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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Saturday: Goodnight Brooklyn Chronicles The Last Days of New York’s Hottest Music Venue

Music documentaries are always a big draw at Indie Memphis, and this year music films get their very own category, called Sounds. One of the most acclaimed films in the category is Goodnight Brooklyn by first-time director Matthew Conboy

Noise rockers Lightening Bolt plays at Death By Audio in Goodnight Brooklyn.

In 2005, when Conboy met Oliver Ackerman, he didn’t know it would change his life forever. Ackerman is the founder of Death By Audio, an small electronics company that makes guitar effects pedals beloved by musicians ranging from Wilco to Nine Inch Nails to U2. Ackerman and his company had taken over an abandoned industrial space in Brooklyn where he lived and worked. “He had a tiny little closet to build pedals in. I started building pedals with him. It became a full time thing with me. That lasted about a year before I started our music venue, which I also called Death By Audio, because I thought it was important for people to know about the awesome pedals that were made there.”

The music venue in question was a formerly disused space downstairs from the loft where Conboy and Ackerman and friends lived and worked. Thanks to a series of high profile shows by up and coming bands like Future Islands, it soon became known as one of the best music venues in New York. “We were a non-profit. Our goal was not to fill the bank account. We were just trying to make enough money to keep it going. We were mostly focusing on building a community, and having it be something that was really fun. That old school DIY mentality is pretty hard to do these days here.”

Conboy says giving artists a place to experiment and find their audience is a vital cultural priority. “I think it’s important if you want to live in a vibrant, compelling society, you need spaces for people to do their art and make things. I think that it really helps if those spaces are less concerned with profits and more concerned with really great ideas. That’s the kind of mentality that fosters new music, and lets the artists that no one gives a shit about right now but who are brilliant and just at the beginning of their career, it allows them a space to develop. And I think you see that in the film. There’s a lot of bands who started out at Death By Audio, playing their first shows or just their first shows in New York, who become pretty famous and pretty successful. I can’t speak for anyone else, but for me, any time I had gone to those kind of spaces in my teens and early twenties, it was a thrilling experience. You’re kind of in it with the people who were there. It’s not an us-vs-them situation, like you might get in an arena. If you are a young person looking for inspiration, that’s the kind of environment that makes you say, ‘I have an idea, and I’m going to fucking go for it!’ Amazing things can happen from that.”

Director Matthew Conboy

But in 2014, Death By Audio’s experiment in musical freedom fell victim to gentrification. Ironically, it was Vice Media, the counterculture news and media outlet, that made the deal to occupy the venue’s space. With two months to go on their lease, the partners decided to go out with a bang, booking the biggest and wildest shows of their eight-year run. When Conboy told producer Amanda Schultz about the space’s impending demise, she urged him to make a film about the experience. “I’m really glad that she convinced me,” Conboy says. “People came out of the woodwork offering to help. It was so moving.” 

Goodnight Brooklyn was Conboy’s directorial trial by fire, shot while the venue was going full tilt into oblivion. “It was a really traumatic time, especially with all of our stuff getting destroyed,” he says. “We felt like the world was crumbling around us. Most of us weren’t really sleeping a lot, and at the same time, we were dealing with tons of stress, and everyone was taking on more than they could handle. The recipe for a fiasco is reaching just beyond your grasp and not making it. But the recipe for greatness is that you do that and you make it. I feel like we achieved some level of greatness.”

Conboy took the lessons in collaboration he had learned in the music world and applied them to his filmmaking. “So much of being the director is just being the person who has thought about this thing the most. The strength I hope I have, and that most good filmmakers do have, is that even with all of your vision and preparation, if someone comes along with a better idea, you can listen to them and make your movie better. There were countless times on this film where that happened.”

Trailer: GOODNIGHT BROOKLYN – THE STORY OF DEATH BY AUDIO from Dishwasher Safe Films on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis Saturday: Goodnight Brooklyn Chronicles The Last Days of New York’s Hottest Music Venue

Goodnight Brooklyn screens at Studio on the Square on Saturday, November 5 at 3:50 PM. You can purchase tickets and passes at the Indie Memphis website.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

“One Ham Manlet” — Ryan Kathman Talks Shakespeare, and How to Reduce Him

Kathman vs Kathman

Ryan Kathman’s speaking my language.

Kathman teaches at St. Benedict’s. He’s also an actor, and the creator of One Ham Manlet, a comedy forward solo take on Hamlet opening at Theatre Memphis. The words are Shakespeare’s, but reduced from it’s nearly 4-hour original length,  to a hearty, 90-minute Shakespeare sauce.  “The thing theater has over film, and it’s not embraced enough, is the audience’s imaginations,” he says, describing his approach to the source material. “We want them to fill in the gaps.”

Kathman teaches his students that actors sometimes need to make their own opportunities. He originally performed One Ham Manlet for them. The solo solo show is, in some measure, the teacher taking his own advice. He knew he wasn’t getting younger and wondered if anybody else might give him a chance to play Hamlet. Or Ophelia, for that matter. Polonius? Horatio? The famous skull?

“I’m one of those people who sometimes thinks its unfortunate that we categorize Shakespeare’s plays into comedies and tragedies,” Kathman says. One of his goals from the beginning was to highlight just how funny tragedy can be. “The best productions of Shakespeare I’ve seen have embraced a blend,” he says, hoping that playing many characters with many voices affords comic opportunities while playing into one of the play’s big questions — is Hamlet mad?

One Ham Manlet isn’t just 90-Minutes of Kathman talking to himself. He also fights himself too. And puts on puppet shows. And… whatever it takes.

“What makes what I’m doing unique is is how I can wink at the conventions of a one-man show, and find theatrical solutions to problems like, how do you have a sword fight with yourself? How do you have a play within the play? How do you have the appearance of a ghost?”

How do you have a sword fight with yourself?

“I attached a piece of metal bracket to my belt,” Kathman says. “I made it a rapier dagger fight so whenever I make a play with the rapier I can hit the metal with my dagger. You get this foley effect of blades sounding like they’re hitting one another.”

This weekend’s Fri. & Saturday only. 8:30 start time, not matter what you may see elsewhere. After this week everything returns to normal. (seriously)

Categories
Music Music Blog

Watch Brand New’s Jesse Lacey cover Julien Baker’s ‘Sprained Ankle’

Sam Leathers

Last night, Brand New’s Jesse Lacey covered Memphis-bred Julien Baker’s Sprained Ankle in El Paso, Texas during their 10th anniversary tour of The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me.

Baker’s debut album has garnered critical praise since it came out in October of last year. The Flyer profiled her shortly before the release.

Watch Lacey’s cover below, as well as Baker’s video for Sprained Ankle:

Watch Brand New’s Jesse Lacey cover Julien Baker’s ‘Sprained Ankle’

Watch Brand New’s Jesse Lacey cover Julien Baker’s ‘Sprained Ankle’ (2)

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Memphis Actor/Director/Diva Cecelia Wingate But Were Afraid to Ask

Legend.

My cover story about sitting on award-winning superstar Cecelia Wingate’s porch is now online at Memphismagazine.com.

Teaser:

“Every time I see Margo Martindale I just want to throw up,” Wingate drawls; kidding/not kidding? “Bitch stole my career,” she adds with a raspy chuckle. If you don’t catch the reference right away, it’s not surprising. Martindale (August: Osage County, Million Dollar Baby) is an earthy, Emmy-winning character actress who makes jokes about how people love her work; they just don’t love it enough to learn her name.

Read the rest here.

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Music Music Blog

Last Night at the Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Snoop Dogg and William Bell cutting up at the Cannon Center.

Last night six inductees entered the Memphis Music Hall of Fame. Local Photographer Cole Wheeler was at the Cannon Center for Performing Arts  to capture some of the action as Marguerite Piazza, John Lee Hooker, William Bell, Charles Lloyd, the Hi Rhythm Section, and Sam “The Sham” Samudio were all inducted.

Overall the ceremony had a much different feel that last year’s event which included guest appearances by Keith Richards and Jimmy Fallon. While this year boasted big names like Snoop Dogg and Cat Power, the local talent of The Sheiks, the North Mississippi Allstars, and the Hi Rhythm Section stole the show.

Perhaps the most captivating performance of the whole night should go to Chelsea Miller of Opera Memphis, who nearly brought the house down when she paid tribute to Marguerite Piazza. Check out some balcony shots from Cole Wheeler below. We’re anxiously anticipating next years nominess, perhaps the Oblivians will make the cut?
Cole Wheeler

All inductees were honored with a short film montage before their songs were covered by a mix of A-list musicians and some of the best local talent Memphis has to offer.

Cole Wheeler

Sam ‘The Sham’ Samudio accepting his induction into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame.

Cole Wheeler

Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks covering the Sam the Sham classic ‘Wooly Bully.’

Cole Wheeler

The Sheiks covering Sam The Sham’s ‘Little Red Riding Hood.’

Cole Wheeler

John Lee Hooker, Jr. paying homage to the blues classic ‘boom boom boom boom.’

Cole Wheeler

John Lee Hooker, Jr. and the North Mississippi Allstars.

Cole Wheeler

William Bell with surprise guest Snoop Dogg performing ‘I Forgot to be your Lover.’

Cole Wheeler

Snoop Dogg with some impressive dance moves while performing with William Bell.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

PizzaRev Opening in Memphis

PizzaRev, a craft your own pizza franchise, will open its first location in December in East Memphis.

Two more, both on Germantown Parkway, will open in early 2017.

These locations will be owned by Robby Stewart and Andres Bolivar, who own the area Steak ‘n Shake.

According to Stewart, whose Southern Restaurant Holdings runs several franchises in Tennessee and Georgia, they were looking to branch out with another brand. They had the burgers and pizza made sense. They also considered Mexican franchises and other pizza restaurants before deciding on Pizza Rev.

“We liked what we saw,” says Stewart of PizzaRev.

PizzaRev was founded in Los Angeles in 2012. It has since expanded to 150 franchises.

One of the draws of Pizza Rev, Stewart says, is its potential for a national footprint. Others include the restaurant’s commitment to organic ingredients and the build-your-own approach.

Stewart says the build-your-own concept isn’t a trend but a change in the restaurant industry. It makes the experience interactive for the customer, he adds, noting that a diner could build a pizza that is 700 calories if he so desired, making a healthier choice as well.

While Stewart is confident in PizzaRev, he says the decision to open three locations quickly was about real estate.

“In my business, some [restaurants] do well, some don’t. If we find the best space, we’ll go ahead. We do not bypass great real estate.”

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Saturday: The “predictably unpredictable” Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum

After the social realism that dominated indie films in the last decade, some filmmakers have chosen to explore the experimental avenues of storytelling and imagery that characterized arthouse cinema in the 1990s. Perhaps the most extreme example of that trend in this year’s Indie Memphis festival is Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum. “There was a big explosion, and then for a while there was room for a lot of weird stuff, but now you go to most festivals and you see these tired narratives that have been on replay for the last decade,” says director Madsen Minax, who shot his film in the Bluff City with a cast and crew that was almost entirely local.

Director Madsen Minax (left) on the set of Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum

Minax, who taught at the University of Memphis before moving on to his current home in Burlington, Vermont, says the film benefitted greatly from the enthusiasm of the Memphis film community. “People were very excited to be participating in something that was really weird and different,” he says. “It was not hard to get a lot of energy for the project, and I feel like in other cities, that would not have happened.”

The storyline of Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum is difficult to explain, because of the shifting points of view and levels of reality represented onscreen. But the plotting is not the point of the film. Instead, the it seeks to plunge the viewer into a dreamlike state. “I feel like using a lens of alternate consciousness allows you to open up the lens of a lot of cinematic experimentation that would always be tolerated in a narrative, because you’re working with your own system of logic. I’m mostly a video artist, so I’m making weird things all the time. I just never positioned them within a narrative context. This gives me a way to get away with all of my weird shenanigans by lodging them in the space of dream logic. Most of my work comes from a writing practice, loose poetry. And a lot of it comes from a reading practice…I wanted to have two characters from different worlds, and the only way they could engage in sex acts is the foods they ingested and expelled.”

Minax says his filmmaking is greatly influenced by his background as a musician, and not only because he created the film’s haunting soundscapes himself. “There’s definitely a correlation between the pacing and how you engage with the practice of editing. To me, the best kind of movie to watch is one that is predictably unpredictable. I enjoy the same thing in music, even though it’s not popular. People want to know when the chorus is coming, but I want it to be in 5/4 tempo and then switch into 7/4, and not even have a chorus. And then I want it to be noise for two minutes.”

Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vaccum screens at Malco’s Studio on the Square on Saturday, November 5 at 3:30 PM. You can buy tickets and passes to the Indie Memphis Film Festival on their web site.

Categories
News News Blog

Raleigh Springs Mall Project Could Soon Be Cleared for Take Off

Apple Maps

The enormous site that was once home to the Raleigh Springs Mall could soon become a town center.

The much-delayed Raleigh Springs Mall project could clear a final hurdle in a couple of weeks, an event that could make the city’s vision for the area into a reality.

A tentative agreement has been reached between the city and one of the last remaining property owners in the mall area, said Memphis City Council member Bill Morrison. The agreement only needs the blessing of Shelby County Circuit Court Judge James Russell, who is set to review the matter on Friday, Nov. 18.

Morrison and Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland brought the news to a large crowd gathered in Raleigh Thursday night. That crowd, Morrison said, has been patient with and committed to the project for years, attending countless hours of city council and community meetings.

“The day I see that mall start coming down, which is hopefully in January, I might have to shed a tear of great relief to know we finally got there,” Morrison said Friday. “It’s been seven years. I joked last night that I had long hair and weighed 180 pounds [when the process began].”

The city council approved a vision plan for the Raleigh Redevelopment Project in November 2013. A year later, the council approved $23.7 million for the transformation project.

City leaders want to raze the old mall. In its place would be a town center with a “state of the art” library, Morrison said, and a “world class” skate park. A new Memphis Police Department precinct in the building would replace the Old Allen Station.

A one-mile walking trail would surround the entire campus, which would include a large water feature that Morrison said will also serve as a retention pond that will save about 600 homes from a 100-year flood event. The campus will also feature a community orchard and pecan grove.

Should Judge Russell sign off on the city’s agreement, Morrison said he hopes demolition would begin in January and the building would be completely gone by April. Should construction begin in the summer, the project could be open by summer 2018, Morrison said. But the entire timeline is tentative, he said.

Morrison had another, smaller piece of good news for Raleigh residents Thursday. A new sign will welcome visitors there. The state has given the city a small tract of land off Austin Peay to erect a large sign to read: “Welcome to Raleigh.” The sign will be landscaped and lit with solar power, Morrison said.

All of this comes as the area is “making a comeback,” Morrison said. He said a vacant strip center along Austin Peay will soon be completely occupied. Another empty strip center is being renovated. Also, he said, a Smoothie King has moved into the former (and vacant) Burger King location there.

“[The town center project] will just accelerate all of that progress in the area,” Morrison said.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Al Kapone’s Throwing a Birthday Party at the Hard Rock Cafe

Al Kapone’s pitching a birthday party at the Hard Rock Cafe this weekend. But I’ll get to that in a minute. First, there’s business to discuss.

“It just happens to be my birthday, Kapone says. “But Saturday night, I’m celebrating getting this situation worked out. I’m celebrating this deal.” The deal in question was struck with an Illinois-based liquor manufacturer known primarily for marketing Chicago’s Al Capone, and Tommy Guns vodka — the world’s only spirit packaged to look like the classic gangster gat. Five years back Memphis’ OG was tapped to promote Tommy Guns, and that led to his own line of potable product. Better news, Kapone’s Hustle Vodka, Memphis Heat cinnamon whiskey, and the rum based Sassy Girl C.R.E.A.M have been picked up by the Hard Rock Cafe chain.
[pullquote-1]“They say it’s very hard for any new brand to get into their system, but we were able to pull that off,” Kapone says. “Quite a few wins for us… We’re really wanting to build the energy for it here first, then it’s almost going to be like going on a tour.”

The big question, of course — is it good? “I can’t put my name on something I don’t like,” Kapone says, bringing classic Memphis heat by describing Memphis Heat cinnamon whiskey as being better than Fireball.

Al Kapone’s Throwing a Birthday Party at the Hard Rock Cafe

But what about his birthday? Kapone’s cagey about saying how many trips he’s made around the sun, but wears his status as an OG like a badge of honor. “I’m proud to say it,” he says, emphasizing the “O” and laughing out loud. Memphis’ original gangsta has worked a lot of mics. He’s been around, and seen a lot. He knows what it means to be a hustling independent, moving his product to the people. He’s made original work for movie soundtracks, and performed with rock bands and symphony orchestras. So we wanted to ask him three questions relating to the past, present and future.

Memphis Flyer: What’s your best memory? Something that just pops when you think about everything you’ve done?

Al Kapone: The first thing that pops in my head thinking about great moments in my life is the birth of my kids. The birth of my son and the birth of my daughter.

What’s the worst?

The worst? I try to look at things in a positive light even when it’s bad. But I’d say the worst thing is being robbed in the 6th grade when I was delivering groceries in South Memphis. Robbed with a 12-gauge.

What are you looking forward to most in the future?

I’m just looking forward to good health, good finances, and a good social life.

Special guests at the party include an Oscar winner and a Grammy winner: Frayser Boy, and Boo Mitchell.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Weekend: Midsummer In Newtown and Dark Night Offer Different Perspectives On Mass Shootings

The phenomenon of mass shootings has been frightening and baffling the country since the Columbine massacre in 1999. Two films at this year’s Indie Memphis film festival grapple with the issue in different ways.

On Saturday, the documentary Midsummer In Newtown looks at the psychic wreckage left in the wake of the Sandy Hook shooting. Producer Tom Yellin says the genesis of the project was a chance meeting with director Michael Unger. Yellin, a veteran of TV news turned independent documentary producer, learned that Unger, a Broadway professional, was traveling to Newtown to produce a musical adaptation of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream with a cast of students from Sandy Hook. “I asked Michael if he would consider letting us capture the process, and make it the centerpiece for the film,” Yellin recalls.

Midsummer In Newtown

Yellin assembled a team and traveled to Newtown with Unger. “The hardest part of these films is getting them funded. We shot the audition process on spec. The director of our film Lloyd Kramer is a friend of mine, and he was intrigued. We went up there with a crew and shot for a couple of days, then we got a great editor and cut it together. I sent it to five people who I thought might potentially fund the film, and all five of them said they would do it. It was amazing. The email I sent just said, ‘Here’s something that’s eight minutes long.’ It didn’t have a pitch, I didn’t write anything, just ‘Take a look’.”

Eventually, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen’s company Vulcan and Participant Media cut a deal to make the film. “It was the easiest thing I’ve ever gotten funded, and one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do,” says Yellin.

This was not the first time Yellin had tackled the subject of mass killing. In the mid-1990s, he produced a TV special with Peter Jennings about the Oklahoma City bombing. “The Tim McVey show was a psychological profile of the making of a mass murderer. How did he become that person? We were totally focused on the perpetrator. In the case of Newtown, one of the subjects mentions the shooter, but he’s not the subject at all. It’s about what happened after the fact to the entire community, particularly the victims of this terrible tragedy. What we are really focusing on with Newtown is the resilience human beings have naturally. One way to get access to that is through art. It’s really remarkable, but ultimately not that surprising, that a play people participate in and music like a very talented musician can make, can help you get in touch with your humanity.”

Midsummer In Newtown

Midsummer In Newtown ties together the stories of the kids preparing for the production with the story of how the parents of one victim are coping with the loss of their daughter. “As we spent more and more time in Newtown, we were told that we couldn’t really understand what is happening here unless we talked to some of the families who lost their children. That was obviously a very difficult thing to do. We had Lloyd and two producers working on this, and one of them spent a lot of time in Newtown. She, family by family, made a lot of different contacts, and we settled on Jimmy and Melba. We thought the fact that Jimmy was an artist resonated deeply with the themes we were discovering as the play was going on. It took a lot of time and effort to convince them to participate, and they put some serious ground rules around their participation. You don’t see much of them, you don’t see their house. We weren’t able to interview their other child. One of the reasons they were so cautious is that they get these crazy denialists who come and yell at them, saying ‘This shooting never happened. You didn’t really have a daughter. This is a conspiracy to take away guns.’ These are crazy, crazy, sick people. They were trying to protect themselves from that, but they agreed to participate.”

Yellin says putting the two stories together in the editing room was among the biggest challenges of his professional life. “The first cut did not work. We screened it for some people, and we thought it worked, but we were told in no uncertain terms that it was not successful. I resisted, I said no, it does work. Then I watched it again, and said, ‘They’re right. It doesn’t work.’ Someone whose son or daughter may have been at Sandy Hook but survived the tragedy is just in a different category than someone who’s son or daughter did not. Putting on a play that is full of comedy is very different from living your life as a tragedy, which is what you’re resigned to when you’ve lost your child like this. Balancing these two parts out so it didn’t feel like they canceled each other out and this whole thing was a waste of time was incredibly, incredibly difficult. We really wrestled with it. Turns out the tweaking we needed was so precise and so subtle. Little things made an enormous difference. It was so hard. But I’m so proud of how it came out. I think we got it right, and audiences who have seen it say the same thing.”

Indie Memphis Weekend: Midsummer In Newtown and Dark Night Offer Different Perspectives On Mass Shootings

On Sunday, filmmaker Tim Sutton takes another tack on the problem of mass violence with Dark Night. Sutton combines fiction and documentary techniques to create a haunting day-in-the-life of a community in the hours before a mass shooting. Sutton says his film was inspired by his studies of the 2012 mass shooting in an Aurora, Colorado theater that was screening the Batman film Dark Knight and Gus Van Zandt’s 2003 film about the Columbine massacre, Elephant. “I almost called the movie Elephant. I had seen it a bunch of times, but after Aurora massacre happened, like everybody I was deeply affected by that. I was watching Elephant, and I remembered loving the pace and all that. I had a real moment where I decided that I was a going to make a movie about Aurora, and it was going to be a day in the life, and if people wanted to say it’s just like Elephant, my response would be, exactly. His movie was a way of continuing a conversation about violence from Alan Clarke’s Elephant, which is about the Troubles in Northern Ireland. I realized that no one wanted to make this movie, so I had to make this movie. It should be thought of as a direct cinematic response to Van Sandt’s Elephant, and it’s on a continuum of direct cinematic response to violence.”

Dark Night

The prevailing mood of Dark Night is suburban isolation, with characters like a fitness obsessed young woman who compulsively posts pictures of herself on Instagram. Even when they are trying to socialize, they are really alone. “It’s very rare when a character in Dark Night shares a frame with another character. These are supposed to be characters that, in any cross section of America, you’ll be able to see yourself in it, even if it’s the selfie fitness girl. The soldier home from Afghanistan or Iraq will see himself in the character who is struggling with PTSD. You’re going to see the guy down the street, who you say, why does that guy have a gun? He doesn’t need a gun. And you’re going to see the teenager you used to be, who has a journal filled with bad thoughts. You’re supposed to see these characters and identify with at least one of them, if not all of them, and replace them while you’re watching the movie with yourself.

Dark Night

Sutton thinks tackling tough, socially relevant topics is his duty as an artist. “My dream would be that a young filmmaker, in two years, makes Dark Night 2 and continues the conversation. I hope that won’t have to happen, but this kind of cinematic discussion needs to keep coming from the film community.”

Indie Memphis Weekend: Midsummer In Newtown and Dark Night Offer Different Perspectives On Mass Shootings (2)

Tickets to Midsummer In Newtown and Dark Night, as well as festival passes, are available on the Indie Memphis website.