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Gonerfest 15: Thursday

A week ago, the man in the chainmail and shimmering cape would have been broiling in the Memphis heat, but rain swept in on cooler winds, and the first night of Gonerfest 15 is just cool enough for the assembled punks, rockers, and music fans to break out their denim jackets — or, in some cases, chainmail.

The emcee takes the Hi-Tone stage just after 9 p.m., wearing sunglasses and leather, and says a few kind words about Chris Beck, Goner’s “Muddy Spear,” who recently passed away from brain cancer. Members of the crowd shouted that they wished Beck could be there, displaying a communal spirit central to the festival.

Music fans come from the world over for Gonerfest, and there always seems to be a happy reunion happening in the parking lot or by the bathrooms. Then the emcee kicks off the night’s festivities, introducing the “King of the Gras,” who “tours in a cage on wheels … just take it  — Bênní!” Then the man in the chainmail hood smiles and steps onstage and up to a stack of keyboards and synthesizers. And he conjures magic.

Allison Green

BÊNNÍ, master of analog synths

Bênní’s set is dark and hypnotic, but there’s a touch of humor in his deadpan stage patter delivery as he sets up each synthesized swirl of sound. He speaks (and sings) into a talk box, explaining that the diamond man character was a vision that haunted him until he put it in a song: “This is who I am — a diamond man.”

The New Orleans-based musician plays an instrumental song in 6/8 time. It sounds at once sinister and rising, like an old-school video game theme played on a church organ at the bottom of a well. “I haven’t played that one in a while,” Bênní says casually. His delivery is wry, as if to nudge the audience and say, “You know we’re just getting started, right?”

Between sets, the garage-rock true believers slip outside to smoke cigarettes or scarf down barbecue from a smoker pulled behind an RV. Cincinnati-based Bummer’s Eve take the stage after a quick turnover, summoning the crowds with violently strummed guitar. The band is raucous and bopping, fuzzed-out punk. They crash into a noise breakdown, a wall of feedback and distortion, before plunging seamlessly back into the rhythm of the song. Where Bênní’s set pulsed, Bummer’s Eve shakes and rattles. Their set seemed to end far too soon.

The Hi Tone, already crowded for opening sets on a Thursday night, swells with the addition of late arrivals. There is a constant sense of rising energy throughout the night, a shared knowledge that this is only the first night of the festival. Conversations buzz and grow louder as the ever-growing mounds of beer cans in the trash continue to rise, and people fight to be heard over each other and the ringing in their ears. People dance and bop, and Memphis-based Aquarian Blood and Tampa party-rockers Gino & the Goons continue to escalate the energy. Aquarian Blood wails, frenetically running chromatic scales up their fret boards, urging the party to a wilder pitch.

Aquarian Blood

Aquarian Blood build a bomb, and Gino & the Goons light the fuse. They’re party punk, solid songs punctuated by grunts of “ooh!” and “uh!” The Florida-based band plays on as the singer shouts from onstage, “You’re not dancing, we’re not stopping!” Then the rhythm changes, and the singer rips into a chorus of “hip-hip-hypnotic” before everything crashes to a stop with a squall of feedback. Lydia Lunch Retrovirus is up next.

Lydia Lunch, backed by a band so tight they seem telepathic, is the penultimate performer on the opening night of Gonerfest. Dressed in black and laughing, she warns the crowd of her band’s “nasty,” “raunchy” ways. Her guitarist strikes a deft balance between crunchy, palm-muted riffs and wild, dissonant squeals of noise. The rhythm section is locked in, propelling the performance forward through moments of angry, brittle complexity and explosive breakdowns. Red and green lights seem to drip from the Hi Tone sign above the stage. Lunch’s voice floats above it all, singing, screaming, and crooning. Local singer and multi-instrumentalist Luke White leans in to shout in my ear, “She’s pretty badass” before admiring the guitar and bass tones.

Jasmine Hirst

Lydia Lunch

White is waiting to go onstage with Harlan T. Bobo, who is closing out night one of the festival. Lunch’s vocals rise, casting a dark spell, while the band pulses with barely restrained energy and she chants, “There’s something witchy in the air.” The music rises to a final crescendo, and Lunch, a master performer, relinquishes the stage with a shouted, “Start the disco!”

Harlan T. Bobo’s set is magnetic, hypnotic. He looks like a man possessed, his eyes going wide as he sings, his smile like Conrad Veidt’s in The Man Who Laughs. He has the strangely compelling charisma of someone who hears holy voices.

His band crafts a dark atmosphere, making them a perfect bookend to Bênní’s darkly filmic opening set, a complement to the eclectic lineup. Frank McLallen’s bass lines are expert, a framework on which to hang the keyboard swells and whine of a slide guitar.

Bobo’s second song is “Human,” the simmering opening track from his new A History of Violence. The song builds to an electric instrumental ending, setting a fevered energy level that the band maintains for several songs, before Bobo pulls out a harmonica and eases up on the gas slightly, giving the captive audience a moment to catch its breath.

It’s the briefest of moments, though, before Bobo starts up a swinging, country-inflected song. It’s an inspired performance, and a fitting end to the opening day of the festival.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11

We featured 50 Memphis music videos in 2017 for our regular Music Video Monday blog post. Now it’s time to recognize some greatness! We scored videos from 1-5 in three categories: Concept, Execution, and Song, then tweaked the order to resolve ties, of which there were several. The results give you a broad look at Memphis music in 2017. Here we go with part one of our countdown!

20. Me & Leah — “Moving So Fast”
The Midtown folkie duo of Leah Keys and Jeff Hulett scored with this melancholy montage of home movies, featuring Jeff’s father at a formative age.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (10)

19. Porcelan — “Real Thing Don’t Change”
Memphis soulstress and David Porter protege Procelan got real with love story set to her powerful piano ballad.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (8)

18. Namazu – “Bactine”
Put on your sailor duds and crank up the amps to go mini golfing with Namazu! Bonus: Bumper boats!

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (11)

17. Alan Scoop – “Sweet Love”
Katori Hall directed this homecoming story starring Memphis stunner Rosalyn Ross.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11

16. Aquarian Blood –  “Parasite Inside”
Ben Rednour created a NSFW psychedelic snack cake for the trippy Goner band.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (3)

15. Alyssa Moore – “Not Of This Earth”
Director (and drummer) John Pickle went minimal for the pummeller from Midtown metal It girl Alyssa Moore.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (2)

14. Infinity Stairs – “Alternative Facts”
2017 was the year of lies, and Infinity Stairs created the retro synth anthem the lying clowns deserve.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (4)

13. Epps – “Steps”
Director Vivian Grey won the Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival competition with this black and white thriller.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (7)

12. Valerie June – “Got Soul”
2017 was the year Valerie June broke big, touring the world in support of her album The Order Of Time, which closes with this barn burner.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (6)

11. The Band Camino – “Who Says We’re Through”
The University of Memphis rockers go Western in this excellently produced video.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2017: 20-11 (9)

Tune in on New Year’s Day for the rest of the list!

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Aquarian Blood

Today’s Music Video Monday has a taste for blood.

Aquarian Blood started life as a home recording project by husband-and-wife duo JB Horrell and Laurel Horrell. JB is the guitar strangling mastermind behind Ex-Cult, and Laurel is a former member of feminist punkers Nots. The sound they created together is grounded in Memphis punk, incorporating songwriting influences as diverse as 1960s psychedelia and industrial noise. Their new album on Goner Records, Last Nite In Paradise just dropped last Friday. You can see them perform songs from the new album at their record release party at Murphy’s this Friday night. The first music video, directed by Benjamin Rednour, gives the song “Parasite Inside” the psychedelic setting it deserves.

Music Video Monday: Aquarian Blood

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

New Memphis Music

Brandon Taylor — Radio Ghost (Madjack Records)

Release Date: Available Now

Mississippi transplant Brandon Taylor camped out at Jack Oblivian’s place while recording the album Radio Ghost, but don’t expect to hear any garage-rock guitar licks on Taylor’s folky debut. Radio Ghost was released last December, a truly dismal month to release new music, so we’re going to pretend that Radio Ghost is a 2017 release for Taylor’s sake. Recorded at Royal Studios, Taylor has an A-list of guest appearances, including Luther and Cody Dickinson, Shannon McNally, and Boo Mitchell in the producer’s chair. The album is available at all local record stores.

Terry Prince and the Principles — You Are Here (self-released)

Release Date: Available Now

Terry Prince and the Principles dropped this four-song EP on the second-to-last day of 2016, and the songs on You Are Here are just as indebted to later-era Lou Reed as they are to “Blue Album”era Weezer, especially the song “Time Warp at the Drive-in, Part II.” The other three songs on You Are Here are just as likely to get stuck in your head. Fun fact: Flyer copy editor Jesse Davis plays guitar and sings in this band.

Valerie June — The Order of Time (Concord Music Group)

Release Date: January 27th, 2017

The first new album from Valerie June in three years drops at the end of this month. After debuting the song “Astral Plane,” NPR ran a lengthy interview with June in which she revealed that she originally wrote the song for Massive Attack, and Ann Powers compared June’s writing to Alice Walker or Bell Hooks. June will be on tour with Sturgill Simpson and Norah Jones to kick off the year, but hopefully a Memphis date is in the works.

Aquarian Blood — Last Nite in Paradise (Goner Records)

Release Date: February 10th, 2017

The Midtown family-freak band, Aquarian Blood, will release their debut album on Goner Records next month, and if you enjoyed either tape the band has released, or their singles on Goner and Pelican Pow Wow (New Orleans), then this LP is probably already on your radar. If you’ve missed the band’s live show but you’re a fan of JB Horrell’s previous offerings (Noise Choir, Moving Finger, Reginald), “weird punk” earth-shattering guitar riffs, or megaphones, this is the group for you. The perfect band for inducing an acid flashback. Look for a track premiere via Noisey sometime this week.

Southern Avenue — Southern Avenue (Stax Records, Concord Music Group)

Release Date: February 24th, 2017

Named after the city street that runs from the easternmost city limits all the way to Soulsville, Southern Avenue have been making waves since their formation, and singer Tierinii Jackson graced the cover of our Summer Music Issue last July. Since then, the band landed a deal with Stax, did some extensive touring, and somehow found time to record their debut album. Produced by Kevin Houston (North Mississippi Allstars, Lucero), the 10-track debut from Southern Avenue features guest appearances by Luther Dickinson (do we see a trend developing here?) and Marc Franklin of the Bo-Keys, among others.

Southern Avenue is a band that needs little introduction at this point, but you can expect this album to show Stax fans far and wide that Memphis soul is still very much intact. While the band will do some pretty extensive touring following the release of their new album, they do have two dates at Lafayette’s Music Room and the Rum Boogie Café booked early in the year.

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Music Music Blog

Gonerfest Friday: Woozy, Brutal, Beautiful

Gonerfesters got a running start on Friday with an afternoon superkegger at Memphis Made’s taproom on Cooper. Memphis Made created a pair of custom beers for this year’s festival: A tart saison IPA and Gonerbraü, a smooth creme ale. Both proved popular with the rockers assembled in the sun to watch a four-band bill. New Orlean’s Trampoline Team turned in the most turnt tunes of the afternoon.

Yes, I just wrote that sentence. I probably should have just deleted it, but I’ll leave it to show the effects 48 hours of pounding beats are having on my synapses.

Trampoline Team riles up the crowd at Memphis Made.

The eventful Hi Tone Friday night got rolling with Opposite Sex from Deundin, New Zealand. They led with an impressive one-two punch in bassist/screamer Lucy Hunter and guitar squealer Reg Norris, who is able to get an huge range of sounds from just a wah pedal and a souped up stomp box. (TurboRat represent!)

Opposite Sex

The Hi Tone was filling up quickly as Memphis family affair Aquarian Blood howled to life. The husband and wife duo of Memphis hardcore OG JB Horrell and Laurel Fernden, supported by drummer Bill Curry and Coletrane Duckworth (son of Memphis guitar legend Jim Duckworth), gets better every time I see them. Between Horrell trying his best to strangle his ax into submission and Fernden switching between a clean microphone and one with rubbery echo effects—sometimes within a single lyrical line—they sound like no one else.

Aquarian Blood

When I walked into the Hi Tone Big Room to see Power killing it, I briefly wondered if I had stepped back in time to 1974. Like their countrymen Wolfmother, the Melbourne, Australia trio have embraced butt rock, mullets and all. And the Gonerfest audience went right there with them.

Power and the crowd.

I have to admit I totally missed Buck Biloxi and the Fucks. I was visiting the food truck out front for a much needed gutbomb burger when the party (it may have been a hip hop show, I wasn’t clear on the details) across the street at the erupted into a shirt-ripping brawl. There was at least one shot fired, but no one was hurt, and cop cars quickly swarmed the area. It was a strange, tense scene: on one side of the street, an African American crowd rapidly dispersing as police arrived; on the other side of the street, sweaty, mostly white punks from all over the world watching with a combination of horror and fascination, wondering if we were going to be witnesses to some kind of racially charged incident that has dominated the news in 2016. Fortunately, the first wave of cops to arrive seemed focused on de-escalating the fighting, and the situation cleared up without further violence or—judging by the lack of ambulance—injury.

The Blind Shake demonstrates unorthodox guitar technique.

Flashing blue lights provided the background as The Blind Shake took the stage. The Minnesota brothers Jim and Mike Blaha, who describes themselves as an “extraterrestrial backyard surf party”, are Gonerfest regulars. This year, they topped themselves with the tightest, snarlingest set I’ve seen from them. “Shots fired next door,” Jim said from the stage. “It’s an old marketing ploy.”

Black Lips

When 1 AM rolled around, the wrung out crowd milled around, trying to catch our breath as Black Lips meandered onto stage. The original Gonerfest grew out of a Black Lips show, and the band represents something of a garage rock ideal. The sound they have been chasing for the last decade and a half is something like a drunken 60s girl group backup band practicing in the stairwell where John Bonham recorded “When The Levee Breaks”. This is the strain of punk rock that originated in Memphis with the immoral Panther Burns. With the addition of a new saxophonist, the Black Lips pushed ever closer to the Panther Burns party vibe, gathering steam with each woozy rocker until “Katrina”, their 2007 underground lament of New Orleans devastation sent the crowd into a frenzy from which we didn’t emerge until the lights came up.

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Music Music Blog

Andy Human and the Reptoids at Murphy’s

Tomorrow night Oakland art-punks Andy Human and the Reptoids kick off their east coast tour with a show at Murphy’s. Performing under Andy Human and in the band Lenz, the Oakland outsider has cranked out many memorable punk offerings, and Thursday’s show should pack a punch, especially with locals Aquarian Blood opening the show. Check out songs from both bands below, with a bonus Andy Human track because the song rules. 

Andy Human and the Reptoids at Murphy’s (3)

Andy Human and the Reptoids at Murphy’s (2)

Andy Human and the Reptoids at Murphy’s

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Music Music Features

Black Lips at the Hi-Tone

The kings of sleazy garage rock return to Memphis this Thursday for a show at the Hi-Tone Cafe. Formed in 1999, the Black Lips quickly climbed the garage-rock ranks on the strength of their unpredictable live shows and throwback recording techniques, and the band actually played some of their first shows in Memphis at places like the People’s Temple and other now-defunct warehouse spaces. Before landing a deal with Vice Records, the band made a name for themselves with stellar releases on In the Red Records, in addition to a rigorous tour schedule that sent the band around the world, including a short jaunt into the Middle East.

While bands like the Strokes were handed the “bad boy” guitar-rock torch by MTV and every other significant media outlet in the early 2000s, the Black Lips are the real heirs to the garage-rock iron throne. Sure, they’ve made records with Mark Ronson and Patrick Carney sitting in the producer’s chair, but the band’s earlier material, specifically 2005’s Let It Bloom, is some of the best garage rock to ever be created. The band’s songs have become more polished as they work with big name producers, but the Black Lips live show has always been their strongest attribute, and that aspect of the Black Lips experience is still very much intact.

On tour with the Black Lips is Chain and the Gang, the deconstructed rock band led by underground icon Ian Svenonius. Svenonius also played in the Make-Up and the extremely influential Washington, D.C., punk band Nation of Ulysses, but Chain and the Gang is his weirdest project to date, which is saying a lot considering Svenonius has never been a predictable songwriter. Locals Aquarian Blood open the show. You don’t want to miss this one.

The Black Lips, Thursday, July 7th at the Hi-Tone Cafe. 8p.m. $15

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Music Music Features

Spray Paint Live at the Hi-Tone

Austin, Texas, noise rockers will celebrate the release of their new album Feel the Clamps this Monday night in the Hi-Tone’s small room. Goner Records is releasing the album, and the vinyl was pressed at Memphis Record Pressing, making Spray Paint one of the newest out-of-town bands to take advantage of the pressing plant. After releasing records on notable underground labels like S-S, Upset the Rhythm, Homeless Records, and Monofonus Press, the Austin three-piece took their talents to Goner Records, a label that has already had a killer year with their release of the Angry Angles compilation. The show will serve as a release show for Feel the Clamps and for a single featuring songs that didn’t make the album. If post punk or noise rock is your thing, Spray Paint are certainly worth the price of admission.

Spray Paint

Rounding out the bill is Aquarian Blood, another Goner Records band who have been working on their new album for most of the year. The band features members of many notable local groups, but almost all the tracks the band plays were cooked up by singer/guitarist JB Horrell in his home studio/practice space. Goner Records has been staying true to releasing some of the best garage/punk the city has to offer, and many will be happy to hear a new LP from Memphis powerhouse NOTS is also coming sometime this year. As for the Hi-Tone, the venue has a stacked calendar throughout the summer, including shows from bands like Every Time I Die, the Black Lips, Chain and the Gang, and Goner alumni Guitar Wolf. Get to the Hi-Tone by 9 p.m. on Monday and start your week off with some noisy punk from two bands in their prime. What could possibly go wrong?

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Music Music Features

Sick Thoughts at the Buccaneer

Baltimore’s Drew Owen brings his home-recording wrecking machine to the Buccaneer this Thursday night when his band Sick Thoughts play with locals Aquarian Blood and Gimp Teeth. Since claiming the garage-punk crown from New Orleans provocateur Buck Biloxi last year, Owen has placed himself at the top of the trash heap, with his only real competition in massive-output perhaps being Martin Meyer of Lumpy and the Dumpers (St. Louis). Sick Thoughts released new music almost every month of 2014, throwing songs out in the form of singles, cassette tapes, and EPs. By the end of the year, Owen had worked with just about every relevant garage punk label in the game including Slovenly, Goner, Kenrock, Goodbye Boozy, and Going Underground.

Josh Miller

Sick Thoughts

With so much recorded output released in such little time, it comes as no surprise that Owen frequently changes up his sound, dabbling in power pop, hardcore punk, and even “techno synth sludge metal.” But no matter what genre of music he’s tackling/making fun of, Owen’s approach is almost immediately identifiable. And while it might be easy to knock Sick Thoughts for taking the quantity over quality route, Owen’s prolific discography seems to be the product of one thing: he’s having fun. And I don’t mean he’s having fun in an ironic pizza-party-thrash-metal way, or a tongue-in-cheek, dance-around-onstage-in-my-underwear type of way. His music is still authentic and believable, it’s just obvious that this perma-teen from Baltimore is enjoying what he’s doing, which is refreshing in a genre that has plenty of bands exuding a fake, tough-guy attitude.

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Music Music Features

Grizzlies, Goner team up for Cooper-Young Fest

This Saturday the Memphis Grizzlies and Goner Records will host an afternoon-long celebration of local music at Cooper-Young Fest. The Grizzlies will have a tent designated specifically for season-ticket holders, and Goner Records will open at 9 a.m. to kick off the festivities. While Cooper-Young Fest is normally an arts-and-crafts/drinking affair, the music on both sides of Young Avenue is also usually worth paying attention to. The Memphis Grizzlies/Goner Records stage sits at the intersection of Young and Meda and features five different brands of local rock-and-roll.

Hosoi Bros kick things off at 12:30 p.m., bringing their brand of skate-rock-meets-heavy-metal to the early hours of the festival. Hosoi Bros feature past and present members of Evil Wizard Eyes and Aquarian Blood and should pack a punch to get the show rolling. And because Hosoi Bros don’t play live very often, metal fans should plan to get to the festival early. Robby Grant (Big Ass Truck, Vending Machine, Mouserocket) calms things down a bit when he takes the stage at 1:30 p.m. Grant announced earlier this year that Let the Little Things Go was his last effort under the moniker Vending Machine, so Saturday’s gig could be a chance for Grant to showcase some new material.

Amurica.com

Mark Edgar Stuart

Aquarian Blood bring their guitar-shredding garage rock to the stage at 2:30 p.m. Expect things to get weird. Mark Edgar Stuart is up next, playing at 3:30 p.m. Stuart will perform as Mark Edgar Stuart & the Hot Mess, making for a rare MES appearance with a full band. Local synth-punk band NOTS close the whole thing down at 4:30 p.m.