Categories
Music Music Features

Smith7 Records’ Eighth Pants Tour

It’s hard out there for an underage band. Most folks who can get a group off the ground do so by playing some shows, saving up a little money, and hitting the road. But when you’re a still-wet kid whose friends can’t buy drinks, the whole process gets weird. That’s where Smith7 Records has made its mark on the Memphis scene.

Smith7 is the work of Brian Vernon, an entrepreneur and curator of young talented bands. Since 2000, Vernon’s label has sought out those who could break out: young bands, often underage, who need some direction and help getting their sound together. One would think that working with musicians who could get grounded or go away to college is not the most profitable idea. One would be right about that. That’s why Smith7 is a non-profit that seeks only to break even and give the rest to charity.

Smith7’s big thing is the Pants Tour. Kids can’t tour, you say. But wait! What if the whole tour took place within our fair city? Now we’re talking.

Pants Tour kicked off earlier this week but runs through July 19th and “stops” at the Bert Ferguson Community Center, the Brass Door, Avenue Coffee, Memphis Music on Poplar, and several house parties. Vernon’s band plays every night, but otherwise the line up changes night-to-night. Bands scheduled to play include Spaceface, Pillow Talk, Chadley Doomington III, Hundred Year Dash, Mancub, the Raleigh Symphony, FRENCHIE!, Sunday’s Best, Becky Flax, and lots of others.

All proceeds for the 2014 Pants Tour go to the Center for Domestic Violence. A Pants Pass is $25 and includes admission to every show and a T-shirt. That’s right; a T-shirt. If you hate T-shirts or can only make it a particular show, you can pay a $5 donation at the door.

Categories
Music Music Features

Ringo Starr at Horseshoe Tunica

Ringo Starr and His Allstarr Band performs at Horseshoe Casino in Tunica on Thursday, July 3rd.

Ever wonder what John Candy, Harry Nilsson, Hoyt Axton, Gary Busey, John Entwhistle, Sheila E, Billy Squier, Edgar Winter, Colin Hay, and Paul McCartney have in common? I too have often wondered that. The answer is they all performed with Ringo Starr & His Allstarr Band. The aspiring hair dresser/drummer for the Beatles brings his latest incarnation of the Allstarr Band to Horseshoe Casino in Tunica on Thursday, July 3rd.

The original group was largely the Band: Levon Helm and Rick Danko. Quasi Memphian Joe Walsh is a staple. One also wonders whether Walsh and Starr ever had a real good time together. The band has evolved over the decades but always includes players who are stars in their own right. The plan is to let Ringo sing a few and then let each star band member do a couple of their own biggest numbers. Listening to recordings of these shows, you hear Ringo having a good time in the Elvis Vegas-years tradition: a charismatic superstar guiding a crack band through great songs.

Memphis and Mississippi are holy ground to a lot of these folks, as well they should be. God knows who might show up.

It’s been 27 years since our pals over at The Commercial Appeal helped screw up a perhaps already screwed up record by getting snarky with Mr. Starkey and setting off a street protest by producer Chips Moman. The “lost” record that Starr tried to make in 1987 was never officially released after both sides agreed it was a mess. I wish I could have been there.

We are happy to see that Moman will be inducted into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame this year.

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Stax Academy WEDNESDAY at the Shell – Bettye Crutcher Playlist

Ronnie Booze

Bettye Crutcher

[It rained. You may have noticed. The Grand Finale Concert will be on Wednesday, July 2nd, at the Shell.]

I’ve spent the past week sort-of embedded in the Stax Music Academy as the Summer SNAP! season comes to a close. That program brings 60 kids together and runs them through the rigors of being a professional musician. They perform, they write, record, and produce under the tutelage of established master like Steve Cropper and Bettye Crutcher.

Crutcher wrote “Who’s Making Love …” — Johnnie Taylor’s breakout hit — and had her work recorded by the Staple Singers, Joan Baez, Delaney & Bonnie. See the playlist below. She’s been teaching a songwriting course, and the students will perform a new song of hers on Sunday, June 29th, the Stax Music Academy Grand Finale Concert at the Levitt Shell.

“It has been very gratifying to come back to the home of Stax Records and work with this new generation of soul music musicians,” Crutcher says. “They have so much energy and talent and they absorb so much that it reminds me of what it was like back in the day at Stax when we were all just learning from each other and supporting each other.”

 Yesterday, I sat in on a workshop in which Steve Cropper led four young guitar players and me through some of his most iconic parts. He talked of the music that led him to play his classic parts, of Ben Branch and the 5 Royales. We traded solos over changes, which was terrifying until you pulled it off. Then it was one of the most rewarding things ever. And that’s what music teaches you: how to use your skills to master a difficult and sometimes scary task. These kids have done just that all summer and deserve the adulation they’ll receive Sunday night at the Shell.

Stax Academy WEDNESDAY at the Shell – Bettye Crutcher Playlist

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Roland Janes Memorial Tribute Jam

On Monday, June 30th, friends and colleagues of the late Roland Janes will jam in his honor at the Levitt Shell. The free event is the work of Janes’ friend and collaborator J.M. Van Eaton. Both men were session musicians at Sun who became rock royalty when another day’s work resulted in “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On” and unleashed the Killer on polite society. Friends from Roland’s life and career will honor him as a guitarist, an engineer, a businessman, and as friend. He was that and much more to so many. The list of invitees tells the tale.

Sun-era stalwarts George Klein, Travis Wammack, Sonny Burgess & the Legendary Pacers, and Hayden Thompson. Smoochy Smith, who moved to Stax after working at Sun, went on to write “Last Night,” the song that broke Stax nationally. Smoochy’ll be there.

Van Eaton and Janes were old friends and participants in the birth of rock and roll.

“Roland and I started at the same time in the music business,” Van Eaton says. “I was still in high school. Tech High School. Billy Riley had just got a record deal with Sun and I met Roland at the studio one day when I had my little school band in there. They heard me play and Riley didn’t have a band. So he started putting his band together and he asked me if I wanted to be a part of his band. Roland was the guitar player. The bass player in that band was Marvin Pepper. Billy hired him and that was the original Little Green Men for ‘Flying Saucer Rock n Roll.’ So I met Roland back in 1956, probably.”

Billy Lee Riley’s Little Green Men: Riley, Roland Janes, Marvin Pepper, and J.M. Van Eaton

Soon after, the backing band made history.

“We’d probably been together about two or three months and Jerry Lee Lewis walked in. He didn’t have a band. So they called us to the studio to back up Jerry. We thought this was an audition to see if he had any talent. Man, we cut this song called “Crazy Arms,” which was his very first record, and that took off enough that they wanted to do the second one. The second one was Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On. So we both played on that. To fast forward to when that kind of played out, Roland and I played in band together in Millington at Fleet Reserve. This was a club band. We got a picture. He had already started Sonic Studio by then. But we played three nights a week for five years at this one place out there. We were packing them in every night.There were four of us in that band, and three of us are still living. We’re gonna bring those guys in.”

Also on the bill are several artists who Roland produced. John Paul Keith was one of Roland’s last real sessions before his death last year. Jon Hornyak was one of many Missourians who found their way to Memphis to work with Janes. His band Interstate 55 will also play.

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Steve Cropper at Stax for Lunch on Friday

On Friday, June 27th, Steve Cropper will host the Soul & Blues Brown Bag Music Series ​at the Stax Music Academy Amphitheater at noon. He’ll also be on Live at 9 on News Channel 3 that morning. For the Brown Bag, Cropper will play and answer questions. He’s a major architect of Memphis soul. Here’s your chance to ask him something. 

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Thursday Music: Shell, Square, Detective Bureau!

Thursday Music: Shell, Square, Detective Bureau!

Thursday has become logistically impossible from a live music standpoint. But the surplus is ours to enjoy. 

The Levitt Shell:  John Fullbright

Usually I see an acoustic guitar/harmonica combo and head for the exit. But this Fullbright guy is of a higher order. He has a musical depth that draws on stuff like Mose Allison. That multi-instrumental songcraft sets him apart from the sensitive SEC strummers. 

Thursdays Squared:  Trademark with 8-Ball Aitken.

Aitken, the all-time world band photo champion, joins the self-styled Motley Crue of country. Aitken. Dude. Trademark look like some rowdy sorts. Pull the muffler off your Prius and get over there.

The Buccaneer The Detective Bureau

We talked to Joe Restivo for our piece on Teenie Hodges. He’s made his place as the city’s most fiercely focused jazz and R&B guitar player. He’s played with everyone, probably a result of his focus on the art, not the technique. The Detective Bureau is his band. They draw on late 1960s-early ’70s jazz and Latin music. Nominal start at 10:30.  

Categories
Music Music Features

Stax Music Academy Alumni Band

Stax Academy Alumni Band at B. B. King’s from Memphidelity on Vimeo.

Stax Music Academy Alumni Band

Last Friday, I had one of those Memphis Kool-Aid experiences: the sort of thing where you become blind to the heat and the hate that bog down so much of life in this city and become a glassy-eyed, sign-carrying apostle of all things Memphis.

The Stax Music Academy Alumni Band is composed of academy graduates who are in college. Many are home for the summer. They will play at B.B. King’s every Monday and Friday from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. through July 25th. There is no cover. They also play the Stax Museum every Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. So you can take the babies too.

Courtesy Stax Museum of American Soul Music

Stax Alumni

This is the second year that the band has taken residency at B.B. King’s. From the look and sound of things last week, it’s a major success. While there was a contingency of proud parents and some Academy staff on hand, the bar was crowded, and there were tables full of tourists. The band had the crowd whipped up into genuine enthusiasm. People were dancing at lunch in 95-degree weather. They were that good.

It was the day before Teenie Hodges passed away in Texas. There was no way the band could have known that. But they broke into “Love & Happiness,” Hodges’ second-most well-known song, with Hodges’ iconic opening guitar riff, and drove the song home like a Mack truck full of soul. The joy on the faces of the kids as they played the classic song was a testament to Hodges’ life and artistry. His work endures in these kids. Go hear them immediately.

— Joe

Categories
Music Music Features

Teenie Hodges: 1946-2014

Mabon “Teenie” Hodges wrote a song that one could mistake for a 19th century gospel standard. “Take Me to the River,” which he penned with Al Green in 1973, has a startling simplicity to it. But then so did Teenie Hodges’ guitar playing. He was a master refiner of ideas and phrases, whittling them down to a profound and economical beauty.

Hodges passed away Sunday night in Dallas from complications of emphysema. He had gone to Austin in March to promote the film Take Me to the River, which is based in part on the world that Hodges lived in with his brothers Leroy Jr., a bassist, and Charles, a keyboardist. In Austin, they celebrated a lifetime of soul music and success. Teenie never made it back to Memphis, but his soul and his spirit leave an indelible mark on our city. The Mitchells and the Hodges are founding fathers of Memphis’ musical identity.

“My dad and mom had seven kids in four years,” Teenie’s brother Charles Hodges said last March before heading to Austin. “So there were three sets of twins in a row. Leroy (bass) is my oldest brother. Teenie is between Leroy and me. Teenie’s twin is a girl, and I have a boy twin. They had eleven kids in all.”

It was a musical home: Their father, Leroy Sr., had been a musician and kept a decidedly musical house. One might think that a home with so many brothers might collapse into a competitive mess. But that was not the case.

“We didn’t compete. We worked together,” Hodges said. “We didn’t go to school for it. It was a gift from God. My dad just helped us develop our talent.”

Robert Allen Parker

The Germantown Blue Dots, Teenie far right.

Named “Teenie” due to his diminutive stature, Hodges began playing in his father’s band at age 12 and was soon noticed by bandleader Willie Mitchell, who played a profound role in Teenie’s life. But Teenie made major contributions to the Mitchell empire too. “Howard Grimes,” Charles said. “Willie had another drummer after Al Jackson went with Booker T. and the MGs. Jeff Greer. … Willie wanted to change the drummer. So Teenie told him about Howard Grimes. We heard Howard, and he just blended in.”

The records that came from this period are classics and key elements to our musical culture as a city and as a country. Al Green, Ann Peebles, O.V. Wright, and the Hi-Rhythm albums don’t need further explanation. If you don’t know them intimately, you have a problem. The music Teenie made with Mitchell also became the gold standard for young players, and his openness as a person and a mentor provided a supreme example to younger players.

“Memphis lost a cornerstone of its musical identity,” Luther Dickinson of the North Mississippi Allstars wrote of Hodges’ death. “Similar to Al Jackson, without Teenie, Memphis soul will never be the same. Teenie was so cool. He elevated the whole city singlehandedly. He was one of the real Memphis guitar heroes, like Scotty Moore, Roland Janes, Steve Cropper, and Reggie Young, playing melodies and rhythms on records that millions of people love worldwide. His guitar style is ingrained in the human collective consciousness.”

Joe Restivo, through his work with engineer Scott Bomar and his band the Bo-Keys, was occasionally called upon to fill in for the ailing guitarist.

“I didn’t quite understand his genius until I got to play within the context of Hi-Rhythm. There’s a way that whole thing fits together. That’s when the light bulb goes on. … His parts fit perfectly in relationship to Howard Grimes, to Charles, Leroy, [and] Hubie [keyboardist Archie Turner]. If you’re playing that role — and I had the opportunity to do that a couple of times — you find yourself doing Teenie. You can’t do anything else. It’s his style, his concept, where he laid it in the pocket.”

Charles addressed the same approach to music when we talked last March. “The bass player knew what I was going to do. I knew what the guitar player was going to do. The drummer knew what we all were going to do. We didn’t get in anyone’s way. We came together spiritually. Teenie, Leroy, and I are biological brothers. But Howard and Hubie are just like our biological brothers. We’re spiritually connected. We just feel each other.”

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Mabon “Teenie” Hodges

We are saddened by the passing of Teenie Hodges. He was fundamental to the sonic identity of Memphis. He co-wrote “Take Me to the River,” a song that could be a thousand years old. He co-wrote “I’m A Ram,” one of the best rhythm tracks ever recorded. His work with Willie Mitchell, Al Green, and — most importantly — with his surviving brothers Leroy and Charles will endure.

Photo: Glen Brown

Mabon ‘Teenie’ Hodges

We talked to his brother in March and to two of his torch bearers yesterday for this week’s Local Beat column. Last Friday, the Stax Academy Alumni Band played Hodges’ “Love and Happiness” at B.B. King’s on Beale. It’s hard to imagine a better tribute. That video and some of his best recorded and live work are below.

Stax Academy Alumni Band at B. B. King’s from Memphidelity on Vimeo.

Mabon ‘Teenie’ Hodges (3)

[jump]

This live footage of O.V. Wright from 1979 is a fine example of Hodges’ smooth style.

Mabon ‘Teenie’ Hodges

An earlier version of this piece mistakenly attributed the guitar on Willie Mitchell’s “20-75” to Hodges.  

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Tyler Keith and Jack O on Beale Friday Evening

BullyRook: Tyler Keith & the Apostles w/ Unwed Teenage Mothers @ the Blind Pig &emdash; Tyler Keith & the Apostles

Tyler Keith and Jack O on Beale Friday Evening (2)

Lordamighty. Goner is hosting its Beale Street Takeover this evening in Handy Park. Nots plays at 6, Jack O at 7, and Tyler Keith at 8. Keith is an Oxford-based rocker who is two decades into an immaculately cool career. He played with Oxford punk institution the Cooters and has led his own bands the Neckbones, the Preachers’ Kids, and the Apostles. He’s not up here as much as we’d like. So get down there tonight and go hear him. Also, here is a bad-arse documentary on milk that he directed. Dude is the real deal. (photo by the lovely and talented Don Perry)

Brown Family Dairy from The Southern Documentary Project on Vimeo.

Tyler Keith and Jack O on Beale Friday Evening