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News News Feature

TIGER FOOTBALL

A CORNER TURNED?

“The Toilet Bowl, that’s all it is.” That’s how my good friend Gordo McAlister, in his usual graphic fashion, characterized last Saturday’s contest between the University of Memphis and Army — each ranked in the bottom ten of Division One in many of the polls — while explaining his reasons for declining my kind offer of a free ticket to the game. “I’d rather watch grass grow,” he growled before hanging up on me.

Well, not a whole lot of grass was growing on the Liberty Bowl playing field on that brisk, picture-perfect autumn afternoon. But maybe, just maybe a football team was, as the University of Memphis comprehensively whipped the Cadets by a 38-10 margin that did not do justice to the Tigers’ complete domination of the proceedings. And now that they’re growing up, maybe, just maybe I’ll be able to talk Gordo into going to a game next season.

He may have stayed home Saturday to watch Michigan/Ohio State on the tube, but, amazingly, an incredible number of Memphians chose instead to come out for the show at the Liberty Bowl. Officially 20,906 were in attendance; even deducting a few thousand no-shows, that number is remarkable, given the fact that this was a battle between two bad teams going nowhere.

I have long argued that Memphis is first and foremost a football town, and that if the Tigers ever again has a winning season, they’ll easily average 40,000 a game. And if they ever were to become a perennial powerhouse, U of M football tickets would end up being scarcer than hen’s teeth. Give Memphis football fans a winner, and the Liberty Bowl would come to resemble Neyland Stadium, only decked out in blue not orange.

Even with the sorry excuse for a football season Tiger devotees have “enjoyed” this year, the U of M is a C-USA attendance behemoth. Take a look around the league last Saturday, and you’ll see what I mean. A mediocre Houston team could only draw 12,856 for its game against South Florida, but even bowl-battling outfits like East Carolina and Tulane could only draw 23,189 and 21, 832, respectively, despite first-rate (TCU and Southern Miss) opponents. And I recall our own game in Birmingham against UAB earlier this season, where the entire crowd could have easily squeezed into the Mike Rose soccer complex.

Let’s face it: this year’s Tiger MVPs are the fans, the folks in blue that never play a down but are there by the thousands, in blazing sunshine, pouring rain, and in constantly trying circumstances. U of M football fans, having taken the concept of “delayed gratification” to never-before-imagined levels, take a licking and keep on ticking.

But maybe, just maybe, the payoff is just around the corner. Assuming that Coach Tommy West can find someone who can play the offensive line (four of the five starters are seniors), 2003 just might bring an end to all this existential agony. The defense, young and inexperienced when the season began but significantly better in November than August, will return nine starters. And the team’s two big offensive guns — sophomore quarterback Danny Wimprine (who broke the U of M single-season passing record Saturday) and freshman running back D’Angelo Williams — are just hitting their prime.

Of course, nothing will change if the Tigers don’t find a cure for their desperate case of turnover-itis. The defense may well have pitched a shutout Saturday were it not for two first-half fumbles, and turnovers this season have already cost the Tigers 99 points. Regardless of talent, you can’t give away a touchdown and a field goal a game and hope to enjoy a winning season.

Saturday’s game in Fort Worth should be interesting. Having blown their national ranking by losing at East Carolina last week, the TCU Horned Frogs ought to be well-focused on the matter at hand.

But if the Tigers can execute the way they did in the second half Saturday, and hold onto the football in the process, Christmas might just come a few weeks early. And if ever a football team deserved a favor from Santa, this one is it.

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We Recommend We Recommend

tuesday, 26

Back at the Blue Monkey, it s Fred, Bobby, and Hunky Rusty.

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News The Fly-By

DEATH IN DISNEYLAND

From theme parks to theme funerals, America is indeed a glorious land of abundantly bizarre opportunity. The Mississippi Press recently reported on St. Louis’ Wade Funeral Home where, “[In a] room dubbed ‘Big Mama’s Kitchen,’ loved ones layed cards barely an arm’s length from [the open casket]. Guests sipped iced tea and Kool-Aid near a stove with a platter of real fried chicken, and a couple of fake pies. A Wonder Bread loaf sat atop a refrigerator, and dishes were in a drainer near the sink.” Other funeral options include a room with a basketball goal for sports fans, and for ex-anglers there is a well-stocked pond with a sign reading, “Fishing season is closed.”

Categories
Art Art Feature

ESTIMATING ACKER

Essential Acker:

The Selected Writings

of Kathy Acker

Edited by Amy Scholder and

Dennis Cooper

Grove Press; 335 pp.; $15 (paper)

Rip-off Red, Girl

Detective/The Burning Bombing of America

By Kathy Acker

Grove Press; 201 pp.; $14 (paper)

I’m not easily destructible as I allow them their destruction. this begins this dense hardly understandable material. through illusion and fantasies who are reality. necessities. you will have to try to understand.

— from The Burning Bombing of America

Kathy Acker, to be certain, was not an author who created easy, cover-to-cover reads. If profanity, violence, pornography, poetry, or nontraditional literary forms offend you, then you might want to steer clear of her entirely. But if you enjoy (or can at least tolerate) these things, then a foray into Acker’s world can be as rewarding as it is challenging.

That said, Essential Acker and Rip-off Red, Girl Detective and The Burning Bombing of America (two short early novels of Acker’s that were recently rediscovered and just now published) are an interesting window onto the career of one of 20th-century America’s most brazen female novelists. Though perhaps novelist is not quite the right term. To quote the author in Rip-off Red, Girl Detective: “Narratives are purely for shit. Here’s the information go fuck yourself.” Whew.

Stylistically, Acker, who died in 1997, is often compared to William S. Burroughs, owing to both her roots in New York City’s writing scene and her insistence on pushing the boundaries of, and redefining, form. Sometimes, she was entirely successful in this endeavor. To this end, the draw of Essential Acker, in particular, lies in its career-spanning chronology. Over the course of nearly 30 years, as Acker became more adept at defining her own experiments, the reading experience became clearer, more digestible.

Her themes remained surprisingly consistent. Acker’s heroines and heroes are sexual creatures, hopelessly indulgent in the physical realm, yet they never seem to cave in to hopelessness or self-pity. It seems that the author’s personal politics, those of a self-empowered, book-hoarding outlaw who at different points in life worked as both a 42nd Street sex-show performer and a college professor, were solidified early on. Herein lies Acker’s most powerful exploration: Through her writing, she continually focused on creating a reality in which one could exist comfortably in the male and female realms simultaneously. Her characters run through her meandering prose with the battle cry “[A] (wo)man wants to control his/her life,” as crystallized in The Burning Bombing of America.

The trouble with Acker’s work is that it’s difficult to discern the boundaries between autobiography, fiction, metafiction, and even plagiarism. This last, a self-conscious choice on the part of the author, eventually forced her to make a public apology to Harold Robbins over material “pirated” from his work. But Acker’s main obsession was the power of language to change reality, which included borrowing scenes and characters from other works with the goal of redefining them.

It’s easy to get disoriented in Acker’s universe if you’re mired in the conventionalities of literature. Nevertheless, she was ultimately successful in putting the complexities of politics, sex, and identity under the microscope and emerging with something that was uniquely her own. To truly find one’s self, I suppose, one must get lost along the way. — Jennifer Hall

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News News Feature

THE FLOWER WILTS

The Yellow Rose Cafe, a mainstay of the downtown Court Square area, will serve its last meal at the end of the month, ending a 30-year history of home cooking.

Joe and Becky Keating, the cafe’s owners for the past 15 years, said the lack of downtown traffic forced the restaurant’s demise. “A lot of the offices that contributed to our clientele have moved out east,” said Becky. “And the spotlight on dining has shifted to Peabody Place and Beale Street. There was no way we could continue to stay in business.”

The restaurant, located at 58 N. Main, has a staff of 10, including some cooks who have been with the restaurant 20 or more years.

“You got to know when to hold ’em and know when to fold ’em,” said Becky. “It was a decision we had to make, and we will miss the many friends we’ve made over the years.”

Ironically or not, on the next to last week of its existence, the Yellow Rose seemed to be drawing turnaway business, with the wait staff scurrying to keep up with demand. One diner after another commiserated with Becky Keating upon checking out, and she told each one, “I could cry.”

The Yellow Rose’s last day will be Friday, November 29th.

Categories
Music Music Features

Sound Advice

The Dillingers were a short-lived local bar band that tore up a few Memphis clubs a couple of years ago with a sound more akin to the Uncle Tupelo alt-country standard than, say, their friends and competitors Lucero’s more punk and indie-rock take on the genre. The barely-legal-aged motley crew was led by big-voiced singer/guitarist/songwriter John Murry, who has remained an erratic presence on the local music scene. The band was rounded out by guitarist Brian McDurmon, bassist/vocalist Brady Potts (later frontman of another short-lived local rootsy bar band, the Star-Crossed Truckers), and drummer Josh Acosta. The Dillingers will re-form for a final gig Friday, November 29th, at old stomping grounds the Hi-Tone Café to celebrate the release of their first — and last –album, a mix of studio and live cuts called More a Lie Than a Band. The record’s title is wishful reference to the posthumous Flatlanders album More a Legend Than a Band, and while the Dillingers certainly aren’t a lost treasure on par with that seminal West Texas outfit, in terms of recent local music they are definitely a notable “might have been.” More a Lie Than a Band features the only available-for-purchase versions of memorable Murry songs “Waste of Time” and “40 Acres,” along with knowing covers of songs by Warren Zevon, Townes Van Zandt, and a loving medley of the Platters and the Clash. Flyer contributor Stephen Deusner provides liner notes.

But that’s not the only local record-release party of note this week. The hard-rockin’ Internationals celebrate the release of their second album, We’ve Never Heard of You Either, Friday, November 29th, at the Hard Rock Café. Nicely bridging the gap between the city’s usually opposed metal and garage-rock scenes (and with a hint of rockabilly skipping along beneath the surface), the Internationals are also known to deliver a pretty rowdy live set.

And eclectic locals Deep Shag, whose new album, Rug Burn, features background vocals from George Clinton on a couple of tracks, will be playing three CD-release/charity shows (to benefit the Union Mission) at Club 152 on Beale Thursday, November 28th, through Saturday, November 30th. — Chris Herrington

Do any of you people understand what a chore it is finding something for you to do week in and week out? Well, it is, let me tell you, especially weeks like this one where the only groups I would go out to see are groups I’ve already recommended too often. I would never send you to a show I wouldn’t go to myself, but this week I’m making an exception or two. For instance, I would never actually go to see Will Hoge, Nashville’s rootsier answer to Counting Crows, when he plays the New Daisy on Saturday, November 30th. Sure, as a songwriter, ol’ Will’s got some really clever wordplay going on; it just doesn’t move me. Likewise, I would never go to see Nine Inch Nails worshippers Defy when they do their in-store appearance at Tower Records on Saturday, November 30th. But maybe you liked Trent Reznor and will also like his wannabe. Who am I to say? I wouldn’t pay, but I might go see Aerosmith at The Pyramid if somehow free tickets fell into my lap, since I’m the only guy left on earth who hasn’t seen them live yet. But I won’t. Tellyawhat: You guys check out these shows. I’m going to sit home and watch Snowglobe over and over again on LiveFromMemphis.com. — Chris Davis

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We Recommend We Recommend

monday, 25

Another fund-raiser, tonight s McEwen s Wine Tasting and Auction at McEwen s on Monroe to benefit Hope House for children effected by HIV/AIDS features a preview tasting of the 2002 Georges DuBoeuf Nouveau Beaujolais and other wines. And it s Two-For-One Burger Night and pint specials during Monday Night Football at Old Zinnie s.

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Music Music Features

Reaching Nirvana

On April 8, 1994, Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger, violently ending his life and his tumultuous music career. What started five years before as an outsider’s itinerant dreams of artistic legitimacy had mushroomed into a brand of grossly iconic celebrity that threatened to overwhelm the music itself. The story of Cobain’s tragic life includes a childhood marked by poverty and divorce, a brash wife, an infant daughter, an intense and undiagnosable recurring stomach pain, and some of the best music of the 1990s. With bassist Krist Novoselic and drummer Dave Grohl, Cobain wrote songs that were darkly ferocious, desperately funny, achingly honest, and phenomenally influential.

In the eight years since he took his own life, popular music, once ruled by Nirvana knockoffs, has been overrun with rap-rock and teen-pop product, recycling the sexism and misogyny Cobain despised in ’80s heavy metal. But the turmoil on the charts and airwaves cannot match the recent controversy surrounding Cobain’s estate. Professional widow Courtney Love, formerly a musician, sued Novoselic and Grohl for control of her late husband’s songs, alleging he was the group’s major artistic contributor, a claim the bandmates heatedly deny. If any of this sounds even vaguely ambiguous, consider this: COURTNEY LOVE WAS NEVER IN NIRVANA.

Earlier this fall, Love apparently realized what had theretofore been obvious to everyone else and suddenly and surprisingly relented. Just a few months later, we have Nirvana, a de facto greatest-hits set that includes one previously unreleased song, “You Know You’re Right.”

If Love lost that battle, she did score one victory: In a heated bidding war involving almost every domestic publisher, she sold the rights to Cobain’s personal diaries to Riverhead, a division of Penguin Putnam, for $4 million. A few months later, we have Journals, an admittedly well-designed and even physically beautiful book that includes high-resolution scans of the actual notebook entries written in Cobain’s own hand.

It’s difficult to view these releases and the headline-making brouhaha that preceded them without a dose of skepticism. By all appearances, the rights auctions, legal in-fighting, and marketing blitzes seem greedily, cynically opportunistic. Buy a piece of a dead rock star! Purchase a genuine relic from a rock-and-roll saint! Just in time for Christmas!

The compilation, after all, only has one unreleased track; the rest is just a repackaging of 13 tracks that have long been available on the band’s proper albums. Oh, but what a track it is. We couldn’t have hoped for something so raw, so brutal, and so intense. Recorded during Nirvana’s final session, just three months before Cobain committed suicide, “You Know You’re Right” begins with an odd chiming sound that gives way to a slow, rumbling guitar riff, the likes of which haven’t been heard on corporate radio in ages; then Cobain’s low, wounded vocals take over before the song erupts in a violent chorus of hey hey heys. It’s worth the steep price of the disc (unless you can download it), and it proves Cobain was still writing fierce songs so late in his career, which makes his death all the more tragic.

After that three-minute maelstrom, Nirvana offers a chronology of the band’s short run. There are three tracks from their brief stay at SubPop (including the brilliant kid-trauma of “Sliver”), four from Nevermind, another four from the hastily recorded In Utero, and two from the band’s swan song, MTV Unplugged in New York. Conspicuously missing from the tracklist are the songs that proved as popular with fans as the radio hits: “Territorial Pissings,” “Polly,” “Something in the Way,” “Serve the Servants,” “Oh Me,” and the Leadbelly cover “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?,” which reveals the band’s blues influence. The unintended result is that Nirvana reduces the band to nothing more than the sum of its singles.

The most fascinating thing about Journals is that it is not at all fascinating. There are no real surprises here, only the modest revelation that Cobain was a normal guy with normal worries and fears. He wrote grocery lists, took notes for his driver’s exam, worked a brief stint as a janitor. His sense of humor was sharp and self-effacing, as in this mock-biography: “It’s the classic case of two bored art students dropping out and forming a band. Kobain [sic], a saw blade painter specializing in wildlife and seascapes, met Novoselic whose passion was gluing seashells and driftwood on burlap potatoe [sic] sacks.”

He frequently indulged in grotesque imagery and lengthy rants against the government and mainstream American pop culture. He believed women were superior to men and African Americans were better musicians than whites. He developed a superiority complex to separate himself from “a redneck loser town called Aberdeen.”

More than anything, Cobain was obsessed with his own band — and rightly so — especially with how Nirvana would be perceived. He wrote several drafts of press releases and tracklists and drew numerous sketches of album covers and T-shirt designs. And, like all but the most talented or self-deluded musicians, he wrote endless variations on his lyrics. In particular, he seems to have fretted over “Smells Like Teen Spirit” in the months leading up to the Nevermind sessions; Journals contains the scribbled-out lyrics from that and other songs.

As Nirvana became increasingly popular, Cobain found he had less control over how the band was seen and how his songs were heard and interpreted. While his humor took on a more sarcastic edge, he wrote defensive explanations for his own widely reported heroin use. But he saved his severest scorn for rock critics and music journalists. “Why in the hell do journalists insist on coming up with a second rate freudian evaluation on my lyrics when 90% of the time they’ve transcribed them incorrectly?” he asked, concluding, “there are more bad rock journalists than there are bad rock bands.”

Anyone looking for insight into Cobain’s “genius” or answers to hard questions will be sorely disappointed with Journals. Despite its attempts to mythologize him, this book can only present him as merely human. On the other hand, perhaps it was this everyguy quality, this ability to speak simultaneously for himself and for so many others, that attracted so many people to Nirvana in the first place and inspired such fervor in fans that they would look to his journals for insight into his life.

Ultimately, Nirvana and Journals are two versions of the same story, both recounting identical dreams and the same unsustainable life. In Journals, Cobain writes the same four words over and over, like a mantra: “Punk rock is freedom.” In the early stages of his career, when he was sleeping on couches and pushing brooms for money, the music Cobain loved fed his dreams of escaping his roots and becoming a true artist; as his career progressed, the music he made was enough to keep him going. Almost.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

GRIZZLIES 1, MICHAEL 0

Hubie Brown is back in the win column. So are the Memphis Grizzlies. Earl Watson came up big down the stretch as the Grizzlies became the final team in the NBA to win this season with an 85-74 victory before a full house at The Pyramid over the Washington Wizards.

Off to an 0-13 start and winless in five games since Brown replaced Sidney Lowe as coach, the Grizzlies scored the game’s final 11 points to finally shake some of their futility.

It was Brown’s first win as coach since early in the 1986 season while with the New York Knicks.

Watson, who was just 7 years old the last time Brown won a game, nailed a 3-pointer with 2:36 remaining to snap a 74-74 tie. He added four free throws in the final 28 seconds to seal it.

Michael Jordan scored 20 points to lead Washington, which fell apart down the stretch en route to its third straight loss.

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News The Fly-By

UNDER THE INFLUENCE

It seems that Ben Smith, the chef/owner of Midtown’s always-superb Pacific Rim bistro Tsunami, finds inspiration for his culinary masterpieces in some unlikely places. In a recent edition of the industry mag Restaurants and Institutions, Smith claims to be influenced by a local “found object” artist, whose constructions remind him of food and has been working on a special dessert since he heard his son announce, “I want chocolate dumplings.” If we’re lucky, the talented but easily influenced chef will never see a dog go near the litter box.