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Steve Gorman, Once Of Black Crowes, Brings The Rock, Country, & Soul

Scott Wills

Trigger Hippy

He might live in Nashville these days, but Memphis has always played an out-sized role in the life of former Black Crowes drummer Steve Gorman.

A 54-year-old rock veteran, Gorman will be in town on December 20, when his latest group Trigger Hippy play Growlers. The rock and country soul four-piece have recently released their second album ‘Full Circle And Then Some,’ five years after their first and with two personnel changes to boot. Bassist and long-time collaborator Nick Gorvik has remained, while guitarist Ed Jurdi and singer Amber Woodhouse are the more recent editions.

Groman – who released band memoir Hard To Handle: The Life and Death of the Crowes with acclaimed music critic Steven Hyden earlier this year – says he’s feeling good about the latest combination.

“I’m not staring at the clock, but I am 54 years old,” Gorman says. “I don’t have another band idea. If one happens, that’s great – but in my mind, and as far as something I’m looking at and trying to build out with an eye towards an actual future, this is the band for me. So, for me, let’s take it easy, let’s slow down and make sure we do it right.”

Back to the role of Memphis for Gorman, who – for the first time – won’t be part of the Black Crowes when they tour next year.

Jeff Dunn, son of the legendary Booker T. and The MGs bassist, was the Black Crowes sound man in the 1990s, while Luther Dickinson, son of legendary producer Jim, played with the group the following decade. The first time that a pan of [Jim Neely’s Interstate] BBQ spaghetti was bought on the tour bus was in Memphis too, he recalls. “That was a life-changer,” he says.

From the personal impact of Big Star’s Alex Chilton on the Black Crowes to his de facto fanship of the Memphis Grizzlies – and plenty more, Gorman opened up to the Memphis Flyer in a wide-ranging conversation recently.

Memphis Flyer: I recently read a quote where you mention that, for the first time in your career, you’ve helped create an album that you didn’t feel the need to change upon its completion. How does that feel?

Steve Gorman: It’s wonderful to get finished with a project and realize … that it was the perfect amount of time because the record is exactly what we wanted to do. When I said that [in The East Nashvillian], I was specifically referring to parts I played or little things. I don’t have regrets on albums that are over-the-top, I look back on anything and go ‘I could have done better there, I pushed that turn around a little, I was too dramatic on that chorus’.

When I said it, I was really referring to that – but this album, across the board, because it ended up taking as long as it did, it wasn’t a lot of work – it just took a long time to do the work. Having that long to sit with every track, you know what I mean? There were things that we did and then, six months later, Nick or Ed or me went ‘you know what’s bugging me?’ We could go right back back in and address it. That ended up feeling like a real luxury. That said, I certainly don’t think the next one will be that long of a process.

Steve Gorman, Once Of Black Crowes, Brings The Rock, Country, & Soul

Be it with the Black Crowes or other projects, you’ve been taking bands on the road for more than 30 years now. Is there a fresh excitement to do it with Trigger Hippy this year?

SG: The last time Trigger Hippy played, it was the summer of 2015. To go four years between gigs, flying this flag, it was necessary [and] made a lot of sense, but it made that much more exciting to go out and do some dates. On top of that, everyone does get on very well. It’s a very nice, very copacetic group of personalities. That was a big part of deciding to ring it back around this time, too. We went in just jamming, me and Nick [and] knew that was a great fit, [but] we were not in a hurry to fill out the rest of the pieces because it was far more important to me to find the right people across the board.

Nashville, like Memphis, you can throw a rock and hit a great musician, you know what I mean? That’s the easy part. Then it’s like, what about the third or fourth time you have a long conversation with them? How many red flags are flying? Do you really want to get into a band with that guy? Do you think your understanding of the word commitment is the same as theirs? There’s all those kinds of questions that, a lot of times, bands don’t think about at all, or if they do, they just think about it on a surface level. With Trigger Hippy, for this album, we knew we had a bunch of great songs, and loved the way the album was shaping up, so it was important to just slow down and make sure it’s right. I’d rather move really slowly, all aligned in the same direction.

In many respects, your time with the Black Crowes will always be the defining aspect of your creative career – and life. What was it like reflecting on the arc of the band, in your book, all these years later?

I had processed and kinda made sense of all it before I started writing the book. The book was not a journey … it wasn’t a question of ‘I’m going to wade into this forest and see if I can come out the other side.’ I’d already done that. It was really just that I had a story I wanted to tell. There were very few surprises and very few moments that were actually trying on me, emotionally, to recount. That said, it was an exhausting process. It was mentally taxing.

Memphis is obviously a city with a colossal amount of music history. Creatively, what does the city mean to you?

You’re talking to a guy whose first hit song was [a cover of] an Otis Redding song. For the glory years of Black Crowes [in the early 90s], our sound man was Duck Dunn’s son, Jeff Dunn. Duck came to a lot of shows – we got to know Duck and June. We had cook-outs at Duck Dunn’s house in Florida. We’d run through his polaroids from a lot of those sessions that no one else has ever seen. Memphis is just one of the home plates, it’s a church in the world of, not just the Black Crowes and very much Trigger Hippy, but anyone who is a fan of rock and roll music. Memphis holds a place that is equal to anywhere else you want to name. It’s just that simple.

[The one thing] the Robinson brothers and I were equally obsessed with was the band Big Star. We opened for Alex Chilton once – it was one of the biggest nights of our lives at that point. Alex stepped into our dressing room. It was December 8, 1987 and we played the Cotton Club in Atlanta. We played our forty-minute set and he poked his head [into the dressing room] and said ‘how old are you guys?’ We were all just looking at him. In our minds, it might as well have been John Lennon standing there. I think Chris said ‘umm, well I’m 22, he’s 20 and I’m 19.’ He was kinda flustered. Alex just said ‘well, y’all got a good little band – keep it up’ and he walked off. You might as well have injected pure heroin into our veins. We were like ‘holy shit’. There’s nothing better in the world than that.

Beyond music, you have a healthy reputation for your knowledge – and opinion – on sport as a former sports radio host. What’s your thoughts on the Memphis sporting scene right now?

[Since ending the ‘Steve Gorman Sports!’ Show last year], I literally stopped paying attention to sports on a major level, I needed a detox – and one area I’ve not jumped back into is college sports. I know there’s been some trouble over there with the recruiting [with James Wiseman] and the football team looks good, but I do pay attention to professional sports.

My biggest problem with the Memphis Grizzlies – and I’m going to make a lot of enemies saying this – is that they didn’t come to Nashville. I would kill for an NBA team right now. For all of the ‘boom city’ [stuff with Nashville], we don’t have an NBA team and until we do, I’ll never say we’re the chosen place. I come over to Memphis to see Grizzlies games every year, my son and I, two or three times a year since forever. I’m a de facto Grizzlies fan, but that’s as far as it goes. If you want to talk about Memphis State University back in the old days, and they had Keith Lee playing basketball in the early 80s, we can go there if we need to, for sure.

Trigger Hippy play Growlers on Friday December 20. Doors open at 7:00 pm, show after 8:00 pm. $18.

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Music Music Blog

Not Hanging Back: Atlanta Trio The Coathangers Returns!

Jeff Forney

The Coathangers

The last time Atlanta garage-punk trio The Coathangers played Memphis, they ended their set at the old Hi-Tone with a merch manager – their drummer’s then-boyfriend – that barely had his arm attached to his body.

“His elbow was dislocated, it didn’t even look like it was connected,” bassist Meredith Franco tells the Memphis Flyer of the 2013 gig. “We just kept playing. He sat behind the merch booth the whole time and was like ‘nah, I’m okay.’ It looked like [his arm] was hanging on by a string.”

Though it was a simple stumble that caused the dislocation, and sheer belligerence that kept it that way, it’s definitely was a punk rock moment typical of The Coathangers’ long, energetic journey that will see them play Bluff City once again at the Hi-Tone this
Wednesday. They’ll be supported by Philadelphia punk trio Control Top and local heroes
Hash Redactor.

Formed in 2006, the band’s first gig was at an Atlanta house party where mastery of their
instruments – “I’d never even played bass before this band,” Franco says – was secondary to the performance itself. After their self-titled 2007 debut, put out through Rob’s House Records and Die Slaughterhaus, The Coathangers begun a long relationship with Seattle’s Suicide Squeeze Records – early backers of Elliott Smith and Modest Mouse – that has seen them release five albums in the last ten years.

“[Suicide Squeeze owner] David [Dickinson] is our number one fan, and we’re his number
one fans,” Franco says. “He really gives us a lot of freedom, whatever we want to do, he
supports us basically.”

Their most recent offering, The Devil You Know, released in March, shows a band that
haven’t taken a step backward from their devil-may-care roots during what has been a
tumultuous time – both politically and socially – in recent American history. With songs like
‘Hey Buddy’, addressing street harassment, and ‘F the NRA’, The Coathangers – named for a DIY abortion technique – was always going to come armed with a response to it.
“Yeah – especially a song like F the NRA,” Franco says. “It’s not like we’ve not ever been ‘not political’, but I think in the past we didn’t want to be [too] preachy. But why not? This is our way to express how we feel, why wouldn’t we write something we believe in? If someone doesn’t like it, fuck off – don’t listen to it.

“[With F the NRA], some people were worried that it was going to get negative [press] and
people who are all about guns were going to like come after us, I don’t know. People were
worried, but we were like, the reason we do what we do is to say what we want. Isn’t that the whole point of music in general? If you don’t like it, don’t listen to it.”

Though Atlanta was the starting point, The Coathangers now find themselves in three
different corners of America. Franco moved back home to Massachusetts to care for her
ailing father (who she wrote ‘Memories’ for), lead singer Julia Kugel-Montoya relocated to
Long Beach while drummer Stephanie Luke remained in Atlanta.

The Memphis connection doesn’t just end with an ex-boyfriend of a drummer who dislocated his elbow, though. The Coathangers were good friends with Memphis punk legend Jay Reatard, dedicating their 2011 track ‘Jaybird’ to his memory.

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Mempho Day Two: Valerie June Honors a Fallen Friend & More

Nathan Armstrong

Valerie June at Mempho

Before this past weekend, the last time I listened to Valerie June was in a tiny art shop in Paparoa, New Zealand at the end of May with my wife and sister.

The Memphis-raised alt-folk star was playing on the stereo, and the shop’s owner excitedly described herself as a big fan. We were just as thrilled to let her know that June was from our neck of the woods.

She was back there yesterday, playing what was arguably the finest set of Mempho’s second day at Shelby Farms Park. Wearing a blue-purple frock and sparkling pants, June came armed with her famously unmatchable sense of positivity — and the ability to show her hometown audience why people like Bob Dylan think she’s absolutely the bees’ knees.

From ‘Shakedown’ to ‘Astral Plane’, June played all her big hits, but it was her heartfelt tribute to Mary Burns that really put the hook in. Burns, the beloved owner of Cooper-Young’s Java Cabana who died this month after battling lung cancer, played a major role in June’s life. June played her first ever gig at the cafe, was close with Burns until the end — and last night, played the 2013 track ‘Somebody to Love’ on banjo to honor her friend.

“You look around the world and you find your people,” June told the crowd. “You find your heart people – your soul people. Mary was one of those for me.”

“I’m not going to cry,” she continued, “instead I’m going to think about her spirit. That Memphis spirit. That ‘pull yourself up by your own bootstraps’ spirit. That ‘if the world don’t believe in you, believe in yourself’ spirit.”

Her set’s conclusion – which saw her joined by iconic local musician Hope Clayburn for ‘Working Woman Blues’ — was the perfect cork for her hour on stage.

Nathan Armstrong

Brandi Carlile at Mempho

Before June performed, local favorites The MDs, paying tribute to Booker T & the MGs, were the pick of the afternoon acts. Afterwards, it was alt-country headliner Brandi Carlile that deserves the plaudits. At nearly an hour and a half, Carlile — nominated this year for six Grammys — delivered a sharp, impressive performance to wrap up the festival, pulling numbers from throughout a long career in alt-country.

Like the Wu-Tang Clan the night before, Carlile — flanked, as always, by long-time collaborators Tim and Phil Hanseroth — ruminated on Memphis’ musical history (“how iconic is this town?”) as well as recalling a gig she played in a dive bar near the University of Memphis that saw crawfish heads lying on the floor by the end of the performance.

Earlier, the Revivalists provided a spirited set, though lead singer David Shaw was perhaps asked to do too much by his largely immobile band mates, gamely providing the only stage presence. Still, their crowd rivaled that of The Raconteurs the night before. Californian indie popsters lovelytheband disappointed, with lead singer Mitchy Collins seeming to spend more time talking about the band than playing their tunes. Show, don’t tell, brother.

For me however, June was the needle that really hit the groove. Watching one of Memphis’ finest recent musical imports doing her thing as the last few rays of weekend light yawned across the festival, it’s hard to think of a better lasting memory of this year’s Mempho.
Spencer Johnson, Creative Studios

Mempho Fest 2019

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Music Music Blog

Mempho Day One: Wu-Tang Leads An Al Green Singalong & More

Nathan Armstrong

RZA sprays the MEMPHO crowd with champagne

From Staten Island to Memphis, “there are two things you need at a Wu-Tang show,” the RZA told the crowd at the Mempho festival yesterday. “Weed – and I can smell that – and energy.”

Though the Memphis Flyer is unable to confirm the presence of the first element, there was certainly plenty of the second as the Wu-Tang Clan easily delivered the stand-out performance of the first day of the third annual music festival at Shelby Farms Park.

Also drawing the day’s biggest crowd, the legendary nine-man team mixed it with a genuine respect for the influence of Memphis music on their own. Memphis soul legend David Porter helped welcome the group out and it was all on from there. Several times, a champagne bottle was produced and shaken up over the front few rows (when walking back to my car, I saw one man cradling an empty Wu-Tang bubbles bottle like a father to a first-born child.)

The afternoon sets largely matched the weather — warm, but not too cool — though local favorites Marcella and Her Lovers warrant a special mention for their sheer vitality. Canadian hard rockers Reignwolf provided something different and I’m not sure if I completely got it. Punching out a Black Keys-styled sound (only far more gratuitous), there was plenty of guitar solos and grand-standing. One surreal moment featured lead singer Jordan Cook pulling his beanie over his eyes and playing his guitar ‘blind’.

Later on in the evening, DJ Paul of Three 6 Mafia thrilled the crowd, boasting of how the group bought Memphis hip hop to the world. It’s hard to argue against the group’s influence, and popularity with the hometown crowd, even if he admitted that “only the ones older than 39 out there have been with us since the start.” DJ Paul provided the best off-the-cuff quotes of the day, including this insight following negotiations to use the Three 6 track ‘Azz and Tittiez’ in the 2012 Will Ferrell film The Campaign: “they gave us $500,000 for that shit and I spent it all on cocaine.”

Keith Griner

Jack White

Wearing what seemed to be a red and black jockey silk, Jack White led his Raconteurs into a smart, polished set to close out the evening, featuring long-standing hits like ‘Level’, ‘Blue Veins’,‘Steady As She Goes’ (encore) and a charged-up rendition of ‘Broken Boy Soldier’ which morphed into Them’s 60s anthem ‘Gloria’. ‘Now That You’re Gone’, off their recently released album Help Us Stranger, was a standout. It’s always fun to see White on stage. The alt-rock icon certainly knows the utility of good lighting, a good guitar pose, the right portion of on-stage swagger and a ‘thank you Memphis, Tennessee’ delivered at the perfect time.

Keith Griner

Wu-Tang Clan at Mempho

But while The Raconteurs’ and DJ Paul’s sets were outstanding, it was the Wu-Tang Clan that clearly claimed the hearts of Mempho yesterday.

From the high-energy opening track ‘Bring Da Ruckus’, all the Wu Tang classics were there — from ‘Can It Be All So Simple’ and ‘Wu Tang Clan Ain’t Nothing ta F’Wit’ to ‘Protect Ya Neck’ and ‘C.R.E.A.M’. An early collaboration between Porter and Isaac Hayes, ‘C.R.E.A.M’ famously samples ‘As Long As I Got You’ from Stax/Volt girl group The Charmels. Wu-Tang track ‘Tearz’ also samples Stax, with Wendy Rene’s track ‘After the Laughter Comes Tears’ laying the base.

“We found a lot of loot [in Memphis music] to help us tell our story,” the RZA told the adoring crowd, while talking up the impact of Hayes, Porter and Memphis soul legend Willie Mitchell in their music. “Now turn that shit up, we gotta take them back to their foundations.”

By the time the Wu-Tang Clan closed with a chill sing-a-long to Al Green’s ‘I’m So in Love With You’, that had been well and truly achieved.
Keith Griner

Wu-Tang Clan at Mempho

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Music Music Features

Thigh Master, Parsnip, and Michael Beach Will Blow Memphis Minds at Gonerfest

When Matthew Ford lived in Memphis as a kid, he once went on a school trip to see a “Masters of Florence” art exhibition at the Pyramid. He remembers works by Leonardo DaVinci being on display.

“Now,” says Ford, leader of Australian guitar-pop group Thigh Master, “it’s filled with huge bears and BB guns.”

Time has a funny way of messing with — and informing — the trajectory of all things. Twelve years after leaving Memphis at 14 for his hometown of Brisbane, Australia, Ford is back this weekend leading an Australian pop invasion of Gonerfest 16.

Along with the Flying Nun Records-inspired Thigh Master are highly anticipated all-girl pop quartet Parsnip and Oakland transplant Michael Beach and the Artists. Though Thigh Master was originally Brisbane-based, all three groups now call Melbourne home.

Thigh Master

“There’s always so many Australian bands that play [at Gonerfest], so it’s cool to be able to do it,” Parsnip drummer Carolyn Hawkins says. “There just seems to be a nice Melbourne-Memphis connection.”

You could hook Ford’s history into that vein like an IV drip. The Toowoomba-born 26-year-old grew up in Germantown, thanks to his father’s job, and received his early musical education through his older brother Daniel’s passion for Goner Records.

This month, Goner, whose long-standing Flying Nun Records love is shared by Ford (Toy Love, The 3Ds, Bats, and The Clean are huge influences) — will be putting out Thigh Master’s second album, Now For Example.

“When I was in high school [in Australia], I was listening to a lot of Jay Reatard stuff, King Louie, early Ty [Segall], and then the Flying Nun stuff, so Goner has played a huge role in influencing my musical tastes,” Ford says.

Add them all up and you get what a 2016 article from Noisey Australia described as “emo music for those who drink XXXX Gold mid-morning at the Mansfield Tavern.” For the many non-Queenslanders out there, a reasonable local translation of that might be: “emo music for those who drink Miller High Life mid-morning at Alex’s.”

The needle definitely hits the groove. Beach, who’ll play bass with Thigh Master at Gonerfest in brother Daniel’s absence, says the vibrancy of the current Melbourne scene comes from the fact that sustainable success in Australian music is a virtual oasis — and everyone knows it.

“In Australia, you understand before you set out that there’s very little chance of being big or ‘making it,'” says Beach, a Californian transplant whose earlier bands, Electric Jellyfish and Shovels, previously made waves in the Lucky Country.

“It frees you up to just do whatever the hell you want to do for the reasons you want to do them. In America, it exists a little less because there’s always that feeling of ‘if I just do this, this, and this, I might not have to work a job anymore.’ It’s a pretty special thing in Australia. You develop a bit more of a tongue-in-cheek sense of humor.”

That “pirate-smiling” Aussie mirth is there with Parsnip, whose poppy hooks will remind listeners of Flying Nun pillars Look Purple, Go Blue, but with a sharper dagger than Kiwis can ever muster. Paris Rebel Richens, the band’s bassist and songwriter, is a rising star on the Aussie scene, having already impressed music fans with Melbourne’s Hierophants.

While the rest of Parsnip are first-timers, this will be Hawkins’ third excursion to Gonerfest, having previously attended as a regular punter in 2012 and played with Melbourne guitar pop trio Chook Race four years later.

“It doesn’t feel, like, super industry,” she says. “It feels independent and genuine — and actually exciting.”

The Aussie acts will join an impressive overall bill at Gonerfest 16, some nights of which sold out a month prior to the first show on Thursday, September 26th.

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Music Music Blog

Too Young To Die: Parsnip’s Paris Richens On Daniel Johnston’s Passing

Charlotte Tobin

Parsnip

Whether you were in Memphis, Austin, Melbourne or anywhere else where sweet, simple things still matter, a bright light went out on a recent Wednesday morning in Waller, Texas.

Lo-fi legend Daniel Johnston was 58 when he died of a suspected heart attack, leaving a legacy of heartbreakingly melodic albums, such as Yip/Jump Music, Hi, How Are You?, and Retired Boxer. His troubled life inspired lyrics that could really put the dagger in, securing Johnston a cult-like status among his devotees. Paris Rebel Richens  — songwriter, lead singer and bassist for Gonerfest-bound Melbourne pop quartet Parsnip — is one of them.

cbc.ca

Daniel Johnston

Preparing for the group’s first American tour when she got the news, Richens was devastated to hear of the great loss.

“I was pretty crushed to be honest,” she tells the Memphis Flyer on the phone before a recent gig in Kingston, New York. “I feel like he was the one artist who I knew was unwell and wouldn’t be around for much longer, so, yeah, I knew I’d be pretty sad about losing him.”

A fellow Antipodean fan myself, I know the feeling. As a Kiwi farmboy-turned-journalist whose love of Johnston was sparked by Jeff Feuerzeig’s incredible 2005 documentary, my fandom extended to my wedding in Memphis last October, when a close Kiwi mate played “True Love Will Find You in the End” while my wife walked down the aisle.

Johnston only made it Down Under once, in 2010. As well as playing Laneway Festivals in Auckland, Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth, the celebrated songwriter held a handful of memorable side shows as well.

Richens never made it to those gigs, but recently told popular Australian music blog The Southern Sounding that Johnston’s 1984 self-released cassette album More Songs of Pain — especially the track “Poptunes” — was one of the most influential albums on her own songwriting.

Listen to the Parsnip sound and the link to Johnston is both undeniable and thoughtfully provoked. “I discovered him when I was in my late teens and going through some stuff,” Richens says. “He just has own magical world that everyone can be a part of. He had all his demons that he suffered, but he created so much joy. He was so funny as well.”

Too Young To Die: Parsnip’s Paris Richens On Daniel Johnston’s Passing

Richens has also identified the equally troubled alt-pop icon Syd Barrett as another huge influence on her songwriting. Richens says she admires lyricists who “have the freedom to be not so perfect, and a bit shambolic.”

While Richens’ appearance at Gonerfest — as both a solo artist and with Parsnip — may mark her first time at the festival or in Memphis, she has had skin in the Goner Records game for a little while now.

Richens is a member of Aussie post-punk popsters Hierophants, whose 2015 LP Parallax Error was released through Goner and Melbourne’s Aarght! Records. Goner Records also released their 7” “I Don’t Mind/The 16th.” 

This time around, Parsnip are touring in support of their debut album When the Tree Bears Fruit (Trouble in Mind).

As “PP”, Richens will be doing a solo set during Gonerfest’s Friday afternoon at Memphis Made Brewing Company. In her first-ever solo set internationally, don’t be surprised if the Victorian wordsmith pays tribute to the “king of lo-fi” in what should be a fantastic late afternoon set.

“It is very sad that he is gone,” Richens says, “but [he] is still around as well.”

Parsnip performs on Saturday, September 28 at the Hi-Tone, 9:45 pm. The show is sold out, for Golden Pass holders only (no door sales). As a solo artist, Paris Richens will perform as ‘PP’ at 4:00 pm at Memphis Made on Friday, September 27. Pre-order tickets are sold out, but limited numbers will be available at the door for $10.