Categories
News News Blog

Memphis Flyer Podcast: Dirt Track Racing, Politics, WLOK Turns 40, and More

Memphis Flyer Podcast: Dirt Track Racing, Politics, WLOK Turns 40, and More

This week the Memphis Flyer Podcast asks a lot of questions: When did the zoo release its economic impact study? What’s up with dirt track racing in West Memphis? Who are your eighth district congressional candidates? Is The Lobster good? Also Bianca Phillips talks about WLOK’s birthday celebration and a new art gallery for homeless people. And, as if that wasn’t enough, Flyer editor Bruce VanWyngarden tells Facebook to get off his lawn!

This week’s music is by Memphis metal band Evil Army who’ll be playing Memphis Punk Fest 4 this week.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Nate Currin Live at the Center for Southern Folklore

Nate Currin.

An RV sat lonely at the far end of the wide-open, Wal-Mart parking lot on a Sunday morning. As the blue-haired ladies drove their sedans past to make their donut run before church, they saw a pleasantly round dog being pushed out the RV’s window. Then a man in his thirties with a beard fell out of the window after the dog.

“My door broke on the RV for a while and the only way out was to climb through the window,” Nate Currin explained, “but I fixed that pretty quick. My dog, Max, tours with me.”

Having spent three years traveling the country in his RV, Nate is a troubadour and pilgrim who is no stranger to the great American road. Blending traditional country styles with modern folk music, Nate’s songs reflect his life’s journey between love lost and a faith re-gained.

Having grown up the son of a Baptist preacher, Nate left his faith at the age of 19. He traveled the world, and by his late twenties, he struggled to overcome some serious issues with drugs and alcohol. The struggle brought him back to his faith which, he says, plays a big part in his songwriting.

“I really attempt to show the dirty—the gritty side—of my faith. I struggle with doubt, and I struggle with unbelief. I attempt to show that through my music.”

Having played with Jars of Clay and Blues Traveler, any fans of serious songwriters such as Owen Temple, Cory Branan or Adam Duritz of Counting Crows should definitely check out Currin’s music. He is currently touring in support of his April 15 release, The Madman and the Poet..

In his twenties, Nate was traveling through the British Isles with a friend. While hiking and camping in Whales, they came across a mountain named Cadair Idris. According to local legend, a traveler who spent the night on its slopes would return either a madman or a poet. Shortly after camping atop the mountain, Nate Currin began to write his first songs.

On the vinyl edition of The Madman and the Poet, there is a “madman” side, which features country infused songs like “Ballad of a Horse Thief” and “Birmingham.” A second side features the mellow, “poet” side of Currin’s songwriting. It begins with the title track and ends with a softly reverent tune, entitled, “Let Grace Fall Down on Me.”

Having already played several sold out shows on this tour, the award-winning Georgia native looks forward to continuing his tour through the Deep South and playing through the summer on a series of West Coast dates.

“The Deep South plays the largest role in my music from a stylistic standpoint,” Currin said. 

Listening to songs off the new album like, “Midnight Train,” which has a Southern gothic sound not unlike the ever popular Chris Stapleton, it isn’t hard to notice that Nate’s Southern roots run strong. The music video on Youtube for “Midnight Train” is wrought with Spanish moss, trains, and alligators —some of the finer things the Deep South has to offer.

On the flip side, the Southern songwriter has been influenced by his travels outside of the South. He spent some time living and working in San Francisco, which is known for its circuit of mellow acoustic songwriters.

“Two years out in San Francisco was really more of a time about rest and rejuvenation. I did some writing out there, but I was primarily working on The Pilgrim album, which I had a vision for already,” Currin explained.

His 2013 release, The Pilgrim, was another concept album based on The Pilgrim’s Progress, which is a religious text written by John Bunyan in 1678 that has been referenced by authors from C.S. Lewis to Mark Twain. The Pilgrim is a mellow album that seems to be the touchstone work of Currin’s return to his faith after spending about a decade experimenting with drugs as the prodigal son. It has a somewhat Lutheran sound, although it is not intended to speak exclusively to a religious audience.

“I’ve always shied away from the Christian music label. You get pigeon-holed so fast with it. There’s so much more to write about than one faith, one point-of-view, or one world view,” Currin said.

The 2013 album is the sort of spirit quest concept album that brings to mind author Joseph Campbell’s book, Hero with a Thousand Faces. The call to adventure occurs on the third track entitled, “Two Friends and a Map” in which the pilgrim must leave behind his friends and ultimately his pack.

“It was really symbolic of all that baggage I was carrying around for all those years. Being able to let all that go was a huge thing for me.”

Nate Currin 8:00 PM on Saturday, June 4 at the Center for Southern Folklore.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Del Gill Wins One (No, Not the Chairmanship)

After what threatened to be an interminable early segment, in which a dozen or so procedural motions from self-appointed Democratic Party scold Del Gill were introduced, duly hashed out, and rejected, the Shelby County Democratic Party got down to business at its regular June meeting Thursday night at the recently refurbished IBEW meeting hall and elected a new chairman. Sheriff’s Department Lt. Michael Pope.

Pope, a former party vice chair who had been serving as acting chairman after the resignation two months ago of then chair Randa Spears, was handily elected to lead the party by a
JB

New SCDP chairman Michael Pope

 margin of 17 to 4 over executive committee member Gill, whose chairmanship bid went the way of all his previous motions and who would lose a subsequent vote for vice chair as well.

In his brief remarks to the party’s executive committee before its members took their vote, Pope had appealed for party unity and an end to internal strife, but the moment of relative concord achieved by his victory dissolved somewhat in the aftermath. That was when Gill offered a new motion calling for the committee to go on record as favoring the prosecution of former chairman Bryan Carson for the alleged embezzlement of upwards of $25,000 from party coffers.

Carson had been forced to resign his chairmanship in February 2015 after an ad hoc internal audit of the party’s books showed an unresolved deficit of several thousand dollars that the chairman was not able to explain. He was also under fire for failing to arrange timely financial reports to the state Registry of Election Finance.

In subsequent months, during the chairmanship of Spears, Carson’s elected successor, the matter of unaccounted-for funds continued to be an unresolved point of contention on the party executive committee. There ensued negotiations of various kinds, both public and private, in an effort to achieve a solution acceptable both to Carson and to all factions of the committee.

At one point, a proposal to allow Carson to repay a reduced sum of $6,000 in modest monthly installments, coupled with a contention of no intentional misconduct, was submitted by Cardon through his attorney, Robert Spence. There is disagreement as to whether the full committee was apprised of the offer, which in any case ceased to be active.

Meanwhile, a new ad hoc committee appointed by then chairman Spears had performed a second audit, showing the funds unaccounted for to be in excess of 25,000 and suggesting a variety of potential responses from the committee.

That was the background of things when, in the wake of the chairmanship vote Thursday night, Gill offered his motion calling for Carson to be prosecuted. There was debate back and forth, with various other members calling for delays or for more restrained actions, but, when vote time came, 14 committee members stood up for the motion to prosecute, including several who rarely or never vote on Gill’s side of an issue. That was enough to make a clear majority.

The gravity of the decision was undercut briefly by a semi-comic moment when Gill appeared about to protest something or other regarding the outcome, as he has done numerous times over the years after losing a vote and had done so repeatedly on Thursday night. Amid various catcalls to Gill of “Shut up!” or “You won,” committee member Rick Maynard uttered the line of the night, “Take yes for an answer!”

It remains to be seen whether and how the committee will follow through on the implications of Thursday night’s vote to prosecute, but it had finally taken a decisive action of sorts and perhaps can shortly shift to what new chairman Pope proposed as the party’s main duty of the year — to elect Democrats in the various election races of 2016.

Categories
News News Blog

ServiceMaster May Be Moving Downtown

ServiceMaster, the Memphis-based Fortune 1000 home-cleaning, maintenance, and pest control company, may be moving its headquarters into the old Peabody Place building, an informed source has told the Memphis Flyer.

The company is expected to hold a press conference on Friday to announce plans to renovate Peabody Place and move its offices there.

ServiceMaster moved their headquarters to Ridgelake Blvd. in Memphis in 2007 on a 12-year PILOT. The company had been looking at new options for its headquarters and had explored other cities, including Atlanta. Had the company moved out of Memphis, it would have been one of the biggest corporate losses since Holiday Inn moved its headquarters to Atlanta in 1991. ServiceMaster employs more than 2,000 workers in Memphis alone.

Earlier this month, the Flyer ran an opinion piece by local advertising firm founder Doug Carpenter urging the company to relocate their headquarters to downtown. The Peabody Place mall has been completely vacant since 2012, but it began dying a slow death around 2005 as various stores and the old Muvico Theater pulled out.

Categories
News News Blog

Strickland Appoints New Director of Parks and Neighborhoods

Maria Munoz-Blanco

Maria Munoz-Blanco has been appointed as the city’s director of Division of Parks and Neighborhoods, Mayor Jim Strickland announced on Thursday afternoon.

Munoz-Blanco’s appointment is subject to approval by the Memphis City Council at next Tuesday’s regular meeting. She formerly served as the executive director of cultural affairs at Miami-Dade College, the director of cultural affairs at the City of Dallas, and the executive director of the Cultural Arts Council of Houston and Harris County. She was chosen from more than 100 candidates who applied for the position. Former Memphis Parks and Neighborhoods Director Janet Hooks was not reappointed when Strickland took over for former Mayor A C Wharton.

“I’m proud to make this appointment, as I believe Maria is the perfect fit to lead us into the future at Parks and Neighborhoods,” Strickland said.

The Dallas News reported in 2014 that Munoz-Blanco “often clashed with arts organizations over management and funding issues” when she was heading up Dallas’ cultural affairs office.

Categories
News News Blog

Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke Addresses Summons to Memphis Luncheon

Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke

Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke gave a spirited and provocative speech at Memphis Magazine’s fourth annual “Summons to Memphis” luncheon Thursday, at the Holiday Inn at the University of Memphis.

The crowd of 300 or so was fronted by a Who’s Who table that included Mayor Jim Strickland, former Mayor AC Wharton, County Mayor Mark Luttrell, Berke, and Maura Sullivan, now chief operating officer of the city of Chattanooga and formerly a top aide in the Wharton administration.

Mayors Strickland, Berke, Luttrell

Berke began by acknowledging the difficulties all four major Tennessee cities have in dealing with a GOP legislature that is controlled by rural interests. “This legislature doesn’t like cities very much,” he said.

Moving from that point of urban commonality, Berke said his city has followed a four-point plan that has lowered its unemployment to 4 percent and has resulted in a booming economy and a thriving city built on the ashes of its departed steel-manufacturing industry.

“In 1967. Walter Cronkite called Chattanooga ‘the dirtiest city in America,'” Berke said. “And when the most trusted man in America says you’re the dirtiest city in America, people believe it.”

Berke alluded to the ‘Chattanooga Way,’ the four points of which are: Working Together Works; Investing in Public Spaces; Great Cities Plan for a Great Future; and Provide More Paths for the Middle Class.

Berke went into each seemingly platitudinal point in great detail, demonstrating the concrete steps Chattanooga has taken to achieve each goal. He was particularly proud of the city-owned broad-band network that is available to every home and business in Chattanooga.

The crowd was attentive and appreciative, seeming to enjoy Berke’s occasional irreverence and his upbeat message.

Contemporary Media, Inc. publisher Kenneth Neill presented Berke with a signed copy of Peter Taylor’s novel, A Summons to Memphis in appreciation of his appearance.

Berke and CMI Publisher Kenneth Neill

Categories
News News Blog

Wear Orange Coalition To Honor Memphis Gun Violence Victims

June 2nd is National Gun Violence Awareness Day, and a group called the Wear Orange Coalition will gather at Loflin Yard (7 W. Carolina Ave.) from 5 to 7 p.m. to honor Memphis victims of gun violence.

The family-friendly event will feature an interactive exhibit called “In Memoriam” in which the event attendees may place photos of loved ones lost to gun violence. After the event, the exhibit will be stored in the National Civil Rights Museum’s permanent archive. Also on display will be a F.F.U.N. (Freedom From Unnecessary Negatives) and Shelby County Crime Victim Center Memorial Quilt.

The national Wear Orange Coalition inspired by friends of Hadiya Pendleton, a 15-year-old Chicago high school student killed by gunfire, who decided to honor her life by wearing orange — the color hunters wear in the woods to protect themselves and others. Wear Orange events are being held all over the country Thursday.

Attendees will include Tennessee State Senator Lee Harris, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, Terri Lee Freeman (president of National Civil Rights Museum), Moms Demand Action volunteer Kristy Glassman, and family and friends of those lost to gun violence.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Playing the Long Game

According to a report released this week by the Pew Research Center and Knight Foundation, more than 40 percent of American adults get news through Facebook. What’s left unsaid in that study is that the definition of “news” is pretty loose — and getting looser.

What pops up on most Americans’ Facebook feeds is a motley conglomeration of photo memes, opinion pieces, videos of friends’ kids and pets, family vacation photos, unsourced clickbait articles, happy birthday wishes, music videos, and politically driven propaganda. “News” can be anything from a link to a well-sourced Washington Post story about Hillary Clinton’s emails to an Alex Jones Newsmax rant about how the CIA uses jet contrails to control the weather.

If you get your news from Facebook, your Facebook “friends” are now your news editors, assisted by Facebook algorithms designed to feed you ads and articles matched to your buying and browsing habits.

When you do come across legitimate news on Facebook, please take note of where it comes from. If it’s national or international news, I’ll wager it’s from The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, The London Times, the Guardian, or other reputable sources. And I’ll also wager that if you see a legitimate local news story on your Facebook feed, it will almost always be from The Commercial Appeal or The Memphis Flyer.

You’re quite welcome. Hope you enjoy the free content. I know Mark Zuckerberg and his legion of doom certainly appreciate the money they’re making off the work that legitimate journalists do. Yes, Facebook sends readers to our web-pages to read our stories, but it’s pretty clear who’s making the big money on the Internet.

Every week, I get emails and calls from people representing local businesses and organizations — restaurants, clubs, concert venues, new enterprises, nonprofits — asking the Flyer to do a story about them or their client. Why do they do this? Because they know the Flyer has a 93 percent or higher pickup rate each week. They know hundreds of thousands of readers visit our website each month. They know our readers are smart, affluent, and influential. And, most important, they know an impartial story in the Flyer legitimizes their cause or their client. That’s because it’s perceived as news, not PR fluff.

Often, these folks have a good story — a new chef, a big band coming to town, a fresh business concept, a meaningful cause, a can’t-miss event — so I assign a reporter, and we do a story that runs in the paper (and online, as all our stories do). Everyone’s happy. The publicist gets publicity for his client; we get an interesting story; our readers learn something new about their city.

Well, almost everybody is happy. Often, when a Flyer sales rep calls on one of those businesses we’ve written a story about, they’re told: “We’re not going to advertise. We’re just doing social media.” And I bet you can guess what material those clients use in their social media campaigns. Yep, the Flyer story that was written about them.

Let me be clear: There’s no quid pro quo. We don’t write stories to get advertisers. Never have, never will. But here’s my point: It is a symbiotic relationship. Local businesses and citizens need local media to tell their stories and report the news about their city — and yes, provide “content” for social media. Likewise, local media need local businesses to value and support their work and to invest in that process. It’s good business in the short run, yes, but it’s also about the long game: making sure local media can continue to do their job. Think local. Buy local. Be local.

Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t give a crap about you or about Memphis or about the media that serve this city. And he sure as hell isn’t going to write about you.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Willie Earl Bates

Willie Earl Bates, owner of the Four Way Restaurant in South Memphis’ Soulsville, USA community, died from cancer last week. I’m not sure the city of Memphis knows what it has lost.

Willie Earl Bates

In 2001, after 50-plus years in operation under Clint and Irene Cleaves, Bates purchased the tiny but famous restaurant. He had been an executive with Universal Life Insurance, a real estate developer, and, early in life, delivered The Commercial Appeal in a red wagon, of which he was quite proud. The wagon sits outside the restaurant today in a fenced garden courtyard, dedicated to Bates’ mother, the late Magnolia Gossett Bates.

Bates was also proud to be the owner of a restaurant that helped change history — and served some of the best soul food in the world. Clint Cleaves was Mayor E.H. “Boss” Crump’s driver, and Crump told all of his friends that they needed to support the Fourway Grill (as it was known then) and it soon became the first truly desegregated restaurant in Memphis.

It was also a popular gathering spot for civil rights leaders such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Rev. Jesse Jackson, and others. The Fourway was immensely popular among musicians, hosting the likes of Aretha Franklin, Elvis Presley, Gladys Night & the Pips, Ike & Tina Turner, and practically every artist who ever recorded around the corner at Stax Records.

I’ve been eating at the Four Way every couple of weeks since starting to work at Stax back in 2004. In 2014, I wrote a piece on Bates for Memphis magazine, and when I asked Mr. Bates what he thought about all of the celebrities who had eaten there (including hip-hop superstar Drake, who had just been there weeks earlier), he said: “I had a mother and daughter from Oklahoma in here not too long ago who had come from St. Jude. They had found out about the restaurant, and the little girl wanted to eat here. That was so touching, so satisfying, to know that we were able to make her happy during a time like that.”

That pretty much sums up Willie Earl Bates and why Memphis may not really know what it has lost.

Bates was a successful businessman and could easily have retired long before his death at 76, but he was too intent on making Memphis — and particularly Soulsville — a better place. He worked with numerous nonprofit organizations to help improve life in the community and often donated food to children’s organizations and other causes.

Former Mayor A C Wharton told me, “The Four Way always has been, and continues to be, a gathering place for community leaders. It may seem a bit quirky, but it was a status symbol to enter The Four Way through the back door and dine in the back room. Principals, doctors, lawyers, and accomplished entertainers, and occasionally, a skinny, hungry black Ole Miss law student like me could often be found in the ‘back room’ being served by Miss Dot.” 

Various crews from the Food Network and Travel Channel featured his famous catfish, turkey-and-dressing, yams, peach cobbler, and chitterlings, which Bates always told me never to order, as he made a face and shook his head.

Last year, author Dave Hoekstra published the critically acclaimed The People’s Place: Soul Food Restaurants and Reminiscences from the Civil Rights Era to Today, and the first restaurant he visited was the Four Way. Hoekstra was asked by the New York Times, “If someone wanted to follow your path, but had time to visit only one city, what would it be?” Hoekstra’s answer: “Memphis. I know at least seven or eight soul food restaurants in Memphis. But to get to what we’re getting at in the book, with the whole combination of the food and the civil rights movement, the Four Way holds a special place in my heart — they were so giving with their stories and with their hospitality. Just the whole history of Memphis and the civil rights movement .”

When I wrote my story for Memphis magazine, it was pretty much standard journalism and storytelling. What I didn’t get to include was how much I loved Mr. Bates and what an important friend he was to me. He had a genuine light-show twinkle in his eye every time I saw him. He was one of the kindest people I have ever known. Memphis was lucky to have had him. I’m luckier to have been his friend.

Categories
Music Music Features

Spray Paint Live at the Hi-Tone

Austin, Texas, noise rockers will celebrate the release of their new album Feel the Clamps this Monday night in the Hi-Tone’s small room. Goner Records is releasing the album, and the vinyl was pressed at Memphis Record Pressing, making Spray Paint one of the newest out-of-town bands to take advantage of the pressing plant. After releasing records on notable underground labels like S-S, Upset the Rhythm, Homeless Records, and Monofonus Press, the Austin three-piece took their talents to Goner Records, a label that has already had a killer year with their release of the Angry Angles compilation. The show will serve as a release show for Feel the Clamps and for a single featuring songs that didn’t make the album. If post punk or noise rock is your thing, Spray Paint are certainly worth the price of admission.

Spray Paint

Rounding out the bill is Aquarian Blood, another Goner Records band who have been working on their new album for most of the year. The band features members of many notable local groups, but almost all the tracks the band plays were cooked up by singer/guitarist JB Horrell in his home studio/practice space. Goner Records has been staying true to releasing some of the best garage/punk the city has to offer, and many will be happy to hear a new LP from Memphis powerhouse NOTS is also coming sometime this year. As for the Hi-Tone, the venue has a stacked calendar throughout the summer, including shows from bands like Every Time I Die, the Black Lips, Chain and the Gang, and Goner alumni Guitar Wolf. Get to the Hi-Tone by 9 p.m. on Monday and start your week off with some noisy punk from two bands in their prime. What could possibly go wrong?