Categories
News News Blog

Rep. Cohen Co-Sponsors Raft of Bills for Restaurant, Live Music Relief

Growlers/Facebook

Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) joined a bipartisan group of federal lawmakers last week to co-sponsor a $10 billion bill to help independent entertainment venues stay afloat during the pandemic.

The Save Our Stages (SOS) Act has broad support from congressional leaders, particularly those from districts or states dependent on live music for tourism, like Memphis and Tennessee. Lawmakers fanned out at live venues across the country earlier this week to push the bill.

The Senate version of the SOS Act would allow the Small Business Administration to make grants of up to $12 million to an eligible operator, promoter, producer, or talent representative to be used for cost incurred between March 1st and December 31, 2020. Another grant of up to $6 million could be used for costs incurred through June 30, 2021.

Last week, Cohen also pushed a raft of bills he’s co-sponsored for COVID-19 relief. The RESTART Act would extend the Paycheck Protection Program. The Real Economic Support That Acknowledges Unique Restaurant Assistance Needed To Survive (RESTAURANTS) Act would establish a $120 billion grant program for relief to restaurants through 2020.

The Mixed Earner Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Acts would allow those who earn a mix of paychecks from companies and from independent work (think musicians, here) to have access to the unemployment assistance provided in the CARES Act.

“Most musicians are facing unprecedented job loss with no end in sight,” said American Federation of Musicians president Ray Hair in a statement. “It is vital that musicians and others who have both W-2 and 1099 income are able to receive full unemployment benefits.”

Ninth District Congressman Steve Cohen

Cohen said not being able to share meals and listen to live music “is having a dire impact on those who rely on these industries for their livelihoods.”

“As important as the music industry is to Tennessee, I’m surprised these measures have so far found no support from our Congressional delegation except from [Rep. Jim Cooper] and me,” Cohen said in a statement. “I hope calling attention to this crisis will result in some relief.

“Too many small restaurants are suffering greatly and are in danger of closing permanently. This will affect not just diners in Memphis and Nashville but the whole tourist industry.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Goner TV Presents Ross Johnson’s Morally Gigantic Universe

courtesy of Goner Records

Ross Johnson

Ross Johnson, having laid down the back beat of underground Memphis bands for over forty years, is on the verge of spilling the beans.

He’s worn the hat of the rock ‘n’ roll librarian, historian, chronicler, and/or raconteur for some time now, both penning a definitive remembrance of the Antenna Club in The Memphis Flyer‘s own pages, and serving as an articulate commentator on the local scene, either on camera or across the table from you at the bar.

Now, his perspective has been distilled under the title Baron of Love: Moral Giant, soon to be released under the Spacecase Records imprint. To ready us for the full onslaught, Johnson has been softening up the target audience with short bursts of close-range excerpts and interviews. His Back to the Light podcast appearance, reported here last week, was just the beginning. Tonight, you can hear even more Johnson-isms when Goner TV takes to the internet once again.

The Spacecase-related blog, Bored Out, has published a few excerpts from the book, full of tantalizing details on the making of some stone-classic “alternative” records, and tonight Johnson will read even more. Here’s a taste of what to expect, courtesy Bored Out:

I was working as a sack boy in the summer of 1972 at one of the local Big Star (yep) chain groceries. Jim [Dickinson] would usually shop for groceries there mid-afternoon Friday while my drumming idol Al Jackson, Jr. shopped at the same Big Star on Friday around dusk. They were the only customers who ever tipped me for carrying their groceries out.

One day I got the nerve up to speak to him as I was loading groceries into his car and said: “You’re Jim Dickinson, aren’t you, and you recorded with the Flamin’ Groovies on Teenage Head, didn’t you?” Years later Jim admitted that he thought I was going to ask about The Rolling Stones but was impressed when I mentioned the Groovies instead. We had an extended conversation in the parking lot about the Teenage Head session and he enthusiastically mentioned that he got paid $700 by producer Richard Robinson for one night of work on the record. I got in trouble with grocery store management for staying in the parking lot so long, but the conversation was worth it.

Doesn’t the thought of getting Ross Johnson in trouble make you want to read more? Stay tuned for the book, and content yourself for now with a visit to tonight’s installment of Goner TV.

GONER TV Ep. 4: Ross Johnson live at Goner Records, Friday, September 11, 8-9:30 p.m.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

901 FC’s Matt Hundley Takes Control in North Carolina

How about Matt Hundley’s left foot? There are a lot of games I feel 901 FC should have won this season, but judging by the eye test, yesterday’s match away to North Carolina FC was not one of them. When the home team’s DJ Taylor nodded in unmarked to equalize in stoppage time, it looked like it would be another night of frustration. But Hundley had the final word, the substitute pulling a rabbit out of a hat to hand Memphis three points in a 3-2 victory.

Eric Glemser

Rafa Mentzingen – pictured here at a home game at AutoZone Park – opened the scoring for 901 FC in the first half against North Carolina

We’ve seen plenty of narrow, one-goal losses where Memphis, statistically, has outplayed its opponent in every department except scoring. And sure, while putting the ball in the back of the net is the most important thing, it was frustrating to see so many good performances go to waste. But last night, 901 FC showcased a clinical approach to goal that has been lacking all season. Sure, Memphis rode its luck for large stretches; some of the chances NC missed have to be seen to be believed. But in crunch time, all that matters are the three points.

There were a few flashes of promise for 901 FC outside the goals, but NC pretty much ran the show all night. The home team held 68 percent possession, outshot Memphis 25-7, and had 10 corners (Memphis had 0). It felt like jumping into a soccer version of Freaky Friday; we’ve seen Coach Tim Mulqueen set up the squad to be proactive in its play for most of the season, so it’s rare to see Memphis on the back foot like this. For much of the night, 901 FC looked sluggish.

Tommy McCabe, Jose Baxter, and Jean-Christophe Koffi started in midfield, but the press was disjointed at times, leaving NC free to play into space and isolate the Memphis defenders. Manny Perez, in particular, caused 901 FC no end of trouble racing in down the left side of our defense and sending in quality service that NC contrived to squander time and again. Up top, Brandon Allen chased down long balls and hassled defenders, but didn’t receive much in the way of service from his teammates.

Memphis struck first, with a type of play we’ve seen many times this season: a lofted ball over the top down the right flank. Mark Segbers (and his late runs) is usually the recipient of this kind of pass, but with the fullback out of the team tonight, Rafa Mentzingen picked up the slack this time. In the 30th minute, Baxter swiveled away from pressure in the center circle and first-timed a pass into the Brazilian’s path, who made several stepovers before cutting inside and smashing a shot past NC keeper Alex Tambakis at the near post.

NC remained on the front foot through the rest of the first half and much of the second, but in the 75th minute, substitute Cal Jennings took down a long ball and caressed it into McCabe’s path. The midfielder played it out to Hundley, who sprinted upfield before delicately cutting onto his left and placing the ball underneath Tambakis and into the far corner for 2-0.

That’s when the game should have been done and dusted, but NC cranked the pressure up to maximum and battered Memphis’ increasingly creaky defense. First, Robbie Kristo struck to make it 2-1 in the 86th minute. And when the fourth official indicated that there would be nine minutes of stoppage time, it seemed likely that there would be another late concession. Sure enough, Taylor was inexplicably left unmarked in a packed Memphis box in the 91st to nod home for 2-2. It was a script we’d seen all too often this season. Memphis has had trouble holding on to a winning position this season, and NC seemed well poised to get another. But while I was busy holding my head in my hands, the Memphis players were dusting themselves off to have one last crack at a winner.

In the 98th minute, with everyone forward, Liam Doyle flicked a pass towards Zach Carroll, who played a ball out wide to Hundley. The substitute forward controlled it on the end line and didn’t look to have much on. But with a quick shimmy, he cut back into the box and wrapped his foot around the ball, cleverly bending it around NC defender Conor Donovan and into the far corner to secure the victory.

Hundley magic aside, 901 FC didn’t have much going for it this game. NC found it very easy to break through both the midfield pressure and the defensive lines. NC’s Perez in particular got behind many times, and again, it’s hard to believe how many good chances the home team missed. But a win is a win, and points are going to be at a premium in the run-in. 901 FC only has five games remaining, and is third in Group G on 10 points (level with NC, who have played one less game). Charlotte, in second, is on 18 points. Realistically, they might be too far ahead to catch, but with 15 points up for grabs, there’s still a chance. For now, Memphis has the chance to bloody NC’s nose again in a rematch on Sunday. Can 901 FC make it five out of five down the stretch? It just might have to.

901 FC faces off against Group G opponents North Carolina FC at 5:00 pm Sunday, September 13.

Watch highlights from the match here.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Announces 2020 Film Festival Will Be “Online and Outdoors”

For its 23rd annual edition, Indie Memphis will seek to “transcend beyond its traditional festival.” The festival will take place October 21st-29th at various outdoor venues in the Memphis area, as well as featuring copious online screenings.

The in-person screenings will be at the Malco Summer Drive-In, Shelby Farms, the Levitt Shell, The Grove at GPAC, the Downtown Riverfront, and the Stax Museum parking lot. Seating will be limited to “pods,” circles of up to six people who can sit together, to insure social distancing. The full lineup will be revealed in an online preview party on Thursday, September 24th.

The industry panels and Q&As that are a big part of the festival will all take place online. The Black Creator’s Forum, which has been a popular addition to the Indie Memphis programming in the last few years, will take place online October 17th-18th, and will be open to participants worldwide. You can apply to attend here.

The festival will also host the Film Festival Alliance’s Regional Roundtable event, which will take place virtually October 16th and 23rd.

Virtual passes to Indie Memphis are for sale to anyone in the world, beginning at $25. Memphis passes, which include access to both online and in-person events, begin at $100, with Indie Memphis members receiving a 20 percent discount. You can buy passes on the official Indie Memphis website

Categories
News News Blog

Active Cases Fall Below 1,500 in Shelby County

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

Active Cases Fall Below 1,500 in Shelby County

Shelby County added 102 new cases of COVID-19 on test results reported since Monday morning.

The figure is not the number of new cases on tests given yesterday. Tests results are not always returned within 24 hours. The new case count comes from numerous tests over numerous days from numerous laboratories.

The latest weekly data available shows 9.8 percent of all tests were positive for the week of August 30th. That’s the lowest weekly average rate since early June. The new weekly positive average is down from the 11.4 percent rate reported on the week of August 23rd.

The county’s overall average positive rate for COVID-19 was 10.7 percent on Friday, where it’s been for much of the week. The figure dipped slightly this week from the 10.8 percent average that has held steady for many weeks. The number is the average of all positive tests from all test results reported since the virus arrived here in March.

The total number of COVID-19 cases here stands at 28,754. Five new deaths were reported in the last 24 hours. The death toll in Shelby County now stands at 410.

The total active number of COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Shelby County fell to 1,440 from Thursday to Friday, a reduction of 132. The figure marks the first time active cases have been below 1,500 in Shelby county for many weeks. Cases active now are 5 percent of all virus cases recorded in Shelby County since March. Those known to have the virus now represent 0.15 percent of Shelby County’s total population.  

There are 9,402 contacts in quarantine, down slightly from Thursday but still below 10,000 where it stood for many weeks.

Categories
News News Blog

New Virus Cases Rise by 105

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

New Virus Cases Rise by 105

Shelby County added 105 new cases of COVID-19 on test results reported since Wednesday morning.

The figure is not the number of new cases on tests given yesterday. Tests results are not always returned within 24 hours. The new case count comes from numerous tests over numerous days from numerous laboratories.

The latest weekly data available shows 11.4 percent of all tests were positive for the week of August 23rd. The average is slightly up from the 11.2 percent of cases reported for the week of August 16th. The increase was the first in five weeks.

The county’s overall average positive rate for COVID-19 was 10.7 percent on Thursday. the figure dipped slightly this week from the 10.8 percent average that has held steady for many weeks. The number is the average of all positive tests from all test results reported since the virus arrived here in March.

The total number of COVID-19 cases here stands at 28,652. One new death was reported in the last 24 hours. The death toll in Shelby County now stands at 405.

The total active number of COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Shelby County fell to 1,572 from Wednesday to Thursday. Cases active now are 5.5 percent of all virus cases recorded in Shelby County since March.

There are 9,483 contacts in quarantine, up slightly from Wednesday but still below 10,000 where it stood for many weeks.

Categories
Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, September 10-16

Dan Ball

Lucero at Sam Phillips Recording

As we approach the autumnal equinox, the Lucero family block party reappears with the reliability of the seasons themselves. This time around, it will be a three-day online extravaganza, from Friday to Sunday. Meanwhile, see other listings for more information about pre-recorded concert series, like the Levitt Shell’s Orion Virtual Concert Series, featuring Ruthie Foster on Friday and The Mighty Souls Brass Band on Saturday.

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, September 10
Noon
Live DJ – Downtown Memphis Virtual Carry Out Concert
Facebook

8 p.m.
Devil Train – at B-Side
Facebook

Friday, September 11
7 p.m.
Lucero – Virtual Family Block Party, through September 13
Home Live Event

8:30 p.m.
Turnstyles – Live-stream from the Lamplighter
Facebook

Sunday, September 13
3 p.m.
Dale Watson – Chicken $#!+ Bingo
Facebook

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

Monday, September 14
8 p.m.
John Paul Keith (every Monday)
YouTube

Tuesday, September 15
7 p.m.
Bill Shipper (every Tuesday)
Facebook

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


Wednesday, September 16

7 p.m.
Amy LaVere & Will Sexton
Facebook

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

Categories
News News Blog

Underground Fire Shuts Power to Areas of Downtown

An early-morning network fire left swaths of Downtown Memphis dark Thursday morning, including AutoZone headquarters, the FedEx Forum, and the National Civil Rights Museum (NCRM).

Memphis Light, Gas & Water (MLGW) said crews were working to restore power those customers, which included MLGW headquarters. An underground network fire began early Thursday morning at Second and Gayoso.

To fix it, MLGW shut down the substation that serves many Downtown businesses and residences.

For this, the NCRM said it would open today at 11 a.m., instead of its regular 9 a.m. open.

Power was expected to return to all affected customers by noon. To report an outage, call MLGW at (901) 544-6500.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

FAQs for the November 3rd Election

October 5th is the last day for voter registration for anyone intending to vote in the election concluding on November 3rd. Numerous offices will be on the ballot, including the Presidency of the United States. The October 5th deadline holds for registering to vote online and in person. If you register by mail, your mail-in registration form must also be postmarked by Monday, October 5th.

In-person voting: The Shelby County Election Commission offers a link to find your appropriate poll location on its website: shelbyvote.com.

Digitalstormcinema | Dreamstime.com

Early voting: You may also vote early or vote absentee by mail, and there is a genuine debate raging just now over which of these modes is to be preferred. A two-week period for early voting is provided, from Wednesday, October 14, 2020, to Thursday, October 29, 2020. Those who advocate it maintain, like Tennessee Democratic Party chair Mary Mancini, that early voting is “the safest, quickest, and easiest way to cast your vote.”

Early voting will be available at locations and during hours that will be posted, in the Flyer and elsewhere, when they are determined by the Election Commission.

Absentee voting: The other mode of voting is by absentee or mail-in ballot, an option whose availability has been extended by judicial action to include persons affected adversely by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The courts have mandated the following conditions will enable voting by mail:

• If an individual has an illness, physical disability or other underlying health condition that makes them especially vulnerable to COVID-19, and who, because of that condition is unable to appear at the polling place and instead wishes to vote absentee.

• If an individual is a caretaker of someone who has a special vulnerability to COVID-19 because he or she is ill, physically disabled, or has an underlying health condition.

• Whether that illness or physical disability creates a special vulnerability should be determined by the voter using guidance from the CDC and common sense as to the voter’s other activities in public. Please visit the Centers for Disease Control website for guidance. A voter is not required to submit a physician’s statement in support of their determination as to their special vulnerability. A complete checklist of eligibility for absentee voting follows:

• You will be outside Shelby County during the entire early voting period and all day on Election Day.

• You or your spouse are enrolled as a full-time student in an accredited college or university outside Shelby County.

• You reside in a licensed nursing home outside Shelby County.

• You will be unable to vote in person due to service as a juror for a Federal or State court.

• You are 60 years of age or older.

•You have a physical disability and an inaccessible polling location.

• You are hospitalized, ill, or physically disabled and unable to appear at your polling place to vote (this includes persons who have underlying medical or health conditions that in their determination render them more susceptible to contracting COVID-19 or at greater risk should they contract it).

• You are the caretaker of a person who is hospitalized, ill, or disabled (this includes caretakers for persons who have underlying medical or health conditions that in their determination render them more susceptible to contracting COVID-19 or at greater risk should they contract it).

• You are a candidate for office in the election.

• You serve as an Election Day official or as an employee of the Shelby County Election Commission.

• Your observance of a religious holiday prevents you from voting in person during the early voting period and on Election Day.

• You or your spouse possess a valid commercial drivers’ license (CDL) or you possess a valid Transportation Worker Identification Credential (TWIC) card and certify that you will be working outside Tennessee or Shelby County during the open hours of early voting and Election Day, and have no specific out-of-county or out-of-state address to which mail may be sent or received during such time.

• You are a member of the military or are an overseas citizen.

Note: Under Tennessee law, once you have requested an absentee ballot, you cannot vote in person for that election except by provisional ballot. Applications must be received no later than seven days before the November 3rd election date.

Categories
Music Music Features

Bobby Rush: Rawer Than Raw

Despite having won a Grammy award a few years ago for his album Porcupine Meat, and several Blues Music Awards to boot, you can always rely on Bobby Rush to keep things down to earth. That’s obvious enough on the cover of his newest album, Rawer Than Raw (Deep Rush/Thirty Tigers), released last week, which features him chasing chickens in a farmyard.

That image is in perfect keeping with the album’s sound, and, like the recordings themselves, was only chosen for the album after the fact. “This wasn’t planned to be no album cover. It was something I’d done because I wanted to go back to my roots. An old friend that I knew, in his backyard. That’s where I was raised up. Every day, my mama would say, ‘Boy, we need a chicken to eat.’ And we’re out in the yard, we kill a chicken. That’s the way we did it!”

Kim Welsh

Bobby Rush

And that’s just how he recorded this album, accompanying himself on guitar and harmonica, his foot stomping the beat. While its closest precursor, 2006’s Raw, was similarly stripped down, it did feature a dobro player on some tracks. This one is different.

“Ain’t nobody there but me, mane! Nobody. I had a harmonica around my neck. And when I got to someplace where I’m singing, I went back and did a couple lines with the harmonica, but that’s the only overdub. If I messed up, it’s messed up. If I got it right, it’s right. It’s one take down! I got a board at my feet, and me patting with a damn board, man. Feet going one way, as a drum, and my thumb going one way as a bass player, and the fingers going one way as a guitar player. Doo-rwee-dap-dap, doo-rwee-dap-dap, bop bop!”

Like the cover image, the tracks weren’t made with an album in mind. He may well have been recording with his touring band now, but COVID-19 got in the way. Rush is convinced that the coronavirus was the illness that beset him in February and March. He’s grateful that he pulled through without any long-term effects but wants the world to know how serious the situation is. “It’s no joke. Wash your hands, keep your mask on, and try to stay to yourself as much as you possibly can. I know you wanna hug and kiss and touch, but that’s a no-no right now.

“I didn’t record this while I was sick. I had already done these things. I wanted to do something, and I thought, ‘What am I gonna do?’ You can’t go out. So I said, ‘Dog! I’ve got at least 150 songs already recorded.’ I picked out some that I started with my guitar, and I said, ‘Hell, these are already finished!'”

Choosing which of those would make a coherent album was another matter. “I said, well, let me try to salute all the people that I love and respect. Still, I couldn’t put all of them on one CD. I said, ‘Let me pick the guys from Mississippi. Like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf. People that I knew back in the day, that I respect highly.’ That’s one reason. The second reason is, the guys from Mississippi never change. When they’re Mississippi blues men, you know who in the hell he is. ‘That’s it. It’s from Mississippi.’ But I’m not doing it just like they would do it. I’m doing it my way.”

Beyond that, he’s mixed in five of his originals, including the opener, “Down in Mississippi,” and the inimitable “Garbage Man,” best summed up by the line, “Out of all the men my woman coulda left me for, she left me for this garbage man. … Every time I see a garbage can, I think about her and the garbage man, all the time!”

It’s especially stark, featuring only Rush’s wailing harmonica, voice, and stomping foot. Rawer than raw, indeed.

Though he’s best known for his crack band on the touring circuit, he’s lost none of the chops he refined when he had no ensemble to rely on. “When things go wrong, I take it out on my guitar. And I sing about it and soothe myself.” The album’s climb up the charts suggests that listeners can relate. “Maybe they like it,” he surmises, “because it represents being alone by yourself, set aside, with nothing to do.”