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Film Features Film/TV

Last Words

Sometimes the big screen is actually smaller.

Enough Said, the latest low-key comedy-of-manners-and-morals indie from accomplished writer-director Nicole Holofcener (Please Give, Friends With Money), pairs two television icons — The Sopranos‘ James Gandolfini and Seinfeld‘s (and, okay, Veep‘s) Julia Louis-Dreyfus — in more delicate, human-scale roles than the ones that made them famous.

Louis-Dreyfus is Eva, a self-employed masseuse, and Gandolfini is Albert, curator of a television history museum. They are each entering middle age a divorced, single, shared-custody parent of a soon-to-be-college-bound daughter.

When Eva and Albert meet at a party, it’s not love at first sight. She doesn’t even find the balding, overweight Albert attractive. But each feels their options shrinking, and a dutiful first date yields some real if very tentative chemistry.

Eva’s doubts are magnified by her relationship with a new client she meets the same night she meets Albert, an alluring but severe poet played by Holofcener regular Catherine Keener, against whose opinions and pronouncements Eva measures her fledgling relationship with Albert. There’s a plot contrivance binding these relationships that feels a little unnecessary. But it’s a conceit a lesser film would build its whole world upon. Here, it’s closer to something that just happens.

Enough Said gives Gandolfini and Louis-Dreyfus each, rather shockingly, their only really good lead film roles, and they make a fetching, deeply relatable couple.

There’s extra poignancy, of course, in Gandolfini’s performance. The actor died this summer, at age 51. This appears to be his penultimate performance, and his final lead, and discussions of Albert’s weight and health carry an unintended extra sting. If it wasn’t already apparent that Gandolfini was one of the best actors of his generation — and his towering Tony Soprano pretty much answers that — playing so far against type, and so beautifully, provides added evidence. Playing a sheepish fifty-something single guy made even more self-conscious as a result of an unhappy marriage, Gandolfini gives a warm, sensitive, immensely satisfying performance. It’s a glimpse at an alternate career that now will never be, as a savior for real-world, grown folks’ rom-coms.

And Louis-Dreyfus not only carries her half of the romantic main plot but also is equally fine in a subplot that could have easily bloomed into its own film, about the mutually needy relationship she develops with her daughter’s neglected best friend.

Though far from flawless, this is a fine film about such underexplored topics as middle-aged courtship and middle-aged sex, about how making peace with others’ (perceived) imperfections can be less about settling than about generosity and wisdom.

Enough Said

Opens Friday, September 27th

Ridgeway Cinema Grill

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Masters of Sound

(Big Legal Mess)

I’ve never been sure what “Americana” means as a musical label. But if it’s going to have any strictly musical relevance, it should be for an artist like Memphis’ John Paul Keith, whose sixth-sense virtuosity with innumerable distinctly American musical styles lends his music a classic sound without a self-consciously retro feel.

On this third solo album since landing in Memphis — produced live-to-tape by Roland Janes at Sam Phillips Recording Service and with ace accompaniment from Mark Edgar Stuart (bass), John Argroves (drums), and Al Gamble (keys) — Keith sounds as in-the-pocket as ever.

Fitting the sound and production style, Memphis Circa 3AM is almost structured like a vinyl-era album. The first side is a testament to Keith’s musical command: The bluesy opening gallop of “You Really Oughta Be With Me” giving way to the swamp-rock groove of “We Got All Night” and the soulful power pop of “Everything’s Different Now” and the barroom country of “Ninety Proof Kiss” and the swooning roots rock of “Walking Along the Lane” and the piano-pounding rockabilly of “True Hard Money.”

Mastery established, the second “side,” starting with “New Year’s Eve” and ending with “Baby We’re a Bad Idea,” blooms into a multi-song love-gone-wrong lament worthy of the dark romanticism of the album’s title. In fact, the first three songs — “New Year’s Eve,” “There’s a Heartache Going Round,” and “If You Catch Me Staring” — might all be taking place at the same place on the same night, at that titular time.

Grade: A-

John Paul Keith plays the Levitt Shell on Friday, September 20th. Showtime is

7:30 p.m.

(Songs of the South)

How many times can you go to the same well? On World Boogie Is Coming, the North Mississippi Allstars — Luther and Cody Dickinson, credited as a duo here — suggest their answer is at least four. This 17-song opus — not including an additional five bonus tracks and four music videos available as companion downloads — is at least the fourth of the band’s seven studio albums to take the hill-country blues not only as its sound but as its subject and theme.

The band’s 2000 debut, “Shake Hands with Shorty,” was about an expression of mastery, the band asserting its place as new artists in an old continuum. Electric Blue Watermelon was about memory, looking back at the experience of coming-of-age in the culture. Keys to the Kingdom was about inheritance — paying respects to father and mentor Jim Dickinson but also taking the baton from him as purveyors of a blues-based style the elder Dickinson dubbed “world boogie.” Now, World Boogie Is Coming is about the band taking its place as ringleaders of a scene that’s undergone a major generational shift since they first emerged.

Made up mostly of hill-country blues standards, the album is short on notable individual songs but long on feel, with nearly every scenemate joining in. This makes the album sound like a great hill-country picnic, especially down the stretch, when two Otha Turner tunes wrap around the blues standard “My Babe” then segue into songs from Bukka White and Sleepy John Estes. This a party specific to a place but timeless — especially if the brothers Dickinson and their cohort have anything to say about it.

Grade: B+

The North Mississippi Allstars play the Mid-South Fair on Tuesday, September 24th. Showtime is 8 p.m.

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Music Music Features

Hayes Carll at the Hi-Tone

The last time I saw Texas singer-songwriter Hayes Carll, he was playing solo acoustic on the big stage at the Levitt Shell last summer, sandwiched between Elizabeth Cook and Todd Snider. That was a tough spot — linking a fetching local debut to a beloved headliner with a full band. But Carll, up there all by his lonesome, even reduced to singing both halves of his battle-of-the-sexes duet “Another Like You,” might have delivered the bill’s most enjoyable set. A brainy but plain-spoken alt-country stalwart who mixes Snider’s sly sense of humor with the Texas country-rock feel of early Steve Earle, Carll arrived with 2008’s Lost Highway debut, Trouble in Mind, one of the past decade’s best roots albums, then might have topped it with last year’s KMAG YOYO, where he opens stompin’ and hollerin’, then segues into wry comedy (“Another Like You”), lilting Bakersfield-style country (“Chances Are”), honky-tonk (“Lovin’ Cup”), and a downbeat holiday song for the ages (“Grateful for Christmas”). Carll returns to town this week, playing the Hi-Tone on Thursday, September 19th, with Warren Hood. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $14.

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Film Features Film/TV

I Am Divine

The closing night of the annual Outflix Film Festival opens with probably the most widely appealing movie in the festival. I Am Divine, from filmmaker Jeffrey Schwarz, is an affectionate, engrossing documentary portrait of Divine — aka Glenn Milstead — the Baltimore drag queen who became a legend as filmmaker John Waters’ muse in celluloid provocations such as Female Trouble, Polyester, and, most notoriously, Pink Flamingos, before both crossed over into something approaching the mainstream with the 1988 hit Hairspray.

“She was a midnight movie star. You could only see her after midnight, but it was worth staying up,” Village Voice columnist Michael Musto says, and is he ever right.

Divine passed away in 1988, shortly after Hairspray and on the verge of making even further in-roads into pop culture writ-large, but his performances on film and stage accomplished so much — puncturing the decorum and verisimilitude of prior drag culture while also channeling the anger of his picked-on youth and transforming it into confrontational art that ultimately erupted into its own kind of joy. He was perhaps more of a punk rocker than Johnny Rotten.

I Am Divine juxtaposes Divine’s in-costume performances with the dapper, soft-spoken interviews Divine gave in more conventional dress and uses interview material from family and friends (most affectingly, his once-estranged mother), collaborators, and acolytes. Waters appears frequently and his remembrances and observations — including first meeting the pre-drag Milstead trying to be a normal teenager: “No one believed it. He could never pass as normal,” Waters says appreciatively — are suffused with humor and palpable love. A great watch. ■

I Am Divine screens at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, September 12th, at Ridgeway Cinema Grill. Individual tickets are $10.

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Music Music Features

Motel Mirrors at the Cooper-Young Festival

The Cooper-Young neighborhood was the canary in the coal mine of a Midtown cultural revival now raging at the other end of Cooper, on Overton Square, and Cooper-Young’s annual neighborhood street festival — taking place on Saturday, September 14th — might be the city’s biggest and best.

In addition to all of the vendors and activities, the festival will feature local music on three stages from late morning to early evening. The main-stage headliner will be the Motel Mirrors, a new country duet project that pairs two of the city’s most popular established roots performers — classic songcraft savant John Paul Keith and versatile upright-bass-thumping singer Amy LaVere. The Motel Mirrors released a fine, eponymous, seven-song debut EP in late August.

Among the artists joining the Motel Mirrors on the Cooper-Young main stage are the Dead Soldiers, an increasingly polished folk/country-rock band that’s building a considerable live reputation around town, the reggae band Chinese Connection Dub Embassy, and Merry Mobile, the latest project from talented multi-instrumentalist Paul Taylor. The Cooper-Young Festival will also feature a “School of Rock” stage showcasing young students from the local music school and a secondary stage jointly sponsored by the Memphis Grizzlies and the Cooper-Young-based Goner Records label and shop. Memphis’ Ex-Cult and garage-rock heavyweight Jack Oblivian will be on the Griz/Goner stage. For a full schedule and info, see cooperyoungfestival.com.

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Music Music Features

Myla Smith Goes to Nashville

Local singer-songwriter Myla Smith has released a handful of albums and EPs over the past half-decade but takes a step forward this week with Hiding Places, which has already been featured in Billboard magazine’s “Bubbling Under” column.

“I definitely think it’s the best thing I’ve put out, which is what you hope for,” Smith says. “I thought the songs really came together on this record, and I had a lot of help from the producer, who I’d never worked with before.”

Encouraged by her musician husband to “go big” on her next album, Smith had cold-called — or emailed, to be specific — Nashville-based producer Brad Jones, best known for his work with artists such as Josh Rouse, Over the Rhine, and Hayes Carll.

“It was a complete shot in the dark,” says Smith, who was hopeful Jones would be interested but wasn’t expecting a response. Instead, Jones requested demos of songs for the new project. Energized by the response, Smith went into overdrive writing more new material.

“He had a knack for bringing a lot out of me,” Smith says of working with Jones. “I tend to be a perfectionist, but that’s not always what connects the best with people.”

Aiding this more personal songwriting and more rough-around-the-edges sound was a studio band featuring a couple of former Memphians in Ross Rice and Will Kimbrough, the former brought in at Smith’s request. The album was recorded in May at Jones’ Nashville studio.

Smith, who was raised in Shake Rag, a small community north of Millington, and graduated from the University of Memphis a few years back, got her start singing in the church choir but became serious about pursuing her music when she started writing songs in high school.

“I wanted to see if I could do it,” she says.

A strong singer with a light touch, Smith’s music moves comfortably between pop, folk, and country.

“All those lines are blurring. I’m fine with being in whatever genre people want to put me in,” says Smith, who thinks of herself as “folk-pop” and says the folk side is probably what she loves most.

“People in Nashville say I’m more Americana or folk than country,” Smith says. “I think that’s about lyrical distinctions. Country music is more direct. There’s not as much metaphor. And I like folk music mostly because I love those melodies. But I also love variety, so I can’t help but write different kinds of songs.”

On Hiding Places, the rootsier material — such as “Love in Black and White” or the more country-ish title song — stand out, but so does the pure pop of the lead single, “Can’t Say No,” which comes with an ebullient video shot by the local New School Media crew at a local Jack Pirtle’s restaurant.

Smith will celebrate the release of Hiding Places with a show at Minglewood Hall’s 1884 Lounge on Friday, September 13th, with Misti Rae opening. Showtime is 8 p.m. Admission is $5, or $10 with a copy of the album.

Memphis Music Hall’s New Inductees

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame has announced its second class of inductees. The 13 inductees this year are: Johnny Cash, Stax soul artists The Bar-Kays and Carla Thomas and songwriter David Porter, gospel pioneers The Blackwood Brothers and Rev. W. Herbert Brewster, Sun Records descendants Knox Phillips and Roland Janes, seminal early blues act The Memphis Jug Band, electric blues legend Albert King, jazz pianist Phineas Newborn Jr., folk singer and radio producer Sid Selvidge, and pop/jazz singer Kay Starr.

This second group of inductees was selected by a committee of music journalists and industry professionals under the direction of Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum executive director John Doyle. “If we lived in another city, we’d be done already,” Doyle said of the controversial selection process. “But here we’ll still be inducting Grammy winners a decade from now.”

This class of inductees will be celebrated at the Gibson Showcase Lounge on November 7th. For more on the new inductees, see memphisflyer.com/blogs/singallkinds.

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Johnny Cash, Carla Thomas Among 13 New Memphis Music Hall of Fame Inductees

Johnny Cash

  • Johnny Cash
Carla Thomas

  • Carla Thomas

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame announced a 13-member second class of inductees this afternoon at Jerry Lee Lewis’ Café & Honky Tonk on Beale Street, with Sun Records legend Johnny Cash and Stax star Carla Thomas leading a diverse class.

As with last year’s inaugural 25 inductees, this year’s smaller second group stands as something of a microcosm of Memphis music history, tapping into the city’s major genres of blues, soul, jazz, and rock/country, highlighting both performers and behind-the-scenes contributors, and representing eras — in terms of each inductee’s heyday — ranging from the 1920s to the 1970s.

The full class:

bbfavoritesongsspirituals_wm.jpg

The Bar-Kays: The “Soul Finger” instrumental hitmakers who served as Otis Redding’s road band. Surviving original members Ben Cauley (trumpet) and James Alexander (bass) lead a still-active version of the group.

The Blackwood Brothers: The Southern gospel quartet who were pioneers in the commercialization of gospel music and a big influence on the rise of rock-and-roll.

Reverend W. Herbert Brewster: South Memphis pastor who published more than 200 gospel compositions, including the standard “Move On Up a Little Higher.”

Johnny Cash: The most country of the major Sun Records artists, who launched one of the great careers in American popular music out of Memphis. Perhaps you’ve heard of him.

Roland Janes: The Sun-connected producer and engineer who connects the dots between multiple generations of Memphis music and still mans the board at Sam Phillips Recording Service.

Albert King: The electric blues guitarist and singer who was reared in Arkansas and moved to Memphis mid-career, where he recorded classics “Born Under a Bad Sign” and “Crosscut Saw” for Stax.

MemphisJugBand.jpg

Memphis Jug Band: Early blues pioneers — starting in the mid-1920s — and proto-rock-and-rollers lead by Will Shade.

Phineas Newborn, Jr.: R&B and jazz pianist who is the most prominent member of a prominent Memphis music family.

phineas.jpg

Knox Phillips: Son of Sam, who fostered Memphis music — and beyond — in the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s as an engineer, producer, and studio owner.

David Porter: Wrote classic Stax hits, often in partnership with Isaac Hayes, and was an underrated recording artist on his own.

Sid Selvidge: Folk and blues revivalist who also led the radio program “Beale Street Caravan” until his passing earlier this year.

Kay Starr: Pop and jazz singer who began her career as a Memphis teenager, both on local radio and at the Peabody Hotel.

Carla Thomas: Stax’s first female star and second-generation Memphis music royalty.

[jump]

This second group of inductees was selected by a committee of music journalists and industry professionals — operating both in and outside of Memphis — under the direction of Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum executive director John Doyle. The Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum launched the Memphis Music Hall of Fame project last year. Deliberations over this year’s class began in April and continued via a series of conference calls, with an initial target of 8-10 inductees swelling to 13 in the final accounting, itself down from roughly 30 candidates who were seriously considered, according to Doyle.

“I’ll be fielding phone calls this afternoon from people asking how could you not choose this person or how could this person be left out,” Doyle says. “But that’s the great thing about it. If we lived in another city, we’d be done already. Here we’ll still be inducting Grammy winners a decade from now.”

Doyle says it was hard to keep the number down to 25 in last year’s inaugural class and that the hope is to get to a smaller number next year.

The more manageable class this year should put a bigger spotlight on each inductee at a ceremony scheduled for Thursday, November 7th.

“This year, we will allow inductees to speak from the stage,” Doyle says. “The smaller numbers allow us to do that.”

After using the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts for last year’s induction ceremony, this year’s event will move to the more intimate and casual — and lately underused — Gibson Showcase Lounge, located inside the Gibson Guitar Factory, which Doyle suggests could become a permanent home for the event.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Outflix Weekend Picks

A scene from Any Day Now.

  • A scene from Any Day Now.

The Outflix Film Festival starts tonight at Malco’s Ridgeway theater and runs through next Thursday. I previewed the opening night features — documentary Bridegroom and the high school comedy G.B.F. — in this week’s paper. Here are a few potential highlights from the Saturday and Sunday slates:

Saturday:

Out in the Dark (3 p.m.): A Palestinian student who falls for an Israeli lawyer and finds himself caught between worlds in multiple ways — ostracized in Palestinian society because of his sexuality and in Israeli society because of his nationality. Has won awards at GLBT film festivals in cities such as Toronto, Philadelphia, and Miami.

Sunday:

Any Day Now (1:30 p.m.): This strong feature from writer-director Travis Fine is based on a true story and set in West Hollywood circa 1979, where a gay couple (Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt) take in a teenager with Down syndrome who’s been abandoned by his mother and fight a biased legal system to keep their new family together. An audience-award winner at festivals around the country, including Tribeca, Chicago, and Outfest. Cumming and Dillahunt’s odd couple pairing isn’t always the most convincing, but the film is moving without straining too hard for effect, and Cumming’s performance as a big-hearted drag queen walks a tightrope, but mostly stays balanced. Well worth a wider theatrical run than it got.

[jump]

The New Black (5:30 p.m.): A documentary about gay-rights issues within the African-American community. One activist asserts early on that her quest for equal rights for homosexuals is part of “the unfinished business of black people being free,” but the film explores such hurdles as the prevalence of homophobia in the black church and the use of gay rights as a black community wedge issue by political conservatives. Also a multiple audience-award winner on the fest circuit.

The Rugby Player (7:30 p.m.): A documentary about the relationship between Mark Bingham, one of the passengers on United 93 on 9/11 and his former flight attendant mother, Alice Hoagland.

For a full schedule and ticketing info see outflixfestival.org.

Categories
Music Music Features

Memphis Rocks (for Love)

After raising more than $120,000 for the Church Health Center over the past six years, the signature Rock for Love series of benefit concerts will add to the tally this weekend with its seventh installment. Since 1987, the Church Health Center has helped provide health care to uninsured working Memphians. Since many who have benefited from the center have been musicians, Rock for Love has emerged as a way for the local community to give back.

It’s also grown into one of the best annual showcases for contemporary Memphis music, this year highlighting 17 local bands and solo acts from a wide range of genres and scenes, who will play across three venues and three days. After tapping into Stax last year for Saturday night headliner Booker T, Rock for Love does so again, in a manner of speaking, with Soulsville “Chief Creative Officer” and Grammy-winning saxophonist Kirk Whalum headlining the free Saturday night show at the Levitt Shell.

In addition to the series of concerts, Rock for Love is conducting an online auction and will be selling a 20-song compilation CD featuring artists from this year’s series and some who have played the event in past years. Among the highlights: The slow-burn anthem “Old Man,” from rising country-rockers Dead Soldiers; the comic “Yardsale Weirdo,” from singer-songwriter Mark Edgar Stuart; the ghostly rockabilly groove of “It’s Only a Lonely Night,” from John Paul Keith; and “Deez,” a rare new track from Memphis indie-rock institution Snowglobe.

A day-by-day snapshot

Thursday, September 5th: An opening “VIP BBQ” at Ardent Studios will feature Latin singer Marcela Pinilla setting the stage for vintage soul band the Bo-Keys, who will be joined by singers John Gary Williams (of the Stax vocal group the Mad Lads) and Percy Wiggins. The event starts at 6 p.m. Tickets are $30 for individuals, $55 for couples, or $500 for a table.

Friday, September 6th: With K97’s Devin Steel keeping the party moving, the lineup at Young Avenue Deli will jump from the vintage roots of the Side Street Steppers (8:30 p.m.) to the Southern-flavored rock of Reemus Bodeemus (9:30 p.m.) to the soul/funk party of Hope Clayburn’s Soul Scrimmage (10:30 p.m.) to genre-flouting trio Kaleidophonix (11:30 p.m.). Admission is $10. Show starts at 8 p.m.

Saturday, September 7th: Three different Rock for Love concert slates provide live music from noon to late night on the concluding day of the festival.

A free day show at the Levitt Shell starts with singer-songwriters Elizabeth Wise (noon) and Chad Nixon (1:15 p.m.) and continues with promising young indie band the Star Killers (2:15 p.m.) and fun-loving Elvis tribute band Big E & the Mississippi Boys (3:15 p.m.).

Free music continues at the Shell that night, with the centerpiece Rock for Love concert. It’s already September, and I still haven’t heard a local album I like as much as Mark Edgar Stuart’s debut, Blues for Lou. Stuart will open the show, alongside frequent collaborator Kait Lawson, at 6 p.m. He’ll be followed by the “future blues” of Beale Street stalwart and The Voice contestant Patrick Dodd (7 p.m.) and then by veteran Memphis rocker John Kilzer (8 p.m.), culminating in Kirk Whalum’s headlining appearance at 9 p.m.

Rock for Love wraps up with an after-party back at Young Avenue Deli, where Devin Steel will again be on the turntables and a terrific three-band bill will feature the Mighty Souls Brass Band at 10 p.m., perhaps the city’s best new band to emerge this year, country-rockers Dead Soldiers at 10:45 p.m., and then roots-pop trio the Memphis Dawls at 11:30 p.m.

Rock for Love 7

Various locations

Thursday, September 5th-Saturday, September 7th

rockforlove.org

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Music Music Features

Steely Dan at Mud Island Amphitheatre

After launching their 1972 debut Can’t Buy a Thrill with the beautiful, bitter radio-rock classic “Reeling in the Years,” Steely Dan became AOR staples throughout the decade. Yet musical partners Walter Becker and Donald Fagen never really seemed that fond of rock. Rather, Becker and Fagen assembled their sui generis sound from every element tangential to rock-and-roll — jazz, traditional pop, blues, and R&B. Steely Dan’s songs were tricky, laden with irony and delivered by untrustworthy narrators, qualities hard to hear through a sonic aesthetic that could sound like cocktail hour for upscale fortysomethings. But the very source of Steely Dan’s charm is in the tension, such as it is, between the band’s low-life lyrics and high-toned jazz-rock soundscapes. Those plush, meticulous backing tracks are perhaps best heard as the idealized interior soundtrack of the typical Steely Dan protagonist — invariably a well-educated and well-off white guy of questionable moral character for whom things aren’t quite working out. Fagen has even sort of endorsed this reading by confessing that he and Becker think of their albums as comedy records to some degree. Reuniting more than a decade ago as a touring and occasional recording unit, Steely Dan has aged well. This isn’t surprising: The band’s music has always sounded “old,” so, in a way, Becker and Fagen may just be catching up with their own sound. Steely Dan plays the Mud Island Amphitheatre on Friday, September 6th. Showtime is 8 p.m. — Chris Herrington