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We Recommend We Recommend

wednesday, 29

Tonight’s Brooks Museum of Art First Wednesdays at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art features a gallery tour, a Brushmark Restaurant dinner, a champagne tasting, a presentation of video works by Memphis College of Art professor Kim Beck, and music by the Don O’Barr trio. And last but certainly not least, the ever-wonderful, ever-beautiful, ever-sweet, and ever-talented Ms. Di Anne Price is playing tonight in the lobby of the Madison Hotel. Go there and have drinks at the hotel’s Grill 83 and you’ll be set. Or don’t. As always, I don’t care what you do tonight or any other night, because I don’t even know you, and unless you can assure me that no “slammer worms” (think about that one!) are going to infest my computer, then I feel quite sure that I don’t want to meet you. Besides, it’s time for me to blow this dump and go see if we’ve invaded Luxembourg yet.

Categories
News The Fly-By

COME ON!

First returns on the new Super Bowl commercials unveiled during Sunday s Tampa Bay-Oakland game are that they are an unusually tacky, uninventive bunch although there is a certain undeniable charm in watching two members of the Osbourne family morph into Donnie and Marie Osmond. (Now what was that product?) Meanwhile, what can be done to rid us of those even tackier Xerox commercials, which turn up every Sunday during the morning political talk shows, that begin with some old authoritarian frump setting himself up for a put-down from some modernized smug platitude-spouting geek. Talk about a plague on both houses!

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We Recommend We Recommend

tuesday, 28

Tonight’s Starving Artist Dinner and Auction at Melange is a fund-raiser for Playhouse on the Square’s educational and outreach theater programs and features a six-course dinner, wine, and an auction. And back at the Blue Monkey it’s < b >Fred, Bobby, and Hunky Rusty .

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We Recommend We Recommend

monday, 27

Here come the Memphis Grizzlies again, playing tonight against Houston. Arkansas-based journalist and author Mara Leveritt will be signing copies of her new controversial book Devil’s Knot: The True Story of the West Memphis Three. And while I’ve never heard them, any band that calls itself The Drunk Stuntmen should be worth checking out; they’re at Murphy’s tonight.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

sunday, 26

It is Super Bowl Sunday, of course, so many of you will be chugalugging beer and eating bean dip either at your favorite bar or at home. Alternatives: m.o.e. is at the New Daisy tonight; and there’s the Memphis Symphony Orchestra: 50th Anniversary Concert at the new Cannon Center for the Performing Arts.

Categories
Music Music Features

Sound Advice

p>Though they aren’t quite what most would envision from the term, upstate New York rockers moe. get saddled with the “jam band” label, though “saddled” has a negative connotation and these guys probably wouldn’t see it like that. Nevertheless, it seems more accurate to say that moe.’s a band that gets most of its inspiration from pre-punk ’70s arena-rock and loves to solo. In other words, there’s about as much Lynyrd Skynyrd-style and Steely Dan-style virtuosity and exploration here as open-ended grooving. They’ve earned a devoted cult with years of hard touring and will be back in Memphis Wednesday, January 29th, at the New Daisy in support of their new album Wormwood, an experimental mix of live recordings and studio work.

Another hard-touring act with one foot in the jam scene and one foot outside of it is North Carolina’s Hobex, whose brand of soul-based rock does for R&B sort of what the North Mississippi Allstars do for the blues. Hobex will show off their unique sound Thursday, January 23rd, at Newby’s.

But the most compelling touring act to hit town (aside from the Apples in Stereo, see Music Feature, page 32) may be Texas honky-tonker Roger Wallace, an Austin-based country singer who has been favorably compared to fellow scenemates Wayne Hancock and Junior Brown. Wallace will perform Saturday, January 25th, at the Hi-Tone Café with local country band Papa Top’s West Coast Turnaround.

If you’re looking for an exclusively local music experience this week, your best bet is likely the latest installment of Tha Movement, the popular monthly series that has been floating around from club to club attracting some of the most exciting and diverse crowds in town. This month, Tha Movement returns to Young Avenue Deli on Saturday, January 25th, for what they’re calling a “Roots, Reggae, & Dance Hall Show,” featuring reggae band JAH-MEK-I and DJs Akili and Aramis. n

Chris Herrington

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Last Dream

It’s become a TV ritual: Every year in mid-January, around the time of Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, we get perfunctory network news reports about “the slain civil rights leader.” But the last three years of his life are totally missing, as if flushed down a memory hole.

What TV viewers see is a closed loop of familiar file footage: King battling desegregation in Birmingham (1963); reciting his dream of racial harmony at the rally in Washington (1963); marching for voting rights in Selma, Alabama (1965); and, finally, lying dead on the motel balcony in Memphis (1968).

An alert viewer might notice that the chronology jumps from 1965 to 1968. Yet King didn’t take a sabbatical near the end of his life. In fact, he was speaking and organizing as diligently as ever. Almost all of those speeches were filmed or taped. But they’re not shown today on TV.

Why?

It’s because national news media have never come to terms with what King stood for during his final years. In the early 1960s, when King focused his challenge on legalized racial discrimination in the South, most major media were his allies. Network TV and national publications graphically showed the police dogs and bullwhips and cattle prods used against Southern blacks who sought the right to vote or to eat at a public lunch counter.

But after passage of civil-rights acts in 1964 and 1965, King began challenging the nation’s fundamental priorities. He maintained that civil-rights laws were empty without “human rights” — including economic rights. For people too poor to eat at a restaurant or afford a decent home, King said, antidiscrimination laws were hollow.

Noting that a majority of Americans below the poverty line were white, King developed a class perspective. He decried the huge income gaps between rich and poor and called for “radical changes in the structure of our society” to redistribute wealth and power.

“True compassion,” King declared, “is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.”

By 1967, King had also become the country’s most prominent opponent of the Vietnam War and a staunch critic of overall U.S. foreign policy, which he deemed militaristic. In his “Beyond Vietnam” speech delivered at New York’s Riverside Church on April 4, 1967 — a year to the day before he was murdered — King called the United States “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.”

From Vietnam to South Africa to Latin America, King said, the U.S. was “on the wrong side of a world revolution.” King questioned “our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America” and asked why the U.S. was suppressing revolutions “of the shirtless and barefoot people” in the Third World, instead of supporting them.

In foreign policy, King also offered an economic critique, complaining about “capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa, and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries.”

In his last months, King was organizing the most militant project of his life: the Poor People’s Campaign. He crisscrossed the country to assemble “a multiracial army of the poor” that would descend on Washington — engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience at the Capitol, if need be — until Congress enacted a poor people’s bill of rights. Reader’s Digest warned of an “insurrection.”

King’s economic bill of rights called for massive government-jobs programs to rebuild America’s cities. He saw a crying need to confront a Congress that had demonstrated its “hostility to the poor” — appropriating “military funds with alacrity and generosity” but providing “poverty funds with miserliness.”

How familiar that sounds today, 35 years after King’s efforts on behalf of the poor people’s mobilization were cut short by an assassin’s bullet.

Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon are syndicated columnists and authors of Adventures in Medialand: Behind the News, Beyond the Pundits.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

On the Make

To I have an original thought in my head?”

“My life is a cliché. I need to turn my life around.”

“I have no understanding of anything outside my own panic and self-loathing.”

These are the words of Charlie Kaufman in the throes of writer’s block, waddling around his apartment in wrinkled flannel and sweatpants, perspiration spreading across his brow, speaking feverishly into a tape recorder about his inability to make progress on his latest screenplay.

Kaufman, the celebrated oddball screenwriter behind Being John Malkovich, Human Nature, and the soon-to-be-released Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, is famous for having very original thoughts, of course, and with Adaptation, his latest collaboration with Malkovich director Spike Jonze, he accomplishes what may well be a film first: Adaptation is a movie in which the screenwriter’s claim of primary authorship is so complete that he becomes as played by Nicolas Cage the film’s protagonist.

And, unsurprisingly, Adaptation is a great film about the act of writing, with a keen sense of the elaborate system of goals and rewards that writers give themselves to push slowly materializing work along: “Okay, I’ll finish this paragraph then (have a snack) (walk the dog) (watch some television) so I can clear my head enough to write the rest.” It captures the onanistic nature (figurative and literal) of the solitary exercise and the often-exhausting struggle between the desire for the relief that completion brings and the desire to do good work. Yet Kaufman portrays his own writing process in an adaptation an interpretation of someone else’s work.

Some background is in order: Kaufman in “real” life (and this is just the sort of film that inspires those quotation marks) was hired to write an adaptation of a real book, The Orchid Thief, by a real writer, New Yorker scribe Susan Orlean. The book is, as Kaufman (the character) says to a studio executive in the film, “great sprawling New Yorker stuff.” Orlean’s title subject is John Laroche, a thirtysomething Floridian and self-taught horticultural expert arrested for leading three Seminoles, for whom he worked as a nursery manager, into the Fakahatchee swamp and extracting pillow cases full of endangered and protected orchids. In the course of detailing Laroche’s case, and his life, Orlean delves into the history and character of Florida, the subculture of orchid collectors, the fascinating (no, really) history of the plant itself, and the nature of collecting and obsession.

Kaufman, both on-screen and off, obviously thinks very highly of the book. In the film, he tells a studio executive that he wants to be true to the book, that he doesn’t want it to be a Hollywood thing with car chases and guns and drug deals, with people falling in love and learning life lessons. Later, when struggling with the adaptation, his agent suggests he “make up a crazy story,” since, after all, that’s what he’s known for. But Kaufman responds, with utter sincerity, “I didn’t want to do that. I have a responsibility to the material. I wanted to grow as a writer. To do something simple. To show people how beautiful flowers are.”

And to a degree, Kaufman’s script is a success. Many of the more memorable yet seemingly noncinematic passages in the book find their way onto the screen: a meditation on the delicately specific relationships between different types of orchids and the insects that pollinate them, for instance. But these scenes invariably bleed into Kaufman’s personal life, such as Orlean’s description of the different varieties of orchids morphing into a romantically unsuccessful Kaufman’s description of different varieties of women.

But Kaufman, in real life and in the film, finds himself incapable of writing (or, one wonders, unwilling to write) a straight adaptation of The Orchid Thief, whatever that might mean with a book about flowers, and so Adaptation interweaves three layers of action. There is the action that takes place within The Orchid Thief itself: the story of plant poacher Laroche (here played brilliantly by former Lone Star leading man Chris Cooper) and his Florida orchid schemes. Then the film pulls back for a second layer of action, envisioning an elegant Orlean (Meryl Streep in fine comic form) writing the book in New York. And finally, there is Kaufman struggling with his screenplay adaptation.

As the film develops, it’s this last layer that begins to take over, with Kaufman’s own insecurities and doubts blocking out his ability to get The Orchid Thief onto the screen. Adaptation is a film that unfurls as it is written, or, as the film itself intimates when Kaufman compares himself to an ouroboros, the mythical serpent that eats its own tail, it’s a film that begins to devour itself as it goes along. As Kaufman’s frustration mounts, Orlean’s “great sprawling New Yorker stuff” becomes “that sprawling New Yorker shit,” and it becomes clear that Adaptation is less a film about flowers than a film about failure, though perhaps the most deliriously entertaining film on that subject ever made.

Because the film’s characters stand in for real people, there seem to be different levels of communication embedded in the dialogue and one can see a discussion between the real Kaufman and Orlean over the screenplay’s relationship to The Orchid Thief happening in the film. At one point, late in the film, Cage’s Kaufman looks up from reading a particularly evocative passage in the book, gazes at Orlean’s photo on the jacket, and says, “Such sad, sweet insights. So true. I don’t know how to do this. I’m afraid to disappoint you. You’ve written a beautiful book.” It comes across as an actual apology to Orlean for a screenplay that some, including possibly Kaufman, might view as an act of extreme selfishness.

To further convey his frustration and anxiety over the writing process, Kaufman creates a fictional twin brother, the cheerfully crass Donald (also Cage), who is as happily oblivious as Charlie is helplessly self-conscious.

Enticed by the Hollywood lifestyle, the deadbeat Donald decides to become a screenwriter too, just like his successful brother. So, while Charlie stares at blank pages and spews self-loathing into his tape recorder, Donald enrolls in screenwriting seminars given by real-life formula guru Robert McKee (a blustery Brian Cox).

As Charlie’s inability to adapt The Orchid Thief worsens, as the pressure from the studio and his agent builds, and as Donald’s unlikely career takes off, a desperate Charlie takes his agent’s advice and solicits Donald’s help on the script, even attending one of McKee’s lectures. Charlie then humiliates himself by asking the action-oriented McKee a question about how to write a script where the characters “struggle and are frustrated and nothing is resolved, like in the real world.”

With McKee assuring Charlie that if you “wow them in the end, then you’ve got a hit,” Charlie gives up and turns the screenplay over to Donald, who earns his (real-life) co-writing credit with a denouement that takes a gleeful dive into the exact same Hollywood clichés Charlie had earlier denounced. What to make of this ever so ambiguous plunge into the abyss? Is it a final admission of failure and defeat? A satiric swipe at Hollywood convention? An insistence that personal contentment trumps artistic integrity? All of the above? Ultimately, perhaps Adaptation is a film whose conclusion has to be written by the audience. Chris Herrington

Narc, Joe Carnahan’s new film, begins with a heart-stopping chase sequence. Detective Nick Tellis (Jason Patric) is in hot pursuit of a crazed junkie through a project-y neighborhood in dirty Detroit. The scene is shot with a hand-held camera. We hear determined footsteps and Patric’s frantic, heavy breathing. Our own breath deepens. Our heartbeats speed up.

Tellis meets up with the “perp” in a playground. He has to make a split-second decision. Tellis is screaming, in equal parts terror, failure, and exhaustion. Blackout. This is Narc.

After the incident at the playground, Tellis sits out to re-prioritize and hold his life together. But months later an undercover cop has been killed on the job, and nobody seems to be able to produce any evidence. Tellis, all too successful at worming his way into the underbelly of the Detroit drug scene, is reluctantly returned to active duty to help the murdered cop’s partner solve the case.

Enter the partner, Lt. Henry Oak (Ray Liotta, with much more complicated intensity than his usual, glaring rage). Hard-edged and not hung up on, say, rules or anything like that, Oak definitely puts the “bad” in the expression “good cop, bad cop.”

So, Oak and the kinder, gentler Tellis are a tense but effective team that becomes tested as details of the case hit closer to home: Tellis neglects his family as he becomes obsessed with solving the murder, and Oak’s closeness to the case obscures his judgment and temper both to near-disaster by the film’s dizzying end, which achieves the same frenetic desperation as the film’s arresting opening.

This is Carnahan’s second film. His first, Blood, Guts, Bullets and Octane, was a well-regarded, gritty action-comedy that Carnahan was miraculously able to compose for a mere $7,500. His rising star is easily explained by the slick and stylish look and feel of Narc shot mostly in weird, cold, clinical, washed-out bluish colors that not only make being a police officer feel like extra-dirty work, they make Detroit look downright unlivable. Or extra-unlivable. Either way, audiences will leave Narc with a little more appreciation for good, drug-free neighborhoods and a little less faith in the police force, whose enforcement of the law can, when only slightly corrupted, seduce the most honorable toward their own rights and wrongs. Bo List

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Short Cuts

Failer

Kathleen Edwards

(Zoë/Rounder)

On this debut album, the 24-year-old Ottawa-based singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards sounds eerily, even suspiciously, like Lucinda Williams. According to her press kit, she’s a diplomat’s daughter who switched from classical violin to alt-country after discovering Whiskeytown, but it’s not former Whiskeytown frontman Ryan Adams who has inspired this familiar-sounding marble-mouthed drawl, especially when bearing down on words such as “heart,” “mouth,” and “face.” It’s his Lost Highway labelmate Williams. So complete is Edwards’ mastery of Williams’ trademark vocal mannerisms that it’s sort of embarrassing on first listen. When Edwards sings “and everything” at the end of a line on “One More Song the Radio Won’t Like,” the first thing that comes to mind is Williams’ devastating delivery of the same evocative, open-ended phrase on Car Wheels On a Gravel Road‘s “Right in Time.”

And it isn’t just Williams’ vocal style that Edwards evokes. She also nails the hard-drinking, reckless, and emotionally raw mood, the combination of vulnerability and wry self-loathing (just look at the album title) that sometimes colors Williams’ music. On “One More Song the Radio Won’t Like,” Edwards muses that “No one likes a girl who won’t sober up,” while on “Hockey Skates” she confronts a lover with “Do you think your boys’ club will crumble/Just because of a loud-mouthed girl?”

But further listening reveals something more than just an ace mimic. Edwards is a compelling artist and sharp songwriter in her own right. She flashes a personality more individual than the standard alt-country cutout: The imagery on “Hockey Skates” is clearly her own, while on “Westby,” a quick-and-dirty narrative about a motel rendezvous with an older man in which Edwards flips through the cable after he passes out, she sounds her age (or a few years younger) in a way that you can’t imagine Williams ever has. And she shows her songwriting fangs on the chorus, observing with pointed nonchalance, “And if you weren’t so old I’d probably keep you/If you weren’t so old I’d tell my friends,” before slowing down for the deadpan punchline: “But I don’t think your wife would like my friends.”

But best of all may be the lead cut, “Six O’Clock News,” in which Edwards treads dangerous ground. Looking for an interesting way into one of those increasingly familiar Dog Day Afternoon-style scenarios (think Columbine but a few notches less intense), Edwards manages to avoid awkwardness in a song more writerly and topical than anything else on the album. Imagining the helpless lover of someone at the center of a bad situation, the song’s accumulated detail evokes Nebraska-era Springsteen more than Williams, and Edwards scores a knockout with a glancing blow when her narrator envisions an escape hatch not likely to materialize: “Peter, sweet baby, there’s just something that I gotta say to you/Gonna have your baby this coming June/We could get a little place down by Gilmour Park/You could do a little time and save my broken heart.”

Chris Herrington

Grade: A-

Shut Up

Kelly Osbourne

(Epic)

Television stardom rarely translates from the tube to the turntable. For every success like the Monkees, there are scores of embarrassing, nearly forgotten also-rans like Rick Springfield, Don Johnson, and — inevitably — Kelly Clarkson. Does anyone remember former Young and the Restless heartthrob and “Rock On” singer Michael Damien? Can you sing the chorus to the Heights’ big hit, “How Do You Talk to an Angel?”

With the fleeting nature of crossover celebrity in mind, it’s surprising how good Kelly Osbourne’s debut album, Shut Up, is. The reality-TV star’s debut has the accessible feel of the best pop-punk, equal parts Avril Lavigne (who has better hooks) and Sum 41 (who have more fun). The title track stands out as a radio-ready single, and “Coolhead” cries out for a montage in some unfilmed teen movie. Unfortunately, too many of the other overproduced songs sound indistinguishable from one another, making Osbourne sound like so many other post-Britney girl rockers.

Shut Up is a fine effort, but it’s not quite good enough to launch a career as anything other than Ozzy’s daughter, the Princess of Darkness. It desperately wants to be a real rock album, but it will inevitably be filed under pop curiosity — neither good nor embarrassing enough to be memorable.

Stephen Deusner

Grade: B

Mama Says I’m Crazy

Mississippi Fred McDowell and Johnny Woods

(Fat Possum)

Let’s put it this way: Without Fred McDowell there would probably be no Fat Possum or any current interest in what has become known in recent years as North Mississippi hill-country blues. McDowell was the prototype for this style of bottleneck guitar blues that is played in an open-chord country tuning. Fat Possum’s Matthew Johnson turned this unadorned and powerful music into a signature record-label sound and identity decades after McDowell’s death. And Johnson’s most bankable artists, R.L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough, great as they are/were, never really made it to the same league as McDowell. He could switch from quiet acoustic blues to devastating electric boogie depending on the recording date or live gig.

And the late Johnny Woods, McDowell’s favorite harmonica player, could have given the hard-drinking, liver-damaged Fat Possum artist roster a run for their money in a moonshine-swilling contest. I once played a benefit gig with a very drunk Woods during the summer of 1979 in Little Rock. (As I recall, the benefit had something to do with a group home for the profoundly retarded, and most of the home’s inhabitants seemed to be in attendance that day. They enjoyed dancing to our music in a large circle while holding hands, but that’s another story.)

Woods wobbled in front of me, staring blankly into my eyes and furiously blowing harp as if trying to tell me something. (That my drumming sucked?) I never did understand what Woods was trying to communicate to me during that performance since he was too intoxicated to speak afterward. But I’ll always remember looking into those yellow, bloodshot orbs of his and noting that nobody seemed to be home. He looked drunk and pitiful that day (so did I, for that matter), but he played and sounded great.

And he sounds that way on this very casual, home recording session taped by George Mitchell in North Mississippi in 1967. It’s not the same caliber as McDowell’s 1969 classic I Do Not Play No Rock and Roll, but it’s a great chronicle of how two masters made music effortlessly and intuitively. Yeah, “Shake ‘Em On Down” is included here, but it was never a cliché when McDowell played it.

Fat Possum is to be commended for uncharacteristic restraint in not making references to “boozy bluesmen” in their liner notes or promo material. Nice one, Matthew. — Ross Johnson

Grade: B+

Categories
Music Music Features

Sound Advice

New York-based punk-rock band Crimson Sweet return to Memphis this week, this time in support of their debut full-length Livin’ in Strut. With femme-fronted punk bands from sea to shining sea (think Cali’s Distillers or NYC’s Yeah Yeah Yeahs) gaining a modicum of buzz, Crimson Sweet has a sound strong and sure enough to join the party, as exhibited on tunes ranging from the rousing, straight-up rock-and-roll anthem “Hello New York” to the surging emotion of “White Heart.”

Crimson Sweet is decidedly more straightforward than local comrades The Lost Sounds, with whom they’ll be sharing the stage Friday, January 17th, at the Hi-Tone Café. This rockin’ double bill offers a chance to not only check out some up-and-coming out-of-towners but give a proper send-off to the Lost Sounds, who’ll be heading out on the road for a month-long tour after the show.

Chris Herrington

So you meet this Chopper Girl and you think, Yeah right. This shy, almost mousy person whose natural flow is more akin to your elementary school librarian’s than to Snoop Dogg is a badass rapper? Believe it when I see it. Then you see Chopper Girl in her old-school warm-ups with the hood up, and you think, Yo man. What’s this little Snow White doing done up all South-side and shit? That’s wack, yo. And then the beat starts and Chopper Girl proves why she’s one of the Dirty South Divas. Chopper Girl will be keepin’ it surreal at Reedmeisters with the godfather of Memphis rap, Al Kapone, on Sunday, January 19th.

I’ve been listening to Jim Dickinson‘s take on Blaze Foley’s “If I Could Only Fly” quite a bit lately. Not many people could cover a tune so recently immortalized by Merle Haggard and still make it seem fresh. But Memphis’ genre-skipping pianoman and world-boogie provocateur has the skills to do just that. He’ll be doing an in-store appearance at Cat’s Midtown on Saturday, January 18th.

At a recent show with the Reigning Sound and newcomers La Paloma, Viva L’American Death Ray Music proved that in spite of some changes in the lineup they are tighter and fuller-sounding than ever. They’ll be joined by Memphis’ exciting new tech-centrics, The Pelicans, at the Young Avenue Deli on Saturday, January 18th.

Chris Davis