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Live at the Garden Releases 2024 Lineup

Memphis Botanic Garden has announced the lineup for this summer’s annual Live at the Garden concert series at the Radians Amphitheater.

Country superstar Dierks Bentley kicks off the series on June 6th, followed by ’90s rock band Goo Goo Dolls on July 12th, classic rock legend John Fogerty on August 9th, Grammy-nominated country music singer-songwriter Sam Hunt on August 23th, and a co-headline concert with rock icons Styx & Foreigner on September 20th. 

“The Memphis Botanic Garden provides Mid-South music fans with an engaging entertainment experience unlike any other,” said David May, Memphis market executive for Regions Bank, the title sponsor for the concert series.

This will be Memphis Botanic Garden’s 24th summer of Live at the Garden, said Sherry May, co-director of Live at the Garden, in a press release. “We have a lot of great music planned this season, including a few newcomers to the Live at the Garden series, as well as some of our all-time fan favorites.”

All season passes and individual show tickets will go on sale Monday, April 29th, 10 a.m. Individual show TruGreen lawn tickets start at $65 and can be purchased here.

Season Lawn Passes for Live at the Garden are $345. Also offered is a Season Pit Pass, which is a general admission lawn ticket with access to the standing-room-only Pit located directly in front of the stage. Season Pit Passes are $500 per person. Season passes can be purchased here.

For the concert series, patrons are encouraged to bring lawn chairs, blankets, and coolers. Food trucks and bars are also located onsite, as well as pre-order catering. Free shuttles will run from Hilton Hotel Corporate Headquarters to the venue from 5 p.m. to midnight for each concert. 

For more information on Live at the Garden, call (901)-636-4107 or visit liveatthegarden.com or radiansamp.com

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The 2024 Lineup at the Overton Park Shell

The lineup for the 2024 Orion Free Concert Series at the Overton Park Shell was announced today, and it’s in perfect keeping with the series’ steady evolution towards ever-greater diversity. Running May 17th through October 12th, the Series will showcase 34 free entertainment experiences, including more funk, soul, hip hop, and house music than ever before, not to mention country, Americana, blues, indie rock, and whatever MonoNeon is.

“This year, we are crossing all genres and creative programming to give access to The Shell’s mission boldly and without barriers, with special emphasis on Memphis artists,” Overton Park Shell Executive Director Natalie Wilson said in a statement. “We are truly honored to be a safe, joyous place for all walks of life in Memphis and Shelby County as we celebrate the incredible talent of our Memphis arts and music scene.”

Familiar local partnerships with the likes of the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, the Memphis Country Blues Festival, the Stax Music
Academy, the PowerPop Festival, Shakespeare at the Shell with Tennessee Shakespeare Company, Opera Memphis, and DreamFest Weekend will all make a return, along with this year’s notable additions, the Memphis Black Arts Alliance Gospel Night, featuring the Tennessee Mass Choir, and BODYWERK, the Shell’s first electronic dance event.

Some performances will resonate with Memphis’ rich music history, as when the iconic Bar-Kays, who have appeared at the Shell
numerous times since their band’s beginnings, celebrate their 60th
anniversary this September. And they’re just one example of the many local and regional groups that will take the stage this year. Lukah with Hope Clayburn & The Fire Salamander, Cedric Burnside, Black Hippie, Talibah Safiyah with MadameFraankie, MonoNeon, Cyrena Wages, Healy, Aaron James, the Memphis Harvest Band, and the North Mississippi Allstars will all make appearances, the latter with the great Ruthie Foster at the Country Blues Festival in October.

See the full lineup below, also available with more details here.

SUMMER SCHEDULE:
All shows start at 7:30 p.m.
Friday May 17th-Sunday, May 19th: Dreamfest Weekend
Friday, May 24th: Lukah with Hope Clayburn & The Fire Salamander
Sunday, May 26th: Sunset Symphony
Thursday, May 30th: Black Opry
Friday, May 31st: BODYWERK with Takuya Nakamura
Saturday, June 1st: Laura Denisse
Thursday, June 6th: Sister Hazel
Friday, June 7th: King & Associates
Saturday, June 8th: Perpetual Groove
Thursday, June 13th: Cedric Burnside
Friday, June 14th: Lamont Landers
Saturday, June 15th: Black Hippie
Thursday, June 20th: Magnolias
Friday, June 21st: Talibah Safiyah with MadameFraankie
Saturday, June 22nd: Sweet Lizzy Project
Thursday, June 27th: Shemarr Allen
Friday, June 28th: Cowboy Mouth
Saturday, June 29th: Annual Stax Academy Summer Showcase

FALL SCHEDULE:
All shows start at 7 p.m.
Friday, August 30th: MonoNeon
Saturday, August 31st: Power Pop Festival: Matthew Sweet
Saturday, September 7th: Cyrena Wages
Friday, September 13th: Healy
Saturday, September 14th: MBAA Gospel Night: Tennessee Mass Choir
Friday, September 20th: Canti Records
Friday, September 27th: Aaron James (Unapologetic)
Saturday, September 28th: The Bar-Kays
Sunday, September 29th: Opera Memphis: Opera Goes to Broadway
Friday, October 4th: Stax Museum Presents: Los Yesterdays
Saturday, October 5th: Memphis Harvest Band
Saturday, October 12th: Memphis Country Blues Festival 
Sunday, October 20th: Shakespeare at The Shell: Comedy of Errors

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Music Music Blog

Eclectic Ecliptic: The Music of Hot Springs’ Festival

“Hopefully all the generators will be turned off,” Quintron opined some weeks before the Ecliptic Festival in Hot Springs, held in the days before and during this week’s total solar eclipse. “And any lighting will be turned off, and all the unnecessary industrial ambient noise that goes along with providing the needs of a festival with thousands of people will be shut down for that period of [totality] so people can really go back a couple thousand years and connect to what we really are, how small we really are.”

And, as it turned out, that was the case once the sun went dark this past Monday. Yet dwelling on the lack of human noise might obscure the fact that this was one ringer of a music festival, co-organized by Hot Springs’ Low Key Arts nonprofit, who for two decades have staged the Valley of the Vapors festival this time every year, and Atlas Obscura, an online magazine and travel company specializing in unusual and obscure destinations.

Hailu Mergia at the Ecliptic Festival (Credit: Alex Greene)

While this reporter arrived well after the fest’s start date of April 5th, by two days later, on Sunday, there was still an expectant buzz in the air as attendees anticipated the next day’s events. The open meadow atop Cedar Glades Park afforded plenty of room for those stretched out in the blazing sun, or huddled together in the shade of the sound guy’s mixer. And that buzz was well complemented by the first live music of the day, a trio led by Hailu Mergia of Ethiopia. Though his name is unfamiliar to some, his playing brightens many tracks by jazz composer Mulatu Astatke, featured on the popular 2007 compilation, The Very Best of Éthiopiques . As heard in this exclusive video on The Memphis Flyer‘s YouTube channel, the lightly rolling organ and Fender Rhodes piano arpeggios so prevalent in Ethiopian music, backed by a tight rhythm section, helped set the day’s easy-going vibe right out of the gate.

Just before that, I had checked in on Quintron, whose Weather Warlock was set up far from the main stage, in a tent down the hill. Throughout the festival, his sound-generating invention was responding to the everyday shifts in the weather and light, and in the bright blue sky of Sunday it was percolating merrily. Passersby on their way up or down the hill would stop in to hear how the machine was responding to its sensors, most of which (including two spinning in the breeze) sat on a stand capped with a weather vane a few feet away. Other inputs included Quintron’s Wildlife Organ, which used sensors in more distant wild areas. In the video, the inventor explains how one transducer was picking up the creaking of an aged tree limb.

After the funky-yet-calming music of Mergia, and checking out some thought-provoking ideas from speaker Michael Jones McKean, I heard the thumps of a new band getting ready back up the hill. It was ESG, the Bronx’s finest minimalist funk/post-punk pioneers since 1978. Though many years older than when the group was in its heyday, and somewhat infirm, firebrand frontwoman Renee Scroggins could spit chants and rhymes with considerable power and sass, even while seated.

The band’s enthusiasm was part of the show, as Scroggins’ daughter Nicole Nicholas held down those all-important bass lines and son Nicholas Nicholas went from one frenzied percussion part to another, both singing along. Nicole proudly exclaimed that “I’m up here with my mother, my brother, and my aunt [Marie Scroggins, also on percussion and vocals]!” And the camaraderie was palpable. Meanwhile, drummer Mark Giordano was an absolute machine, playing with the precision of an 808 beat and the power of John Bonham. As they played their “U.F.O.,” one of the most sampled tracks in the history of hip hop, brother Nicholas and Aunt Marie donned extraterrestrial masks. “If you see an alien come down,” quipped Nicole, “it’s not an abduction, it’s a rescue mission!”

After ESG’s masterful “Erase You” and a brief encore, Shannon and the Clams were up next. As fans of their 2022 Gonerfest appearance know, their dramatic, soulful harmonies and driving songs of passion, chock full of cinematic guitar hooks and sci-fi organ, were perfect for the Golden Hour.

Shannon Shaw, Nate Mahan, and Cody Blanchard of Shannon & the Clams in the Golden Hour (Credit: Alex Greene).

And then this reporter, having baked in the sun for some hours, valiantly surrendered to exhaustion, though the festival raged on into the pre-eclipse night. No less than the Allah-Las and Fred Armisen presided over the party.

Arriving the next day, just as the moon’s limb was edging into the sun’s brilliant disc, the day began on a dream-like note and stayed there. That was amplified by the ethereal harp music of Mary Lattimore, who runs her ancient instrument through various pedals. The spaciness of those sounds, especially paired with the more sustained notes of accordionist Walt McClements, only added to the mystery of the dimming, silvery light. Meanwhile, a phalanx of small boxes sporting solar panels on one side and a speaker on the other created enigmatic tones as the light shifted and people milled around them.

There were more environmentally interactive tones down the hill, where Quintron continued minding his machine. It was sounding markedly different when I approached just after 1:30. And, with the sun dimming over the next 20-odd minutes, the tones only grew more captivating and rhythmic, complemented by the birds and bugs of Cedar Glades Park.

Quintron didn’t even touch his machine. Instead, we listened to it respond to the dimming of light with a low sinking tone reminiscent of “the Mothership” powering down. A cheer went up as the eclipse reached totality, and I gasped at the sheer breadth of the sun’s corona. Venus and Jupiter flanked the muted orb and its crown like an honor guard, heralds of the day’s second dawn. The world seemed to hold its breath for three and a half minutes. Then, as light returned, the Weather Warlock’s deep bass tone began to rise again, even as the other layers of sound changed in more subtle ways.

It was a powerful moment. Witnessing the incredible coincidence of the moon’s apparent diameter exactly matching that of the sun made me feel lucky to be living in this epoch. After all, the moon is moving away from the earth by an inch every year, and won’t ever completely block the sun’s disc in eons to come.

As the light slowly returned, I wandered back to the performance area, where the Sun Ra Arkestra took the stage. Having played as a group since 1951, they still carry on long after their founder’s death in 1993, led by Marshall Allen, who was there from almost the beginning.

The Sun Ra Arkestra at the Ecliptic Festival (Credit: Chris McCoy).

Allen didn’t make the festival, as bassist Tyler Mitchell later explained. About to turn 100 this year, he is in good health, but is picky about his traveling. Knoel Scott, on baritone & alto saxophones, voice, percussion & space dancing, filled in as the musical director, cueing solos and breakdowns with aplomb and launching each incantation.

One standout member of the Arkestra was keyboardist Farid Barron. Doubling on piano and Moog synthesizer as Ra once did, he had some big shoes to fill, but did so with aplomb, elegance, mischief, and humor. Equally capable of erratic chord clusters, synth noise blasts, stride piano, and bluesy ivory-tickling, he was a stylistic tour de force. (As a high schooler, he was discovered by Wynton Marsalis before joining the Arkestra in 2008). Then again, the Arkestra operating semi-collectively, guided by a single aesthetic, it was the group chemistry that was the real tour de force.

“When the world was in darkness, and darkness was ignorance, ALONG CAME RA!!” they chanted. The music was a perfect balance of out-there free jazz and big band swing, complete with punchy horn arrangements. The band was decked in all manner of glittering outfits, and at one point Scott did somersaults and spins at the front of the stage. Meanwhile, the moon slowly moved away from its moment in the spotlight. At one point as we listened, an elated Quintron borrowed my solar glasses, looked up, and exclaimed “Pac Man!” And, with the moon by then just carving a small divot out of the solar disc, that’s exactly what the face of the sun looked like.

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Gonerfest 21 Lineup Announced

Today, Goner Records announced the initial lineup for Gonerfest 21, which will take place at Railgarten this September 26th – 29th. Once again the Goner team have managed to craft a roster that’s both historically rich and cutting edge, drawing on bands, MCs, and DJs from around the world.

The festival has always had an international bent, and this year is no different, with performances by African desert blues collective Etran de L’air, Japanese garage punks Angel Face, and Kiwi psyche rockers Bailter Space on the slate, not to mention a reliable Australian contingent, including Split System, Gee Tee, Michael Beach and RFMC.

But the most stellar international artist would have to be Derv Gordon, front man for Swinging London’s now legendary outfit The Equals, back in the ’60s and ’70s, now performing those songs and more with the Bay Area’s So What. The band promises to offer “stompers, hand clappers, and all the riffs that matter” on their Facebook page, and indeed they do, especially when paired with Gordon.

After the young/old outfit’s incendiary appearance at Gonerfest 14 in 2017, The Memphis Flyer wrote:

“So What did a fine job of staying true to the old Equals arrangements, harmonies and all, but with a bigger, louder sound courtesy of Jason Duncan’s Gibson SG through a Marshall. Derv’s voice was in fine shape, from crooning to belting to singalong mode. Most of your favorite Equals tunes were revived and given a new jumpstart by So What: ‘Diversion,’ ‘Police on my Back,’ ‘Michael and his Slipper Tree.’ Of the latter, Derv confessed that it was originally written as a ‘nutmeg tree,’ until Derv himself made the more enigmatic lyrical change. The crowd was revved up, joining the band in nearly every chorus of every song, not satisfied until the encore brought the house down. Clearly Memphis is Equals territory.”

The Rip Offs, also headlining, attained a legendary status of their own in the ’90s with a unique approach sometimes dubbed “budget rock.” Garage rock legends Jon Spencer and the Cheater Slicks were also announced today. Here’s the complete list so far: 

The Rip Offs, Derv Gordon and So What, Etran de L’air, Angel Face, Gee Tee, Jon Spencer, Split System, Cheater Slicks, Schitzophonics, Bailter Space, Michael Beach, Ryan Davis & the Roadhouse Band, Pull Chains, Tube Alloys, Sleeveens, Th’ Losin Streaks, Sex Mex, RMFC, Feeling Figures.

For more information and to purchase tickets, go here.

Derv Gordon & So What, Oct 9th, 2017, at the Hi Tone.

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Those Pretty Wrongs: Songs of Innocence and Experience

Since Alex Chilton’s death in 2010, one revelation of the continuing Big Star revivals has been the enduring charm and power of Jody Stephens’ voice. As the only continuous member besides Chilton since the group’s founding, Stephens primarily distinguished himself as the powerful drummer behind their sound, yet also contributed the occasional vocal to their original three albums. His singing then always conveyed a tone of youthful naivete perfectly suited to Big Star’s original aesthetic, as defined by founder Chris Bell.

That aesthetic was acknowledged grudgingly by Chilton at times, as he described the Big Star fans as “nice little guys who are usually in college, and they’re kind of lonely and misunderstood, learning to play guitar.” It was a wistful, yearning sound that Chilton himself conveyed beautifully when he wanted to. But so did Stephens.

Now that he alone is left to carry the torch, Stephens has taken a crack version of Big Star on the road, sharing vocal duties with Chris Stamey, Jon Auer, Pat Sansone, and Mike Mills, with Stephens leaning into the songs that most convey that wistful feeling, as in recent celebrations of the group’s debut album (chronicled by The Memphis Flyer here). But over the past decade, he’s had another, less celebrated platform for the disarming innocence of his voice: Those Pretty Wrongs.

This Friday, April 5th, they’ll take the stage at The Green Room at Crosstown Arts, offering Memphians a rare chance to hear how much the group’s sound has evolved since they started.

Ostensibly a duet featuring Stephens and multi instrumentalist Luther Russell, their sound has grown more ambitious over the decade since they formed, until, by the time of last year’s Holiday Camp album, they had taken on the power of a full-fledged power pop group through the magic of overdubs. With Stephens’ vocals front and center, rich harmonies, acoustic strums, and electric guitar riffs flow over the listener like some of the most delicate Big Star tunes, yet with a personality all their own. While all of the duo’s songs are grounded by Stephens’ reliable beat, they’ve also become showcases for Russell’s imaginative guitar work and other instrumental flourishes.

Those elements have always been present, but have ramped up on all fronts as time has passed. “We have more experience with each other,” says Stephens. “It’s evolved into, I think, richer embellishments with the production and songs, and maybe lyrically too. There’s a certain ease that we have now when we get in to record, and more focus. We don’t have to spend much time on trying to figure out where to go. Things just came together naturally for this record.”

Holiday Camp is also notable for the contributions of other players who’ve long been in the Big Star orbit. “On the new album,” says Stephens, “Pat Sansone plays Moog and Mellotron on ‘Always the Rainbow’ and he plays Mellotron on ‘Scream.’ And then Chris Stamey did a string arrangement with flute and clarinet on ‘Brother, My Brother.'”

Stephens and Russell typically tour as only a duo, even mounting a minimalist tour of the the U.K. last year using only train travel, but this week’s show will show off their sonic evolution like no other. “We’ll actually have a string section at the Green Room,” says Stephens. “One of the nice things about Crosstown Arts is that at each one of our shows — and this is our third, I believe — they’ve provided a string quartet. So we’ll have Rebeca Rathlef and Michael Brennan on violin, Katie Brown on viola, and Jonathan Kirkscey on cello. It’s a special show because it’s the only time we ever get to have strings, and there will even be a flutist for this performance.”

There will also be a chance to hear the stripped-down version of Those Pretty Wrongs this week. “We’re also gonna play on Jim Spake’s show on WYXR [Cabbages & Kings, Thursday, April 4th, 2-4 p.m.],” Stephens says. “I’m excited about that.”

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Capturing the History of Chess Records

It’s only appropriate to bring news of the new Chess Records revival today, for it was on March 12, 1917, that Leonard Chess, the label’s co-founder, was born. In truth, he was christened Lejzor Szmuel Czyż at the time, when the family lived just west of Pinsk on the Yaselda River, Poland at the time, now Belarus. When they moved to America, settling in Chicago with Anglicized names, Lejzor became Leonard and his brother Fiszel became Phil. Together they would go on to found one of the most groundbreaking and influential independent labels in the history of blues, jazz, and especially rock-and-roll.

Memphian Robert E. “Buster” Williams, whose Plastic Products Company pressed and distributed vinyl, was involved with the brothers early on, and it was Williams who suggested that Leonard and Phil name their new label “Chess.” (This and more can be found in Nadine Cohodas’ excellent history of the label). Indeed, the label had many ties to Memphis, from Chess Records hits like “Rocket 88” and “Moanin’ at Midnight” being recorded by Sam Phillips, to young Memphian Maurice White joining the house band.

That tradition only continues with the involvement of Memphis virtuosos Eric Gales and MonoNeon in a recent album by The Chess Project, New Moves, as detailed in this week’s music feature.

Yet the album is but a piece of a larger plan now being pursued by Leonard’s son Marshall, who was in the thick of the label’s business until Leonard and Phil sold the company in 1969. Leonard would die at the age of 52 later that year. Since that time, as ownership of the label’s catalog shifted over the decades, Marshall remained as the keeper of the family’s real legacy: their memories. And lately, he’s more committed than ever to telling their story.

Partnering with Marshall Chess on this mission is longtime friend Richard Ganter, who worked with Marshall to promote the Legendary Masters series in the mid-1990s. Five years ago, Ganter suggested they create a richly illustrated, high-quality coffee table book, and during the onset of Covid they made it happen, Chess Record Corp.: A Tribute, with Marshall providing the foreword.

Upon the book’s release, Ganter and Chess also started the YouTube channel, Chess Records Tribute, to promote the book and provide a multimedia venue to showcase the legacy of the Chess family — with Marshall’s full support. 

“The channel covers blues, rock-and-roll, soul, gospel, and jazz, plus comedy — the entire Chess history,” says Ganter. After the soft launch in July 2020 and a fuller launch this January, the YouTube channel now offers over 500 videos. Recently the pair have started to produce podcasts concerning the history of Chess Records as well, sometimes touching on Marshall Chess’ time as the first president of Rolling Stones Records in the 1970s.

All in all, it’s a music historian’s dream, and a treasury of ripping good yarns as well — a fitting memorial to Leonard Chess and worth a visit on his birthday.

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Fugees, Odesza, & Jelly Roll Top Riverbeat Fest

The much-anticipated lineup for the upcoming Riverbeat Music Festival went live today, and it’s clear that Memphians won’t have any lack of quality music this May 3rd to 5th. And naturally, given that the festival is produced by the good folks at Mempho Presents, the curated artists are a good fit for the diverse tastes of the Mid South.

For starters, how can you go wrong with The Fugees? The unified forces of Wyclef Jean, Pras Michel, and Lauryn Hill are touring as one again, despite some of last fall’s reunion shows being postponed when Hill was beset with health concerns. Wyclef Jean confirmed just last month that more touring was on the books for 2024, and now their Riverbeat appearance is proof positive that Hill’s health has bounced back.

That will be especially meaningful to Unapologetic’s Kid Maestro. One of his regular gigs is functioning as Hill’s playback engineer when she’s touring with her solo band. He’s at the ready should he be recruited for the Riverbeat show. “Miss Hill’s needs are very unique in terms of playback engineering,” he recently told the Memphis Flyer. “You’ve got to be super fast, paying attention, and when she puts her hand up to mute, you’ve got to be ready to to stop with the band. Otherwise, if the band stops, but there’s a beat playing in the background, it just doesn’t have that impact.”

Kid Maestro’s experience is just one of the myriad ways Riverbeat reflects its rootedness in Memphis. Another will be an especially unique all-star event, when two-time Grammy-winning producer/engineer Boo Mitchell will direct and play with a hand-picked band of artists called Take Me to the River: Memphis, echoing the generation-spanning Take Me to the River films and education initiatives he’s played a hand in. “I believe this is a unique lineup,” he says of the group, which will include William Bell, Eric Gales, Carla Thomas, Jerome Chism, Lina Beach, and the Hi Rhythm Section. “I’m really impressed by the caliber of talent that signed up for our first year. I can’t wait to get back out there on stage and enjoy this event with all of Memphis.”

Other artists on the bill with a Memphis connection include 8Ball and MJG, Charlie Musselwhite, Southern Avenue, Al Kapone & the B.W.A. Band, Don Bryant & the Bo-Keys, Kenny Brown, Talibah Safiya, Marcella Simien, Lawrence Matthews, Jimbo Mathus, Lucky 7 Brass Band, Bailey Bigger, Dirty Streets, Mark Edgar Stuart, the Wilkins Sisters, Rodd Bland and the Members Only Band, and Salo Pallini.

On the other hand, Riverbeat is also bringing such big tent attractions as Odesza, Jelly Roll, Mt. Joy, Black Pumas, Big Boi, Tobe Nwigwe, The Band Camino, Killer Mike, Matt and Kim, Yung Gravy, Jessie Murph, and over two dozen other artists. All of which put the Riverbeat fest on track to uphold that fine Memphis tradition of music by the river in springtime.

“We are so excited to host the RiverBeat Festival along the Mississippi River at Tom Lee Park,” Jeff Bransford, spokesman for Mempho Presents, said in a statement. “Memphians know us for Mempho Music Festival, and now we’re introducing another signature event in downtown Memphis, which we believe will be a big draw for international and local visitors alike. RiverBeat was conceived as an inclusive event featuring a wide range of genres that will attract music lovers from all walks of life. Through music, we will bring our community together, support our local businesses, and attract new visitors to our city. We believe this is what Memphis is all about.”

All three-day ticketing and parking options are available now for purchase here.

3-Day General Admission tickets: $249
3-Day VIP tickets: $995
3-Day Parking: $100

The daily lineup, schedule, and single-day tickets for GA, VIP, and Parking will be released soon. Visit riverbeat.com for more information.

Single-Day General Admission tickets: $99
Single-Day VIP tickets: $395
Single-Day Parking: $40

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Doyle Schaeffer’s Tragedy Mobilizes Music Community

It’s a nightmare scenario that few have to face: a fire ignites, spreads through a home, and in a heartbeat all the treasures of one’s life are destroyed.

Unfortunately, Doyle Schaeffer, erstwhile guitarist for the Angel Sluts, suffered that very series of events earlier this week when flames engulfed his apartment. Suddenly, his only worldly possessions were the clothes on his back.

Almost immediately, the Memphis music community stepped up to help as K.B. Jones and Becca Smith set up a GoFundMe page to solicit contributions. In a testament to the city’s tight-knit scene, that page has already met its goal of $20,000, yet continues to grow as donations pour in.

As Jones and Smith wrote on the fundraising page, “Now, picture the anguish of also losing a beloved furry companion. Doyle’s cherished cat, Michelangelo (aka Mikey), was unable to escape the fire, leaving a void in his heart that can never be filled. In the aftermath of this harrowing event, Doyle finds himself facing an uphill battle to rebuild his life from scratch.”

Schaeffer is best known as a latter-day member of the no-frills punk band the Angel Sluts, adding his guitar to two EPs, Suesie Was a Nihilist and Love Sweet Love, both dating back to 2011. Though the band has since released an archival album, Live at the Buccaneer, recorded in the mid-2000s, Schaeffer was not part of last year’s record release show, which featured only the original four band members.

Nonetheless, Harry Koniditsiotis, aka Switchblad Kid, founding member of the Angel Sluts, invoked the camaraderie of musicians in support of Schaeffer in a recent social media post addressing the tragedy. “A band is a family,” he wrote. “We fight, we break up, we put BS aside and get together to help each other out when one of us is in trouble. Our brother Doyle is going through a rough time and can use all of our support.”

Koniditsiotis then announced a further fundraising event in which Schaeffer will appear as a full-fledged band member. On April 5th, the Hi Tone Cafe will host a benefit show, For the Love of Doyle, featuring the Angel Sluts’ latter-day lineup. “Come see Doyle and Timmy do their punk rock Bert and Ernie routine!” he wrote. The benefit will also feature Risky Whispers and Heavy Machine Gun. All of which is proof positive of the unshakeable solidarity that Memphis musicians share, especially when one of their own is in need.

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David Collins’ B-Side Residencies Bear Fruit

Recently, in the wake of the Memphis Flyer‘s coverage of the local classical scene, a reporter asked me what venues I would recommend to hear exciting, new composers at work. After listing a few of the usual suspects — the Green Room at Crosstown Arts, the Cannon Center, the Germantown Performing Arts Center, etc. — I wrapped it up with the words, “Oh yeah, there’s also this bar …”

A bar where one can hear composers of new music? Yes indeed, thanks to the venturesome spirit that is alive and well at B-Side Bar in Midtown. The club nestled among the various shops of Minglewood Hall has become a favorite of the experimental set (among many other genres) in recent years, and one regular there has been David Collins.

Since before his 2021 debut album, Memphis, Collins has demonstrated a knack for inhabiting the interstices between classical, jazz, rock, and “new music,” whatever that is. Along the way, he’s been incredibly prolific, not just in composing his own music, but in tackling other composers from the worlds of both jazz (e.g., Horace Silver) and classical (e.g., Erik Satie). And he’s often performed at B-Side, typically with his primary group, Frog Squad.

As of July of last year, he ramped that up considerably, as his spin-off group, Freak Squid, took up a residency there on the last Tuesday of every month in order to work out some of Collins’ newer material. It still preserved Frog Squad’s rock-friendly approach to instrumental music — “sometimes we had four guitars, which was awesome,” Collins quips — but with a slightly different feel.

And, because of the quality of the sound at B-Side, usually overseen by live sound veteran Joe Holland, that July-December residency will soon yield more tangible fruits. Having recorded every Freak Squid performance from last year, Collins has now mixed the best cuts into a new collection, due to drop later this week. “It’s maybe more indie-rock-ish, like Radiohead-ish,” he says of the imminent album. “We also have some really free stuff on there. I’m gonna put it out in two parts. And the second part is going to be a lot more aggressive kind of avant garde. It will be released under my name David Collins, and the title is Freak Squid One.”

Meanwhile, Collins has already moved on. Now he has a group simply called David Collins’ Acoustic Septet, and they currently occupy the coveted last-Tuesday slot. “I’ve got a new band, and probably in six months I’ll have another new band after that,” Collins remarks. “I’m hoping that every six months I’ll do a new band and then we’ll record it live, so I’ll get two albums a year from this residency. This new band features two guitarists, me and Logan Hanna. Ethan Baker’s on violin, Ben Walsh is on double bass, Aaron Phillips is on bass flute, Delara Hashemi is on alto flute, and Haley Ivey is on concert flute.”

David Collins’ Acoustic Septet (Photo courtesy David Collins).

This material is decidedly less indie-rock, particularly as it has no drums. “This is nice because it’s really quiet. Kind of intimate,” says the composer. “I’ve got everything arranged. There’s a few tunes that just have lead sheets for the rhythm section, but flutes are generally scored out. The idea is that the flutes will have a calliope kind of sound.”

David Collins’ Acoustic Septet appears on Tuesday, February 27th at B-Side Memphis, 10 p.m., and the last Tuesday of every month after that.

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Chris Corsano to Rattle the Walls at Goner

Goner Records, often tagged as the premier punk presence in the Bluff City, is actually all that and more, and their recent show bookings have included music that’s decidedly not punk, yet nevertheless decidedly out there. That is to say, artists that are beyond category, and that’s about all one can say about artists like Tatsuya Nakatani, Jack Wright’s Wrest, Quintron’s Weather Warlock, or even the ostensibly Afrobeat Etran de L’Aïr: All of them defy categorization.

This Friday, February 23rd, Goner presents another artist who fits that description, the irrepressibly inventive drummer Chris Corsano. Gonerfest fans may recall that he performed with no wave/noise guitarist Bill Orcutt last year, but that only scratches the surface of Corsano’s creativity. “Jazz” fans may also know him from a release on our region’s premier free improv-friendly label, Mahakala Music in Hot Springs, who brought Corsano together with two other luminaries from the New York improvisation scene, trombonist Steve Swell and tenor saxophonist Joe McPhee, on the 2022 album Sometimes the Air Is.

He’s also worked with Tennessee’s free jazz luminary Zoh Amba, several “rock” artists (Sir Richard Bishop, Thurston Moore, Jim O’Rourke), not to mention Björk on her Volta album and world tour. And while those are just a few of the artists he’s appeared with on over 180 albums, he’s a renowned solo performer in his own right, with a record due out later this year on the Drag City label.

The Memphis Flyer caught up with Corsano yesterday to hear more about this pioneer’s solo work and what to expect at the Goner show.

Memphis Flyer: How would you describe your approach to music as a solo performer?

Chris Corsano: I’ll do different things as a solo set. I’ve been on tour a bunch since August, doing a lot of solo shows, and I’m trying to keep them different. So I’m improvising, and it’s kind of heavy on the prepared drum aspect of it, maybe more so than a lot of other people. I’m just trying to get the drums to not sound like a drum solo. Or what people tend to think of as a drum solo. Like, I installed a couple of cello strings on the snare drum rack tom, and with bowing techniques that accentuate the harmonics you can get little melodies happening, even though you’re not playing like a violin or a cello. You come up with a third path. It’s not drums and it’s not another instrument. But you know, drums are great resonators. And I’ve got other things that I make myself and then a lot of extended techniques, which are pretty common in the universe of improvised music.

That “third way” makes sense because in free music you’ll often hear horn players or other kind of instrumental players playing percussively, tapping their valves and that sort of thing. So it makes sense to kind of blur the lines in the other direction from the drums into tonal instruments.

Sure, but there’s also a long history of melodic playing. Drums are awesome melodic instruments in the right hands. Ed Blackwell was a huge influence on me; Ornette Coleman was some of the first stuff that I heard on record. And Blackwell’s melodic sense on that stuff was always life-affirming and also really eye opening in terms of how you can play melodies.

I’ve also played with a lot of sax players. In doing so, basically playing as a duo, you can fill up a lot more space and you have a lot more responsibility for bringing the music, whatever that means. Playing solo, it’s all on you. It’s up to me what I’m going to do, what I should do next, and how I’m going to make a piece of music. So yeah, melody and things some people don’t associate with drums, that’s all open to me because nobody else is covering that space.

I’ve read that you also incorporate reeds, circular breathing through reed instruments. Is that happening?

Yeah, I’ve been doing that for about 20 years now. My first solo record was in 2006. You know, it was always a fascinating thing that some sax players would do, so I tried to see what I could do with it. Right now I have an alto sax mouthpiece playing through half of a clarinet, which doesn’t really do all the things a clarinet can do. But I play it alongside the drums so the drums resonate with certain pitches and harmonics, and that fights against the pitches, or works in conjunction with the pitches, coming out of the bell of the half-clarinet.

The way I think about it, what I’m looking for is that chocolate and peanut butter kind of thing. That third thing happening that is different than either of the two things together, and hopefully unexpected. And hopefully somebody enjoys it.

It sounds like what you’re doing involves paying very close attention to overtones, and playing with those almost as a melodic element.

Yeah, definitely. I don’t have a lot of things which are pitched, but I’m a little bit more trying to get those harmonics and have those be the thing that are creating the melodies, instead of just the fundamental.

We’ve recently heard shows by the Tatsuya Nakatani Gong Orchestra. Do you use gongs and bells also?

A bit, but also a lot of thrift store pot lids — there’s a certain kind that sounds a certain way. If you get the right ones, they’re not made to be a specific pitch, but if you get the right pot lids together, you’ve got these microtonal things happening. You might you hit it a certain way and hear the fundamental an, then hit it again, and there are other harmonics in there. So sometimes I used gongs and things, but mostly using things in the “wrong,” quote unquote, way. I’m always trying to repurpose them somehow.

Chris Corsano will appear with Robert Traxler at the Goner Records store on Friday, February 23, 9 p.m. $10. Click here for tickets.