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Viva La Plant Bus!

It’s a brisk but sunny November Saturday as Memphians wander among the booths at the Broad Avenue Artwalk. A performer croons a sad, slow song over the clean tones of a softly strummed electric guitar. At Sugar Ghost Ice Cream and Bubble Tea, the line of customers stretches out the door and onto the sidewalk.

“This is the best idea ever,” says a woman wearing a Memphis Tigers sweatshirt as she ducks her way into Viva La Plant Bus, parked next to the Falling Into Place gift shop. Inside the bus, pothos vines dangle from shelves along the walls, and snake plants and other leafy greenery reach toward the vibrantly decorated ceiling. It’s a bus; it’s a plant store; according to one Tigers fan, it might be the best idea ever. It’s Viva La Plant Bus, the mobile plant store owned and operated by the husband-and-wife duo of Matt Vinson and Iris Valenzuela-Vinson.

(Photos: Justin Fox Burks)

Transplants: From Texas to Tennessee
Matt originally hails from Fort Worth, Texas, but in 2012 — before traveling to Memphis — he moved the 2,000 miles to Portland, Oregon. “I am originally from El Paso, Texas,” Iris says. “Same as Matt — in 2012 I moved to Portland, Oregon. We didn’t know each other at the time, but I think he moved there about a month before I did. I went to art school out there. I just kind of loved it and decided to go to school out there.”

The two met in 2015 at the Toyota dealership where they were both employed. Matt worked in the service department and Iris was a receptionist, so they didn’t cross paths often. That is, until a faulty tire brought Iris to Matt’s department. “She thought I was a pretty cute guy,” Matt says.

“I pursued him after I left the job,” Iris says with a laugh. Matt quips, “He’s from Texas, he can change a tire, what else do you need?”

As the romance progressed, the couple discovered they shared a goal — to own and operate their own business. “Knowing we wanted to be small business owners one day is something we bonded over very quickly,” Iris says. “I think that’s something that has always stuck with us. Living in Portland, small businesses very much meant community for both of us.”

Iris and Matt married in 2018. A year later, the young couple picked up and moved to Memphis. They were ready for a change, Matt says, and being in Memphis turned a multi-day drive to visit family in Texas into a more manageable six-hour drive. The Texas transplants say they love Memphis, though they did have to do a little bit of adjusting.

“Definitely the biggest change for us would be the weather,” Matt says. “The first summer was definitely — ”

“Brutal,” they say in unison. “We ended up in a rental that wasn’t that great, that we didn’t get a chance to see before we got here. So the first summer was sweaty.”

Before long, the couple began to thrive in a new environment, and the experience with the not-so-great rental home would later help inform their business. Houseplants are, after all, one simple way to brighten a dreary space. “They go to each place with you,” Iris says of her houseplants, noting the difference between, say, a favorite satin-leaf pothos or a dilapidated couch or a piece of furniture that might be too heavy or expensive to move, especially across the country. But, as Iris says, “Your plant, you just always make room for them.”

Rooted in community and creativity, Iris Valenzuela-Vinson and Matt Vinson’s Viva La Plant Bus plants seeds of wonder and excitement, no matter where the couple brings their business.

On the Bus
“Plants are definitely my thing. I will take that credit,” Iris admits. When she was a child, she saw them at her grandparents’ house. “I was very lucky to grow up very close to them, within five minutes probably, so we spent a lot of time with them. And both my grandparents are huge plant people,” she remembers. “That’s just something that’s always been around me.” The passion persists, both in Iris and in her relatives. In fact, her grandfather is about to turn 90, and he still maintains a large collection of plants.

“My grandparents had everything. I remember they had a lime tree and then aloe vera plants everywhere, of course, because we were in the desert so they grow so easily. And a lot of houseplants, too. That was very much my grandmother’s little touches,” Iris says.

Hearkening back to her childhood, one of Matt and Iris’ goals with Viva La Plant Bus, Iris says, is “being a representation for Latinx culture in the community. That was a very important thing for us and was definitely the whole theme for the bus. It’s been really cool to create an environment that’s based on my culture and really celebrates it.

“We definitely have a lot of customers who come out and are really excited to see a space that is familiar to them,” Iris says. “It’s been great, too, to connect to other Latinx business owners, like Mili’s Flower Truck. She’s been really great.” Mili opened some communication lines with other local businesses when Matt and Iris were first launching the plant bus, and the couple says they’re still grateful for the connections.

“The reception has been overwhelmingly positive, so we’ve been excited about that,” Matt adds.

Let It Grow: Love, Plants, and Business
Beginning a business is no small thing, even in the best of times. Launching a relatively new concept — plants? on a bus? — during a pandemic is another level of risk. Add to that equation that Matt and Iris were new in town, both worked other jobs, and that Matt’s job was supervising the opening of a new Tesla location; the mind-boggling effort that went into Viva La Plant Bus begins to clarify.

“It’s been very challenging to say the least,” Matt says, with a touch of modesty. “We both have our weekly jobs, and on the weekends it’s the plant bus,” he continues. “During the week, Iris maintains and builds up the plants that we have. And we’re working on social media and marketing during the week as well. It’s been a lot of evenings and dinners discussing bus- and business-related things. It’s been challenging, but it’s been really fun.”

Of course, as any small business owner or indie band member will confess, the business will wind its way into one’s personal life as well, ignoring the delineation of so-called “business hours” and creeping like kudzu vines. So, even though there’s a whole bus devoted to Iris and Matt’s business, so, too, has it claimed a room of their house.

“We have converted our spare bedroom into a plant studio. We currently have five three-tier shelves full of plants and plant lights. It’s a lot to maintain during the week,” Iris says. She spends time each day repotting plants, watering them, and adding little Viva La Plant Bus touches to their pots and containers. “I get so much joy out of seeing my plants grow and thrive,” Iris says, admitting that she celebrates every time one of her plants gets a new leaf. “That’s the everyday — maintaining plants, making sure things are healthy and pest-free — and at night I’m a bartender.”

Challenges aside, Iris and Matt have enjoyed building the business together. There are times they get on each other’s nerves, they admit, but they think it’s good to have something to work on together.

“It does get me away from the worries of the daily work at my job,” Matt says. “It’s a good thing to do in our ‘free’ time. It’s something we’ve been doing together, and it’s been really enjoyable.”

“Saturday is typically our pop-up day. Saturday morning is get up, take care of the dogs, and start loading plants,” Iris says. They spend Saturday mornings watering plants, putting them on “huge trays,” and getting them on the bus. The pop-ups usually last about six hours, then it’s time to drive home, unload the bus, and take inventory of unsold stock.

Flowers in the Window
“I saw the bus for sale from a brand that was selling Mexican huaraches,” Iris says, “and they were on that next step for their business, so giving up their bus.” The bus already had the trellis roof with greenery, and it had been partially converted into a retail space. “It already had the Mexican upholstery in the back and that green wall, and I just immediately thought ‘a plant bus,’” Iris says. “It’s a no-brainer.”

So Iris and Matt put their plant plan into action. They purchased the bus in February of this year, picked it up from Los Angeles in April, and opened for business in August. Since then, it’s been a process, as their business began to take root and thrive in Memphis.

“I think honestly we’re just taking it day by day,” Iris says. “We’ve just really been enjoying where this is taking us and are excited to see what is possible for the plant bus. I don’t think we have any intention of opening a brick-and-mortar.” They enjoy the mobility the bus offers — and keeping costs low, for themselves and for their customers. It’s nice, Iris and Matt admit, not having to pay rent for a storefront. That was also a factor in working up the courage to take the leap on a new business in a pandemic.

“We didn’t have to deal with the insecurity of ‘Are we going to be able to cover rent? Are we going to maintain a lease? Are we going to have people come into our store?’” Matt explains. Of course, there were still challenges — and reasons to be nervous — but the bus felt like a safer investment. So they kept an eye on the future. They weren’t sure if people would want to go out, but if the customers did appear (and they did), Viva La Plant Bus would be ready.

As Iris and Matt’s bus has tooled around Memphis, they have built a customer base, and the pair say that business has been going well. What’s most important to them, though, is creating a space to foster wonder and excitement. They want people to learn the joys of caring for plants, that it’s not as difficult or as frightening as it might appear, and to transport their customers, if only for a little while, to a place where even something as mundane as a bus can be magical.

“People love the bus,” Iris says. “It’s just such an experience.”
Viva La Plant Bus will be at Soul & Spirits Brewing Saturday, November 27th; Frances Berry-Moreno Open Studio Saturday, December 4th; and Memphis Modern Market at Saddle Creek Sunday, December 5th. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram at @vivalaplantbus.

Plant Care with Amanda

Amanda Willoughby is co-owner of Not Your Ordinary Films production company. She’s also the lead video facilitator for Memphis Public Libraries at CLOUD901 Teen Learning Lab and the Mentor Program Coordinator and the Black Creators Forum/Festival Producer at Indie Memphis. Her film skills are put to use in a myriad of ways, not the least of which is in managing her @planty.droppers Instagram account, where she waters her houseplants in seductive slow-motion.

Amanda Willoughby (Photo: Courtesy Amanda Willoughby)

Her videos turn routine plant care into something steamier — and generally more entertaining. Now she’s a recurring guest on Action News 5’s “Bluff City Life” segment, where she shares her tips for keeping houseplants healthy and thriving. We asked her to share a few tips with our readers who might be interested in taking the plunge into houseplant parenthood.

Memphis Flyer: First, I have to say I’m a huge fan of your Instagram page @planty.droppers. It’s hilarious and also pretty satisfying to watch plants get watered. What gave you the idea for that?

Amanda Willoughby: I came up with the idea for @planty.droppers out of sheer boredom one day at home. I started recording some of my plant care and got a little creative with the shots. And then came the music! I personally thought they were cool and just kept the videos to myself for a while and made them for my own entertainment. Then I figured, if I like these so much, why not share them for other people to see? Turns out other people liked it too!

How did you get into caring for houseplants?

About five years ago I was given a handful of houseplants and managed to kill them all. After that, determined to keep plants alive, I bought more and learned how to properly care for them. I watched a lot of YouTube tutorials. I also really loved the way they looked as home decor. Somehow, this grew into an obsession with having plants in my house, in every room. The slightly improved air quality is also a plus.

Do you have a favorite plant to care for?

Yes! Jade plants! They’re so beautiful. The jades are my oldest plants, and they don’t require much attention. Jades grow slowly, but they are easy to manipulate into desired shapes and patterns. I have about seven bonsai jade trees that are my pride and joy. They’re also really easy to propagate, so I’ve given several jade babies away as gifts.

I propagate my pothos, but I’ve never tried with anything else. Do you have any tips for propagating plants?

Have patience. Other plants, such as succulents, take more time to grow roots. Sometimes it can take months, so be sure to research the proper way to propagate each of your plants. Trust mother nature to do her thing, and enjoy the process.

Are there any tips you would give to new plant parents?

Research the care for every plant you acquire (light, soil, and watering needs). In the beginning, I made the mistake of treating all of my plants the same, which is the reason many of them died. They each have their own needs and an ideal environment for thriving. Be sure you can accommodate those needs in your home.

Where can Memphians see what you’ve got growing?

You can check out my bimonthly segment all about plant parenting on “Bluff City Life.” And of course, follow my plants on IG.

Is there anything else you want people to know?

A green thumb is not something that comes to people naturally. It’s a skill that anyone can learn. So, if it interests you, try it out and see where that leads you. Being a plant mom has taught me a lot about how nature operates, and I’ve grown to have the utmost respect for mother nature. It’s pretty cool that the skills that are necessary for plant care (patience, understanding, logic) can help us in so many other areas of life.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Sleeping Cop, Tweet of the Week, and Briarcrest

Memphis on the internet.

On the job

A TikTok from JT Rodriguez seems to show a Memphis Police Department officer asleep in a patrol car. Commenters were split on the video’s veracity. You decide.

Tweet of the week

Now living in Georgia, @Kokfrfr_ proclaimed, “I never lived in Tennessee. I lived in Memphis.”

Double talk

Briarcrest Christian School wrote on Facebook, “A beautiful sunset showing God’s glorious sunset at the Briarcrest campus this evening!” A commenter said, “The Lord painted a beautiful painting in the sky tonight!”

Protest

Posted to Facebook by Hunter Demster

Protesters gathered outside Briarcrest Christian School last week against an adult class from the school called “God Made Them Male and Female and That Was Good.”

Categories
Music Music Features

Rev. Charles Hodges: A Life in Music That Reads Like a Sermon

When you have a chance to speak to a musical innovator like the Rev. Charles Hodges, you don’t think twice. Here, still living and performing among us, is a man who redefined the place of organ in soul music, shaping the hits of a generation by way of forging his own voice. Now, Hodges has found his voice on the printed page as well with the release of his authorized biography, My Story: Charles Edward Hodges Sr., written by Delois Jackson.

One side benefit of the book’s release this year has been that Hodges is eager to talk about his life. And, sitting down to hear him tell the tales, one realizes that the book, with only about 80 pages of narrative, barely scratches the surface. That may be because of the roundabout way the book came into being.

“This book is more of an introduction,” Hodges explains. “I didn’t use a professional writer, but she is known for her work. Delois Jackson. She’s a member at the church where I’m an associate minister, and she noticed my shoes and the way I dressed. That captured her imagination — she didn’t know anything about me. So she started asking members of the church, and they’d say, ‘You don’t know him?’ One day she came to me and asked if I’d be interested in her doing a book on me, and I said, ‘Yeah, that’d be kind of interesting.’”

Such understatement is typical of a man whose watchword is humility. “It’s nice, feeling like a hero,” he says, “but I’m one of those humble heroes, I guess.” That quality is echoed in the book itself, which bears an old-school formality and dignity that is rare in music biographies. Indeed, it captures some of the spirit of the ministry to which Hodges has dedicated his life for the past 23 years.

Similar to the way certain words are highlighted for emphasis in the Bible, key phrases in Hodges’ life are singled out by the author. “We were poor but never hungry,” reads one quote. “I often went to the icebox and kitchen cabinets looking for food.” Later, Jackson notes that “For Charles, using crack cocaine the second time led to an eleven-year nightmare of drug use.” Such an approach distinguishes the volume from more conventional music biographies. It’s more like a homespun sermon, looking unflinchingly at the whole of his life, from his rural upbringing to his studio session days, from drug addiction to his own redemption.

Most readers may already know Hodges’ work under producer Willie Mitchell, who dubbed him “Do Funny” for the unpredictable flourishes Hodges would bring to a track. Hits by Al Green, Ann Peebles, O.V. Wright, Syl Johnson, and Otis Clay all bore Hodges’ unique stamp. But one delight of this book is its deeper look at the roots of the Hodges family, including Charles’ two brothers, “Flick” and “Teenie,” who would also become integral to the Hi Records sound. All of them came up under the musical guidance of their father, Leroy Hodges Sr., in rural Germantown.

“My dad was one of the greatest blues piano players in the city,” says Hodges now. “I’m going to say in the world. And I’m not saying that just because he was my dad. I still can’t understand today how he could do the things he did. He played that boogie and he wouldn’t skip a beat!” But Leroy Hodges Sr. was content to see what instruments his sons took to naturally before he taught them more.

“My dad wouldn’t help me until he saw that I wanted to do it,” Hodges recalls. “We brought the piano in the house when I was about 11 years old. And there was about a year where I would get on the piano and just bang it. At about age 12 was when he came over my shoulder. He’d say, ‘No, do it like this.’ And I always watched him. So by 16, I was in the Memphis musicians’ union.”

The path from childhood to success, to addiction, recovery, and redemption, gives this book a philosophical bent, something that comes out in Hodges’ casual conversation to this day. “I’ve had some good times and some bad times. You don’t trade that for nothing,” he reflects. “That’s something to hold on to. Because you can grow from anything. I love adversity because it carries you somewhere else.”

Rev. Charles Hodges is the organist for Unity Baptist Church in Collierville and is still active in both the gospel and secular traditions, onstage and in the studio. His biography can be ordered from xlibris.com. He will discuss and sign copies of his book on Saturday, December 11, 3-5 p.m., at the Memphis Listening Lab.

Categories
Opinion Romance Language

The Iron Swipe: Online Dating

My last three relationships and my last approximately 74 star-crossed situationships all began on the World Wide Web. This might shake the sensibilities of readers who have ever said, “I’m glad I met old so-and-so before online dating. I couldn’t possibly imagine doing it now. Perish the thought!”

After the last year of homebound communication, I don’t need to explain the uncomfortable value of internet connectedness. We all happen to be at the same 24-hour party of social media, and it’s strange. It makes love matches appear more possible as a by-product of numbers. We can “meet” people we haven’t seen in our daily lives. We can connect with people in niche fandoms all over the globe. The plenty of fish in the sea are multiplied.

And while social media platforms do their best to mimic the organic meeting of souls in a gigantic cacophony — rife with mutual ties and deceptively complete with life lived in words and images — dating apps take it a step further. The first time I ever created a dating profile was a few years ago at the onset of Facebook dating. This seemed to make sense given that data on my preferences had been mined for a decade. Why not let Cupid Zuck use it for good! I was wrong. I encountered the typical experience in all its superficiality and power. I rejected interested parties en masse with my iron swipe. I talked to a few people and eventually felt overwhelmed maintaining conversations with lots of men with whom I shared the delicate desire for romance.

Both details are problematic:

1. The truth is that someone in real life who doesn’t catch my heart-eye might with time. People can become exponentially more attractive through building rapport. I’ve developed crushes on probably 326 coworkers in this way — unlikely candidates whose familiar quirks grew appealing. The dating app invites you to treat humans as bad résumés — a slush pile to screen as quickly as possible. The ethics are debatable, but it just doesn’t accurately represent the complexity of attraction in the real world.

2. Okay, so you matched. You made it past the split-second gateway. You are joined in the revelation of your common intent to grow that precious flower of love. In the everyday emotional availability desert, simply wanting a relationship is an oasis. It’s intoxicating. So much so that it’s easy to overlook other metrics for compatibility.

Compatibility: that naturally occurring thing we taste when we meet someone at a concert and can assume we share interest in the band or setting. Meeting someone entirely new on a dating app can seem suspicious. Where has the beloved been? Is this person cool in a way that means something to me? If I’ve never seen this person at events I attend because they’re important to me, do we have enough in common to make it last?

This is absolutely unfair. You can be new to town. (Ah, I remember the days of being the coveted transplant fondly.) Or maybe you’re freshly single. Maybe you’re overcoming paralyzing social anxiety. Maybe you just haven’t yet found your love of the thing at the center of the scene in question. There are reasons.

My last relationship began on a dating app and proved incompatible. We shared some relationship preferences, some priorities, and a few personality traits. It wasn’t enough. Even so, I still have hope it’s possible to meet some undiscovered Romeo on the likes of Hinge or Bumble. In vibrant Midtown, where we same 50 people attend every art show, concert, and film screening, where we inevitably date all of the same few singles left, it is important to see reminders of a world beyond the bubble and into the realm of single, available people open to partnership.

Besides, dating isn’t appreciated enough as a leisure habit. Life is short. Drive to Clarksdale on a full moon to meet that match and have the best one-night stand of your life; then gather your tattered little ghosted heart for the next adventure. Just hypothetically, I mean. Live a little.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Puck Food Hall Building at 409 South Main Takes on New Life

Meredith Gardner Clinton is excited about the rebirth of the old Puck Food Hall building at 409 South Main. 

“I’m down here at 409 and right now we’re just kind of cleaning out the place,” Clinton says.

And, she says, “There’s going to be restaurant. I don’t know if they’ve come up with a name. I don’t know what concept they’re going to go with.”

An image of the nature sprite Puck sits atop 409 South Main. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

They don’t have a target date for the opening of the restaurant, but they currently are catering for “private dinners or if you have a holiday party,” Clinton says. “Birthday parties, weddings, and baby showers.”  They can cater basically any private event, “either here or off location.”

Clinton, former sous chef at Erling Jensen: The Restaurant, will be chef de cuisine at her new business, where she is a partner along with Jared Welch and Bill Ganus.

Meredith Gardner Clinton. (Credit: Trey Easter)

The building, formerly Puck Food Hall, will comprise one restaurant and the catering business, Clinton says. “I’m going to be supervising everything, but mostly the food end. I want everything to be done the way I want it done.”

As for the cuisine, Clinton says they’re “kind of waiting” to decide what that will be. But, she says, “I’m always going to lean towards Southern ‘cause that’s just the cuisine I was raised into and the cuisine I always go back into.”

The catering side is called Black Sheep Catering. “I think people in the restaurant business are all kind of black sheep,” she says.

In a restaurant, it’s “kind of this culture” to just be an outcast, Clinton says. “Because we don’t sleep in late. We’re not trying to get up to go to work 9 to 5 and go home and have dinner. I think it’s just a personality trait. You can go with the grain or go against it.”

Some people view “black sheep” as a “bad term,” but Clinton says, “We’re using it as a good term. Something more elegant.”

Clinton, who is from Haiti, Missouri, says her grandmother was her cooking influence. “I grew up in a small town where my dad had a gas station. I was around a lot of ‘fried chicken gas station stuff.’ I started working there when I was 12. Just cooking fried chicken and making biscuits, biscuits and gravy, and stuff like that.”

She moved to Memphis to attend L’ecole Culinaire culinary school. “And that’s how I met Jimmy Gentry and Ben Smith and all the other great chefs that were there. Rick Farmer. And Ben Smith offered me a job [at Tsunami].”

She moved back home before officially moving to Memphis in 2013.  Her husband, Keith Clinton, is former chef de cuisine at Erling Jensen: The Restaurant. They have one child.

As for her new job, Clinton says, “I’m so excited. It’s going to be a lot to take on so I’m obviously nervous.”

But, she adds, “They say if you’re not nervous, your dreams aren’t big enough. So, I’m excited to do something new.”

To cater an event with Black Sheep Catering, call 901-402-4498.

Meredith Gardner Clinton. (Credit: Trey Easter)
Categories
News Blog News Feature

Memphis Covid-19 Cases Rise From Surge Low

Covid-19 cases are rising again in Shelby County, a trend emerging around the country and the world.

The seven-day rolling average of new cases fell to a Delta-surge record low of 73 on October 31st. That’s about 8.5 percent of the 860 average cases reported daily at the height of summer’s record-high Delta surge in late August. 

(Credit: Shelby County Health Department)

However, the average number of new cases has slowly increased since that low figure set on Halloween. The number was 101 per day a week ago, according to data from the Shelby County Health Department. The figure was 120 on Sunday and on Monday, according to the health department. 

(Credit: Tennessee Department of Health)

Plateaus and slight increases in case counts are being seen across Tennessee. The state hit a Delta-surge low of 548 cases on November 7th. The figure more than doubled to 1,213 on November 12th. That figure fell again to 743 on November 14th, according to data from the Tennessee department of Health. Numbers are plateauing or slightly increasing in every metro across the state.  

(Credit: Tennessee Department of Health)

The increases come as new laws forbid mask or vaccine mandates from some private businesses, schools, and government agencies. Those seeking exemptions form the law can apply at a brand new website from the Tennessee Comptroller’s Office. Gov. Bill Lee signed the legislation last week from a special session of the Tennessee General Assembly. However, a Middle Tennessee judge has temporarily blocked the law on concerns that it might violate the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). 

(Credit: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

The increases seen in Memphis and Tennessee mirror increases seen across the country, bottoming out in late October before starting a gentle rise. Dr. Anthony Fauci, White House chief medical advisor, noted upticks across the country but said there’s good news, and some “challenging news” may need to be addressed this winter. Though, he said vaccinated families should be comfortable gathering this holiday season. 

(Credit: Our World In Data)

The increases are happening around the world and some of them are bringing new mandates and lockdown measures in Germany, France, Austria, and more. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

The Grizzlies Snap Skid With 136-102 Victory Over Rockets

Memphis avoided a four-game losing streak on Monday night with a resounding victory over the Houston Rockets.

The Grizzlies’ defense had been shaky in their last three games, leading to losses by double digits.

Last season, the Grizzlies were known for their defensive prowess. They finished the season with the sixth-best defense in the league.

Fans were agitated following the three-game losing streak, and panic set in as if everything had fallen apart. In addition to those losses, the manner in which they lost was jarring and unsettling. 

The question is “Have they made a major shift in the right direction?” Winning masks a wide range of problems.

Defense Wins Games

“It was definitely a much-needed bounce back,” Taylor Jenkins said after snapping the three-game skid. “Obviously I’m really proud of how the guys came out with an edge in that first quarter, 20-point defensive quarter.”

Jenkins wasn’t too thrilled about giving up a ton of points to the lowly Rockets in the second period. He noted, “I got on them at halftime about giving up 36 points in the second quarter — there were too many breakdowns.” 

“We knew paint defense was a priority,” he added. “There were a lot of cutters, drives. Our one-on-one defense, our shifts weren’t there. I challenged them to re-find that edge.”

After halftime, his players responded to his call and gained a 40-point lead over the Rockets.

“They came out and it was a 15-point defensive quarter in that third quarter,” Jenkins continued. “Definitely a good bounce back, a mini step in the right direction for embracing our habits. Now we’ve got to get back to work tomorrow and the next two days before our next game.”

Triple J 🦄

On 7-of-14 shooting, Jaren Jackson Jr. scored 18 points, seven rebounds, two blocks, and two steals. Jackson rebounded from his four-point performance in the New Orleans Pelicans’ 112-101 loss on Saturday.

Jaren Jackson Jr. shot chart – 11/15/21 (via NBA.com)

His coach was impressed by Jackson’s performance. Jenkins said, “A lot of good work inside. I thought he [Jackson] found the right times to seek advantages with some of the small ball they were playing to post up. He shot the ball pretty good from the outside. Defensively, two blocks again. Rebounding, I thought he did a really good job with our pick-and-roll defense as well tonight. We didn’t change any coverages. The discipline to be in the right spots, to man the paint, man the rim, he did a really good job defensively.”

Energy and Effort

In his third game back from injury, Dillon Brooks had 16 points, three assists, and two steals on the night. 

Brooks delivered a strong message after the game about the team’s energy. He stated, “That should never die, the energy every single game, every single day, practice … your vitamins, your workouts. You should never lack energy. We’ve been together for so long that every game from now on we should have super energy to play, to prove something every time we come out there.”

The Grizzlies’ leading scorer had a productive and efficient night. Ja Morant netted 22 points (9-15 FG, 4-6 3P) with six rebounds and six assists in 25 minutes of action.

Brooks’ sentiments were echoed by Morant. “Just our energy and effort,” Morant said of the team’s defense. That was my message after the game — we got to play with that same energy and effort every game for a full 48 minutes.” 

Then he added, “I feel like tonight we had our brothers back. We didn’t leave anybody on the island. We had great run protection and rotations out of it. We just got to be like that, not saying we want to be in rotations all the time, but when we are, we got to make that run or whatever it is.”

Who Got Next?

Action speaks louder than words. Against the L.A. Clippers, Memphis has a chance to put the words into action on Thursday night. Memphis prevailed 120-114 in their first encounter on October 23rd.  Start time will be 7 p.m. CT at the FedExForum.

Categories
Music Music Blog

With a Single Guitar, Marc Ribot Levitates Crosstown Concourse

“Whew!” was the general response in the crowd as guitarist Marc Ribot sounded his last note of the night and disappeared backstage. Eyes wide with amazement, the audience seemed to be emerging from a roller coaster ride, and indeed they had, after a fashion. Ribot had just taken us on a mystery tour of his weathered Gibson acoustic (possibly a pre-War model) and every musical method he could muster to coax sound from it.

Most know the guitarist for his work as a session and side man with the likes of Tom Waits, Caetano Veloso, John Zorn, Jack McDuff, Wilson Pickett, The Lounge Lizards, Arto Lindsay, T-Bone Burnett, Medeski, Martin and Wood, Cibo Matto, Elvis Costello, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, Susana Baca, The Black Keys, Elton John, Madeleine Peyroux, Marianne Faithfull, Diana Krall, Allen Toussaint, and Robert Quine. But he’s led his own groups for over 30 years as well.

The music he played last Saturday in The Green Room was closest in spirit to the free jazz he typically creates with his group Ceramic Dog. But while that trio certainly casts a wide, anarchic net, the variety of music evoked at his most recent Memphis performance was even more inclusive. It ran like a dream one must have to fully process a day of travel, skipping from scene to scene, and in that sense, encompassed some very lyrical and folk passages that were downright traditional. Yet no style or melody was allowed to linger for long, as Ribot’s restless creativity soon replaced it with another musing.

From the start, the musical quotes seemed to fit Memphis, and perhaps the show really was Ribot’s way of processing his visit here. Opening with a quiet folk melody and chords reminiscent of “Shenandoah,” he quickly moved to more dissonant territory, while somehow still incorporating quotes from “Santa Claus is Coming to Town.”

One might consider him a master of the guitar, both acoustic and electric, but he speaks more of his limitations than his talents. As he told Guitar Player magazine in 1997, he’s been handicapped to a degree by having learned to play with his right hand, despite being left handed. “That’s a real limit, one that caused me a lot of grief when I was working with Jack McDuff and realizing I wasn’t following in George Benson’s footsteps. I couldn’t be a straight-ahead jazz contender if you held a gun to my head.”

Yet that same limitation has somehow caused Ribot to approach the guitar almost like a pianist. Multiple melodies wove around each other, as he sounded the low, middle, and high strings nearly independently, creating stunning counterpoint and chordal accompaniments.

At times, you’d hear echoes of other projects he’s led. After one far-ranging flurry of improvisation, he noted that parts of it referenced Marc Ribot Plays Solo Guitar Works of Frantz Casseus, a 1993 album of solo guitar works written by the Haitian-American composer. Other portions evoked his work with Los Cubanos Postizos, comprised of Cuban music, or other eclectic world music sources, including echoes of Bahamian folk singer Joseph Spence.

Other portions were more closely related to John Cage’s music for cacti or other such “outside of the box” works, as when he simply drummed on the guitar body or frailed the fret board with rhythmic abandon. The audience remained galvanized, The Green Room being a perfect venue for those who show up to listen deeply.

Memphis seemed to creep into the journey more directly as well, including bluesy quotes (a snatch of “Blue Monk”?) that would have felt at home on Beale Street, or passages that alluded to standards like “Come Rain or Come Shine.” But Memphis also cropped up in the few sparse comments he made between performances. “Thank you,” he said. “I’m very glad to be back in Memphis. This very room was the last gig I did before the shutdown almost two years ago. So I’m glad to be here. In fact, I’m glad to be anywhere.” Judging from the roaring applause that brought him out for an encore, Memphis music fans were glad as well.

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We Saw You: Josh Cosby at Crafts & Drafts

Josh Cosby took a spin on his bike to Crosstown Concourse to check out Crafts & Drafts, the Memphis Flyer’s Fall gathering that features brews, arts and crafts, and food trucks.

The Star & Micey singer, who released a music video today (November 15th), was impressed with the event held Saturday, November 13th.

“First off, I just happened upon it,” Cosby says. “I didn’t know what was planned. And I was blown away by the artists, all the people with their crafts. They had so much amazing stuff. I wanted to spend a lot of money there, but I don’t have any. I’m an artist. I’m broke, too.

“And I loved the beer. It was amazing. You get a little buzz. You loosen up. It was good to run into a lot of people from the community that I knew there. A lot of folks from the scene were around there, which is nice.”

Cosby released his music video for his solo project.

“It’s called ‘Black Bettie.’ It was filmed in a 100-year-old church building. On the fourth floor. With asbestos and lead peeling off the wall. In Memphis.

“‘Black Bettie’ is named after my 17-year-old dog that passed away. It’s just an outlet for me to release songs that are kind of from my heart that you can’t fit into the band. Star & Micey is a little more upbeat. Friends and family. These are songs straight from my heart that might be kind of sad. It’s an outlet for me to let go of personal stuff.”

Star & Micey is still around, but, Cosby says, “We don’t do much because we’re all so old and it’s hard for us to get together.”

He released his EP solo project, Black Bettie, last year. “Lately, I’ve just been doing singles. And I’ll put a video to the single. This is the second single in a series.”

To watch “Black Bettie,” click here:https://youtu.be/P_g9EaDsgyQ

Among the folks at Crafts & Drafts:

Kristen Fisher, Shea Kissell, Amie Eoff, Ryan Azada ,and Maria Applegate at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ali and Aliyana Muhammad with Delilah at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
The Keith and Meredith Clinton family at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Samuel X. Cicci and Bruce VanWyngarden at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Matt Badalucco and DaMon Smith at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Justin Tilley and October Summerfield at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Derek Hardaway, Tyrell Bradley, and Ivy Hardaway at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Mary Moss VanWyngarden at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
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The 20 < 30 Class of 2022

The Memphis Flyer is seeking nominations for candidates for our 12th class of 20<30 — the class of 2022.

Simply put, we’re looking to find and honor 20 of the city’s best and brightest young people. Candidates must be no older than 29 on January 1, 2022. Send a brief bio/summary of the nominee’s work and activities and a photo to Jesse Davis at jesse@memphisflyer.com. Use “20<30 Nomination” in your subject header. Deadline for nominations is December 15, 2021.