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News

“Red” is a Winner

Chris Davis says you should go see Circuit Playhouse’s production of Red, about the life of painter Mark Rothko.

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News

Delta Fair & Music Festival

The annual Delta Fair & Music Festival kicks off at the Agricenter this weekend.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Huge Naked Yard Sale!

I don’t think you can sell those at a yard sale, can you?

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Local Band On Verge Of Stardom…Again.

Neil Downs

  • Neil Downs

For the thirteenth time in nine years, and in spite of the fact that, once again, they weren’t even asked to play the Center for Southern Folklore’s annual Music & Heritage Festival, local band “Confluence” is about to hit the big time, according to band founder and drummer Neil Downs.

Confluence has been a staple of the Memphis music scene since 2002, appearing at local clubs, area dives, and private parties. Downs describes the band’s sound as “a magical exploration of rock, country, reggae and jazz”.

“The record label guys started sniffing around in 2004, but the deal has always fallen apart because we want to keep our integrity,” said Downs while taking a break from his day job with a local tree service. “You can’t put a price on that, you know?”

According to Downs, despite repeated deals going South with major labels for reasons involving “creative control,” “money issues,” and “weird vibes”, Confluence is going to go big in the next few months. “Yeah, we’ve been approached by a major label to do a three CD deal,” Downs said. “This time it’s for real.”

Other members of Confluence are not as optimistic. “I don’t know,” said guitarist Paul Fret. “Last time Neil told us the deal fell apart because they wanted us to do the Tonight Show, and Neil thinks Leno is a ‘stooge,’ so he refused to do it. And in 2010 he told us the A&R guys pulled out because of an argument over book rights. We don’t even write books. I don’t know, man. I don’t know.”

According to Downs, Confluence will be headlining at Coachella next April in advance of the release of the first album under the three CD deal that he says is all but certain to go down.

“But, hey, if anything does go wrong, Confluence will be rocking out that weekend at our regular El Banditos gig in Raleigh,” Downs added.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Pop Tragedy: RED leaves a mark at Circuit Playhouse

Rothko and (metaphoric) son.

  • Circuit Playhouse
  • Rothko and (metaphoric) son.

Let’s listen to some Ken Nordine while thinking about Circuit Playhouse’s excellent production of RED, a Tony Award-winning play about abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko, shall we? Why Nordine? I’ll get around to that. But I like the playful way he uses language to express the many moods of colors like magenta, maroon, burgundy, and black. Rothko would have hated it, and somehow that only seems appropriate.

Before each night’s performance the lights go down. Blackness swallows all the red in a way that the Rothko of playwright John Logan’s imagination says he fears like death. But the vanished colors return almost immediately, more vibrant than ever when the light comes up on Tony Isbell giving what may be the strongest performance of his acting career. There he is, front stage center: Rothko, the opinionated, self-infatuated brat painter whose work and ideas will be celebrated and challenged over the course of one vigorous act.

Isbell stares hard, and wordlessly into the audience, but he’s not looking at any person. He’s looking at something else. Or through something else. He adjusts his gaze and looks even harder.

“What do you see,” he asks at length, and so begins an hour-and-a-half of overly-familiar plot devices loosely stitched together in a way that is far more riveting and revealing than it has any right to be.

So what do we see when we watch this catfight between a famous historical figure and a fictional assistent created for no reason other than to give the famous guy somebody to argue with? Are we dupes caught up in a hackneyed play where characters speak in ridiculous monologues, sometimes revealing dark, difficult secrets? Or is this rollicking hero’s journey that moves from one patricide to the next with less subtlety than a Doors song? Could it be a smug middlebrow romp where culturally significant brand names like Shakespeare, Nietzsche, Jung, and Freud aren’t so much dropped as slung around like fertilizer? Or a soap opera where drama-prone characters fret and fight like they’d been cut out of a Roy Lichtenstein painting?

Yes to all of that, and all for the best.

RED , a study in conflict, contrast, and irony opens a window onto Rothko’s world after the artist has been offered $35,000 — a vast sum at the time — to create a series of murals for the Four Seasons, a fancy New York restaurant opening in the Segrams Building, an international style skyscraper designed by Mies van der Rohe. Now the uncompromising artist who criticized Picasso’s “ugly pots,” is forced to confront the commodification of his own work at a time when Pop artists like Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg are threatening to make even his interior monologue obsolete.

Tony Isbell ad Mark Rothko

  • Tony Isbell ad Mark Rothko

It’s not easy to talk seriously about seriousness or to keep a straight face while saying lofty things about the importance of paintings with tragedy infused into every brush stroke. But the more Isbell’s Rothko talks— and boy does he talk— the more obvious all the little tragedies become. And somehow all of this cartoonishness and cliche leaves us with the impression that we’ve experienced something rich, real, and rewarding.

This is pop art for playgoers. The great Rothko condemned to live forever inside a commodified Hell: Black swallows red, red swallows black, and so on.

Christopher Joel Onken delivers a nice, understated performance as Ken, a younger artist hired to make coffee and prime canvases. He is especially good in a scene where he and Isbell brainstorm together attempting to take the idea of red and break it down into dozens of more specific colors with a variety of even more specific emotionally-charged descriptors. For what it’s worth, this nearly musical passage is what reminded me of Ken Nordine, who launched his own unusual recording career in the late 1950’s at just about the time Rothko would have been working on the Four Seasons project.

I’ve seen several superb productions of plays over the past year: Hurt Village, Angels in America, A Steady Rain, and Time Stands Still all leap immediately to mind. As insubstantial as it might seem going down, RED, directed by Brian Fruits, is as satisfying as any of them and Isbell’s performance as Rothko is not to be missed.

Time and ticket information, HERE.

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News

The Sketchbook Project

A traveling art exhibition of homemade sketchbooks made a stop in Crosstown on Thursday. Bianca Phillips stopped by.

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Art Exhibit M

On the Scene at The Sketchbook Project Event

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News

Memphis Music and Heritage Fest

This Memphis Music and Heritage Festival takes over much of downtown this weekend, with food, arts, crafts, and music, including Chitlin’ Circuit legend Bobby Rush.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Memphis Music and Heritage Festival

Bobby Rush

  • Bobby Rush

The most diverse gathering of local music and culture every year, the Center for Southern Folklore’s annual Memphis Music & Heritage Festival will take over the area surrounding Main Street and Peabody Place this weekend, with live music running from late morning thru late night on five stages over two days.

On Saturday, August 31st, chitlin’-circuit soul legend Bobby Rush will headline the Tennessee Arts main stage at 10 p.m. while Memphis roots-punk/art-damage legend Tav Falco will direct his Panther Burns on the Greyhound Stage at 8:45 p.m.

Among many other potential highlights on Saturday are: Hip-hop/soul duo Artistik Approach (2:45 p.m.) and Beale blues stalwart Preston Shannon (4:45 p.m.) on the Tennessee Arts Stage. Indie rockers Mouserocket (3 p.m.) and the latin Aztec Dancers (6 p.m.) on the Greyhound Stage. An interview with local jazz great Joyce Cobb (2:15 p.m.) and a jazz/funk party from Hope Clayburn’s Soul Scrimmage (9:15 p.m.) on the Comcast Stage. A kids’ music performance from University of Memphis musicologist David Evans (1 p.m.) and the jug band Bluff City Backsliders (9 p.m.) on the Center for Southern Folklore Stage.

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Joyce Cobb

  • Joyce Cobb

On Sunday, September 1st, Joyce Cobb will close the festivities as the honored performer at 9:45 p.m. on the Tennessee Arts main stage, while The New Agrarians (songwriters Kate Campbell, Pierce Pettis, and Tom Kimmel) will play the Comcast Stage at 9 p.m.

Among many other potential highlights on Sunday are: Memphis blues/folk inheritors Sons of Mudboy (7:45 p.m.), first-generation rockabilly artist Sonny Burgess (6:45 p.m.) and latin singer Marcela Pinella (4:45 p.m.) on the Tennessee Arts Stage. Vocal gem Susan Marshall (4 p.m.) and Daddy Mack’s Blues Band (8:45 p.m.) on the Greyhound Stage. Opera great Kallen Esperian (3:15 p.m.) singing the blues on the Comcast Stage. Reggae group Chinese Connection Dub Embassy (6:30 p.m.) on the ArtsMemphis Stage.

The event, which includes many cultural and culinary activities beyond the music schedule, is free. You can find a full schedule and other information at southernfolklore.com.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Fincher Warns Against a Governmental-Shutdown Strategy

Fincher at Master Meal

  • JB
  • Fincher at Master Meal

Stephen Fincher, a member in good standing of the congressional Tea Party caucus and an unabashed member of the Republican Party’s right wing, struck some unwontedly moderate-sounding notes Tuesday night as the featured speaker at the annual Master Meal event of the East Shelby County Republican Club.

Noting that he was “the first Republican to hold this seat,” the 8th District congressman from Frog Jump in Crockett County called for unity among all Republicans of whatever faction. “This is a two-party system. We cannot eat our own. We must stay united if we’re going to beat Barack Obama and the Democrats,”he said.

And Fincher, who spoke before a packed house at the Great Hall of Germantown, urged caution regarding a proposal by some Republicans to force a shutdown of the government rather than allow the funding of Obamacare (the Affordable Care Act)..

“If we do a CR [Continuing Resolution] without Obamacare, [Senate Democratic Leader] Harry Reid is going to put it right back in and sent it back to the House,” Fincher said.

Then, after asking for a show of hands over the proposition that “the President will be right back on campaign trail, and IRS scandals and Benghazi and all that will be swept under the rug, and he will use this to keep control of the Senate in 2014,” Fincher said, “I think that’s what’ll happen….I think he’s baiting us, he’s trying to divide us.” The congressman advocated instead a strategy of delaying the onset of aspects of Obamacare.

But Fincher made it clear that, in proposing discretion, he was not advocating that Republicans surrender their principles. “If we fall, it won’t be because of the Democrats. It’ll be because of the Republicans not standing up.”

Other speakers at the annual East Shelby GOP affair included Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell, Shelby County Republican chairman Justin Joy, and state Republican chairman Chris DeVaney of Nashville.

Devaney defended a decision by the National Republican Committee to keep NBC and CNN out of the GOP’s future televised-debate plans as the penalty for those networks’ pursuing program projects relating to potential Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.