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Sound Advice

Friday, June 8th, offers a tough choice for local music fans as two of the city’s most popular bands — Big Ass Truck and The North Mississippi Allstars — make what have become increasingly rare local appearances. But tough though the choice is, the pick hit this week has to be the Truck. As reported in these pages a few weeks ago, the eclectic five-piece that has been a premier local attraction for nearly a decade is at a bit of a crossroads and their show Friday at the New Daisy Theatre promises to be the band’s last for a while. Oddly enough, Big Ass Truck will go on hiatus just as their next album, The Rug, is getting ready for release (it’s due out in late July). Accidental Mersh and Retrospect will be on hand to help send BAT out in style.

As for the Allstars, Friday’s show at the Young Avenue Deli will be the band’s first local club gig since their fabulous (and fabulously well-attended) set at the Beale Street Music Fest and their Handy Award win in May. Be on the lookout for some of the original material that’ll be featured on their sophomore album, which is due out later in the year.

A final local show this week that demands attention is Songwriters In Their Own Voice, a song swap that’ll be at the Bartlett Performing Arts Center on June 9th. Hosted by Nancy Apple, who frequently hosts similar events at Kudzu’s and the Blue Monkey, this event will see Apple joined by Keith Sykes, Teenie Hodges, Delta Joe Sanders, Duane Jarvis, and Sandy Carroll.

As for the out-of-towners, that old five-and-dimer himself, Billy Joe Shaver, will be at the Hi-Tone Café on Thursday, June 7th. Teenbeat Records’ True Love Always will be at the Map Room on Friday, June 8th, with Palindrome and Jai Alai. But the best bet might be Little Rock’s Boondogs, who will be at the Blue Monkey on Saturday, June 9th. The Boondogs won a record contract through garageband.com, a talent-search site created by Talking Head Jerry Harrison. With three vocalists a la Fleetwood Mac, the Boondogs make what they call Roots Pop For Now People, which is the Nick Lowe-inspired title of a promotional EP the band recently put out. That EP features the three original songs that won them the garageband.com deal as well as covers of Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain,” Elvis Costello’s “Blame It On Cain,” and Suzanne Vega’s “Luka” (in Spanish). The EP captures a band in full command of its tasteful but crafty adult pop sound and only whets the appetite for the full-length to come, which was produced locally at Ardent Studios by Jim Dickinson. — Chris Herrington

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Well, the saga of Last Place on Earth continues: Contrary to previous reports, the downtown punk/metal/rock club did not close at the end of May and the once-cancelled Bad Brains reunion show is on again. According to owner Chris Walker, the club will remain open through June 15th, the night of the Bad Brains show, then close for good. Negotiations by a club employee to purchase and re-open the club have apparently fallen through. Bad Brains are, of course, a seminal early-’80s D.C. hardcore band, the most important African-American hard rock band ever, and the only American punk band to do justice to the music’s reggae fetish. The original lineup has reunited under the moniker Soul Brains and will close the twisty but often vibrant tenure of Last Place on Earth with help from openers Candiria and Haste. Tickets for the show are $15; for more info call 545-0007.

The delay has been long and well-chronicled, but the Gibson Guitar Plant downtown is now at 80 percent production (producing 80 guitars a day with an eventual goal of 100) and you can go down and witness the production process yourself. In conjunction with the Rock ‘N’ Soul Museum, Gibson began giving tours of the facility during Handy Award weekend and will continue the tours Thursdays through Saturdays, with tours leaving on the hour from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tours are $10 per person and last about half an hour. The tours allow visitors to see the complete guitar-making process at the Memphis Gibson plant, which currently receives wood guitar molds from Nashville (the Memphis plant plans to open its own woodworking area in the near future, so that the plant will be self-sufficient). Every step of the process is done by hand, and you can see the guitars glued, sanded, buffed, painted, lacquered, detailed, fitted with electronics, tuned, inspected, and probably a lot more that I’ve forgotten. I took in the tour over the weekend, and it might be the most interesting quick-and-easy music tour in town this side of Sun itself. For more info call 543-0800, ext. 101.

Humorist Garrison Keillor will bring his popular public radio staple, A Prairie Home Companion, to Memphis this month. The program will be broadcasting live from The Orpheum from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday, June 16th. Local musicians and guests featured on the broadcast will include Alvin Youngblood Hart and The Memphis Horns, who will be joined by roots-music notable Tracy Nelson. Tickets for the event range from $25 to $40 and are available through Ticketmaster (743-ARTS) or The Orpheum box office (525-3000). You can call WKNO-FM at 325-6544 for more information.

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

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Local Record Roundup

Hi Records is generally and justly thought of as the home of Willie Mitchell and Al Green, but before Hi replaced Stax as the city’s greatest soul provider it was the home of Hit Instrumentals (what the “Hi” originally stood for) in the form of two titans of the long-defunct jukebox market: Bill Black’s Combo and Ace Cannon. But now, with Hi Records Years collections from each of these two significant local acts, that side of the Hi story gets its due.

The continuation of a series that has also featured Hi soul artists Ann Peebles, Syl Johnson, and Otis Clay, these two 18-song compilations contain liner notes from music historian Colin Escort, who wrote the definitive Sun Records history, Good Rockin’ Tonight. The pieces captured on the two albums may seem pretty dated, but at their best — like the instrumentals of Booker T. and the MGs and the Markeys — these sides are a testament to the economy of the Memphis sound; Black’s and Cannon’s respective groups lay down tough, soulful grooves with no unnecessary flash.

Black was, of course, the bass player for Elvis Presley’s Sun-era group, forming his own combo after parting ways with the King. The 18 songs on this collection — which should be complete enough for most listeners — follow Black’s astoundingly successful instrumental group chronologically, from its founding to Black’s death in 1965 from a brain tumor.

Most of the cuts on The Best of Bill Black’s Combo — The Hi Records Years (Hi Records/The Right Stuff; Grade: B) charted, and the lead cuts, “Smokie Part 2” and “White Silver Sands,” both hit Top 20 pop and number one R&B. The changing lineup of Black’s combo features the formative work of some of the era’s finest regional talents, including Chips Moman, Tommy Cogbill, and Ace Cannon himself.

This collection mixes Black originals with covers of then-contemporary hits such as “Don’t Be Cruel” (Black never worked with Presley again, but that didn’t stop him from grabbing onto a good thing), “Tequila,” and Chuck Berry’s “Little Queenie.” This stuff probably sounded a lot better at the time, coming individually out of a jukebox or as background music at a crowded bar or nightclub. But all together as one document it can be a bit of a drag to listen to, so much so that the likes of “Tequila” and “Blue Tango” are refreshing purely as changes of pace.

Honestly, unless you were there and harbor some nostalgic attraction or you’re a music historian or you just blindly love any music associated with Memphis, I have a hard time seeing how these decent little R&B shuffles could hold much interest today.

Cannon’s music holds up much better. The Best of Ace Cannon — The Hi Records Years (Hi Records/The Right Stuff; Grade: B+) covers a decade in the formidable sax man’s career, starting with his hit “Tuff” in 1961 and ending with the more modern-sounding “Drunk” from 1971.

Cannon’s music didn’t chart as well as Black’s, though it was every bit as prominent on jukeboxes and sure sounds better today. The bulk of this collection consists of lean, tasteful instrumentals, with Cannon’s slow, moaning blues sax spread over a reserved rhythm section of drums, bass, guitar, and organ or piano.

As with Black’s combo, the material here balances interpretations of pop hits of the day (“Kansas City,” “Searchin’,” “Heartbreak Hotel”) with original or more obscure material, but some of Cannon’s interpretations are so reworked that the sources are almost unrecognizable, and the music is all the better for it. This is the case with Cannon’s bluesy take on Johnny Cash’s “I Walk The Line” and his jazzy rendition of Hank Williams’ “Moanin’ the Blues” (here shortened to “Moanin'”). But not all is well. Cannon’s take on “Cotton Fields” (which would be treated to a great version a few years later by Creedence Clearwater Revival) is done in an arrangement too jaunty by half and marred by some histrionic, white-bread backing vocals and misplaced handclaps. It’s an atrocity.

Cannon’s music shows tremendous growth over the course of this collection, as the late ’60s and early ’70s see him getting into straight, hard funk on “Soul For Sale,” “Drunk” (the only cut with lead vocals), and (of all things) Pete Seeger’s “If I Had a Hammer” with surprisingly credible results.

R.L. Burnside may have become a college-radio cause celebre in the mid-’90s, when hipster labels Matador and Epitaph joined Oxford’s Fat Possum in figuring out how to market old blues to young alt-rockers, but he’d been making high-quality blues records for a long time prior to that “discovery,” as two new collections attest.

Well Well Well (MC Records; Grade: B+) collects live recordings made by Burnside at five different locations from 1986 to 1993. This record adds something useful to the Burnside discography by capturing spontaneous and unguarded moments prior to Burnside’s repackaging that reflect something of the man’s personality outside of the image Fat Possum has cultivated for him. A hard, violent, and bemused take on the classic “Staggolee,” recorded at a friend’s home in New Orleans in 1986, is Burnside uncensored but detectably aware of the “badass” image he’s playing with. Even better is the extraordinary “Grazing Grass Rap,” a Richard Pryor-worthy monologue he delivers at a 1986 show in Charleston: “I was out in this yard, man. I was so hungry. I’d been hitchhiking for three or four days and I ain’t got no money in my pocket and I’m eating grass here on the front yard. This little girl, she came to the window and she looked out there and she saw me. So she looked back and told her mother. She said, ‘Mother, there’s a man out here that must just be plumb near about to starve to death, ’cause he’s eating grass.’ So [the mother] gets up, comes to the window, looks, and after she sees that I’m a black man, she says, ‘Mister, there’s better grazing in the back yard, ’cause we ain’t mowed that one.'”

Nothing else on the record can touch that, but the same intimate and relaxed mood informs the mix of Burnside originals and blues standards — Muddy Waters’ “Can’t Be Satisfied,” Lightnin’ Hopkins’ “Mojo Hand,” Howlin’ Wolf’s “How Many More Years.”

Also from Burnside is Mississippi Hill Country Blues (Fat Possum/Epitaph; Grade: B), a straight reissue of a 1985 solo record that was mostly recorded in the Netherlands. Mississippi Hill Country Blues, as a studio recording, has better sound quality than Well Well Well but isn’t quite as interesting a document. It’s probably best recommended to recent Burnside aficionados who have never heard his more traditionally acoustic, pre-Fat Possum material. This record also contains three very early Burnside cuts, recorded in Coldwater, Mississippi, in 1967: “Rolling and Tumbling,” “Mellow Peaches,” and “I Believe.”

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@mempisflyer.com.

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Sound Advice

The most promising event this week has to be the Phatidef Music Techno Rap Show, which is scheduled for Saturday, June 2nd, at the International Shell Complex (806 E. Brooks Road). Put together by local hip-hop production company Phatidef, the event promises over 20 artists — a mix of techno DJs from the mecca of electronic music, Detroit, and rappers from Memphis, though no names have been announced. The event will begin at 7 p.m. and tickets are $20. For more information see Phatidef’s Web site — www.phatidef.com.

Nashville singer-songwriter Kate Campbell has captured the people and culture of the modern South in song since her mid-’90s debut. Campbell’s latest record, Wandering Strange, is a Southern gospel album recorded at Fame Studios, the Muscle Shoals birthplace of some of the greatest soul music of the ’60s, with studio icon Spooner Oldham in tow. Campbell will perform at the Center for Southern Folklore on Saturday, June 2nd.

Accomplished post-bop pianist Mulgrew Miller, who served a stint in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers in the mid-’80s, will be performing at Centenary United Methodist Church (584 East McLemore Avenue) on Saturday, June 2nd, at 7 p.m. There is no cover charge for the event, but the performance is being given to benefit the church’s summer youth camp, so don’t be stingy when the offering plate gets passed around.– Chris Herrington

Any band that can entice Buck Owens to record with them has my seal of approval. And while I was once leery of the Austin-based Derailers — their sound was too muscular and showy for my country music tastes — their 1999 release Full Western Dress turned me right around. From their duet with Owens to their gender-inverted cover of the Crystals’ “Then He Kissed Me,” I was enthralled. They found that elusive groove where classic country meets mid-century pop and penned gritty, heartfelt lyrics that would make even the great Harlan Howard proud. While their live shows are fueled by the kind of energy that can only be described as punk, these guys never lose their pure, honky-tonk sound. And though they lack the ragged sincerity of the Two Dollar Pistols, the virtuosity of BR5-49, and the plain-talking charm of Dale Watson, the Derailers rank high in the pantheon of country revivalists. I’ve recommended them a number of times in the past and recommend them again now. Any chance to scoot your boots with these guys should be taken. So get your Stetson re-creased. The Derailers hit the Hi-Tone Café on Saturday, June 2nd. — Chris Davis

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local beat

I demand a recount. The non-attending B.B. King may have won Entertainer of the Year at last week’s W.C. Handy Awards — the definitive annual awards given by the blues industry — but for anyone who was actually at the ceremony Thursday night at The Orpheum it was pretty clear that soul-blues icon Bobby Rush was the real entertainer of the year. Rush’s roughly 20-minute set, which kicked off the second half of the show, was the night’s highlight. Ribald, funny, soulful, and flashy, Rush’s chitlin’ circuit stage show may not have been exactly dignified, but it presented blues as a living music more forcefully than any other performance at the Handys. With five “hoochie mamas” backing that azz up and a crack band featuring a brilliantly suave guitar player, Rush owned the night. They should have just canceled the rest of the awards and let him keep playing.

Unfortunately, that peak quickly devolved into the night’s low point, when Rush brought out Kentucky Headhunter guitarist Greg Martin for a deflating anticlimax to his set. No offense to Martin, but he was about a fourth as skilled and entertaining as Rush’s own house player, and to have Rush reduced to pimping for this great white savior (and trying to coax the crowd into a standing ovation that Rush himself and his great guitarist didn’t receive) was pretty much a travesty.

Outside of Rush’s set, the night belonged to Shemekia Copeland and B.B. King, who each took home the biggest awards but weren’t there to claim them, and Memphis’ younger generation of blues players. The North Mississippi Allstars won the Best New Artist Debut Award, with bassist Chris Chew accepting for the band, and International Blues Challenge winner and local club regular Richard Johnston delivered one of the night’s most memorable performances, winning over the large crowd with his one-man-band traditional blues. Other notable performances came from Corey Harris and Henry Butler, who did two songs from their great Vu-Du Menz album in a set that was slightly marred by sound problems, and Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater, who closed his brief set with the rousing Chuck Berry homage “I Wouldn’t Lay My Guitar Down.”

The night ended with Rufus Thomas and the great Ruth Brown giving the Entertainer of the Year Award, proving, as the Premier Player Awards did a couple of months ago, that Rufus Thomas plus a Memphis audience equals a standing ovation. And rightly so.

The complete list of winners: Blues Song of the Year: Rick Vito — “It’s 2 a.m.”; Blues Band of the Year: Taj Mahal & the Phantom Blues Band; Traditional Blues Album: Son Seals — Lettin’ Go; Acoustic Blues Album: Robert Lockwood Jr. — Delta Crossroads; Historical Album: Otis Spann — Last Call; Soul Male Artist of the Year: Little Milton; Comeback Blues Album: Mel Brown — Neck Bones & Caviar; Soul Blues Album: Irma Thomas — My Heart Is In Memphis; Blues Album of the Year: Shemekia Copeland — Wicked; Contemporary Male Artist: Eddy Clearwater; Traditional Female Artist: Koko Taylor; Acoustic Blues Artist: Keb’ Mo’; Blues Entertainer of the Year: B.B. King; Contemporary Blues Album: B.B. King/Eric Clapton — Riding with the King; Contemporary Female Artist: Shemekia Copeland; Soul Female Artist of the Year: Etta James; Traditional Male Artist: James Cotton; Best New Artist Debut: North Mississippi Allstars — Shake Hands With Shorty; Blues Instrumentalist Guitar: Duke Robillard; Blues Instrumentalist Harmonica: Charlie Musselwhite; Blues Instrumentalist Bass: Willie Kent; Blues Instrumentalist Drums: Chris Layton; Blues Instrumentalist Horns: Roomful Of Blues Horns; Blues Instrumentalist Keyboard: Pinetop Perkins; Blues Instrumentalist Other: Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (fiddle).

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

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Local Record Roundup

The latest musical enterprise from Greg Cartwright, one of the driving forces behind local punk/garage-rock bands the Oblivians and the Compulsive Gamblers, The Reigning Sound have established themselves as one of the city’s finest rock bands with a recent string of wonderful club gigs. The band’s recorded debut, Break Up, Break Down (Sympathy For the Record Industry; Grade: A-), delivers on the promise of those live shows, presenting Cartwright’s new band as a more garage-rockin’ update of the Byrds. Break Up, Break Down features the chiming guitars and sweet melodies of the best mid-’60s folk-rock but adds the organ textures (Alex Greene) and rockin’, R&B-oriented rhythm section (drummer Greg Roberson and bassist Jeremy Scott) of the same period’s garage-rock scene. Cartwright then pushes this sound to another level with the smart, subtle songwriting and distinctly soulful vocals that he has brought to all of his projects. The resulting hybrid is an alternate take on what one-time Byrd Gram Parsons called Cosmic American Music.

The record is a pretty big departure for an artist best known for the Oblivians’ trash-punk clamor. Relatively sedate and extremely melodic, Break Up, Break Down boasts a Beach Boys cover (Pet Sounds‘ “Waiting For the Day”) and even ventures into country territory with a cover of the Everly Brothers’ “So Sad” and the lovely “As Long.” The latter features Papa Top’s West Coast Turnaround’s John Whittemore on steel guitar and Lucero’s Brian Venable on mandolin.

The record begins and ends very strongly but sags slightly in the middle. My faves are the two openers — “Since When” and “I Don’t Care.” The latter is a kiss-off to an ex-lover where both the lyrics and vocal phrasing have a distinctly Dylanesque feel, Cartwright spitting lyrics such as “You told me repeatedly that you had aged beyond your years/But you don’t have to scream your mantra standing so close to my ears” as Alex Greene colors the spaces in the music with great organ fills. Easily one of the best local records you’ll hear this year.

The quirky, sunny synth pop on Shelby Bryant‘s Cloud-Wow Music (Smells Like Records; Grade: A-) is bizarre and personal in a way that might conjure other pop oddballs such as Syd Barrett, Daniel Johnston, or Donovan, but the music Bryant creates on this record is really such a genre unto itself that it deserves the unique moniker Bryant has bestowed upon it. Cloud-wow music is an apt description for a collection that sounds and feels every bit as innocent and dreamy as its cover art. The solo debut from Bryant, who might be best known around town as a member of the mid-’90s new-wave band the Clears, is an acquired taste, for sure, but if you can hear it on its own terms it is really quite beautiful.

Full of swooning melodies and sly, weird lyrics, a love-song epiphany on Cloud-Wow Music takes the form of something as ineffably perfect as this moment from “The Walk” — “My pants are tight/My mind is loose/Not frightened The sky above is speaking some inane thing to me.” Bryant might be one of the few people on the planet who could sing the lyric “My mind is on high/A puff above the clouds in the sky” and have the listener absolutely convinced that it isn’t a drug reference.

Bryant will have an official release party for Cloud-Wow Music on Friday, June 15th, at Shangri-La Records. Look for more on Bryant in that week’s issue of the Flyer.

Bugging us haters with their “Orange Mound killer look,” rap collective (more than 10 MCs are credited on the record) Concrete Mound come on pretty strong on their eponymous debut (Po’ Boy; Grade: C+), but unlike early Three 6 Mafia, for instance, the group seems to be merely reporting the facts of a rough life rather than spiking their gangsta tales with calculated sensationalism. The backing tracks, which rely far too heavily on a synth sound pitched somewhere between the horror-movie-soundtrack sound of Three 6 and the laid-back funk of “classic” Dr. Dre, are pretty tepid, but the rapping and the lyrics are more accomplished. Concrete Mound’s “Hard Times” is no match for Run-DMC’s, but it’s still pretty good and contains the following Inspirational Verse: “The system is against us/But that ain’t new/They say we all act alike/But nigga that ain’t true.”

In terms of content — lyrical and vocal — this promising and occasionally powerful debut is better than the letter grade I’ve given it, but I docked it a couple notches due to poor sound quality.

Vocalist and harmonica player in the defunct local blues band the junkyardmen, Billy Gibson goes solo again with The Nearness of You (Inside Memphis; Grade: B), a record that finds him crooning and blowing through a batch of jazz and pre-rock pop standards with solid results. Gibson and his band deliver decent takes on the likes of Duke Ellington’s “In a Sentimental Mood” and Hoagy Carmichael’s title track, while Gibson steps to the mike for serviceable interpretations of songs such as “When I Fall In Love With You” and “Sweet Lorraine.” My favorite track, though, is actually the only Gibson original on the set — the bluesy, piano-driven “Darling, Please Come Home.”

Blues Is My Business (Lucy; Grade: C+), the second solo album from former John Lee Hooker sideman-turned-Mid-Southerner Paul Wood, is a by-the-numbers but well-executed blues-rock effort. Recorded locally at Sounds Unreel Studio with a host of local studio stars — Jim Spake, Scott Thompson, Dave Smith, Steve Potts, Reba Russell — Blues Is My Business features Wood’s workmanlike vocals and flashy, bar-blues guitar and takes the blues itself as subject matter on originals such as “Everything Dies But the Blues” and “The Mojo Man,” which begins with a promise the record doesn’t quite live up to: “I used to boogie with John Lee Hooker/Shook Muddy Waters’ hand/They sent me here to play the blues for you/’Cause I’m the mojo man.”

If we can believe the trendspotters, then hair-metal nostalgia is on the rise, and, judging from their new eponymous disc (RubyFlex; Grade: C+), Bad Apple seems primed to take advantage of that. More old-school arena/boogie-metal than most hard-rock bands around today, Bad Apple’s album is sort of what Saliva might sound like without the hip-hop influences, pop hooks, or major-label sheen. Songs like “Mountain” and “Star” have a bit of a Southern-rock feel, but the most memorable song is also the oddest: It’s hard to tell if the Zeppelinesque “Hippie Festival” is intended to be a joke (it’s very possible that it is), but it’s pretty funny regardless.

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

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Sound Advice

The Handy Awards ceremony may be Thursday, May 24th, but as far as live music is concerned, the real action might be the next night, when the Handy Festival brings a plethora of national blues names to join some of Memphis’ finest in the clubs along historic Beale Street.

Awards host and New Orleans piano man Dr. John will kick off the night’s musical offerings with a concert at Handy Park. In the clubs, Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year nominee Deborah Coleman will be at Rum Boogie Café for a three-night stint — Thursday through Saturday. She’ll be joined by Traditional Blues Female Artist of the Year nominee Ann Rabson on Friday and Saturday.

Coleman hits town supporting a new album, the locally recorded Livin’ on Love (produced by Memphian Jim Gaines). As a young African-American woman who not only sings the blues but is a highly regarded lead guitarist, Coleman confound modern blues stereotypes at every turn, yet she’s managed to become a major star on the contemporary blues scene.

Other notable out-of-towners Friday night include Clarksdale native and multiple Handy nominee Big Jack Johnson, whose soulful, eclectic Roots Stew was one of the best blues records I heard last year. Johnson will be performing at one of his frequent haunts, Blues City Café. Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year nominee Larry Garner will be at Elvis Presley’s Memphis Friday and Saturday and blue-eyed bluesman Lee Roy Parnell, who performed Dan Penn’s “Memphis, Women, and Chicken” at the Premier Player Awards earlier this year, will open for Levon Helm at B.B. King’s.

Local artists rounding out Friday night’s Beale bill are Blind Mississippi Morris and Brad Webb at the Blues Hall, Kirk Smithhart at Club 152, and Charlie Wood at King’s Palace. — Chris Herrington

Sure, you have lightning-fingered virtuosos like Kenny Wayne Shephard (wake me when he’s through noodling). You’ve got fine traditionalists like Keb Mo. You’ve got gritty journeymen like R.L. Burnside and soulful pickers like Clarence Spady. But given the fact that most contemporary blues players tend to drive their three chords down the middle of a much-traveled road, I’ve never been able to muster too much excitement for the Handy Awards. Sure, it was great seeing Ike Turner play an impromptu set at King’s Palace last year. And Bonnie Raitt showed why her reputation as a guitar monster looms large at the previous year’s all-star jam. But overall, I’d rather just go to Wild Bill’s, soak up the Hollywood All-Stars’ lurking electric blues, drink Crown Royal, and shake it till my hangover sets in. This year’s Handy week, however, provides at least one mighty fine compromise. Handy Award nominee Freddy Roulette, whose insane lap-steel guitar work has invigorated the already vigorous music of Bo Diddley, deepened the already deep sound of John Lee Hooker, and enhanced the performances of any number of Chicago’s top bluesmen will be playing at Wild Bill’s on Thursday, May 24th. He’ll be at Automatic Slim’s on Friday and opening for Lucero at the Hi-Tone on Saturday, so there will be plenty of opportunities to see him. But if I were you I’d go to Wild Bill’s. Seeing an artist of Roulette’s caliber at that tiny juke joint on Vollintine is the kind of thing you’ll remember for the rest of your life — if you remember it at all, that is. — Chris Davis

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Of the overwhelming number of events this week tangentially connected to the Handy Awards, a few demand extra attention: The official closing ceremony of Handy weekend will be an all-star benefit concert for BluesAid on Saturday night at the New Daisy Theatre. The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m., and scheduled performers at press time include Sam Carr, Levon Helm, Steve Cropper, John Kay (of Steppenwolf, natch), The Kentucky Headhunters, Bobby Rush, and Buddy Miles. BluesAid is a decade-old benefit concert organized by the Helena, Arkansas, Sonny Boy Blues Society to provide health care and financial assistance to blues musicians. Moving the concert to Memphis this year, Sonny Boy Blues Society will share proceeds from the concert with the Make a Wish Foundation and the Smithsonian Rock ‘N’ Soul Museum. The Sonny Boy Blues Society also recently reclaimed control of Helena’s annual King Biscuit Blues Festival, which has been managed by a Memphis-based company for the last few years.

On Friday afternoon, from 4 to 6 at B.B. King’s Blues Club, the Blues Music Association (BMA) will host a town hall meeting on the “State of the Blues.” The BMA is a blues trade association formed in 1998. The forum will be an open discussion on the state of the industry and will be audience-driven but facilitated by several industry professionals.

Also on Friday, the New Daisy will host a free festival of blues-related documentaries by director Robert Mugge. Running from 3 to 8 p.m., Mugge will be screening his films Hellhound On My Trail and Deep Blues and will be debuting his latest work, Rhythm and Bayous, a look at music in Louisiana. There will also be a question-and-answer session with the filmmaker.

Other odds and ends: The Memphis and Shelby County Music Commission is launching a lecture series — “The Experts: A Series of Lectures, Seminars, and Symposiums.” This series is an offshoot of the commission’s Musicians’ Advisory Council. The first lecture in the series will take place on Saturday, May 26th, at the Center for Southern Folklore and will feature prominent music agent John Branca in a roundtable discussion with commission president Jerry Schilling and other industry representatives. Recently, Branca has worked with artists such as Matchbox Twenty, Blink-182, and the Backstreet Boys The music commission has also partnered with the Memphis and Shelby County Film and Television Commission and Select-O-Hits to produce a promotional CD of local music for distribution within the film industry Local musician Brad Pounders has formed a new record label, Serious Therapy. The label, which Pounders envisions as an avenue for individual musicians in bands to put out solo records, has issued its first release with a four-song, joint single that features Pounders and Vending Machine (aka Big Ass Truck’s Robby Grant). Pounders’ side contains a cover of Vending Machine’s “Huge Window Display” and his own unreleased “Surprise.” Vending Machine’s side contains a cover of Pounders’ “Circulation” and Grant’s own unreleased “I’m Just Blushing” Power-poppers Crash Into June are set to go into Easley-McCain Recording to start work on their next album, which will be produced by Neilson Hubbard For those who missed it in the paper last week, downtown rock club Last Place on Earth will close, at least temporarily, at the end of May. June’s highly anticipated Bad Brains reunion show has been canceled.

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

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Handicapping the Handys

If we can believe Handy Award voters, then these five Album of the Year nominees capture the heart of the blues today:

Reservation Blues — Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater (Bullseye): The 66-year-old Clearwater is a Mississippi-born veteran of the Chicago blues scene, and most of Reservation Blues is a standard if extremely accomplished example of electric Chicago blues. Clearwater’s command of the Chicago style is captured by the slow burn of the title cut and the over-seven-minutes-long “Running Along” and the deep-grooved stomp of “Find Yourself.” In addition to being a first-rate blues songwriter — most of Reservation Blues features Clearwater’s original compositions — Clearwater has long been known for mixing Chicago blues with Chuck Berry-style rockers. On Reservation Blues, Clearwater offers up an original, “I Wouldn’t Lay My Guitar Down,” that’s an obvious Berry homage and closes the record out with a spirited cover of Berry’s “Sweet Little Rock and Roller.” Clearwater further expands the scope of this fine effort with a cover of Dale Hawkins’ rock standard “Susie Q” and a couple of social commentary songs — the self-penned “Walls of Hate” and the Song of the Year nominee “Winds of Change” — that, taken together, are a bit too heavy-handed.

Lettin’ Go — Son Seals (Telarc): Another Chicago blues veteran with Delta roots, the 58-year-old, Osceola, Arkansas, native Seals made his Telarc debut with this 14-song, 70-minute opus after many years with Alligator Records. Driven by Seals’ gruff vocals and stinging guitar leads and by some prominent horn work, Lettin’ Go showcases a rawer Chicago blues sound than that on Clearwater’s record. Seals’ power is best captured by the straightforward five-song blast that opens the record. After that, Lettin’ Go is a bit more varied: “Osceola Rock,” essentially a rewrite of “Jailhouse Rock,” is very expendable on this marathon of a record, but “Rockin’ and Rollin’ Tonight,” which has a gentle country feel, is a much more successful departure from Seals’ trademark sound.

Roots Stew — Big Jack Johnson (MC Records): A son of the Delta and former member of the blues trio the Jelly Roll Kings, the 60-year-old Johnson was introduced to many by his appearance in Robert Mugge’s 1991 documentary Deep Blues. With Roots Stew, he delivers a great but entirely individual blast of Southern juke-joint blues. Conventional room-shakers “Jump for Joy” and “Hummingbird” set up more eclectic excursions, like the mandolin-driven country blues “Cherry Tree” and a lap-steel, instrumental take on Ivory Joe Hunter’s “Since I Met You Baby.” But the songs that make Roots Stew special are “Going Too Far” and “So Long, Frank Frost.” “Going Too Far” is an instrumental medley as patriotic tribute to American song. “Baby Please Don’t Go” segues into “She’ll Be Coming Around the Mountain,” and I swear I hear “Old Time Religion” and “Will the Circle Be Unbroken” in there somewhere. The Song of the Year nominee “So Long, Frank Frost” is a loving, even hushed, tribute to Johnson’s late Jelly Roll Kings comrade.

Wicked — Shemekia Copeland (Alligator): Pegged as an inheritor of Koko Taylor’s crown as Queen of the Blues, this daughter of blues great Johnny Copeland has become a major star on the blues scene despite the fact that she’s still in her early 20s. Copeland leads this year’s Handy field with five nominations, including one for Entertainer of the Year. Wicked, her second album, is hard-driving blues that puts Copeland’s powerful vocals front and center. Song of the Year nominee “It’s 2 a.m.” features Copeland belting over a riff-heavy, almost hard-rock track. The soul ballad “Love Scene,” the country blues “Beat-up Guitar,” and the good, gritty R&B workout “Miss Hy Ciditty” show her range. But the highlight of the record might be her duet with soul pioneer Ruth Brown on “If He Moves His Lips.”

Vu-Du Menz — Corey Harris and Henry Butler (Alligator): This acoustic tour de force joins two of the brightest young stars on the blues scene: New Orleans piano man Butler and Harris, an amazingly diverse and intelligent musician perhaps best heard on his, at times stunning, 1999 album Greens From the Garden. With their guitar/piano sound and mix of originals and traditional songs, Harris and Butler evoke the bawdy feel of ’30s blues while still sounding contemporary. Harris may be unrivaled for his ability to convert a scholarly interest in blues styles and history into soulful, vibrant, fully alive music, and this set with Butler is as much a testament to that as anything else he’s done.

And the winner is: I don’t have enough experience with the Handys to accurately pick what will win, but I can sure tell you what I think should. Clearwater’s and Seals’ records are expert documents of a style that rarely excites me, though I have a slight preference for Lettin’ Go. And Wicked definitely makes the case for Copeland’s formidable talent. But Roots Stew and Vu-Du Menz were two of my favorite records of 2000 — no blues qualifier needed. So I’ll be pretty happy to see either Big Jack or Harris/Butler take home the prize Thursday night. But I’ll be rooting for Vu-Du Menz. n

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

A Selective Schedule Of

Handy Weekend Events

Thursday, May 24th

The 22nd Annual W.C. Handy Awards

7:30-10:30 p.m.

The Orpheum

Scheduled performers include: Dr. John, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, Taj Mahal, Corey Harris and Henry Butler, Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater, and Big Jack Johnson.

Friday, May 25th

Blues on Film: The Films of Robert Mugge

3-8 p.m.

The New Daisy Theatre

Includes the debut of Mugge’s latest film, Rhythm and Bayous.

Blues Symposium: “Setting the Standards: W.C. Handy, Louis Armstrong, and Bessie Smith”

2:15-3:15 p.m.

Blues City Café

“The State of the Blues” — A Blues Music Association Town Hall Meeting

4-6 p.m.

B.B. King’s Blues Club

Handy Awards Festival

Starts at 8 p.m.

Beale Street

Blues performers at Beale clubs.

Saturday, May 26th

BluesAid Hall of Fame Ceremony

Noon-3 p.m.

The Memphis Rock ‘N’ Soul Museum

The Children’s Blues Festival

Noon-5:30 p.m.

Handy Park

BluesAid Benefit Concert

Starts at 7:30 p.m.

The New Daisy Theatre

All-star concert benefiting a blues musicians’ assistance fund.

Categories
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Sound Advice

Charlie Robison picked up a bit of publicity a couple of years ago when he married the Dixie Chicks’ Emily Erwin. Musically Robison and his wife’s band are quite different, but they share at least one thing: The Dixie Chicks are one of the best things going in mainstream country and Robison is one of the finest artists on the fringes of the scene. Robison isn’t an alt-country latecomer, just a solid Texas-based singer-songwriter whose rootsy sound contains both rock and honky-tonk influences.

Robison will hit the Hi-Tone Café on Tuesday, May 22nd, in support of his fine new album, Step Right Up, a record that includes an NRBQ cover (“I Want You Bad”), a duet with Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Mains (“The Wedding Song”), a Springsteenian narrative (“Desperate Times”), an Irish jig (“John O’Reilly”), and a quirky Tex-Mex stomp (“One In a Million”), and it still manages to sound of one piece.

Chris Herrington

Primo picker Del McCourey brings his unique brand of blue(ish)grass to the Hi-Tone Café on Thursday, May 17th, so rest your liver and get ready to stumble home from that little cosmopolitan roadhouse with one eye closed. Folks who only know McCourey from his work with Steve Earle are in for a real treat. Nothing against Earle, he’s a mighty fine songwriter to be sure, but this kind of music goes down much smoother once all traces of self-righteousness have been removed.

And now for the rock. While I can’t exactly heap praise on The Internationals for either sterling musicianship or stunning originality, they get six thumbs up for attitude. And when you are in the right mood, that’s all that matters. The band’s meathead posturing — which strikes a balance between the sublime David Johansen and the ridiculous Vinnie Barbarino — is hilariously idiotic, and their over-the-top stage banter is ludicrously macho and egomaniacal. An I’Nats show is like a cock-strutting gutter-punk answer to This is Spinal Tap, but when they shut up and play they can really deliver the brain-damaged goods. And in case there is any confusion, I mean all of this as a compliment. Catch them at the Last Place on Earth on Saturday, May 19th, with two unfortunately named bands — Swollen Sky and Hellfish. — Chris Davis