Categories
Music Music Blog

Peabody Records Flies Again

As anyone reading this week’s music feature about MEM_MODS might have gathered, Peabody Records, the boutique imprint label founded in 1976 by the late singer/songwriter Sid Selvidge, is once again releasing albums after a decades-long hibernation. Naturally, this revival is being guided by Sid’s son, Steve Selvidge, the guitarist extraordinaire best known for his work with The Hold Steady and, more locally, Sons of Mudboy and Big Ass Truck.

Recently, the Memphis Flyer and the younger Selvidge took a deep dive into the ongoing vinyl revival during a 2022 interview centered on the vagaries of the small label game. Peabody has always been the epitome of the Memphis specialty record company, offering but a few releases that nonetheless had a global impact in their day. In that sense, the humble label that Sid Selvidge launched 47 years ago, with it’s oddball duck logo reinforcing the “Peabody” connection (and echoing the classic Bluebird Records label of the 1930s), is the grandfather of today’s many independent imprints like Goner, Black & Wyatt, Blast Habit, Back to the Light, and others.

“Peabody was always a bespoke, curated label,” says Steve Selvidge. “A ‘we’re not going to worry about what you look like or how many units you’re going to shift’ kind of thing. It was just what piqued my dad’s interest.”

That philosophy led Peabody to release some very unconventional material indeed, most famously Alex Chilton’s trash-rock masterpiece Like Flies on Sherbert. During the label’s ten year heyday on vinyl, other releases included Sid Selvidge’s The Cold Of The Morning, Waiting On A Train, and Live LPs, Crawpatch’s Trailer Park Weekend, Cybill Shepherd’s Vanilla, and Paul Craft Warnings! by — you guessed it — Paul Craft.

And there’s one album that the younger Selvidge is particularly proud of: “Peabody had the first vinyl release of Christopher Idylls by Gimmer Nicholson. Well before Light in the Attic or anyone else put anything out. My understanding was that Terry [Manning] and Gimmer cut that stuff in the ’60s, and it never found a home. So when my dad was up and rolling with Peabody, he was like, ‘Well, I’ve got the machine in place. I’ll put it out.'”

Later, Steve Selvidge-related projects like Big Ass Truck and Secret Service were released on CD, as were reissues of Like Flies on Sherbert. But MEM_MODS Vol. 1 marks the label’s first vinyl product since 1986. And, according to Selvidge, the two projects — the label and the ad hoc band — went hand in hand.

After he’d mixed tracks that he’d recorded during quarantine with Luther Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars) and Paul Taylor (New Memphis Colorways), Selvidge says “we realized, ‘We’ve got a record!’ And we were very enthusiastic about it. But trying to see who could put it out became an endless conversation that was going nowhere, until I finally said, ‘You know what? I’ll just end this conversation and put it out. I’ll take it from here.'”

Getting back to the nuts and bolts of vinyl production and distribution came naturally. “It turns out, I do know some things,” says Selvidge, “and I’ve got the stuff together. We didn’t spend any money on the recording; we just did it ourselves. And once I had a project to do, that got the ball rolling with Peabody. Before that, I was always like, ‘Man, I should do that.’ Getting started was the hardest part; the inertia was so great. But the enthusiasm for MEM_MODS became a catalyst to get the whole label moving, finally. I was intrigued by the idea of, rather than saying, ‘Hey, I started up the label, here’s my dad’s records!’ saying instead, ‘Hey, we’re coming back with something new.'”

Now that the ball is rolling, or the duck is flying, as the case may be, look for reissues from deep within the Peabody catalog, and what Selvidge calls “other projects that I’ve been putting off.” Given his famously far-flung collaborations, those projects could be very interesting indeed.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Oxford Film Festival Celebrates 20th Anniversary

Matt Wymer’s first year as executive director of the Oxford Film Festival is a special milestone for the organization. “This is our 20th Anniversary edition and we’re celebrating the audiences that allowed the Oxford Film Festival to inspire and entertain our community for the past two decades. To show our appreciation, we are providing more free screenings, more panels, and bigger parties than ever before.”

This year’s festival includes 15 narrative and 18 documentary feature films, 93 shorts, and 18 music videos. The opening night feature is Little Richard: I Am Everything, Lisa Cortes’ portrait of the R&B iconoclast. This film is so new it doesn’t have a trailer yet, but here’s the director talking about tackling the story of an often misunderstood musical genius.

In a festival year with history on its mind, OFF goes way back into the archives. The first film shot in Mississippi is believed to be The Crisis from 1916. It’s the story of an ill-fated love triangle between a St. Louis lawyer-turned-Union officer, a Southern belle, and her Confederate fiancé. The Mississippi Film Commission is sponsoring the screening as part of their own 50th anniversary celebration.

The Crisis

Oxford’s most famous native is brought to life by the present day Mississippi production William Faulkner: The Past Is Never Dead by director Michael Modak-Truran.

The closing night feature is The Banality, a Southern Gothic tale of recurring nightmares, small town eccentricities, and murder.

You can buy tickets and passes, and get more information about all the festival screenings and events, at the Oxford Film Festival website.

Categories
News News Blog

U Of M Partners With Bank of America For Career Fellows Program

The University of Memphis’ Fogelman College of Business and Economics has partnered with Bank of America to launch the FCBE Career Fellows Program.

According to a statement released by the University of Memphis, the purpose of this program is to “engage, educate and effectively prepare African American students for professional success.”

According to Marja Martin-Carruth, director of the Avron B. Fogelman Center for Complete Professional Development at the University of Memphis, this partnership came about over a year ago.

“In a general sense, Bank of America was looking for ways to basically focus on their economic mobility,” said Martin-Carruth. “With their economic mobility, and aligning it with some of their college initiatives, they were looking to partner with a business school, specifically Fogelman, and hone in on some of the resources and programs that we currently have in place.”

“Career opportunities are a critical pillar in addressing the racial equality gap in our country,” said Trevia Chatman, president of Bank of America Memphis, in a statement. “In partnership with the U of M, the FCBE Career Fellows Program is designed to further equip Black/African American undergraduate business students with career development support and guidance to help ensure their success and position them for career advancement.”

The program is designed for African-American juniors, and it focuses on a group of students who may be looking for guidance, additional resources, help in connecting the dots to career readiness, internships, and preparing for their future career goals. 

“Oftentimes, what we’ve seen over the last couple of years, even after the pandemic, students are having to juggle, or balance between ‘am I going to go to my part-time job so maybe I can make ends meet, or am I going to take advantage of this internship opportunity,’” said Martin-Carruth. She added that students may also not know what options are available to them, but there are a number of resources available at Fogelman that are designed to equip students for success.

The program hopes to show students that they can still have an internship that gives them the same financial stability as a part-time job, while also providing guidance from mentors and showing them how to take advantage of their resources.

“Some students just don’t take advantage of those resources, or know how to access them,” said Martin-Carruth. “With this program and with us kind of customizing a professional development plan with each of the fellows, we’re able to work with them specifically with their major, what their career/internship interests are, align some of our resources with what their ultimate goals are to give them that extra nudge that they need to make sure they have everything aligned.”

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Crush Lakers Behind Historic Night From Morant

Tuesday night, the Memphis Grizzlies went on national television and embarrassed Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers. LeBron James watched from the bench as Ja Morant and company put on a masterclass in the second half, setting a few records while coming away with the 121-109 victory.  

Let’s get into it.  

The first half was pretty forgettable, and Memphis trailed by 3 at halftime, with several Grizzlies struggling to make shots. Ja Morant went 3 for 14 in the first half, and Jaren Jackson Jr. and Dillon Brooks shot 1 of 5 and 1 of 8, respectively.  

It was in the second half that this team really came to life on the strength of a record-setting 47-point third quarter, led by Morant’s career-high 28-points.  

The Lakers tried to close the gap in the fourth quarter, at one point cutting the lead to four, but that was followed by an 8-0 run from the Grizzlies punctuated by a pair of dunks from Jackson Jr. and Morant for good measure. 

Enjoy:

By The Numbers: 

As a team, Memphis scored a franchise record 41 points off 26 Lakers turnovers. 

Ja Morant led all scorers with 39 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists, his 10th career triple-double, and the highest scoring triple-double in franchise history. Morant’s 28 points in the third quarter are the most by any NBA player in a quarter this season. 

Xavier Tillman Sr. scored a career-high 18 points and 11 rebounds, his first double-double of the season.  

Jaren Jackson Jr. finished the night with 16 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 blocks.  

Desmond Bane also finished with 16 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, and 4 steals.  

Who Got Next? 

No rest for the weary: The Grizzlies are back at it tonight in Houston, facing off against the Houston Rockets. Tip-off is at 7 PM CST.  

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Tops Bar-B-Q To Open a Cordova Location

Tops Bar-B-Q is on a roll. Or maybe a “bun” would be more accurate. The Memphis-based company is opening its 18th location in June. 

“We’re building in Cordova,” says Hunter Brown with Tops Operations LLC.

The new restaurant will be at Germantown Parkway and Cordova Road. The company is building on one acre of the parking lot of Memphis’s Incredible Pizza Company at 1245 North Germantown Parkway, Suite 104.

Tops opened its 17th location — 4199 Hacks Cross Road — on February 14th.

They’ve wanted a location in Cordova as much as they want locations in Collierville, Arlington, and other places, Brown says. “This just came first.”

They want to open new restaurants in areas where customers who were used to having a Tops Bar-B-Q in their neighborhood are moving, Brown says. For example, if a customer grew up with the Tops in Frayser and now lives in Cordova, they “deserve to have their own.”

The original growth spurt was in the late ’60s and early ’70s when Tops opened restaurants in quick succession on Thomas Street, Summer Avenue at National Street, Lamar Avenue, Union Avenue, and Frayser Boulevard.

Tops continued to open restaurants over the next 30 years, but began its current growth spurt in 2021 with its restaurant at 6745 Stage Road in Bartlett and then Hacks Cross Road. “The trajectory is adding up to two locations a year until we feel like we have fulfilled the needs of Memphis and the surrounding areas.”

They’re not stopping to take a breath after Cordova. “When we open Cordova, we plan on breaking ground somewhere else.”

Tops Bar-B-Q opened in 1952 in Memphis. “Rhodes at Getwell is the oldest store open. The first store doesn’t exist anymore. It was about two miles north of where our Sycamore View and Macon store is now.”

As for the upcoming Cordova location, Brown says, “There will be definite features to the new Tops, which will face Cordova Road, including a “a dual drive-through to enhance speed of service.”And, he says, “We’ll open the restaurant with breakfast to meet the needs of the surrounding area and those commuting to work.”

Breakfast is currently available at nine Tops restaurants. “It’s still evolving. But the plan is to open new restaurants with breakfast.”

Brown says the restaurant is a long-time favorite. “Memphis as a community is faithful. You see it when the Grizzlies are winning. When the Tigers are hot. They support Memphis things.

“The reality is Memphis supports Memphis. And they know that although we are growing and big, we’re still a hometown locally owned company that’s been in their family and generations for many years. And every day when I’m inside a Tops whether it’s Frayser Boulevard or Summer National, someone is coming up to me with a story about how they and their family and friends came in wherever after school and ate. 

“There’s so much nostalgia. And merely from just being around so long, it builds camaraderie. That doesn’t exist for national brands.”

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

State GOP Members Want to Add Firing Squad, “Hanging By A Tree” to Execution Methods

Death row inmates prefer a firing squad as a means of execution, according to one Tennessee lawmaker, and his bill “just simply gives them that option.” 

Rep. Dennis Powers (Credit: State of Tennessee)

Tennessee GOP lawmakers are looking for alternative methods to kill inmates in the state should officials here not be able to adhere to lethal injection protocols. On Tuesday, Rep. Dennis Powers (R-Jacksboro) advanced a bill to include firing squads to the state’s methods. Rep. Paul Sherrell (R-Sparta) wanted to add “hanging by a tree” to the bill but the motion was not formalized by other lawmakers. 

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee halted all executions here in May. Officials discovered lethal-injection chemicals had not been screened for toxins before the scheduled execution of Oscar Franklin Smith, one hour before his scheduled execution.

The toxins could cause respiratory and other distressing issues. ACLU of Tennessee Executive Director Kathy Sinback said they can “create the sensation of drowning or burning alive.” Screening for the toxins is mandatory under Tennessee’s execution protocols. 

In January, Lee appointed Frank Strada as the new commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Corrections (TDOC), an official who oversaw the renewal of executions as deputy director of the Arizona Department of Corrections. Strada oversaw three executions in 2022, all of which were marked by problems delivering lethal chemicals, according to Tennessee Lookout’s Sam Stockard.

On Tuesday, Powers told the House Criminal Justice Committee that TDOC is not “philosophically opposed” to his legislation. His original bill listed only electrocution as an alternative to lethal injection. But a new amendment introduced Tuesday (not yet available on the legislature’s website) rewrote the proposal and Powers only mentioned firing squads in his presentation. 

In his presentation, Powers said “having done a survey of people on death row,” the firing squad method is preferred. He did not cite a source of the survey. 

He said capital punishment is “not unconstitutional” in Tennessee and said neither was his bill. He said, “[W]e need to make sure they get these executions done more quickly,” noting that one of his constituents died before the execution of a man convicted of raping and killing the constituent’s wife and daughter. 

“This is the most humane way,” Powers said. “If you want to look at the most humane way and the most effective way to do it is by firing squad.”

Powers explained that the method is “not like the old Westerns when they stand up and put … a blindfold on and they’re standing there and they give them a cigarette or something.” 

In a special facility, Powers said the inmate would sit in a chair and would be immobilized by some kind of apparatus. Officials would put a target over the inmate’s heart. Families would be invited to watch, as is the case with all executions in the state.

One marksman on the firing squad would shoot a blank so no one would really know who fired the fatal shots. He said other states have had more volunteer help to carry these out than they needed. 

Rep. G.A. Hardaway (Credit: State of Tennessee)

Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D-Memphis) read depositions from other states that said “death by firing squad would not significantly reduce the risk of severe pain,” the same reason Tennessee’s lethal injection executions were put on hold. 

“Any type of death … it’s going to be painful,” Powers said. “The death that they promoted and carried out for another subject was painful, too. So, I don’t have a whole lot of empathy for people that suffer pain during an execution.”

Arguments for a similar law in South Carolina were heard by that state’s highest court in January but a decision is still pending. Idaho lawmakers are now also considering death by firing squad.  

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Black Coalition for Housing to Host Black Developers Housing Summit

The Black Coalition for Housing will be hosting the 2023 Black Developers Housing Summit in Memphis on March 9-11 at the Hilton Hotel located at 939 Ridge Lake Boulevard. The theme for this year’s summit is “shifting the paradigm through equity and access.”

According to Tennessee managing director Rasheedah Jones, the Black Coalition for Housing is a national organization headquartered out of Chicago, Illinois.

Jones is a native “North Memphian” who wanted to bring this summit to her hometown after noticing inequities in the development industry. 

“Memphis was the first launch city for the outreach work, as a market that needed the kind of impact that we wanted to make across this country,” said Jones.

Jones has worked in the real estate industry in various capacities for 18 years. She said that her primary focus is on community development and rehabilitation around neighborhood development that supports affordable housing models. 

Memphis is the first-choice city for what is to be a five-city tour for the summit. According to Jones, there are challenges on the ground that continue to impact Black home ownership, and the inability to close the wealth gap.

According to information compiled from the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2022, stacker.com said that the Black homeownership gap is 30.4 percent. The Black homeownership rate for Memphis is 58.8 percent, with the white homeownership rate being 74.3 percent.

“The disparity for homeownership continues to grow here,” said Jones. “Even with the deployment of dollars, even with the deployment of opportunities, what I have continued to hear is that there is a lack of skillset for Black developers to access opportunities.”

Jones also said that there is a large housing stock crisis, and that due to the dynamic market of interest rates, people are either falling out of the ability to obtain homeownership. She also said that people are unaware that they can enter into this as a wealth-building strategy.

“It was important for me to fight that Memphis be mapped in a way that those resources, opportunities, and conversations happen here,” said Jones.

In a statement released regarding the summit, it is stated that the purpose is to “synergize Black and minority developers at every stage of their real estate development, business journey by offering collective technical support, education, and the sharing of lived experience to scale, grow, and expose others to the next level.”

Jones said that the summit will consist of “foundations of development training.” She said that they receive inquiries about where to start in development. This is in hopes of exposing the foundation of development to developers who have zero to three years of experience, in addition to students who are looking to start work in development.

There will also be overarching conversations with “mixed levels of development.” There will be a panel of seasoned developers who Jones said have impacted their respective communities with onboarding properties, which she said were not “generating tax revenue up to the millions.”

Jones also said that these conversations will be heard by organizations such as the Black Legislative Caucus of Shelby County Commission, the City of Memphis Division of Housing and Community Development, and the Downtown Memphis Commission.

“We have a huge support system where we can lean into understanding as to what they’re looking for when they’re thinking of opportunities for Black developers,” said Jones. “The goal is to empower the participants, but to also list out the concerns and challenges that exist from both sides of the coin, so that we may be able to come together on some solution.”

Categories
Fun Stuff News of the Weird

News of the Weird: Week of 03/02/23

Dream Job

Five lucky participants will clear a cool $1,000 to do what they wanted to do anyway: Eat cheese before bedtime. Fox5-TV reported that Sleep Junkie, a mattress review website, hopes to test the legend that eating cheese before bed causes nightmares, so they’re asking “dairy dreamers” to consume a wide variety of cheeses, log their sleep, and provide feedback about sleep quality, energy levels, and bad dreams. The best part? Participants will be reimbursed for the cheese! The catch: You have to sleep alone. [Fox5, 1/20/2023]

Police Report

A 31-year-old woman was charged with two counts of robbery and possession of a weapon (ahem) on Jan. 22 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, after a puzzling attempt to steal a pizza, the CBC reported. Around 3 a.m., she allegedly entered a crowded restaurant and demanded a pizza, brandishing a firecracker as a threat. She was denied the pie, so she lit the firework and ran off with a pizza. Outside the restaurant, she got into a cab, but the driver asked her to get out because she was being belligerent. When the driver stepped out of the car, she jumped into his seat and took off, dragging the 54-year-old several meters down the street. Officers caught up with the stolen cab and caught the pizza thief when she became stuck in a snowbank. [CBC, 1/23/2023]

That Rule Doesn’t Apply to Me

A dump truck driver in Contra Costa County, California, either couldn’t read or didn’t care when he barreled through a road closure barricade on Jan. 23, KTVU-TV reported, and ended up with his front left wheel in a sinkhole. The “road closed” sign was found beneath his vehicle, and the driver escaped without injury. Excessive rains have caused “flooding, mudslides, sinkholes, and other issues” in the area, county officials noted. [KTVU, 1/23/2023]

Bright Idea

If you’re looking for a crafty project for 2023, the online shop Savor has you covered, Slate reported. For the low, low price of $46.95, you can put together your own “In Case I Go Missing” binder, which Savor says “makes it super easy for the true-crime obsessed to record their key stats for their loved ones.” Those facts include medical and financial information, fingerprints, and lists of “hangout spots.” One woman said she added “a hair sample just in case they need it for DNA testing.” Elizabeth Jeglic, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, soothingly says, “The majority of adults will not go missing or be kidnapped.” Her colleague Patrick McLaughlin offers some ideas for the kit, though: recent photos; the unlock code for your phone; pics of tattoos, scars, or birthmarks; handwriting samples — but he warns that such binders might not be admissible as evidence. [Slate, 1/22/2023]

That Guy

Dennis Garsjo, 73, of Glasgow, Montana, may not know your name when he greets you on the street, but he’ll call out to you anyway, using your birthday. “Top of the morning to ya, April 11,” he might say, according to KRTV. Garsjo has memorized more than 3,000 birthdays and says he came by the talent naturally. “My mother remembered all our relatives’ birthdays before she started getting dementia,” he said. “I don’t think my talent is all that special. I’m more impressed by musicians who can play a song from memory on the piano.” Still, residents of Prairie Ridge Village, where he works, enjoy The Birthday Guy, as he’s known, and he loves surprising people with their special day. [KRTV, 1/26/2023]

News You Can Use

KFC Thailand partnered with perfume experts during the Lunar New Year to create what every finger-lickin’ good fan wants: fried chicken incense. Oddity Central reported that the incense sticks look good enough to eat and smell even better. Alas, you can’t buy them: The incense will be awarded through a raffle on KFC Thailand’s Facebook page. [Oddity Central, 1/20/2023]

Send your weird news items with subject line WEIRD NEWS to WeirdNewsTips@amuniversal.com. News of the Weird is now a podcast on all major platforms! Visit newsoftheweirdpodcast.com for more.

NEWS OF THE WEIRD
© 2023 Andrews McMeel Syndication.
Reprinted with permission.
All rights reserved.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Soul Fragments

Confession: I have a few books out there that no one knows about because I haven’t written them … well, finished them. I’ve talked in previous columns about “wrestling with infinity” — the match I always lose — by which I mean, picking a subject too large to reduce to words and eventually getting hopelessly lost in it, e.g.: shifting human consciousness, transcending what we think we know, truly creating peace (whatever that is).

So welcome to my latest attempt to circumvent infinity. The book I’m aiming at is a collection of the poetry I’ve written over the past two decades, but not exactly. It’s not really a “collection” of anything — art objects on display in glass cases, meant to be admired — and the poetry (and other stuff) I would include I think of essentially as “soul fragments”: bleeding pieces of personal truth. And the point of the book is to enter the present moment with the reader, to revere life together, to tremble at its wonder, to look into the eyes the unknown … with the help of something I call the Blue Pearl.

A second confession: I admit it, I’m a jewel thief. I came upon the concept “Blue Pearl” many years ago, in a book called Meditate by Swami Muktananda. He describes the Blue Pearl as something found at a deep stage of meditation: “a tiny blue light, the light of the Self. … The Blue Pearl is the size of a sesame seed, but in reality it is so vast it contains the entire universe. … [It] lights up our faces and our hearts; it is because of this light that we give love to others.”

Fascinated as I was by this, I considered myself a total mediocrity when it came to meditation, and knew I would never reach a level where I might somehow grasp the Blue Pearl. But a decade later, something happened. My wife was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Untreatable.

By the time it was discovered, it had metastasized throughout her gastrointestinal system. She was given four months to live — case closed, nothing can be done. The doctor we talked to in the wake of her surgery was stunningly emphatic, so much so that I wrote in my journal afterwards: “At this point my image of Western medicine is of a mason jar with the lid closed tight, all the facts in there stale and hopeless. They want Barbara inside that jar and inside that jar she’s going to die.”

We had no choice but to reach beyond this medical certainty in every way we could — to reach for alleged miracles, and to savor every day, every moment. And, oh my God, I needed a real role to play. I asked Barbara if I could be her “spiritual advisor,” whatever that might mean. She concurred. We joined the Cancer Wellness Center, read the same books, looked at treatments beyond the world of conventional medicine (some doctors tread there) … and I thought about the Blue Pearl.

Indeed, I just took it — smashed the window, reached in, and seized it, brought it into my life and Barbara’s life. I could never have seized the Blue Pearl if it hadn’t been for the shock of the medical diagnosis, which shattered not some window in a museum of world religions, but an inner window of self-doubt and false awe that could just as easily be called intimidation. I don’t quite know what I seized, maybe no more than three words: “the Blue Pearl.”

But as I felt Barbara’s mortality looming, kicking around in the next room — as I felt my own mortality for the first time — a sense of urgency lit up. This is all we’re going to get. And it was the life around me that began to glow, infused by some precious secret about how much life is worth that the dying pass back and forth to one another.

Barbara survived beyond the diagnosis. She lived nine months — months that were difficult and pain-ridden, but also amazing beyond words. After her passing I started writing poetry. The narrative of my life was interrupted, shattered. I could only write poetry, for the first year or so that I was a widower. I wrote about her life. I wrote about cancer. I wrote about our 12-year-old daughter. I wrote about whatever I encountered — the beauty of wet snow, the streetwise salesman at the train station who pleaded: “Pray for me.” I wrote about a ceiling leak. I wrote about my dad. So these are the soul fragments I want to clump into a book: sparkling blue pearls, perhaps, each of which tries in its own way to turn a moment sacred, to turn life’s every moment sacred. Here, for instance, are the final lines of a poem called “The Blue Pearl”:

In the lifeless parking lot
my wild heart,
so big and wanting
happiness, a cure for
cancer or just five years
five years to perfectly
love my wife, stops,
lets go of itself,
bears for an instant
the silver-streaked now
of truth,
now now only now
and always now
she is alive
and I am alive
and that’s my miracle
and it’s enough.

Robert Koehler (koehlercw@gmail.com), syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a Chicago award-winning journalist and editor. He is the author of Courage Grows Strong at the Wound.

Categories
Music Music Features

MEM_MODS

Creative thinking is often spurred on by a sudden change: There’s nothing like having the rug pulled out from under you to get you thinking on your feet. And, to hear Steve Selvidge tell it, that’s exactly what happened nearly three years ago when he, Luther Dickinson, and Paul Taylor began work on what’s now the freshly released album, MEM_MODS Vol. 1 (Peabody Records). Of course, that was a time when the whole world was caught off guard, not the least these three musicians who’ve thrived on live performance for decades.

“We were all reeling,” Selvidge recalls. But then a ray of hope appeared. “I got an email from Luther saying, ‘Paul and I have been messing around with some stuff, do you want to put some guitar on it?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, I don’t have anything else to do!’” It was within the first month of the pandemic’s lockdown, so Dickinson and Taylor had not been playing together in person; they’d been swapping tracks over the internet. And that in itself was not unusual for any of them.

“We all had some sort of digital audio workstation of some sort in our homes,” says Selvidge. “And I’d been doing a bunch of remote recording pre-pandemic, anyway. It’s not uncommon for me to do guitar overdubs here in my home studio.” That might even include the odd overdub on a Hold Steady track, he notes. “Mostly last little pickup bits right at the end,” he explains. “But for that last Bash & Pop record [by Tommy Stinson], we cut half of it live at Tommy’s place, and the other half was stuff written after the fact. So I did a lot of my guitars and all of my vocals here at my place on that album.”

Dickinson and Taylor had similar home studios, though Selvidge’s home in Memphis tended to be where it all came together. “After a while, it was easier for me to be the guy running everything in Pro Tools, with everybody sending me files,” Selvidge adds. “And so it kept growing.”

As it turned out, the three began to thrive on the collaboration in unexpected ways. After the first track, says Selvidge, “I was like, ‘We made this! I love it! And it’s something to keep myself occupied.’ So that turned into another track, and then we realized we had kind of a workflow. And we exploded with this creativity. Paul might start with drums, and either Luther or I would add a bass line, creating a song out of raw drums. And I started messing with old drum machines and wrote a tune to that. There were ideas flying everywhere! So much so that we had a brief storage crisis, the music piled up so quickly.”

The result is that rare bird in the indie music world, an instrumental album. While that might be somewhat familiar in the jam band world, MEM_MODS doesn’t really fit that tag. The tracks hit more like a lost ’70s soundtrack, evoking everything from Augustus Pablo-like dub to funk bangers to smoldering Isaac Hayes-like ballads. Tasty, ear-catching synth sounds abound. Indeed, the trio leaned into their multi-instrumental talents, with Dickinson not even contributing his first instrument, guitar. Instead, he played bass and various keyboards; Selvidge played guitar, bass, Rhodes piano, and drum machine; and Taylor contributed drums, percussion, omnichord, bass, fretless bass, washtub bass, synth pedals, and “soundscapes.”

Over these elements sit some of the finest horn parts to come out of Memphis in recent years, courtesy arranger and trumpeter Marc Franklin and saxophonist Art Edmaiston. Ranging from pitch-perfect pads to nimble, jazz influenced fills, the horns (and a flute cameo) pair with warm drums, bass, and guitar to ground the album in an earthy, Memphis vibe.

It makes sense, given how far back the three musicians go, all from famed musical families. “We’ve been making music together for 30 odd years,” says Selvidge. “So everything we’ve done together and apart came to the table when we did this. We know each other’s instincts, even as our lives have changed, getting married, having children. Losing our fathers. There’s a depth there with us. And that depth has gone into our playing.”