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John Németh Wins Big at 44th Annual Blues Music Awards

There was an extra helping of good will and cheer as Memphian John Németh took home two Blues Music Awards at the Renasant Convention Center last night, one for his harmonica playing, another naming his May Be the Last Time the best Traditional Blues Album of 2022.

The good will began the night before, when a host of artists gathered at Rum Boogie Memphis for a revue that doubled as a BMA showcase and a fundraiser for Németh, who’s struggled with some serious health issues recently. As he noted on social media, “I am honored and grateful to have so many legends gathering in Memphis for my benefit.” In a sign that medical issues have not knocked him out of the game, Németh’s band, the Blue Dreamers, was the Rum Boogie house band that night, and Németh himself performed.

That’s been the case for some time, as he soldiered on last year in his usual bluesman’s itinerary. Just last October, after a performance in Minneapolis, he wrote “I was in serious pain during this show and had to sit during the performance. The vocals and chromatic harmonica are fierce.”

Despite successfully confronting health issues, Németh had an all-around great 2022, musically speaking. In January he thanked “roots music DJs for making my new Love Light Orchestra record the number one air played Soul Blues Album in the US for 2022. If you have not heard it, then please check out Leave The Light On.” That album was nominated for both Album of the Year and Soul Blues Album, but did not win either.

Other regional favorites who nabbed BMA’s included Charlie Musselwhite, whose Mississippi Son won best Acoustic Blues Album; Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, who was named best Contemporary Blues Male Artist; and Anthony Geraci, who received the Instrumentalist Pinetop Perkins Piano Player award.

National treasure Buddy Guy was the biggest winner of the night, with his album, The Blues Don’t Lie, picking up the Album of the Year and Contemporary Blues Album awards. The title song, “The Blues Don’t Lie,” written by Tom Hambridge, also won Song of the Year.

Acoustic Blues Album: Charlie Musselwhite – Mississippi Son
Acoustic Blues Artist: Doug MacLeod
Album of the Year: Buddy Guy – The Blues Don’t Lie
B.B. King Entertainer: Tommy Castro
Band of the Year: Tedeschi Trucks Band
Best Emerging Artist Album: Dylan Triplett – Who is He?
Blues Rock Album: Albert Castiglia – I Got Love
Blues Rock Artist: Albert Castiglia
Contemporary Blues Album: Buddy Guy – The Blues Don’t Lie
Contemporary Blues Female Artist: Ruthie Foster
Contemporary Blues Male Artist: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram
Instrumentalist-Bass: Danielle Nicole
Instrumentalist-Drums: Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith
Instrumentalist-Guitar: Laura Chavez
Instrumentalist-Harmonica: John Németh
Instrumentalist-Horn: Deanna Bogart
Instrumentalist-Pinetop Perkins Piano Player: Anthony Geraci
Instrumentalist-Vocals: Shemekia Copeland
Song of the Year: “The Blues Don’t Lie,” written by Tom Hambridge Soul Blues Album: Sugaray Rayford – In Too Deep
Soul Blues Female Artist: Thornetta Davis
Soul Blues Male Artist: Curtis Salgado
Traditional Blues Album: John Németh – May Be the Last Time
Traditional Blues Female Artist Koko Taylor Award: Sue Foley
Traditional Blues Male Artist: John Primer

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Iris Collective Wraps Up Season with Michael Stern’s Return

Though many feared the final show of the 2021-22 concert season spelled the end of Iris Orchestra, with conductor Michael Stern preparing to step down, the ensemble was rescued by the sheer pluck of its players. Though most of them hail from other cities and only convene in Memphis for Iris concert weekends, their love of the Bluff City was such that they were loath to see Iris vanish. And thus was the Iris Collective born, as the group became a more cooperative enterprise helmed by the players.

As Stern said at the time, “The musicians themselves grouped together, committed to the idea that they simply would not let Iris go away. It was absolutely musician-driven. And Iris will continue on. It’s going to have a different feel. I will be less involved, and it will be an amalgam of ensembles, chamber music, orchestra concerts, and new ways of imagining community engagement.”

This season, then, has put those words into practice. With three imaginative concerts already under its belt, the Iris Collective has proven that it lost no momentum when it took on a new name and new organizational principles. With The Soldier’s Tale last November, Andrew Grams stepped in as guest conductor; February’s Intersections paired the collective with Randall Goosby on violin and Zhu Wang on piano; and just last month, Iris and the Dalí Quartet were joined by Cuban-born Memphis percussionist Nelson Rodriguez in a concert fusing classical and Latin music.

This weekend will mark the season finale with two separate shows. The first of two concerts featuring rising star and saxophone virtuoso Steven Banks takes place on Saturday, April 29 at the Germantown Performing Arts Center (GPAC), and will feature Michael Stern’s only return to conduct this season. Titled The American Experience, the program includes that old chestnut, Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring, along with Darius Milhaud’s jazz-influenced La Création du Monde, and Souvenirs by the great Samuel Barber.

That same evening, Iris will also be one of the few orchestras premiering jazz pianist Billy Childs’ newly commissioned saxophone concerto, written specifically for Banks and inspired by poets Langston Hughes, Claude McKay and Amiri Baraka.

Then on Sunday, April 30, Iris musicians will join Banks for an intimate chamber concert entitled Fantasy & Reflections at the Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, inspired by Britten’s quirky Phantasy Quartet in F minor and Banks’ own work, Cries, Sighs, and Dreams.

Mary Javian, Iris Collective’s strategic advisor and a longtime performer with the group, notes that “Steven is a rapidly rising star who any Memphis music lover should get a chance to hear while they can. Steven also plays several horns with virtuosity: soprano, alto, tenor and baritone. Most saxophonists are just not able to do what he does on all four instruments, and in both classical and jazz genres.”

The American Experience concert takes place Saturday, April 29, 7:30 p.m. at GPAC; Tickets $45-$70
Program: Aaron Copland Appalachian Spring; Billy Childs saxophone concerto for Steven Banks; Darius Milhaud La création du monde; Samuel Barber Souvenirs. 

Fantasy & Reflections is on Sunday, April 30, 3 p.m. at the Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center. Tickets $30 in advance/$35 at door 
Program: Mozart Oboe Quartet in F Major; Britten Phantasy Quartet in F minor; Banks Cries, Sighs, and Dreams.

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“Green Onions” Lives! Booker T. Jones at City Winery, NYC

In a fitting warm up to this week’s 20th Anniversary of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music (see our April 27th cover story), Booker T. Jones was on the road this month, ostensibly to celebrate the 60th Anniversary of “Green Onions,” the tune that propelled Booker T. and the MG’s and Stax Records into the national spotlight. Given that the song was recorded and released in 1962, the most chronologically appropriate homage was at the museum last September, when Jones joined the Franklin Triplets, all Stax Music Academy alumni, in what would have been the record company’s old tracking room to play a short set of MG’s classics. And indeed, nothing could have topped the magic of that moment, now available as an episode of Beale Street Caravan.

But 2023 is becoming the de facto year of tributes to the classic track, cut almost as an afterthought by the group and originally dubbed “Funky Onions” by then-bassist Lewis Steinberg, until label co-owner Estelle Axton made it more palatable by changing the first word to “Green.” It was only this February, more than 60 years on, that Rhino Records re-issued the original Green Onions LP, notably the first album ever released by Stax.

Jones himself has paid tribute to the tune this year with multiple cover versions released on streaming services, all adapting the song’s basic riff to styles as disparate as Latin rock, straight rock, and country.

And so it was that an appearance by the famed organist, composer, and producer at New York’s City Winery on April 15th was billed as “Booker T. Jones: Celebrating 60 Years of ‘Green Onions.'” What was more surprising was the venue’s release of a special wine dedicated to both the song and the show. Sales of the dedicated vintage will benefit the Stax Museum.

(Credit: Alex Greene)

That night, my date and I sampled a freshly uncorked bottle as we settled into the spacious, sold-out venue and its sweeping view of the Hudson River, the dusky spires of Jersey City looming in the distance. Soon the band, sans Jones, took the stage and began playing the descending figure of “Soul Dressing,” a cut off the MG’s album of the same name. “Wow,” exclaimed a fellow patron, representative of the night’s older demographic, “it’s not every day you get to hear the MG’s!”

I refrained from correcting him, but in my mind I heard Steve Cropper’s recent quip that “if I went out with Booker now, we’d have to call it Booker T. and the MG!” Meanwhile, I was content to take in the band before us: Dylan Jones on guitar, Melvin Brown on bass, and Ty Dennis on drums. Soon Booker T. Jones himself sauntered out to the organ, looking dapper in a blue suit and flat cap, and “Soul Dressing” began in earnest.

What followed was a tight, focused journey through not only the MG’s catalog, but other Stax hits as well. The band, while missing the inimitable swing of the original Stax house band, was on point with the arrangements. Dylan Jones carried off many of Steve Cropper’s original guitar parts faithfully, though he couldn’t resist injecting a bit of shredding when he soloed at length. His work on the the MG’s “Melting Pot” was quite venturesome, but that was in keeping with the song’s original jazz-inclined aesthetic. Brown’s bass solo on the same tune also went far beyond anything the MG’s recorded, but was imaginative and soulful nonetheless. Throughout, Booker T. Jones’ playing was as funky, tasteful, and restrained as his recorded works, even when stretching out for extended soloing on “Green Onions” in the set’s midpoint. That tune, of course, elicited the evening’s most frenzied applause.

Vocalist Ayanna Irish stepped out to put across numbers more associated with female singers, such as “Gee Whiz” and “Respect,” the latter having more to do with Aretha Franklin’s cover version than the Otis Redding original, and her approach was appropriately old-school.

Booker T. Jones sang as well, and another surprise followed his brief reminiscence. “The first time I came to New York City, in 1962, I was at the Roseland Ballroom,” he said. “With Ruth Brown and Jimmy Reed.” Already holding a guitar after singing Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine” (which he produced), he then launched into Reed’s “Bright Lights, Big City.” For a moment, you could imagine you were back home on Beale Street.

The show reached its climax with the smoldering build-up of the ostensible set-closer, “Time is Tight,” the coda of which seemed to throw the band for a loop. But as the applause died down, Jones immediately brought everyone back to Memphis. “I was standing on McLemore Avenue, and I see this guy pull up in a van from Georgia, and he starts pulling out guitar amps and suitcases and stuff and carrying them into the studio. Then he sits next to me on the organ and he wants to know if he can sing a song. And of course I say, ‘No, you can’t sing a song. You’re the valet!'” Laughter rippled through the room. “Anyway, he started singing this.” While I expected to hear “These Arms of Mine,” often associated with that story, Jones instead launched into another of Otis Redding’s great masterpieces from the early Stax era, “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now).”

At the song’s end, just as we were thoroughly melted into the floor, Jones brought things squarely into the contemporary age. “This song was written by Lauryn Hill, and it’s called ‘Everything is Everything.'” The tune, its title taken from a promotional slogan used by Stax in its heyday, and recorded by Jones in collaboration with The Roots, was the perfect way to remind us that, all anniversaries notwithstanding, this was a restless, thriving artist standing before us. Long live “Green Onions,” I thought, and long live Booker T. Jones.

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Acoustic Music Project Brings Together Youth Who Love Traditional Sounds at GPAC

The Bluff City and the art of song go hand in hand, as the Memphis Flyer’s April 19 feature on a Grammy Week songwriting workshop revealed. Such fascination with songcraft isn’t limited to professionals only, however; there are budding troubadours honing their skills privately across the city, the country, and the world. Now some young American musicians and songwriters are gathering in a workshop of their own right here in Memphis, thanks to a new program launched by the Germantown Performing Arts Center (GPAC).

The Acoustic Music Project (under the rather ironic acronym of AMP) brings talented young song-oriented musicians from around the country together to hone their skills with GPAC teaching artists and visiting headliners. Eleven students aged 16 to 22 were selected, having proven their proficiency in the realms of classical, bluegrass, folk, Americana, Celtic, or any other traditional music played largely on acoustic instruments.

The nine-day immersive experience, now approaching its end, has included study with AMP Artistic Director, Grammy-nominated guitarist Darrell Scott, Native American guitarist and flutist Bill Miller, and Nashville Songwriters Hall of Famer Beth Nielsen Chapman. And the students have also counted master-level acoustic musicians such as Béla Fleck, Edgar Meyer, Shawn Colvin, and Marc Cohn among their teachers.

Beyond workshopping songs and arrangements, the students have been immersed in Memphis-based music, visiting historic recording studios and meeting with award-winning producers, engineers, and recording artists.

On Saturday, April 22 GPAC will present a very special performance of the Acoustic Music Project participants as a culmination of their time here. The eleven young players will perform their original works, created and refined during their project experience.

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Overton Park Shell’s 2023 Lineup Includes Memphis’ Finest

With the balmy breezes of spring in the air, music lovers know that live concerts at the Overton Park Shell are not far away, and last week the nonprofit announced the performers slated to appear there this summer and fall. And beyond the nationally touring acts brought to Memphis by the Shell, a host of local heroes will also play under the stars there. Such an appearance can often be a local group’s best gig of the year, and it can serve to remind casual music fans of the riches available in their own backyard.

For starters, the ticketed Shell Yeah! Benefit Concert Series kicks off with the force of nature known as Wendy Moten. Ever since she cut a deal with EMI in the 1990s, and the top ten singles in the US and UK that followed, Moten has been a formidable presence in the industry, whether singing harmony or as an especially eclectic solo artist, mastering styles from country to R&B.

Soon after that, the Orion Free Music Concert Series opens on May 28 with the time-honored Sunset Symphony series by the Memphis Symphony Orchestra (MSO). This year, “symphony” is a bit of a misnomer, as the focus will be on the MSO Big Band, founded in 2010 to highlight the jazzier side of MSO musicians. Led by principal trumpet Scott Moore, the MSO Big Band performs swing classics spiced up with samba and other genres.

The Sunset Symphony tradition is a fitting season opener, harking back to the earliest days of entertainment in Overton Park, before the Shell was opened in 1936. Indeed, as detailed in this Memphis Magazine article, 2023 marks the 90th Anniversary of the first organized performance in the park, a staging of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado in a dip in the landscape where the Shell now sits.

From there, a both national and local acts will play every weekend until the beginning of July. The local focus continues on June 16th, when both Star and Micey and the Dead Soldiers will grace the stage. That should prove to be the perfect pairing, with two local groups that bring their own respective approaches to the more rocking side of Americana. Given that both groups have eased up on their live appearances in recent years, this should feel like a real homecoming for those who love tight harmonies and arrangements with a funky, folk-rock feel.

On the following weekend, on June 24th, the Stax Music Academy will showcase its best and brightest in what has become a new tradition all its own. And then fans can catch a more contemporary take on the Memphis sound when Unapologetic takes over the Shell on July 1st. What’s known primarily as a hip hop collective actually showcases artists as diverse as Cameron Bethany, PreauXX, A Weirdo From Memphis (AWFM), and more.

That revue will close down the summer season, but the Shell revs back to life when cool temps return in September. The first weekend of that month starts, appropriately enough, with Memphis Powerpop Presents, a recurring event that showcases the city’s seminal roots and promising future in that genre. This year, the day’s highlight will be the Sonny Wilsons, a new power pop project featuring Adam Yancey (Solo artist, Afterglow, The Chain Hopsons, The Becky’s), Allen Couch (East Link), Danny McGreger (Lately David), Chris Swenson (El Dorado Del Ray, Black Oak Arkansas, studio engineer) and Johnny Norris (Crash Into June, Your Academy). Their first album, recorded at Ardent and High/Low studios with Jon Auer (Posies, Big Star) producing, will be released late summer of this year. 

Two weeks later, in back to back concerts on Septemeber 15th and 16th, Memphians will have a chance to savor two versions of hard-hitting local music, both grit and grind. The grit comes from Pezz, practically grand-daddies of the Memphis punk scene by now, and still making vital, politically charged original music decades later. The grind will come on the 16th from Al Kapone, well loved for huge hits like “Whoop That Trick,” but also bringing things home in a deep way with his experiments in blues rap.

And finally, the Memphis Country Blues Festival on September 23rd will feature another African American artist who’s expanded the vocabulary of the blues in his own inimitable way, the axemaster Alvin ‘Youngblood’ Hart. Though based in Coila, Mississippi, Hart has won a considerable following here and exemplifies the Memphis tradition of music made at the crossroads. While the Shell’s season carries on to the end of September, Hart’s appearance will be a fitting local finale to a season peppered with the best the Mid South has to offer.

The full season and details on each band can be found here. Below is a list of what to expect, play by play, from the Orion Free Concert Series.
5/28 – Sunset Symphony (ft. the MSO Big Band)
6/1 – The Collection
6/3 – Magic!
6/8 – Tré Burt
6/9 – Anand Wilder
6/10 – Battle of Santiago
6/15 – The Heavy Heavy
6/16 – Star & Micey | Dead Soldiers
6/17 – Rumble ft. Chief Joseph Boudreaux Jr.
6/22 – AvevA
6/23 – Jimmi Kinard presents Muzaic
6/24 – Stax Music Academy
6/29 – Jenny & The Mexicats
6/30 – Buffalo Nichols
7/1 – Unapologetic Night

9/1 – Los Rakas w/ Special Guests
9/2 – Memphis PowerPop Presents
9/8 – Thee Sinseers
9/9 – Black Joe Lewis
9/15 – Pezz
9/16 – Al Kapone
9/22 – Jeremie Albino
9/23 – Memphis Country Blues Festival
9/29 – Spree Wilson
9/30 – Telmary
10/6 – Morgan James
10/15 – Shakespeare at The Shell

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With Dippers Show, Bar Keough Now Bringing Bands

This Friday, April 7 will mark the ascension of yet another venue into the realm of Memphis’ popping live scene. That quiet corner joint on Cooper and Peabody, Bar Keough, jump starts a new era within its walls as it plays host to Brisbane’s Dippers. The band formerly known as Thigh Master is familiar to many Goner Records fans, as the label released their second album, Now For Example, in 2019. Now that back catalog lives on the Dippers Bandcamp page.

It will be a cozy affair, but denizens of spaces like Bar DKDC find that intimacy a positive boon, especially if one’s inclined to tune into the dry Oz-ian wit of singer Matthew Ford’s lyrics, which range effortlessly between Robyn Hitchcock’s surrealism and the Go Betweens’ school of hard knocks lit, all over scrappy guitars.

The latest sounds from Dippers, to be released on Goner this June as the LP Clastic Rock, carry on where Thigh Master left off. Hear their lead single, “Tightening the Tangles,” above. Rolling Stone calls their sound “catchy-as-fuck and perfectly unpretentious guitar pop split by venom-spitting gloom … a face slap of scrappy punk revelry.”

Opening the show, and representing some of the finest in Memphian songwriting, will be Aquarian Blood, also perfect for an intimate listening room, as long as patrons can fit in after the band sets up.

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A Brass Note on Beale for Omar Higgins

Omar Higgins, the trailblazing bass player and front man of Chinese Connection Dub Embassy and Negro Terror, will receive a posthumous Brass Note at Handy Park on Beale Street at 5 p.m. on April 18th, with a celebration concert to follow.

Higgins died suddenly of septic shock on April 18th, 2019 at the age of 37. Shortly thereafter, the Memphis Flyer‘s Chris McCoy published this remembrance of him and this story on how the Memphis music community reacted to his death.

“We will celebrate Omar’s legacy and all the genres of music he loved performing, and we will cement that legacy with a Brass Note on the legendary Beale Street,” said brother David Higgins in a statement. “Omar’s friends and family all around the world can then look at April 18th as a day of celebration, and not just sorrow.”

That celebration will feature a multi-genre bill reflecting the diversity and number of musicians and fans who were touched by Higgins’ life. Kween Jasira, Danny Cosby, SvmDvde, PreauXX, Moses Crouch, Ryan Peel, Tonya Dyson and others will join the Chinese Connection Dub Embassy house band to perform one song each.

Higgins brothers Joseph and David have continued to perform and release material as Chinese Connection Dub Embassy, as detailed in a recent Memphis Flyer feature, and also have plans to revive Negro Terror.

“Omar was a joyous, ebullient figure, whose devotion to music and those he loved was total,” Joseph Higgins noted in a statement. “The day will serve as a celebration of his legacy and contribution to the Memphis arts community.”

In being honored thus, Omar Higgins will join over 180 other artists and pivotal music industry figures who populate the Beale Street Brass Notes Walk of Fame. Notably, he is arguably the first punk rock/reggae artist to be celebrated by the organization.

To cover event costs, organizers are raising funds through an ioby crowdfunding campaign. Donations of up to $2,000 will be matched by ioby.

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Maggie Rose: A Songbird with Sass and Soul

Some may think of Nashville as the city of country music, but that’s obsolete for this era. Consider the work of Maggie Rose, who appears at Lafayette’s Music Room on Thursday, March 30th. She’s a Nashville-based, genre-smashing artist whose publicity describes her music as a “collision of rock n’roll, soul, folk, funk, and R&B.” Note the absence of “country,” despite the fact that many have filed her under that tag since she began her career in 2009.

Such categories mean little in this post-Taylor Swift world, and Rose has clearly taken that message to heart. Case in point, Rose’s 2021 album, Have a Seat. Produced by Ben Tanner of Alabama Shakes, it was cut before the pandemic at the inimitable FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. That alone screams out soul and rock and roll, all the more so because the studio band included heavy-hitters like bassist David Hood of the Swampers (the session musicians who backed up the likes of Aretha Franklin and Etta James) and guitarist Will McFarlane (Bonnie Raitt, Levon Helm), not to mention Rose’s longtime bandmates/collaborators Larry Florman, Alex Haddad, and Sarah Tomek.

The Wurlitzer electric piano that begins Have a Seat sets the tone for the rest of the music to follow with a spot-on soul vamp. String and horn sections further establish the roots of Rose’s sound here. And then come the lyrics of songs composed by Rose and a small army of co-writers.

Notably, her genre studies aren’t always on the nose. “I diagnose myself with the internet, minor aches and pains, death is imminent, I think the twitch in my eye might be permanent, you got a cure for it?” she sings in “Help Myself,” and it almost sounds like Supertramp with it’s bouncy keyboards. Yet she returns to the land of soul for the album’s closer: “Don’t ya give me the floor and then leave the room/I know that I’m speaking for myself but I’m talking to you,” she sings in “You Got Today.”

The latter song underscores the strong streak of women’s empowerment in Maggie Rose’s career. And that goes beyond her music. She also hosts a podcast, Salute the Songbird, which features her conversations with fellow women artists about their lives in and out of music, not to mention music industry-adjacent women like music journalist Marissa Moss, whose book Her Country is an inside look at the world of women in country music. Other guests have included erstwhile Memphis artists like Valerie June and Shannon McNally.

This sensibility of solidarity is echoed in Maggie Rose’s music, which spans over a decade now, making her Thursday show at Lafayette’s (with a full band that includes Kaitlyn Connor on keys, Kyle Lewis on guitar, Judd Fuller on bass, and Tim Burkhead on drums) the perfect way to wrap up National Women’s History Month.

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Meet James Sexton, Composer, and the Otis Mission

When Crosstown Arts musical director Jenny Davis introduced The Green Room’s featured artist last Friday, she noted something unique about him: “For those of you who don’t know, James Sexton is the unofficial M.V.P. of jazz month, he’s drummed with so many of the bands performing this March.” And while it’s true that Sexton is one of the city’s most versatile drummers, often playing with the Ted Ludwig trio and their disparate collaborators, last Friday wasn’t about his track record. Rather, it was about tracks, his tracks, never yet heard on a record but surely deserving it.

To a sold out room, Sexton and band took to the stage as he gave a shout out to his time studying with Dr. Jack Cooper and the late Tim Goodwin at the University of Memphis Scheidt School of Music, noting that while he never finished his degree there, it had profoundly affected his grasp of music and arranging. Creating his dream band, the Otis Mission, for Friday’s debut was a culmination of those and many more years of composing and arranging. “Otis is my middle name,” Sexton explains, “named after my late godfather Otis Washington.”

While one could broadly describe the compositions as jazz fusion, that would belie the stylistic versatility of the band, as they deftly navigated charts bursting with stop-time phrases and unison lines in the classic jazz fusion approach, yet ranging from funk to salsa to reggae to gospel. That band included Sexton on drums, Alvie Givhan on keyboards, Tony Dickerson on “auxiliary keys,” Joe Restivo on guitar, Carl Caspersen on bass, DeAnté Payne on mallet instruments (via a large set of pads triggering samples), and Christian Kirk and brother James “Jennings” Sexton as guest singers, and they rose to the challenge of the material’s complexity with aplomb.

And yet, to hear James Sexton tell it, that was just the beginning. “This is a condensed version of The Otis Mission,” he wrote to the Memphis Flyer. “I originally wrote the music for a 15-piece ensemble, consisting of three singers, three horns, a string quartet, keys, bass, lead guitar, percussion, and drums. So the next show will be the whole kit and caboodle.”

As a drummer, Sexton is a world-class talent, having performed or recorded with the likes of En Vogue, Amy Grant, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Branford Marsalis, Kirk Whalum, BeBe Winans, The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of London, and Stevie Wonder. But last Friday, he was playing for one person in particular: “I just really wanted my dad to hear it,” he notes. “He’s been on me the last three years or so. We’d tried to pull off the show before Covid hit, but it didn’t work out. So, I’m very relieved to have finally gotten the ball rolling, with my pops in attendance.”

The group brought Sexton’s work to life with precision and soul, offering some stunning solos along the way, including Sexton’s own solo turn on the kit as he kept a perfect clave beat with a foot pedal hitting a wood block. Below, Sexton offers his commentary on the intricate, funky pieces he premiered last Friday:

James Sexton (Photo courtesy Crosstown Arts)

No Limit ‘Cept Yo Limits is “funk inspired, a Prince kinda vibe.”
A.M. Spired, a compositional highlight, was “inspired by modal jazz of the ’50s and ’60s.”
Duly Noted. Lesson Learned was based on a “bad experience that’ll never happen again. A mixer of rock and reggae that featured prominent Memphis guitarist Joe Restivo and myself.”
Get up Sunshine was “inspired by classic vocal jazz ballads, and featured Christian Kirk, the daughter of legendary Memphis jazz pianist Sidney Kirk. It also featured Alvie Givhan on piano and DeAnte Payne on vibes. The message is simply ‘Don’t dim your light. The world needs it.'”
Eden’s Aura was “inspired by my then five-year-old daughter’s mood swings, and my time playing in a salsa band. Her name is Sarah Eden Sexton. It featured DeAnte Payne, Alvie Givhan, and myself.”
Got That Good Feelin’ (How bout’ Chu?) was “inspired by my time as a drummer in the The New Orleans Jazz Ramblers. A great tune for a second line dance.”
The Liberator, sung by Sexton’s brother James “Jennings” Sexton, revealed the importance of the church to Sexton. “This shows my gospel roots. In the Christian faith, Jesus is the door to liberation, in every aspect of life.”
The Hatchling, a title Sexton said referred to himself, is “an up-tempo jazz fusion tune, inspired by artists like James Brown, Tower of Power, or the Dave Weckl Band. There’s a fusion version of a James Brown tune called ‘The Chicken,’ and this would be my version of an updated spin off.”

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A Historic St. Pat’s Parade Down Beale, One Week Early

Silky O’Sullivan’s has been a mainstay of Beale Street for decades, so it’s only natural that St. Patrick’s Day should cause the street to erupt into celebrations. This year, the March 17 holiday is merely the culmination of a week’s worth of revelry that includes Silky Sullivan’s St. Patrick’s Parade on Saturday, March 11. Given that this is the parade’s 50th Anniversary, why not start drinking early?

The parade is presented by the Beale Street Merchants Association and sponsored by the Irish Eyes of Memphis, and is the public highlight of a full week of commemorations, including a motor caravan to pick up visiting dignitaries on March 9, the Africa in April Salutes Ireland luncheon and Beale Street Merchants dinner on March 10, and a Beale Street pub crawl and “raising of the goat” at Silky O’Sullivan’s on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17.

Throwin’ o’ the beads at a Silky Sullivan St. Patrick’s Parade (Credit: Vicki Gill)

The roots of the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade, the oldest continuously running parade in Memphis, lie with the Irish Eyes of Memphis, a group led by the late politician Mark Flanagan and bar owners Thomas Boggs and Thomas “Silky” Sullivan. The group started in 1969 when Flanagan began hosting St. Patrick’s Day barbecues at his home. By 1973, the year from which the current event marks its beginning, the barbecue had grown so big it was a multi-venue event.

Of course, being centered on Beale Street, music will be front and center this year. That’s partly reflected in this year’s Grand Marshal, Pat Mitchell Worley, president and CEO of the Soulsville Foundation and longtime host of the syndicated radio program Beale Street Caravan (and whose wedding was held on Beale during the parade years ago). Ron Childers, chief meteorologist for WMC Action News 5, will serve as King, complete with a crown forged by smiths at the National Ornamental Metal Museum in Memphis.

Also in the court will be Moira Flanagan, niece of the parade’s co-founder Mark Flanagan. She will be crowned Queen of All Western Appalachia. Meanwhile, Benny Carter, the proprietor of Murphy’s, is the Irish American of the Year.

Music will figure more directly into the proceedings via the Christian Brothers High School marching band, the oldest high school band in America. It’s enjoyed a continuous existence since its founding in the fall of 1872 by Br. Maurelian, who served as the first band director. The first recorded performance of the group was in the Memphis St. Patrick’s Day Parade of 1873, and the band has performed every year since.

1888 Christian Brothers Band under the direction of Paul Schneider with Br. Maurelian (Credit: Patrick Bolton – Own work Christian Brothers Band Archives)

“One thing that makes the St. Patrick’s parade so special, and all of the celebrations we have for St. Patrick’s, is that it’s for everyone,” says Joellyn Sullivan, the former owner of Silky O’Sullivan’s and a St. Patrick’s Parade organizer. “This is a blanket invitation to gather our citizens together shoulder to shoulder sharing smiles, sharing cheers, wishes for good luck, wishes for friendships new and old, and peace to all.”

Named by the Beale Street Merchants Association in honor of Sullivan’s husband Thomas, who was considered Memphis’ “King of the Irish,” the parade started in Midtown Memphis, but has been held on Beale Street for the past 30 years.