has no illusions about that.

“Take my hero, John Prine,” Branan says. “If you ask 10 people who John Prine is, maybe two or three will know. And yet, if I could have just a tiny fraction of the career he’s had I’d be very happy.”

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

Cory Branan

record release party

The Hi-Tone Café

Sunday, May 20th

Categories
News News Feature

WE RECOMMEND (THE SENTIMENTAL PART)

As I write this, it is Sunday, Mother’s Day, and I know my mom is behind all this. Since she left the tangible world a few years ago, this has been a sad day for me, but so far this morning I have laughed out loud several times, and I know she is out there somewhere making this happen. Always equally adept at telling tawdry jokes and running her business systems management company, Mom was no stranger to having a good time. Whether shopping for pet owls or painting every natural-wood surface in the house avocado green during the 1960s, her artistic energy fueled by the weight-loss “medicine” her doctor gave her after bearing her last child, there was always time to “make a run” to the fun shop to purchase a variety of plastic bugs to place atop the food she would leave out on the stove for my dad (rest his wonderful soul, as well), just in case he returned home late for dinner after a five-day leave of absence spent “getting a hair cut,” which, of course, meant a five-day winning spree shooting pool at Speedy’s, a wonderful little place in Charlotte, N.C., where we lived for a few years when I was a young’un. And believe me, the fake flies on the macaroni and cheese was a mild one. It didn’t elicit nearly the reaction from him as the time we bought our first color television set, the day after which Mom managed to find a piece of plastic to place over the screen, making it look like it was shattered by a gunshot, all the while having me sit close by with my BB gun, coaching me on how to apologize profusely for being so careless as to accidentally let said gun go off while aimed at said television. That one was an Oscar-winning performance on both our parts. I could go on and on and on and never remember all of the wonderful tricks she taught me– ever cracked your father’s bedroom door and placed a bucket of water atop it, causing it to fall when he opened it to go in for a good night’s sleep?– but I know she is out there still at it. For one thing, I just stepped outside my office to smoke in the parking lot. My office is located in the heart of a residential neighborhood in Midtown on Peabody, near Cooper. I heard a strange kind of clip-clop sound (and no, I won’t burden you with the Clip-clop, bang! Clip-clop, bang! Amish drive-by shooting joke) and looked up to see a man ride past me on a horse (and no, no more horseman-knew-her jokes either). Yes, a man riding a horse down Peabody Avenue at 9 a.m. on a Sunday morning. And when he saw me looking at him, he waved and began laughing hysterically. Thank you, Mom. I feel certain you were responsible for that. Then I opened the paper only to see this headline: PRESIDENT OUTLINES WAYS TO SAVE FUEL; CHENEY UNVEILS PLAN THIS WEEK. Even though she was spared having to have Georgie as her president, she still knows who’s really boss and was probably looking over the shoulder of whoever wrote that headline. But the grand finale of the morning was running across an article about a pair of twins who got drunk on an airplane headed from San Francisco to Shanghai and caused the plane to make an emergency landing in Anchorage, because one of them bloodied the nose of one flight attendant and jumped on another, applying a choke hold, because she wanted to smoke a cigarette. All I can say about that is, You go, girl! And thanks, Mom. I’m sure you made sure I saw that too. It’s good to know they let you still be a prankster in Heaven, and I can’t wait to find out what happens later today.

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We Recommend We Recommend

friday, may 18th

Although I don t have a clue as to what it s about, the name is interesting
enough to mention that tonight is opening night of the Memphis Black Repertory
Theatre s production of The Trial of One Short Sighted Black Woman versus
Mammy Louise and Safreeta Mae
at TheatreWorks. And there are a couple of
art openings tonight. One is at Cooper-Young Gallery for From the
Earth, works by Bryan Blankenship and Nancy Bickerest; the other is at
Christian Brothers University Gallery for Transitions: The Art of
Annabelle Meacham. Tonight s Memphis Vocal Arts Ensemble: Great Moments in
Grand Opera
at the Buckman Performing and Fine Arts Centre is the 10th
anniversary of the group s show and features highlights of past performances.
Groupo Amour is at Automatic Slim s tonight. Singer-songwriter and
multi-instrumentalist Don Conoscenti is at Otherlands (not Saturday
night, as some may have been told accidentally). And Bumpercrop and
Eighty-Katie are at the Hi-Tone.

Categories
Hot Properties Real Estate

Firmly Planted

I’ve got trees on my mind.

Mostly, it’s because I spent about half of this fine, mid-70s, low-humidity spring day pruning my backyard trees. I’ve got a policy: When I plant a tree, I’m going to do all the pruning myself, until the tree gets so tall that a man can’t prune it from the ground. By doing all the early pruning, I end up with a tree just the way I like it. For good or bad, I’ve got a style. A tree-minded person could walk through my end of the neighborhood and tell which trees I’ve pruned.

About 15 years ago, I took up trees like some men take up golf. It all started when folks in my neighborhood decided that we needed some new trees on our medians. We planted about 20 little trees and most of them died. I figured it was my own ignorance that killed them. I hate and despise walking around ignorant, so I started working on my tree game. I read tree books, I talked to tree people, I thought about trees day and night. Before I was done, I knew trees by their Latin names. I knew their strengths and weaknesses, their leaves, nuts, and catkins.

These days, the neighborhood is about 1,000 trees richer, and there’s no more room for trees in my yard. My head full of tree knowledge is mostly useless, except for days when a homebuyer hits me with a tree question. When that happens, I explain, “I’m not a tree expert, and I’m not charging you anything for this advice. Get the final word from a good tree man.” Folks nod, and then I tell ’em everything they need to know.

Most of the time, people want to know what to do when tree roots heave a sidewalk or a driveway or cause cracks in a foundation wall. Amazingly, a lot of people think cutting down the tree will solve the problem.

Well, no. That’s not right. You see, when you cut down a tree, the roots rot. If a big tree root pushes your driveway up six inches, and you cut down the tree, your driveway will eventually drop 12 inches. The same thing will happen to a foundation wall.

As far as I know, there are two ways to deal with tree roots that are damaging concrete slabs and foundation walls. The first is to do nothing. As a general rule, tree roots grow slowly. If the cracked slab or wall is still functional, it will probably stay functional for a long time. The second approach is careful pruning of the roots. Sometimes, a skilled arborist can prune roots away from a structure and not kill the tree. Often, though, messing with the roots means slow death for the tree. A dead tree, besides being ugly, is expensive. Rotten limbs can fall on your house, your car, or your head. I’ve got a puny old hackberry tree in my backyard now. When it finally crumps, getting rid of its rotting carcass will cost me as much as a good used car.

If you’re wondering about the competence of a tree cutter, here’s a quick test: If he tells you that a tree needs “topping,” if he even uses the word “top” as a verb, he is a tree mangler, and he’s trying to sell you a worse-than-useless service. Do not hire his sorry ass.

Just so you’ll know: Topping is a pruning job that cuts the biggest branches back to stubs. This gives rise to a lot of weakly attached new growth and leaves the stubbed ends exposed to rot and disease.

Every good tree man knows the pruning rules of thumb, which go something like this: If you’re going to cut a branch off a tree, do it before the branch is as big around as your thumb. Cut off a branch the same way you’d cut off your thumb — that is, flush with the joint, without leaving a stub.

If you’re buying a new house, keep an eye on the landscapers. I’ve watched ’em work, and they usually throw the trees into too-shallow holes then put about a foot of mulch on top of the root ball. These trees will die. You want the top of the root ball even with the surrounding soil, and no more than three to four inches of mulch. Mulch shouldn’t be up against the bark.

You can e-mail Helter Shelter at walter.jowers@nashville.com.