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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Memphians in Oxford American Tennessee Music Issue

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The sometimes-existing Oxford American magazine released its Southern Music issue for Tennessee this week. There are some obvious Memphis names and some that make you think they really know our hearts. The track list kicks off with Sid Selvidge’s “That’s How I Got ti Memphis.” It looks like a great playlist. Local musicians include Motel Mirrors, Human Radio, The Bo-Keys, The Grifters, and Van Duren. Obviously, the old guard makes the list too. Have a look after you read the entire Flyer and patronize at least half of our advertisers.

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Music Music Features

New MGMT

MGMT comes to the Orpheum this Saturday. And for member Andrew VanWyngarden, a 2001 White Station High School graduate, it’s something of a return home. VanWyngarden is half of the platinum-selling musical duo that formed at Wesleyan University in 2002, along with Ben Goldwasser. (VanWyngarden is also the son of Flyer editor Bruce VanWyngarden.)

We talked with one of Memphis’ biggest musical successes about MGMT’s new self-titled third album on Sony Music and the storm of commentary that seems to follow the band.

Memphis Flyer: Everybody has an opinion about this record. What do you think?

Andrew VanWyngarden: I’m a little biased, because I made it. I like it. I think it’s not very comfortable-sounding music. It’s something Ben and I tried to make intentionally a little upsetting in a way. It’s not easy listening. We try to avoid the word challenging, because I think that’s a bit pretentious. It accurately reflects Ben’s mood and my mood when we were recording in 2012. I think it’s an honest and real album. I’m proud of it and happy to tour around to promote it.

How did your approach change from the earlier albums?

It was just me and Ben in the studio. On the second album [Congratulations], we were definitely going for a more live, whole band, sort of psychedelic folk sound. This time around, it was more about the two of us experimenting in the studio. We weren’t thinking about translating the songs to a live setting. It’s really all about the listening experience. And this is studio time. It’s been different for each of our three albums. This time, it was more about starting off with sessions of improvisation and finding moments that we both liked and building songs out of those. A lot of arranging and editing. We haven’t put out an album that has live takes or more than one person playing at once. Maybe bass and drums or something. We’ve always worked more in the sense of setting the time and then getting it together.

Did you intentionally abandon formal song structures?

There are still songs like “Alien Days” and “Plenty of Girls in the Sea” that are more traditionally structured and have verses and what we call choruses and that kind of stuff. But, in general, the headspace we were in while we were making it was about creating dense sonic worlds that you can get overwhelmed in if you want to. It was more about trance, in the sense that we would do things that were repeating over and over. And the chord progressions are more simple than on the first two records. So it’s more about repetition. What we were looking for in the improvisations and the moments we try to build songs on were usually ones where Ben and I felt like we were in a trance state. In the moment we were making it, we felt like it was automatically happening.

You wore your early influences on your sleeve. Who influenced this new direction?

Our musical tastes have evolved. I think we were definitely going for a Beach Boys Surf’s Up thing [on Congratulations]. But also definitely influenced by tones and personalities of more obscure English ’80s bands like the Deep Freeze Mice, the Monochrome Set, that kind of stuff.

This time around, what makes this album different — and I think what makes it cool — is that we didn’t go into it with specific musical references in mind. For the second album, we knew we were consciously trying to reference a moment in musical history. This time, we weren’t doing that at all. The music we listened to while we were making it was much more about textures and the kind of environments than sounds … Woo, the Orb, and Aphex Twin. The songs are their own individual worlds to go into.

Why did you return to work with producer Dave Fridmann after an album with Sonic Boom?

Even on Congratulations, we mixed it at Fridmann’s studio. So he was still part of that album but not as much on pre-production. Since we first went up to Tarbox Road Studios, we have felt comfortable there recording and creating. Dave is the kind of guy who helps to push us and motivate us to do the crazy ideas we have. He’s such a good guy. He doesn’t have an underlying intention or motivation to mess with the song or stamp his own kind of sound on it. That makes us feel comfortable working with him. This time, it was cool to go back. We’ve only done this a couple of times, when we’re writing everything in the studio with Dave.

How important is it to isolate yourselves from the social-media commentariat?

That’s one of the things about being at Dave’s studio in rural, western New York — it’s easy to forget about that side of the music world and to kind of push it out. I think that’s what Ben and I have done while making the second and third albums. Both times, we’ve gotten completely into our own world and come out and released it and been a little bit giddy. Back to that naive mindset thing …

Ben and I both feel a little bit shocked [at the response]. We’re both sensitive dudes. A lot of times it feels like it’s a competition to see who can say the snarkiest thing. It’s so much less about listening deep into the music, which is all we want to do. The good thing is that if music critics aren’t doing that, then our fans are more and more. We hear it from them. That’s why we play shows. We’re fortunate that we’ve established and developed deep connections with our fans. They’ve kind of followed us along and gone down different paths of experimentation with us. And that’s what we want.

MGMT plays the Orpheum on Saturday, November 23rd, at 8 p.m.

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Music Record Reviews

New Records

Leo Welch’s Sabougla Voices is the latest from Big Legal Mess records. It’s gospel blues, a virulent strain of Hill Country religious fervor. Welch is a pastor and the host of Black Gospel Express, a Sunday program in Bruce, Mississippi. He’s 81. There’s a spirit alive in this music all right: the spirit of R.L. and Junior drinking and fishing with the Apostles. Welch’s evangelizing has the two-four jump and growl of the best electric country blues.

After 30 years in the church and working on a logging crew, Welch called the label after learning that Junior Kimbrough had recorded for Big Legal Mess. An intern told him they no longer produced blues. A higher-up overheard the conversation and intervened. The result is an album of 10 tracks that could have come from any of the big names in Hill Country blues aside from the exhortations of praise and the ecclesiastical reflections in the lyrics. It’s some of the dancingest church music you’ll hear outside of a praise break. It would make a fine contribution to any heathen’s Sunday morning Bloody Mary and bacon grease situation.

Leo Welch

Sabougla Voices, available January 7th

(Big Legal Mess)

Another take on the blues and biblical influence comes from longtime Memphis songwriter Ron Jungklas. The Spirit and the Spine has a more twisted take on religiosity and redemption. The opening track, “Black Snake Moan,” paints a picture of a post-religious apocalypse, a tooth-and-claw consideration of human nature. Thundering drums and guitars that sound like dust storms get whipped up into “Automatic,” a Dust Bowl tinged lament for rain as a metaphor for meaningful faith.

Jungklas made a run at the big time in the radio days of the 1980s. He’s taught science at local schools since the 1990s. But he stayed close enough to the fires to heed the call of music. The Spirit and the Spine finds Jungklas mining despair, alienation, and suffering. “Spit” explores the nature of false prophecy and hypocrisy: “I just gathered up some dust, and I spit into my hand … I am the crowing cock, sweet honey in the rock/The poison in the bitter pill.” All of this happens over the unsettling whirring of a filtered drone menacingly throbbing beneath everything.

The sounds on this record signal thematic changes. Mud and smoke clear for “Say Damn,” a bent, electric homecoming: “The loyal opposition in the angel choir.” It’s a gritty, erotic Prodigal Son thing.

Maybe I’m lost in the twister of imagery and this album is not intended to be a pilgrim’s progress through the sex-soaked, anger-spewing, materialistic — yet somehow Christian — culture of the contemporary Bible Belt. But it sure works as one. The Spirit and the Spine is fascinating to listen to, even if it makes you want to put a parental advisory sticker on the Bible.

Rob Jungklas


The Spirit and the Spine

(Madjack Records)

It may be time to work the martini shaker and stare at the moon. If that’s the case, Jeremy Shrader and Ed Finney have got you covered. The Moon Is in Love is a collection of originals and jazz standards from the 1930s. Shrader sings and plays trumpet over Finney’s jazz guitar. The pairing is spare, but it gives them room to play. And do they ever.

The duo’s compositions stand up to some heavy comparisons too. They cover the Gershwins, Berlin, and Rodgers and Hart. The standards give the instruments an opportunity to interplay in a way that’s engaging. The original songs carry the load based on a couple of virtues:

Shrader’s voice bounces along fine on the standards and also keeps up with Finney’s compositional workout in “Lovers in Love.” “Daytime, Nighttime” is a Shrader original that divines the mood and harmonic textures of the age into a masterfully written song. It’s a case study of a golden age in American songcraft.

Shrader’s tune “True” veers off the program a bit with a nod to the 1960s. The song incorporates the virtues of ’30s songwriting but puts an R&B energy behind it. What Finney does on this great set of chord changes is phenomenal. His guitar tone is so full and powerful and his phrasing so precise and lyrical that it’s like watching a rodeo bull dance ballet. You almost can’t believe it.

There is a CD release party at the Cove on Thursday, November 21st.

Jeremy Shrader and Ed Finney

The Moon Is in Love

(Electric Room)

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Music Music Features

George Coleman Quartet at Rhodes

It’s homecoming at Rhodes College for a couple of old friends: Jazz greats George Coleman and Harold Mabern will perform as the George Coleman Quartet on November 23rd in the McCallum Ballroom at Rhodes.

Coleman’s resume is profound. He played for B.B. King in the early ’50s and on several of Miles Davis’ essential hard-bop recordings from 1963 to 1964, including “My Funny Valentine” and “Seven Steps to Heaven.” He also played for Lionel Hampton, Herbie Hancock, Lee Morgan, Max Roach, Jimmy Smith, and Chet Baker. Coleman has made several albums as a leader.

Mabern is the protégé of 2013 Memphis Music Hall of Fame inductee Phineas Newborn Jr. He was also a Miles Davis sideman and worked with Morgan, Sarah Vaughan, and Wes Montgomery in the ’60s. The self-taught Mabern stayed vital in the ’70s, working with George Benson and Stanley Turrentine.

Coleman and Mabern made three albums together with Mabern leading: A Few Miles From Memphis, Rakin’ and Scrapin’, and Workin’ and Wailin’. They are out of print except for a compilation that includes Wailin’ and Greasy Kid Stuff!, Mabern’s follow-up sans Coleman.

The Mike Curb Institute for Music at Rhodes hosts the quartet as part of its concert series. Other acts have included Dan Penn with Spooner Oldham and Mose Allison. For more information, go to rhodes.edu/curb. — Joe Boone

The George Coleman Quartet with Harold Mabern, Saturday, November 23rd, 7:30 p.m. in the McCallum Ballroom of the Bryan Campus Life Center.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Shrader and Finney CD Release @ Cove on Thursday

See our review of the new CD from Jeremy Shrader and Ed Finney. The duo has a release party Thursday night at their natural habitiat, The Cove. Here is Schrader leading a band through his original “True.”

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Paul Rodgers “Royal Sessions” for Stax Academy

Paul Rodgers, the voice of Bad Company, Free, and the Firm, will release an album of tunes cut at Royal Studios called “Royal Sessions.” Rodgers cut the tracks with Reverend Charles Hodges on organ, Michael Tolls on guitar, LeRoy Hodges Jr. on bass, “Hubby” Archie Turner on Wurlitzer organ, and Steve Potts and James Robertson Sr. on drums. All proceeds from the sales will go toward local music education, including the Stax Academy.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Magic Kingdom? Magic Kids!

Local art punks Magic Kids licensed a song for a Disney Hong Kong ad. Well, I think. Truthfully, I don’t read Chinese. This could be anything. Hey, Fragrant Harbor, get your mouse ears on! It’s the Magic Kids.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Night Beats at Hi-Tone Saturday

If you’re not too damn scared to leave the house after watching their video, you can go see the Night Beats at the Hi-Tone. That video’s nuts. Just goes to show be careful who you put in a scary torture mask, because OBVIOUSLY they’re gonna come crawling up out of the ground to seek revenge. Bear that in mind.

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Music Music Features

Justin Timberlake at FedExForum

Years ago, I wrote some unkind things about J.T. in this paper. When Justin Timberlake decided to base his record label operations in L.A., it seemed, well, un-Memphian. But, boy, has that changed.

In the decade since, Timberlake has capitalized the Mirimichi Golf Course in Millington and ponied up like a boss to represent Memphis in the roster of local Grizzlies ownership. He closed out his fifth stint hosting Saturday Night Live wearing a Griz T-shirt and a Tigers hat. Time for me to shut up.

Say what you will about him being a Mouseketeer, ‘N Sync member, or Britney’s thang, Timberlake was part of Mammon’s entertainment machine because of his undeniable talents. The guy is as funny as any cast member on SNL, and word is he hits his parts in one take when he’s in the studio. Elvis won three Grammys. Timberlake has six. Let that bounce around under your mouse ears.

His latest visionary move is The 20/20 Experience, an album in two parts. The first installment debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200. It sold nearly a million copies in its first week. The second installment arrived in late September. Critical reviews were mixed. But did those critics wear Tiger hats on SNL? No, they did not. So they can all go to hell.

Welcome home, J.T.

Justin Timberlake’s 20/20 Experience World Tour comes to FedExForum on Monday, November 18th. Tickets available at ticketmaster.com.

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Music Music Features

Due Respect

Some people irrationally love Memphis. Others irrationally hate Memphis. The truth is that the whole thing is complicated. Memphis can make you cry tears of joy or sorrow with equal ease. It depends on where you’re looking. Stax is one of our holy places and a point of faith. It’s a source of pride, where we can point to people of different races working together. And they did. But the truth is complicated.

Robert Gordon’s new history of Stax Records, Respect Yourself, dives into that complicated story and revels in its complexity. Other books have outlined the story. Gordon fills in detail that brings Stax down from the mountain of ideas and into the human, Memphian realm. This is not idolatry. It’s history.

Inevitably cast in the light of race relations, the Stax story is also a tale of great women: Founder Estelle Axton’s story is moving.

“She just seemed to have a great attitude,” Gordon said in a recent interview. Axton was the Union Planters National Bank employee who, with her brother, not only opened a business in a poor, black neighborhood but also opened the doors of that business to the neighborhood. “Her welcoming spirit had so much to do with the whole label. Not to underplay Jim’s musicality or organizational abilities. Those are all essential. But she was the face out front and helped imbue that spirit into the label.”

Axton’s open-mindedness was essential to the label’s early success. But her fate at the label is one of the hardest parts of the book to read. It’s a great story about women in the workplace and about people living in Memphis. But it’s complicated.

Gordon and I recently drove south to New Park Cemetery in Horn Lake, where Rufus Thomas, Al Jackson Jr., and all but one of the Bar-Kays who died with Otis Redding are buried.

“The Bar-Kays: what a story,” Gordon said. “Their narrative very much shadows the Stax narrative. That was the second tragedy [after the loss of chart-topper Redding]. Their comeback has never stopped. It’s been ongoing. They’ve never stopped pushing to create. I try to give them their due in the book, because they have never stood still creatively.”

The loss of Redding and all but two of the Bar-Kays is well told. It’s primary-source history, but it never gets dry. The tale of an integrated label in the South finding huge success with an integrated talent roster is thrilling. The loss of Stax’s shining star and the kids he nurtured is still raw in the telling. And that’s where this book succeeds: in taking the names out of the museums and liner notes and giving them their full due.

“Have you ever seen that footage of them performing with Otis?” Gordon asked. “That is like 36 hours before the accident. You look at all of that energy onstage. You just think there’s no way it could ever be terminated. Can you imagine being at the label? Isaac Hayes, I remember him saying that he couldn’t create for a year. That he just shut down. I imagine that you would be stunned. The sense of promise. The sense of a new generation. And to have it ripped from your guts. So many of them were still teenagers. Matthew Kelly was 17. One of the preachers at the funeral said, ‘It’s a strange phenomenon. These guys are experiencing sunset at the morning of their lives.’ Oh my God. It’s so true.”

For Memphis history buffs, the business side of the story is essential reading. One central tenet of the Stax mythology is the financial mismanagement of the label. This is another place where complexity beggars the myth. There was arguably more mismanagement among the white bankers at Union Planters Bank who financed label operations than there was at Stax. The major labels were no help either. This part of the book really works and sets the book on your shelf beside Hampton Sides’ Hellhound on His Trail. The books complement one another. Gordon’s work on union leader T.O. Jones and the sanitation workers’ strike adds context to the Stax story. That context is missing from Peter Guralnick’s Sweet Soul Music, which was only partly about Stax.

Some of the grittier aspects of the Stax story gave Gordon pause. Johnny Baylor was Stax’s distribution man. His tactics were illegal on several fronts, but he broke open new markets one after the other whether it involved a handshake or a pistol. Baylor’s story makes for fascinating reading.

“I worried a little bit about that,” Gordon said. “The gangster thing is such an attractive idea now. But in the end, I had to think that’s what happened. I have to stick to what happened. At one point I remember thinking: Will the kids at Stax Academy want to be reading about Johnny Baylor? Maybe I should be writing a different book.

“But in this book, Johnny Baylor is part of what happened. A pretty brutal man. I think representative of a certain period of business. Especially in distribution … distribution of all things. Not just records. Who was Motown’s guy like that? I don’t know, but I know that there was one. So that part of the industry doesn’t get talked about so much.”

Respect Yourself succeeds by talking about the hard stuff. But that’s what makes the sweet stuff so meaningful.

Robert Gordon will read from and sign Respect Yourself at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music on Saturday, November 16th, beginning at 5 p.m.; at Burke’s Book Store on December 19th; and at the Booksellers at Laurelwood on December 20th. 

Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion

By Robert Gordon

Bloomsbury, 384 pp., $30