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Music Music Features

Memphis at the Folk Alliance International Conference

The folk music old guard that dominated the Folk Alliance International conferences for the past 35 years has passed the guitar to a new generation that is younger, energized, and mostly female and non-white.

And the kids are all right.

In the BC years (before Covid), the annual five-day conference that draws more than 1,000 musicians from around the world was largely the province of aging performers and music lovers.

This year, the beat has changed. Most of the performers were young, female, and non-white, lending a whole new energy to the event that was held this past weekend in Kansas City, Missouri. The LGBTQIA+ community was also well-represented.

Memphis was everywhere, chosen as the first “City of Honor,” with Memphis-oriented workshops, speakers, and a slew of talented performers including Amy LaVere, Bailey Bigger, Talibah Safiya, Yella P of Memphissippi Sounds, violinist Alice Hasen, and the brilliant Aquarian Blood.

Valerie June (Photo: Karen Pulfer Focht )

Grammy-nominated singer, songwriter, poet, and actor Valerie June astounded with her keynote speech that said love and hope can defeat hate and fear. As she spoke about the global crisis, the “technological hacking of the human mind and body,” and nuclear war, she abruptly stopped and flashed her trademark smile. She walked to center stage, picked up a banjo, and played a delicate version of “What a Wonderful World” in defiance of the doomsayers.

Wherever she walked, she was treated like royalty. Women and children rushed up and hugged her.

She now lives in Brooklyn but said she would always consider Memphis her home. Like the rest of us, June went from concert to concert to hear the young artists.

The annual gathering is designed to allow music critics, agents, disc jockeys, and concert and festival bookers to get up close and personal with new artists and discover new talent.

It’s also a chance for singers and musicians to strut their stuff in the smaller, intimate venues of the Westin Hotel and gather new fans. There are organized workshops and concerts during the day and evening, though much of the action started at 10:30 p.m. and continued almost to daybreak in hundreds of hotel rooms converted into makeshift music spots. Sometimes a performer played for just one or two people, a memorable experience.

There were a few older performers here, like Tom Paxton and Janis Ian, who acted in more of a non-performing, advisory capacity. Ian received a well-deserved lifetime achievement award. Paxton said he was just there to be inspired by the young people.

Instead of the usual performances by folk icons like Livingston Taylor, John McCutcheon, and Eliza Gilkyson, visitors chose between blues singers from Memphis, storytellers from Ireland, brash bands from Australia, and new Americana voices from everywhere.

The toughest challenge is choosing who to see since every concert choice means missing hundreds of other mini concerts going on elsewhere.

In one, Josh White Jr. seemed a little baffled when his co-performer, 92-year-old jazz genius, composer, and orchestra conductor David Amram asked him to play “House of the Rising Sun” a second time. But he smiled and acquiesced.

Amram impulsively invited young musicians he just met hours earlier to join them. Violinist Rahel-Liis Aasrand of Estonia and percussionist Natalia Miranda from Guatemala nervously joined Amram and White in an impromptu jazz number, as if they had played together for years.

Amy LaVere has a voice much larger than her lithe frame which was dwarfed by the stand-up bass she played. Her voice is at once sweet and powerful, and her accompanying guitarist and violinist could not have been better.

Alice Hasen showed just how versatile the violin could be, switching gears from classical to folk to almost hip-hop.

There was music around every corner. In one room, Brit Shane Hennessy played an instrumental tribute to Chet Atkins. In another, the laid-back Aquarian Blood’s J.B. Horrell played the guitar upright between his knees while his wife, Laurel, sang along.

And the talent goes on and on, stretching out through the halls and into the early morning hours as it expands the definition of folk music far, far beyond the notion of a guy with a guitar.

For more information on the Folk Alliance and how to attend next year’s conference, go to folk.org.

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Strange Child” by Kathy Zhou

Happy Halloween from Music Video Monday!

We’ve got a suitably spooky selection for Samhain, a tale of witchcraft and devilry from Memphis chanteuse Kathy Zhou. You’ve seen her on keys at Zebra Lounge, and now she’s ready to reveal her own music.

“’Strange Child’ is an upbeat, spooky, theatrical retelling of a nightmare I had as a child,” Zhou says. “The nightmare takes place on a movie-set-like landscape and features a mystical witch, innocent animals, and my younger self. 

“As the song progresses, chaos ensues when the witch gets a subtle eerily fiery attitude and decides to wreak havoc upon the poor creatures around her. The song is powered by my piano and vocal narration, and features a talented team of local artists — Alice Hasen on violin and flute, Victoria Dowdy on background vocals and electric guitar, and Dee Torrell on bass. It also features L.A.-based drummer Sarah Mori.”

The video filmed at Ardent Studios by director Nolan Dean. Take a look!

If you’d like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Music Music Blog Music Features

Memphis Musicians Shine at Folk Alliance

Covid has taken a brutal toll on this week’s Folk Alliance International conference, a five-day festival where musicians and performers from around the world connect with critics, record producers, club owners, and festival bookers to make deals, and most importantly, play music.

But this, the 34th year, the conference looked very different.

Memphis was well-represented by violinist-singer Alice Hasen; guitarist and “elder” Andy Cohen, who mentored younger performers; singer, blues blaster, larger-than-life Rachel Maxann, who is currently on tour with Valerie June; “semi-average Joe” Johnson, who far exceeded his self-imposed moniker; and the immortal Muddy Waters sideman and regional musician “Steady Rollin’ Bob Margolin” among others.

There were about 25 percent fewer performers and guests than in previous years. Instead of the usual 1,000 performers from around the world with more than another thousand music lovers and industry people, this year there were less than 1,500 combined. Normally, the Westin Hotel in downtown Kansas City is alive with dozens of musicians and bands playing in lobbies, hallways and any other open space at all times and crowds of music lovers. There has been little of that bustle this year.

Well-known performers like Livingston Taylor, Tom Paxton, John McCutcheon, and others who are usually fixtures at the conference, attending to teach the young performers a thing or two, were missing in action.

Andy Cohen with Earwig Music Company plays guitar. (Credit: Karen Pulfer Focht)

Instead, the roster was awash with hundreds of unfamiliar names, young musicians trying to make a name for themselves in a competitive market. Many of the A-list performers, even the B-list acts, were no-shows because the conference was moved from its usual comfy time slot in February to May over Covid concerns. Aaron Fowler, an official with Local 1000 of the Traveling Musicians Union, said a reason for the lack of musicians was simple — they are out touring.

“After almost two years without being able to play because of Covid, everyone is taking advantage of [the covid slowdown] and going out to tour,” he said. “The conference was always held in February because that is a slow time of the year for touring. Hopefully, things will be back to normal next year when the conference returns in February.”

The conference consisted of daytime teaching events, covering subjects like the issue of race in folk music, recognizing performers with disabilities, and how to create songs for TikTok. There was a heavy emphasis on virtual concerts and how to take advantage of new technology which has changed the music industry.

There were four hours of live concerts every afternoon where dozens of artists perform in eight music halls in the hotel. The music continued at 10:30 p.m., when hundreds of performers put on intimate shows in dozens of hotel rooms, shorn of furniture, before audiences as small as one person. These shows went on into the wee hours of 3 or 4 a.m.

The word “folk” is also misleading. Consider it an umbrella term that covers country, blues, rock, traditional music from many nations and ethnic music. Sometimes, a combination of styles.

At a keynote performance on Friday afternoon, Madeleine Peyroux stunned the audience with excerpts from her internationally renowned stage show that combines jazz, folk, and blues music and the work of artists like Billie Holliday, Bessie Smith, and even Groucho Marx.

In a single sentence, she crystalized the importance of live concerts, “The living tradition of gathering — being together, produces a sound that can only be heard and felt when we gather in real-time and space,” she said, in one of the finest descriptions of the importance of live music.

Seeing performers play in a crowded room with bad lighting to a handful of people may sound less than ideal, but the music transcended the reality of the space and became a physical thing.

Bob Margolin, who sacrificed a large chunk of his performance time tuning his guitar and talking about his days with Muddy Waters, was a musical force that uplifted the small audience as he played some “straight and natural blues” with the help of bassist Freebo.

Memphis fiddler Alice Hasen performs her showcase at the Folk Alliance International conference being held in Kansas City, Missouri, the weekend of May 20, 2022. (Credit: Karen Pulfer Focht)

The Music Export Memphis room was busy all weekend as a handful of artists delivered one incredible set after another. Most surprising was violinist Alice Hasen, who sang some songs, including a striking plea to save the “Memphis Sands” from pollution in a song of the same name.

Her virtuoso violin performances were augmented by a looping device which allowed her to layer the melody over and over.

Memphis Singer Rachel Maxann delighted fans earlier with original songs and a powerful interpretation of Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine When She’s Gone,” right down to the requisite 26 repetitions of the phrase “I know.” She popped out of nowhere during Hasan’s show to sing along with “Dream of Rain,” Hasen’s song about the destruction of the environment.

Many Memphis residents will remember that Folk Alliance held its annual gathering in the city from 2007 to 2012 until it was lured away to Kansas City. The hardest part about picking a show is knowing that for every performance chosen you miss several hundred others. Veteran attendees are always asking each other for advice on which shows not to miss, trading names and info flyers. Acts give away hundreds of CDs to conference attendees in the hopes to secure bookings at future shows.

There were so many concerts going on it is difficult to choose the best, but some of the show-stopping performers to watch for include the husband and wife duo from Nashville by way of New Zealand and Peru, South For Winter; Buffalo Rose, the enthusiastic sextet of rocking folkies from Pittsburgh led by twin lead vocals from two talented women; James McCarthy, an American Irishman living in Hawaii where he delights playing Irish music; and Abby Posner, a gay woman who writes and performs incredible songs that defy genre. And hundreds of others.

The Folk Alliance defied the odds this year to stay open despite the ravages of Covid and the calendar and hosted more newcomer performers than ever. It will be interesting to see how the event will unfold in a mere 10 months from now when, hopefully, Covid will be just an unpleasant memory.

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We Recommend We Recommend

To the Max: Rachel Maxann at the Green Room

Memphis is a beacon. It attracts artists from the world over, inviting them to make a home — and an album or film or other work of art — here. One such artist is Rachel Maxann, the Ohio-born singer-songwriter who will be performing, with her band, on a double bill with Alice Hasen this weekend at Crosstown Arts’ Green Room.

Maxann first visited the Bluff City on a tour. “Memphis was one of my stops, and I fell in love with it,” she says. She adds that she thought it might make a nice place to make a home, though she didn’t expect to find herself back in the Bluff City so soon.

“I was doing cruise ships when the pandemic happened. Then of course everything sort of went to a halt. … I actually would consider Memphis my first actual ‘home’ in a while,” the singer explains, saying that while she enjoyed the freedom and the friends she made while performing on a cruise ship, even before the pandemic made it a necessity, she had begun to long for a place to settle down. To paraphrase the late country songsmith Tom T. Hall, that’s how she got to Memphis.

Now, with an ace group of Memphis musicians forming her band, Maxann is ready for her second performance at The Green Room — her first with a full group. Those performers are drummer Robb Aquadro, bassist Zach Riddick, and keyboardist/producer Doug Walker, and together they blend indie elements with what Maxann describes as “postmodern folklore.” “It’s becoming a very Memphis-made sound. It’s really exciting,” she says. That sound can be heard on the band’s recently released EP, Belonging to Forever. The EP’s “Goddess” is a stunning example, with haunting production and a soaring vocal performance from Maxann.

Alice Hasen + Rachel Maxann at Crosstown Arts, Saturday, October 2nd, 7:30 p.m.

Rachel Maxann’s Belonging to Forever EP
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Music Music Blog

Alice Hasen Pays Homage to Hamilton for July Fourth

Vermont native Alice Hasen has been a fixture on the Memphis music scene since 2016, and even longer in the region, having originally moved to Clarksdale, Mississippi from the Northeast. That was where the classically-trained violinist helped found Blackwater Trio, who mix folk and classic-rock-influenced originals. Here in the big city, she founded Alice Hasen and the Blaze to better focus on her own originals (as we covered in this Memphis Flyer feature). But her latest project, just in time for the patriotic fervor of the Fourth of July, is a tribute to another songwriter: Lin-Manuel Miranda.

That name is well known to any fan of the musical Hamilton, and indeed, Hasen is among the many millions who have been carried away by that production’s musical and historical milieu. On July 1st, she released a set of songs on her YouTube channel that she calls The Hamilton Sessions.

She describes it as “a nerdy passion project” and explains its origins in the regular live-stream performances she began under quarantine.

“Last year, I arranged and performed the majority of Act 1 of Hamilton on my Fiddler’s Friday live stream, on solo violin and loop pedal.  Since these streams were some of my most popular, I decided to enlist the help of Helena-based filmmaker Nolan Dean (who made the video for “Ghosts in the Water”), to film my adaptations of five songs from the musical.

“Unedited, live takes filmed on an empty warehouse floor in April 2021, the videos capture the authentic, earnest spirit of the musical. Each song is performed on violin and loop pedal, with occasional help from an octave pedal.”

The result is a perfect complement to your Fourth of July weekend, should you care to tune out the fusillades of explosives outside and dwell for a moment on the reason for the season. Below, we present Hasen’s version of “History Has Its Eyes On You.” Visit her YouTube channel to hear her other covers from Hamilton: “My Shot,” “Dear Theodosia,” “Stay Alive,” and “Yorktown.”  

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: FreeWorld and Friends

Music Video Monday is bringing you all the colors of the rainbow.

Memphis jam band monarchs FreeWorld have been around long enough to know nearly everyone in the Bluff City music scene. The Beale Street stalwarts have spent their pandemic-enforced time off the stage in the studio, says bassist Richard Cushing. “We’ve been in Cotton Row Studio for the past several months working on this amazing project, and we’re all extremely proud of the way it turned out! The end result of all our dedicated work is a city-wide, multi-genre, multi-racial, multi-cultural music video meant to celebrate and exemplify Memphis’ (and the whole world’s, for that matter) diversity, and was created purely as a way to showcase the concept, the lyrics, the voices, the faces, and the overarching idea of diversity as an essential quality of life!”

When I say FreeWorld knows everyone, I mean it. “D-UP (Here’s to Diversity)” boasts a whopping 23 vocalists and 15-member band, including Al Kapone, Hope Clayburn, Marcella Simien, Luther Dickinson, and Blind Mississippi Morris.

Cushing says “D-UP” was originally a FreeWorld tune that the band decided to rework to reflect the lyric’s ideals and celebrate the struggling Memphis music scene. “The song, with lyrics written by David Skypeck and accompanying video produced by Justin Jaggers, came bursting forth with new life through the amazing production talents of Niko Lyras, along with the instrumental and vocal contributions of over three dozen established entertainers, talented newcomers, and legacy artists (see below), who all came together and donated their time and talents to create a work of art that celebrates and exemplifies the musical, cultural, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual unity and diversity inherent in our city and the world beyond.”

Music Video Monday: FreeWorld and Friends

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

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Music Music Features

Alice Hasen Releases New Album: Violintro

Memphis music fans are well acquainted with violinist Alice Hasen, even if they don’t know it. She keeps busy as a member, with Seth Stroud and Walt Busby, of the Blackwater Trio, whose mix of folk and classic rock can frequently be heard at the Dirty Crow Inn or Lafayette’s Music Room. But she’ll become more well-known soon, as she celebrates the release of her first solo album, Violintro, at B-Side on Saturday, September 7th.

Fans of Blackwater’s sounds will be in for a surprise. With Violintro, Hasen gives full rein to her imagination and strives to stretch the boundaries of the fiddle. When I asked her about how the solo album came to be, I found it was the culmination of the lessons she’s learned from living in the South.

Memphis Flyer: Being from Vermont, where you studied classical violin, how did the move to this area affect your music?

PhotographyMiyabi

Alice Hasen: The stripping away of elements to their essence, in either writing or playing, has been one of the main things the South has given me. When I came down to the South, it was initially to Clarksdale, Mississippi. That was a change for me, culturally, but it was straight into the thick of things. Both there and in Memphis, there’s something about the energy of the river, in addition to what’s already here. Just being connected to the heartland, the center of the country. It’s sort of a mystical thing. There’s so much power churning past us right now.

Was relocating here from Clarksdale a challenge?

I’ve been surprised at how much I’ve been able to do here since I moved in 2016. It helped to already be in the South. I don’t think moving to Memphis would have been something I thought of doing otherwise. I wouldn’t have become a professional violinist if I hadn’t come down South. My mother is a flautist in the Vermont Symphony, and she’s influenced me and encouraged me. But she’s also warned me that the life of a musician’s really hard. I majored in music, but I wasn’t confident that I would be a performer. In the classical world, there’s a standard that you have to attain, and there are people that you’re supposed to sound like. Whereas in the non-classical world, you don’t need to sound like somebody else. It’s better if you don’t.

One thing I’ve realized here is that I’m the best at sounding like me. Not trying to do what the prescribed role as a fiddler might be. What I’m doing is off the beaten path of the usual fiddle genres. Everything but the kitchen sink, as it were.

Isn’t there still a bit of the classical aesthetic in your music?

I think so. But what I love doing is keeping the classical technique of intonation and sound, having that as my base pallet, then adding whatever I want. And applying it to genres that are not normally fiddle genres, so rock and jazz and funk and pop. And a little bit of hip-hop and disco on this album. There is one song that’s classical.

How would you distinguish your solo album from the Blackwater Trio?

The trio plays rock and folk, whereas my group is more jazz, funk, pop, and rock. Still coming from a place of rock but with more freedom to stretch the chords to a more jazzy place. Not all the songs are super fiddly, but there’s a violin stamp on everything. Whether it’s a section of classical strings, or a loop, or just a wandering, folksy sort of melody. The thing that binds the album together is an instrument, versus a single genre. So I feel more free to push the envelope, with ‘Where can I take the violin that it hasn’t been taken before?’

And the album artwork is mostly photos of Memphis locations. I’m really proud that there’s a Memphis element in every panel. Little things that, if you’re not from Memphis, you might not know. And a lot of the songs are about the city, too, or people in the city. It’s my homage to the city that’s made me what I am.
Alice Hasen album release show at B-Side, Saturday, September 7th, at 7 p.m.