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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Short Films Compete for $15,000 Prize at Oxford Virtual Film Festival

‘In The Pink’ by Katherine Stocker is in competition for the $15,000 Artist Vodka prize in the Oxford Virtual Film Festival.

The Hoka is the name of the trophy given to winners of the Oxford Film Festival. But this week, the Oxford Virtual Film Festival unveils its biggest prize of the season. The Artist Vodka Short Film Prize is determined by votes from the audience. The winning director will receive $15,000. “Artist Vodka continues to be such an important part of our film festival by lending a big financial hand to one of our filmmakers as they have in years past,” says Oxford Film Festival Executive Director Melanie Addington. “And now our audience members can take a real active part in deciding whose name will go on that big check. It adds a rooting interest to the entertainment each one of these three programs delivers in a major way. I can’t wait to see who is going to win that prize.”

Twenty short films are in competition for prize money, including two films by Memphis directors. “The Indignation of Michael Busby” by Nathan Ross Murphy and “Life After Death” by Noah Glenn were both part of the historically great Indie Memphis short film competition in 2019. “Life After Death” was most recently seen on WKNO’s Indie TV compilation show.

Allen Gardner in Nathan Ross Murphy’s short film ‘The Indignation of Michael Busby’

You can sign up to watch the films and vote for your favorite on the Eventive site: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. For the price of admission, you can also take part in the virtual discussions with the filmmakers. The competition bloc will be available from the Oxford Virtual Film Festival May 29-June 5. 

Categories
Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, May 28-June 3

Uriah Mitchell

Heading into June, the summer is upon us! Kudos to local performers who continue to pursue the live-stream option rather than throw physical distancing completely out the window. Beyond online streaming, see this week’s cover story on the many other creative approaches musicians are taking in this era of quarantine.

REMINDER: The Memphis Flyer supports social distancing in these uncertain times. Please live-stream responsibly. We remind all players that even a small gathering could recklessly spread the coronavirus and endanger others. If you must gather as a band, please keep all players six feet apart, preferably outside, and remind viewers to do the same.

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, May 28
noon
Amy LaVere & Will Sexton
Facebook

1 p.m.
Vincent Cross – The Nuncheon Sessions
Facebook

7 p.m.
DJs Lernard and Bernard Chambers – Benefit for Bridges, USA
Facebook

7 p.m.
The Rusty Pieces
Facebook

Friday, May 29
noon
Max Kaplan – Virtual Fridays in HSP
Facebook

1 p.m.
Xanthe Alexis – The Nuncheon Sessions
Facebook

4 p.m.
Alice Hasen – Fiddlers Friday (every Friday)
Facebook

7 p.m.
Larry Springfield and The Suga Daddies – The SugaShack
Facebook

7 p.m.
Louise Page – Virtual Zebra Lounge
Facebook

8:30 p.m.
The Juke Joint AllStars & The Sensation Band
Wild Bill’s Stay Safe At Home Live Stream
Facebook

Saturday, May 30
10:30 a.m.
Tony Manard – Coffee in a Cadillac
Facebook

1:30 p.m.
Michael Graber – Microdose (every Saturday)
Facebook

7 p.m.
Hologram Music Festival
Mylon Webb
Tree Riehl
DJ Ben Murray
DudeCalledRob
Ryan The Mind

Facebook

7:30 p.m.
Paul Taylor – Orpheum Theatre’s Memphis Songwriters Series: Virtual Voices
Facebook

8 p.m.
Lil Al, G Reub and Uriah Mitchell – Live at Royal Studios with Boo Mitchell
Facebook

8:30 p.m.
The Juke Joint AllStars & The Sensation Band
Wild Bill’s Stay Safe At Home Live Stream
Facebook

Sunday, May 31
4 p.m.
Bill Shipper – For Kids (every Sunday)
Facebook

5:30 p.m.
Organist Patrick A. Scott with Kelly Herrmann, flute – Grace St. Lukes Episcopal Church
Facebook

9 p.m.
Max Kaplan Band
Facebook

10:00 p.m.
Defcon Engaged (every Sunday)
Twitch TV

Monday, June 1
8 p.m.
John Paul Keith (every Monday)
Facebook

Tuesday, June 2
7 p.m.
Bill Shipper (every Tuesday)
Facebook

8 p.m.
Mario Monterosso (every Tuesday)
Facebook

Wednesday, June 3
7 p.m.
Miz Stefani (every Wednesday)
Facebook

8 p.m.
Richard Wilson (every Wednesday)
Facebook

Categories
News News Blog

Strickland Responds to Protest, Says He’s ‘Proud’ of Police Response

Facebook/Tami Sawyer

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland responded to the demonstration here Wednesday night by saying he and Memphis Police Department director Michael Rallings share the frustration of the participants.

Here is the mayor’s full statement released Thursday morning:

“I understand and share your frustration with what happened in Minneapolis and other parts of the country. Police Director Mike Rallings shares your frustration, and so do all the true police officers — men and women who put on the uniform every day to protect and serve.

All cities and police departments have a responsibility to protect citizens from harm and to fight crime.

But all of us — city governments, police departments, and the public — should expect police to protect and serve in a way that is responsible.

It’s right and understandable for people to express their frustration through peaceful protest; however, I wish last night’s protesters would have all had on masks, been six feet apart, and gone through the proper channels to ensure everyone’s safety. By not doing so, protesters and our officers were unnecessarily put at risk.

I’m proud of the Memphis Police Department and the way our officers conducted themselves last night.”

Facebook/Hunter Demster


This comes after protesters 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.

At least five protesters were arrested as a result of the demonstration. 

The protest in Memphis was one of a few around the country. Other demonstrations took place in Minneapolis, where Floyd died, and Los Angeles.

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News News Blog

122 New COVID-19 Cases Reported, Three Additional Deaths

The Shelby County Health Department reported 122 new cases of coronavirus here Thursday, May 28th, bringing the total from 4,581 to 4,703. 

Three additional deaths were reported for a total number of 105 in the county. The health department reported 1,419 tests were performed Wednesday. Of those, 8.6 percent were positive. To date, 69,208 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: Duke Deuce ft. Lil Jon, Juicy J, and Project Pat

It’s a Music Video Week double shot with Duke Deuce and crew. Back in the Before Time of November, 2019, the Memphis rapper scored a major hit by answering the musical question, “Is crunk dead?” The studio video, shot by Wikid Films, racked up more than 17 million views on YouTube.

Music Video Week: Duke Deuce ft. Lil Jon, Juicy J, and Project Pat (2)

The success of “Crunk Ain’t Dead” attracted some high profile admirers — namely, the architects of crunk, Lil Jon, Juicy J, and Project Pat. The remix video, shot Downtown last February, brings back Wikid Films, but with a considerably higher budget. Watch Duke Deuce and his crew tear it up on South Main in the “Crunk Ain’t Dead (Remix)”: 

Music Video Week: Duke Deuce ft. Lil Jon, Juicy J, and Project Pat

See you back here tomorrow for the next installment of Music Video Week! 

Categories
News News Blog

Protest Responding to Deaths of George Floyd, Others Shuts Down Union

Facebook/Tami Sawyer

Police surround and arrest a protester

A protest in response to the recent deaths of black people in this country that was meant to be silent and peaceful Wednesday night escalated when counter-protesters showed up with Confederate 901 signs.

A video of the event posted to Facebook by local activist Hunter Demster shows close to 100 people gathered on Union Avenue in front of a Memphis Police Department station, protesting the recent deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd.

About 50 police cars surrounded the demonstrators, who chanted “No justice, no peace, no racist police” and “black lives matters.” On the other side of the street, a handful of counter-protesters responded with “police lives matter” chants. 

At one point the crowd kneels down repeating “I can’t breathe,” a reference to Floyd who died after a Minneapolis police officer restrained him by placing his knee on the back of Floyd’s neck for several minutes. In a viral video, Floyd can be seen telling the officer he can’t breathe several times before passing out. 

Two arrests have been made by MPD as a result of the protest.

Here is a video posted by Demster capturing a portion of tonight’s events, which are still ongoing.

Protest Responding to Deaths of George Floyd, Others Shuts Down Union

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Twenty From The Teens: Top Albums Of The Decade, 2010-2019

Aquarian Blood

“One thing I’m doing more of during shelter-in-place is listening to great local records that I hadn’t had a chance to catch up on.” So said songwriter Mark Edgar Stuart in a recent interview for our 2020 music issue. It’s something we’re all doing more of, and, given that this year marks not only a new decade, but a new way of living (optimistically speaking), we’re seizing the moment of this special issue to reflect on what’s come before. Here are the Memphis Flyer’s top 20 albums of the past decade.

Granted, such lists will always be subjective, and this one’s no exception. But I can personally attest to the fact that these albums, once played through my stereo, were then played again and again. And they continue to be played, as we look to an uncertain future, doing double takes at the recent past and muttering, “What just happened?”

But I’m not alone in my feeling that each of these is a masterpiece of innovation and expression. This is the cream of a very impressive crop, each album like the tip of an iceberg suggesting greater depths below. Look under the hood of Aquarian Blood’s 2019 release, and you’ll find an entire gritty noise-rock backstory; follow the sounds of The Barbaras and you’ll find yourself picnicking with the Magic Kids; and prepare to be astounded once you hear the individual releases by the artists of the Unapologetic collective who delivered the one-two punch of Stuntarious IV.

Part of this depth can be excavated by following each title’s link, which will take you to the original articles by me, Jesse Davis, J.D. Reager, Andria Lisle, Chris McCoy, Chris Herrington, and Chris Shaw, quoted sporadically below. And of course, part of the depth comes from the list’s breadth. For Memphis not only produced some of the past decade’s finest music, it spanned nearly every genre and generation while doing so, from acoustic punk to surreal hip hop to seasoned works by sorely-missed lifers like Sid Selvidge and John Kilzer. For your listening pleasure, we present music of the ages, in alphabetical order.

The Top 20 Albums of the Decade, 2010-2019
Aquarian Blood – A Love That Leads to War (Goner, 2019)
“Dark observations and wry commentary are surrounded with unassuming acoustic ostinatos, (mostly) subtle keyboard textures, and inventive bass counterpoints.”

Julien Baker – Turn Out the Lights (Matador, 2017)
“Meditations on love, rejection, God, rage, and redemption … piano- and cello-tinged ensemble pieces captured on tape at Ardent.”

The Barbaras

The Barbaras – 2006-2008 (Goner, 2012)
“Able to turn on a dime, unafraid to be goofy, and gifted with a breezy sense of irony that simultaneously celebrates and mocks the Nuggets psychedelia that infuses their sound.”

The Sensational Barnes Brothers – Nobody’s Fault But My Own (Bible & Tire, 2019) 
“All the songs on the new Barnes Brothers record were songs that artists on the Designer Records catalog had done. Basically, they came in, I used my studio musicians, and we made that record.” And Lord, do those studio musicians rock.

Harlan T. Bobo – A History of Violence (Goner, 2018)
“The band [is] now rocking harder, with a more sinister edge … his singing now addressing a world swirling around him more than the romantic entanglements of his earlier work.”

Don Bryant

Don Bryant – Don’t Give Up On Love (Fat Possum, 2017)
A return to form by one of the city’s great songwriters from the golden age of soul, backed unerringly by those specialists in vintage vibes, the Bo-Keys.

The City Champs – The Set-Up (Electraphonic, 2010)
“The instrumental soul-jazz trio absolutely floored me … The Set-Up is one of those records that just keeps getting better with repeated listening, so now I can’t put it down.”

DJ Paul – Power, Pleasure, & Painful Things (Scale-A-Ton, 2019)
“Interspersed with spoken segments in which the artist recalls pivotal moments in his Memphis youth, the tracks make use of a wide-ranging musicality and inventive, turn-on-a-dime production to create what may be Paul’s best work yet.”

Hash Redactor – Drecksound (Goner, 2019)
“The songs come in fast and hard, propelled by booming bass and tight drums. Watson and Lones share an easy comfort playing together … McIntyre sneers the vocals, an antihero decrying humanity’s self-destructive tendencies … The guitars alone are worth the price of admission.”

John Kilzer – Scars (Archer, 2019)
“I wrote on different instruments. I wrote a couple on a mandolin, a couple on ukulele, and several on the piano. I would have never, ever considered doing that earlier in my career. So that kind of creative tension manifests in the songs.”

Lucero – Women & Work (ATO, 2012)
“I think Women & Work is the band’s best album yet … it captures the live sound of a band that has always excelled on stage and how fully they commit to a soulful, opulent Southern rock style.” 

Magic Kids – Memphis (True Panther Sounds, 2010)
“[A] genial, ramshackle deployment of myriad traditional, pre-punk influences. The album’s earnest romances play out against a Memphis presented as a relaxed, sunny playpen.”

Mellotron Variations – Mellotron Variations (Spaceflight, 2019)
“Local players Robby Grant and Jonathan Kirkscey were joined by Pat Sansone (Wilco) and John Medeski (Medeski Martin & Wood), presenting semi-improvised original pieces that showed off the evocative range of multiple Mellotrons being played at once.”

New Memphis Colorways – Old Forest Loop (Owl Jackson Jr., 2018)
“‘This is music I deliberately made for people to take summertime drives to — they can grill to it or swim to it.’ … Old Forest Loop has the citrus punch of an orange sherbet popsicle.”

Jack Oblivian & the Sheiks – Lone Ranger of Love (Mony, 2016)
“Well done, boys. I find it very hard to believe a local artist tops this record in 2016. Might as well flip this sucker over and start again.”

The Oblivians – Desperation (In the Red, 2013)
“The band doesn’t pretend that the past 15 years never happened, and most tracks are sonically closer to the musicians’ individual recording projects but goosed-up Oblivians-style.”

Marco Pavé – Welcome to Grc Lnd (Radio Rahim Music, 2017)
“Pavé is a charismatic frontman, equally at home flowing about the school-to-prison pipeline or barking his shins while getting out of bed…Overall, this is one of the most meticulously constructed, finely paced albums to come out of Memphis in recent memory.”

Sid Selvidge – I Should Be Blue (Archer, 2010)
I Should Be Blue retains Selvidge’s usual folk setting but with a new musical texture that can stand up to his strikingly beautiful vocals.”

Various Artists – Take Me To the River – Soundtrack (Stax, 2014)
Soul and blues legends pair off with current rappers at Royal Studios. “It’s fun to be a fly on the wall in these recording sessions held in historic spaces, and the camaraderie and respect between the players is evident. The talent, discipline, and instincts on display are amazing.”

Various Artists – Stuntarious IV (Unapologetic, 2019)
“The Stuntarious series explode[s] with sonic and verbal ideas, and Stuntarious IV is no exception. This time around, the album has a cinematic feel … It sets the stage for the wide-ranging palette of sound design elements that percolate throughout the tracks that follow.”

They Also Served: A Baker’s Dozen More From a Decade Packed with Dynamite
Once you get started, it will be hard to stop listening to releases from one of the city’s most extraordinary musical decades. That’s saying a lot, of course, but the depth and breadth of these albums attest to what a simmering hotbed of creativity we have in Memphis. That’s not even mentioning some striking singles from the period (“Uptown Funk,” anyone?).

So for those with ravenous ears, here are 12 more to groove to, from the underappreciated Stereolab-meets-dank-Southern-humidity of Cloudland Canyon to a Memphis-centric offering from the young Young Dolph, before he grew to dominate the airwaves so thoroughly.

Cloudland CanyonAn Arabesque (Medical, 2016)
Dead SoldiersThe Great Emptiness (American Grapefruit Tapes, 2017)
Detective No. 1 (2019)
Don LiftedContour (2018)
John Paul KeithMemphis Circa 3 AM (Big Legal Mess, 2013)
Jonathan KirksceyWon’t You Be My Neighbor? (Mondo, 2018)
Amy LaVerePainting Blue (Nine Mile, 2019)
Memphis DawlsRooted in the Bone (Madjack, 2014)
Motel MirrorsIn the Meantime (Last Chance, 2018)
Joe RestivoWhere’s Joe? (Blue Barrel, 2019)
SpacefaceSun Kids (Jet Pilot, 2017)
Mark Edgar StuartBlues for Lou (Madjack, 2013)
Young DolphKing of Memphis (Paper Route Empire, 2016)

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News News Blog

Pink Palace, Lichterman Nature Center to Reopen Next Week With New Protocols

Facebook/Pink Palace Museum


The Pink Palace Museum and Lichterman Nature Center will be reopening for members only beginning Tuesday, June 2nd, and for the general public the following week.

Bill Walsh, Pink Palace Museum marketing manager, said it will be a “soft opening of sorts for our members as a way to show our appreciation.”

The museum and nature center will open to the general public on Tuesday, June 9th. The theater, planetarium, Mallory-Neely House, and Magevney House will not reopen at this time.

The reopening will come with special days and hours of operation, and a COVID-19 protocol, which is copied below.

What to Expect When You Visit:

HEALTH & SAFETY PROTOCOL

• Employees are required to wear masks and will be subject to temperature screenings.

• Guests will be required to undergo temperature check screenings upon entry.

• Guests are highly encouraged to wear masks, but not required.

• Guests will be asked screening questions upon entry.

SANITIZATION

• All public areas for all facilities will be wiped/disinfected three times a day.

• Hand sanitizer will be available at ticket counters, in restrooms, and at locations in our facilities.

SOCIAL DISTANCING

• Signage has been placed throughout facilities to create awareness of proper physical distancing between guests.

The hours and days of operation are listed below.

Members Only Opening: June 2-7, 2020

Museum Days of Operation: Tuesday-Sunday

Hours:

Tuesday-Saturday: 10:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Sunday: Noon-5 p.m.

Lichterman Nature Center Days of Operation: Tuesday-Saturday

Hours:

Tuesday-Thursday: 11 a.m.-3 p.m.

Friday and Saturday : 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

Members and General Public Opening: June 9th
Hours:

Tuesday-Saturday members only: 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

Members and general public: 2:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Sunday: Noon-5 p.m.


Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

TN Legislators Advance Bill Targeting Transgender Athletes

A Tennessee House subcommittee advanced a bill Tuesday, May 27th, that aims to exclude school-aged transgender athletes from participating on teams matching their chosen gender.

The legislation, HB 1572, is sponsored by Rep. Brice Griffey (R-Paris). Griffey said the bill “is an attempt to address an issue where we have transgender athletes wanting to compete in female-primary sports, which gives them an unfair advantage.”

A summary of the bill reads in part: “As introduced, requires elementary and secondary schools that receive public funding to ensure that student athletes participate in school-sanctioned sports based on the student’s biological sex as indicated on certificate issued at time of birth.”

Griffey said allowing transgender athletes to compete against the gender they identify as is unfair, pointing to puberty and testosterone, which he says “makes all the difference in the world. It’s just a fact of life.

“I have two daughters that are both school athletes and I would certainly be upset and I know a lot of other people who may have daughters who would be upset if a male athlete that considers themselves female and transgender has an unfair advantage.”

When asked by Rep. Vincent Dixie (D-Nashville) if there had been instances of this happening in Tennessee, Griffey said he is “not aware that we have had specific instances in Tennessee yet. This is a prospective bill so that we don’t run into this problem in the future.”

Griffey’s bill would establish a civil penalty for schools that don’t comply with the law of up to $10,000. Schools would also immediately lose eligibility for local and state funds of any type. Additionally, any school administrator or local official who violates the law’s provisions would be required to leave their position for five years.

A nearly identical bill, HB 1689, which has already passed through this subcommittee, is also set to go before the full education committee for consideration Thursday.

“I don’t care how we get the job done,” Griffey said of the competing bill. “It just needs to be done.”

Rep. Scott Cepicky (R-Culleoka), who is sponsoring that bill, says it is meant to “protect the safety-competitive balance and the opportunity for scholarships of our female athletes in middle school all the way to high school.”

Cepicky’s bill goes further and would mandate that schools require athletes to “verify that the student is of the respective sex before the student may participate.” The bill would require students to present birth certificates for verification and when not available students would have to provide results of a genetic or DNA test done by a healthcare practitioner.

Both bills could cause the state to lose $623.4 million dollars in federal education funds, as prohibiting students from participating who do not have a birth certificate may be a violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.

Title IX “prohibits a person, on the basis of sex, from being excluded from participation in, to be denied the benefits of, be treated differently from another person, or otherwise discriminated against in any interscholastic, intercollegiate, club, or intramural athletics.”

The bills will be considered in the House Education Committee, Thursday, May 28th at 5 p.m.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Week: Aktion Kat!

Welcome to Music Video Week! Normally, I feature a new music video from a Memphis-area music artist or filmmaker (preferably both) every Monday. In conjunction with the Memphis Flyer’s annual Music Issue, we’re unveiling a weeklong music video blitz. Every day until next Tuesday, I’ll highlight a new or classic video from the Bluff City.

If you’re like us, you’re missing live music right now. Our artists are struggling, and we’re just plain bummed out. The lifeline between musicians and their fans has been connecting through the computer screen, whether by live streamed shows from bedrooms and basements or homespun music videos like this one from Aktion Kat. Paul Garner has been locked up in his apartment so long he wrote a song about it. The video is a masterclass in doing a lot with a little. It’s a tribute to just how much you can get accomplished if you have nothing else on your calendar.

Music Video Week: Aktion Kat!

Tune in tomorrow for more Music Video Week!