Categories
Film Features Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: “Wolves I Have Known” by TVYellow

Music Video Monday will get you moving!

Today’s MVM is by a relavtively new band called TVYellow. Drummer Luke Stubblefield, guitarist Sal Sanchez, formerly of 7$Sox, were joined by Billy Ray Thomas on bass, Noel Clark on guitar, and vocalist Crockett Hall, played a single show before the pandemic shut down live music. They spent their time finishing an album, and released Worst Invention in September 2020. They immediately returned to Young Avenue Sound with Brass Tacks Audio’s Matt Qualls behind the controls. It was, Clark says, “ … a practice in focus on the creative process rather than on uncontrollable circumstances.”

Clark says “Wolves I Have Known” is meant to “capture the energy and excitement of roaring guitars and pounding drums in a tight venue. The single is proof that high energy live performances will live on in Memphis, in person and on records, whatever the circumstances.”

The music video was created by Stubblefield using the low-budget filmmaker’s best friend: public domain footage. In this case, it’s animation from the silent era, with a little extra 21st century razzmatazz. Watch for TVYellow’s return to the stage at the Lamplighter on November 27.

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Missing Pieces and Empty Seats

The Memphis Tigers played East Carolina last Saturday with a one-dimensional offense and no kicking game. Their loss to the Pirates isn’t a surprise. How close they came to winning — under two scenarios — is the game’s remarkable footnote. Had David Kemp not missed a second-quarter extra point, the score at the end of regulation may have been 24-23, Memphis. (Yes, ECU’s strategy would have changed, but this is hypothetical, so play along.) Had the Tigers converted the two-point attempt after their touchdown in overtime, the final score would have been 31-30, Memphis. (No hypothetical stretch here.) Alas, a kick was missed, Seth Henigan’s final pass fell incomplete, and the Tigers will travel to 17th-ranked Houston with a 5-5 record, a win shy of bowl eligibility with two games to play.

Memphis coach Ryan Silverfield acknowledged “flashbacks to the missed extra point” in deciding to go for two points — win or lose — in overtime. He also conceded the Tigers’ ineptitude on the ground made limiting possessions in OT a priority. Silverfield, without saying as much, didn’t think his team could win by alternating short-field attacks with the Pirates. It’s a dreadful place to find a program that so recently counted its offense among the top 10 or 12 in the country.

Why can’t the Tigers run the football? Brandon Thomas returned to action Saturday but was not a factor (eight yards on four carries). Dreke Clark had one 20-yard dash, but otherwise gained 10 yards on three carries. Quarterback Seth Henigan led the Tigers in rushing (61 yards), most of his gains coming on the impressive (and desperate) drive to tie the game in the last two minutes of regulation. Memphis has a veteran offensive line, guard Dylan Parham leading the way with 49 career starts. But over the course of ten games now, this personnel simply isn’t good enough to impact the Tigers’ attack. And it makes an opposing defensive coordinator’s job much too simple: pressure Henigan and drape the Tiger receivers with coverage. Until Silverfield — a former offensive line coach, remember — finds or builds a running game, mediocrity is the bar for Memphis football.

• For the second straight week, the Tiger defense made enough big plays to win most games. Memphis sacked ECU quarterback Holton Ahlers six times and accumulated ten tackles behind the line of scrimmage. Jacobi Francis had a pair of interceptions, one in the Tigers’ end zone. Quindell Johnson made a touchdown-saving tackle right before Francis’s second pick. All of which made the Pirates’ seven-minute drive (16 plays!) in the fourth quarter to take the lead excruciating to watch. For the third time this season, Memphis lost a game it led in the second half, the most painful variety of defeat. The Pirate offense maintained possession a remarkable 42 minutes (out of 60 in regulation). That Tiger defense we saw in the fourth quarter was tired. And this brings us back to the Memphis running game, the most effective clock-eating tool in football. Its absence hurts, even when the Tigers don’t have the ball.

• The Liberty Bowl — or whatever we now call the stadium at the Mid-South Fairgrounds — remains too large for University of Memphis football. Last Saturday was a glorious one for a ball game. On the chilly side (upper 40s), but the crowd was bathed in sunshine for three hours. That crowd numbered 28,431, meaning there were nearly 30,000 empty seats for a significant game against East Carolina. It’s disheartening, largely because the fans who do show up make a difference. There’s passion in the crowd, football smarts, generations of loyalty. But surrounded by entire sections of emptiness. (2021 disclaimer: Yes, a pandemic lingers, and this certainly has something to do with reduced attendance. But not enough for 30,000 empty seats. There was virtually no student tailgating before Saturday’s game.)

The stadium can be filled, but planets must align as they did on November 2, 2019, when 58,325 packed the Liberty Bowl to culminate the day ESPN’s GameDay crew came to town to see the Tigers play SMU in a battle of ranked teams. When Mississippi State came to play two months ago (the Bulldogs’ first visit in ten years) 43,461 fans saw a thrilling game. It was great atmosphere for such an early-season contest . . . with more than 10,000 empty seats. I can be persuaded either way in the debate over an on-campus stadium for the Tigers. But whether on-campus or elsewhere, the Tigers need to play in a new, smaller facility. “Less is more” would do wonders toward the Memphis football program becoming fully what it might and should be.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Suns Scorch Grizzlies, 119-94

Tidbits from the Grizzlies’ 119-94 loss to the Suns. 

There’s a bit of a Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde vibe going on in Memphis. The Grizzlies haven’t decided what type of team they want to be yet.

The Suns took a commanding lead from start to finish and were up by as many as 38 points.

Phoenix shot 48.9 percent from the field and 48.6 percent at the three-point line, while Memphis was 37.8 percent from the field and 21.2 percent at the three-point line. A season-high 18 3-pointers were made by the Suns in this game.

In the last four games, the Grizzlies have given up more than 115 points.

After the loss, Taylor Jenkins didn’t hold back. He said, “I’d just say we’ve got two versions of the Grizzlies: the six wins, we play disciplined basketball, we make shots, we do what we need to do defensively, and then outside of the Lakers game, the ones where we’ve gotten smacked, our defense hasn’t been disciplined and we’ve missed a lot of shots. You’re not going to win games when you shoot 38 percent and 21 percent [from the 3-point line].”

“I’m not going to use youth as an excuse or anything like that,” Jenkins continued. “It’s just a matter of just finding consistency and just going out there and just playing better.”

For the time being, Ja Morant appears to be the only consistent Grizzlies player. He finished the game with 26 points, 12 rebounds, and six assists as the Grizzlies fell to 6-6 for the season. 

When he’s on the bench, it seems like everything goes downhill.

Just two points were scored by the bench in the first half. Nine shots were attempted, but only one was successful. The Phoenix bench outscored the Grizzlies bench 48-32, including a 33-7 advantage in the first three quarters.

However, Morant has a solution for the team’s problems. “Play harder, for 48 minutes,” he re-enforced. “Games we won, it is that simple, ready to play to the end, all four quarters.”

In addition to Morant, Jaren Jackson, Jr. was the only other Memphis player to score in double digits. Jackson tallied 19 points, four rebounds, and two blocks on 7-of-18 shooting from the field.

Two-year guard Desmond Bane shared his thoughts on what it takes for the team to get back on track. He said, “A strong defensive effort. I think we need to get back to enjoying playing defense and flying around for 48 minutes. I feel like our defense has let us down in the games we lose. We are better when we get out in transition, and are able to run, play at a faster pace. We have not been able to do that, because teams are scoring at a high rate.”

Bane continued, “It goes back to defense. We are not being consistent guarding, and we dig ourselves a hole. It’s tough to climb out [of]. We have had a tough start to the season, played a bunch of good teams. Almost all of our losses will probably be to playoff teams this year, or last year. We just have to bounce back, but we have a resilient group, so I think we will be fine.”

He went on to say, “It is a lack of discipline. It showed in the games we have lost. Whether it has been coverages, schemes, or game plan. When we are not making shots on the offense end, those things usually start to magnify.”

Bane scored nine points, grabbed eight rebounds, and blocked two shots.

The time has come for the group to step it up a notch. As a result, a faster start is required. In many cases, they often fall behind early and have to fight their way back. However, they’ve got another 70 games to work through it. Hopefully they’ll figure it out sooner rather than later.

Up Next

Even if things go south, there’s always hope for a turnaround in the NBA. The Grizzlies and Pelicans meet tonight at 6 p.m. CT in New Orleans for an early tip-off. The Grizzlies will face Jonas Valanciunas for the first time since he was traded to New Orleans. Valanciunas spent three seasons in Memphis.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Play Nice: Louise Page Releases Solo Album

Memphis-based singer/songwriter/pianist Louise Page is set to release her first solo album, Play Nice, this Saturday with a sold-out concert at Mollie Fontaine Lounge. 

Since her debut with 2017’s Salt Mosaic, Page has charted her own path, crafting a unique chamber-pop sound over the course of her successive releases. She’s been a frequent star of the Flyer’s “Music Video Monday” series, and along with her band — complete with horn players, a violinist, and others — is a fixture of Memphis’ musical nightlife. So her absence has been felt keenly in the past 20 or so months of the necessarily pandemic-restricted live music landscape, making the release of her new album, recorded with engineer Calvin Lauber at Young Avenue Sound, a balm for fans who have missed her wit, piano prowess, and ethos of radical empathy.

In advance of Page’s album-release concert, I spoke with her about settling in to record a solo album, knuckle tats, overwork, grief and the healing process, and the importance of learning to play nice.

Louise Page’s new album, Play Nice, shows off the singer’s more introspective side.

Memphis Flyer: Tell me about the title of the album. I’m sure “Play Nice” isn’t just a reference to your piano playing. 

Louise Page: Definitely I wanted the first connotation to be piano playing, especially considering this is my first solo album without a band and it is therefore very piano heavy. “Play Nice” is pulled out of the lyrics of my song “Treatment” — which was released on my 2019 album Silver Daughter, and is on this album in a fresh solo form. The lyric is “Most people are broken or breaking so try to play nice.” So it’s a reference to moving through the world with kindness, a reference to my piano playing, and a reference to the song “Treatment” which is all about healing. Also, if I were to ever get knuckle tats, they would say “PLAY NICE.” That is probably never gonna happen, so I’ll use it for an album title instead.

What made you want to record a solo album? 
There were several reasons, some artistic and some practical. I wrote all of these songs in my bedroom in the breadbox tiny one-bedroom Midtown apartment I lived in at the beginning of the pandemic, mostly in April and May. They are solitary songs, they are very personal, and they were written to be solo tunes — just me and the piano. The past two albums I released, Simple Sugar and Silver Daughter, were both written with both my band and my audience in mind. I intentionally made those albums full of songs that would be fun to dance to, fun to add horns and strings and percussion to, fun to play to a crowd. These songs were a little different — I didn’t necessarily write them thinking about playing to a big crowd. I felt so removed from crowds and parties and shows when I wrote them. I wrote these by myself, in quiet introspective moments, and they are intended to be listened to by oneself in quiet introspective moments. I think the ideal listening experience for this album would be in a bubble bath by yourself with a glass of wine, or a cup of tea, or a joint, and nothing but time.

The pandemic also created practical reasons for recording a solo album — for starters, recording is really expensive, and the more moving parts you add the more expensive it ends up being. The solo album was far more in my budget with all the work and money I lost in 2020. It also just felt a lot safer, in 2020, to get into the studio with just one other person instead of a whole crew. Shoutout to Calvin Lauber for recording this with me, I can’t thank you enough for your support.

The final reason it was important for me to record a solo album is because genuinely about half the shows I play are solo shows, and I wanted some recorded streamable discography that reflected that facet of my work. 

Playing with a band helps fill in the gaps in a song. Did it make you nervous to put yourself out there so much? 
Yes! Very nervous, I am so nervous about this album honestly. I recorded it almost a year ago and sat on it for this long because I was afraid to release it. I struggle with depression, and for a lot of 2021 I kind of had these songs shelved away, because I was overwhelmed at the prospect of offering my little pandemic brainchildren up to the rest of the world for consumption and critique. It felt scary. But I have moved past that fear.  I love the songs, and they are special to me, and at the end of the day that’s what’s important. But I do hope someone else will love them and find them special too. Sharing my music and connecting with others is part of what makes music so special to me.

Are there any songs that feel like stand-outs to you? Or that you’re particularly excited for people to hear? 
Honestly all the new stuff, I’m really excited and proud of it. “Plastic Crowns” is a really different track for me and it opens the album. I wanted it to be hypnotic, and kind of put the listener into a trance that would set the tone for the rest of the album. Very fond of that song. I am also personally very fond of “Little Icarus,” which explores relationships, trust issues, the unintended ways we isolate ourselves from or hurt the ones we love, and the connection between love and pain.

What should fans expect from the album release show? 
I wanted the release show to reflect the intimacy of the album. It will be very beautiful. I am so happy to be playing at Mollie Fontaine Lounge, which is a stunning venue with a gorgeous baby grand piano. I am going to play through my album, as well as some other new unreleased and unrecorded material. After I perform, DJ Chandler Blingg will spin a fun dancey DJ set and we will all celebrate! There will also be exclusive event merch available. I am so honored to say this show has sold out, which is amazing, so it seems like there is some good positive energy and enthusiasm brewing already.

Every story is a pandemic story these days. What have the last 20 or so months been like for you? It seems like every time I look, you’re in a music video or on tour or releasing an album or single — was it hard to slow down? 
That is genuinely so sweet of you to say because from my end it has not felt that way [laughs]. I have tried my best. I learned some big lessons with the pandemic — pre-pandemic I was without a doubt a workaholic. So losing so many shows and gigs and opportunities was honestly devastating for me. I felt like I had worked so hard for so long to gain a little bit of momentum, and then out of nowhere it was taken from me. I spent large swaths of 2020 incredibly depressed and living on my couch watching TV. There are probably months where that’s all I did. I was afraid, I missed my immediate family who lived together in Pennsylvania, and I was questioning my career choice. I mourned, absolutely mourned not being able to play live in-person shows, which is my passion in this life and my absolute favorite thing to do. So yes, it was hard to slow down. But once I was slowed down and depressed, it felt hard to do anything. So I guess I’m happy that from the outside looking in it seemed like I got a lot done, because it didn’t feel that way to me! [laughs] My mental health has been steadily improving this year, thankfully. And one thing I did take from the pandemic was that I was overworking myself in 2018 and 2019, and I need to slow down. I’m my own boss, and I am allowed to give myself days off!

Would you talk a little bit about your single “In Lieu of Flowers”? I know it’s been out for a while, but I love it. 
Thank you so much! “In Lieu of Flowers” is actually not on this album — it’s a stand alone single — but I may include it as a bonus track on the CD. “In Lieu of Flowers” is incredibly personal to me. In 2013 a dear friend of mine passed away from a heroin overdose. I was a sophomore in college, and absolutely devastated. I’m honestly still absolutely devastated. I, and several of his friends, read short eulogies at his funeral. And I just remember thinking — there is nothing I can write or do or say in this moment that could ever convey the horror and tragedy of losing this bright young wonderful person who should still be with us. Who am I to look into the faces of his family and say anything? It was genuinely one of the saddest things I’ve ever been through. It took me seven years to write a song about it because I wasn’t ready. We recorded “In Lieu of Flowers” in January of 2020, and I sat on it until December. I released it on New Year’s Eve because I promised myself I would release it in 2020. Much like “Play Nice” — I sat on “In Lieu of Flowers” for almost a year because it was just so personal, I was petrified at the thought of it not belonging to me alone anymore. I also really care about my friend and his family, and I in no way wanted anything about the song to come off as disrespectful, so I really agonized over releasing it at all, honestly. But ultimately I’m glad I did. In short, the song is about grief. And my friend, Knight, was an amazing bass player — the beautiful bass solo by Gunter Gaupp is an homage to that. I really do feel like Knight was with me when I wrote that song, his spirit is in it, and all the love in my heart for him is in it, and I hope he would like it.

Is there anything on the horizon you can talk about? 
After this release I am chillin’ with my family for the holidays! Excited to slow down, although I do have a full band album cooking in my brain that I would love to record and release in 2022. I will be playing a song off of that future release at the album release tomorrow, as a treat. I also recorded an electronic dreamy song, different from much of my work, with my friend Blair Davis at Young Avenue Sound earlier this year. It’s called “Sunday Forever” and we are tentatively planning to release it in December. I’m excited to share that with everyone.

Is there anything else you would like people to know? 
Most people are broken or breaking so try to play nice.

Louise Page (Credit: Cameron Mitchell)
Categories
Art Art Feature

Artist Yvonne Bobo Wins $10,000 Emmett Award

Yvonne Bobo has been named recipient of the Emmett O’Ryan Award for Artistic Inspiration, known as “The Emmett.”

The Emmett is awarded annually by Renasant Bank to a distinguished visual artist in Shelby County. This is the 10th year of this award, which now carries a $10,000 prize — the largest unrestricted cash award given to a visual artist in Shelby County. It is named in honor of Emmett O’Ryan, a founding board member of Metropolitan Bank, which merged with Renasant in 2017. Since the award’s inception, the award amount has increased, resulting in more than $60,000 granted to individual artists.

Bobo is a sculptor, metal fabricator, designer, and engineer. The announcement from ArtsMemphis says that although metal is her primary medium, her passion lies in mixed media combining glass, steel, wood, lighting, plastics, and more. “Yvonne’s art focuses on the interaction between invention and nature. Her wind-activated art captures the playful character of a breeze and creates a constantly changing experience for the viewer.”

Bobo’s work is in Memphis public spaces, including Peabody Park, Overton Park, Overton Square, Southside Park, and Raleigh Springs Town Center. It’s also in Cancer Survivors Park, West Cancer Clinic, Methodist Transplant at Shorb Tower, and LeBonheur Children’s Hospital.

Nominees for The Emmett are selected by a committee of artists, curators, and ArtsMemphis volunteers, including Ruthie O’Ryan Lichterman, daughter of the award’s namesake. Finalists for this year’s award included visual artists Coriana Close and Erin Harmon.

“We’re so grateful for Renasant’s continued contributions to our arts sector, especially through this generous award,” said ArtsMemphis president and CEO Elizabeth Rouse. “The vision for this award
inspired ArtsMemphis’ individual artist grant program, ArtsAccelerator. Together, these programs have provided $225,000 in funding to local artists.”

Images of Bobo’s work throughout Memphis are on display at the Renasant Convention Center.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Harold Ford Sr. is Back on the Case

Time was, when the presence of Harold Ford Sr. was inescapable during an election year. That was during the 20-plus years when Ford, serving as Congressman from Memphis’ 9th District and as the city’s acknowledged political broker-in-chief, would put out a slate of recommended candidates, and woe be to those who weren’t on it, at least in the core precincts of Memphis

Ford was ultimately succeeded in office by his son, and Harold Ford Jr., who focused more on his national ambitions, didn’t pay the same heed to local political matters. The concept of the “Ford Ballot” increasingly became a non-factor at election time.

The senior Ford retired to Florida and used his influence on Memphis and Shelby County elections on a more or less ad hoc basis through the years. This remained the case even when Ford, who always found time to come back to Memphis on as as-needed basis, opened a plush, new, hypermodern funeral home on Sycamore Grove.

Well, the 2022 election season beckons, and Harold Ford Sr. has given indication that, in one form or another, he’ll be heard from in something like the old way. 

When Memphis Democrats gathered for a pre-election forum at the Great Hall of Germantown on Wednesday night, and Memphis Councilman JB Smiley took his turn at the dais, Smiley spent much of his time talking about a lengthy conversation he had just had with Ford, and dilated at length on the political advice offered by the latter.

Ford is doing more than offering his advice. He turned up Thursday night for  a rooftop fund-raiser and announcement event at the Memphian Hotel at Overton Square for County Commissioner Reginald Milton’s intended campaign for Juvenile Court Clerk.

Ford was there as a principal endorser and sponsor of Milton, and he was joined in that role by Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, giving Milton’s kickoff a bit of extra adrenaline. (The Ford-Strickland duo was also a feature of the brief local Bloomberg-for-President campaign in 2020.)

In previous campaigns, Milton, who is term-limited and cannot run for reelection to the commission, has had premium sponsorships and no doubt will earn more before the campaign is over, but, being bracketed by Strickland and Ford was surely not a bad way to begin. 

And that event, coupled with Smiley’s earlier remarks, gave fair notice that Harold Ford Sr. might not be finished with lending his political influence and advice for the coming season. Stay tuned.

Categories
News News Blog

TN AG: Time Has Run Out for Ban on Abortion Law

Tennessee’s 48-hour waiting period for abortions is now an unquestioned law, said the Tennessee Attorney General, as “the legal battle is over.”

Tennessee AG Herbert Slatery said Friday the window of opportunity for a review of the law by the U.S. Supreme Court has closed. The 48-hour waiting period for an abortion “is no longer subject to question,” he said.  

The law passed the Tennessee General Assembly in 2015. Later, a district court agreed with abortion providers that the law violated a woman’s right to have an abortion. The ruling stopped officials here from enforcing the law. 

State officials appealed the ruling to the full sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. That court reversed the lower-court judgment saying the law “is not a substantial obstacle to abortion for a large fraction of women seeking pre-viability abortions in Tennessee.” 

“This law was on the books for five years before the district court enjoined it,” Slatery said in a statement. “The Sixth Circuit took the unusual step of having the full court review the district court decision and that of its own panel.

“We are grateful that the court recognized the validity of a law passed by the people’s representatives and did not substitute its own judgment for the policy decision made by the legislature and the governor.” 

Categories
News News Blog

Groups Criticize TVA for Lack of Transparency, Engagement

Two groups urged the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) for more transparency and more public input this week, reminding that the power giant is a public agency. 

In a letter, the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC) objected to TVA’s “effort to evade meaningful public engagement” around its decisions on where to store coal ash from the former Allen Fossil Plant. Protestors locked arms in Knoxville this week, demanding TVA “immediately resume public listening sessions” at board meetings, which were suspended on Covid-19 concerns.

Toxic coal ash ponds at the former Allen Fossil Plant near Presidents Island threaten the Memphis Sand Aquifer, the area’s source of its famously pure drinking water. TVA has agreed to remove the ash from the site. 

But SELC attorneys say the process of finding a location to dump the ash has not been transparent and the utility has not engaged well with neighbors who may be affected by the selection. The group watches these decisions closely and said it was surprised in late July to find that a dump site — the South Shelby Landfill — had been selected and that construction of a new landfill for the project had been completed already “without ever having disclosed its selection of this specific landfill.” 

The SELC is now asking TVA for an additional review of the project. It says TVA did not adequately seek out other sites for the ash. TVA also ”violated federal regulations by depriving communities in South Memphis the opportunity to provide input on the disposal plan.” That plan will run trucks from the Allen site across several South Memphis neighborhood to the landfill (close to the corner of Holmes and Malone).

“TVA’s decision will impose nearly a decade of additional traffic, noise, air pollution, and public safety impacts on predominantly Black, low-wealth communities in South Memphis that already bear more than their fair share of environmental burdens — including the cumulative burdens associated with sixty years of TVA’s burning of coal at the Allen Coal Plant and TVA’s ongoing operation of the Allen Combined Cycle Plant,” reads the SELC letter.  

Earlier this week, protestors gathered in Knoxville with a demonstration called “Locked Out, Locked Arms,” seeking access to TVA board meeting. 

The meetings have been mostly virtual through much of the pandemic, but some board members are gathering in person once again. However, the board has not resumed public listening sessions at meetings.    

“Unlike legislative bodies and government agencies across the country that have adapted and adopted virtual participation and public comment in response to Covid-19, TVA’s board has not held any public listening sessions since it shifted to virtual board meetings in May 2020,” reads a statement from the Tennessee Valley Energy Democracy Movement, a collaboration of environmental groups throughout TVA’s service area. 

The protestors also displayed a paper chain made with a selection of 4,000 comments submitted by members of the public on subjects ranging from climate change to transparency. 

“I am requesting public listening sessions,” wrote Trish Marshall of Nashville. “No ‘backroom’ decisions made in secret. TVA is a public entity!  Enough of the ‘covertness’ more transparency!”

A TVA official did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Categories
News News Blog

Work Begins on Highland Strip Walkability Upgrades

The Highland Strip is getting a pedestrian-friendly facelift as work began last week on a $6 million project from Midland to Southern.  

The project will calm traffic along the strip, aiming to improve safety for all, especially pedestrians. Improvements will include a raised traffic table at the intersection of Midland and Highland. The device raises the entire wheelbase of a vehicle to reduce its traffic speed. A new mast arm traffic signal will direct traffic at the intersection. 

The project will bring two new signalized crosswalks on Highland, as well. It also includes raised medians with plantings, new street trees, new sidewalks, and landscaping along both the east and west sides of the roadway, asphalt paving, and new streetlights.

“This project will be totally transformational for the Highland Strip and the surrounding neighborhoods, creating a much safer, walkable, and enjoyable environment,” said Cody Fletcher, executive director of the University Neighborhoods Development Corporation (UNDC). “We expect these improvements will help transform the area from its current use as a high-speed cut-through artery to a more pedestrian-friendly and neighborhood-centric atmosphere.”

UNDC and MFA, the project manager, funded the project with proceeds from the Highland Revitalization Tax Increment Financing (TIF) program, with financing provided by FirstBanks. 

Categories
Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, November 11-17

The live-stream game is strong in this city, and the coming week is no exception. In a follow up to our October music feature on her, Alicja-Pop will be playing a record release show at B-Side Memphis. Her posts note that she will play at 9 p.m. sharp, and San Salida will follow. This will feature the rocking band that helped Trout kick off Gonerfest, noted in our blog from Gonerfest 18: Thursday.

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, November 11
8 p.m.
Flying Buffaloes and Wyly Bigger — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

9 p.m.
Devil Train — B-Side Memphis
Facebook YouTube Twitch TV

10 p.m.
Velvetina’s Harvest Moon Revue — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Friday, November 12
8 p.m.
Dale Watson & the Memphians
— Friendsgiving at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

9 p.m.
Alicja-Pop and San Salida — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Saturday, November 13
8 p.m.
Dirty Streets and Ben Abney & the Hurts — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Sunday, November 14
2 p.m.
Dale Watson —Chicken $#!+ Bingo at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

6 p.m.
Jazz Jam — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

8 p.m.
Michigan Rattlers — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

10 p.m.
Richard & Anne — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Monday, November 15
10 p.m.
Evil Rain — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Tuesday, November 16
10 p.m.
Brian Sharpe — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV


Wednesday, November 17
5:30 p.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

7 p.m.
Elevation — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website