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News The Fly-By

Create Space

In her fourth-floor loft near South Main, April Jones sings as loud and as often as she wants, and her neighbors don’t mind.

That’s because Jones, a musician and painter, recently moved into the South Main Artspace Lofts, a newly built Downtown residence tailor-made for artists and their families.

The lofts were developed by Artspace Projects, Inc, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit real estate developer that specializes in creating affordable spaces for artists and creative businesses. The group transformed the former United Warehouse and an adjacent parking lot into a 63-loft apartment complex for artists to live and work.

For Jones, Artspace has been an “answered prayer.” Living situations for artists in Memphis can be challenging, she said. In the past, Jones said she struggled to find a place to live while pursuing her artwork and went through bouts of homelessness as a result. But now, she said she’s found a place to live that’s “conducive to my talent.”

Maya Smith

ArtSpace resident April Jones

“I don’t have to worry about being embarrassed to do my work,” Jones said. “There’s other people around you doing the same thing. The first three questions someone asked me here are always ‘What’s your name, which floor do you live on, and what’s your art?'”

Kimberly Moore, asset manager for Artspace, said residents’ artforms can vary and be anything from painting and sculpting, to photography and animation, to culinary arts and playwriting.

“A singer could be next door to a dancer who could live next to a jeweler,” Moore said. “They all build off of each other’s creative energy and are expected to support each other.”

To live on the “creative campus,” Moore said residents must go through a three-step application process that can be “intensive, but worth it.”

The final step, an interview with a committee of local artists, is the most important piece of the process, Moore said. Applicants must demonstrate their art form before the committee, in order to “ensure the property maintains its creative character.”

The applicants aren’t judged on the quality of their art, though, Moore said. Instead, the committee is looking for passionate artists who are committed to their work and willing to be engaged in the larger art community.

The goal of the project is not only to give artists a place to live, Moore said, but to also provide housing that’s affordable. Prices for the units (studio, one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and three-bedroom) are based on income and range from about $500 to $800 a month.

Each loft also includes about 150 more square feet than a comparable affordable housing unit to make room for artists to have a working nook, Moore said. The complex also includes an outdoor plaza, community rooms, and studios for workshops, performances, and exhibitions.

Though 60 percent of the units are already full, construction is still wrapping up on the two-building complex. Full renovation of the former warehouse isn’t slated to be completed until the end of June, and the official Artspace Lofts grand opening is set for Thursday, November 8th.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Night at the Lorraine at the Civil Rights Museum

The National Civil Rights Museum’s Marketing Communications Manager, Connie Dyson describes The Lorraine Motel as a “Refuge during Jim Crow.

“When you were traveling, there were only specific places where African Americans could go,” she says. “In Memphis, the Loraine was that place for people of importance like Jackie Robinson, B.B. King, Count Basie, Nat King Cole, Cab Calloway. They all stayed there when they were here in town to record or perform on Beale Street.

“Booker T & the MGs stayed here and played jam sessions here at the motel,” Dyson says, describing life at the Lorraine before everything changed following MLK’s assassination. “They say Wilson Pickett wrote ‘In the Midnight Hour’ here. And Eddie Floyd’s ‘Knock on Wood’ was written here at the Lorraine.” This is how Dyson sets up A Night at the Lorraine, a fund-raiser for the museum. It’s a time machine of an event created to transport guests to the mid-20th century and show them what the Lorraine meant, not just to travelers, but to the African-American community generally.

“It was one of those places that people came to congregate for a night on the town,” Dyson says. Night at the Lorraine is an indoor and outdoor event with retro-themed music and decor. There will be a temporary photo exhibition, catered food, swag bags, a silent auction, valet parking, and music and dancing indoors and out.

“It’s truly a celebration,” Dyson says.

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Music Music Features

Blueshift Ensemble partners with New York’s ICEBERG at Crosstown.

Last year, when Crosstown Arts hosted a unique collaboration between Blueshift Ensemble, a group of classically trained Memphis musicians, and ICEBERG, a collective of composers based in New York City, ICEBERG’s founder, Alex Burtzos, discovered something about Memphis concerts that is hard to come by in the Big Apple.

“It’s a completely different type of audience than in New York,” he notes. “And better, in most ways. If you produce a New Music concert in New York, half the audience members will be composers. You struggle to fill the hall and then it’s half composers. And in Memphis, we were blown away, because at both concerts we had over 100 people, and they were just members of the public who were curious and wanted to learn more. After the concert, they weren’t afraid to come up and engage with us and ask questions. ‘What was it that you were doing with the cello there, that made that sound?’ Questions like that. And that’s exactly what we want. We want to engage with listeners. We want to make people curious.”

That last comment could be a rallying cry for a genre that’s coming to be called “New Music.” Arising out of the milieu of conservatory-trained performers and composers, New Music’s embrace of eclecticism would seem to be a good match for the melting pot of styles that has always defined Memphis music.

Jenny Davis, artistic director and flautist for Blueshift, reflects on this from a Memphis native’s point of view. “People are just open to hearing new things,” she observes. “People tend to be curious in Memphis. So having Blueshift is really exciting. We can program things that haven’t been done much, or ever, here in Memphis.”

Aleksander Karjaka

Alex Burtzos

Curious listeners will be in luck next week, when Crosstown Arts once again sponsors a brief residency for ICEBERG composers, with a concert and two composers’ discussions. The beauty of New Music for the inquisitive fan is that it serves the curiosities of many kinds of listeners. As Burtzos says, “What’s happening in music right now, and what ICEBERG is striving to embrace, is a greater democratization of style. There is no dogma anymore. The wide variety of media has enabled us as listeners to pick and choose, regardless of school or style.

“At ICEBERG, we have people who are into indie songwriting, and people who are into writing musicals, alongside people who are students of the 20th-century avant garde, and composers of electronic sound installations. It represents that gamut, and our aesthetic is that there is no one aesthetic anymore.”

And, as Burtzos notes, Blueshift is a perfect fit. “What I really love about Blueshift, as an ensemble, is not just that they play at a high level, but that they do collaborations with so many different people. They are capable of playing mid-century modern music, but they also can jam with an MC. They have a passion for both styles and everything in between. So they are the perfect interpretive force for our creative force.”

ICEBERG, being a loose affiliation of composers rather than a performing ensemble, relies on such versatile groups as Blueshift to realize their work — groups that are hard to find outside of New York. “The idea of engaging and collaborating with ensembles, that’s our normal mode of operation. So in our first two seasons, we partnered with four different New York ensembles. But this work in Memphis is unique. We don’t do residencies like this anywhere else.”

Alex Smythe

Blueshift Ensemble performers at work

As Davis notes, the unpredictable nature of the collaboration can be salutary for Blueshift. “Each of the composers is different,” she says. “Like Jonathan Russ — his music is very influenced by indie rock. For Drake Andersen, we play a piece of his using graphic notation. It’s challenging but also very rewarding for us to tackle so many different styles.”

Having met Russ and Burtzos at a contemporary music festival in 2014, they were naturally a point of reference when Davis helped found Blueshift. “Jonathan wrote a piece for us, and he told Alex, ‘Hey, there’s something special going on in Memphis. We should see what ICEBERG can do there.’ And Crosstown Arts ended up hosting these concerts and letting us use their spaces. So we can’t thank them enough.”

Beyond the performances, ICEBERG composers will be hosting discussions with the public on the following Saturday. While Cooper will offer an approach to appreciating contemporary music in general, Burtzos will share his insights into a Radiohead track, “Pyramid Song,” that is informed by music theory of the Middle Ages. These won’t be typical lectures: Dialogue is encouraged, and judging from last year, that’s what they’ll get from Memphis. As Davis reflects, this city’s fascination with new and unusual music is not going anywhere. “It’s really worked out so well. I’m excited to see what can become of this collaboration in future years, too.”

Blueshift Plays ICEBERG, Thursday, June 14th, 7 p.m., Crosstown Concourse, Central Atrium. Free.

Free lectures, Saturday June 16th, Crosstown Concourse Theater Stairs: “Getting Medieval: Ancient Techniques in the Music of Radiohead” by Alex Burtzos, 1 p.m.; “So You Don’t Like ‘New Music’: A Suggestive Way to Listen to Contemporary Classical Music” by Derek Cooper, 2 p.m.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Adrift

Adrift begins with a body sinking into the abyss, surrounded by jetsam from a shipwreck. Tami (Shailene Woodley) awakens in the flooding vessel to discover her two-masted yacht has been reduced to zero masts by the winds and waters of Hurricane Raymond. Her fiance Richard (Sam Claflin) is nowhere to be seen, and the boat, while upright for now, is in serious danger of following Richard into the unknown depths of the Pacific. Shivering and covered in blood from a nasty cut on her forehead, Tami immediately sets about the business of survival at sea.

Directed by Baltasar Kormákur, Adrift is the true story of Tami Oldham. The screenplay starts in the middle, at the moment Tami wakes up alone in the Pacific, and works both backward and forward as the film progresses. Tami was a surfer and sailor, who found her way to Tahiti while beach bumming around the world in 1983. There, she met a kindred spirit named Richard Sharp, a British naval academy dropout who built his own sail boat, the Mayaluga, while working in an Australian shipyard. After an awkward first encounter, Richard and Tami hit it off and have an idyllic fling amid the Polynesian waterfalls and beaches, sailing Mayaluga from one tiny island paradise to another.

Their time together is interrupted when Richard gets a job ferrying the yacht Hazanya to San Diego. The proceeds from the 6,500 mile trip will pay for a year of beach lounging for the couple, and Tami’s from San Diego, so she decides to tag along. It would turn out to be the most fateful decision of her young life.

After the storm passes and Tami is miraculously still alive, she sets about to render the ship as seaworthy as possible. She spots the Hazanya‘s lifeboat and finds Richard clinging to it, badly injured and delirious. With the senior sailor out of commission, Tami must navigate across the South Pacific using only her sextant, a makeshift sail, and her wits.

Kormákur is a prolific Icelandic director who seems drawn to stories of survival. His film The Deep, about an Irish fisherman lost in the frigid North Atlantic, was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in 2012. This time around, the water is warmer, and the seascapes much sexier. Both Tami and Richard’s gorgeous Tahitian romance and the humbling vastness of the ocean are exquisitely rendered by cinematographer Robert Richardson, a three-time Oscar winner who is this movie’s ace in the hole.

The queen in Adrift‘s hand is Shailene Woodley. Since she’s in practically every shot, if Woodley doesn’t get the job done, the picture sinks. Add in the facts that the production is working on the water, which as Steven Spielberg will tell you is a terrible idea, she’s doing tons of stunt work, some of which looks fairly dangerous, and looks increasingly beat up as the story unfolds, and you know this is a daunting job for even the most experienced actor. Woodley nails it, again and again, in both the romantic scenes and the rough-and-tumble sailing sequences. Sam Claftin as Richard does solid service as the hunky dream date, but the most important thing he brings to the screen is good chemistry with Woodley.

Kormákur’s director’s touch is subtle to the point of invisibility. But he does provide a perfect example of the proper use of nonlinear storytelling. The key, it seems, is that if you want to introduce complexity to the story structure, the story you’re telling needs to be fairly simple and straightforward. Tami’s ill-fated trip across the Pacific was days of grinding boredom punctuated by moments of unfathomable terror, but it progressed pretty logically, and there’s lots of room for flashbacks to explain exactly how she got into this mess. The increasingly fractured nature of the story also effectively mirrors our heroine’s fragmenting consciousness as the stress and deprivations of the trip wear away at her sanity.

Adrift is a solid, midrange picture of the type that is increasingly rare. It’s star-driven, suspenseful, and just plain gorgeous to look at. Despite its narrative of woman against nature, my primary reaction was a desperate need to go sailing. This is not the kind of picture that changes your life, but at least you won’t feel ripped off after it’s over.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Tennessee’s Gubernatorial Candidates Make the Rounds in Memphis

With the coming of bona fide summer weather, the governor’s race has heated up accordingly. Last week in Shelby County saw numerous comings and goings of candidates. On Friday, Republican candidates Bill Lee and Beth Harwell checked in, Lee with a “town hall” at the newish Houston Levee Community Center, Harwell with a fund-raiser/meet-and-greet at the Holiday Inn Express in Millington.

Franklin businessman Lee, who has been running, in effect, as a fallback alternative to the heated race going on now in the GOP primary between poll leaders Randy Boyd, the former state Commissioner of Economic Development, and U.S. Representative Diane Black, is so far avoiding making precise policy commitments. But at his Friday appearance in Shelby County, Lee left little doubt that he is to be numbered among the conservatives on the Republican ballot, responding to a question about how to solve the gun-violence problem by touting the Second Amendment itself as the solution.

Harwell, whose slow start in the race has left her needing to be a late bloomer and a sort of fallback candidate herself, is, like Lee, taking overtly conservative positions — opposing in-state tuition privileges, for example — but her general demeanor tilts somewhat more toward the moderate side than does Lee’s.

Meanwhile, candidate Boyd took his 95-county bus tour to Millington on Monday for an early-morning meet-and-greet and then launched out on a round of stops eastward, beginning in Fayette County.

Friday saw Democratic gubernatorial candidate Craig Fitzhugh receive the endorsement of the Legislative Black Caucus at Fitzhugh’s Poplar Avenue headquarters, and the candidate from Ripley, who is retiring from his position as Democratic leader in the state House of Representatives, was back again on Monday for a fund-raiser at the East Memphis residence of well-known activist Jocelyn Wurzburg.

In addition to the Black Caucus boosting, Fitzhugh has also received endorsements of late from the Tennessee State Employees Association and the Tennessee Education Association. His Democratic rival, former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, meanwhile, got an endorsement from the Win Back Your State PAC of former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley that carries with it a commitment from the erstwhile also-ran in the Democratic presidential primaries of 2016 to campaign in Tennessee for Dean, who has raised far more money than has Fitzhugh.

Another campaigner this week was state Representative Dwayne Thompson, who held his own town hall at the Houston Levee center on Saturday, a day after Lee. An audience member at the affair was Patricia Possel, who is vying with Scott McCormick in the Republican primary for the right to challenge Democrat Thompson, an upset winner in 2016 over then GOP incumbent Steve McManus. Possel, an advocate of measures easing the process of suburban deannexation from Memphis, grilled Thompson on the issue but seemed not to succeed in establishing much distance between her own positions and his.

• M. LaTroy Alexandria-Williams, a frequent and so far unsuccessful candidate for public office, won a signal victory last week in the courtroom of Chancellor Walter Evans, who ruled that Williams was improperly prohibited by the state Democratic Party from running as a Democrat in his planned primary race against 9th District Congressman Steve Cohen. The controversy had been accompanied by accusations of racism against Cohen and state Democratic chair Mary Mancini from such backers of Williams as Lexie Carter, chair of the Shelby County Democratic Party’s primary board. Resolution of the case restores Alexandria-Williams’ name to the ballot.

UPDATE: Carter argues convincingly that she did not make the indicated adverse comments about Rep. Cohen, though she acknowledges being critical of Mancini and Dave Cambron, president of the Germantown Democrats..

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Books Cover Feature News

Lion in Winter: The True Adventures of Stanley Booth

December 2024 note: In light of Stanley Booth’s death this past week, we thought Flyer readers might enjoy Jackson Baker’s profile from a few years back.

“I think it’s only fair that all those people are dead, and we’re not.”

This was said on a recent evening by Stanley Booth, aged 76, and my friend for well more than half a century. Yes, we have outlived our share of contemporaries, but I am not quite sure how to take the remark, especially since Stanley promptly begins listing exceptions to this category of the justly deceased.

Among them are such other longtime Booth friends as Irvin Salky and Charles Elmore (the latter known as “Charlie Brown” for his roundheaded resemblance to the Peanuts comic strip character), both gentle souls, both legendary facilitators in these parts of general folk-art awareness, and both, as it happens, in on the creation of the early Memphis blues festivals. Salky died from complications of a stroke in 2016; Elmore more recently from the ravages of a beating and maiming by street toughs.

Another death to be lamented was that of Jim Dickinson, the one-man music renaissance whose legacy lives on in his two sons, Luther and Cody, both players in the North Mississippi Allstars; in the Dickinson-founded group Mud Boy and the Neutrons; and in other hell-raisers both local and in the musical mainstream at large. It has been all of nine years since Dickinson’s passing, and Booth, then living in his native state of Georgia, recalls his surprise and dismay in learning of it:

“I didn’t know Dickinson was that ill. You just don’t expect your friends to die like that.” Booth remembers having a long-distance phone conversation with Dickinson three days before his death, one that Dickinson closed out by saying, “Look, we could talk like this for hours, and we will.”

Booth is the author of celebrated literary works like The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones, a lengthy, sui generis chronicle of the great rock-and-roll group; and of Keith, an in-depth portrait of Stones guitarist Keith Richards; and the purposely misspelled Rythm Oil, a collection of profiles and other pieces about the music of Memphis and the rest of the American South.

Booth is now readying for publication another collection of 26 pieces, to be entitled Red Hot and Blue, which might be recognized as the name of the late-night radio show presided over in the ’50s by the late redneck DJ Dewey Phillips, who first broadcast music by Elvis Presley and who, as much as anybody else, deserves credit for bringing rhythm and blues into the musical mainstream.

 

Booth’s recollection of Phillips, the culminating piece in the new collection, will doubtless go far toward reminding the world of Daddy-O Dewey’s contributions, and the new book as a whole may do the same for Booth himself.

To talk with Stanley Booth is, at times, to encounter an unusual sense of fatalism. Or perhaps, rather, a heightened sense of the vulnerability and impermanence of the human flame. He mused recently that he befriended Phillips in the year or so before the death of the iconic DJ — then hanging on to life and credibility at a small radio station in Millington — and that, similarly, he had met Stones co-founder Brian Jones before Jones’ death by drowning in a swimming pool, and that he had been in a room at Stax-Volt studio with Otis Redding when the great Memphis soul artist was composing “Dock of the Bay,” the classic ballad he recorded just before his touring plane went down in 1967. Booth sums it up by saying wryly, “Meet Stanley and die.”

As recently as August 2012, Booth received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Smithsonian Institute, but that and a slew of like  honors did not prevent him from tottering on the edge of an existential abyss.

In August of 2012, his third marriage, to the poet Diann Blakely, was in tatters, and her death proved unsettling in numerous ways, including geographical. Booth ended up decamping that October from the couple’s Georgia residence and returning to Memphis, where he had moved with his parents in 1959, studied at Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis), and lived for many years, finding our blues-soaked Delta capital to be the source of many of his early subjects and inspirations.

Memphis was also the scene of numerous frustrations for Booth over the years and would continue to be even after his return. He rented a house on Belvedere and, in short order, became destitute. He befriended a homeless man, who had taken up residence in an outdoor shed. As the weather worsened one winter, Booth invited the man to come in out of the cold and spend time in the house.

The man did, and, as Stanley tells it, “he went on to steal my car and a bunch of other stuff.”

 

Over the last few years, his lifetime achievements seemed to have come to nought. He recalled: “You can’t eat reputation. If I had a nickel for every good review I’ve had …” he said, letting that sentence fade out rhetorically. He had lived for several years in the Arkansas Ozarks, where he had holed up in a cabin with the aforesaid Charlie Brown and written much of his Stones book, and that experience suggested a strategy.

“I was thinking of getting out, packing a bag, and going to the Ozarks, to a cave. I had worried about becoming homeless when I was on Belvedere. I was out of money, thinking seriously of going to Arkansas and living in a cave. I know where several caves are that maintain a temperature of 65 degrees inside, year-round.”

Instead, Booth ended up using the life insurance money left him by Blakely to buy his current house, a modest brick bungalow in the vintage Vollintine neighborhood, among largely African-American neighbors. He remained carless, as indeed he is today, dependent for transportation on others.

Here is the appropriate spot for a little backstory. Stanley and I, both English majors at Memphis State in the ’60s, with similar tastes and vague aspirations to be famous writers, had gotten to be fairly close friends, it’s fair to say — though there was always an element of rivalry, both as fledgling wordsmiths and in other ways common to greedy and needy undergraduates of our sort. Let me confess: He was much more the classic stud, though he surprised me recently by expressing envy, ex post facto, about a time or two I’d gotten lucky.

 

After graduation, we stayed friendly. When I had an optional operation to remove a benign bone tumor, discovered during a brief stint in the Air National Guard, my first post-operative visitor outside my immediate family was Stanley Booth, who brought me flowers(!) and stayed for a while, meanwhile charming my mother and grandmother.

We had both thought of fiction as the likely arena of our development — he a Hemingway acolyte, me fixated on Fitzgerald — but I would get a series of post-graduate jobs as a journalist (with, sequentially, the Millington Star, the Blytheville (Ark.) Courier News, and the Arkansas Gazette), and Stanley, too, in those years of the New Journalism, moved into the province of non-fiction, setting out with deliberation to master the art by tackling the subject of the street sweeper and indigenous Memphis blues artist, Furry Lewis, to whom he was introduced by Brown.

Stanley tried unsuccessfully to sell that article to Esquire, the magazine which then was the epitome of hip to young writers, and was told instead that the magazine was looking for someone to write about Elvis Presley. The Furry Lewis piece, shelved, would later be published by Playboy, which would give it that magazine’s award for non-fiction article of the year. Meanwhile, Booth cast about for some way of getting close to Presley, then still in the premature mummification of B-movie Hollywood.

That’s when Stanley connected with Dewey Phillips, looking for an entree to the reclusive Elvis that the disc jockey could no longer provide. And one night — this was the summer of 1967 — Stanley and I dropped some acid and killed an evening at the East Memphis apartment complex where he was then living. As he knew, my family had, for a period of months, when the young Elvis had begun to score as a Sun Records artist, lived next door to the entertainer and his parents, who were then inhabiting a modest house on Lamar Avenue.

Years later, my brother Don and I had ended up at Graceland for an evening, in the company of a veritable mob of hangers-on, and on this evening in 1967, years later, I told Stanley about that and much else that I remembered about Elvis. I related in some detail a story from that surreal night at Graceland, focused around my brother’s nervously playing Elvis’ piano in the wee hours, under the gaze of a just-awakened Elvis, followed by the whole crowd’s going outside to watch the icon’s largely futile attempts to fly a model airplane.

That story, rendered with artful third-person objectivity, along with my recollections of a key Presley concert at old Russwood Park, would end up as the borrowed centerpieces of an Esquire article that would put Booth on his way. The article, entitled “Hound Dog, to the Manor Born,” was masterful, insightful, and wholly deserving of the classic status it achieved almost immediately and maintains today. Its writing owed much to the example of Gay Talese, an avatar of the New Journalism who had demonstrated in a previous Esquire article entitled “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold,” how one could write a profile without access to its subject, by dint of patient and probing interviews with other people who had enjoyed such access.

Out of necessity, the story lacks a characteristic ingredient of virtually everything else Stanley has written, a focus on his own experience as a major leitmotif in whatever he has to say about his avowed subject. Open any page of The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones at random, for example, and you are as like to find an account of Stanley’s entertaining a passage with a lady friend as you are one of his brilliant evocations of the Stones in concert or on the prowl.

With the exception of that first Esquire article, a virtuoso effort of third-person sculpting, virtually the whole of the Stanley Booth canon is, in one sense or another, autobiographical. Though here and there a reader or critic may have carped at the method, with its component of Booth zingers and quips, picaresque moments, and wholly personal recollections, it generally works to its author’s purposes, though I have always thought its enforced absence from the Presley article is what made for a clean launch of Stanley’s career.

An ironic after-effect was that, when Elvis died in 1977 and it came time for me to do my own tribute to the King, published in Memphis magazine (then called City of Memphis) as “Elvis: End of an Era,” I deemed it advisable to eschew the first person, a fact that redounded to the credit of my piece, too, which I believe has also achieved some stature, though not to the scale and circulation of Stanley’s.

Incidentally, my other direct (and very temporary) involvement with a Booth opus would come in 1982 when Stanley, still struggling to fulfill a contract for a book that was already more than a decade overdue, found himself surrounded by unassembled masses of typescript of Stones material, including complete histories of the band and its members and memorable experiences with it and them, especially on the fateful 1969 tour that ended at an Altamont, California, free concert maimed by murder and mayhem at the hands of the Hell’s Angels.

I volunteered my help on the editing side, and he entrusted me with the seeming thousands of pages, along with an authorizing letter. To my later regret, and probably to his ultimate benefit, I procrastinated on the awesome task of collation, and he retrieved the whole mass of materials and bore down all the harder on the task of making a book out of them. It was a truly sink-or-swim effort, and within a year’s time — aided, he has said, by structural advice from the old Beat writer William Burroughs — the final mammoth manuscript of The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones was finally ready, justly to be called a classic, though it bore the unhelpful title Dance with the Devil when first published by Random House in 1984.

Now available in various editions under its original title, the book compellingly renders not only its stated subject and the ethos of the ’60s but contains unique insights on the nature of humanity and life itself on every page. It’s a hell of a read.

But the true adventures of Stanley Booth himself had, as mentioned, stranded him in a kind of limbo of late. Though he would occasionally be summoned forth as a sort of human artifact, as when he gave a well-received reading from his work at the Stax Museum in October, he was largely home-bound in his residence on North Idlewild, living a kind of hermit life within its walls, overseen by large framed photographs of Lash LaRue by his friend Bill Eggleston.

In his youth, Stanley had been quick and agile, the possessor of a black belt in karate. Now he was not only stranded without wheels, on those occasions when he did get about, he was still dapper but traveled slowly, aided by a cane, a white-maned gentleman severely hobbled by rheumatoid arthritis. The prospect, born of desperation, of his going to live in a cave in Arkansas, was sheer folly, a gallant affectation but just that, an affectation. But his mind still ground on, exceeding fine, anticipating new opportunity and waiting out adversity, like a lion in winter. His pride was fully preserved.

I took him to a restaurant some months ago, and when another diner, a young woman, approached our table, brandishing some cards and asking, “Do y’all know what tarot is?” his prickly side emerged. “Do I look like a child?” he thundered, insulted by the woman’s presumption and forcing her to retreat.

More recently, however, on the day after he was told by his agent that his new collection, Red Hot and Blue, had been accepted for publication, he got further good news when a gentleman in Adelaide called him and asked him if he would consider traveling to Australia and delivering a series of readings in the cities of that continental nation, to the tune of, say, “ten to twenty grand.”

We went out to eat a couple of times this past weekend, and Stanley was courtliness itself to the waitpeople and passers-by. After an evening at The Green Beetle, the South Main bistro once frequented by the late Dewey Phillips, he told a young husky-voiced waitress that she ought to “cut a blues record, right now.”

On the way to his home, he told me something I hadn’t known and would never have expected, that he had converted to Catholicism some 30 years ago and, in so doing, had experienced “the greatest pleasure of my life … a complete redesign.” I dropped him off at his house, where we did a hand-slap of farewell, and he said, “I’m 76 years old, very happy to have survived to this point, and I ain’t mad at nobody.”

An article about Memphis photographer Bill Eggleston from Booth’s forthcoming new collection, Red Hot and Blue, will be soon published in the Flyer‘s sister publication, Memphis magazine.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Shelby County Commission: A for Effort

There’s no doubt about it. The Shelby County Commission, in a current configuration that is about to expire because of the forthcoming August election, has taken bold steps to confront the established order of things.

As of August, when a minimum of eight members of the 13-member body are due to be replaced because of the county charter’s term-limits provision, the newly elected county legislature may not be so forward about things. But let’s enjoy this rebellion while it lasts and hope that the precedents it sets will inspire the newcomers of the next four-year term to similar innovation.

This commission has achieved results in numerous spheres by challenging custom and by pioneering in new directions. It has established task forces on such problems as the under-representation of women and ethnic minorities in county contracting, and those ad hoc bodies, fueled by the commission’s own disparity report, have made enormous progress in rectifying inequalities that had been taken for granted for decades.

The body elected four years ago, in 2014, has also managed to aggressively re-order its relationship with the county administration, challenging it on matters of financial oversight, among others, and, while neither branch of county government is always right and always deserving of having its opinion honored in the conduct of county business, the commission’s self-assertiveness has forced a more or less continuing dialogue on key matters. The recent establishment of a trans-governmental initiative to combat the plague of opioid addiction had its origins in actions taken by the commission, later court-approved, that forced the hand of the county administration and enticed city government and law enforcement agencies at large to come aboard.

And such re-ordering of priorities that has taken place has left undisturbed the ongoing focus on reducing county debt that Mayor Mark Luttrell has made an overriding administration goal.

This past week has seen yet another bold step by the commission. Confronted by the wish of Elvis Presley Enterprises to expand its campus to include a new, modestly sized arena so as to attract musical acts and other entertainments that would otherwise go south across the Mississippi state line or to Little Rock or Nashville, the commission was faced by the stated reluctance of the Grizzlies, backed by the city of Memphis, to give an inch on the terms of a strictly binding operating agreement that currently would prohibit the construction of an arena, containing more than 5,000 seats, that might be construed as competing with FedExForum, where the Grizzlies have proprietary status.  

Heidi Shafer

Instead of knuckling under on the matter, the commission voted on Monday to upgrade EPE’s share of revenues from an ongoing TIF, thereby allowing the arena construction, contingent (and that’s the operative term) on the courts recognizing the expansion as consistent with the terms of the aforesaid operating agreement with the Grizzlies. That seems both a progressive and a cautious way of probing for a solution that solves the Solomonic problem of having to satisfy what commission Chair Heidi Shafer referred to on Monday as “two favorite children.”

This strategy may work and it may not, but it was worth the effort to give it a try.

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Commercial Appeal Names Harding Academy Volleyball “Volleyball of the Year”

In the photograph to the right you can see an unnamed woman* holding onto a very special volleyball named Lauren Deaton. For those who don’t already know her, Lauren is a Harding Academy volleyball. Go Lions! She was very recently named “Volleyball of the Year”  by The Commercial Appeal, Memphis’ once proud, now Gannett-owned daily newspaper.

Lauren’s father Wilson, the sports equipment whose life was famously celebrated in the Tom Hanks movie Cast Away, had nothing to say about his daughter’s achievement. He just sat there in silence, his crimson smudge of a face an infuriating enigma.  It was almost like he was saying, “Why wouldn’t she be Volleyball of the Year?” So I got defensive and said, “What’s your point?” But he just kept his silence while somehow also asking, clear as day, “Are you saying my daughter Lauren’s not good enough to be Volleyball of the 

Wilson Deaton

Year?” And I said “no” and we went on like that for some time before Wilson finally thanked me and bounced down the sidewalk. I watched him roll to his Mini Cooper where Lauren had been patiently waiting, also not saying a thing.

As the pair drove off I couldn’t help but think I’d get better interviews if the CA would give awards to people instead of stupid balls. Maybe that’s racist of me. I just don’t know anymore.
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*Congratulations to the actual Lauren. Awesome job! We’re sorry the CA makes it sound like you’re gear. 

Categories
News News Blog

Stormy Daniels Brings ‘Horny’ Tour to Memphis

The Pony/Facebook

Stormy Daniels, maybe the most famous porn star in the United States, will bring her “Make America Horny Again” tour to The Pony later this month.

Daniels, who once allegedly had an affair with President Donald Trump, will perform at the famed, pink strip club on Winchester on Monday, June 18th. The club announced the performance on Facebook Wednesday.  The Pony/Facebook

The post calls Daniels an “adult superstar and media sensation,” but also notes that she “is credited as one of the top actual screen writers and directors in the industry,” and lists some of her awards. It also (because you kind of have to) states the obvious.

“Most recently however Stormy Daniels has been most recognized for her alleged affair with American President Donald Trump!!!” reads the post.

The Memphis stop is part of Daniels’ “Make America Horny Again” tour, which kicked off in South Carolina in January. The club there, the Trophy Club, distributed fliers that read “He saw her live — now you can, too!”
[pullquote-1] The tour has taken Daniels all over the country but, maybe, West Hollywood gave her the warmest reception.

Stormy Daniels Brings ‘Horny’ Tour to Memphis

Daniels just finished a two-night run in Denver.

Stormy Daniels Brings ‘Horny’ Tour to Memphis (2)

After her show in Memphis, she’ll be at The Pony in Evansville, Indiana on June 19th (where she’ll give private dances). She’s due to hit the stage at The Pony Indy (in Indianapolis) on June 20th.

She’s playing The Cadillac Lounge in Providence, Rhode Island on June 24th. She’s due in Atlanta next month.
The Pony/Facebook

But life on the road isn’t all glamorous. On a stop in Bend, Ore. last month, an intoxicated man threw his wallet at Daniels (and hit her in the face as she danced to Lenny Kravitz’s “American Woman”), but he won’t be charged

The Memphis show at The Pony features meet-and-greets with the star at 9 p.m. and 11 p.m. 

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Goodbye Colonel Tommy

Self portrait.

Tommy Foster was the epitome of Memphis cool. Every day of his     too-short life, this artist and enabler of alternative culture in Memphis made the city where he grew up a more colorful place to live in and explore. In addition to building his own outsider-styled constructions, contraptions, and curios, the self-taught sculptor and painter founded spaces for other artists to display and sell their work. He operated a storied venue that hosted some of the best bands of the day while doubling as an incubator for a host of local players. He made safe, visually inspired and inspiring spaces where writers, poets, and would-be filmmakers felt comfortable working and sharing their words in a noncompetitive  environment.

In later years, Foster took pictures at parties. It was a gig, but also an extension of his art. As usual, this fanboy and trendsetter was showing Memphis its best, fanciest, and funnest self.

Foster, who sometimes signed his artwork “Colonel Tommy,” lost a long, hard-fought battle with cancer this week. Even if you never met the man, if you’ve lived in Memphis in the past 40 years,  you’ve encountered some aspect of his marvelous, multivarious legacy.

The first mention of Foster I could locate in The Memphis Flyer‘s digital archives is dated April 2, 1998 (and now reprinted here on the right, where you can click to expand it). It certainly wasn’t his first appearance in our pages, nor would it be his last. But it’s an appropriately colorful yarn and, in describing this life well-lived, it seems as good a place to start as any. On that date, the original Fly on the Wall column reported that the Java Cabana founder, who sometimes moonlighted as non-denominational minister, had sold his funky Cooper-Young coffee shop and would no longer perform Elvis-themed weddings in its Viva Memphis Wedding Chapel. He was packing up his decorated box of sideburns, wigs, and chunky gold sunglasses and taking his kingly matrimony business to the Center for Southern Folklore, which was then located on Beale Street.

Wedding packages were affordably priced starting at only $185.

Memphis is a  city of marvels and curiosities and Tommy Foster did his part to keep it weird and real. In the 1980s, he founded the Pyramid Club, an upstairs rock-and-roll bar on a stretch of Madison Ave. where all the buildings were leveled to make room for AutoZone Park and surrounding apartment buildings. Musicians who played there may remember the seemingly endless, narrow stairway as the “worst load-in in history” but it attracted players like Alex Chilton and personalities like musician/journalist Bob Palmer and it hosted performances by bands like Flat Duo Jets, Human Radio, The Grifters, and The Scam.

Foster almost singlehandedly launched coffee culture in Memphis  and laid a cornerstone for Memphis’ funky coffeehouse scene. He opened Java Cabana in the Cooper-Young neighborhood in 1992, at the dawn of the C/Y comeback.

Foster turned Java’s back room into his Viva Wedding Chapel, so Elvis-loving couples wouldn’t have to go to Vegas to get married by the King. It could happen in the birthplace of rock-and-roll in a funky little room where the walls were hung with folk art depictions of rock-and-soul saints. Foster’s wonderful coin operated Elvis impersonator shrine— originally a window display for Java  Cabana— was replicated and placed in House of Blues venues across the country.

Foster ran the quirky Viva Memphis photo booth, oversaw the creation of A. Schwab’s fantastic soda fountain, and did so many other things I’m sure I’m leaving out. He’ll be missed, but his spirit will be with us for some time to come.

A memorial service is planned for later this summer. Details to come.

Goodbye Colonel Tommy