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News News Blog

Positive Rate Slides Again After Surge

The rate of positive COVID-19 cases fell again Saturday after a five-day increases in cases this week. Positive cases fell Friday to 7 percent from Thursday’s rate of 8.8 percent. The overall positivity rate for the county remains at 6.8 percent.

On Saturday, the Shelby County Health Department reported 95 new cases of coronavirus. That figure pushed the county’s total over 5,000 to 5,003. The new cases came from 1,454 test performed yesterday.  

No new deaths was reported Saturday. the death toll here remains at 109.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Week: Julien Baker

Today on Music Video Week, we look at Julien Baker’s brilliant decade.

Along with his Music Issue cover story about Memphis musicians coping with the pandemic, Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene compiled a list of the twenty best Memphis albums of the 2010s. Julien Baker’s 2017 Matador album Turn Out The Lights made the cut.

Baker got her start playing pop punk in Midtown before going solo in 2014. This early video gave us a sense of her power. Alone in a cavernous parking garage, she easily fills up the space with just her guitar and voice. Notice that this video is a one-shot. It’s just her and director Breezy Lucia alone and live.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (3)

In 2015, director Sabyn Mayfield created this clip for “Sprained Ankle”, the title track for her first solo album. Around the same time, Baker was the subject of a Memphis Flyer cover story by Eileen Townsend: “If VH1 ever makes a Behind the Music: Julien Baker, it will play out something like this: A small girl with a big voice grows up in the far suburbs of Memphis. She works a night shift through high school, spends her free time hanging out at the skatepark; she smokes cigarettes, plays hymns at her small church, and figures out an electric guitar in her dad’s living room. She forms a punk band with her friends. They call themselves ‘The Star Killers’ and play all-ages shows in community centers and neighborhood pool houses. She gets a girlfriend, gets into drinking, gets some dumb tattoos. Starts touring when she isn’t in school. Applies herself. Makes it to state college, where she records a lonely record. The record is really good. People hear the record, share the record, and she gets signed. What’s next is history.”

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (4)

Baker’s big break came with this spectacular performance on NPR’s Tiny Desk Concerts series, which turned a lot of heads.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (2)

Two years later, Baker recorded her second solo record, Turn Out The Lights, at Ardent Studios. This video by director Sophia Peer was shot in Memphis with a local crew that included Breezy Lucia, who had first introduced her to the world.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (5)

Baker toured extensively with Turn Out The Lights, playing to festival crowds all over the world. Here she is at last year’s Best Kept Secret festival in Belgium.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker

Baker found time to join her friends Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus in Boygenius, a supergroup of women singer-songwriters. Here they are at plying for Pitchfork in Brooklyn.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (7)

Baker’s latest song, “Tokyo”, came out on SubPop last October. She’s been doing livestreams on her Instagram account during the pandemic, and you might even catch her trying out a new song.

Music Video Week: Julien Baker (6)

Music Video Week returns tomorrow. 

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News News Blog

Positivity Rate 7 Percent On 1,633 Tests

The Shelby County Health Department reported 115 new cases of coronavirus here Saturday, May 30th bringing the total from 4,793 to 4,908. One new deaths was reported for a total number of 109 in the county.

The health department reported 1,633 tests were performed Friday. Of those, 7 percent were positive. To date, 71,860 tests have been conducted. The county’s overall positive rate was 6.8 percent Friday.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Week: Junior

Music Video Week continues with a very special episode.

Photographer Jamie Harmon has put a face on Memphis’ COVID-19 response with his quarantine portraits. His often haunting images have made appearances on CBS News Sunday Morning and the cover of Memphis Magazine.

Junior is a band from Missoula, Montana which counts Harmon’s sister-in-law Carolyn Keys as a member. They asked their locked-down friends to sing along to the first single from their album Warm Buildings. Editor Marshall Granger created this video for “Goddamnit” by combining the clips with Harmon’s Quarantine Portraits. It captures the mood of our time perfectly.

Music Video Week: Junior

Stay tuned for more Music Video Week! 

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Revised Orpheum Broadway Schedule Announced

Orpheum Theatre Group President & CEO Brett Batterson has announced the venue’s revised schedule for the 2020-2021 Broadway season. Performances have been moved out of Fall 2020 and extended until November, 2021. The changes pertain only to the Broadway series and not scheduled concerts and events for the fall.
The Orpheum

Scene from ‘Hamilton’

The revised lineup:
Jesus Christ Superstar: December 8-13, 2020
Cats: February 9-14, 2021
Mean Girls: March 9-14, 2021
Jimmy Buffett’s Escape to Margaritaville: April 13-18, 2021
Hadestown: May 4-9, 2021
Hamilton: July 13-25, 2021
The Band’s Visit: August 24-29, 2021
Disney’s The Lion King: Fall 2021
Come From Away, which had been scheduled as the final show in the 2019-2020 season is now scheduled for October 5-10, 2021.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

David Grisanti’s Italian-style Patio Opens May 30th at His Restaurant



David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant is about to become more Italian.

Ryan McCarty

Grisanti created an Italian-style patio at the rear of Sheffield Antiques Mall, where his Collierville restaurant is located. 

The patio is slated to open May 30th, Grisanti says.

Explaining where he got the idea to transform the space into an Italian patio, Grisanti says, “I went to Italy and there’s a bunch of patios. My wife and I love being outside eating dinner, Italy-style.”

The patio is “real shady. It’s not hot. It doesn’t get direct sun. It’s got six ceiling fans. All kinds of plants. Some of these plants come from Italy. I’m getting two more lemon trees. In Italy, all you see are lemon trees.”

Grisanti also has herbs and flowers on the patio.

Ryan McCarty

He also will feature classic recordings of Italian music by artists, including Dean Martin. He wants to offer live music in the future.

The area had been used for some of Sheffield’s outdoor furniture and garden accessories. “I thought, ‘You know what? I’m going to give it a try.’”

Grisanti plans to serve lunch and dinner on the patio. Because of the coronavirus, he’s setting up only five tables. For now, he’ll just utilize half of the 26-foot-by-51-foot space.

Ryan McCarty

His restaurant, which still is doing carryout, now features a dining room, but operates, for now, at 50 percent capacity.

Describing some of the patio fare, executive sous chef/kitchen manager Ryan McCarty says, “Everything that’s in season right now. Grab everything at [the] farmers market. I’m trying not to be super heavy. Fish dishes and charcuterie platter.

“Everybody’s going outside now more because of the coronavirus. People are enjoying the outside more.”

The dishes will be “super fresh food and stick within the season,” McCarty says. “We try to do everything as local as possible with all this stuff going on. If I see somebody on the Collierville square selling tomatoes, that’s where I’m going to get them.”

Ryan McCarty

Grilled swordfish with risotto and a basil caper beurre blanc with grilled asparagus from David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant.

Tuscan bread, lasagna, and Italian spinach are his most popular carry-out items, Grisanti says. But he prefers the dining room service: “I want to get my people. Talk to my customers.”

The restaurant, which is closed Sundays, is open for lunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. the rest of the week and for dinner from 5 to 9 p.m. on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays.

Ryan McCarty

David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant is at 684 West Poplar Avenue in Sheffield’s Antiques Mall in Collierville.

(901)-861-1777.

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News News Blog

Strickland Calls for Investigation of Police Response to Protest

Facebook/Tami Sawyer

A day after applauding the actions of Memphis Police Departments during a Wednesday night protest, Memphis Jim Strickland announced he is calling for an investigation into police actions after receiving more information.

“After learning more information on an event that occured Wednesday night with one of our officers and a female protester, I have asked Director [Michael] Rallings to fully investigate the matter,” Strickland said.

In Strickland’s original response to the protest, he said he was “proud of the Memphis Police Department and the way our officers conducted themselves last night.” Now the mayor is calling for an investigation, after viewing a video of an MPD officer in riot gear shoving a protester to the ground. 

Thursday, Shelby County Commissioner Tami Sawyer and other leaders held a press conference and called out MPD’s excessive use of force and asked for the release of arrested protesters.

At least five protesters were arrested as a result of the demonstration that shut down Union Avenue in response to the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd. The demonstration, which lasted more than three hours, was met with counter-protesters from the Confederate 901 group, along with dozens of police officers.

Categories
Blurb Books

Your Quarantine Reading List, Part Two

Phase II of Memphis’ and Shelby County’s Back to Business reopening plan is underway, but things are still anything but business as usual for many Memphians and Mid-Southerners.

In one step toward normalcy, though, both of the Bluff City’s biggest indie bookstores have, with a set of well-thought-out guidelines, opened their doors to customers this week. Burke’s Book Store and Novel are allowing in-store shopping (and continuing curbside pickup for those who prefer it) with adherence to guidelines posted on their respective social media pages. Burke’s even shared this thoughtful, rhyming image to help customers remember the rules.

Burke’s Book Store

Burke’s posted this message to its social media pages to help customers remember to practice social distancing while shopping.

So for those still on the lookout for safe, socially distanced activities, here are a few more Memphis-centric books to help while away the homebound hours. There’s popular fiction, mystery, history, fantasy, and even a comic book series.

Sheree Renée Thomas

Sheree Renée Thomas
Nine Bar Blues, 2020 (Fiction)
From publisher Third Man Records (that’s right, Jack White’s record company) and two-time World Fantasy Award-winning author Sheree Renée Thomas, this short story collection explores music, myth, and history. Thomas’ prose is sure and lyrical; Nine Bar Blues reads like a prophetic warning or a song sung to beat the devil. Music is a recurring motif in the collection, making it the ideal starting point for Memphians eager to explore the literature of the New South.

Eric Jerome Dickey

Eric Jerome Dickey
The Business of Lovers, 2020 (Fiction)
All things considered, maybe now is the perfect moment for a novel that takes human connection as its focus. “It’s a novel about family — the family you have and the family that you choose to have,” the author says. The Business of Lovers follows Brick Duquesne, fresh from a fight against cancer, an ailment he never revealed to his family. “It’s one of those things where people go through something but don’t know how to ask for help because they don’t want to disturb the lives of others,” Dickey explains. In a novel with former child stars, comedians, engineers, and a tangled web of relationships, Dickey’s characters search for agency and for ways to lift up the family they choose to love. Of course, as Dickey points out, perception is everything. “Anybody can smile and take a picture in front of a palm tree,” Dickey says. Of course, as the author points out, that photo can only hint at what’s going on beyond the edges of the frame.

Claire Fullerton
Little Tea, 2020 (Fiction)

Little Tea is set in Memphis in two time periods — the narrative alternates between the present day and the ’80s. Fullerton’s fourth novel — the follow-up to 2018’s successful Mourning Dove — follows the narrator Celia Wakefield and hinges primarily on her friend Thelonia Winfrey, known also as Little T. It’s a novel about disparities, social norms and mores, about the slow march toward equality, but more than anything else, it is a novel about the deep-rooted friendships that bind our lives. “We’re all just comparing notes on life,” Fullerton says of herself and her fellow storytellers, whether they work in ink and paper, film frames, or song. And with four novels and a career in radio under her belt, Fullerton can boast her share of experience with storytelling. She worked in radio in Memphis for nearly a decade, logging time at WEGR-Rock-103, FM 100, WMC-79, WEVL, and WSMS. And that was before she made the move to a bigger stage in California. In other words, it’s a safe bet that the Memphis-born author knows how to tease out a good tale. And, as in so many things, Fuller says a good story needs subtlety. “A writer can’t come out, laying the cards on the table, and say ‘This is the point,’” Fullerton explains. “You’ve got to leave that to the reader.” Fullerton will be hosting a virtual book talk in partnership with Novel bookstore on Thursday, June 18th, at 6 p.m.

Claire Fullerton

Chanelle Benz
The Man Who Shot Out My Eye Is Dead, 2017 (Fiction, Short Stories)
Chanelle Benz’s The Gone Dead was one of the best novels of 2019, and her debut short story collection is just as good, albeit in several bite-sized segments. The stories in The Man Who Shot Out My Eye Is Dead take a tour through various genres — the story from which the collection takes its title is a Western — demonstrating the author’s nimble skill switching between styles.

Tony Max
The Golden Silence and The Crimson Hand (Comics)

From the mad mastermind behind Memfamous Comics and No Regrets tattoo artist Tony Max, comes the two-part comics series The Golden Silence and The Crimson Hand. The books are all set in the same reality, in a walled-in Memphis 200 years from now. It’s a world steeped in the history of alternative comics and pulp fiction — with disgraced former cops, barbarians at the gates, and crumbling society. Max just put the finishing touches on the final issue of The Crimson Hand, making now the perfect time to get caught up on Memphis’ premier dystopian comic book. The series is available online for free at tapas.io/rabideyemovement.

Arthur Flowers
Another Good Loving Blues, 1993 (Fiction)
This novel takes Beale Street as its setting, telling the tale of bluesman Lucas Bodeen and Melvira Dupree, the conjure woman he loves. It’s a story of love in the time of Jim Crow, of happiness and connection and myth and history.

Categories
News News Blog

90 New COVID-19 Cases, Three Additional Deaths Reported

The Shelby County Health Department reported 90 new cases of coronavirus here Friday, May 29th, bringing the total from 4,703 to 4,793.

Three additional deaths were reported for a total number of 108 in the county. The health department reported 1,019 tests were performed Thursday. Of those, 8.8 percent were positive. To date, 70,227 tests have been conducted with an overall positivity rate of 6.8 percent.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Week: Alyssa Moore

Today on Music Video Week, a quarantine project by one of Memphis’ most talented musical auteurs.

Alyssa Moore made her debut on the Memphis scene with Strengths, and has come to be known as a talented producer and trusted sound engineer. She’s also an amazing songwriter, and since there have been no shows to mix, she’s been keeping busy creating new tunes. With “The World Is Listening,” she tries to take in the moment.

“This song and video were created in the weeks of the beginning of the national lockdown,” says Moore. “I was inspired to create something hopeful yet cautious — listening to the press conferences was depressing, yet moving. The first verse is a bit sarcastic; I poke fun at Donald Trump, threaten him with the possibility of being ‘taken’ from ‘his land.’ It’s easy to imagine that our lives are in his hands, as the president, because he is supposed to do his best to keep us safe. However, the tables are turned, and the public seems to be far more aware of how to handle the virus than he does. His life — meaning his power — is now in our hands. Inversely, the public’s lives are in the hand of experts. The phrase can be interpreted ominously when applied to corruption, but positively when imagining a benevolent scientist doing her best to persuade the public to take caution.”

Music Video Week: Alyssa Moore

Stay tuned for more Memphis artists on Music Video Week.