The University of Tennessee Board of Trustees has voted to acquire the assets of Martin Methodist College and establish a new UT campus in Pulaski, Tennessee, to be known as UT Southern.
Effective July 1, the addition of UT Southern will represent the fourth undergraduate college within the UT System, and the first new campus since UT Chattanooga joined more than 50 years ago.
UT Southern will be the only four-year and graduate institution of higher education between Sewanee in the east and Freed-Hardeman in the west, serving a southern Middle Tennessee region of 13 counties near the Alabama border.
The Board voted to appoint Mark La Branche, president of Martin Methodist College since July 1, 2017, as the inaugural chancellor of UT Southern. Prior to joining Martin Methodist, La Branche served as the president of Louisburg College in North Carolina, where he oversaw the school’s 22 percent increase in enrollment, 58 percent increase in graduates, and a five-year, $18 million fund-raising campaign that exceeded its goals by 20 percent.
OUTMemphis' new Youth Emergency Center (Credit: Lucy Garrett)
OUTMemphis opened the doors of a brand new facility this week — a haven for LGBTQ+ young adults in crisis — that’s the first of its kind in the region.
The new Youth Emergency Center (YEC) is a 2,000 square-foot drop-in center for those aged 16 to 24 seeking emergency shelter. It will offer wrap-around support for these young adults, including new interventions as family conflict can lead to suicide, long-term substance abuse, coerced sex work, permanent homelessness, and lifelong mental health barriers, according to OUTMemphis.
LGBTQ+ youth are 120 percent more likely to experience homelessness than their non-LGBTQ+ peers, according to the organization. Since the pandemic began, OUTMemphis said it has seen nearly double the numbers of youth seeking emergency shelter through the organization. In the 16-24-year-old age range, youth are at a higher risk of becoming chronically homeless.
(Credit: OUTMemphis)
The facility will be the home base for OUTMemphis’ youth housing program, the Metamorphosis Project, which began in 2017 and will provide transitional housing, case management, and other support.
“Almost five years ago now, we were regularly finding youth sleeping on our porch at OUTMemphis,” said Stephanie Reyes, OUTMemphis deputy director and founder of the Metamorphosis Project. “Every day, we encountered young people who found themselves in emergency situations, with nowhere to turn. We dreamed up a space that was more then a just a shelter and catered specifically to our youth community.”
“Almost five years ago now, we were regularly finding youth sleeping on our porch at OUTMemphis.” Stephanie Reyes.
The YEC features a living room, a classroom, a kitchen and dining area, laundry services, a full, accessible public bathroom, and a computer lab. The building also includes dorms for up to 30 nights of residence. For respect and safety, each dorm is single-occupancy and includes an independent entrance and a full bathroom.
(Credit: Lucy Garrett)
“As a community, experiencing the last year was a test and testament to what LGBTQ+ advocates do best: fight for our own and find seemingly impossible pathways to a thriving life,” said OUTMemphis executive director Molly Rose Quinn. “The care and innovation in this facility, from our peer advocates at the front desk to the unique design of the dorms, is driven by the lived experiences of our community. I’m deeply proud to see this service added to our city.”
The YEC was funded by the Assisi Foundation of Memphis, the Plough Foundation, Mystic Krewe of Pegasus, Manna House, and donations from families and individuals since the plans for the space were announced in 2017. Ikea, Raymond James Financial, and the PowerOn Foundation donated interiors and technology. Building design work was donated by LLW Architects. Construction consulting was donated by LGBTQ+ owned and operated TJ Builds. Local construction company ReConstruction Services completed the major portion of construction. Outdoor landscaping was supported by donations from Compost House, the Yard, and volunteers from the Kennedy View Garden Club.
Duet for Theremin and Lap Stee, whol play Memphis Concrète (CREDIT: Jamie Harmon)
In addition to the usual venues and private artists with virtual concert capabilities, an entire festival will be online this week. Memphis Concrète has become a mainstay of this city’s underground scene, and, after featuring only a smattering of smaller shows last year, their festival of electronic and experimental music is back in full force. And it’s all online. Read all about the live-streamed shows here, or simply tune in to the Twitch TV links below to see for yourself. It’s all free, and tipping portals for all the artists are conveniently located on the organization’s home page.
ALL TIMES CDT
Thursday, June 24 8 p.m. The Mastersons and Bonnie Whitmore — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way Website
Friday, June25 6 p.m. Memphis Concrète 2021 Pas moi Signals Under Tests Artificer CEL SHADE Berkay Tok Tatras Disaster Trees Duet for Theremin and Lap Steel Twitch TV
8 p.m. The Closson Brothers— at Hernando’s Hide-a-way Website
5 p.m. Memphis Concrète 2021 Nicholas Maloney Stupid Lepton Towering Flesh Argiflex Luct Melod Infanta Silhouette Kristina Warren Andrew Raffo Dewar post doom romance Eve Maret Twitch TV
8 p.m. Wayne Hancock and The Pine Hill Haints — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way Website
8 p.m. Yatra, Kroil, and Sleuthfoot — at B-Side YouTubeTwitch TV
Sunday, June 27 5 p.m. Memphis Concrète 2021 Bruiser window Dog Chakra Lavellian Objects Dinosauria Paul Vinsonhaler Evicshen Pas Musique Twitch TV
8 p.m. Tail Light Rebellion and Lonewolf — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way Website
A $3 million contribution from author and philanthropist MacKenzie Scott and educator and philanthropist Dan Jewett has been given to Collage Dance Collective.
The gift follows the successful completion of two major efforts by the dance nonprofit: an $11 million capital campaign launched in the summer of 2019, and a $9 million center for dance that opened in December 2020.
Marcellus Harper, executive director and co-founder of Collage Dance, said, “We are indebted to our community for investing in us and preparing us for this moment and grateful to Ms. Scott and Mr. Jewett for trusting organizations of color to be leaders in the equity and inclusion work we know and understand on a cellular level.”
Collage has trained more than 3,000 students in the organization’s 12-year history. The nonprofit’s internationally touring professional company launches its 12th performance season in September and was recently invited to perform on the Kennedy Center stage in Washington D.C. in June 2022.
Kevin Thomas, Collage’s artistic director and co-founder, said, “Not uncommon to organizations led by people of color, much of our work these last 11 years has been bootstrapped and built from the ground up with rarely enough financial resources. This generous gift from Ms. Scott and Mr. Jewett helps us to focus more on the work and a little less on how we are going to pay the bills. It allows us to grow in our creativity, further refine our artistic product and take some artistic risk, which Black arts organizations rarely have the luxury to do because of funding inequities.”
Illinois-based rockers REO Speedwagon will complete the 2021 lineup for Memphis Botanic Garden’s Live at the Garden concert series. This morning’s announcement said the band will perform on August 27th.
The 2021 lineup will be the 20th season of Live at the Garden, sponsored this year by Regions Bank. Performers include Little Big Town, Brad Paisley, and Sheryl Crow. Earth, Wind and Fire will close out the season with a performance on October 21st.
Season Lawn Passes for Live at the Garden are $250 for a regular season lawn pass and $300 for a Premium Season Lawn Pass, which allows patrons entry to the venue 15 minutes prior to general gates opening. Individual TruGreen lawn tickets start at $50 plus fees.
Patrons are encouraged to bring lawn chairs, blankets, and coolers to the concerts. Food trucks and bars will be onsite, as well as pre-order catering.
For more information on Live at the Garden, call 636-4107 or visit liveatthegarden.com.
The Tennessee Supreme Court will hear arguments from a Memphis man convicted of murder who believes he deserves a new trial because his original trial lawyers were ineffective.
In a rare move, the state Supreme Court granted an appeal from Tommie Phillips last week. The man was convicted of murder, rape, kidnapping, burglary, and sexual battery in a case tied to one event in December 2008.
Phillips has appealed his 2011 conviction from the Shelby County Criminal Court several times. The state Supreme Court denied an appeal from Phillips in 2014. Most recently, his appeal was denied by the state Court of Criminal Appeals in February.
Phillips has argued his public defenders failed to adequately present his case in court with a litany of complaints, noting generally that his defense team had no trial strategy. His central complaint, however, is that his lawyers failed to suppress a statement he made to police.
Phillips believes allowing the statement in court helped seal his conviction. The appeals court ruling in February disagreed. Even if the statement had been thrown out, “he still cannot show that the result of his trial would have been different given the overwhelming proof of his guilt.”
In approving Phillips’ appeal, Tennessee Supreme Court justices said they are “particularly interested” hearing his arguments about the case, especially as to whether the statement should have been suppressed. The case was set for oral arguments, though no schedule was given.
The 2008 crime
In 2008, Phillips arrived at a home looking for an acquaintance who, Phillips said, owed him money. The acquaintance’s mother shared the home with her 85-year-old mother.
Court records say Phillips forced the woman to take the elderly woman to her bedroom and bind her feet and hands with shoelaces. He then forced the woman to disrobe and get into a bathtub. He bound her feet and hands, sexually assaulted her, sliced at her throat and stabbed her in the chest.
“[Phillips] stepped out of the bathtub, smiled at her, and went back into her bedroom,” court records say. “He returned with her bathrobe and said, ‘Pack it down, you’ll live.’
“He told her that if her son arrived in fifteen minutes, he could call the paramedics to save her. He said, ‘I do this all the time,’ then smiled and left the bathroom.”
Phillips’ acquaintance arrived home and the men struggled. The mother broke free from her bindings, attempted to call for help, and attacked Phillips with a hammer.
Once he left, they found the 85-year-old grandmother dead in a bathroom. Court records said she was apparently strangled, found with a “blue bandana wrapped tightly around her neck.” In the police car with his mother much later, Phillips told her that the elderly woman ”was having a heart attack and he put a pillow under her head.”
On Tuesday, the White House (yes, that one) tweeted examples of how the closure of the Hernando DeSoto Bridge, which it just called “the Mississippi River bridge,” was hurting the area economy.
In a five-part tweet, the White House featured quotes from West Memphis Mayor Marco McClendon, a dentist, a business owner, and it noted that revenues at Southland Casino Racing were down 33 percent since May.
Here's how the Mississippi River bridge closure is affecting nearby residents' lives and their economy: 1/5
West Memphis Mayor Marco McClendon says, “This has completely crippled our city in so many different ways, from just the quality of life to the economic impact.” https://t.co/QYh1HXXo6C
One tweet featured Patrick Reilly, co-owner and chef at The Majestic Grille Downtown.
Patrick Reilly, who co-owns Majestic Grille in downtown Memphis, said his regulars from Arkansas aren’t making the re-routed drive to his restaurant. “They’re calling and saying, ‘We’re sorry, we’re just not going to do it,’". 4/5
The restaurant responded with a Facebook post that reads, “thanks for shining a light … on the struggles we’re facing due to the I-40 bridge closure. Not only are our [Arkansas] guests canceling reservations, vendor deliveries are delayed and staff can’t get to and from work. All this on top of massive revenue loss from COVID. It’s time to pass President Joe Biden’s Infrastructure Plan!”
Evicshen: "Very noisy, but very richly detailed and textured" (CREDIT: Arnaud Pagès)
Aside from all the punk rock, folk, blues, R&B, funk, soul and hip-hop that Memphis is known for, another scene has been gaining momentum here for some time: experimental electronic music. In 2017, this crystallized more than ever with the advent of the Memphis Concrète festival (and of course, the Memphis Flyer reported on it). If the depth and breadth of regional artists dedicated to all manner of synthesized and unorthodox music was impressive then, it’s only become more so as the festival continued to be staged every year since.
Every year except last year, of course, when COVID-19 put a stop to so many gatherings. And yet, drawing on an already-established tendency to stage shows featuring small handfuls of artists throughout the year, Memphis Concrète did just that practically as soon as lockdowns became common. Smaller virtual shows popped up at the organizers’ behest in March and April of 2020, but it was no substitute for the full-blown festivals that had been staged in and around Crosstown Concourse in previous years.
Now the festival is back in force, scheduled this Friday through Sunday. But, unlike many venues that have rushed to embrace live music again, Memphis Concrète is sticking with the virtual realm. I asked one of its principal organizers, Robert Traxler, about that and other details, and it soon became clear that, true to its innovative spirit, the festival is turning its embrace of the virtual into a positive asset.
Memphis Flyer:What will the festival look like this year, as you adhere to a wholly virtual, live-streamed approach?
Robert Traxler: It’s gonna be three days, 26 artists, a variety of genres. There will be a lot of musicians with very different approaches to music that can make you think about music differently, both local and scattered around. It’s a few hours over a whole weekend. You can drop in, drop out. There’s no cost to watch the stream on Twitch TV. It’s free, but we will have links on the website where you can donate to the artists. And all that money will go to the artists.
Would you say there’s a positive side to the virtual approach?
Yes, in that we are trying to connect with as many friends in other places as possible, to make use of the streaming format. We have one person who will be playing from Ireland, Nicholas Maloney, who’s actually from Mississippi. He played the first year of the festival as Blanket Swimming. Now he’s playing under his own name, and he’s in Ireland right now. Also, instead of waiting until people can come here, let’s let them come here virtually. True, things are opening up, but it still feels weird. I haven’t made it out to a show yet. It still seems kind of on the border. Some people might especially not want to attend a festival with a lot of artists, even now.
There are a lot of artists, spanning many styles, being featured. Who would you say the headliners are for the three nights?
On Friday, we have Duet for Theremin & Lap Steel. They played in Memphis at the Continuum Festival a few years ago. They’re from Atlanta. They’re awesome and their name describes them very well. Also on Friday, we have Disaster Trees. That’s Kim, who is Belly Full of Stars, with her husband Chris. She does a lot of ambient and drone, with a little glitch. From what I’ve heard, this new project is kind of heavy drone. Really great stuff.
Duet for Theremin and Lap Steel (Credit: Jamie Harmon)
On Saturday, we have Eve Maret. She’s from Nashville and does a lot of synth-pop. She can get dancy, disco-y. But she put out an album just a few months ago that is much more abstract and experimental. So she has a rich variety of sounds, usually synthesizer-based.
And Post Doom Romance from Chicago is also on Saturday. This is a newer industrial ambient project by Michael Boyd, who played with us a few years ago. In this project, he’s playing with Chelsea Heikes, and they work with both sounds and visuals. The visuals are a big part of their set.
On Sunday we have Pas Musique. He’s from New York, and he works in a lot of styles. A lot of it is kind of psych-based. Experimental noise and ambient and a whole slough of things. And there’s also Evicshen. She’s now in San Francisco, a noise artist who’s worked with Jessica Rylan, who had a boutique synth company called Flower Electronics a while back. They made all these weird little boxes that made all kinds of crazy noises. Evicshen is very noisy, but also very richly detailed and textured. It has a lot of layers. I’m excited because her stuff is really awesome.
Overall, it has a similar mix to what we’ve had in the past. Some we’ve had before, but also a lot of new people. We tried to get as many local people who hadn’t played the festival before as we could. I didn’t want to have too many of one thing or sound together. Everything’s spread around.
No doubt some fans will want to boogie to the bleeps. Which artists veer more into EDM territory?
For those who are more interested in the dance side of things, CEL SHADE is very rhythmic. Argiflex. Some of Luct Melod’s stuff veers more to EDM. Eve Maret is more rhythmic or even poppy sometimes. Window can get kind of dancy. Some kind of straddle that line between ambient and rhythmic, like Signals Under Tests or Paul Vinsonhaler.
Memphis Concrète 2021 runs from Friday, June 25, through Sunday, June 27, live-streaming on Twitch TV. Free.
Memphis is rightly known as a city of musicians’ musicians. Whether they stay planted here, like MonoNeon, or move to the coasts where the music industry and its stars are based, they bring a feel and a groove that few others can match. But the city also attracts brilliant players from elsewhere, in search of that Memphis sound. More than any formula or ingredient, like our much-touted horn players, there’s an elusive ambience, a holistic character, that emerges when one works in this city. And one element of that is simple: It’s in the rooms.
That doesn’t mean our well-appointed lodgings, but rather the classic studios that have dotted the city for over half a century. But it wasn’t always thus. At the dawn of the 2000s, digital technology led many to retreat into the safety and economy of home studios, to such an extent that many studio owners wondered if they’d go the way of the dinosaurs. Was there any money in the studio business?
In recent years, that question is being answered with a definite maybe. The pendulum has swung back to the advantages that only dedicated studios can offer, especially larger rooms, classic gear, and efficient engineering. As Boo Mitchell, co-owner of Royal Studios, one of the oldest continuously operated spaces of its kind in the world, recently noted, “It’s shifting back to the way it used to be, when we were a recording destination.”
All such history is new again, as many artists and producers clamor for a sound that some call retro and others call classic. One indication came in 2019, when what was once unthinkable came to be: A new studio opened in town. And the classic sound was crucial to it. As Memphis Magnetic Recording Co. co-owner Bob Suffolk reflected, “Our studio is brand-spanking new, although it’s done in what I call a purpose-built vintage style.”
Matt Ross-Spang (Photo: Jamie Harmon)
Memphis Sounds, Southern Grooves
Now, a new “purpose-built vintage” recording space is opening with an even more local provenance. Matt Ross-Spang, who distinguished himself first at Sun Studio and then as a Grammy-winning engineer and producer based at the renowned Sam C. Phillips Recording Studio and elsewhere, is custom-designing a new room, to be called Southern Grooves, in what was once the Sears cafeteria on the second floor of Crosstown Concourse. As he puts on the finishing touches, it’s clear that this one project embodies all Ross-Spang has learned from multiple studios around Memphis for over a decade, a distillation of the city’s legendary history of recorded music.
“On these walls, we used a polyurethane paint. And that doubled the length of the room,” Ross-Spang says. When you get a tour of a studio, you hear such absurdities regularly. Wait a minute, I think, the paint alone can double the length of the room? That’s when I realize he’s talking about the length of the room’s echo. In a studio, what matters is how your ears measure a room, not your eyes or your yardstick.
In this instance, the room is basically a closet, but it’s a closet designed to always remain empty: another absurdity. “This is what I’m most proud of, our echo chamber. Steve [Durr] designed it. Here’s what it sounds like,” says Ross-Spang as he claps a single time. “It’s about four seconds. Of course, our bodies are soaking up some of the sound.” When in use, the room will have only speakers, playing audio from the control room, and microphones to record how those sounds bounce off the walls. To build such a room, Ross-Spang and Durr studied Phillips Recording intensely. “Phillips has three chambers. The one behind the pink door at the end of the hall there is the greatest echo chamber I’ve ever heard. It’s about six seconds. I didn’t have that much space, but we had height.”
Ross-Spang is one of the few to have seen the Phillips chambers in detail. As Jerry Phillips, son of the late Sam Phillips, says, “We’ve got some of the greatest echo chambers in the world in that building. And we keep them kind of a secret. We don’t let anybody take pictures in there. It’s proprietary. We have three different sizes. And the combination can really give you a great sound. You cannot duplicate it in any kind of digital process.”
That’s true of all such physical spaces, be they echo chambers or the large rooms in which bands record. Stepping into the tracking room at Southern Grooves is like stepping back in time, both sonically and visually. Wood panels alternate with orange fabric on the walls; a wooden chair rail runs along the room’s perimeter; linoleum floor tiles sport geometric patterns here and there; perforated light fixtures, reminiscent of the Summer Drive-In, hang from a ceiling with similarly perforated panels, arranged in an uneven sawtooth pattern. All of it seems to invite a band to set up and record in the old-school way, all together, playing live in the room that time forgot.
A session at Phillips Recording, with (l-r) Rev. Charles Hodges, Matt Ross-Spang, William Bell (behind piano), Leroy Hodges, Ken Coomer, and David Cousar (Photo: Jamie Harmon)Southern Grooves, the new recording studio in Crosstown Concourse (Photo: Jamie Harmon)
Memphis Soul Stew, or Ingredients of a Sound Studio
“I kinda stole from all my Memphis heroes. At Sun, the V-shapes on the ceiling went long ways, and at Phillips they go like this. And then Chips Moman’s thing was latticework,” Ross-Spang explains, referring to the producer/engineer who helped found both Stax and American Sound Studio. “So the ceilings here are about 15 feet high; the panels drop down and are angled, but the sound goes through the perforated metal, and then there’s insulation so it stops before it comes back down. So you still get the big room, but you don’t have the parallel surfaces. You never want parallel surfaces.” Such surfaces cause sounds to bounce around too much. “That was another big Sam [Phillips] thing. The angles throw off the flatness of the floor.”
And yet some bounce is desirable. Take the linoleum floor, also a design element from Sun (actually known as the Memphis Recording Service in its heyday). Those floors have often been celebrated as being critical to the roomy sound of early Howlin’ Wolf, Elvis, and Jerry Lee Lewis recordings. As musician Mark Edgar Stuart notes, one story among his fellow tour guides at Sun Studio is that once Bob Dylan himself walked in on a tour, looked at the floor, said, “Ahh, tile,” then walked back out.
As Jerry Phillips says of his father, “Memphis Recording Service was his baby, of course. And Marion Keisker helped him a lot. They laid the floor tiles. He would clap his hands and hear how the echo sounded in the room. How alive or dead it was. He wanted a combination of live sound and controllable sound. And he just built the acoustics in that studio by experimenting.”
Jerry Phillips at the bar in Sam C. Phillips Recording Studio (Photo:Jamie Harmon)
As Ross-Spang envisioned it, having such a “live” tracking room, with some echo (as opposed to a “dead,” echoless room) was critical. “In the ’60s, all the rooms were really reverberant,” he explains. “And then in the late ’60s, early ’70s, when they got 16 track machines and could put mics closer on stuff, they started to deaden stuff with burlap. And then they went so far, they would just really deaden it. So I wanted to have a ’60s room that just started putting up burlap. I always thought that was the coolest balance. ’Cause you can always deaden something more. I can always put more shag rugs down; I can put in baffles. But it’s hard to make stuff livelier. And I just love the old tile floor. Ever since Sun, I’ve always loved that sound.”
The wood and burlap on the walls, on the other hand, are inspired by the second location of Ardent Studios, built in 1972, where Big Star (and many others) made legendary albums. Once again, Ross-Spang leaned on his design collaborator for much of those details. “Steve Durr was really good friends with Welton Jetton, who built all the equipment for Stax and Ardent and helped John Fry [and Terry Manning and Rick Ireland] design the original acoustics at Ardent. So Ardent Studio A had these kinds of reflectors and absorbers. That was a Welton Jetton design. I brought that back because I always thought that was a great look, and they sound amazing.”
Yet there are some elements of Southern Groove’s acoustics that are completely unique, unrelated to the studios of yore. “You always want limitations, and I had the limitations of the columns,” Ross-Spang explains. He’s speaking of the huge concrete columns that pepper the entire Crosstown Concourse structure. There was no possibility of removing or moving them, but Ross-Spang was okay with that. “Acoustically, the columns are interesting because they’re three-foot-thick concrete, they’re smooth, and sound will bounce off that randomly every time. There’s no way to mathematically account for that, acoustically. You play guitar from here, you move and inch, and it’ll bounce differently. I think it’ll be interesting when we get mics in here because it will randomize the room a lot.”
For Ross-Spang, the randomness was a bonus. “A lot of acousticians have one design that they go for every time, but Steve [Durr]knows I wanted something weird and not necessarily correct. Because all the Memphis studios aren’t correct, but they’re cool. I didn’t want a perfect studio; I wanted a weird studio.”
As we move into the control room, where two electricians are painstakingly working, it becomes clear that weirdness is literally wired into the entire space, thanks in part to Ross-Spang’s forethought. Pointing to the electricians, he says, “They’re pulling 30,000 feet of cable, and we’ve got conduits and troughs running to all the rooms. I wanted to wire every room for sound ’cause sometimes you want something to sound perfect, and sometimes you want it to sound like it’s in a garage. The hallways and every other little room are wired. Sometimes a guitar in the main tracking room sounds too good. So you put it in the hallway and it sounds like Tom Waits, and that’s what you need, you know? I do that a lot. At both Sun and Phillips, I would use that front lobby all the time. So I wanted to keep that here. All the wiring is running through the floor in troughs, and the cables will come up into these old school ’60s one-fourth-inch patchbays.”
Ultimately, the wires will converge on a mixing board that, among all the design features, will make Ross-Spang’s commitment to classic Memphis studios more apparent than ever. “I actually have John Fry’s original board from the original Ardent on National Street, where they did the first Big Star stuff. It’s getting fixed up, and it’ll be the main board. It was built in Memphis by Welton Jetton. And I also have a later board that Welton built for Stax, when they upgraded to the bigger boards. We’re putting the Ardent console in the original Stax frame, this cool white Formica top thing.”
The influence of Jetton on the studios of Memphis is hard to overstate. As Terry Manning, the first engineer at Ardent and now a distinguished producer, says, “Welton was a genius. He was the chief engineer at Pepper [Sound] Studios, which at the time was the biggest jingle recording company in the world and had several studios that Welton had put in. Pepper was huge, and Welton was a prime part of that. And later he started his own company making consoles, which became the Spectrasonics consoles that Stax and Ardent had. Later he changed that to Auditronics, and they were used all over the world. It was all Welton and his crew — acoustic design, electronic design, building the consoles. ‘Hey, we need a direct box! What’s a direct box? I don’t know, but Welton will build it!’ It was an amazing time, where you made your own gear and recorded your way.”
Finally, aside from the collection of other vintage gear that Ross-Spang has amassed in his current home base at Phillips, there will be vintage amps and instruments, including a Hammond A-100 organ and one thing most home studios and even many professional ones simply do not have these days: a grand piano.
For that, Ross-Spang received some sage advice from one of the pillars of Memphis’ golden era of recording. “I brought one of my heroes, Dan Penn, over here, and out of nowhere he said, ‘What kind of piano are you gonna get?’ And I said, ‘I don’t know. I don’t want to get anything too big.’ And he said, ‘You need to get the biggest durned piano you can buy. Them little pianos, the sound don’t wanna come out of them. But them big pianos, they can’t wait to be recorded. They jump out the speakers.’ So I’m going to have a Baldwin from 1965 in here. It’s a 7-footer. It was really cool to get it from Amro Music ’cause it’s their 100th year of serving Memphis.”
James Taylor, Peter Asher, and Terry Manning at Ardent Studio in 1971, using the mixing board Matt Ross-Spang has acquired. (Photo: Courtesy Terry Manning)
I’ll Take You There, or Setting is Everything
And yet, despite all of Ross-Spang’s committment to the designs and instruments and gear of yesteryear, there’s another element that he may value over all others. As we wrap up the tour, he reflects a bit more on the simple fact of where Southern Grooves will live. The name screams out “Memphis,” of course, but there’s more to it than that. Something unique.
“Never has a studio been in such an ecosystem like Crosstown,” he says. “That was one of the biggest selling points to me. Think about with Ardent and other places with multiple rooms and who you might run into. You might be doing an overdub, but then Jack Oblivian’s in Studio A, and you’re like, ‘Hey, will you come play real quick?’ And that’s kinda gone now with home studios and one-studio facilities.
“But at Crosstown — like, we just ran into Craig Brewer! It’s kinda like having Jerry Phillips come visit Phillips Recording. Here, you can go next door to the Memphis Listening Lab and remember why we’re doing this in the first place. Crosstown is a million-and-a-half-square-foot lounge, essentially, filled with creative people. And I don’t think any other studio has had that opportunity. That’s what I feed off of: other people’s energy. If you put me in here by myself, I couldn’t create anything. But when I have the people here, I’ll go two days without sleeping because I’m so jacked, you know?”
Matt Ross-Spang plans to have Southern Grooves fully operational this August.
Terry Prince & the Principles, long ago (Photo by Lorna Field)
In this week’s cover story, Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene takes readers on a tour of producer Matt Ross-Spang’s soon-to-open recording studio, Southern Grooves. Since Ross-Spang is a student of local recording history, references to older, more storied studios abound. But don’t take my word for it — flip to page 12 and see for yourself.
Sentimental as I can be, this week’s story sent me on a trip down memory lane. Until recently (say March 2020 or thereabouts), I could often be found in one of Memphis’ recording studios or music venues. I never ascended to the ranks of the Memphis musical elite, but playing music was a big part of my life nonetheless. It gave me a creative outlet, a way to blow off steam, and a reason to get together with friends; it even made me a little money from time to time. Music never paid all my bills, but it sometimes took care of the Memphis Light, Gas & Water payment — or, like a snake eating its own tail, paid for more studio time.
I don’t think there’s any chance that I’ll ever get a star on Beale Street, but I’ve written and recorded a couple dozen songs — two of which I think are genuinely something to be proud of. It was a small contribution, but in my own way, I added a little thread to the tapestry of Memphis music. And when one of my bands played out-of-town gigs, we did our best to be admirable amateur ambassadors from the Bluff City.
Now it looks like those days are behind me. I’m sure I’ll continue to play and write, and there might be the odd performance or recording session. But I don’t really see myself using vacation time to tour the South in the sweltering summer in a van of questionable reliability. I don’t want to sleep on out-of-town friends’ floors or share a bed with all of my bandmates — and the dog of the house, too. Twelve-hour recording sessions seem more grueling these days. I’ll leave all that to the pros.
Still, I can’t imagine a feeling quite like surfing the wave of a close-knit rhythm section, plucking out a guitar solo before the band hits a half-beat pause together, then crashes into the crescendo in sync. Or switching from 4/4 time to compound measure all together. It’s euphoric, and studies have shown that this is more than just romanticized talk — musicians’ brain waves sync up mid-performance. But to be that together on stage in the moment demands a fair amount of rehearsal time in advance — at least for a musician of my middling caliber — and these days I think I’d rather make up silly songs with my nephew. We’re currently working on one about flying away, though I’m not certain of the destination or mode of flight. I can’t be entirely sure, but context clues and his general interests lead me to believe it’s about pterodactyls. He doesn’t get my Dinosaur Jr. references, but that’s okay. It keeps me humble.
What’s my point, you might ask. Namely, I think, that too much concern is placed these days on the tangible worth of a thing. Will I ever be counted among Memphis’ musical legends? Heck no! W.C. Handy changed the entire world when he notated the blues. Whether you credit Ike Turner’s “Rocket 88” or Elvis Presley’s take on “That’s Alright, Mama,” rock-and-roll has some of its earliest roots in Memphis soil. And from “Green Onions” to Al Green’s entire catalogue to Unapologetic artists getting songs placed in high-profile ads and Netflix shows, Memphis music is still out in the world in a big way. Not to mention Goner Records! I don’t have to hang with the greats, but, even as a Z-lister, I got to be a part of something. If I had worried about being profitable or the best — or any good at all — I would have missed out on so much.
More important, to me at least, is that I got to create something with other people. One of my close friends designed the cover for one of my EPs, and my band wrote and performed the score for another friend’s short film. Music gave me an excuse to make art (or at least noise) with people I admire, and those memories are nothing short of priceless.
So, to the folks who listened, thank you. To the musicians making a real go of it, I’ll see you out there. I can’t wait.