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Music Music Features

Tour de Wolf at Murphy’s

Music consumption is increasingly on the move: in the car, on the subway, in a plane looking out the window. Even walking down the street is commonly done with a pair of headphones on. We accidentally shout lyrics in large crowds, and we all know the kind of music that sounds best when the world is moving around us. The songs of Tour de Wolf fall into this category. The members of this ever-expanding group have only been working together for six months or so, and though the songs are written mainly by lead singer Chris Reid, each hinges on collaboration between a diverse set of instruments. The swirling, intricately layered sound captures the feeling of being suspended in motion in the way only ambient power-pop can. And while a number of similar projects have accomplished this, Tour de Wolf manages to do it while going beyond mere imitation. They balance labored work with spontaneity and nuanced music with a cohesive aim. Reid’s growling, often indistinguishable vocals offset the sunny complexity of the rest of the sound, pointing out what’s unique about music in the midst of commute. It physically cuts us off from the world around us, even while making us feel connected to everyone and everything else. It’s that pairing of community with isolation that makes Tour de Wolf interesting, relevant, and more impressive than the many who attempt a similar goal. Tour de Wolf play with Whose Army?, Blue Cadet 3, and Youniverse at Murphy’s Saturday, May 29th, at 10 p.m. — Halley Johnson

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We Recommend We Recommend

Sin City

Myth: What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Fact: Not when what happens in Vegas finds its way inside High Stakes, where Sin City’s nightlife hits rock bottom: prostitution, drugs, human trafficking, sex slavery. It’s also where you’ll find Shaun, Dawn, and Felicia, three young women who gamble on the good life, but as the press release for High Stakes states, “When it comes to matters of the heart, all bets are off.”

Debut author Toshia Shaw is betting that High Stakes is her entrée into the ranks of “urban fiction.” She grew up in Memphis and, after serving in the military, returned to Memphis, where she participated in the “spoken-word” scene and helped to raise awareness of domestic violence. Now she’s back in Las Vegas, where she is executive director of Purple Wings, a nonprofit that helps at-risk women steer clear of the sex industry. And that’s where High Stakes comes in. It’s from Purple Wings Publishing.

“I’d gotten out of the military 10 years ago and wrote High Stakes about the things I’d seen and stories I’d heard from women I knew in Las Vegas,” Shaw says. “I don’t wanna get sued, but the things friends did in Vegas were mind-boggling. Unreal! So, High Stakes is in-your-face, raw, gritty. But I want readers to go into it with an open mind, not pass judgment. The story may make you uncomfortable, but my goal is to uplift, empower, and also entertain. Las Vegas isn’t all that you see on TV. I wanted to show the human side.”

Toshia Shaw signing “High Stakes,” Cafe Soul (492 S. Main), Friday, May 28th, 5:30 p.m.

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We Recommend We Recommend

A Colorful Benefit

Joseph, the Old Testament Bible hero known best for his bold fashion sense, could have benefited greatly from the Community Legal Center (CLC). The nonprofit organization, which provides counseling and legal representation in civil matters to working clients who can’t afford a lawyer, could have helped poor Joseph to understand his rights after 11 jealous brothers threw him into a pit and sold him into slavery. The CLC could have advised him when he was falsely accused of sleeping with another man’s wife and then imprisoned. They even might have helped Joseph find representation for a defamation suit after Donny Osmond was cast as the titular character in the film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s popular musical Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.

After some 4,000 years, Joseph and the CLC finally are working together. On Wednesday, June 2nd, the center hosts its 10th annual fund-raiser at Theatre Memphis. A silent auction begins at 6 p.m. At 7:30 p.m., attendees have a chance to be among the first to see Theatre Memphis’ lavish revival of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Webber’s Joseph, a pop-operetta inspired by early rock-and-roll, improves on the original Bible story by depicting Pharaoh as an Elvis impersonator.

“Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” Fund-raiser for the Community Legal Center, Theatre Memphis, Wednesday, June 2nd, 6 p.m. Tickets are $40, $25 for students. For tickets, call 544-7000. For more information on the Community Legal Center, visit clcmemphis.com.

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News The Fly-By

What They Said

About “Blunt Assessment” and Tennessee’s marijuana laws:

“Slippery slopes are usually coated with some form of bullshit.” — 38103

About “Letter from the Editor” on the same topic:

“You may have seen corporate executives smoking pot, but you won’t see their employees doing it because they all have to pass mandatory drug tests, even if all they do is answer a phone. Where big brother government can’t legally go, corporate America is perfectly happy to intrude.” — jeff

About “The Rant” and America’s love affair with oil:

“The part that really baffles me about the Hummer is that after driving them in the military, why in the world would anyone want to drive one? — mad merc”

About “Who Were the West Memphis Cop Killers?”:

“Where is the proof that the two vans, and the two sets of guys, are the same? Where are the videos from the cop cars, the Walmart security cams, the police audio tapes, the 911 and police dispatchers? Are two cop-killer Hispanic guys still on the loose with AK47s? Will the cops try to find them, or will they just try the two dead white guys, because they can’t mount a defense from the grave?” — Tex

About “Teachers, Education Reform, and Unions”:

“Over the last three years, as a teacher, I have averaged a 2 percent increase per year in pay — so what difference does it make? The entire compensation for teachers must be evaluated!” — Hawkeye

Comment of the Week:

About “Letter from the Editor” and marijuana laws:

“OD on alcohol and you go to the ER or the morgue. OD on weed and you go to sleep.” — Packrat

To share your thoughts, comments, concerns, and — maybe — get published, visit memphisflyer.com.

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News The Fly-By

Techno Artists

Six students sit facing a large projector screen in Ridgeway Middle School’s music room with djembes, or African drums, at their feet. Teacher Ken Greene fiddles with the controls of the computer that sits at his desk, and a classroom in Fairfax, Virginia, materializes on the screen. These students are wielding violins, and their teacher gives the Ridgeway students a thumbs up. Greene leans forward and asks, “Do you mind if we jam with you?”

Promethean’s ActivBoard, the 78-inch computer screen/chalkboard hybrid recently installed in several Memphis City Schools music labs, has connected Ridgeway students to classes in France, Belgium, and, last week, Virginia.

“Technology is such an integral part of most students’ lives,” Greene says. “It seems logical that we’d bring that familiarity into the classroom and make the experience not only more enjoyable but I think, overall, more effective.”

The students use ActivBoard for activities usually restricted to individual assignments, such as taking quizzes and practicing musical notation. ActivBoard also helps students to collaborate and create their own music while learning technology.

Greene can supply his own questions for games created specifically for ActivBoard, and the system tracks the progress of each student and the class as a whole.

“We get that immediate response and feedback,” Greene says. “It really serves us well in the classroom.” He also uploads student progress to the class website, where students can find music they’ve made, as well as homework assignments.

“When the students go home, they have a connection to our classroom and to our material,” Greene says.

Though the current labs were financed by a grant from Yamaha, the city schools are hoping to put ActivBoards in more Memphis classrooms.

“We’re going to keep on developing great relationships and using technology for all kinds of education,” Greene says.

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News

Harold Ford Lobbies for Big Cable

Former 9th District congressman Harold Ford was the target of a scathing column on Huffington Post today.

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Opinion The BruceV Blog

Harold Ford Checks in for Big Media

Columnist Josh Silver launched a broadside at former 9th District Congressman Harold Ford on Huffington Post today. An excerpt:

This week, Harold Ford, Chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, showed how completely the DLC is captured by industry money, why the US congress is mired in gridlock, and why the government continues to protect the American public: from oil spills to banking crises to mining disasters, and now to the Internet. Big money lobbyists and their puppet politicians’ blind abandonment of reasonable government oversight.

Harold Ford is one of those puppets ...

Harold Ford, lobbyist

  • Harold Ford, lobbyist

Read it all here.

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News

Fit for a Zombie

brains6.jpg

  • Stacey Greenberg

Just in time for the annual Memphis Zombie Massacre — this Friday at 6:30 p.m on South Main — you can learn how to survive a Dawn of the Dead.

For those of you just as interested in zombie moves as zombie movies, this month’s Wired magazine brings us this fun, little class: the St. Charles, Illinois, ZombieFit.

“To prepare for Z-Day, students do cardio, lift weights, and practice parkour maneuvers in a foam rubber mock-up of an urban environment.

‘It’s about being quick and efficient with your movements,’ explains instructor Jess Randall.”

To remain healthy — and alive — participants practice climbing, falling, hurdling, and breaking away from a zombie’s death grasp.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Stinging Nettles!

nettles.JPG

I stopped by the Cooper-Young Community Farmers Market on Saturday near closing time, and Downing Hollow Farm had a few heads of lettuce left and lots of stinging nettles.

Now I know why.

Lori Greene offered a bundle of the nettles free of charge so I could try them, along with this warning: Be sure to wear gloves until they are cooked.

Yikes. It seems the wild herb, which is plentiful in spring, is covered with stinging hairs that magically disappear as soon as the greens are cooked.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

GOP Candidates Hold On to Their Chips in WKNO Forum

Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey smiles for the camera after WKNO forum

  • JB
  • Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey smiles for the camera after WKNO forum

By the luck of the draw, one assumes, Knoxville mayor Bill Haslam got to open up Tuesday night’s forum for Republican gubernatorial candidates on WKNO-TV and other public television stations statewide. (The forum was co-sponsored by the League of Women Voters.)

And at evening’s end Mike McWherter, the Democrats’ gubernatorial nominee-in-waiting, conveyed his sense of how things stood among the GOP hopefuls with a press release dissing the forum performances of “Bill Haslam and the candidates running for the GOP gubernatorial nomination.”

Add to that the fact that Haslam’s opening monologue was smooth and convincing — better by far than his uneasy recent talking-head campaign commercial (is it the third or fourth that the well-heeled Haslam has run thus far?)

In other words, Haslam did nothing — and had nothing done to him — that would disturb his long-presumed position as frontrunner in the Republican pack (and among gubernatorial candi9dates at large, for that matter).

Haslam’s task at this point of the nomination contest is to suggest to Republican primary voters that he is adequately conservative while intimating to voters at large that he is nondescript or “moderate” enough to deserve their votes in the general election. By and large, the Pilot Oil scion (whose formidable fundraising receipts have kept his personal wealth moot to this point) was able to do that Tuesday night.

Meanwhile, Chattanooga congressman Zach Wamp had a somewhat more difficult task — to compete with Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey for the affection of the Republican right wing while expanding his credibility with middle-of-the-road voters.

Wamp, too, largely succeeded — though, from a cosmetic point of view, his over-wide grins at the close of his answers took some of the edge off his impressive natural intensity. But the congressman held to his guns when questioner Otis Sanford of The Commercial Appeal suggested that Wamp might be backing off somewhat from his just-signed pledge to render unto the Med the same amount of federal funding received by the state as the Memphis hospital generates from uncompensated patient care.

And Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey of Blountville, relatively unyielding in his public posture against state spending federal interference in state matters, kept his street cred with hardline conservatives and was the only major candidate Tuesday night willing to consider cutting funds for Pre-K education.

But even he was able to play off the extreme right-wing views evinced by Nashville businessman Joe Kirkpatrick, previously an Unknown Quantity, whose platform seemed to be equal parts devotion to “the God of Israel” and abhorrence of any federal role in Tennessee whatsoever.

Tea Partier Kirkpatrick’s description of liberalism as “a mental disorder,” his proposed solution to illegal aliens in Tennessee (“Buy ‘em a ticket to West Memphis, Arkansas, and send ‘em home”), his desire to abolish gun-carry restrictions altogether, his repudiation of climate change, and his general flamboyance all provided some entertainment and a parameter of sorts to the discussion.

All the candidates were for biting the bullet on reducing the number of state employees, though their criteria ranged from Wamp’s proposal for across-the-board cuts to Ramsey’s for reductions that were simultaneously more rigorous (“cut by a third”) and more selective (he opposed across-the-board cuts).
None of the candidates were for eliminating coal as an energy source, though Haslam touted solar power and Wamp promoted nuclear power as alternatives.

Given that the forum was held in Memphis, there was precious little local reference from the panel, drawn from journalists across the state, until Sanford broached the subject of the Med. Ramsey thought the solution to the hospital’s dilemma lay in pressuring Arkansas and Mississippi to pony up more support while Haslam focused on the institution’s need for a long-term business plan.

Asked afterward why he had chosen not to join Wamp in signing the dollar-for-dollar pledge desired by the Shelby County Commission, Haslam cited objections from state TennCare officials that the procedure would reduce the state’s overall TennCare pool and thus its potential for acquiring federal matching funds.

Even if that dilemma could be avoided by the simple expedient of delaying distribution of uncompensated-care monies until all matching funds were in place, Haslam cast doubt on the accuracy of existing formulas for gauging levels of uncompensated care.

More to Come