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Music Music Features

Beale Street Music Festival 2015 – Lineup and Schedule for Saturday May 2nd

SATURDAY MAY 2nd

Bud Light Stage (South) …

The Vespers 2:15 P.M.

Soul Asylum 3:45 P.M.

Big Head Todd & the Monsters 5:25 P.M.

Flogging Molly 7:05 P.M.

Band of Horses 8:45 P.M.

The Avett Brothers 10:30 P.M.

FedEx Stage (Middle) …

Copeland 2:10 P.M.

Devon Baldwin 3:30 P.M.

LeCrae 4:15 P.M.

G-Eazy 5:45 P.M.

Lindsey Stirling 7:20 P.M.

Bleachers 9:00 P.M.

Paramore 10:40 P.M.

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage (North) …

Dead Soldiers 2:10 P.M.

Diarrhea Planet 3:35 P.M.

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic 5:10 P.M.

Wale 6:55 P.M.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band 8:30 P.M.

John Fogerty 10:15 P.M.

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent …

Ghost Town Blues Band 2:00 P.M.

Kelley Hunt 3:20 P.M.

Kenny Brown Band 4:45 P.M.

Lurrie Bell 6:10 P.M.

Matthew Curry 7:40 P.M.

Ana Popovic 9:05 P.M.

Kim Simmonds & Savoy Brown 10:45 P.M.

MetroPCS Blues Shack …

Terry “Big T” Williams Times Vary

Leo Bud Welch Times Vary

THE BANDS:

Leo Bud Welch

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Age is nothing but a number – just ask 82-year-old guitarist Leo Bud Welch. Welch apparently once missed an audition to join B.B. King’s band because he didn’t have the bus fare, but he’s done all right since then, touring the States and Europe many times over with his sparkle-covered guitar.

Terry Big T Williams

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Another Mississippi bluesman that should not be missed this weekend. Williams grew up hearing stories about the blues from his grandmother, who saw legends like Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker.

Ghost Town Blues Band

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 2:00 p.m.

We already gave you the lowdown on Ghost Town Blues Band as part of our cover feature (p. 14), so make sure you get to the Blues Tent early to hear songs off the band’s latest album, Hard Road to Hoe.

Dead Soldiers

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 2:10 p.m.

Another band of Memphis boys, Dead Soldiers should definitely be shown some local love when they play on Saturday. Made up of members of old Memphis metal bands, Dead Soldiers put on an entertaining live show fueled by Tennessee whiskey and good times, both of which should be on hand all weekend long.

Copeland

FedEx Stage • 2:10 p.m.

This Lakeland rock band (that’s Lakeland, Florida, not Lakeland, Tennessee) has been around since 2001 and has made it clear that they are not a “Christian band” despite being associated with the Christian rock label Tooth and Nail. Their latest album, Ixora, was released last year and was the band’s first new album in six years.

The Vespers

Bud Light Stage • 2:15 p.m.

The Vespers reside just 200 miles east of Memphis in Nashville, but we won’t hold that against them. This Americana act is a family affair, with two brothers (Taylor and Bruno Jones) and two sisters (Callie and Phoebe Cryar) rounding out the lineup.

Kelley Hunt

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 3:20 p.m.

This Lawrence, Kansas-based piano player has been at it for a while, releasing influential albums since 1995.

Devon Baldwin

FedEx Stage • 3:30 p.m.

This former American Idol contestant and Bay Area native crafts modern pop songs that R&B fans would also find appealing. Baldwin has collaborated with G-Eazy (also playing Music Fest) on multiple occasions, including the YouTube hit “Let’s Get Lost.”

Diarrhea Planet

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 3:35 p.m.

Diarrhea Planet (DP) pack a punch with their live show that includes four electric guitarists. Hailing from Nashville, DP had a monster 2014, which included being named the best live act of the year by Paste Magazine. Musically, they fall somewhere in between pop-punk and indie rock, with enough on-stage energy to get the crowd moving no matter when they are billed.

Soul Asylum

Bud Light Stage • 3:45 p.m.

Remember that Soul Asylum video where Claire Danes has the freaky-looking shoulder blades, and all the kids at the school dance point and laugh at her, and then mid-dance, she grows angel wings? And then she’s all “take that, bullies!” as she flies away. Yea, that was awesome.

Lecrae

FedEx Stage • 4:15 p.m.

More like cray cray. Okay, sorry. This Christian rapper has been around since 2004 and is the co-founder of Reach Records. While there probably won’t be an offering plate passed around, LeCrae should provide a spiritual experience when he takes the stage on Saturday.

Kenny Brown Band

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 4:45 p.m.

Mentored by R. L. Burnside, Kenny Brown is an amazing guitarist from Nesbit, Mississippi. Brown’s guitar work was used in Black Snake Moan, and his Memphis ties run deep.

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 5:10 p.m.

We want the funk! And these guys are sure to bring it. Fronted by George Clinton, who revolutionized R&B in the ’70s by morphing psychedelic rock, soul, and funk into a unique sound — dubbed P-Funk — this group knows how to throw down. If you’ve yet to see them in action, picture this: a big crew partying on stage, lots of dancing, wailing guitars, funky bass lines, and a little jazz horn. And did I mention a party on stage? They might just tear the roof off the sucker.

Big Head Todd & the Monsters

Bud Light Stage • 5:25 p.m.

Okay, so we already gave out the best name award, but Big Head Todd & the Monsters are putting up a serious fight for second place. Since forming in 1986, the band has released a plethora of albums, including the classic Midnight Radio album released in 1980, which featured artwork by Chris Mars, formerly of the Replacements.

G-Eazy

FedEx Stage • 5:45 p.m.

Formerly of the “Bay Boyz,” G-Eazy is a Northern California hip-hop artist who was chosen to open for Drake after going viral on sites like MySpace and YouTube. G-Eazy has also played Warped Tour and released the critically acclaimed album, These Things Happen, last summer. Don’t miss the “James Dean of Rap” on Saturday evening.

Lurrie Bell

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 6:10 p.m.

Lurrie Bell has been playing since the ’70s, cranking out more than 10 solo records and almost twice as many collaboration albums with his father Carey Bell and other acts like the Doobie Twisters.

Wale

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 6:55 p.m.

Wale is one of the only hip-hop artists performing this year, but that shouldn’t deter you from checking out his performance on Saturday night. The Washington, D.C., native has solid hits like “Pretty Girl” and “Chillin” under his belt, in addition to songs on video games like Saints Row.

Flogging Molly

Bud Light Stage • 7:05 p.m.

In the early ’90s, some of the early members of this seven-piece Irish punk band played an L.A. bar called Molly Malone’s every week. Irish-born lead singer Dave King has said that they felt like they were “flogging it to death” at Molly Malone’s, and hence the band’s name was born. They’re best known for 2002’s Drunken Lullabies, which was filled with fast-paced Irish ditties (“Swagger,” “What’s Left of the Flag”) that make you want to dance a jig and slam-dance at the same time.

Lindsey Stirling

FedEx Stage • 7:20 p.m.

What do you get when you combine classical violin with dubstep? Lindsey Stirling, that’s what. Dubbed the hip-hop violinist, Stirling has forged her own path and basically created a genre that combines a soothing and sophisticated string sound with dirty dubstep bass drops. Stirling’s expert delivery somehow softens EDM’s often-jarring edge, resulting in music that would be equally appealing to a bro at a Skrillex show and your grandmother.

Matthew Curry

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 7:40 p.m.

Hailing from Normal, Illinois, there’s nothing that’s ordinary about Curry’s music. He’s only been around since last year, but his live show already has the approval of Steve Miller.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 8:30 p.m.

A self-taught guitarist, Kenny Wayne Shepherd achieved success in the ’90s behind the hit “Blue on Black,” sung by Noah Hunt. Shepherd has been nominated for five Grammy Awards and has released seven studio albums.

Band of Horses

Bud Light Stage • 8:45 p.m.

Briefly known as Horses, Band of Horses formed in 2004. The Seattle, Washington, band features Ben Birdwell, formerly of Carissa’s Weird. Band of Horses have worked with some of the biggest labels in indie rock, including Sub Pop and Fat Possum Records.

Bleachers

FedEx Stage • 9:00 p.m.

This New York City band features Jack Antonoff of Steel Train and Fun. Relatively new in comparison to some of the other bands on the Music Fest lineup, Bleachers started out as a secret side project of Antonoff’s, until he debuted the critically acclaimed single “I Wanna Get Better” in February of last year.

Ana Popovic

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 9:05 p.m.

Shout out to all the Memphis, Tennessee-based Serbians who will be at Music Fest this weekend, including Ana Popovic. With six albums under her belt and no signs of slowing down, Popovic is a great example of the diverse talent the Memphis music scene has to offer.

John Fogerty

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 10:15 p.m.

The legendary king of the bayou should never be missed. Even the most casual fans will immediately recognize Fogerty as the voice behind the legendary classic rock band Creedence Clearwater Revival, but the California native has also had an impressive solo career including the Grammy-nominated song “Change in the Weather,” among other songs that convey his classic sound. This will be Fogerty’s first Memphis concert in 20 years.

The Avett Brothers

Bud Light Stage • 10:30 p.m.

If you’ve detected a trend of alt-country punk bands playing this year’s Beale Street Music Fest, you might be on to something. The Avett Brothers represent the genre well and have had studio time with Rick Rubin to prove it.


Paramore

FedEx Stage • 10:40 p.m.

The original members of this emo-pop band hail from just down the road in Franklin, Tennessee. And though some of those members have left, the band is still fronted by the spunky Hayley Williams, whose fiery orange (or sometimes teal blue) locks and tiny stature give her an elfin appearance. Paramore are best known for their works from emo’s mid-oughts heyday — “Misery Business,” “That’s What You Get,” “Crushcrushcrush.” And although the band clearly falls into the emo genre, there’s something about their delivery that feels less obnoxious than that of their emo-pop contemporaries (like Avril Lavigne or Panic at the Disco!).

Kim Simmonds and Savoy Brown

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 10:45 p.m.

In case you didn’t know, Kim Simmonds is widely considered to be one of the fathers of British blues. That means he and Savoy Brown are a pretty big deal. You don’t want to disrespect British blues while you’re in the home of the blues this weekend, do you? Didn’t think so.

Categories
Music Music Features

Beale Street Music Festival 2015 – Lineup and Schedule for Friday May 1st

FRIDAY, MAY 1

Bud Light Stage (South) …

Spin Doctors 6:10 P.M.

Jenny Lewis 7:45 P.M.

Ryan Adams 9:20 P.M.

Lenny Kravitz 11:00 P.M.

FedEx Stage (Middle) …

Myslovitz (Poland) 6:15 P.M.

Awolnation 7:45 P.M.

Pixies 9:25 P.M.

The Flaming Lips 11:05 P.M.

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage (North) …

In This Moment 6:05 P.M.

Slash 7:40 P.M.

Breaking Benjamin 9:20 P.M.

Five Finger Death Punch 11:00 P.M.

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent …

Preston Shannon 6:10 P.M.

Ira Walker 7:45 P.M.

Alejandro Escovedo 9:25 P.M.

Robert Randolph & the Family Band 11:05 P.M.

MetroPCS Blues Shack …

Terry “Harmonica” Bean Times Vary

Butch Mudbone Times Vary

THE BANDS:

Terry Harmonica Bean

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Hailing from Pontotoc, Mississippi, Terry “Harmonica” Bean has worked with T-Model Ford, appearing on his 2008 album Jack Daniel Time. Bean comes from a family of Pontotoc bluesmen, and his father Eddie Bean frequently hosted informal concerts at their house “Bean Hill.” He’s also appeared in multiple blues documentaries and the television series Moonshine and Mojo Hands.

Butch Mudbone

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Butch Mudbone wins the unofficial “best-name competition” of Beale Street Music Fest. This area musician has opened for everyone from James Brown to B.B. King but shouldn’t be labeled as simply an opening act. Butch Mudbone claims to live the blues, so keep that in mind when checking his set out Friday night.

In This Moment

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 6:05 p.m.

Get ready for a healthy dose of goth metal from In This Moment, who kick things off early on Friday night. Formed in 2005, the band released their early work on metal label Century Media before signing to Atlantic and releasing Black Widow, an album that has sold 80,000 albums to date. If their 2014 live album Blood at the Orpheum is any indication of what this band is capable of, metal fans should be in for a memorable experience.

Spin Doctors

Bud Light Stage • 6:10 p.m.

What time is it? It’s 4:30! No, actually it’s 6:10 p.m. on Friday when ’90s jam-rockers the Spin Doctors take the stage. But it’s not late, no. It’s early. Probably early enough to watch the beginning stages of sunset as lead singer Chris Barron croons those famous lines about his pocket full of Kryptonite.

Preston Shannon

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 6:10 p.m.

Preston Shannon’s southern fried soul music shouldn’t be missed this weekend. Originally from Olive Branch, Mississippi, Shannon moved to Memphis at the age of 8. This will be Shannon’s third Beale Street Music Fest appearance, and the North Mississippian also appeared on The Voice in 2012. Shannon is one of many local artists who are sure to put on a captivating performance this weekend.

Myslovitz

FedEx Stage • 6:15 p.m.

This Polish indie rock band combines elements of college rock and shoegaze to create a sound that’s accessible and commercial-ready. Influenced by everyone from Joy Division to My Bloody Valentine, Myslovitz take their name from their hometown of Myslowice, Poland. Show these Polish boys some southern hospitality when they play Friday night.

Slash

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 7:40 p.m.

Saul Hudson, aka Slash, has a rock-and-roll resume that cannot be questioned. He ripped the guitar in Guns N Roses, was a member of Velvet Revolver, and partied hard in the 90s with celebrities like Charlie Sheen. His mother also designed costumes for David Bowie. He’s released multiple albums since going solo, and his latest features Myles Kennedy and the Conspirators.

Ira Walker

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 7:45 p.m.

Recently nominated for a Grammy as a producer, Walker is a must-see act at Beale Street Music Festival. He won a Grammy in 2008 and has shared the stage with everyone from Steve Miller to Carlos Santana. Walker also wrote the hit song “I Wanna Go Back” for Eddie Money and has written songs for Travis Tritt and Randy Travis. His latest album, Blame Me, was released in 2014 and received rave reviews.

Awolnation

FedEx Stage • 7:45 p.m.

This band got the endorsement of Red Bull Records and free rein of the Red Bull Studio in Los Angeles, and released the critically acclaimed Megalithic Symphony in 2011. Featured in all kinds of commercials, you’re probably familiar with Awolnation’s brand of electro-rock even if you didn’t realize it. Their most notable song, “Sail,” has sold more than 5 million copies.

Jenny Lewis

Bud Light Stage • 7:45 p.m.

Formerly of Rilo Kiley, Jenny Lewis crafts dreamy indie-pop songs that get stuck in your head after the first listen. Lewis is primarily a solo artist at this point, but she’s also collaborated with Cursive, the Postal Service, and Elvis Costello in addition to contributing songs to the HBO show Girls and the Disney movie Bolt.

Ryan Adams

Bud Light Stage • 9:20 p.m.

This wildcard singer-songwriter is also a legendary producer, helping craft albums for the likes of everyone from Fall Out Boy to Willie Nelson. Not one to be tied to a specific genre, Adams has tackled everything from alternative country to pop punk. He recently released 1984, a punk album that was heavily indebted to the Replacements and, most recently, a live album of his performance at Carnegie Hall.

Breaking Benjamin

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 9:20 p.m.

Often referred to as a “post-grunge” and “alternative metal,” Breaking Benjamin’s late-’90s formation and debut album Saturation, released in 2002, chronologically makes them more of a “post-post-grunge” band, and their sound relies less on metal elements than it does basic hard-rock characteristics. The band commercially peaked with its third full-length, 2006’s Phobia, a concept album about the various debilitating phobias – flying, death anxiety, fear of the dark, and driving anxiety – suffered by founding songwriter/vocalist/guitarist Benjamin Burnley.

Pixies

FedEx Stage • 9:25 p.m.

This year’s inclusion in the Music Fest lineup will mark the second ever Memphis date for the Pixies; the first being a show at the Orpheum in late 2011. The Pixies have primarily operated as a live act since reuniting 11 years ago, but last year the band released its first full album of new material, the dubiously titled Indy Cindy, as a proper follow-up to 1991’s Trompe Le Monde. Oddly enough, later 2015 dates for the Pixies have them opening for Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant.

Alejandro Escovedo

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 9:25 p.m.

Escovedo’s been at it for a long time, releasing 14 albums since 1992. This former member of the Nuns has punk rock ties to Posh Boy Records and his brother was in the Zeros. For punk rock purists, Escovedo can be considered royalty, even if he’s moved on to country music.

Lenny Kravitz

Bud Light Stage • 11:00 p.m.

The headliner of Beale Street Music Festival needs no introduction. He’s a platinum-selling artist and one of the best guitar shredders of his generation. Recently, Kravitz has ventured into acting, but rest assured he’s got what it takes to leave Beale Street Music Fest in awe on Friday night.

Five Finger Death Punch

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 11:00 p.m.

Also known as 5FDP and named after the famous martial arts move, Las Vegas’ Five Finger Death Punch formed in 2005 around the mid-2000s version of groove-metal pioneered by Pantera and Sepultura (as well as that band’s offshoot, Soulfly) during the previous decade. Promptly becoming one of mainstream metal’s biggest bands, and staying that way, Five Finger Death Punch’s first two albums – 2007’s Way of the Fist and 2009’s War Is the Answer – were both certified gold in the U.S.

Robert Randolph & the Family Band

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 11:05 p.m.

This family band is a veritable super group led by seasoned veteran steel guitarist Robert Randolph. You should also know that Randolph is listed in Rolling Stone‘s top 100 guitarists of all time and most recently wrote a song for the show SEC Nation.

The Flaming Lips

FedEx Stage • 11:05 p.m.

This will be the third Music Fest appearance for the Flaming Lips. In 2012, the band chose Memphis as the starting line when it broke the Guinness World Record for Most Concerts Played in Multiple Cities in a 24-Hour Period. Consistently active since the mid-’80s and boasting an immense body of work that genuinely contains at least one stylistic era for anyone with more than a casual interest in underground rock, the Flaming Lips are festival legends at this point

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Cover Feature News

New Year. New You.

We here at the Memphis Flyer are not know-it-alls, but that’s never stopped us from giving advice. And in our first issue of the new year, it’s become something of an annual tradition for our staff to offer suggestions to you for ways to enhance and revitalize yourselves as we begin another lap around the calendar. So, without further ado, advice from us to you. Ignore at your peril.

Salsa!

Edgar Mendez will transform you from a couch-tuber who sits around watching Dancing with the Stars into a smooth dance-floor operator in just a few short lessons. Need inspiration? Go down to the Rumba Room, Mendez’s club on South Main, on Saturday night and find your groove by watching men and women of every stripe, hue, size, shape, and ethnic variation spin and swirl and move their hips to the rhythms of salsa, bachata, merengue, etc. At 9:30 p.m., there are free lessons, which, along with a couple of Rumba Room mojitos, can help get you loosened up and well on your way to finding your inner salsero. — Bruce VanWyngarden

Volunteer at a Theater

Admit it. You’ve always dreamed of having your big moment in the spotlight. Sure, you tell all your pals who hate musicals that you hate musicals too, but you’ve already got orchestra-seat tickets to Kinky Boots and secretly belt out “I’m Still Here” like Yvonne De Carlo whenever you’re sure nobody’s paying attention. Unfortunately, your brilliant stage career was sidetracked early in life because you were born tone deaf, with two left feet.

Never fear. Having no talent whatsoever in no way precludes you from being a star in Memphis’ ever-expanding theater community. A star volunteer, that is. From the Orpheum downtown to Germantown Community Theatre on Forest Hill-Irene, volunteers work both in the front of the house and backstage. Every theater uses volunteers differently, but almost every day in Memphis there are opportunities to stage-manage, run lights and sound, set props, sew costumes, and hand out programs. Even if you weren’t cut out for the spotlight, with all the theaters in Memphis, there are still a lot of opportunities to at least operate a spotlight. — Chris Davis

Juice!

Resolve to start each morning (or at least a few mornings each week) with a tall glass of veggie and fruit juice. Not the commercial, sugary, bottled kind but fresh, homemade juice made using a juicer. Don’t have a juicer? Stop by Cosmic Coconut or Whole Foods and get your juice fix there. Or order juices from the Memphis-based Raw Girls vegan food delivery service. Juicing is a great way to fill your body with concentrated vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. Go for a full-on juice cleanse if you’d like, but it’s also just fine to enjoy a juice as part of your balanced breakfast. — Bianca Philips

A New Uke

Are you feeling insufficiently musical? That’s sad. Let’s fix this immediately by enrolling you in group ukulele lessons taught by Misti Rae Holton at Amurica. Release your inner Don Ho. And mo’. They make bass ukes now, which is totally insane. Pick up a ukulele at any of the local instrument stores. Search for “group ukulele lessons” on Facebook to sign up. Learn music with new pals in a cool place. — Joe Boone

Lower the Bar

So you say you can’t keep your New Year’s resolutions. Every year you make up a list of stuff to do: Quit drinking turpentine; eat only vegan animals; free yourself from the tyranny of pants. But before the Super Bowl, you’re back to guzzling turpentine and wearing trousers. Why not lower the bar? Instead of listing specific things that you need to improve, adopt a vague slogan, like “Try to do better,” and then declare victory. For example, a few years ago, my “resolution” was to Get My Shit Together. About March, I arbitrarily declared my shit to be together and then went on with my pathetic life. This year, I’m going to “Take Care of Business.” I foresee great success. — Chris McCoy

Do It Now: The Book

If you’ve ever thought about it, now’s the time. Now. Not later. Set a goal for starting, managing, and completing a book-length manuscript this year. What book? C’mon, you probably have one in mind. Or several. Pick one, be it fiction, nonfiction, or just whatever. Work some time into your normal schedule, somewhere from an hour to three hours a day, when you sit at the computer and don’t browse, check your email, go shopping for stuff, or upload your selfies. Write. Period. And according to a rational goal of so many words (or chapters) at such-and-such a rate. Then see what you have a year from now. — Jackson Baker

Have Healthier Hangovers

You explain your New Year’s resolutions over beer, wine, cocktails, and, or course, the champagne toast at midnight. Then you wake up on New Year’s Day — the very first day of your brand-new promise to yourself — with a booming, gritty, inescapable, hangdog hangover.

Google “healthy hangover” and you’ll find “miracle” foods like quinoa, spinach, and cayenne pepper. You’ll also find “miracle” beverages like tomato juice, tea, coconut water, and, of course, regular old water water. You’ll also find things to do like exercise (no joke), have sex, or hit the local sauna.

Many medical practitioners (and your mother, college roommate, boss, boyfriend, mailman, and Instagram follower) believe hangovers are linked to hydration. Over the holidays, I tried the recommended 1:1 ratio. That is, one alcoholic drink to one glass of water. I drank less alcohol (maybe because I was in the bathroom all night) and did, indeed, feel better the next day, lots better. To simplify, drink water as you drink alcohol and you’ll feel better.

But if you must get drunk one night and have stuff to do the next day, Atlas Men’s Health will hook you up … to an IV … for hydration therapy. The Midtown “casual clinic” says the therapy can “bring about a quicker recovery period.” — Toby Sells

Be a Mentor

Showing an at-risk kid that you’re concerned about their well-being and future could have a life-changing effect. Studies show that mentoring a young person can significantly increase their chances of completing school, pursuing a career, and staying away from crime. Various agencies offer mentoring opportunities in Memphis including Youth Villages, the Boys and Girls Club, Memphis Athletic Ministries, and the Grizzlies’ TEAM UP initiative. Use your spare time to make a difference in someone’s life. — Louis Goggans

Vote

Did you vote in the 2014 midterm elections? Only 36.4 percent of eligible voters did last year, down from 61.6 percent in 2008. Voter suppression is real. For the past six years, those who do not believe in government have been monkey-wrenching the lawmaking process on the national level to convince the people who showed up to the polls in 2008 with hope in their hearts to not bother any more. The demoralization campaign has been quite successful, and the party that pretends to believe government is evil is proceeding to use government regulation to restrict women’s reproductive choices and sell off public assets to the highest bidder.

We’re voting for mayor and city council in Memphis on October 8th this year, and if you want things to change for the better in this city (however you define that) you should educate yourself, get off your duff, and cast a ballot. — CM

Get Your Music On

Memphis is, as we say, “blessed” with everything you need to upgrade your listening experience. You can buy a turntable at Halford Loudspeakers’ showroom and listening salon in Cooper-Young or from George Merrill’s Analog Emporium out in Cordova. Records? Millions of them: Audiomania, Shangri-La, and Goner Records are open for business. Vinyl has fewer military uses today, and new pressings are better than they ever were. Feeling creative? Make your own record: Get Jeff Powell to run your master lacquer and press the fool thing out at the newly christened Memphis Record Pressing. That’s a better-sounding you! — JBoone

Drink More Water

Reaching past that soda or brew for a bottle of water when you open the fridge brings several health benefits. According to fitness and health website greatist.com, drinking water regularly can help aid weight loss, strengthen the kidneys, prevent constipation and headaches, and lessen the chances of developing certain cancers. — LG

Plant a Tree

There’s no shortage of bad news for humans who want civilization to continue on earth for a little while longer: Greenhouse gas emissions are rising again after plateauing during the recent recession, and 2014 is looking like it will tie or exceed 1998 as the hottest year on record. But there is also some good news to be had on the climate front: Solar and wind power have reached price parity with coal in many states, which means cleaner, renewable energy supplies for the grid are going to be a reality sooner than many had predicted. Another speck of good news is the recovery of the world’s forests. Brazil and Costa Rica, for example, have gotten their deforestation problems under control, and tree cover in the United States has rebounded to a level not seen since World War I. So if you want to take direct action and suck some CO2 out of the air, plant a tree. It’s a practical symbol of your commitment to the future. — CM

Go Somewhere

That’s it. Just go. To the City of Light. To the Palace of the Doge. To Wrigley Field. Or if you’re truly adventurous, to the immortal George’s Majestic Lounge honky-tonk in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Pick out a place you’ve always wanted to go to but never have. We’re talking about a year’s worth of time to do it, so you’ve got time to lay away the right kind of cash and calendar space and make your reservations. Once you do it this year and do it right, you may find that you’ve developed an addiction to travel that requires at least annual satisfaction. That’s a good thing, not a bad thing. — JBaker

Get Crafty with Beer

If you’ve been intimidated by all the new brews available, here’s a place to start: Walk into a growler shop or a brewery tasting room and say, “Hello, I’d like to try a new beer but I don’t know what to try. Can you help me?” They love to hear this. 

They’ll likely ask you what you drink now. Tell them you drink Bud Light, wine, vodka/Red Bull, or whatever. They want to know what you like already so they can recommend a beer that you’ll like. Many places around town will let you sample their stuff before you make up your mind. 

Speaking of your mind, keep it open. Don’t worry if you get a pint, six pack, or a growler of something you just don’t like. It’s going to happen. But don’t let that dismay you from new beers altogether. Drinking beer is tough work, but with a little determination, it’ll pay off. — TS

Purge Your Facebook Friends

Do you really need to be friends with that stoner dude who sat next to you in high school English class and copied your answers? Ditch him. And get rid of any family members whose political beliefs just irritate you. Isn’t dealing with them at Christmas enough? And ditch all those people who still send annoying invites to play Candy Crush or Texas Hold ‘Em. And 86 anyone who still “pokes” you. Would you be friends with someone who pokes you in real life? Didn’t think so. — BP

Try a New Restaurant

Memphis is globally known for its barbecue, but there’s much more the Bluff City has to offer. From Mexican to French-Creole to down-home Southern cooking (and everything in between), there’s a restaurant for everybody. Instead of routinely hitting your usual spots, read reviews, look around, check the Flyer dining listings, and diversify your restaurant selections this year. — LG

Explore Memphis

Make a list of all the places you’ve taken out-of-town relatives when they visit, and then set a goal to visit those places, sans relatives. How many times have you driven past Graceland and thought, Man, it’s been years since I’ve been in there? Be a tourist in your own city. Visit the Crystal Shrine Grotto. Eat at the Arcade. Take a tour of the Stax Museum. Check out the changes at the National Civil Rights Museum. — BP

Get Political!

Stop crabbing about the rascals you want to throw out every time there’s an election and become one of the rascals. They say the grass really is greener on the other side. It may not be grass, exactly, but you’ll definitely be in the way of some green if you get elected. I kid. If you do run for something, your motives should be pure. But you will need some start-up cash (i.e., fund-raising) to do it right. And some good helpers. And, yeah, a network — be it a political party or some other well-established group of people with a track record. And, really, you should have run on that track yourself a few times, trying to help get some other rascal into office. It may take a few years or a few elections to develop the right connections, but you can get started this year. — JBaker

Hit the Street

You want to know something that would make Memphis streets safer? More pedestrians. People who walk and bike get to know their neighbors and their neighborhood more intimately than those who treat all points between their homes and their destinations as flyover country. And with so many tree-lined streets and sidewalks and an expanding bike-lane system, there’s never been a better time to explore your own backyard. Think of the exercise as a fringe benefit. — CD

Host a House Concert

Looking for motivation to attack that tottering heap of dishes in the sink? How about 10 or 20 pals coming over with potluckery in arms to hear some live music? House concerts are a grievously under-traveled road to the good times. Find an up-and-coming artist whose game is good enough to keep the neighbors dancing, or at least listening. All of the idiotic volume levels and unwashed sorts clamoring for drinks and attention are a thing of the past. You call the shots. And if somebody there has a good time and likes your idea, you have a decent chance of being invited to something cool soon thereafter. Masterfully played. — JBoone

Stop It!

Stop with the ridiculous Memphis/Nashville rivalry thing, okay? I mean, it’s probably okay to tease “Music City” about its adequate barbecue, and its bro-Country, and the fact that the state capital’s collective IQ plummets every single time the legislature convenes for business. And yes, they probably deserve a rib tickling  for all those downtown Elvis statues and for Kenny Chesney’s muscle shirts, and for providing a safe, affirming environment for mullet-users well into the 21st century. But engaging in a Twitter war every time Memphis gets an Ikea and Nashville doesn’t is just silly. — CD

Push It Real Good

By which, I mean eat right, exercise, and otherwise work yourself into a fine lather. No, you won’t get to be Arnold Schwarzenegger (for which, thank your lucky stars). But you can be fit and healthy, at least in a way relative to your age and station. Everything is relative, but if you can find your own God-given center and keep it tuned, you won’t be running second to anybody else, living or dead. There are scads of good gyms out there now; if you can’t find one that fits your means, you’re just not paying attention. As for running, the world is your track. — JBaker

Put Your Phone Away at Restaurants

Don’t be that guy who goes through the entire meal with his face buried in his phone. It’s rude, especially if you’re only dining with one other person. Your dinner date is left with no choice but to bury their face in their phone, too, since you’re too busy checking your Twitter feed to take part in normal dinner conversation. If you need to Instagram your meal or photograph it for Yelp later, fine. Take your pic, then put your phone in your purse or pocket. — BP

Categories
Music Music Features

A Look Back: 2014

Recordings:

Virghost — GHOSTS (self-released)

One of the most gifted wordsmiths in Memphis’ underground rap scene, Virghost dropped a monumental project in September: GHOSTS. Similar to Kendrick Lamar’s Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City or Big K.R.I.T.’s Cadillactica, GHOSTS is a concept album. Through 16 tracks, Virghost reflects on a three-year period of his life that’s haunted him incessantly. GHOSTS is set during Virghost’s days at the University of Memphis (2005-2008), and showcases spitting, candid, heartfelt lyrics accompanied by solid production. The album is unquestionably worth checking out if you’re a fan of Memphis-bred underground hip-hop or storytelling through the form of raw lyricism.

— Louis Goggans

Lukah Luciano — Bad Guy x Good Fella (self-released)

A criminally under-looked rap album from one of the best unsigned MCs in Memphis. This album has it all: incredible production, creative samples, and thoughtful lyrics from a rapper whose knowledge of organized crime may make you wonder where the line between fact and fiction is drawn. An amazing release from one of the best kept secrets in Memphis, though he probably won’t be underground for much longer.

— Chris Shaw

Aquarian Blood — Demo Cassette

(ZAP Records)

The first offering from Aquarian Blood came in the form of a demo limited to 100 copies, but that didn’t stop critics from WMFU and Pitchfork from praising this Memphis super group. Forming out of the remains of Moving Finger, Aquarian Blood is a band to pay attention to in 2015, which should be easy given their fantastic live show and the amount of live appearances the band schedules. — CS

Dutch Masters — All in the Wires (Spacecase Records)

Amazing downer vibes pumped through a garage-rock filter, complete with screeching guitar solos, crashing drums, and howling vocals. Dutch Masters broke up in 2010, but that didn’t stop Spacecase from releasing this compilation featuring unreleased material in addition to the band’s recorded works for Goner. A once-missing piece of the Memphis garage-rock puzzle. — CS

Nots — We Are Nots

(Goner Records)

Eleven songs spanning 26 minutes, Nots’ bare-boned, bass-driven, and synth-charged debut never falls short. Take into consideration that it’s the band’s debut LP, and it’s all the more impressive. Nots doesn’t come across as a band that just dropped their first album. They seem more seasoned than that. We Are Nots with its howling vocals and forefronted, often dizzying synth, has an unmistakable sound that will leave you wondering what else Nots has up their sleeve.

— Joshua Cannon

The Star Killers/Little Moses split

(self-released) A band’s first album inevitably lives as a statement to which their later work will be compared. Because of this, many bands release a four- or five-track EP before embarking on a full-length. But the Star Killers operate in reverse. Last year, they released their first full-length album American Blues.

In July, they released a split with Atlanta-bred Little Moses. Here, the Star Killers get it just right. “Black Poppy Wine” rests heavily on the band’s blues influence before roaring guitars and pounding drums carry harmonizing vocals to the end of the song. Frontwoman Julien Baker’s lyrics are vulnerable, and her soft but powerful voice guides “Esau” to its conclusion. Sometimes less is more. The Star Killers find that in these songs. — JC

Dead Soldiers — High Anxiety

Dead Soldiers captures a depth and sincerity that are lacking in today’s country music. The widespread influences shine through on each track of High Anxiety. Each song’s polished production lets an arsenal of strings, horns, and steel guitars to peak in and out of the mix. High Anxiety has many moments reminiscent of John Prine and Townes Van Zandt, but “Ironclad” pulls more influence from Tom Waits. — JC

Live Shows:

September 4th: Nik Turner’s Hawkwind at the Hi-Tone.

Hands down the best show I saw all year, complete with a light show, backup dancers, and enough flute solos to make Ian Anderson proud. Even at 74, Nik Turner led the captivated Hi-Tone audience on an insane trip through many shades of psychedelic rock. A life-changing experience. — CS

July 13th: Black Flag and Black Oak Arkansas at the Young Avenue Deli.

For obvious reasons, this show wins the WTF? Award of 2014. The pairing of Black Oak Arkansas and Black Flag had hundreds of Memphians scratching their heads, but that didn’t stop a raucous crowd from piling into the Young Avenue Deli to get a taste of the action. Both bands delivered, especially Black Oak Arkansas who cranked out hit after hit in between amazing stage banter from Jim Dandy.

— CS

December 6th: Nights Like These and Gimp Teeth at Carcosa House.

Who needs a venue when you can throw concerts in your living room? This show was my first time at Carcosa, which could easily be compared to the house venue The Dairy (a midtown show space that closed four years ago). Gimp Teeth brought their A game, ripping through new material before Nights Like These put the neighbors’ patience to test with their extremely loud brand of heavy metal. House shows used to be a staple of the Memphis music scene, and it’s always a good sign when a new home decides to pick up the slack. — CS

February 28th: Da Mafia 6ix at the New Daisy Theater.

DJ Paul got the band back together and gave us one of the best Three 6 Mafia spin-offs since the “Tear Da Club Up Thugs” with Da Mafia 6ix. Featuring classic members of Three 6 Mafia like Crunchy Black and Gangsta Boo, Da Mafia 6ix immediately gained a loyal following, and their show at the New Daisy proved that the group was still capable of bringing the heat to a packed-out venue. Memphis legends Kingpin Skinny Pimp and DJ Zirk were also in attendance, making this one of the craziest local rap shows of the year.

— CS

Three Good Things 1. The Jay Reatard mural on the corner of Main and Vance is a long-overdue celebration of one of the most prolific musicians to come out of Memphis in the past 25 years. Jay might have left us years ago, but thanks to this awesome mural by local artist Lance Turner, his memory lives on.

2. Bar DKDC really ramped up its live shows in 2014, with local and touring acts playing almost every night. The tiny bar in Cooper Young provided plenty of great shows this year, and also gave numerous local bands a chance to play in front of a diverse crowd.

3. You might not always like the bands playing at the Hi-Tone, but the BBQ by Pit Master Richard never disappoints. The best food at a local venue, hands down. — CS

Categories
Cover Feature News

What a Burger!

Burgers are having their moment in Memphis. Witness the three burger-centric places that opened just in the past few months — Oshi, LBOE, and Belly Acres. Now, don’t get us wrong, we love the classics from Huey’s, Earnestine & Hazel’s, and Kooky Canuck, but there are folks out there who are stretching the limit of what a burger is — from the raw, to the bunless, to the innovative flourishes. Here are 15 of the city’s most awe-inspiring takes on the all-American classic.

Justin Fox Burks

The Big Cheeser

The Big Cheeser

at El Toro Loco

The Big Cheeser at El Toro Loco is the perfect Mexican expression of an American favorite. It’s a basic cheeseburger topped with shredded lettuce, tomato, and pickled jalapeno. Then the entire burger is covered in melted Chihuahua cheese. The best part? It’s topped with a cherry! It comes out looking like a beautiful dinner/dessert hybrid. The cherry is really just for show, but the Chihuahua cheese has the delicious effect of steaming the bun underneath. While it does require a knife and fork, it is truly outstanding and should not be overlooked.

Stacey Greenberg

El Toro Loco, 2617 Poplar (458-4414)

torolocos.com

The Burger

at Cafe 1912

In keeping with the French bistro ambiance of Cafe 1912, this burger is tres formidable, but with a gourmet feel. A hefty portion of premium ground beef is topped with Benton Farms bacon, Maytag bleu cheese (or provolone, if you prefer), roasted garlic aioli, red onion, fresh tomatoes, and lettuce, all served on a ciabatta bun. It’s accompanied by a pile of skinny, crispy pomme frites, none of which will be left on your plate. Cafe 1912’s burger is delicious and filling, and you’ll probably find yourself using a fork before dinner is over. This goes perfectly with a nice glass of Pinot Noir, or my favorite, a Duvel Belgian beer.

Bruce VanWyngarden

Cafe 1912, 243 S. Cooper (722-2700)

cafe1912.com

The Big Smack

at Imagine Vegan Cafe

Two non-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, and onion on a dairy-free bun. Isn’t that how the song went? Oh yeah, that was “all-beef patties.” Well, screw that song. Imagine Vegan Cafe’s meat-free version of the iconic McDonald’s sandwich is much better for the animals and your health. Their vegan burger patties have a toothsome, meaty texture (this ain’t no flimsy, hippie bean burger), and they’re guaranteed to hold together until the last bite. The dairy-free cheddar is so melty that you’ll need napkins (and maybe a fork). — Bianca Phillips

Imagine Vegan Cafe, 2299 Young (654-3455)

imaginevegancafe.com

Justin Fox Burks

The Greek to Me

The Greek to Me

at LBOE

The Greek to Me burger at recently opened LBOE (Last Burger on Earth) is the perfect choice for anyone desiring to sink their teeth into a flavorful delight with a twist.

Made-to-order with fresh ground beef, the juicy 8 oz. burger is cooked medium-well and dressed with sautéed spinach, tzatziki sauce, and a dollop of roasted garlic cream cheese. Two toasted and buttered ciabatta buns hold everything together.

The burger comes with chips. My recommendation: the spicy, eye-watering Nikki’s Hot Ass Chips.

Reasonably priced at $9.95, the Greek to Me is enough for two people to split and will leave you full and satisfied. — Louis Goggans

LBOE, 2021 Madison (725-0770)

lboerestaurant.com

The Pat LaFrieda Chopped Steak Burger

at Off the Hoof

First off, be aware that Off the Hoof is a fairly far piece, especially on a bad rainy night and even if (like me) you already live way out east. Once at Off the Hoof, though, you’ll be impressed by the crowds in the place (even on a bad rainy night), even if that makes for something like assembly-line service. Now, ready? The proprietors are specialists. Burgers are basically all they do, and their menu consists of infinite variations on that theme. (Anyone for ground boar? I kid you not.) I had their specialty, the Pat LaFrieda (beef) — which is, I was told, two kinds of steak, each ground and chopped into a coherent and well-textured patty. I had mine well-done with habanero pepper jack cheese simmered into the patty. Hearty and not overly spicy, even so. Several varieties of fries, too — including the sweet potato kind.

Jackson Baker

Off the Hook Burgers, 12013 U.S. Highway 70, Arlington (867-3565)

offthehoofburgers.com

Stacey Greenberg

Bi Bim Bop Burger

Bi Bim Bop Burger

at Kwik Chek

Kwik Chek, which is known for its popular Korean dish, Bi Bim Bop, recently introduced the Bi Bim Bop Burger. Bi Bim Bop is typically served in a sizzling hot stone bowl and includes rice, meat of your choosing (or tofu), sliced veggies, bean sprouts, an over easy egg, and a spicy red sauce.

The Bi Bim Bop burger takes a cheeseburger and tops it with the veggies, beans sprouts, and egg. It is a beauty. And it is seriously messy. The addition of cheese and mayonnaise was a bit off-putting at first, but the flavors really come together nicely. If you are a fan of Bi Bim Bop, or just unusual burgers, it’s definitely worth a try. Grab several napkins and a fork.

SG

Kwik Chek, 2013 Madison (274-9293)

Memphis Flyer Staff

Voodoo Moo-Moo

Voodoo Moo-Moo

at Belly Acres

Others would have played it safe. I’m not others.

“Go for something basic,” they’d say. “Develop a baseline for comparison.”

Blackened patty. Blue cheese. Sriracha aioli. How could I say no? I couldn’t, especially with all of the “Os” in Voodoo Moo-Moo eyeing me from the menu.

Plus, it’s tough to even get a “basic” burger at Belly Acres, the newest player on the city’s burger stage. The closest thing to standard is the Dare Ya, a bacon cheeseburger with “acre sauce.”

Not sure if Belly Acres was going for a New Orleans kind of thing with the Voodoo Moo-Moo. It’s a guess based on the name, the blackened-ness of the thing, and the presence of aioli. Also, on the menu it’s sandwiched between burgers with Mexican and Italian influences.

But after the first bite, the name barely mattered. Something magical happened when the blue cheese hit the caramelized onions, the blackened beef, and the perfectly placed pickles. When it happened to me, I closed my eyes in a moment of involuntarily and very public burger worship. No, I was not transported to the Crescent City but to hamburger heaven.

The Voodoo Moo-Moo is just one daring burger on a list of daring burgers from Belly Acres. Chorizo. Waffle buns. Pork belly. Guacamole. Maple ketchup. The menu alone has put Belly Acres on the Memphis burger map, and if it maintains the quality I got Monday, it is destined to be a hotspot for a long time.

Toby Sells

Belly Acres, 2102 Trimble (529-7017)

bellyacres901.com

Stacey Greenberg

Tora Toro

Tora Toro

at Oshi Burger Bar

Newly opened Oshi features its own Asian-inspired burger, the Tora Toro. It is made from house ground Ahi tuna and is topped with “crushed” avocado, Asian slaw, sesame seeds, and umami mayo. It’s super tasty, especially with a side of their thin and crispy French fries, which are served with a spicy ketchup that has its own Asian flare. For die-hard burger fans, it is a nice change from the typical beef patty and is maybe even a tad healthier? At the very least it is a great way to get your pescatarian friends to join you at the trendiest new burger joint downtown. — SG

Oshi Burger Bar, 94 S. Main (341-2091)

oshiburger.com

Marrow Burgers

at home

Take charge! Why wait around on a burger like a chump? Charlie’s Meat Market on Summer (aka the Avenue of Delights) will set you up with the latest rage: marrow burgers. There are a trillion recipes online, but basically you get beef bones and some chuck, knife the marrow out of the bones, salt and pepper the beef, and wad it all into patties. Grill, griddle, whatever. The result is a crazily moist, beefy burger (if you’re like me) or a lipid-sodden meat sponge (if you’re like my wife). Bring some acidity: a pepper relish, pickles, or a Malbec. — Joe Boone

Charlie’s Meat Market, 4790 Summer (683-1192)

charliesmemphis.com

Stacey Greenberg

Ecco Burger

ECCO Burger

at ECCO on Overton Park

ECCO on Overton Park’s signature ECCO burger features a spicy Chorizo sausage patty and is served on a homemade bun. Inside you’ll find melted manchego cheese and garlic aioli. It’s quite sophisticated, but don’t be fooled. It’s not for the weak of stomach as it packs a punch. — SG

1585 Overton Park (410-8200)

eccoonovertonpark.com

The Bacon Burger Wrap

at 5 Guys Burgers and Fries

There are several gourmet options for gluten-free burger lovers these days, but when you’re on the go and only have time for fast food, you may have to forget about the bun. In that case, 5 Guys has you covered. For those who prefer their food in a pile, 5 Guys will drop any of their burger combinations into a bread-free bowl, but the lettuce wrap is so much more convenient and burger-appropriate. The bacon burger is comprised of two flat-top-grilled burger patties and a healthy serving of crispy bacon. It’s tasty, if a little plain, but it can be gussied up with grilled onions and jalapenos, and a wide range of condiments and toppings that are available at no extra charge. What’s special about this burger is the care that’s taken in wrapping it in large, pliable, but still slightly crunchy lettuce leaves. You may begin to wonder why anybody would ever use a bun in the first place. — Chris Davis

5 Guys Burgers and Fries, multiple locations

fiveguys.com

Justin Fox Burks

The Colossus

The Colossus

at 3 Angels On Broad

I must hurry and finish this blurb before I slip into meat-induced catatonia for I have just eaten a Colossus. The most aptly named burger on our list stands astride the menu at the recently revamped 3 Angels On Broad as a towering achievement in burger architecture. The burger is a half pound of lean chuck fried to perfection, married with smoked gouda, and topped with two thick strips of bacon. On the opposing bun, a garlic mayo base supports pickles, tomatoes, slaw, and a nest of thin, crispy fried onions. This is the burger to have if you’ve been fasting for a few days, or if you’re ready to settle down into a long winter’s nap. — Chris McCoy

3 Angels on Broad, 2617 Broad (452-1111)

3angelsmemphis.com

Memphis Flyer Staff

Cashew Burger

Cashew Burger

at 2 Vegan Sistas

This raw vegan burger may well be the healthiest burger in town. Finely ground seasoned cashews are shaped into a patty and covered in pickles, onions, ketchup, and mustard. It’s served on a heart of romaine, but those with heartier appetites can request gluten-free bread. Pro tip: Order the bread on the side and take a bite with each forkful of cashew burger. To complete this super-healthy version of the all-American meal, order 2 Vegan Sistas’ take on a chocolate milkshake — the Carob Smoothie, made with carob, tahini, and almond milk. — BP

2 Vegan Sistas, 6343 Summer, Suite 100 (1-800-984-0379)

twovegansistas.com

Justin Fox Burks

The Ramen Burger

The Ramen Burger

at South of Beale

Brittany Cabigao, one of the operating partners of South of Beale, says they added a Ramen burger as a special to their menu after hearing about the New York craze. Ramen noodle master Keizo Shimamoto blew people’s minds with his bun made from crispy Ramen noodles at his restaurant Ramen Co.

The burger, topped with spinach and a homemade ramen sauce, was supposed to be a one-day thing, but proved so popular they added a second day. And while Cabigao doesn’t think the Ramen burger would ever make it on South of Beale’s regular menu, the burger will be on special this week as well as New Year’s Eve. — SG

361 S. Main (526-0388)

southofbeale.com

Justin Fox Burks

The Barbecue Burger

The Barbecue Burger

at Tops Bar•B•Q

Any burger fan cannot consider him/herself truly serious without a visit to Tops Bar•B•Q. While many may be aware of their famous barbecue sandwiches and many may have heard that their cheeseburgers have a cult-like following, it is only a few who have dared to combine the two. For the Barbecue Burger, order a burger and ask for an ounce of pork, slaw, and barbecue sauce. Depending on which Tops you go to, the extra meat may be underneath the hamburger patty. Seth Agranov, founder of the Best Memphis Burger Fest, says, “The barbecue should be on top, not under the burger. Placement counts!” He suggests going “all in” and adding an extra hamburger patty.

It seems like a lot for one bun to handle, but the burger/barbeque combo goes down surprisingly well. It’s so good that it may be gone before you get a chance to fully appreciate it. — SG

Tops Bar•B•Q, multiple locations

topsbarbq.com

Categories
Cover Feature News

Endpapers: This Season’s Top Books — Winter 2014

Memphis: Sweet, Spicy & a Little Greasy

By Susan Schadt and Annie Bares; photography by Lisa Buser

Wild Abundance Publishing; 253 pp.; $45

Dogs I’ve Nosed from Here to Naples

By Jack Kenner

Self-published; 166 pp.; $39.95

Memphis: Sweet, Spicy & A Little Greasy, the new title from ArtsMemphis-spawned Wild Abundance Publishing, is a whole lot of fun. It’s a hybrid of sorts — part coffee-table book, part cookbook, and part yearbook, detailing ArtsMemphis’ 2013 culinary arts series. These 12 parties mixed the best of Memphis’ art scene. Held at the homes of the city’s most influential art patrons and other venues, the parties featured dancers, actors, visual artists, and musicians performing while guests noshed on meals created by the area’s most notable chefs.

The book’s vibrant pictures, taken by Lisa Buser, show these events in full swing. In one striking image, Valerie June is seen mid-strum and mid-wail during the elaborate three-day Foxfield event held at Michelle and Bill Dunavant’s farm. In another, taken at the Homegrown Treasures party at the Hyde Foundation, chef Andrew Adams beams over a vehicle’s backseat absolutely crammed with pots and pans. Throughout are pictures of guests dancing and eating and celebrating. Chefs — Kelly English, Karen Carrier, Mac Edwards, Erling Jensen, Patrick Reilly, Jason Severs, Jackson Kramer, among them — are shown cooking and mingling and toasting a meal well done.

The recipes in the book can be used for your own fabulous parties — from Mac Edwards’ Gibson’s Donuts Bread Pudding and Burch Brown’s Stax Funky Frog Leg Ragout to the Veggie Chorizo Tortellini by Justin Fox Burks, Amy Lawrence, and Andrew Adams and the Quail Stuffed with Bison and Truffles by Erling Jensen.

Memphis photographer Jack Kenner’s Dogs I’ve Nosed from Here to Naples is his third book of animal portraits, but this book comes with something a little extra: recipes for pets. Many of the recipes look fine enough for your own dinner.

Like Memphis: Sweet, Spicy & A Little Greasy, you’ll recognize some names here. There’s Kelly English, his belly covered by his three adorable little dogs: Pappy, Shelby, and Benton. His recipe is Chicken Fried Rice. Karen Carrier — “lapped up” by her two big hounds, Otis and Sadie — suggests sharing a bowl of her Chicken and Rice Casserole. Ben Smith offers With Fish, a raw fish dish with kale, rice, and egg, which he feeds to his dogs Juno and Hobbes.

The “Naples” in the title refers to Naples, Florida, where Kenner had an exhibit of dog portraits, which are included here. In his introduction, he mentions how he prefers to shoot his subjects in their own environments. From the weest canaries to the greatest Great Dane, Kenner’s images present these animals at their finest — loved and loving. — Susan Ellis

The Forgotten Fifties

By James Conaway

Skira Rizzoli; 237 pp.; $45

“What Were We Thinking?” “Be Afraid.” “Are You Now or Have You Ever Been.” “Light, Cheap, Everlasting.” “And Then It Was Over.”

Those are some of the chapter titles used to describe 1950s America, and the book is The Forgotten Fifties by James Conaway.

Conaway — a novelist, journalist, and travel writer who grew up in Memphis and now lives in Washington, D.C. — knows this decade, as anyone who’s read his memoir, Memphis Afternoons, also knows. In The Forgotten Fifties, he takes a national look at those years, but this is no dry rehashing of the decade that brought us the Korean War, UFO sightings, Joseph McCarthy hearings, “I Like Ike” banners, frozen foods, the polio vaccine, black-and-white TV families, and whites-only dry cleaners.

To write this handsomely designed, coffee-table-size book, Conaway had access to the photo archives, housed in the Library of Congress, of Look, a magazine that at the height of its popularity had a peak circulation of 7.75 million. What does that number tell you about the influence Look had on the way Americans viewed themselves? That’s a question Conaway repeatedly asks. And what was Look‘s mission? To combine reporting with top-notch photography, and that’s what Conaway has done here: He’s written a series of essays — one essay per year of the decade — in the collective voice of the first-person plural to comment on the images he culled from the archives. Some of those images you might remember. Many of them you could not have remembered, because Look never published them. And it’s precisely what wasn’t published back then that may say more to us right now.

If you lived through the Fifties, it’s still a good question: What were we thinking? After looking at The Forgotten Fifties, later generations will want to rephrase that, with added emphasis: What were they thinking? — Leonard Gill

Embattled Rebel: Jefferson Davis as Commander in Chief

By James M. McPherson

Penguin Press; 300 pp.; $32.95

           

To say the least, the historical reputation of Jefferson Davis has suffered from what, today, we would call bad press. The leader of a failed rebellion against the United States, a defender of the institution of slavery, a military strategist whose decisions have evoked near universal scorn, a personality considered flinty and secretive — all this does not inure to the admiration of posterity.

Even among the partisans and commemorators of the Confederacy, Davis exerts an uncertain hold, as witnessed in the relative indifference — locally, anyhow — to the recent change of name for Jefferson Davis Park in downtown Memphis compared to the anguish and protest that met the renaming of Nathan Bedford Forrest Park nearby. Both retired to Memphis after the war. Perhaps the difference is that Forrest’s remains are still here, interred in the formerly eponymous grounds, while Davis, an erstwhile Mississippian who operated an insurance company in Memphis for a while and lived in The Peabody, would move on to a series of residences elsewhere in his former Confederate domain.

In any case, as James M. McPherson’s Embattled Rebel makes clear, Jefferson Davis was always a remote figure, even in his own sphere in his own time. One of the accusations against him is that he was overly partial to a few intimates — Braxton Bragg as commander of the South’s ill-fated military operations in the western theater, say, as well as a series of ill-equipped “political generals” elsewhere.

While acknowledging that charge and numerous others, McPherson — a Pulitzer Prize winner for his Battle Cry of Freedom and no sympathizer for the Confederate cause — is at pains to balance the historical record in Davis’ favor. Bragg, for example, he sees as unfairly maligned, a competent general overall, especially as compared to such darlings of the historians as the ever-hesitant General Joseph E. Johnston, a bête noire to Davis throughout the war.

In the same way that Abraham Lincoln was able to discern the virtues of Ulysses Grant and elevate him to a de facto personal partnership, so was Davis able to do so with Robert E. Lee, whose advice he took in most matters, especially in the policy of taking the war to the North, as at Antietam and Gettysburg. In order to maintain a flow of troops, as well as fiscal and political support from the states of the far-flung Confederacy, Davis was obliged to spread his resources thin, however, and that would ultimately prove an untenable strategy.

McPherson notes that Davis, a hero of the Mexican War, was chosen by the organizers of the Confederacy to be president of a fledgling breakaway nation certain to face a challenge to its existence because of his presumed military prowess. As a plantation owner and slaveholder, he was (and would remain) a firm believer in white supremacy and the South’s “peculiar institution.”

What is unfamiliar to most people is that, in the desperate last days of the Confederacy, as McPherson documents, President Davis had sent Secretary of State Judah Benjamin abroad to solicit British and French support in return for a promise of eventual abolition of slavery. And Davis was attempting to fast-track his own version of an Emancipation Proclamation — a massive granting of freedman status to whichever slaves would agree to provide last-ditch military service in defense of his shrinking realm. Companies of black soldiers were being organized even as Richmond finally fell in April 1865.

The ironies of all that are obvious — underscoring the several coincidences that relate Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln, both Kentucky-born and both veterans of Congress, each of these gaunt eminences a legitimate spokesperson for an opposite side of the great racial issue that divided, and in some ways continues to divide, the unity of the North American continent. — Jackson Baker

Stoner

By John Williams

New York Review Books Classics;

288 pp.; $16.95 (paper)

Dude! How have I never heard of this book? Well, it turns out John Williams’ Stoner (first published in 1965) isn’t about my college years at the University of Missouri, but oddly enough it is a novel set at the University of Missouri. It’s the life story of a fictional professor — one William Stoner, born at the end of the 19th century on a hardscrabble piece of land near Booneville, the only son of a dirt-poor farmer and his wife. In the summer of William’s 18th year, his father surprises him by suggesting that William should consider going off to the university in Columbia, some 15 miles away, to study agronomy. In four years, his father says, William could come back to the family farm with new ideas, maybe some ways to make their lives easier.

And so Stoner begins, a deceptively simple story of a farm boy going off to college. William doesn’t really fit into academia at first. His clothes, his appearance, his ignorance of collegiate life trouble him: “He became conscious of himself in a way he had not done before. Sometimes he looked at himself in a mirror, at the long face with its thatch of dry brown hair, and touched his sharp cheekbones; he saw the thin wrists that protruded inches out of his coat sleeves; and he wondered if he appeared as ludicrous to others as he did to himself.”

But an odd thing happens: Stoner takes a required English class and becomes enthralled with a Shakespeare sonnet and with the music and complexities of language. His English professor takes a liking to him, and William’s interest in agriculture slips away. After four years at school, he is offered a small stipend to teach English and accepts, setting the course of his life away from farming forever.

It’s a small life. William naively marries an unhappy, spoiled woman who makes his days miserable. He gets caught up in the petty machinery of faculty politics; he angers the wrong colleague, who rises to power and makes Stoner’s tenure a career-long struggle. He falls in love with a beautiful young grad student and has a magical but ultimately ill-fated affair. His life opens up briefly and closes again. He settles back into his marriage. He grows old. He dies in his own bed.

Stoner seems on the surface a simple, tragic tale of a life lived in quiet desperation. And it is. But its simplicity and its clear, declarative prose generate a slow irresistible power. You can’t put it down. Williams has written one of the great, unheralded works of 20th-century fiction. — Bruce VanWyngarden

Let Me Be Frank With You

By Richard Ford

HarperCollins; 240 pp.; $27.99

Frank Bascombe is back. The recurrent protagonist of author Richard Ford’s The Sportswriter, Independence Day, and The Lay of the Land is now 68 years old, retired from real estate, and volunteering on behalf of the blind and of soldiers returning to the States from Afghanistan. Living downsized with his wife Sally in Haddam, New Jersey, where we first encountered him in the 1980s, now Frank experiences a body’s response to passing time as he ruminates on the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy and other of life’s vagaries.

In this collection of four short stories, Frank regards the altered Jersey shoreline with somewhat the same detachment that he scrutinizes the cosmetically altered features of a former client’s face. Within his own home, he discovers a past that shattered other lives but barely scratches the surface of his own. Awareness of two old deceptions affects him in surprising proportions.

The conclusion of each story leads to the beginning of another. Ironically, in Frank’s willfully decluttered language, there is a touch of the sparse-at-all-costs feng shui decorating style that this proud misfit finds so discomfiting in the stylish, almost clinically decorated apartment inhabited by his ex-wife, a victim of Parkinson’s.

But his, in its own way, is a cluttered life. Frank begins the pre-Christmas season by feeling not guilty but “implicated by everything’s dilapidation.” He yields to an unwanted embrace by observing, “Our sympathies are most required when they seem less due.”

Unless severe weather keeps him grounded, Frank can anticipate with some pleasure a trip to Kansas City, where his son’s business ventures teeter between solvency and devastation. A day can be saved, Frank still believes, by “a few good words” — presumably a credo shared by author Richard Ford. — Linda Baker

The Animals’ Santa

By Jan Brett

Putnam; 32 pp.; $17.99

Bestselling author and illustrator Jan Brett has released another beautifully crafted children’s book just in time for Christmas. In The Animals’ Santa, a rabbit named Big Snowshoe tells his younger brother, Little Snow, about the mysterious animals’ Santa, who stealthily delivers presents to all of the forest animals each Christmas. Big Snowshoe and his animal friends all have guesses as to who they think the animals’ Santa might be (is he a thick-coated badger? a blizzard-resistant polar bear? a sure-footed moose?), but Little Snow, who is celebrating his first Christmas, thinks the idea is silly. That is, until he comes face to face with the animals’ Santa himself.

The Animals’ Santa is an adorable tale for the holiday season. The story and detailed illustrations by Brett will transport children into a magical world of friendly, talking animals and introduce readers to some of the creatures that inhabit the snowy forests of northern Canada. — Hannah Anderson On Thursday, December 4th, Memphians can introduce themselves to Jan Brett. The Booksellers at Laurelwood is hosting a book signing with Brett and her hat-wearing hedgehog, Hedgie, at the Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library from 5 to 7 p.m. The event is free, but line tickets are required and are included with the purchase of The Animals’ Santa from the Booksellers.

Leo’s Other Christmas

Written and illustrated by Graham Sale

Little Black Book Press; 29 pp.; $9.95 (paper)

Graham Sale may have once been an editorial cartoonist for The Commercial Appeal, but he sure has a way with words in his holiday children’s book, Leo’s Other Christmas. The story, based on a true story from Sale’s own past, centers around a boy who certainly loves toys — he loves dreaming about them, making lists of them, and receiving them at Christmastime. Leo is a well-behaved child — maybe a little spoiled — who just doesn’t know any better, but once he opens his eyes to the troubles of others, he realizes that Christmas is even more special once we open our hearts to those less fortunate. When it comes time to help a family in need, we see Leo’s journey, which starts out begrudgingly, lead to compassion.

Leo’s Other Christmas is an adorable spin on an old lesson — Sale’s illustrations are half the fun — but it’s a lesson worth retelling. And it might just inspire adults to ask themselves too, “What else can I do?” — Alexandra Pusateri

Leo’s Other Christmas is available at the Booksellers at Laurelwood and Burke’s Book Store. To order, go to the author/illustrator’s website, grahamsale.com.

Memphis Type History: Signs and Stories From Just Around the Corner

By Caitlin L. Horton;

illustrated by Rebecca Phillips

Saturday Morning Press;

149 pp.; $39.95

You see the signs everywhere — the rusty, well-worn, retro relics of a bygone era. Those fading, hand-painted murals and vintage neons give a glimpse into Memphis’ past, days when movies cost a quarter and a young Elvis Presley could be spotted around town.

There are a wealth of stories behind those signs and the places they represent — some long boarded-up, others still very much in business. And that’s the premise of Memphis Type History: Signs and Stories From Just Around the Corner.

Each chapter features a painting of an iconic sign by Rebecca Phillips, as well as historical images and additional current-day photographs by Jeremy Greene. The history of the signs and the places they represent are told through personal stories, collected by author Caitlin Horton.

Featured are the Universal Life Insurance Company sign on Dr. M.L. King Jr. Avenue, the old Chicago Pizza Factory sign that was replaced with Chiwawa’s “Midtown Is Memphis” sign, the Sputnik sign at Joe’s Wines & Liquor, the dancing-lady sign at Drink-n-Drag (formerly Club Spectrum), and the Skateland roller-rink sign, among others.

The book is filled with personal accounts of mid-century Memphis life. In the chapter on the Lamar Theater, a woman remembers the old serials and Westerns featuring Hopalong Cassidy that screened on Saturdays. The pages dedicated to Leahy’s Trailer Park on Summer contain a childhood love story and snippets of the truth — James Jones put his finishing touches on From Here to Eternity there — and of legend — Machine Gun Kelly supposedly frequented a bordello in the front of the park.

The “Memphis Type” project began in 2009 when photographer Greene began documenting old and overlooked Memphis signs just for fun. He sought out signs with compelling type as well as interesting graffiti. Phillips was inspired to base paintings on the signs, and Horton helped her sell some of them on her website, FrontPorchArt.com. It wasn’t long before a book deal was born, and Horton began collecting stories from Memphians.

If you’ve ever marveled at the “dripping” neon radiator sign on Walker Radiator Works and wondered who maintains that vintage treasure, or if you’ve spied that rusty Normal Beauty Shop sign on Highland and thought, What’s so normal about that place, anyway?, you’ll find those answers (and so much more) in Memphis Type History. Bianca Phillips

Caitlin Horton and Rebecca Phillips will be signing Memphis Type History at Burke’s Book Store on Thursday, December 11th, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.

In Tune: Charley Patton, Jimmie Rodgers and the Roots of American Music

By Ben Wynne

Louisiana State University Press; 270 pp.; $38

Jimmie Rodgers and Charley Patton represent a fork in American popular music traditions. But the two men were clearly drawing inspiration from the same deep wells, and the far-reaching influence of songs like Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #1” and Patton’s “Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues” is unmistakable in the work of pioneering artists like Bill Monroe and Elvis Presley.

Ben Wynne’s new book In Tune: Charley Patton, Jimmie Rodgers and the Roots of American Music, functions as backstory for the Elvis myth, as it describes the life and hard times of two poor-born men from Mississippi who came of age in the post-Civil War South and who went on to become American music royalty. In Tune tells the parallel but markedly dissimilar tales of Rodgers, the King of Country Music, and Patton, the hard-living Delta Blues King. The real narrative, however, is how both men used music as a means of transcending the boundaries of race and class.

Wynne, associate professor of history at the University of North Georgia, has written extensively about Mississippi and the Civil War. Although the author has a strong sense of the two artists’ musical kinship and their impact on popular culture, he’s at his best contrasting the social and economic conditions impacting the lives of Rodgers’ peripatetic family as it pushed westward in search of opportunity and Patton’s attempted escape from plantation culture.

Wynne’s research suggests that Patton the man may have been the equal to Patton the myth. He was small of stature, with a big, penetrating voice and an equally large appetite for whiskey, women, and trouble. At a time when mobility was a measure of success, Patton seems to have regarded music as a way to escape a conventional life on the farm.

Rodgers was called “The Singing Brakeman,” but he never much cared for the image. He was still a kid with stars in his eyes when he ran off to sing and play guitar with a medicine show. When his first attempt at a career in show business didn’t work out as planned, Rodgers went to work on the trains.

Steeped in a puritanical ethos where playing music and work were two entirely different things, In Tune shows that, in spite of segregation, Patton and Rodgers both “drew on the human condition for their subject matter,” Wynne writes. “Both men recorded songs with a wide range of themes from religion and death to hell-raising and sex. Both men played with other musicians on occasion but were, in essence, solo performers, more comfortable with a guitar than any kind of manual labor.” If not for their gifts, the author concludes, Patton would have been just another sharecropper, while Rodgers might have spent his adult life “grinding out” a meager living. “Because they could play music, other people noticed them,” Wynne writes. But as conclusions go, that’s something of a letdown. — Chris Davis

Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story

By Rick Bragg

Harper; 481 pp.; $27.99

Jerry Lee Lewis deserves a biographer on the order of William Manchester, Carl Van Doren, or Walter Isaacson. Rick Bragg’s biggest problem in biographying the Killer is Nick Tosches’ Hellfire, a comparatively rhapsodic and better-written account of Lewis’ life. But Tosches, like his subject, has his demons: He’s writing about the myth of the Killer, not the man. This hindered his insight into and access to the most important and talented white personality from the rock-and-roll era. Tosches gets carried away like a screaming fan boy and fails to contextualize a man whose actions bear further scrutiny. But his is a cool book.

Any old man can tell you cool ain’t everything, though. Bragg gets the larger, more difficult job done. For all of his tube-biscuit eloquence, Bragg knows the Deep South. Even if his subject is living in the dark as his own ghost, Bragg makes the most of his time with Lewis, coaxing details out of the old stone. One would imagine that a properly snobbish intellectual wouldn’t get too far. So it’s a compromise — sort of like the Killer’s career after his fall from grace. Bragg, our man in Nesbit, is not the ideal candidate, but at least we get a fuller picture of a superhuman piano man haunted by the thrill of lust and the terror of fate. — Joe Boone

Rick Bragg will be discussing and signing Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story at the Booksellers at Laurelwood on Saturday, December 6th, at 6:30 p.m.

I Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like: Mostly True Tall Tales

By Todd Snider

Da Capo Press; 295 pp.;

$16.99 (paper)

Stories have been a hallmark of Todd Snider’s shows for decades.

There’s the one about taking life advice from a shoeless, shirtless Slash (yes, the Guns N’ Roses guitarist) at an L.A. bar one morning. There’s another one about trying to buy coffee and a honey bun from a freshly stabbed convenience-store clerk in Midtown Memphis.

For nearly as long as the singer-songwriter has been telling stories, Snider’s been telling audiences that he was going to write them all down one day. Well, he finally did. Snider’s book, I Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like: Mostly True Tall Tales, opens with a caveat that any fan knows already: “Almost everything I say is true. Ask anybody.”

Snider is a hard-core East Nashvillian these days. But when he was 21, he moved to Memphis on a hot tip that he hoped would launch his music career. His dad called him from a Memphis bar. He’d just met the bartender, and she was Memphis singer-songwriter Keith Sykes’ wife’s sister.

“That call was enough to get me to move to Memphis,” Snider writes.

Sykes became his mentor, and Snider found an open-mic night at the Daily Planet. He grew his audience from that Park Avenue bar on songs like “My Generation, Part II.” Snider’s career took off while he lived in Memphis with tours and his record deal with Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville Records.

I Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like is not a full autobiography, but that’s not the point. It has detailed versions of Snider’s best-loved stories in chapters called “Jerry Jeff Walker’s Balls,” “Waylon Jennings Sucks,” and “Meeting Bill Elliott.”

Snider fans will love the book. But it’s a fun, wild ride for anyone. — Toby Sells

Gimme Indie Rock: 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996

By Andrew Earles

Voyageur Press; 400 pp.;

$19.99 (paper)

If you’re a stickler for sub-categorizing every type of music that you listen to into tiny microcosms where only one or two bands fit the exact characteristics of a genre, then Gimme Indie Rock, the new book by local author Andrew Earles, may not be for you.

While Earles might paint with a broad stroke in calling all 500 of the albums he lists as “indie rock,” his research is as thorough as it is impressive. By ignoring the indie vs. major label argument as grounds for inclusion, Earles is able to cover more than 300 bands in this extensive record guide, giving everyone from Nirvana to Sun City Girls the spotlight.

It’s also important to recognize that this isn’t merely a list of the author’s favorite albums. In Gimme Indie Rock, Earles isn’t afraid to admit he isn’t a fan of some of the albums he lists, explaining why the historical or social significance of a band and their work may overshadow how good an album by itself may be.

And no, this isn’t the type of book you’re going to sit down and read cover to cover. But it could definitely help out a newcomer to underground music, and it would certainly come in handy as a back-pocket bible when scouring through used-record bins. By including such major players in underground music like Nirvana and Smashing Pumpkins, Earles makes the book accessible to the most novice of music lovers, and Gimme Indie Rock might be the only book ever to include Nation of Ulysses and Negative Approach on the same page.

The end result is an expansive take on the unsung heroes who have shaped the indie landscape into what it is today. Like many things music-related, most, if not all, of the information in Gimme Indie Rock can be found on the internet with just a few clicks. But like the records that Earles cites, there’s something about holding the product in your hands that makes the experience much more worthwhile. — Chris Shaw

“Literchoor Is My Beat”: A Life of James Laughlin, Publisher of New Directions

By Ian S. MacNiven

Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 560 pp.; $37.50

Early in the 20th century, Ezra Pound had declared to his fellow poets, “Make it new,” and James Laughlin IV, himself a fledgling poet, did. He returned from visiting Pound in Italy to his dorm room at Harvard, where in the middle of the Great Depression, Laughlin founded New Directions, the independent publishing house that brought “advance guard” literature to American readers — but not all American readers. “If you are one of a growing number of cultivated readers … if you resent the commercialism that promotes ‘bestsellers’ at the expense of fine writing and poetry … if you are this kind of reader, the really intelligent reader, New Directions will interest you,” Laughlin announced in the promotional material accompanying his inaugural New Directions in Prose and Poetry from 1936.

Laughlin was banking on a certain audience, who, at the time, had yet to be introduced to the work of Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams. He was also banking on his own response to the untested literature of his time: new voices in poetry and prose. Those voices, stateside, would come to include Henry Miller, Kenneth Rexroth, Elizabeth Bishop, Thomas Merton, and Tennessee Williams; on the international front, Borges, Garcia Lorca, Neruda, Pasternak, and Dylan Thomas — a who’s who of 20th-century literature. This year we celebrate the centennial of James Laughlin’s birth (he died in 1997) with a biography by Ian S. MacNiven, “Literchoor Is My Beat,” a book that is not only well-researched, it’s a real pleasure to read.

Laughlin could afford to establish what began as a one-man publishing house during the Depression. He came from a prominent Pittsburgh steel family. He received the best schooling, both here and abroad. He read everything. He traveled everywhere. When he wasn’t meeting with and publishing writers he admired, he was skiing the world’s best slopes. And when he wasn’t publishing and skiing, he was meeting women and sometimes marrying them. But he was also a poet who wrote his entire adult life and who late in life finally received the recognition he more than anything sought.

See, then, in addition to “Literchoor Is My Beat,” another new title to go with it: The Collected Poems of James Laughlin: 1935-1997, edited by Peter Glassgold. The publisher of the collected poems is, yes, New Directions. — Leonard Gill

Roadtrip with a Raindrop

By Gayle Harper

Acclaim Press; 236 pp.; $39.95

It’s said that it takes 90 days for a raindrop to travel from the headwaters of the Mississippi on down to the Gulf of Mexico. It took travel writer and photographer Gayle Harper 90 days too — and nearly 2,400 miles driving on and off the Great River Road — to go from Lake Itasca, Minnesota, to Venice, Louisiana. Roadtrip with a Raindrop is Harper’s account of that trip and her photographic record of the people she met, the places she saw, and the river she encountered in all its shapes, sizes, and moods.

This being the Mississippi, Memphis was one of Harper’s stops. A resident of the Missouri Ozarks, she already knew the city pretty well. What she hadn’t counted on was an eye-opening visit with artist Holly Fisher inside the Blacksmith Shop at the Metal Museum and the spirited conversation she had with conservationists Diana Threadgill and Glenn Cox. But it was Harper’s meeting with Joe Royer of Outdoors Inc. that terrified her. That’s because Royer had Harper paddling in his kayak in the middle of the Mississippi. And for once, Harper wasn’t viewing the river from its banks, from a distant vantage point, or from atop one of its gigantic barges. As she writes, “The Mississippi is a mile wide here [at Memphis] and sitting at surface-level, with just inches of boat on either side, brings an exquisite, heart-clutching awareness of its power. … [O]f all the ways that I have been with and on this River, I have never felt such a sublime intimacy with it.”

“Powerful” is the word for many of Harper’s images, from majestic to ghostly, of the Mississippi. Readers of Roadtrip with a Raindrop will to get to know a wonderful cross-section of Americans living alongside the river or working its commercial traffic as well. But more than anything, they’ll get to know Gayle Harper — winning photographer, winning storyteller. — Leonard Gill

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Best of Memphis 2014: The Video!

Best of Memphis 2014: The Video!