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Blues Hall Of Fame Class Of 2024 Named

Every year at this time the world is reminded that the epicenter of the blues is in Memphis, Tennessee, with both the International Blues Challenge looming ahead and the announcement of the year’s inductees to the Blues Hall of Fame. The latter happened today, in anticipation of the induction ceremony taking place at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts on Wednesday, May 8th.

As usual, the list is a compelling cross-section of both the brilliant past and the vital contemporary heartbeat of the blues in all its permutations. This year’s inductees include Memphis’ own soul powerhouse, O.V. Wright, who died young in 1980; pioneering blues shouter and jazz singer Jimmy Rushing, also known by one of his greatest Count Basie-backed hits, “Mr. Five By Five”; Odetta, hailed as “The Mother Goddess of Folk Blues” by The New York Times; early twentieth century guitar virtuoso, Scrapper Blackwell; small-but-mighty vocalist Sugar Pie Desanto; Chicago guitarist Lurrie Bell; and one of Chicago’s leading bluesmen, fez-wearing Lil’ Ed Williams, nephew of J.B. Hutto, who’s toured relentlessly for decades with his Blues Imperials.

On the more writerly side, author, folklorist, professor, and lecturer William R. “Bill” Ferris will be honored in the Business, Production, Media, Academic category, and the book Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday by Angela Davis (Pantheon, 1998), is slated for recognition as a Classic of Blues Literature.

This year’s induction will mark an important recognition of Wright, who has not yet been recognized by the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, despite being a prolific hitmaker with Willie Mitchell on Hi Records. And many will cheer the inclusion of Odetta Holmes, a unique figure in the folk world, having been classically trained. Ultimately her repertoire spanned blues, spirituals, jazz, and songs from various folk and popular traditions, not to mention many original topical songs reflecting her commitment as a civil rights activist.

And Jimmy Rushing would be a must in any music hall of fame. Though best known for his years with the Count Basie Orchestra, the Oklahoma City native began his blues journey in California in 1923, where he played piano with Jelly Roll Morton before returning to Oklahoma. He also worked with Buck Clayton, Benny Goodman, Dizzy Gillespie, Earl “Fatha” Hines, and others through his career and was still going strong by the 1970 Monterey Jazz Festival. Yet he’ll chiefly be known for his hit records with the Basie band, starting in 1935, such as “Good Morning Blues,” “Going to Chicago,” and “Sent for You Yesterday and Here You Come Today,” which showcased his commanding vocal presence and made him a leading figure in the big band era, bringing blues to a broader audience.

The inductees include classic records as well, including the album Here’s the Man!!! by Bobby “Blue” Bland (Duke, 1962), and the singles “Driving Wheel” by Junior Parker (Duke, 1961), “I Ain’t Got You” by Billy Boy Arnold (Vee-Jay, 1955), “Key to the Highway” by Jazz Gillum (Bluebird, 1940), “Okie Dokie Stomp” by Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (Peacock, 1954), and the stone classic “Why Don’t You Do Right?” by Lil Green (Bluebird, 1941).

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Music Music Blog

The Blues Music Awards Go Live Once More

The Renasant Convention Center played host to scores of blues musicians and fans Thursday night, as the ceremonies of the 43rd Annual Blues Music Awards (BMAs) took place. Between handing out honors in over two dozen categories, the evening featured performances from many nominees, culminating in a joyous all-star jam by the night’s end.

It was especially welcome after the 2020 and 2021 ceremonies took place online only. Judith Black, president and CEO of the Blues Foundation, recognized the watershed moment in a statement: “What an amazing reunion after nearly three years of separation. It was an awards evening filled with awesome music, wonderful fellowshipping, and exciting honors. It was apparent everywhere you looked that people were thrilled to be back and, I am sure they could tell we were ecstatic to welcome everyone back.”

Tommy Castro snagged three BMAs: the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year (which he won previously in 2010 and 2008); the Album of the Year for Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came to Town; and Band of the Year for Tommy Castro & The Painkillers.

Sue Foley at the 2022 BMAs (Credit: Andrea Zucker)

Sue Foley, who we featured in this week’s music column, was one of two double-winners, with her Pinky’s Blues recognized as the year’s best Traditional Blues Album, and Foley herself garnering the Traditional Blues Female Artist – Koko Taylor Award, repeating her 2020 win in that category. Fresh off his Grammy win, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram took home Contemporary Blues Male Artist for the third consecutive year. He was also awarded Contemporary Blues Album, which he previously won in 2020.

Also on the local tip, the Best Emerging Artist Album award went to Rodd Bland & The Members Only Band for Live on Beale Street: A Tribute to Bobby “Blue” Bland. Native Memphian Eric Gales won in the category of Instrumentalist – Guitar, and longtime Memphis resident John Nemeth took home the award for Instrumentalist – Vocals.

The complete list of 2022 Blues Music Award winners:
Acoustic Blues Album: Dear America, Eric Bibb
Acoustic Blues Artist: Keb’ Mo’
Album of the Year: A Bluesman Came to Town, Tommy Castro
B.B. King Entertainer: Tommy Castro
Band of the Year: Tommy Castro & The Painkillers
Best Emerging Artist Album: Live on Beale Street: A Tribute to Bobby “Blue” Bland, Rodd Bland & the Members Only Band
Blues Rock Album: Resurrection, Mike Zito
Blues Rock Artist: Albert Castiglia
Contemporary Blues Album: 662, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram
Contemporary Blues Female Artist: Vanessa Collier
Contemporary Blues Male Artist: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram
Instrumentalist-Bass: Danielle Nicole
Instrumentalist-Drums: Tom Hambridge
Instrumentalist-Guitar: Eric Gales
Instrumentalist-Harmonica: Jason Ricci
Instrumentalist-Horn: Jimmy Carpenter
Instrumentalist Pinetop Perkins Piano Player: Mike Finnigan
Instrumentalist-Vocals: John Nemeth
Song of the Year: “I’d Climb Mountains,” written & performed by Selwyn Birchwood
Soul Blues Album: Long As I Got My Guitar, Zac Harmon
Soul Blues Female Artist: Annika Chambers
Soul Blues Male Artist: Curtis Salgado
Traditional Blues Album: Pinky’s Blues, Sue Foley
Traditional Blues Female Artist Koko Taylor Award: Sue Foley
Traditional Blues Male Artist: Taj Mahal

Meanwhile, the Blues Hall of Fame held this year’s induction ceremony on May 4th. The inductees included pre-war performer and songwriter Lucille Bogan; soul, blues, and rock ‘n’ roll star Little Willie John; renowned songwriter, artist Johnnie Taylor; and legendary songwriter Otis Blackwell.

Classic recordings that the Blues Hall of Fame honored this year were Sonny Boy Williamson II’s “Eyesight to the Blind,” Bobby “Blue” Bland’s “Farther Up the Road,” Roy Brown’s “Good Rocking Tonight,” B.B. King’s “Rock Me Baby,” “Rollin’ and Tumblin’” by the Baby Face Leroy Trio, and Bo Diddley’sclassic album, Bo Diddley. This year’s non-performing inductee was Mary Katherine Aldin, who worked as an editor, disc jockey, compiler, and annotator of blues and folk reissue albums. The Classic of Blues Literature entrant was Red River Blues: The Blues Tradition in the Southeast, written by British author Bruce Bastin.

Today, May 6th, the total blues immersion continues with a special reception at the Blues Hall of Fame for award-winning music photographer Jérôme Brunet, and the first volley of a four-day run for the International Blues Challenge.

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Music Music Features

Sue Foley’s Musical Journey Leads to the Blues Music Awards

This week will witness the most blues-intensive stretch of days that Memphis has seen in a long time. For one thing, the International Blues Challenge (IBC), which usually occurs in January, has now been folded into the same week as the Blues Music Awards (BMAs). And that’s not all: The Blues Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will kick things off on Wednesday, May 4th, followed by the Blues Music Awards on Thursday, May 5th. On Friday, May 6th, the Blues Hall of Fame will host a special reception for award-winning music photographer Jérôme Brunet, even as the IBC begins its four-day run.

Sue Foley, nominated for the BMAs’ Koko Taylor Award (Best Traditional Blues Female Artist) this year, with her Pinky’s Blues nominated for Album of the Year, exemplifies the international quality of the blues today, though she’s never participated in the IBC. Having grown up in Ottawa and Vancouver, Foley is proof positive of the blues’ power to reach across cultural boundaries. Now regarded as one of the finest blues guitarists alive (to which her Koko Taylor Award nomination attests), she became a devotee of the genre at an early age, moving to Austin, Texas, by the time she was 21. To trace her evolution as an artist, I spoke with her shortly before her other Memphis appearance — at the Beale Street Music Festival.

Memphis Flyer: Thank you for taking a moment to talk during your tour.
Sue Foley: Sure! We’re out with ZZ Top and Cheap Trick this week. It’s pretty fun. I got to sit in with Cheap Trick last night and I realized, “Oh my god, these guys were so big for me.” You forget — because I’m a blues artist, I haven’t thought about them for a long time. And then I was like, “Wait a minute, these guys are huge!”

I was really appreciating your guitar, “Pinky,” on your latest album. There’s a unique charm to a Fender Telecaster’s sound, isn’t there?
There is. It’s a really simple guitar. I’m a pretty staunch Tele player. Not that I can’t play other guitars, but there’s something about a Tele. A lot of it was Albert Collins, I think, who put the Tele on the map for me. “The Master of the Telecaster.” And when you think about the staunch Tele players, it’s such a unique set of people, from Steve Cropper to Muddy Waters.

A lot of country people like Teles. It’s not a huge blues guitar, but there are some pretty killer blues players that gravitated to Teles, too.

Are there any Memphis players who have been especially significant to you?
Yes, the most significant player for me is Memphis Minnie. She’s my favorite artist of all time. She was a guitar-playing woman and paved the way for all of us. Blues has a long history of women playing guitar, and I really attribute that to Minnie. Because who came before her, really? Nobody that had a career like she did. There was Sister Rosetta Tharpe, who was more gospel, but Minnie really, for me, paved the way. I’ve been playing her songs since I was a teenager. I love a lot of Mississippi artists. But Memphis Minnie’s still my number one.

Has it been challenging, being a woman in the blues world?
The funny thing is, I think the blues has always been receptive to strong women and women instrumentalists. So from the players themselves, I never felt any difficulty. Can you play or can you not play? This is just a hard business, period. So I’m not sure it’s any harder on women than men. It’s just different. A different set of obstacles we encounter. For instance, having children. Playing the blues really sets your life in a certain direction, as a female would-be child-bearer. But in the blues, there are a lot of female instrumentalists. More than ever. So I feel it’s more about the music. People just respect you if you’re a good player.

The 43rd Blues Music Awards will be held at the Renasant Convention Center on Thursday, May 5th. Doors 5 p.m. Visit blues.org/blues-music-awards for details.

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Music Music Blog

Blues Hall of Fame to Unveil R.L. Burnside Display

R.L. Burnside

This Saturday, The Blues Hall of Fame will unveil a new display of artifacts related to R.L. Burnside. Bruce Watson and Matthew Johnson of Fat Possum Records loaned the museum R.L. Burnside’s Stratocaster electric guitar, and also on display is the Grammy Nomination Medallion for Burnside on Burnside, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Album in 2002. Burnside recorded several albums for Fat Possum and was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2014.

The display will be unveiled to family members and fans at 10 a.m. on Saturday, April 9 and the public is invited to attend. Admission to the Blues Hall of Fame is $10 for adults, $8 for students 13 years and older, and free for children 12 years old and under. for more information on the Blues Hall of Fame, click here. 

Blues Hall of Fame to Unveil R.L. Burnside Display

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Rockin’ the Halls

“I have gladly given my life to Memphis music, and it has given me back a hundred-fold. It has been my fortune to know truly great men and hear the music of the spheres. May we all meet again at the end of the trail.” — Excerpted from the last words of Jim Dickinson.

Justin Fox Burks

The ceiling of the hallway leading to the museum’s second-floor space is lined with guitars that point the way to the exhibits.

Jim Dickinson liked to “watch shit rot.” Those are Dickinson’s own colorful words, of course. The storied producer, musician, Memphis Music Hall of Fame inductee, and provocateur, always placed “decomposition” at the heart of his personal aesthetic. He believed you could hear the sounds of decay in the songs he recorded with Alex Chilton and Big Star. You could see it represented visually in the paintings he labored over, then left outdoors for nature to complete.

Until very recently, visitors to Dickinson’s Zebra Ranch recording studio, were encouraged to touch a broken-down piano decomposing in the yard. In its former life, the crumbling instrument, propped up on cinder blocks like some old jalopy and covered in filth and leaves, had belonged to the Stax recording studio. It was in the building when Isaac Hayes and David Porter were songwriting partners cranking out hits like “Soul Man,” and “Wrap it Up.” It was there when Booker T. and the MG’s was the Stax house band, and when Otis Redding wrote “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay.”

Dickinson’s widow, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, says some people understood her husband’s fondness for decay. It also made a lot of people angry to see a beautiful piece of music history left out in the weather to fall apart.

Justin Fox Burks

Jim Dickinson’s piano detail.

Justin Fox Burks

Jim Dickinson’s piano

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum, describes what’s left of the old Stax piano as, “a piece of Jim Dickinson’s soul.” He says it’s a perfect example of the kinds of things a visitor can expect to find on display at the Memphis Memphis Music Hall of Fame museum, which opens for business this week at the corner of Second and Beale, in a cozy two-story space nestled between the newly relocated Hard Rock Cafe and Lansky Bros. Clothier to the King. The exhibits are primarily on the second floor, where the Lansky brothers once stored their formal wear. It’s the place where Johnny Cash was taken after he came to Bernard Lansky brandishing a Prince Albert tobacco tin, wanting to buy a black frock coat just like the prince’s. “That may be the beginning of the ‘Man in Black,”‘ Doyle speculates.
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, Executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, shows off a few of the museum’s treasures including Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cadillac, Johnny Cash’s black suit, and an original Elvis jumpsuit.

Although the two museums share administrative staff, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame isn’t Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum Jr. The latter Smithsonian-affiliated museum, located in the FedExForum, has been telling the story of Memphis music for the past 15 years. The Memphis Music Hall of Fame has only been inducting members since 2012. Its new brick-and-mortar facility will give visitors a chance to spend some digitally interactive quality time with the legendary heroes of Memphis music.
Justin Fox Burks

A customized emblem on Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cadillac.

“I asked myself, if I had the opportunity to hang out with the musicians we’re inducting each year, what would that cocktail party be like?” Doyle says, explaining his vision for the Hall of Fame exhibit. “I’m pretty sure it would not look like the Smithsonian. It would probably be weird. So we’re positioning the Memphis Music Hall of Fame as a museum where our exhibits are as outrageous as our inductees.”
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, discusses the layout of a large case with Pam Parham, director of operations.

That explains decorative touches like a ceiling hung with St. Blues guitars and the full-sized piano suspended upside down and transformed into an enormous light fixture. That’s also the philosophy behind both Dickinson’s decomposing keyboard, and a lifelike python built to accompany Larry Dodson’s costumes in the eye-popping Bar-Kays exhibit.
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, stands art the top of the stairs where a glowing piano stands in for a traditional light fixture.

“In Europe, they’re protecting Rembrandts,” Doyle says. “In Memphis, we’re protecting a pink shorts set with a cape that Rufus Thomas wore at WattStax. It is the funkiest-looking thing ever. But in Memphis it becomes an art museum treasure.”

Additional treasures collected in the Hall of Fame include an acoustic guitar that belonged to Memphis street sweeper and blues legend Furry Lewis. The well-documented guitar is on loan from a North Dakota collector, as is the original guitar case on which Lewis painted his name.

The seeds that grew into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame were planted in 2007, when Doyle asked his Rock ‘n’ Soul board to brainstorm new ways for the museum to enhance its mission to tell the Memphis music story and grow beyond the walls of the FedExForum. It was Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau President Kevin Kane who first suggested the idea of opening a hall of fame. The concept was an immediate hit, although nobody seemed to know for sure what form such an entity might take. “It could be a chicken dinner we have every year, with special performances and trophies,” Doyle says. “It might be a public art installation somewhere downtown. Or a comprehensive website with music and pictures.” Doyle thought a new off-site exhibit would be cost-prohibitive. Then, about a week after the hall’s first induction ceremony, Memphis Mayor A C Wharton approached the Rock ‘n’ Soul director with news that Beale Street’s Hard Rock Cafe was moving from its original location on the eastern stretch of Beale, into the old Lansky’s building. The club, Wharton said, was looking to partner with a museum.

“As the executive director, my heart sank,” Doyle jokes. “I could tell this was going to mean a lot of work.” With nearly six million visitors annually, Beale Street is Tennessee’s largest tourist destination, and although it’s home to the W.C. Handy House and Museum, there’s no visitor center where people can find out about the Memphis Zoo or the Stax Museum of American Soul Music or the newly opened Blues Hall of Fame on South Main or anything else.

“We felt like we could assist in doing all that by having a presence here,” Doyle says. Between the licensing appropriate music and photos and the hiring of top-notch music writers and designers, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame’s website was costing the Rock ‘n’ Soul museum $90,000 a year. “That’s a good-size burden for a not-for-profit museum,” Doyle says. “Fortunately, because of our relationship with the Memphis Grizzlies and because of our location at the FedExForum, we’ve been able to sustain that and grow our mission outside the walls they provide for us.”

Even in a tourist-rich zone like Beale Street, that kind of “assist” might not sound like a big deal. But Memphis music tourism is already on the rise and Elvis Presley’s Graceland Public Relations Director Kevin Kern thinks the new Hall of Fame will only help to promote that upward trend. “[It] will add to our story, while expanding the list of options for the traveler to keep them in town,” Kern says. Memphis, he adds, has finally grown into something “more than a long weekend destination.”

More than 600,000 tour Graceland annually, making it Memphis’ second largest music-related destination after Beale Street, and the second-most-visited residence in America after the White House. More than 150,000 people visit Sun Studio annually, and another 60,000 tour the Rock ‘n’ Soul museum and the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.  

Tim Sampson, communications director for the Soulsville Foundation, agrees with Kern. “Our attendance at Stax is way up,” he says. “We’ve got people here in the museum from every continent every single day.”

Sampson welcomes the new Memphis Music Hall of Fame, just as he welcomed the Blues Hall of Fame, which opened in May. He credits the recent boom in music tourism to the fact that music-related destinations are more collaborative than competitive. He also believes that additions to the landscape such as music-related murals and an increasing number of historical markers and museums also help the Memphis tourism industry.

Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul hit 60,000 tourists annually in 2013, and had its best month ever in April. Each subsequent month has broken previous records. Doyle thinks this is strong evidence that the stage is perfectly set for a facility like the Memphis Music Hall of Fame.

“There is no other city in America that can host its own music Hall of Fame,” Doyle boasts. “Some states can. Alabama has one. Texas has one. But Memphis is the epicenter of American music.

“When we first sat down and started coming up with the names of potential inductees it was so easy,” Doyle says. “There was Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley, Otis Redding, Rufus Thomas, Al Green, Isaac Hayes, The Staple Singers, and on and on. In that first evening, we listed 300 well-known performers from different musical traditions — jazz, blues, rural field-holler-type music, jug bands, rock ‘n’ roll, rockabilly, gospel, R&B, rap, hip-hop. In a very short time, our list of potential inductees became enormous.”

On the morning before his latest documentary, Best of Enemies, was scheduled to screen in Los Angeles, author and Memphis music historian Robert Gordon offered some perspective regarding the potential of a Memphis Music Hall of Fame compared to other music towns.

“Lots of cities can say they’re home to a star,” he said. “Buddy Holly’s from Lubbock, Texas, for example. And so is Waylon Jennings.  So they can make a little Buddy Holly shrine in Lubbock. But Memphis? What decade do you want to talk about? What musical genre?

“People ask how can it be possible that Carl Perkins wasn’t selected until the third year of the Memphis Hall of Fame?” says Gordon. “He’s the first guy to have a number-one record on the pop, country, and R&B charts at the same time,” Gordon says. “And that frustrates some people. It’s something we should celebrate. Our music history has been so rich that we can not induct Carl Perkins until the third year, because each year we’ve wanted to recognize our musical diversity.

“What I want to know is, when will Booker Little get into the Hall of Fame?” Gordon asks, rhetorically. Even though Little died young and his name isn’t a household word, his contributions were significant. It may be next year or 10 years from now, but the Manassas graduate and hard-bop trumpet innovator who performed alongside John Coltrane will eventually be enshrined alongside the better known heroes of Sun, Hi, and Stax.

The answer doesn’t matter, Gordon finally concludes, because the Hall of Fame isn’t a popularity contest.

In a telephone interview, Mary Lindsay Dickinson remembered the day the big truck with “Amro” painted on the side pulled up to the family’s Zebra Ranch recording studio in Coldwater, Mississippi. It had come to take her late husband’s special piano to its final resting place in the Memphis Music Hall of Fame. “There are no better piano movers in the world, I don’t think,” she said. But in spite of their expert handling, the wooden portions of the once-fine instrument fell into shreds as the movers lifted it from its resting place. “It had rotted completely,” Dickinson said, unable to conceal her delight that her late husband Jim had gotten exactly what he wanted.

Spooner Oldham, the great keyboard player, known for his work with Bob Dylan and Aretha Franklin, described Dickinson’s piano as the perfect metaphor for both mortality and immortality. He told Mary Lindsay that even when the wooden bits on the outside had returned to ashes and dust, “there will still be a harp inside.”

“And a harp is what was left,” Dickinson said, reiterating Doyle’s desire to collect edgy artifacts. “The harp was left. And when it finally goes up in the hall of fame it will be the oddest, ugliest, and most unique exhibit in any museum anywhere in the world.”

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame opens to the public on July 27th at 126 Second. Hours of operation will be 10 a.m.-7 p.m. 205-2532 memphismusichalloffame.com/

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Rum Boogie Cafe Celebrates 30 Years

Suzanne Mcclain

The hanging guitars at the Rum Boogie Cafe.

The Rum Boogie Cafe will celebrate 30 years on Beale this weekend with a whole slew of live shows. Opened on Friday, May 8th in 1985, the Rum Boogie Cafe has been the home of many legendary Beale Street performers, in addition to being a watering hole for tourists and locals alike. The anniversary activities will follow the official opening of the Blues Foundation’s Blues Hall of Fame, see below for the complete list of performers and show times.

Friday, May 8th

1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
The 4th Annual Beale Street Mess Around featuring: Janiva Magness, Jarekus Singleton, Brandon Santini, Mick Kolassa, Igor Prado, “Monster” Mike Welch, Anthony Geraci, Annika Chambers, Jeff Jensen, John Primer, Bob Corritore, and many more. $10, all ages.

6:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
Tas Cru and his Band of Tortured Souls.

10:30 p.m.-2:00 a.m.
Vizztone Label Group presents the Blues Party On Beale. This All-Star showcase will be hosted by former Muddy Waters sideman and multiple Blues Music Award winner Bob Margolin, featuring special guests: Brandon Santini, Amanda Fish, Dave Gross, Long Tall Deb, Rob Stone, Bob Corritore, and many more.

Saturday, May 9th

5:30-8:30 p.m. at Fubar (Rum Boogie upstairs)
Women in Blues Showcase:
An afternoon of the finest emerging blues talent.

9:00 p.m. – 1:00 a.m.
Gracie Curran and the High Falutin’ Band.