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KREATURE COMFORTS

A recent Elvis-related article in London’s Sunday Telegraph quoted Kreature Comfort: The Lowlife Guide to Memphis, a tool for alternative tourists published by Shangri La records. The article cites the guide’s claim that a trip to Memphis offers tourists both the best and the worst in vacation opportunities, saying, “You could hit a jamming Keith Richards show on Beale Streetor end up in line with 8,000 Elvis Zombies waiting to smell Elvis’s bicycle seat at Graceland. The choice is yours.” The author, Michael Gray, politiely responds, “I’ll take Graceland,thanks.”

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SIM MEMPHIS

The hottest trend in the art world today appears to be the emulation of video games. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is displaying a 1997 work by artist Miltos Manetas in which Tomb Raider‘s curvey heroine Laura Croft dies in a number of gruesome ways. Phoenix-based artist John Haddock has likewise jumped on the latest pop-art bandwagon by making historical events look like scenarios from Maxis’ popular Sim games. Haddock’s works include the Sim-style image of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination at the Lorraine Motel.

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sunday, august 19

I have but two words for tonight: Denise LaSalle. Yes, the R&B superstar is at Club 152 on Beale St.

T.S.

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saturday, August 18

While I really haven’t kept up with things this year, tonight is the grand finale of the Images of Elvis impersonator contest at the Holiday Inn Select, so I suppose this is the night the winner will be named at Today’s 19th Annual Elvis Presley International 5K Run and Fun Walk — a fund-raiser for UCP (formerly United Cerebral Palsy) — at Graceland is expected to draw some 4,000 runners, walkers, and wheelchair participants and ends with a post-run party at Graceland Pavilion with live music by the Bouffants. This afternoon’s Homeless Animals’ Day at the Overton Park Shell honors shelter animals and the organizations that help them. There’s a K-97 Summer Jam at Mud Island Ampitheater tonight. The Dillingers are having their reunion show tonight with Bluegrass Stains at the Map Room. And the Memhis Acoustic Music Association is hosting a concert at Otherlands Coffee Bar tonight by Willie Lee Ellis (better known as Commercial Appeal music writer Bill Ellis) and the winner of ths year’s International Blues Talent competition, Richard Johnson.

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friday, august 17

One art opening tonight: it s at the Memphis Arts Council offices for Passion for Nature, works by Jeanne Reynolds. Tonight s Orpheum Summer Movie Series feature is One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest. James Taylor is in concert tonight at The Pyramid. Back at Horseshoe Casino, there s a show by Daryl Hall and John Oates. Andy Childs is performing his Elvis Week Variety Show in the Budweiser Pavilion at W.C. Handy Park on Beale Street. Just across the street, Barbara Blue is at O Sullivan s on Beale. The Hollywood All-Stars are at Wild Bill s. And Jack Ingram is at the Hi-Tone Cafe.

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MORE ELVIS

Lansky Brothers, the men s clothing store that provided Elvis with his hip duds, has announced that it will produce a line of Elvis-inspired clothing. As of now, the line is limited to 1950s-style rockabilly shirts and suits. Elvis fans who wish to emulate the rocker s bedazzling white-jumpsuit look remain S.O.L.

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PIECES OF THE CROSS

Once upon a time there was only Graceland. Nowadays rock-and-roll pilgrims may choose to visit any number of Elvis-related shrines throughout the Mid-South, each with its own assortment of increasingly bizarre relics. If you thought that Elvis’ Dilaudid bottles, part of Dr. Nick’s “Memories of Elvis” exhibit at Hollywood Casino, was the creme de la tacky, think again. The Rockabilly Hall of Fame of Jackson, Tennessee, which recently announced that its annual rockabilly festival will henceforth be held in August to coincide with the influx of Presley-related tourists, boasts the weirdest bit of memorabilia to surface to date: The Hall of Fame is displaying the accursed defibrillator and paddles that failed to revive our King all those years ago.

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thursday, august 16

Tonight, the Playwrights’ Forum production of Dancing at the Revolution opens at TheatreWorks. There are lots of Elvis Week events, not the least of which is Elvis: The Concert, a massive multimedia show that reunites Elvis’ band members live on stage with a video-projected King performing with them. One non-sanctioned event is tonight’s Millennium Death Trip show at Murphy’s, with live music by The Limes, The Chiselers, and The Gabe & Amy Show.

Down in Tunica, Ringo Starr and His New All-Starr Band are at Horseshoe Casino. St. Somewhere is at Newby’s tonight. The Ross Rice Band is at the Blue Monkey. And last but certainly not least, there’s a show tonight at B.B. King’s with Rufus Thomas, Ruby Wilson, Preston Shannon, and Little Jimmy King. I’d say that one ought to be the ticket.

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Music Record Reviews

Short Cuts

St. Louis Blues

Archie Shepp

(Jazz Magnet)

Archie Shepp, besides being a playwright and professor, is one of the more notable musicians to come out of the avant-garde (or free) movement that revolutionized jazz in the 1960s. He was considered a fearsome intellectual who articulated his rage at social injustice through his vitriolic and very original tenor sax solos when he wasn’t decrying established cultural dogma within earshot of anyone who would listen. But as that decade crept to a close, Shepp seemed to have worn himself out, content to experiment with and explore the African-American tradition in music with the intensity he once reserved for protest.

Forty or so years and innumerable recordings later, Shepp offers an accomplished and beautifully cerebral homage to the blues and its gospel underpinnings. Joining him on St. Louis Blues are the brilliant Richard Davis on bass and fellow free jazz veteran Sunny Murray on drums. Davis, also a professor, is a classicist who works acoustic-only and is associated more with hard bop. A technical master, Davis is also a veteran of several symphony orchestras, including Stravinsky’s, but is known best as an inimitable asset on any session. Murray, a propulsive drummer, is more fastidious in style than many of his contemporaries. His unique approach focuses not on laying down a steady beat or keeping a tune’s rhythm (he was one of the first to diverge from the norm) but on a meandering parallel accompaniment to the dominant instruments. Guest percussionist Leopoldo Fleming provides an intuitive mix of bongos and other accentuating instruments on all tracks.

W.C. Handy’s “St. Louis Blues” and Billie Holiday’s “God Bless the Child” feature brief passages of Shepp’s guileless vocals, much informed by the spiritual longings of gospel. His tenor sax invokes the melodies of these compositions without running them over, while Davis and Murray intimate the songs’ time-worn phrases. Much more exciting, though, are some of the players’ own compositions. Murray’s “Et Moi” allows Shepp to wander off into Eastern territory, punctuating with the bravura patois of his sax the rhythm stressed so furtively by Murray, while the throbbing cadence of Davis’ bass fluidly dominates the low range. Davis’ “Total Package” might best be described as trippy as hell. A mind-bending piece opened and transfixed by Davis’ use of a bow on his bass, “Total Package” is a wide-open space in which all involved seem to submit to the personal nature of their instrument, whether it be clamorous (drums), meditative (bass), or existential (sax), and enter into an exalted dialogue that ends when Murray, suddenly wild, strikes the resolution into tinkling abeyance, as if revealing some unfocused psychological dread or impatience with the exchange. — Jeremy Spencer

Grade: A-

Drawn From Life

Brian Eno and Peter Schwalm

(Astralwerks)

Abandon the cliché of song structure (as Brian Eno has done very aggressively during the last 20 years or so) and sooner or later you court the risk of embracing the cliché of meandering noise. It’s that old avant-garde catch that vexed thoughtful musicians during the last century. Throw out the predictable tyranny of musical form and chances are you’ll end up making a bunch of noise that is interesting and challenging to play but also duller than dishwater to hear. Formless noise often ends up sounding like, well, formless noise. It may be liberating and exciting to make such noise, but listeners are often left out in the cold and excluded by the sonic difficulty of such music.

Brian Eno has usually stayed on the pretty side of this “sound for the sake of sound” divide, making one album after another of pleasant, formless synthesizer noodling. Bad Bri was New Age before there was such a thing. Laying blame for the likes of Kitaro and the entire Windham Hill catalog at his feet may be more than a little unfair, but he was the first one out of the box to achieve some notoriety and sales for his brand of ambient music-making/theorizing in the late ’70s. And his career as a producer/collaborator with Talking Heads, David Bowie, and U2 (you gotta feel sorry for the guy there; imagine having to humor Bono as a serious thinker) further makes a case for his allegiance to looking like an edgy, groundbreaking artist while remaining a serviceable hack for recycled ideas. Speaking of recycled ideas, this new one by Eno and Peter Schwalm is full of them, lots of familiar-sounding Yamaha keyboard programming and lush, vaporous washes of percussion (courtesy of Schwalm, who appears to be something of a conservatory-trained percussionist; these pieces are even listed as being “composed” by the two of them). Like his 1995 collaboration with bassist Jah Wobble on Spinner, this is a soothing sound-effects record and not much more. — Ross Johnson

Grade: B

Listening Log

Devil’s Night — D-12 (Interscope): Eminem and his Detroit homies/flunkies with a posse record that really is the collection of cheap, mostly pointless, occasionally reckless shock tactics that clueless sorts claimed The Marshall Mathers LP was. But that little white boy still spits like a champ. (“Purple Pills,” “Fight Music,” “Revelation”)

Grade: B-

Neighborhoods — Olu Dara (Atlantic): A (coffee) house party thrown by a jazz/blues vet who witnessed “the embryonic state of hip hop” — aka “young children’s music” — and got something out of it. (“Massamba,” “Neighborhoods,” “I See the Light”)

Grade: B

Cabin In the Hills — Merle Haggard (Relentless Nashville): One of our greatest living singers with a casual, stripped-down little gospel record that mixes originals and standards but peaks with an Iris Dement cover. (“Farther Along,” “Lord Don’t Give Up On Me,” “Shores of Jordan”)

Grade: B+

Hi-Teknology — Hi-Tek (Rawkus): Native Tongues — The Next Generation. Cincinnati DJ Hi-Tek recruits a passel of singers and MCs, some known (Common, Mos Def, Talib Kweli), most not, for a sharp, tasteful set of East Coast hip hop. (“The Sun God,” “All I Need Is You,” “Round and Round”)

Grade: B+

You’ve Seen Us You Must Have Seen Us — KaitO (Devil In the Woods): If Veruca Salt had been European art-punks with a better handle on sonics than songs. (“Go,” “Catnap,” “Shoot Shoot”)

Grade: B-

Cachaito — Orlando Cachaito Lopez (World Circuit/Nonesuch): The Buena Vista Social Club’s sexagenarian bassist with a long-awaited solo joint that’s likely the most adventurous and playful record to yet emerge from the Cuban roots renaissance. (“Mis Dos Pequenas,” “Cachaito In Laboratory,” “Conversacion”)

Grade: A-

Blue Boy — Ron Sexsmith (SpinArt): The production switch from Tchad Blake and Mitchell Froom’s claustrophobic atmospherics to Steve Earle’s more live-and-loose sound opens up the celebrated singer-songwriter’s mopey music considerably, but Earle can’t do much for Sexsmith’s mumble-mouth vocals. On the scale of alt-oriented, white-guy singer-songwriters, a notch below Elliott Smith, several notches below Freedy Johnston. (“This Song,” “Cheap Hotel,” “Just My Heart Talkin'”) n — Chris Herrington

Grade: B

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wednesday, august 15

Tonight, of course, is the night of the Elvis Week Candlelight Vigil and Vigilcast, during which guests line up and pay their respects as they make their way up the long driveway to the gravesite. And just down the street, it might be very interesting to see what’s happening at karaoke night at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way. Or then again, it may not. As always, I really couldn’t care less what you do tonight or any other night, because I don’t even know you, and unless you can explain how one could climb the Empire State Building in the same amount of time it takes to get one’s car tags renewed around here, I’m sure I don’t want to meet you. Besides, I must leave now and go make sure George W. believes that he believes in what he believes in. I believe.

T.S