Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

GG Jackson II and Ziaire Williams Lift Grizzlies Over Bucks

In their last game before the all-star break, the Memphis Grizzlies took on the Milwaukee Bucks and came away with their second win in a row. With a final score of 113-110, the offensive powers of GG Jackson II and Ziaire Williams helped the Grizzlies secure the victory.

Memphis was missing Jaren Jackson Jr, who was sidelined with soreness in the right quadricep and did not play on the second night of back-to-back games.

GG Jackson II and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Credit: NBAE/Getty Images

The youngest player in the league, GG Jackson II, helped this struggling Grizzlies team defeat two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Bucks, who currently hold the third seed in the Eastern conference.

The two teams traded baskets in the first two quarters and went into the second half tied at 57 all. It was a high-powered third quarter on the part of the Grizzlies, with Ziaire Williams putting up 17 of his 27 points during the period, shooting a scorching 7 of 8 overall and 3 of 3 from beyond the arc.

The Grizzlies were up by nine points with a minute remaining in the game when two quick three-pointers from the Bucks brought Milwaukee within three. Damian Lillard took and missed the final shot from three, allowing the Grizzlies to come away with the win.

The three-point line played a big role in this win, with the Grizzlies averaging 50% from beyond the arc and the Bucks only 25%. In the third period, the Grizzlies shot 100% (4 of 4) from three-point range, while the Bucks shot just 16.7% (1 of 6).

Memphis was able to convert 14 turnovers from the Bucks into 22 points.

Ziaire Williams finished the night with a career-high 27 points, 4 rebounds, 4 assists, and 3 steals.

GG Jackson II added 27 points from the bench, while shooting 6 of 10 from beyond the arc.

Vince Williams Jr put up 18 points, 12 rebounds, 7 assists, and 2 steals.

Trey Jemison added 10 points and 6 rebounds. Lamar Stevens put up 13 points and 5 rebounds.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies’ first game after the All-Star break will be at home against the Los Angeles Clippers on February 23rd. Tip-off is at 7 PM CST.

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We Recommend We Recommend

On the Fly: Week of 02/16/24

Louise Page’s 5th Annual Valentine’s Soiree
Black Lodge

Friday, February 16, 8 p.m.-3 a.m.
Louise Page returns for her fifth annual Valentine’s Soiree. It’s a night of music, drinks, dancing, surprises, and love for all with opening performances by Marcella Simien and Alicja n Friends. Plus, late night karaoke after the show AND specialty drinks made just for the occasion. Cover is $15. And if you’re not 18+, stay home.

Great Backyard Bird Count
Memphis Botanic Garden
Saturday, February 17, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Here at the Flyer, we’re fans of things that fly. It’s in our nature. So we like birds. Looking at them, thinking about them, giving them. Apparently, counting them is also a thing, and there’s a whole squawking day devoted to it thanks to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, National Audubon Society, and Birds Canada. (Learn more about this global effort at birdcount.org.) The Memphis Botanic Garden is taking part and having people record and count birds. Plus, guests can enjoy a self-guided bird scavenger hunt, learn how to use the Merlin Bird ID App, and take in family-friendly presentations on great horned owls at 10 a.m. and native birds at 12:30 p.m. Plus, children will receive binoculars to decorate and take home during this fun day. All activities are free with Garden admission, and no registration is required. (P.S. The Lichterman Nature Center is also doing the Great Backyard Bird Count, so you can get your bird count in there, too!)

Mardi Growl with Hollywood Feed
Overton Park
Saturday, February 17, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
Who let the dogs out?! That’s what you’re gonna be thinking when you see them getting ready to PAWWWWTY at the Mardi Growl. The day will feature a dog costume contest with prizes, Hollywood Feed giveaways, dog caricatures, food trucks, a dog parade, and live music from the Mighty Souls Brass Band. Judges will award dog costume contest winners at noon. Plus, adoptable dogs will be on site from the Humane Society of Memphis & Shelby County, Alive Rescue Memphis, and New Beginnings Rescue.

Valentine’s Day Dessert & Beer Pairing
Meddlesome Brewing Company
Saturday, February 17, 1 p.m. & 4 p.m.  
Join Meddlesome for a beer and dessert pairing like no other. You’ll get four beers paired perfectly with four desserts: Memphis Style (American lager) paired with a pound cake and key lime mousse shooter, She Devil (Belgian golden strong) paired with an orange creamsicle cake, Devils Water (Belgian dark strong) paired with a death by chocolate and strawberry shooter, and Under Pressure (vanilla porter) paired with a heart shaped luscious Cuatro Leches cake. Tickets are $30 and can be purchased here

Soulful Murder Mystery Dinner
The Halloran Centre
Sunday, February 18, 3 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.
Put on your detective hat and get a clue at the touring Soulful Murder Mystery Dinner Theater Experience, a unique and immersive experience for customers who enjoy music, theater, food, puzzles, and mysteries. Guests will embark on a night of extraordinary fun and laughter solving a mystery with the soulful ambiance of live performances and a delicious meal. This show is recommended for ages 15 and older. You must be 21 or older to drink (obvi). Doors open, dining starts, and cocktail hour is one hour prior to each showtime, but the experience starts soon as you enter the building so remember DON’T TRUST ANYONE. Tickets are $75 and can be purchased here.

Oscar Nominee Screening: Killers of the Flower Moon
Black Lodge
Sunday, February 18, 5:30 p.m.
Join the Lodge for a screening of the Oscar-nominated dark historical epic from acclaimed, multi-award winning director Martin Scorsese. Picture it: 1919, Osage County, Oklahoma. Due to the discovery of oil on their land, the Osage people have become unexpectedly rich. Having just been discharged from the U.S. Army, Ernest Burkhart (Leo DiCaprio) returns to the area to work for his wealthy uncle, William Hale (Robert De Niro). He soon finds himself sinking into a dangerous mystery, as many Osage people begin dying in suspicious circumstances and nothing is being done about it. The screening is free to all, but only folks 18+ — so not all. Read our film editor Chris McCoy’s review of the film here

Colbie Caillat
Gold Strike Casino
Sunday, February 18, 8 p.m.

You don’t have to try, try, try, try — I remember when that song came out. My grandma hated it (still hates it), so naturally I learned every word. I don’t know why Gammy is such a hater. Colbie Caillat has some jams, man! And two Grammys to prove it. My Gammy has no Grammys to her name — she could’ve been called Grammy if she wanted but nooooo. So don’t listen to Gammy, and instead listen to (and jam to) Colbie Caillat at her concert this weekend. Tickets ($59.50-$79.50) can be purchased here. No admittance under 21.

“The Concert Photography of Jack Robinson”: Gallery Talk
Stax Museum of American Soul Music
Tuesday, February 20, 6 p.m.
On June 28, 1968, Memphis-born photographer Jack Robinson covered a concert at Madison Square Garden featuring a roster of Atlantic recording artists such as Aretha Franklin, Sam & Dave, King Curtis, and more. Held just months after the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., concert organizers donated more than $75,000 to charity. Robinson took striking, action photographs of the performers and captured the chaotic energy of the night’s performances. The Stax Museum presents 15 of Robinson’s finest images from the concert The images will be on display until mid-March 2024. Jack Robinson Archive representatives Percy Clarke and Dan Oppenheime will give a special gallery talk for the exhibit’s opening.

Queen of the Deuce: Morris and Mollye Fogelman International Jewish Film Festival
Memphis Jewish Community Center
Tuesday, February 20, 7 p.m.
From the late ’60s to the mid-’80s, in the notorious Times Square area known as the Deuce, the eccentric, Greek-born Chelly Wilson built a porn cinema empire and a reputation as one of the most savvy and charismatic figures on the scene. Queen of the Deuce reveals Chelly’s origins as a taboo-breaking entrepreneur and traces the fraught events that lead to her departure from Europe on the eve of war, and the unconventional trajectories of her American business ventures and personal life. With the rise of feminism, the sexual revolution and gay pride in frame, Queen of the Deuce is an alternate take on cultural history as seen through Chelly Wilson’s empowering story of survival. Tickets for the screening are $7 and can be purchased here.

Harmonizing Herstory: Small Business Series
ARCHd
Wednesday, February 21, 6 p.m.
Join Iris Collective for a musical celebration of all things women. Iris Collective musicians — violinist Carolyn Huebl and cellist Kimberly Patterson — will delight the crowd with works of women composers in Memphis’ newest woman-owned and woman-inspired retailer, ARCHd. Sip a glass of wine, shop unique and inspiring gifts that empower women, and see music transform this small business into the place to be. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased here.

There’s always something happening in Memphis. See a full calendar of events here.

Submit events here or by emailing calendar@memphisflyer.com.


Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Bob Marley: One Love

Before embarking on a musical biopic project, all filmmakers should be required to watch two films: First, Walk The Line, the made-in-Memphis story of Johnny Cash’s romance with June Carter, which is probably the best musical biopic ever made; then Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, which skewers musical biopics so expertly it almost killed the entire genre. 

Director Reinaldo Marcus Green has clearly studied Walk The Line for Bob Marley: One Love. It takes roughly the same approach to its subject, isolating one specific story line out of an artist’s rich and complex life story to illuminate the character behind the music. In this case, it’s the story of the recording of Exodus, Marley’s 1977 album which Time called the greatest musical achievement of the twentieth century. After a brief opening sequence where young Nesta Robert Marley (Nolan Collingnon) and his mother Cedilla (Nadine Marshall) move from the plantation to Kingston, we meet adult Bob Marley (Kingsley Ben-Adir) as the already rich and famous king of reggae. Jamaica in the mid-’70s was riven by what amounted to a low-intensity civil war between supporters of democratic socialist Prime Minister Michael Manley and his reactionary rival Edward Seaga. As the violence intensified, Marley was asked to play the Smile Jamaica concert, which was intended to, if not unify the country, at least convince people to stop killing one other by bringing them together in a shared love of reggae. During the promotional press conference, Marley refused to take sides, instead declaring that all Earthly rulers are “Babylon”, and that true peace could only be achieved through Rastafarianism, the cannabis-infused Pan-Africanist cult descended from Judaism which reveres Ethiopian ruler Haile Selassie as a liberationist messiah. 

His message does not go over well with the Powers That Be, and someone (probably Seaga, but maybe the CIA) ordered a hit on Marley. Two days before Smile Jamaica, as the band was rehearsing, gunmen infiltrated Marley’s family compound and shot Marley, his manager Don Taylor (Anthony Welsh), and wife Rita (Lashana Lynch). As his band fled the country, the wounded Marley promised to keep his commitment to his people and perform one song. When Marley took the stage in front of 80,000 people at Smile Jamaica, he showed the crowd his still-bloody gunshot wounds, and launched into “War,” whose lyrics Marley adapted from Haile Selassie’s 1963 speech to the United Nations. “Until the philosophy which holds one race superior and another inferior is finally and permanently discredited and abandoned; that until there are no longer first-class and second-class citizens of any nation; that until the color of a man’s skin is of no more importance than the color of his eyes, and until the basic human rights are equally guaranteed to all without regard to race; that until that day, the dream of lasting peace and world citizenship and the rule of international morality will remain but a fleeting illusion to be pursued, but never attained.” 

As you can see, Green and his three screenwriters have a much more complex job than, say, the makers of Bohemian Rhapsody. The Smile Jamaica sequence is more compelling than Queen at Live Aid, but you can be forgiven if you come out of One Love not knowing who was fighting whom, or why they wanted to kill a popular musician. The film’s fundamental flaw is that Bob Marley doesn’t deserve the Walk The Line treatment—he deserves Malcom X, a sweeping historical biography which connects all the dots. The filmmakers sense this, and try to cover some ground with flashbacks. Unfortunately, these flashbacks often come in exactly the way Walk Hard parodies, with the artist remembering his trauma as he walks onstage. 

But my job as is not to review the film that “should be,” but rather the one that exists. Yes, Bob Marley: One Love is a stodgy, conventional biopic, but at least it’s done well. Ben-Adir, one of the most talented actors of his generation, disappears into the role. He struggles mightily to rise above mere mimicry of Marley’s distinctive patois and reveal the legend’s inner life. When Ben-Adir and Lynch are together as Bob and Rita, the film crackles with life—only to lose the momentum with meandering scenes in London recording studios and swanky Paris parties. Green and Ben-Adir take pains to emphasizes their hero’s spirituality. A smoky Rastafarian ceremony makes clear that reggae is, like American soul, thinly secularized religious music. One Love sees Marley as a Rasta Apostle Paul, an evangelist who refined the message of a revolutionary cult into a universalist religion. 

For a glimpse into the fuller story, I recommend the 2012 documentary Marley. While Bob Marley: One Love is far from perfect, at least its heart is in the right place.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Snap Losing Streak

The Memphis Grizzlies snapped a nine-game losing skid Wednesday night by beating the Houston Rockets, 121-113 at FedExForum. 

The bench came up huge with 57 of the Grizzlies’ 121 points. Wednesday was Valentine’s Day with love and basketball when Grizzlies’ ex Dillon Brooks stepped on the floor for the Rockets, but the Memphis newcomers spoiled his revenge story.

Lamar Stevens had a “Welcome to Memphis” moment in just his second game with the Grizzlies. He finished with 14 points (4-of-8), eight rebounds, and two blocks, as a reserve.

“It is just good communication and talking throughout the game,” Stevens said. “We are trying to get on the same page. We were talking on the defensive end how we were going to adjust and play together. It’s like putting a puzzle together and trying to figure it out. It’s a bunch of good guys that want to win.”

After he sat out against the Pelicans due to violating a team rule, GG Jackson II came back with a vengeance, leading the Grizzlies with 20 points off of 8-for-15 shooting, 9 rebounds, and 3 blocks, off the bench. 

“You know, I don’t want to use my age as an excuse, but you make some mistakes here and there, and it’s on you to learn from them,” Jackson II said. “The coaching staff expressed to me how they know I’m better than that, and they know I’m going to continue to get better. They told me to get ready for Wednesday’s game, so I kind of got an extra day to prep, just making sure my shot feels good. I got in the gym, taking care of my body.” 

Newcomer Jordan Goodwin’s first game with the Grizzlies yielded good dividends with 10 points, three rebounds, three assists, plus a stock. Goodwin signed a 10-day contract with the Grizzlies just Tuesday afternoon. 

“I just go out there and just play hard, don’t do too much — try to go out there and play my game,” said Goodwin after the game. “…Just go out there, just being myself, doing all the right things off the court, being a good teammate. Listening and paying attention, just taking everything in. I didn’t know it was this culture here. This is a cool group of guys. Everybody’s pulling for each other.”

Luke Kennard finished with a season-high 19 points, shooting 71.4 percent from the field. 

Vince Williams Jr. finished with a near triple-double 12 points, eight rebounds seven assists, and three steals while going 10-of-12 from the free throw line. It marks Williams Jr.’s fourth consecutive game with seven or more assists. 

Jaren Jackson Jr. had only five points in the first half and was hampered by foul trouble again. He came up big in the final period to finish with 11 of his 18 points on 7-for-12 shooting, and added three assists. 

“I think he’s got a great ability to kind of figure out how teams are guarding him,” said Coach Taylor Jenkins on Jackson Jr.’s performance. “I think they were swarming him. He ended up with four turnovers, was missing some of his teammates, and he was aware of it, but just after the fact.

“And then he was able just to kind of reset, see the crowds. I think there were a couple of drives late where he saw the defense not in their shifts and he was able to drive and kick. I thought he did a good job of moving the ball, and then, obviously, he was a product of just being a spacer. We talked about maybe him being off the ball, creating those advantages on the second side, using Lamar [Stevens] more as a screener, and I thought he just kind of adjusted as the game went on, which was impressive.”

Tid-bit

Welcome back Ziaire Williams and nice dime by Goodwin. He was out for about two weeks with hand soreness. 

Next up

The Grizzlies will host the Milwaukee Bucks tonight, exclusively on TNT at 7:30 p.m. CT.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Odd Bills: Lawmakers Take Aim at Cold Beer, Service Animals, and the United Nations

Do you want keep buying cold beer from the store? 

Do you want to bring your untrained support animal into restaurants?

Do you want a week in July to be a time of prayer and fasting in in Tennessee and seeks God’s hand of mercy healing on Tennessee? 

Well, the Tennessee General Assembly has some good news and some bad news for you.

Hundreds of bills are filed each legislative session. Not all of them rise to the height of debate. Nor do all of them pertain to all Tennesseans. Remember when the ladder became the state tool? Oh, and hot slaw is on the way to becoming a state food. 

Here are some bills now under consideration in Nashville are bold, specific, and sometimes just plain odd. 

HB 1909 

Speaking of specific, this bill allows adults to carry pepper spray, tasers, and “similar devices” (whatever those are) on college campuses. Oh, and those colleges can’t make rules against this, either. 

“…it is not a criminal offense for an adult person to carry or possess pepper spray, a taser, or another similar device for purposes of self-defense when on property owned, operated, or in use by any college or university board of trustees, regents, or directors for the administration of any public or private educational institution…”

HB2031

This one does have bearing in Memphis. 

Protestors here like to close the Hernando DeSoto Bridge. If this bill is passed, the penalty goes up to a Class D felony. And anyone “who suffers loss or injury” from the road obstruction can sue those who do it. 

HB 1635 

This one’s already passed the full House (not the show). 

It “prohibits emotional support animals that are not trained, or being trained, to perform tasks or work for a person with a disability from indoor areas of food service establishments.”

 HJR 0803

Just….here: ”Designates the period of July 1, 2024, through July 31, 2024, as a time of prayer and fasting in Tennessee and seeks God’s hand of mercy healing on Tennessee.”

You thought I was kidding. 

HJR 0849

Also here: “Urges the United States to withdraw from the United Nations.”

SB  2153

This one is so specific, it sounds personal. 

The bill, ”authorizes a member of a homeowners’ association for a neighborhood in Williamson County with at least 300 single family residential homes and two or more gates restricting ingress and egress to the neighborhood to request a report from the board of directors for the homeowners’ association regarding criminal activity in the gated subdivision.”

HJR 0689

So, just…like…keep on doing what we’re doing, I guess. 

The bill “urges Congress to keep the power to declare war and for the National Guard to be protected from executive power.”

SB 2636

Maybe you thought I was kidding about the beer thing, too? Nope. 

This bill “prohibits a beer permittee from selling at retail refrigerated or cold beer.” 

It is now referred to a committee in the Senate. However, the bill lost several sponsors in the House last week, not a great signal for its passage. Phew. 

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Memphis and Shelby County Receive $11 Million in Funding to Address Homelessness

Memphis and Shelby County will receive $11 million in funding to address homelessness in vulnerable populations. This funding came from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in the Continuum of Care Program Competition, and was procured by the Community Alliance for the Homeless (CAFTH) and the Memphis & Shelby County Homeless Consortium.

Previously, Memphis and Shelby County received $8.9 million which was used for housing for youth, families, and other individuals. This year, the nearly $2 million increase will help LGBTQ populations and people fleeing domestic violence.

Emma Boehme, Continuum of Care project coordinator for CAFTH, said when they’re dealing with youth systems in CAFTH, they are also helping LGBTQ youth. Boehme added that the LGBTQ youth community, “especially in states like Tennessee,” experience homelessness disproportionately.

“Tennessee doesn’t have any systems currently in place that are measuring the hard data surrounding that because Tennessee isn’t the safest place for that,” said Boehme. “Nationwide, LGBTQ youth are 120 percent more likely to experience homelessness than non-LGBTQ+ youth, and 22 percent of LGBTQ youth are actively experiencing poverty and housing insecurity compared to 11.5 percent of the general population.”

Julie Meiman, Continuum of Care planning director for CAFTH, said the grant mainly funds two different types of programs. Rapid re-housing is a medium- to long-term rental assistance, while permanent supportive housing is for people who have a disability “who need long-term assistance to stay stably housed.”

“Through those they [HUD] want to serve all populations. Included in this funding is our youth homelessness funding. About 2 million of that award includes funding for youth and special populations,” said Meiman. “The Continuum of Care grant, known as the NOFO [Notice of Funding Opportunities], is an annual funding opportunity offered by HUD for Continuum of Care regions around the country.” 

Meiman said CAFTH is the lead agency for Memphis and Shelby County and is responsible for leading the grant process. The grant is submitted on behalf of agencies including Metropolitan Inter-Faith Association (MIFA), Friends for All, Promise Development Corporation, OUTMemphis, Catholic Charities of West Tennessee, and others.

“Everything about this process is as accessible as possible,” Meiman said. “Once HUD announces that the application is open, we immediately post a timeline on our website. Even before the date is announced we’re doing workshops inviting people, especially new agencies that have never received HUD funding to run a housing program. HUD wants to fund new projects.”

Meiman said applying for federal funding is a “complicated and lengthy” process, so they make a special effort to make sure new and returning applicants understand every step.

“All agencies serving any population of people experiencing homelessness are encouraged to apply for this funding in August of 2024,” said CAFTH in a statement. “Community Alliance for the Homeless is thrilled to play a pivotal role in bringing increased funding to the community to impact homelessness. They will continue to leverage a combination of federal, state, and local funding to address all areas of the homeless system, in conjunction with their partners in the City of Memphis, Shelby County Government, and the member agencies of the Memphis and Shelby County Homeless Consortium.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Jerry Phillips Remembers J.M. Van Eaton

Last Friday, on February 9th, drummer James Mack Van Eaton, aka “J.M.” or “Jimmy,” passed away at the age of 86, and with him were lost some of the last first-hand memories of Sun Records’ early days. Any fan of Jerry Lee Lewis knows Van Eaton’s work, for on the day that Lewis showed up at Sun with his cousin, J.W. Brown, ready for his first proper recording session, producer Jack Clement called up Van Eaton and guitarist Roland Janes to fill out the band, and the rest is history.

As described in Peter Guralnick’s Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ‘N’ Roll, the ad hoc quartet cut over two dozen tracks that day. After they’d played themselves out, Janes took a bathroom break, then emerged only to hear Van Eaton and Lewis playing on as a duo, indefatigable. As it turned out, that stripped down drums-and-piano version of “Crazy Arms” was Lewis’ first hit for the Memphis label. And that was just the beginning, with Janes and Van Eaton going to to accompany Lewis on many of his hits. Ultimately, Van Eaton would record with several other Sun artists, including Billy Lee Riley, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, and Charlie Rich.

To reflect on the passing of one of Sun Records’ giants, I called on Sam Phillips’ son, Jerry Phillips, to share his memories of the man and his music.

Memphis Flyer: Did you know J.M. back in the day, when he was most active at Sun Records?

Jerry Phillips: I’ve known J.M. pretty much all my life. He started young at Sun and was I was young too, and over the years I’ve played with him and he’s played with me. You know, I was in Spain a couple of years ago at the Rockin’ Race Jamboree, a rockabilly festival. I started listening to the drummers, and you know, every one of those drummers was either trying to play like J.M. Van Eaton or they were playing J.M. Van Eaton licks. It wasn’t J.M. Van Eaton, but man, they were trying hard to be him.

He had quite a distinctive approach, didn’t he?

At the 2020 Ameripolitan Awards, J.M. got the Founder of the Sound Award, and they asked me to present it to him. In my speech I said, ‘I don’t know that Sun Records would have been the Sun Records it became without J.M.’s drumming.’ There was a definite sound that he had, and that’s what gave Sun a lot of its personality. I just don’t think we would have had the same sound or the same legacy had J.M. Van Eaton not been playing drums.

Just as my dad would say, ‘If you’re not doing anything different, you’re not doing anything at all.’ And J.M.’s drumming was completely different from anybody else’s that I’ve heard — except for the guys that are trying to imitate him. You never knew if he was going to do a roll, or what he was going to do. And he had that shuffle beat.

J.M. left full-time music behind for many years before coming back to the stage. Did he still have it when he got back in the game?

Oh, he definitely did. Probably 20 years ago, he brought a gospel group into the studio. And he played sessions with different people, just from kind of hanging around at Phillips Recording. Those guys that came out of Sun liked to just hang around. That’s what they did at Sun, they hung around.

Of course, you can’t leave Roland Janes out of the equation, either. Because J.M. and Roland were like a team. When Roland passed, they did a tribute to him at the Shell, and me and J.M. and Travis Wammack all got together and played.

J.M. eventually moved to the Tuscumbia/Muscle Shoals area and bought a house, and he always played quite a bit over there with different people. He played with Travis Wammack a lot. And I saw him and played with him more often there, since I was in the Shoals quite a bit because of our radio stations. We were better friends as adults, you know what I mean? And he just loved the Shoals area, and everybody there loved him.

He was just an extremely likable guy, wasn’t he?

I just can’t say enough about J.M.’s drumming, but also what a great person he was. I mean, I think he knew he was a great drummer, but maybe he didn’t. He never was one to say, ‘Hey, I’m a great drummer.’ But he just was. If you had J.M. on your session, you knew who was playing drums just by listening to him. And that was a signature Sam Phillips/Sun trademark, was that everybody over there sounded like themselves — and different. Tell me one drummer that J.M. sounded like!

Did you see or speak to J.M. soon before he passed away?

I did talk to J.M. the other day, I think it was a day before he passed away. We just had a little brief conversation. I told him how much I loved him and how important he was to everything. But he was pretty weak. He wasn’t really in the greatest shape, you know? Once his kidneys failed, he went downhill fairly quick. But up until that point, he was in pretty good health.

I’m gonna miss J.M. I really am. And I think J.M. was one of the most important people in the history of rock and roll music. I really do.

A celebration of life for J.M. Van Eaton will be held on Friday, February 23rd, at First Assembly Memphis, 8650 Walnut Grove Road, Cordova, from 6 to 8 p.m. A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 2nd, at Cypress Moon Studios, 1000 Alabama Ave., Sheffield, Alabama. Call (256)381-5745 for details.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

Cold Weather Blues

Vicki steadied herself on the window sill, raised up, and reconnected a blind cord that had popped off a few moments earlier. She then stepped onto a wobbly bar stool and lowered herself to the hardwood floor. Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley looked on, seemingly in amusement, their black-and-white smiles forever captured on a framed print hung from the exposed brick wall. The print included a quote, “Don’t criticize what you don’t understand, son. You never walked in that man’s shoes.” I sneered at Elvis, hanging there with a big grin on his face. I’ll worry about walking in another man’s shoes when I can feel my feet again.

Mid-morning on Thursday, January 18th, and temperatures hovered near 30 degrees with windchills that made it much, much colder. Sleet, or freezing rain, lightly pelted the cars, the sidewalk, and the parking lot outside our first-floor rental. My feet, already wrapped in two layers of wool socks, felt numb. I wiggled my toes to make certain they still worked.

As I often jokingly say to Vicki, my better half, “Whose bright idea was this?” Unfortunately, this one was all mine.

On Wednesday afternoon we pulled into the rear parking lot of our Airbnb, located inside the former Ambassador Hotel on Vance Avenue. The dry snow that accumulated earlier in the week hadn’t refrozen yet, so navigating from our far away East Memphis home to South Main wasn’t difficult. While unloading Vicki’s Subaru, a small CAT bulldozer scraped snow from the lot and dumped it onto a gray slush-pile right behind us. The dozer’s noise and noxious gas fumes, combined with a biting cold wind, reminded me that this week might be unforgettable, but for all the wrong reasons. Yeah, maybe not a bright idea to be Downtown during a Snowpocalypse.

Icy Beale Street on Wednesday, January 17th (Photo: Ken Billett)

The 39th edition of the International Blues Challenge (IBC) kicked off that Wednesday night, so, as avid blues fans, we braved the ice and snow to support up-and-coming blues musicians who traveled to Memphis to perform in the bars and clubs along Beale Street. Typically held in January, IBC is a weeklong blues convention and, this year, featured almost 140 musical acts from the U.S., Canada, and 11 other countries.

After surviving Wednesday night’s frigid temperatures and Thursday morning’s frozen precipitation, Vicki and I ventured back to Beale, navigating icy sidewalks, slushy crosswalks, and ever-expanding piles of dirty snow. Baby steps, Vicki repeated like a mantra as we crunched and cursed our way along South Main. Once the skies cleared, Thursday’s weather turned out to be tolerable. Beale’s clubs were busy with various IBC activities: master classes conducted by veteran musicians, a “Women in Blues” showcase at Alfred’s and, inside A. Schwab’s, a Hohner harmonica demonstration. Following a dinner of slathered ribs at Blues City Café, we hopped next door to the Band Box, where we caught several performances and stayed for a late-night jam session. Well past our bedtime, Vicki and I called it a night and baby-stepped back to the Ambassador for some much-needed sleep. And warmth. We’d survived the first two days of IBC but had two more to go, and, unfortunately, the Mid-South’s Snowmaggedon would soon get worse. Early Friday morning, January 19th, and the outside temperature was barely 27. The extended forecast said temps would drop into the low 20s and stay there all day through Saturday. To add to the fun, burst water mains forced MLGW to issue a boil water advisory for portions of Shelby County.

Snow “sludge” on South Main Street (Photo: Ken Billett)

Johnny smiled. I frowned. That “Don’t criticize …” quote swirled inside my head. “Don’t start,” I warned the Man in Black. “You and ‘E’ get to stay here, where it’s warm.” From the bedroom, Vicki asked me who I was talking to.

Our Friday adventures on Beale were a frozen blur. The entire county was under a boil water advisory, and Saturday’s arctic-cold temperatures would be in the teens, not the 20s. Yeah, not a real bright idea …

Shivering from the cold, Vicki and I stood inside the historic Orpheum Theatre for Saturday’s IBC Finals. The grand lobby felt like an ice box. We soon learned that due to water-pressure problems, the facilities were now outside. So, when “nature called,” we opened an exit door and hurried through the bitter cold to a porta-potty. Unforgettable.

We’d left the comfort of our warm urban oasis for porta-potties and sub-freezing winds while sharing a lukewarm bottle of water. Nonetheless, we stayed all afternoon and enjoyed the talented finalists performing on the stage. After the finals, we baby-stepped our way to the Downtown Slider Inn. Finally, warm and cozy, Vicki ordered the falafel sliders and declared them her new favorite.

Sometimes, I have a good idea, I was tempted to say.

Instead, I just smiled.

Ken Billett is a freelance writer and short-story fiction author. He and his wife, Vicki, have called Memphis home for nearly 35 years. When not listening to blues music, Ken reads spy novels and tends to his flowers.

Categories
Art Art Feature

“three left, one right”

The title of James Inscho’s show — “three left, one right” — doesn’t refer to dancing.

“The works are abstract, but deal with the ideas of revisiting, reliving, and reconstructing fragments of observed moments and felt experiences,” says Inscho, 40. “So, the title means a few different things to me.

“Three left turns is one right, and that’s the long path we take to arrive at a simple decision. The other interpretation is three lefts plus one right is a 180-degree turn, and that’s a return to where you came from.

“Rather than thinking of it as directions left to right, you can think of it as three options remaining and one is correct.”

“Left” can mean a direction, but it also can refer to what’s left when something is taken away. “And ‘right’ can be a right turn or it can mean ‘right’ as in what’s correct.”

Inscho includes 30 acrylic gouache paintings in the show. “The works are kind of defined by a shifting of space and context. Brushstrokes become shadows. They become forms. They become space. The paintings are in a state of flux.”

The show, “in a sense, speaks to the beauty and uncertainty and the simultaneity of our access to all these different perspectives at a moment’s notice of every event, everything that happens. Seeing experience through a lot of eyes at one time.”

As the press release states, “We might see flat brown brushstrokes criss-cross a flame-red field. Matte black marks become shadows, and now the brown strokes are transformed into sticks, a pile of logs, a mound. It takes so little for the mind to write a story. Look again and it’s only brushstrokes.”

Painting abstract works was not what Inscho originally wanted to do growing up in Dothan, Alabama. “I really wanted to be a Disney cartoonist.”

He remembered watching Disney artists in the animation studio on trips with his parents to Orlando, Florida. “I just remember people working on The Lion King when I was a kid.”

Inscho, who played basketball and golf as a kid, also held an interest in music. “I learned guitar playing on my dad’s classical guitar when I was 8 or 9. Just kind of self-taught.

“I bounced around schools and I pursued a lot of different interests. I was interested in architecture at one point.”

Inscho first moved to Memphis in 2004 because he “just wanted a change of pace.”

While at University of Memphis studying graphic design, Inscho took a painting class with Chuck Johnson “and really took to the medium and the language and the history.”

Inscho, who got his BFA in 2011, had never lived in a big city like Memphis, which he felt “was a bit more cosmopolitan. I had a lot more to learn about life, and art provided a vessel for figuring some stuff out.”

Inscho then went straight to grad school at Tyler School of Art and Architecture in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he lived for 11 years. “I had some shows and some interest and kind of rode that little bit.

“I had several years after grad school where I ran off the fumes of what I accomplished at grad school. And that summer following graduation I kept making work, but things kind of petered out after a few years and I hit a cross-point with my work. It felt like the way I was working wasn’t right for me anymore. I was just feeling a different way about life. Things needed to change to line up more with how I was experiencing things. So, I started from the ground up again.

“I withdrew from the art community in Philadelphia and hunkered down in my studio and tried to figure stuff out. I felt like I was banging my head against the wall for three or four years.”

He turned from making larger, more geometric paintings to smaller ones, which were “more improvisational. More gestural. More evidence of the hand.”

In 2022, Inscho returned to Memphis, where his wife, Whitney Hubbard, is from. “Moving back provided an opportunity to reprioritize and revisit what I wanted my life to be like post-Covid. I wanted to be an artist that’s more engaged with my community.”

He found Memphis to be “such a wonderful” city, where “people have time for you” and “energy as a creator here is really good.”

Inscho reached out to Tops Gallery owner Matt Ducklo, who he met when he first lived in Memphis. “I think Matt just has a really great eye. And it’s a very contemporary space. It’s quirky. It’s a basement space.”

The gallery also “gets national attention. I know he brings in artists from New York and other areas to show in Memphis.”

Inscho has found Memphis to be a “very prolific” time for him since he moved back. “I started making these small paintings six years ago. They’re starting to enter a more mature vision than when I started. I think I’m starting to hit a stride with these pieces.

“When I first started, I didn’t know what a good brushstroke looked like.” But things changed back in Memphis. “I was learning to trust my hand as a painter for the first time.”

Inscho and Memphis are a good fit. “I am a rabid Grizzlies fan. I really enjoy cooking. And I have started to play golf again since I was a kid because there’s so many affordable courses in the city.”

Most importantly, “Memphis is an artistic community. While I was living in Philadelphia, Crosstown happened. TONE started. Tops Gallery started. And now Sheet Cake [Gallery] just opened. It feels like a good time to be an artist in the city. I’m happy to be back.”

“three left, one right” is on view through March 9th at Tops Gallery at 400 South Front.

Categories
Music Music Features

The ELVIS Act

There was a sizable Memphis contingent attending a press conference in Nashville last month, and not just because it concerned new bipartisan legislation known as the ELVIS Act. That’s not about naming another street after The King, but rather a recognition of how the distinctive, instantly recognizable voices of recording artists need new protections in the brave new world of artificial intelligence (AI). Officially speaking, it’s the Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security Act, which Gov. Bill Lee’s office describes as “a bill updating Tennessee’s Protection of Personal Rights law to include protections for songwriters, performers, and music industry professionals’ voice[s] from the misuse of artificial intelligence.” And among the catalysts for the legislation, it turned out, was the concern one Memphian felt over the risks of such misuse.

That would be Gebre Waddell, whose company Sound Credit is focused on ensuring recognition of music industry workers’ contributions to the recording arts via a custom platform that catalogs credits, like the liner notes of your dreams. That being the sea in which Waddell swims, confronting AI’s ability to mimic artists’ work came naturally to him, but he didn’t do so as a representative of Sound Credit, or as the secretary/treasurer of the Recording Academy, or as a member of the Tennessee Entertainment Commission (other hats that Waddell wears).

Photo: Bing AI

Rather, it all began with some casual party banter. Last year, Waddell was attending one of many celebrations honoring hip-hop’s 50th anniversary when a common concern kept coming up in conversation. “So we were chatting on the lawn and conversations just started turning towards AI,” he recalls. “This was not long after the fake Drake/fake The Weeknd thing happened.”

That was the phenomenon where, as Billboard reported last April, “a track called ‘Heart on My Sleeve,’ allegedly created with artificial intelligence to sound like it was by Drake and The Weeknd became the hottest thing in music.” It was quickly pulled from streaming services after raising concerns over potentially widespread deep fakes of human hitmakers, but the issue lingered in the minds of music industry influencers.

“As we were chatting,” Waddell recalls, “I was like, ‘You know, we just need to add AI language into an existing state’s right of publicity law, and then that could create some momentum for a federal law.’ That was just an idea that I threw out there and people were saying, ‘That that would be great, you could probably pull some people together.’ So I came home and set up some Zooms.”

A “right of publicity law” is one that protects against unauthorized uses of a person’s name or likeness for commercial (and certain other) purposes, but there is no federal standard, only a hodgepodge of different states’ statutes. Tennessee has one of the country’s toughest right of publicity laws, but it does not feature language about AI. Waddell decided to fix that.

“I drafted a version of what the legislation could look like,” says Waddell. “Then I invited a number of people to a Zoom meeting to discuss it, and I showed them what I drafted. And it really created some momentum.” Clearly, this was permeating the zeitgeist, and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) soon drafted their own version. The momentum only increased. “Boom, the very next thing to happen was the press conference,” says Waddell.

The Recording Academy, which last year helped launch the Human Artistry Campaign to protect human-created music in the face of AI, was there in force, as were other organizations, all eager to witness the first proposed state legislation to explicitly target AI fakes. As the Recording Academy’s news page noted, “The ELVIS Act is expected to be quickly considered by the state’s legislature, and with support from the Governor could soon become the first law of its kind. And the Recording Academy hopes it will also become model legislation for other states to follow. That same day, leaders on Capitol Hill took a similar step to protecting creators’ identity with the bipartisan introduction of the No AI FRAUD Act (H.R. 6943).”

Waddell, for his part, is feeling encouraged. “I fully support it. I think that, as it’s currently written, it’s exactly what we need. And the thing I’m really proud of is that it carries a West Tennessee namesake: It ended up being called the ELVIS Act. It started with the involvement of a Memphian and ended up having a very Memphis kind of name.”