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Gonerfest 20 Friday: Gories Rule OK!

Once Gonerfest hits its first full day, as Gonerfest 20 did yesterday, pacing is everything. Is this not what the immortal Keith Richards taught us? (Keith’s other bit of advice? “Always insist on medical grade product…”). And one could not possibly see all the bands present. Yet, all pacing aside, there was a large turnout for the day’s opener, Memphis’ own Optic Sink. We took a deep dive into that group’s new album earlier this week. Now it was time to hear how it would translate to the stage.

Optic Sink (Credit: Alex Greene)

A host of fans were curious, braving the blazing sun to see their 1:30 p.m. set. And while many lingered on the peripheries of Railgarten, clinging to the shade, just as many stood defiantly in the open area before the stage, just to see this one-of-a-kind band up close. And it was clear they were knocked out.

With Keith Cooper added on bass, the group has ramped up their stage energy considerably. Also contributing to this was Natalie Hoffmann’s increasing use of guitar in Optic Sink. And Ben Bauermeister’s increasingly imaginative drum programming ties it all together. As Hoffman alternately strummed or played synth, the rhythms marched on. And the crowd was primed for dancing, doing the Ratchet, the Twitch, and the Energizer Bunny as they baked in the sun.

Other bands kept them moving, and from that point on it was clearly “Aussie Day” at Gonerfest, with Vintage Crop, 1-800-Mikey, Tee Vee Repairmann, C.O.F.F.I.N., and Civic all hailing from Down Under. Many raved about 1-800-Mikey, but for my money Tee Vee Repairmann was the afternoon’s real shot in the arm. Both brought an intoxicating pop sensibility to their punkish underpinnings, but it was the latter band that has “hooks a mile wide,” as the Gonerfest program guide notes.

C.O.F.F.I.N. and Civic, meanwhile, demonstrated the heavier side of Down Under. I sat with friends as the former band played, parsing out their influences. “There’s clearly some AC/DC going on there,” said one. “Yeah, but I hear a bit of Southern Rock in their riffs,” said another. Both were right, as the band, sometimes verging on hardcore, steamrolled all over us. The raw power went to our heads, or was it Memphis Made’s special Golden Pass Gonerfest brew?

The day was not without its hiccups. After a captivating start, local post-punk heroes Ibex Clone were only able to play six songs or so, after which singer Alec McIntire was heard telling the band his voice was shot. Furthermore, the Skull Practitioners were delayed in even getting to town, hailing as they do from that land of sudden flooding, New York City. This left a hole in the afternoon lineup, gamely taken up by the New Memphis Legs, featuring Goner’s own Eric Friedl. Though they were more of a presence a decade ago, it clearly came back to them like riding a bike — a very noisy one.

Sweeping Promises (Credit: Alex Greene)

By the time Sweeping Promises appeared, after much buzz and anticipation, the crowd was pressed up to the stage, and their sparse, dynamic drive with hints of angular melody and otherworldly vocals from singer Lira Mondal drove everyone mad. With one of the most identifiable sounds in in recent memory, echoing the odd niche that Lene Lovich occupied many decades ago, they were also incredibly propulsive after extensive touring recently. Caufield Schnug’s guitar lines were thin and reedy, a perfect complement to Mondal’s overdriven bass. A power trio, yes, but not in the conventional sense.

For a power trio with an emphasis on power, one needed look no further than the delayed set by Skull Practitioners. With current Dream Syndicate guitarist Jason Victor backed by only bass and drums, they managed to conjure up the biggest sound of the night, specializing in heavy rock with some tasty feedback-swathed soloing from Victory. Between songs, Victor was so amiable that you could have introduced him to your mother, expressing gratitude that their delayed flight had not squelched their Gonerfest dreams, but only deferred them to a later, shorter slot before the evening’s headliner.

That, of course, was The Gories. As emcee Dane Perugini said in his introduction, “If you don’t know who they are, what the fuck are you doing here?” As the group took the stage, Mick Collins, Danny Kroha, and Peg O’Neil were not as jittery as they were when they first played the Antenna Club over 30 years ago, with reunion shows making consummate professionals out of these erstwhile garage-dwelling guttersnipes, but the same energy was there once they launched into “Going to the River.” The two guitars over O’Neil’s soulful thumping hit the crowd like a cool breeze. The sonic palette of the group was far more minimalist and blues-based than many of the heavier rock bands of the day, but the interplay between the three was so perfect as to galvanize the audience. The lust-fueled “Queenie,” with its manic, screamed chorus, was a highlight.

“It’s been 13 years since we played Gonerfest,” quipped Kroha, expressing the band’s love of Memphis, instilled when they came down in the spring of 1990 to work with producer Alex Chilton. But they made it clear that they were proud Detroiters, and saluted the Keggs, a much-loved ’60s group “from the wild suburbs of Detroit,” as Kroha put it. “We’ve got a nice little Detroit contingent down here,” he went on. “Toledo is also represented — the Great Lakes states!”

The Gories (Credit: Alex Greene)

Meanwhile, Collins was fiddling with his guitar, which he clawed at through the night like a feral cat. “Man, this thing is still in tune,” he exclaimed. “Incredible! For us it is…”

Decadent bourgeois concepts like tuning mattered little as the band launched into one classic after another, and not only their own classics. They made covers of Bo Diddley, John Lee Hooker, and the Keggs their own, combining the looseness of the blues with the attack of a Motor City V8 engine. Kroha even rocked a mean blues harp for one number. But it was their cover of Suicide’s “Ghostrider” that brought the house down, as Collins screamed “America, America is killing its youth!” to the wildly gyrating crowd. It culminated in one of the greatest feedback-drenched guitar solos ever heard on a Gonerfest stage. The amp and guitar seemed glued to Collins’ hands as if he was being electrocuted, while the gear at his command howled in protest. And then, all too soon, it was over. The midnight hour approached, the day was done, and as The Gories surveyed the battlefield, the audience before them scattered and slain under the harvest moon.

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Gonerfest 20 Thursday: O Sees Can You Say?

Standing around between bands during last night’s opening salvo of Gonerfest 20, I saw none other than Graham Burks walk by, decked out in headphones and other comm gear, toting a Sony Handycam. As part of a small army of camera operators making the Gonerfest 20 live stream happen, his exhilaration was contagious: he’d just shot an incendiary set by The Kids, who were clearly not phased by having to play borrowed instruments.

The Kids (Credit: Sara Moseley)

“You bastard!” sang front man Ludo Mariman on “Fascist Cops,” a prescient clarion call the Belgian band released in 1978. The band was hitting on all cylinders last night and conjured up that first wave of punk as if it were yesterday. And Burks, having been in the heart of the action as the band played, was glowing like he’d been playing along himself.

Such exhilaration was common among the camera crew. Another of the videographers, Kim Lloyd, had just finished her shift after shooting the French/Swiss band Jack of Heart, who had a similar old-school punk vibe, with echoes of hardcore but still loose enough to pull off a roaring cover of “You’re Out of Time” by the Rolling Stones. Though discharged from her duties for the rest of the night, Lloyd exclaimed “I don’t want to quit! What a rush!” It’s the next best thing to actually playing in a band at Gonerfest.

Live video production headquarters at Gonerfest 20 (Credit: Chris McCoy)

But when I saw Burks, it was obvious that he was not done, nor was the night. “The next band is going to be wild!” he exclaimed with a manic grin moving back to his post onstage. And he wasn’t lying: next up were Osees, aka Orinoka Crash Suite (1997–2003), OCS (2003–2005, 2017), Orange County Sound (2005), The Ohsees (2006), Thee Oh Sees (2006–2017), and Oh Sees (2017–2019). Their reputation as one of the most explosive bands of the last quarter century clearly preceded them, and they did not disappoint.

But they didn’t quite bring the frenzy from the start, opting to start their set with a sonic wash of noise until the beat kicked in with a vengeance. Featuring two drummers, bass, and synth/second guitar backing guitarist and lead singer John Dwyer, the band is a steamroller that blends punk, psychedelic post-punk, and even hints of guttural death metal. There were plenty of pogo-worthy moments, as the mosh pit made clear, but also slower, stop-time beats that allowed plenty of space for the guitar crunch to hang in the air.

Many flipped birds also hung in the air, as Dwyer saluted the crowd with them repeatedly, always receiving them in return with aplomb. “This one’s for you mom!” he shouted with a jeer, before stepping back and saying sincerely, “Seriously, this one goes out to your mother…”

A barefoot John Dwyer (guitar) with drummers Paul Quattrone and Dan Rincon, (right) and keyboardist Tomas Dolas (left) of Osees (Credit: Sara Moseley)

But he also showed Memphis some love. “This one’s for the Oblivians!” he said before unleashing a volley of solo guitar noise. Apparently, the noise was a little off: he stopped mid-riff and announced “I fucked up!” before launching the tune again. Later he quipped, “We’re one and a half months into a tour…and we’re only getting worse!”

Not that he came off as the humble type. Indeed, Dwyer’s mix of bravado and self-disdain perfectly complemented the pounding machine of the band, who also sported some intricate arrangements and varied textures thanks to the telepathic interplay between Dwyer and synth wiz Tomas Dolas, even as the front phalanx of dual drummers (Paul Quattrone and Dan Rincon) and bass (Tim Hellman) propelled them onward. As it turned out, the Gonerfest program guide was not far off in noting what to expect: “Full mania. The biggest act of the fest!”

Laundry Bats (Credit: Alex Greene)

They were the capstone to an evening that began on a more local note with Memphis’ latest supergroup, Laundry Bats, led by erstwhile Manatees member Abe White “in inimitable Abe-Style,” as Goner’s guide notes. Singing his own songs and playing guitar, he was backed by an enviable collection of superfriends: Jack Oblivian on drums, Alicja Trout on guitar, and Greg Cartwright on bass. Together, they unleashed scratchy twin-guitar rock that harked back to the Golden Age of the Antenna Club. Though all are seasoned pros by now, they exuded a youthful enthusiasm, especially as Cartwright and Jack Oblivian locked down the rhythm. “I’ve never played bass in a band before,” noted Cartwright after their set. “It’s fun!”

Alien Nosejob, the solo project of Ausmuteants’ Jake Robertson, then brought a unique mix of pop-punk that chugged along like a locomotive covered in graffiti. By then the audience had filled in and the crowd surfing had begun. As the night progressed, that and the moshing would gain momentum in the zone in front of the stage, even as hundreds pushed in from the peripheries of Railgarten to get that much closer to the intoxicating sounds.

Inez McLain of Exbats (Credit: Sara Moseley)

By the time Exbats took the stage, it appeared to be the most well-attended Gonerfest in history. The love Memphians have developed for this Arizona band since they appeared at Gonerfest 18 was palpable. Their perfectly minimalist ’60s pop songs by drummer Inez McLain, accompanied by her dad Kenny McLain on guitar, with the bassist and second guitarist chiming in “oohs” and “ahhs” in the background, was like a breath of fresh air. And this fresh air had hundreds of fans dancing and pressing ever-closer to the stage. In the slightly steamy evening, that was the whole night in a nutshell: an audience made up of superfans, hanging on every note, shaking, grinding, and slamming to the beat, thrilling to the freaky harmonies. Gonerfest 20 had begun.

Jack of Heart (Credit: Chris McCoy)
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James McMurtry Can Really Sell a Song

James McMurtry is a songwriter’s songwriter, rightly celebrated for his evocative compositions over the course of more than three decades. Stephen King called him “the truest, fiercest songwriter of his generation,” and that highlights something unique about the Texas-based performer: writers of all stripes are among his biggest fans. And yet he doesn’t let such praise go to his head. Just listen to his song “Restless,” which begins with the lines:


She gets a little restless in the spring
She might follow the lines you sing
Bullshit though they are
‘Cos sometimes that’s just the thing
If delivered with panache and a certain grace

Perhaps when your father is novelist Larry McMurtry you have a certain perspective on any writerly talents you might possess, or accolades you might accumulate. Certainly that lends perspective on any similarities casual listeners might assume to exist between songwriting and prose-writing.

“I don’t take leads from any author,” he tells the Memphis Flyer. “I’m not a prose writer. My leads come from Kris Kristofferson, John Prine and people that write songs. It’s a whole different muscle. And you also have the melodic aspect, which we can’t really do without. People will compare my work to poetry but it’s not. I hear a couple of lines and a melody in my head and I chase it. If it’s cool enough to keep me up at night, I finish the song. With poetry, you don’t have to write for an instrument. Your voice is an instrument, so you write words that sing well. You don’t have to do that poetry — it doesn’t have to be sung, it doesn’t even have to be spoken.”

The key principle of songwriting, he says, it that “you don’t want to write words to tie your tongue. And I usually have to tweak it so I can sing it better. You want consonants that roll off the tongue, that drop in the pocket. That way you can talk it or sing it. If you study Kristofferson’s work, that’s kind of how he does it. He didn’t think of himself as a singer. You can sing the hell out of those words, or you can talk them. It gives you more options as to how to sell it. Roy Acuff talked about that. He said, ‘I’m not a singer. I’m a seller.'”

On Thursday, this consummate salesman and his band will be peddling their wares at Lafayette’s Music Room. And lest you think the lyrics, however singable, are the only thing going on with this artist, the music is just as carefully crafted. That makes for some very moving songcraft, as most critics have agreed. His albums Just Us Kids (2008) and Childish Things (2005) were hailed as milestones, with the former earning McMurtry his highest Billboard 200 chart position in two decades (since eclipsed by Complicated Game) and a few Americana Music Award nominations. Childish Things, a few years earlier, spent six full weeks topping the Americana Music Radio chart in 2005 and 2006, and won the Americana Music Association’s Album of the Year, with the politically charged “We Can’t Make It Here” named the organization’s Song of the Year. Still, he keeps evolving.

“I have explored more melodic approaches over time,” McMurtry notes. “The more I sing, the more my range increases. So two records ago I was writing some high stuff, high notes that I wouldn’t have tried earlier. And there’s one song on this record, ‘Blackberry Winter,’ that’s in a little bit higher range than I used to do. But I don’t know that it really matters. It makes it harder!”

That record, The Horses and the Hounds, released by New West Records in 2021, is classic McMurtry, spinning empathetic, wry tales full of the despondent feel of small town America on the skids. “That’s been a thread through most of my work for most of my so called career,” he admits. “I get my details through the windshield because we spent a lot of time going down the highway. But I know that feeling of wanting to get out of a small town. That’s kind of the culture I came from. My dad escaped from a small town in Texas and went to school, and most of his friends were first-generation-off-the-farm grad students. So that was kind of how I was raised. It instilled a skepticism of rural, small towns in me which I later saw firsthand from living in Lockhart, Texas. And I even wound up back in my dad’s hometown for some of the time. It was just like he said!”

James McMurtry and band play Lafayette’s Music Room on Thursday, September 28th at 7 p.m. $25 advance/$30 day of show. Click here for tickets.

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Jason Isbell’s Flawless Set at Radians

There’s a sense of security fans feel when attending a concert at Radians Amphitheater, and it’s not just from the bucolic surroundings of the Memphis Botanic Garden. It’s more from the professionalism exuded by the staff there, which is saying something when it’s on the scale of Radians. The towering stage, covered with scaffolds of lights, lined with speakers capable of projecting bass frequencies like cannons, instantly transports audience members to another realm, where teams of show business veterans scurry behind the scenes to ensure that nothing’s out of place.

That was especially true when Mempho Presents brought Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit to the Radians stage last Saturday. From the lights to the sound to the concessions, everything was pulled off without a hitch — an occasion to celebrate in this age of ever-impending chaos. Of course, it wouldn’t have meant much if the performers didn’t make all that support meaningful, but it turned out they were a bulwark against chaos too. This was a band of veteran troubadours capable of bringing a flawless show.

The music, as all Isbell fans know, is full of big, sustained chords and shredding solos that underpin the perceptive pen and voice of Isbell himself, and it was executed so meticulously that every verse and chorus rang out in perfect clarity. And that was the main point, for it’s the lyrics that make Isbell’s songs stand out as exceptional touchstones of our time.

As it turns out, Memphis had something to do with that. Though he didn’t finish his bachelor’s degree at the time, Isbell studied English and creative writing at the University of Memphis. And the influence of a more writerly approach can be heard in nearly every song of his.

“Tried to go to college but I didn’t belong/Everything I said was either funny or wrong/Laughed at my boots, laughed at my jeans/Laughed when they gave me amphetamines,” he sang on one crowd-pleaser in particular, “Last of My Kind.” Judging from the rapt attention of his fans, those words were hitting home.

Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit (Credit: Alex Greene)

After he’d finished the song, Isbell made it clear that those words had nothing to do with him personally. “My college experience happened here at the University of Memphis,” he exclaimed to wild applause. “Until one day in class when it occurred to me, ‘It’s not illegal for me to just leave.'” That’s exactly what he did, embarking on the life of a rock-and-roller.

“But,” he added, “thanks to the U of M, I’ve finally received my degree. Thanks, University of Memphis. I appreciate that!” And with that, the band launched into the Stonesy “Super 8,” with the uplifting chorus, “Don’t wanna die in a Super 8 motel!”

That wasn’t the only time the singer/songwriter tipped his hat to Memphis. Introducing his drummer, he noted that Chad Gamble had lived in Memphis many years. “His brother Al still lives here too,” Isbell added, “but he can’t play the drums for shit!” Al Gamble being a nationally celebrated keyboardist, the crowd chuckled appreciatively.

By then their ears were primed to hear the name of our fair city. When the band launched into “White Beretta” and Isbell sang “We’ll go to Memphis in the morning,” a wave of shouts and “woo-hoos” echoed around us. It was not unwelcome, but rather counter to the mood of the song. “Raised in the church, washed in the blood/We all were saved before we even left home/I thank God you weren’t brought up like me/With all that shame and certainty.”

Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit (Credit: Alex Greene)

One thing that Isbell was certain of that night: He liked the smell of Memphis. He made a brief allusion to the singer Morrisey, who was “forced offstage at Coachella by smell of burning meat” back in 2009 (according to a report in the Guardian). He and the 400 Unit were very different, Isbell testified. “In Memphis,” he announced, “if you don’t smell meat cooking, you don’t have to go on stage.” 

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Put the Pedal to the Metal: Where to Rock in Memphis

We’ve had a great reader response to this week’s cover story on the more metal edge of Memphis music, still thriving even as hip hop and indie pop have come to rule the charts in recent years. And with that have come questions, especially this one: Where can I rock out in Memphis?

Certain venues favor that sweet spot where rock takes on a harder edge without adopting the frenetic pace of punk. Call it hard rock, hair metal, or rawk, chances are you know the sound, and you can be sure to find some at clubs that have long catered to that sound. Minglewood Hall and Graceland Soundstage sometimes book major hard rock acts for that “go big or go home” experience — Tora Tora had a triumphant show at Mingelwood in April, and Cheap Trick just played Graceland. The Hi-Tone Cafe, Growlers, B-Side Memphis, and Railgarten are perfect for that medium rock show vibe, while smaller spaces like the Lamplighter Lounge and Bar DKDC might sometimes host metal-leaning acts with a special intimacy that may require you to wear ear protection.

Of these, the Hi-Tone arguably rocks out the most reliably and consistently. Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre, who are about to drop a star-studded tribute to the MC5, Call Me Animal, will be playing there on October 8th.

Cover subject Steve Selvidge will be leading his own band at Railgarten this Friday, September 15th. While his solo shows offer an eclectic mix of styles, this ace guitarist has so internalized Jimmy Page and other heavy music trailblazers that plenty of rock energy is sure to permeate the evening. Note also that Big Ass Truck (of which this author is a founding member), while one of the most eclectic bands of the past 30 years, does rock out righteously at times and features Selvidge as lead axe man; they’re playing Minglewood Hall on October 14.

Gonerfest 20 revs up next week, and can certainly be counted on to bring hard-rocking bands. But lately the festival’s lineup has favored groups beyond category, not quite punk and not quite metal. “We have more post-punkers this year,” says Eric Friedl of Goner Records, before adding that “Poison Ruin from Philadelphia is ‘dungeon metal,’ on Relapse Records, a traditionally metal label. And we just added Drew Owen’s Evil Tree to the Saturday lineup. They are heavy metal from New Orleans.”

Yet the Gonerfest afterparties are just as lit as the festival itself, and that’s where you can see Alicja Trout and Sweet Knives on Thursday, September 28th at Bar DKDC. If you can’t wait that long for that cozy, hard rock experience, consider taking in the guitar artistry of Tamar Love and Mama Honey at Bar DKDC this Friday, September 15th.

Speaking of festivals, the Mempho Music Festival is just around the corner. Such festivals are where that big, heavy riff rock sound lives on, and Mempho is no different, with this year’s lineup featuring the Black Crowes and Dinosaur Jr., representing opposite ends of the Church of the Distorted Guitar.

That instrument, of course, figures heavily into this week’s feature, as it’s being celebrated in twin exhibits at the Museum of Science and History (MoSH), running through October 22nd. What’s not as well known are the musical performances and workshops MoSH is hosting during this time. The next event is Saturday, September 16th: The Way They Play, with Gerald Harris, is a series that spotlights special guest musicians through discussions and demonstrations of their iconic styles, tricks, and techniques. Next month, on October 21st, they’ll host Laser Live: School of Rock, where the three area School of Rock locations (Memphis, Wolfchase, and Germantown), will collaborate, accompanied by a full laser light show.  

Finally, don’t forget about that champion of local live music, the Overton Park Shell. The Orion Free Concert Series there will present the Dirty Streets this Friday, September 15th. The following week, on September 23rd, hear some heavy blues rock when both the North Mississippi Allstars and Alvin Youngblood Hart play the Shell’s Country Blues Festival.

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William Eggleston’s New Single … With Brian Eno

Appreciators of William Eggleston’s art often have a fondness for music, and the renowned photographer’s been known to associate with more than a few musical artists himself. And, as Memphis Flyer readers may recall from our 2017 coverage of his debut album, Musik, he’s also a gifted self-taught pianist who’s played classical works by ear and improvised his own compositions since childhood.

That album, as we noted upon its release, was played and recorded by Eggleston on an instrument he was enamored of in the early 1990s, the Korg 01/W sampling keyboard. “It’s manufactured in Tokyo, but a hundred percent of it is a bunch of engineers in California,” he told us at the time. “It makes maybe a billion different sounds. When this model of Korg came out, I was so enchanted with the machine.”

And he was inspired, using the keyboard’s recording function to preserve many extemporaneous compositions in which he could command a variety of orchestral sounds at once, riffing out entire concertos in one sitting. Selections from those recordings formed the basis of Musik.

Now with today’s single, “Improvisation,” Eggleston is announcing another album, 512, to be released November 3rd on the Secretly Canadian imprint. Produced by Tom Lunt, 512 features four standards, “Ol’ Man River,” “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” “Over the Rainbow,” and “Onward Christian Soldiers,” along with the originals “Improvisation” and “That’s Some Robert Burns.” 

In a departure from the free-wheeling soliloquies of Eggleston’s debut, Lunt invited musicians Sam Amidon and Leo Abrahams to collaborate on 512. This openness to collaboration led to Brian Eno performing bells on “Improvisation,” an introduction of sorts to 512’s piano-driven palette.

512, produced in one day in 2018, is named after the room where it was recorded, the Parkview apartment in Memphis where Eggleston lived for many years. The resulting 512 is a sparse, stark work that holds a mirror to music that Eggleston has internalized most profoundly. “I’ve never heard anything like it,” Eggleston notes in a press release. “It’s very modern.”
 

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Jon Auer Hits His Stride

“Memphis is like a second musical home to me now,” muses Jon Auer, best known as a veteran of the Big Star revival(s) and, once upon a time, the Posies. He’s been in town since last Saturday, when he performed with the Sonny Wilsons in their jangling, harmony-laden opening set for the Baseball Project at Overton Park Shell. Today he begins his Sweet Southern Sojourn tour through Nashville, Knoxville, and Asheville, then back to B-Side Memphis on Sunday, September 10th (click here for tickets). And with the Bluff City serving as his base, he’s been staying busy.

“I’ve worked with Memphis artists a lot,” he explains. “Obviously there’s the Big Star connection, so I’ve played here a lot. Part of that’s also due to wanting to only play with people you like. Like, Jody Stephens is a longtime friend of mine. It’s hard not to love Jody Stephens. I’m really fortunate to have had all this time with him in things related to Big Star. Now I’ve been coming to the Crosstown Concourse a lot, and I just made this record with the Sonny Wilsons at Ardent and High/Low Recording. So I’m starting to feel like there’s actually a little community here related to me that makes it feel very homey now. It’s not like I’m just going someplace to do some work. I love the vibe of Memphis. And technically, I mean, I’m in the Memphis Music Hall of Fame! I don’t know how that happened. It kind of makes me laugh, but I’ll take it.”

Indeed, Auer proved his mastery of the original Big Star’s oeuvre only last December, when he, Jody Stephens, Chris Stamey, Pat Sansone, and Mike Mills celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the Memphis band’s debut. But while Auer made several songwriting contributions to the latter-day Big Star’s In Space album, that project is forever bound to be focused on the past. These days he’s more future-oriented, getting back to writing and performing as a solo artist.

“It’s kind of emotional to be back out touring because it was taken away for a variety of reasons,” he reflects. “The pandemic really did a number on everyone, myself included.” His first touring after those days of lockdown only came late last year, “playing the recent Big Star 50th Anniversary celebrations in Memphis, New York, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles. And I did my first post-pandemic solo show in Richmond, Virginia, around those days. So this Southern tour is actually me kind of getting back to it.”

He says to expect a bit of music from the great bands he’s been associated with, perhaps including Posies hits like “Coming Right Along” or “Going, Going, Gone,” mixed into a healthy selection of solo material exemplified by his 2006 masterpiece, Songs from the Year of Our Demise. That album, critically acclaimed 17 years ago, hits even harder in the current dark era with songs like “Six Feet Under” or “The Year of Our Demise.”

While that album does rock out dynamically, it also has a vulnerable edge not unlike Elliot Smith’s most homespun work. “That was the first proper, full-length original thing that I did. It was 15 songs and I played everything on it, with the exception of a few drum tracks and a few other instruments. It sold a few thousand copies, got great reviews, and I toured the world: Australia, Japan, the States, and all of Europe. And that was where I discovered the solo part of me, as far as really going out and actually doing a show, getting something together, and really being able to communicate with people.”

He seems eager to do just that at Sunday’s B-Side show. Auer says he’s here for the music and ready to play. “I don’t even have a website. I’m one of those guys. No one would accuse me of over-promoting myself, though I’m better at it these days. I just want to work on music that I enjoy. Certainly it’s nice to get paid, but ultimately this Memphis show isn’t about the money. And I think B-Side is going to be the perfect place for this. I’m just looking forward to having it be a good time with a lot of friends who are coming.”

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Cheyenne Marrs’ Debut, Born in Tragedy, Finds a Home

A lot of budding songwriters languish away, hoping to be noticed by a record label that will recognize their gift. But Cheyenne Marrs found that such a deal fell into his lap. Of course, fortune favors the bold, and it didn’t hurt that Marrs, best known for his work with local band Spacer, already had an album ready to go. Still, he thought he was just previewing tracks for a friend — when lightning struck.

“You can’t make this stuff up!” Marrs says. “I went to Otherlands and saw a friend sitting outside with his laptop on the patio. He played me a couple tracks he’d recorded, so I pulled up the stuff I’ve been working on with Graham Winchester. And while I was playing it, the guy next to us at the other table was like, ‘Hey man, I really liked that song you were playing, it gave me Pink Floyd Meddle vibes!’ And I was like, ‘Dude, that’s my favorite Pink Floyd record!'”

Better yet, the bystander had a plan. “It turned out it was Patrick Carey of Out on the Eaves, and he was like, ‘I really liked that stuff. I’d like to hear more. And if you don’t have a home for it, me and Scott McEwen of Memphis Magnetic are starting a label, Red Curtain Records, and we’d love to release it.'”

Some months later, Marrs’ baby, the nine track album Everybody Wants to Go Home, will soon see the light of day, as he plays a 9 p.m. record release party this Saturday, August 26 at B-Side Memphis.

Preview tracks released to the press foreshadow a fine work of sonic craftsmanship, somehow evoking both Radiohead’s eerie melodies and chords and Tom Waits’ sonic palette, while remaining utterly unique. The imaginative use of the studio is all the more impressive for being cut at Graham Winchester’s up-and-coming home recording space.

“Working with Graham was just so easy,” says Marrs. “I went over to his house and I just didn’t know what to expect. Spacer, my other band, and Turnstyles played a show together, and Graham was talking about recording his solo record all with one mic. And I was like, ‘Man, I want to do that!’ He said to come on over, and I just expected to record one song. But it worked so well, and just came out so easily and organically, that I said, ‘Fuck it. I’ve been wanting to do a whole record. So let’s just do it here and now.'”

While Marrs didn’t record everything with one microphone, he did feel comfortable enough to play most of the instruments himself, with the occasional assist from Winchester on keyboards or drums. And the dynamics apparent in the tracks are sweeping and bold, ranging from quiet acoustic passages to full-blown guitar rave-ups and sonic collages built from bits of found sound.

Most of all, Marrs gelled with Winchester on a personal level, the bond between them becoming all the more important when Marrs suffered a horrific loss in his life. “I have a son who’s 12,” he explains. “He’s actually the kid on the record cover, falling in the snow. But his mother [Semelea Jensen] passed away in the middle of doing this recording. So it was pretty hard. It was a lot harder on me than on my son. He was my rock through it all.” As it turned out, so was Winchester.

“I told Graham, ‘Dude, your studio has become my therapist’s office and you’re my therapist. And the guitar and mic and drums are my couch,'” Marrs recalls. The emotional rawness of the record is a testament to that. Now, months later, Marrs is more philosophical about the experience. “I was pretty torn up over it,” he says. “But that’s the best time for me to write songs. It’s like through heartbreak, and shitty things happening, the songs just come out effortlessly.”

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Elvis Week ’23: See Him Sing on the Silver Screen

Elvis Week, those days in August surrounding the anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death, is here again, with its unlikely mixture of celebration and mourning, and Elvis Presley’s Graceland once again rises to the occasion of this great gathering of pilgrims. Check their website for a massive smorgasbord of events to choose from, all compelling in their own way: an Elvis tribute artist contest; The Conversations on Elvis series, featuring those who knew Elvis best sharing memories and stories; and of course the annual candlelight vigil on the night he died, Tuesday, August 15th (a Monday in 1977, the year of his death). This year, the same day will feature another event of mourning in remembrance of Lisa Marie Presley.

Yet Elvis Week also features, through the wonders of cinema, two brilliant concert films from the singer’s career, and thus two chances to witness his artistry very much alive and in full bloom. Such moments of bearing witness to what Elvis hath wrought help one lean into the celebratory side of the moment.

The Elvis ’68 Comback Special 55th Anniversary Enhanced Screening on Monday, August 14th, features an NBC television program that aired in December 1968, later dubbed “The Comeback Special.” But while filmed for TV, the high production values of Singer Presents … Elvis make it worthy of the cinematic treatment, especially with such iconic moments as his appearance in black leather with his Sun Records band, or bedecked in white, standing before his name in blazing red lights. Here’s a rare chance to see this era-defining show on a larger-than-life screen.

For the uninitiated who believe Elvis was all washed up by the late sixties, see how 2018’s 50th Anniversary of the ’68 Comeback was saluted by the Memphis Flyer’s onetime scribe Chris Davis — including his interviews with the show’s producer/director Steve Binder and singer Darlene Love of the Blossoms.

The enhanced screening on Monday will include special guest appearances by Allan Blye (writer), Gene McAvoy (art director), Mike Deasy (guitarist), and Tanya Lemani George (dancer), not to mention video interviews with those who were there.

The ’68 Comeback Special features brilliant performances, but can such a carefully crafted television production capture the electricity of a live concert? That’s where the Elvis: Aloha from Hawaii 50th Anniversary Concert film on Wednesday, August 16th, comes in. Elvis Presley’s Graceland doesn’t mess around with 50th Anniversaries, and this celebration is preceded with Sony’s Q&A listening event and an “Aloha” luau dinner.

The film itself captures the singer’s groundbreaking Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite concert, performed at the Honolulu International Center on January 14, 1973. Not including the short broadcast of “All You Need is Love” via satellite by The Beatles in 1967, Aloha from Hawaii was the first entertainment special by a solo artist to be broadcast live around the world.

That itself was a technological marvel at the time. This year, more such marvels will make it possible to see Elvis’ Aloha from Hawaii concert live on the big screen, featuring vocals by the king himself, backed by a live band on stage. That’s right, a live band will be matching Elvis’ voice beat for beat for the entire show. The night will also feature a guest appearance by original TCB Band member Glen Hardin.

And there you have it, two great ways to get your Elvis on. Now you can pay your respects in the most fundamental way possible — by listening to him sing.

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National Vinyl Record Day in Vinyl City, USA

Music fans know all about Record Store Day, that occasional holiday when buyers flock to their favorite local brick-and-mortar shops to load up on playable media. And while the growth of Record Store Day’s popularity has gone hand in hand with a resurgence in vinyl sales over recent years (see last year’s cover story on the subject here), it’s worth remembering that RSD is media-agnostic. There are even those who come home with nothing but a load of CDs after the day’s grand events. Meanwhile, there’s one holiday for vinyl and vinyl only: National Vinyl Record Day, which falls on Saturday, August 12th this year. And, given the importance of Memphis to every step of the vinyl food chain, it comes as no surprise that there will be a unique celebration here.

Vinyl is clearly no joke here. Memphis Record Pressing (MRP) recently underwent a multimillion-dollar expansion, tripling the size of the company and bringing the total number of presses to 52 and the staff to more than 400. With these changes, the company’s on track to produce 20-25 million records this year. When running at full capacity, MRP can press as many as 125,000 records a day or more than 45 million a year, making it the largest vinyl record manufacturer by volume in North America.

A worker prepares to flatten a lump of vinyl into an LP (photo courtesy of MRP)

Having turned this monumental corner, MRP is now marking National Vinyl Record Day with a giveaway for record enthusiasts. In partnership with local record stores Goner Records, Shangri-la Records, and River City Records, MRP is giving away a limited-edition, specially designed National Vinyl Record Day commemorative pin, to be available on a first-come-first-served basis at the participating stores. MRP employees will also be sporting the pins at work in the week leading up to National Vinyl Record Day.

“National Vinyl Record Day, obviously, means a lot to us, and we thought this was a fun way to mark the occasion and thank all the vinyl enthusiasts who have helped our industry thrive in recent years,” noted MRP CEO and co-founder Brandon Seavers in a statement.

California radio host and vinyl enthusiast Gary Freiberg started National Vinyl Record Day in 2002 to promote the “preservation of the cultural influence, the recordings, and the cover art of the vinyl record.” The date was chosen to honor the reported date in 1877 when Thomas Edison invented the phonograph. This year’s celebration comes fast on the heels of the 75th anniversary of the long-playing album, or LP, marked this June.

The event also comes as the vinyl renaissance that began almost two decades ago has reached a new milestone. Vinyl record sales have been increasing steadily for 17 years, and only grew more during the pandemic. Last year, vinyl album sales overtook CD sales for the first time since 1987, with 43.46 million copies sold.

MRPs growth in recent years has been equally impressive. An offshoot of defunct CD manufacturer AudioGraphc Masterworks, MRP has expanded dramatically since opening its doors in 2015.

Meanwhile, what of the city’s veritable temple to vinyl culture and music, Memphis Listening Lab, on this day of tribute to the majesty of wax? “We don’t have anything planned,” says MLL head archivist Jim Cole. “But we’re here if anyone wants to come spin some records.”