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Music Record Reviews

Short Cuts

Addison Engelking:

1. One Beat — Sleater-Kinney (Kill Rock Stars): For me, Sleater-Kinney’s grand achievement was the best record of 2002 as early as July 17th, when I saw them headline a benefit concert for their native Portland’s fabulous Rock and Roll Camp for Girls. After 45 minutes of a VH-1: Storytellers-type show featuring career-spanning hits and anecdotes, the band launched into fearsome versions of the ebullient, clear-headed combat rock that makes One Beat local music that acts and feels like a global imperative. Girls ages 8 to 18 ran the sound board and light show, and 14 of the happy campers danced around and behind Janet Weiss, Corin Tucker, and Carrie Brownstein during the encore as I and several sets of rapt parents watched, awestruck, from our theater seats.

2. OOOH! — The Mekons (Quarterstick): Just when I thought One Beat‘s best tunes had epitomized 21st-century protest songs, this record came rumbling out of the ground like the drums of death pounding under the prologue of Gangs of New York. The imaginary and real wars that have preoccupied the Mekons for 20-plus years finally hit home September 2001, and though that may be good for artists, it might spell doom for everyone else. These 11 tribal battle hymns capture the imagination of disaster while insisting over and over that ancient hatreds will destroy us all or maybe not. “Better turn all the clocks back/I deserve to be happy” is just one of the hard truths scattered throughout the most frightening album in years.

3. Testament: The Complete Slash Recordings — The Blasters (Rhino); Send Me a Lullaby, Before Hollywood, Spring Hill Fair — The Go-Betweens (Circus/Jetset): These handsome reissues redefined the rock-and-roll canon of the 1980s and shed new light on such sere terms as “pop music” and “roots rock” in the process.

4. The Rough Guide to the Music of Nigeria and Ghana — Various Artists (World Music Network): I’m still too dumb to distinguish soukous from mbaqanga without a cheat sheet, but this is by far the funkiest Afropop comp I’ve heard. Thanks to Sir Victor Uwaifo and E.K. Nyame, it’s one of the purdiest too.

5. Songs for the Deaf — Queens of the Stone Age (Interscope): Turn it up.

Michaelangelo Matos:

1. Bootleg bonanza: From Boom Selection_Issue 01 (three MP3-CDs, 432 tracks, 34 hours) to under-the-counter compendiums like The Best Bootlegs in the World Ever to 2 Many DJs’ As Heard on Radio Soulwax mixes (Pt. 2 was legally issued by Pias Belgium, with Pt. 1 and Pt. 3 available less legitimately), 2002 was the year of the mash-up. In a year when none of Eminem’s singles had backing tracks as good as those surgically attached by Freelance Hairdresser or Jacknife Lee, it’s about damn time.

2. Original Pirate Material — The Streets (Vice/Atlantic): More catchphrases than you can throw a crumpet at, cheap-and-ready beats that retain their freshness dozens of listens in, a sense of humor broader than a season of Benny Hill, and more poignant than a very special episode of EastEnders, this was the best excuse for Anglophilia in ages.

3. Singles galore: As many good albums as 2002 offered, as a whole they weren’t a match for the singles. There are at least 40 legit, nonbootleg singles I could have happily put in my top 10, ranging from mainstream juggernauts (Kylie, No Doubt, Pink, the Hives, Clipse, Missy) to the more specialist likes of Shakedown, the Rapture, Royksopp, Sugababes, and DJ/rupture. So, uh, why does the radio still suck?

4. Microhouse madness: The beautiful bastard child of laptop glitch and club-bump kept on giving this year, thanks to mix discs by Triple R, Ellen Allien, and Swayzak, albums by Pantytec and Hakan Lidbo, and Herbert’s Secondhand Sounds collection.

5. Classic Afropop avalanche: Reissues of Orchestra Super Mazembe and the Bhundu Boys, not to mention comps like The History of Township Music, The Music in My Head 2, and African Salsa and Rumba, made living in the past sound every bit as inviting as the brave sonic tomorrows detailed above.

Stephen Deusner:

1. Original Pirate Material — The Streets (Vice/Atlantic): In the first verse of the first track of his first album, Britsploitation rapper Mike Skinner — aka The Streets — declares he’s “45th-generation Roman,” then he spends the rest of the album evoking a particularly Western world-weariness. His world contains “nothing but gray concrete and deadbeats.” What makes the album so powerful is his uncynical search for something more.

2. One Beat — Sleater-Kinney (Kill Rock Stars): With many people blindly swallowing the president’s war rhetoric, Sleater-Kinney have become the country’s new liberal conscience. One Beat‘s politics are best, though, when mixed with the personal: The album’s most haunting image is of Corin Tucker watching the 9/11 coverage with her new baby, both of them half a world away and helpless.

3. Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots — The Flaming Lips (Warner Brothers): Forget the title character and her mechanical nemeses: The vague story line here isn’t nearly as important as the songs, which celebrate the wonders of human emotions — from love and happiness to fear and regret. The emotionally direct “Do You Realize??” is the most devastating pop song about death since “Everybody Hurts.”

4. Sea Change — Beck (DGC): God bless poor Beck. He splits with his longtime girlfriend and then records a breakup album that’s equal parts Pink Moon and Hot Buttered Soul. Sea Change marks the first time he’s been able to completely shed his various personae and reveal what sounds like his true self.

5. Songs for the Deaf — Queens of the Stone Age (Interscope): In 2002, the planets aligned as Mark Lanegan and Dave Grohl joined QOTSA mainstays Josh Homme and Nick Oliveri for Songs for the Deaf, easily the coolest album title of the year. It’s a lineup they probably can’t duplicate, but together they sound like they know there won’t be a tomorrow.

Andrew Earles:

1. Suicide Invoice — The Hot Snakes (Swami): My perfect rock record comes courtesy of the minds that teamed up 10 years back as Drive Like Jehu — a record that manages to convey a believably tense and troubled air without screaming or yelling about it.

2. Slanted and Enchanted: Live and Redux — Pavement (Matador): Holds up like a champ — a triumph, considering this is decade-old indie rock, and it’s difficult to think of anything that ages as poorly. Pavement was also borrowing heavily from early Fall and the Swell Maps long before turn-of-the-’80s post-punk was the bankable commodity that it is today.

3. This Night — Destroyer (Merge): This is music that gives Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) the night sweats and humbles every other contemporary singer-songwriter operating outside the mainstream. Attention, Ryan Adams: Get out your notebook.

4. Each One Teach One — Oneida (Jagjaguwar): Don’t blame laziness or apathy for Oneida’s appearance on yet another of my year-end lists. Blame Oneida for putting out a record this brilliant. Oh, and blame other New York spotlight stealers like Interpol and the Liars for repackaging past genres into the underground rock equivalents of boy bands. Conversely, you cannot trace Oneida’s sound back to anything concrete. With impeccable taste, they piecemeal the past 40 years of volume-heavy rock and emerge peerless.

5. Live at the Witch Trials + Bonus Tracks — The Fall (Cog Sinister): For those intoxicated by Joy Division’s latest revival via Interpol’s popularity or 24 Hour Party People, I offer a literate, rollicking, sarcastic post-punk alternative. Be warned: Though an official label, it’s occasionally apparent that Cog Sinister finds it amusing (I’m sure in some quasi-Situationist fashion) to master their reissue catalog straight from the vinyl originals.

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wednesday, 8

Arf!: The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is presenting Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle: The Art of Charles Schulz now through Feb. 2, 2003. The exhibit tracks the late cartoonist’s life from his Minnesota roots on, and follows the development of the characters that made up the unique world of Peanuts.

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News The Fly-By

HIT THE ROAD, JACK!

Let’s get interactive. Nominations are in order for the person — fictional or actual or generic — you would most like to see depart the premises (in good health, of course). Examples: that dude Steve in the Dell commercials; the nameless offender who ends the Verizon commercials with “Can You Hear Me Now?” (Yes, unfortunately!); drivers who veer left before making right turns (and vice versa). Jerry Falwell. Meryl Streep. The range is wide.

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sunday, 5

If CBS comes calling — as they will today at 3:30 at The Pyramid to see John Caliparti’s basketball Tigers take on Villanova, the least we can do is show up inforce to boost the homeboys and heckle the intruders. Be there.

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News The Fly-By

UPSET ABOUT THE UPSET?

‘Twas a famous victory, all right, the Fiesta Bowl Ohio State win that all the jock-sniffers and armchair quarterbacks amongst us watched Friday night. Okay, Okay, so the interference call that kept Miami from winning in overtime was a bad call! Just like the one that umpire Don Denkinger blew in the 7th game of the 1985 World Series. But remember, all you Cardinal fans who won’t let that one rest: Jack Clark dropped a pop foul and Todd Worrell unloosed a wild pitch in the same inning. Who are we to quarrel with the fates? Hooray, Buckeyes!

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News The Fly-By

ECHOES OF YESTERYEAR?

Previews of Coming Attractions?

A new Rambo-style action-adventure film, “Iraqui 2”

A new blues number, “Korea, Korea”

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friday, 3

The Griz go against the Clippers of L.A. 7 p.m., The Pyramid.

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thursday, 2

It’s way over Fayetteville-way, but if it’s good enough for the ever-mobile Tiger Road Show, it’s good enough for us fans. The U of M basketball team takes on Arkansas at Bud Walton Arena, 7:05 p.m.

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Music Music Features

Sound Advice

Local singer-songwriter Wayne LeeLoy is probably better known around town as entrepreneur than as artist, and for good reason. As founder of the popular Memphis Troubadours Acoustic Showcase and driving force behind the spin-off project The Acoustic Highway, LeeLoy has been making good things happen on the local music scene. But he’s also an artist in his own right, fronting the folk-rock band Native Son, who will hold a CD-release party Saturday, December 28th, at the Lounge for their fine new disc Spirit. With its toe-tapping acoustic-based sound and ambitious songwriting, Spirit sports a vibe somewhat reminiscent of the Dave Matthews Band. Native Son will be joined Saturday by Los Cantadores.

Other local shows (not many touring acts around the holidays) of note this week include another record-release, for longtime local fixtures FreeWorld, who celebrate their new live album Saturday, December 28th, at the New Daisy Theatre, with Retrospect. And four bands whose records topped this critic’s year-end local list (see Music Feature, page 31) can all be seen this week. The Reigning Sound headline a New Year’s Eve bash at the Hi-Tone Café with Tyler Keith & the Preacher’s Kids and The Cool Jerks. At the Young Avenue Deli Friday, December 27th, Snowglobe and The Bloodthirsty Lovers will be joined by The Glass. And the next night at the Deli, Lucero return home for a special Christmas show that is sure to get you in the holiday spirit.

Chris Herrington

“Drinkin’ Alone,” the signature tune by Detroit goof-a-billy artists Bill Parker and His Motherscratchers, contains a bit of Charlie Louvin-style preaching. “God spoke to me in a dream,” says frontman Hank Diesel, “unfortunately, I was asleep.” Yes indeed, here is yet another punk-country group that develops their material by standing outside the trailer park looking in. Unlike most of the bands that are mining this increasingly fallow field these days, the Motherscratchers seem to genuinely enjoy the traditional music they exploit. Compared to the tired shtick of Southern Culture on the Skids, the Motherscratch-ers seem completely fresh, and they get extra points for taking their name from one of the silliest bits of dialogue that the Coen Brothers ever committed to film. They will be at the Hi-Tone on Friday, December 27th, with Knoxville’s Pink Sexies and Memphis’ own The Limes. —Chris Davis

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When Where What

Here it goes again: New Year’s Eve. Last year, you swore you wouldn’t go to another party filled with strangers. You decided then, as you locked yourself in the bathroom to avoid the touchy-feely toll of the new year, that next time you’ll be in Hawaii or New York or Paris or Cancun or Miami or the Bahamas. And here it goes again. But you don’t have to have a repeat of last year. There is plenty to do. Plenty.

Beale Street

At ALFRED’S (197 Beale, 525-3711), Nation will get you going with party tunes at 10:30 p.m., and afterward you can enjoy Steve Reid, Dave Smith, and Steve Wenger ($20-$25 cover). Just a few doors down, at BLUES HALL COFFEE HOUSE (182 Beale, 527-4392), Blind Mississippi Morris will do his “thang” from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m., and Faultline will step in at 10 p.m. For a New Year’s Eve workout — dance, dance, dance! — move your feet over to CLUB 152 (152 Beale, 544-7011) and DJs Tony and Worm at 10 p.m. If this doesn’t suit you, swing over to the NEW DAISY (330 Beale, 525-8979) and party with Another Society, Rail, Ashley Red, Crippled Nation, and Sheltered Life. Doors open at 7 p.m. ($10 cover). Get down, boogie, woogie, woogie at the RUM BOOGIE CAFE (182 Beale, 528-0150) with the Kirk Smithhart Band (5:30 to 9:30 p.m.) and James Govan & the Boogie Blues Band (10 p.m. to midnight) ($15 cover). If you always thought that you could do a better job than Gloria Gaynor, PAT O’BRIEN’S (310 Beale, 529-0900) may be your choice for the night. There, you can enjoy sing-along entertainment at the piano bar and a champagne toast and party favors at midnight (cover: $25 in advance, $30 at the door).

Collierville/Cordova/Germantown

For a laid-back New Year’s Eve, visit EQUESTRIA Restaurant & Lounge (3165 Forest Hill-Irene Rd., 869-2663), which offers a five-course menu including a variety of appetizers and salads as well as a choice of grilled ahi tuna, beef tenderloin, veal Milanese, sun-dried apricot-encrusted grouper, or a filet with rosemary shrimp and scallops, and a choice of desserts for $80/ person, gratuity not included. You can’t do without your HUEY’S burger on New Year’s Eve (1771 S. Germantown Rd., 754-3885)? You don’t have to. You can get as many burgers as you can eat (and afford) and enjoy The Lakesiders at 9 p.m. ($5 cover).

Downtown

Celebrate New Year’s Eve at AUTOMATIC SLIM’S Tonga Club (83 S. Second, 525-7948) and a four-course menu for $65 that offers a choice of four appetizers, entrées, and desserts, plus live entertainment by Los Cantadores. DAN MCGUINNESS PUB (Peabody Place, 527-8500) joins other mall businesses for a big party with various bands and DJs (no cover). Stop for a soul burger at EARNESTINE & HAZEL’S (84 G.E. Patterson, 523-9754), work its jukebox downstairs, or listen to Mr. Todd on the piano upstairs (no cover). And you’d better not miss Aquanet playing from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the FLYING SAUCER (130 Peabody Pl., 523-8536) — $10 cover. To experience the not-so-ordinary party, throw on your cocktail dress and have your chauffeur take you to the MADISON HOTEL (79 Madison, 333-1215) for a five-course dinner with wine, champagne toast, and party favors for $150/person. Seating starts at 8 p.m. Cash bar and live band Di Anne Price and Her Boyfriends. If you like it, you can stay: dinner and overnight stay in a deluxe room: $596 to $671/couple.

East Memphis

The COCKEYED CAMEL (5871 Poplar, 683-4056) will host a New Year’s Eve party with Backstage Pass and recommends reservations. ERLING JENSEN: The Restaurant (1044 S. Yates, 763-3700) offers a four-course New Year’s Eve dinner for $75/ person, including entrée choices such as buffalo tenderloin, Arctic char, and pheasant breast — but you better make those reservations. FOLK’S FOLLY (551 S. Mendenhall, 762-8200) really cuts down on the fuss, simply offering regular dinner available from 5 p.m. to midnight and Larry Cunningham on the piano in the front lounge all night long. You’ll get in for free at PATRICK’S (4698 Spottswood, 682-2853) and be entertained by The Marie Spence Band, or drive down to THE BOTTOM LINE (1817 Kirby Pkwy., 755-2481) for an evening with The Plaintiffs. If you want to pretend you are in New York while you’re actually at a restaurant in Memphis, WALLY JOE (5040 Sanderlin, 818-0821) should be your choice. There you can indulge in a New Year’s Eve menu with either four courses for $75/person or a seven course and glass of champagne for $125/person.

Frayser/Millington

You may have to BYOB at CLUB 51 (872-0151), but its New Year’s Eve party with Eden’s Alley is said to be worth the trip ($10/person, $15/couple; doors open at 8 p.m.).

Hickory Hill/Southeast

T.J. MULLIGAN’S (6635 Quince Rd., 753-8056)? Yes! Because if you don’t know where to go, you can be sure to always find T.J.’s and have a great New Year’s Eve party with The Snozberrys, champagne toast at midnight, and party favors ($5 cover).

Midtown

BOSCOS SQUARED (2120 Madison, 432-2222) offers a five-course menu with a choice of appetizers, entrées such as grilled crab-stuffed filet mignon, herb-crusted wild salmon, or pan-roasted turbot, and desserts for $100/person. Joyce Cobb and her dance band Cool Heat will provide the groove from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. THE BLUE MONKEY (2012 Madison, 272-BLUE) begins its party with The Sallymacs at 9:30 p.m. and provides champagne for everyone at midnight ($10 cover). BARI, formerly KOTO (22 S. Cooper, 722-2244) offers a four-course menu including dishes such as antipasti or salumi and grilled swordfish with balsamic vinegar and mint for $50/person with a glass of Asti. Just next door at THE FRENCH QUARTER SUITES (2144 Madison, 728-4000) you can celebrate the new year with Todd Hale & Company from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. At THE HI-TONE (1913 Poplar, 278-TONE), The Reigning Sound, The Cool Jerks, and The Preacher’s Kids will make your night. MELANGE (948 S. Cooper, 276-0002) makes it mellow this year with a four-course New Year’s Eve dinner for $44 per person, which includes a choice of appetizers such as seared sea scallops, portobello leek tart, or roasted quail, entrée choices of beef, salmon, venison, or risotto, and a quartet of desserts. Later in the evening, local DJs will provide the right groove in the bar. THE P&H CAFE (1532 Madison, 726-0906) goes deep in the Delta on New Year’s Eve with the bluegrass band Two Mule Plow playing at 10 p.m. Champagne toast at midnight ($10 cover). At THE YOUNG AVENUE DELI (2119 Young, 278-0034), The Cotton Tone play at 10:30 p.m., with a champagne toast at midnight (no cover).

Raleigh/Bartlett

Hats, horns, and lots of noise is your thing? Get to The STAGE SHOP (2951 Cela Rd., 382-1577) for its New Year’s Eve party, with live music from The Clergy, Nina Makris Band, and Vintage Rust starting at 9:30 p.m. ($8 cover).

University of Memphis

If you happen to end up on the Highland strip, then happen by NEWBY’S (539 S. Highland, 452-8408) and party with The Gamble Brothers and their opening act Stout at 10 p.m. Stay for party favors and the breakfast buffet at 1 a.m. ($15 cover).

Tunica

You’ve got that poker face, and here’s what Tunica has to offer: GRAND CASINO RESORT (1-800-WIN-4-WIN) has entertainment with Carrie Folks and The Dempseys and Dr. Zarr in the Replays sports bar. Lou Rawls will perfom at GOLD STRIKE CASINO (1-888-24K-PLAY), and at HOLLYWOOD CASINO (1-800-871-0711), Sonny Burgess and the Pacers play at 9 p.m. and 11 p.m. If you are looking for Big Fun, try FITZGERALDS CASINO (1-800-766-LUCK) at 11:30 p.m.

And More

AXA LIBERTY BOWL FOOTBALL CLASSIC. The Conference USA champion and the Mountain West champion square off at 2:30 p.m., complete with a week of events. Liberty Bowl (525-1515). Tickets, $25-$50. MEMPHIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. Broadway New Year’s Eve: vocalist Kim Crosby will join vocalist Cris Groenendaal and Craig Schulman in an array of Broadway classics at the Germantown Performing Arts Centre (1801 Exeter Rd., 525-1515) at 8 p.m. ($60/ticket). THE MILITARY RETIREES NEW YEAR’S EVE CELEBRATION at 280 Cynthia Place (527-0238) begins at 10 p.m. ($15/person, $25/couple). If you want to ring in 2003 by listening and dancing to some smooth neo-soul, jazz, and funk sounds, MPACT MEMPHIS, THA MOVEMENT, AND GAMUT magazine’s New Year’s Eve Event at 11 W. Butler — off South Front across from the Lofts apartments is the event for you. Host DJs on two stages and in the Jazz Lounge are Afrodesia, Native Son, Soulsville Prophets, The Memphix DJs Chase One and Red Eye Jedi, Jet set DJs Carlos Moore and Dave Agape, and Soul Shower DJs Brad Johnson and Witnesse. Event starts at 8 p.m., tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Tickets can be purchased at Java Cabana (2170 Young Avenue), Java Juice and Jazz (1423 Elvis Presley Boulevard), and Patrick Henry, Tailor (115 G.E. Patterson Street). THE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM (2525 Central, 458-2678) will celebrate New Year’s at Noon with crafts, a walk through the Time Tunnel, face-painting, and a parade to the Time Square exhibit for a countdown to the new year. 10 a.m.-1 p.m.