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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Will Kimbrough at Otherlands Friday

Friday at Otherlands: Will Kimbrough with guest Bryan Hartley

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: The Great Barrier Reefs at the Deli

The Great Barrier Reefs are at the Young Avenue Deli Friday:

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Switchblade Kid’s New Record AND A PARTY!

Have a listen to Switchblade Kid’s new record, For All the Sad Bastards.

There’s release party at Black Lodge Video on Saturday, October 19th. They screen a DVD compilation of videos Harry Koniditsiotis’ musical library at 9 and live music starts at 10. It’s free.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Detective Bureau at the Buc!

These geniuses are at the Buc tonight:

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Music Music Features

Soundly in Place

In 2011, local musician Sean Murphy lost Crosstown Arts’ MemFeast competition to Robin Salant’s animated colored-window project. Murphy was not upset. Immediately taken by the sound signature of such a huge, unfinished space, Murphy spent 18 months composing music for it. That music is the basis of a new album, Sketches of Crosstown, and a performance this Sunday, October 20th, from 4 to 6 p.m.

The space presents some challenges.

“The music was inspired by the actual building. Primarily what you hear are the seven or so seconds of echo. At first I thought I was going to compose music, put an ensemble together. But I quickly realized that that just doesn’t work in a space like this, because every sound you make just rings and rings.”

Sean Murphy previews his Sketches of Crosstown concert for the Memphis Flyer from Memphis Flyer Music on Vimeo.

Acoustic limitations fascinate Murphy.

“We couldn’t really do rhythmic stuff in this space,” he says. “But we did [record] up in the tower where the 5,000-gallon metal tank is. The sprinkler system for the entire building was all gravity-fed from that tank. That’s the reason that tower is there, to house the water tank. There’s only a couple of seconds of echo in that room but with a cool flange effect because there’s still water in the tank.”

Murphy was classically trained on tuba at the University of Memphis, where he earned a degree in ethnomusicology, the study of musical cultures.

“One of my favorite pieces on the album is called ‘Crosstown Soul.’ It’s me on tuba and Jim Spake playing tenor sax. Jim is as far in one direction as he can go, and I am as far in the other direction as I can go. So we’re pushing two football fields away from one another, indoors, with a microphone sitting there in the middle. I’m outlining a chord progression. But I sound like an organ playing in the space, because I would play three notes and they would all ring together and grow. Then Jim comes sailing over the top of it. It really was just beautiful.”

The album is available on vinyl and is acoustically marvelous. It takes a second to get over the noise floor — ambient noise (cars, wind, etc.) — but the reward is music that sounds like a place. It’s a reminder that music was once recorded in huge spaces like former churches, such as Columbia’s 30th Street Studio in New York. A note is played and grows in the space as it reverberates off of the walls.

On Sunday, Crosstown Arts will host a performance by Murphy in the Sears building, with pieces on different floors and culminating on the roof for sunset. Basic admission gets you in, but the pricier tickets include the record, which is worth the 11-story climb and the cash. (Turn off your cell phone, as your bad manners will reverberate for seven full seconds.)

Murphy has other large-scale goings-on. We met under his largest undertaking, the new chimes in Overton Square’s bell tower.

Murphy and his wife, artist Anne J. Froning, own Being Art, specializing in outdoor classrooms and public-art instruments. They made the instruments in the Memphis Botanic Garden’s My Big Back Yard. Their first job was a 35-foot-long marimba in Nebraska City, Nebraska.

“Loeb Properties wanted to do something with the tower to have an art element. Anne and I both looked at it and went, ‘Wind chimes.’ They thought it was a great idea and went for it. It’s the biggest thing we’ve ever done. That whole thing weighs about 750 pounds. The chimes are aluminum, about seven inches in diameter. The longest pipe is 10 feet and is a low A.”

Froning designed the sail, which was cut by a friend of theirs who designs armored cars.

Murphy is still aghast at how well their work has fit into this public space at the often-awkward nexus of art and commerce. He thinks the Loeb brothers have a unique take on real estate.

“Their mother was an artist. They’ve really committed to [Overton Square], and it’s a gem. It’s great.”

Sketches of Crosstown performance

Sears Crosstown

Sunday, October 20th, 4-6 p.m.

Tickets from $30

www.eventbrite.com/event/7966976441

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Music Music Features

Neutral Milk Hotel at Minglewood Hall

Fuzzy, psychedelic folk is all the rage these days. Nobody’s complaining. Who wouldn’t like pensive lyrics, fuzzed-out guitars, and galaxy-size reverb halls? At some point, young bands stopped gently hitting xylophones and baby-whispering (think every commercial c. 2010-12) and just got plain-old freaky. This is a good development.

It would be easy to link them all back to Syd Barrett and Marc Bolan. And, sure, the bearded vanguard would cite them as influences. But there were steps along the way. One of those touchstones is Neutral Milk Hotel. Before Tame Impala and Unknown Mortal Orchestra, there was Neutral Milk Hotel.

Members of the scene associated with the Elephant 6 Recording Company, the band formed in the 1990s around the peripatetic lifestyle and cassette aesthetic of Jeff Mangum. Mangum’s experimental mixtapes gained notoriety and led to the band’s first LP, On Avery Island in 1996. 1998’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea was based on the life of Anne Frank.

The band went on hiatus in 1998 and returned to live performance in April of this year. Over the decade-and-a-half of inactivity, their music was covered by Bon Iver and Mountain Goats. — Joe Boone

Neutral Milk Hotel with Elf Power at Minglewood Hall on Friday, October 18th, at 9 p.m.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Session Notes: Kilzer’s Killer Band

Rick Steff, Greg Morrow, Sam Shoup, Steve Selvidge, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Luther Dickinson, Keving Houston, and Daniel Lynn

  • Elizabeth Cawein
  • Rick Steff, Greg Morrow, Sam Shoup, Steve Selvidge, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Luther Dickinson, Keving Houston, and Daniel Lynn

Last week, we got a call that EVERYBODY was at Music + Arts studio for the recording of John Kilzer’s next record. Session personnel? Rick Steff, Greg Morrow, Sam Shoup, Steve Selvidge, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Luther Dickinson, Kevin Houston, and Daniel Lynn. Top that! The session had more heavy-weights than we can comprehend; everybody there was worthy of their own story. Stay tuned to our music coverage for more on what promises to be a really important Memphis recording.

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Music Music Features

The .01 Percent

Lord T & Eloise, the world’s first aristocrunk rappers, are back in Memphis with a show at the Young Avenue Deli on Saturday, October 12th. The duo is known for combining rap culture’s monetary braggadocio with crunk — Memphis’ distinct contribution to the hip-hop soundscape — into a meta consideration of wealth, celebrity, and partying your fool head off.

Lord T, the 18th-century aristocrat with the dirty-south drawl, is the alter ego of Elliott Ives. The harder-barking Eloise, allegedly covered in 24-karat gold skin, is the second self of Robert Anthony, the writer and editor responsible for this perhaps insane concept. Crazy as it may sound, Lord T & Eloise have been a success.

Ives, currently touring and recording as guitarist for Justin Timberlake, recalls the whole concept catching on faster than they ever planned.

“Robert came up with this crazy idea from the perspective of these two characters,” Ives says. “I never thought it would come out. I was like, ‘Man, don’t. Let’s not put that out. These [songs] are stupid.’ But we had 20 something songs.

“Next thing I know: ‘Man, let’s not do a show. We can’t do a show.’ We did a show, and all of a sudden we had a booking agent and were doing national tours. We were wondering what the hell happened. It was my side project at the time.”

The original lineup included DJ Witnesse — who is still part of the team — and Cameron Mann, recent head of the Music Resource Center for the Memphis Music Foundation and now the manager of development and communications at Shelby Farms Park. Mann’s father, Don, started Young Avenue Sound in 2001. (Cameron left the group in 2008.)

Ives was an upstart engineer at Young Avenue Sound in 2006 and orchestrated the purchase of an Akai MPC, the essential sampling tool that was the technological basis of hip-hop as digital technology replaced the hard-to-learn handwork and expense of turntables. The studio became a haven for local hip-hop.

“I convinced Don to buy an MPC, because the studio’s clients were rappers and producers. So I was just grinding out beats and learning that machine,” Ives says.

Aristocrunk, Lord T & Eloise’s 2006 debut album and manifesto, combined the sensibility of the .01 percent with a very heavy dose of Prince Mongo. The Flyer gave the album an A. The sound was essentially Memphian.

Ives had marinated in the horrorcore hip-hip of Orange Mound, with clients working in the shadows of Three 6 Mafia. Where Craig Brewer’s character Shelby from his hip-hop film Hustle & Flow — allegedly based on real-life math teacher and synth whiz Shelby Bryant — ventured alone into rap collaboration, Ives enjoyed a steady stream of hip-hop work through the mid-1990s, honing his sensibility and technical efficiency. Later, this work would inform his musical output in FreeSol, a rap-driven funk-pop outfit that backed Timberlake and which led to his current gig with the pop superstar.

Ives just returned home from touring with Timberlake.

“I have a couple days off,” he says. “We just finished a promo tour and we had a summer tour. It’s been crazy. We did Rio with 95,000 people. You couldn’t see the back. You couldn’t see the sides. It was absolutely insane. The people are so far away from you. It’s not like the Hi-Tone where you have 200 people right in your face. That’s hard to play.”

Lord T & Eloise return to the intimacy of Memphis this Saturday. Despite the recent highs of playing to tens of thousands, Ives is excited about this homecoming:

“It’s going to be really cool. We haven’t played for a while, but we were getting to a really cool place. We have a rotating cast of characters. We have Paul the Tailor playing drums. That’s going to be awesome. Biggs Strings is on bass. And DJ Witnesse.”

As time allows, the band will continue working on the next mixtape, which will be their fourth album, following 2008’s Chairmen of the Bored and Rapocalyse from 2010.

“We have a bunch of unfinished material for Blackout Crunk Vol. 1, which is not finished,” Ives says. “We have it all mapped out. The songs are there.”

Sadly, Ives reports that Anthony has become stuck in character and is receiving medical attention. Our request for an interview with Anthony was answered with a carrier-pigeon-delivered scroll offering financial-advisory services. But the show will go on.

Lord T & Eloise with Spaceface Young Avenue Deli Saturday, October 12th, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.

lordtandeloise.com

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Music Music Features

The Eagles at FedExForum

Hell froze over in 1994, and the Eagles liked it. After an acrimonious break-up, the band re-formed that year, and they’re at it again. The Eagles play FedExForum on October 14th.

The Eagles were the soundtrack to the United States of America in the late 1970s and early 1980s, reaching a level of success and ubiquity that eventually undid them and, well, lots of music-listening Americans. Along with Fleetwood Mac, the group became an unavoidable presence in the days of mass media. A world with one or two radio stations seems inconceivable now. But that world existed and it played the Eagles. A lot. By the 1990s, we welcomed Kurt Cobain, noise, and instrument destruction with open arms.

But the Eagles are getting a thorough reconsideration. Whether it’s nostalgia or just enough distance, the band is again part of the conversation. A fascinating documentary, The History of the Eagles — Part One, is on Showtime, and the group is making the rounds again. The documentary sheds light on the intelligence and hard work that guided the success. The band’s insights and diligence are amazing: They write great songs. They sing as well as any band ever did. There’s a reason why they were everywhere: People respond to those songs.

Plus, Joe Walsh. Gotta love Joe Walsh. — Joe Boone

The Eagles at FedExForum on Monday, October 14th, at 8 p.m. Tickets are available through Ticketmaster.

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News News Blog

New Art Installation at Overton Square

Photographer Daniel Frederick of Light My Way Photography captured this shot of artist Yvonne Bobo supervising the installation of her new piece at Overton Square.

Daniel Frederick