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Making Movies: A Band of the World (Including Memphis)

Unlike your typical band from, say, Austin or Philadelphia, it’s hard to geolocate the band Making Movies, appearing this Thursday, February 23rd at The Green Room at Crosstown Arts. Technically, they’re from Kansas City, but the band’s diversity showcases just what a world city that Missouri metropolis has become.

Consider the personnel: founding singer, guitarist, and songwriter Enrique Chi, and his brother, bassist Diego Chi, are Panamanian; percussionist Juan-Carlos Chaurand is of Mexican descent; and drummer Duncan Burnett specializes in Black gospel.

Together, they’ve crafted a unique brand of rock blended with African, African American, and Latin American rhythms and structures. Singing in both English and Spanish, playing electric guitars and indigenous instruments, Making Movies has developed a sound that Rolling Stone calls “an eclectic blend of rumbero percussions, delicate organs, and grungy fuzz rock.”

Percussive, grungy fuzz rock? Sounds pretty Memphis. But recently the band took it a step further and recorded with Hi Rhythm organist Rev. Charles Hodges (featured in this Memphis Flyer cover story) and the Sensational Barnes Brothers (featured here). With these cameos, “Calor,” from their 2022 album Xopa, puts a Memphis flavor front and center. The song is also featured in the band’s PBS music documentary AMERI’KANA, aired in April 2022 in various markets.

Thursday’s show will feature the Barnes Brothers, lending the band’s Memphis appearance a special magic. Soon they’ll be South by Southwest (SXSW)-bound, where they may well connect with other collaborators. That list often includes longtime band champion Steve Berlin of Los Lobos, but Panamanian songster Rubén Blades has also cowritten with them, and other Making Movies collaborators include Hurray for the Riff Raff, trumpeter Asdru Sierra of Ozomatli, Puerto Rican salsero Frankie Negròn, and the women’s mariachi group Flor de Toloache.

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “A Happy Day Is Coming” by Richard Wilson

As Memphis Tigers football coach Ryan Silverfield said after his team beat Navy in Annapolis on Saturday, “It’s been a hard week.”

If the burst of high-profile violence in Memphis has you down and anxious, singer/songwriter Richard Wilson has a little burst of positivity for you on this Music Video Monday. “A Happy Day Is Coming” bounces along on a jaunty beat. The gospel tones of the B3 organ are provided by Memphis legend Charles Hodges. As seen in the video, produced by Carrie Leah Sanders, it was recorded at Royal Studios with Boo Mitchell behind the board.

Music can’t cure everything that ails us, but it does help you feel better for a little while, and that feeling is the beginning of hope. Even as we mourn and debate now, let Richard Wilson remind you that this, too, will pass.

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

Rev. Charles Hodges: A Life in Music That Reads Like a Sermon

When you have a chance to speak to a musical innovator like the Rev. Charles Hodges, you don’t think twice. Here, still living and performing among us, is a man who redefined the place of organ in soul music, shaping the hits of a generation by way of forging his own voice. Now, Hodges has found his voice on the printed page as well with the release of his authorized biography, My Story: Charles Edward Hodges Sr., written by Delois Jackson.

One side benefit of the book’s release this year has been that Hodges is eager to talk about his life. And, sitting down to hear him tell the tales, one realizes that the book, with only about 80 pages of narrative, barely scratches the surface. That may be because of the roundabout way the book came into being.

“This book is more of an introduction,” Hodges explains. “I didn’t use a professional writer, but she is known for her work. Delois Jackson. She’s a member at the church where I’m an associate minister, and she noticed my shoes and the way I dressed. That captured her imagination — she didn’t know anything about me. So she started asking members of the church, and they’d say, ‘You don’t know him?’ One day she came to me and asked if I’d be interested in her doing a book on me, and I said, ‘Yeah, that’d be kind of interesting.’”

Such understatement is typical of a man whose watchword is humility. “It’s nice, feeling like a hero,” he says, “but I’m one of those humble heroes, I guess.” That quality is echoed in the book itself, which bears an old-school formality and dignity that is rare in music biographies. Indeed, it captures some of the spirit of the ministry to which Hodges has dedicated his life for the past 23 years.

Similar to the way certain words are highlighted for emphasis in the Bible, key phrases in Hodges’ life are singled out by the author. “We were poor but never hungry,” reads one quote. “I often went to the icebox and kitchen cabinets looking for food.” Later, Jackson notes that “For Charles, using crack cocaine the second time led to an eleven-year nightmare of drug use.” Such an approach distinguishes the volume from more conventional music biographies. It’s more like a homespun sermon, looking unflinchingly at the whole of his life, from his rural upbringing to his studio session days, from drug addiction to his own redemption.

Most readers may already know Hodges’ work under producer Willie Mitchell, who dubbed him “Do Funny” for the unpredictable flourishes Hodges would bring to a track. Hits by Al Green, Ann Peebles, O.V. Wright, Syl Johnson, and Otis Clay all bore Hodges’ unique stamp. But one delight of this book is its deeper look at the roots of the Hodges family, including Charles’ two brothers, “Flick” and “Teenie,” who would also become integral to the Hi Records sound. All of them came up under the musical guidance of their father, Leroy Hodges Sr., in rural Germantown.

“My dad was one of the greatest blues piano players in the city,” says Hodges now. “I’m going to say in the world. And I’m not saying that just because he was my dad. I still can’t understand today how he could do the things he did. He played that boogie and he wouldn’t skip a beat!” But Leroy Hodges Sr. was content to see what instruments his sons took to naturally before he taught them more.

“My dad wouldn’t help me until he saw that I wanted to do it,” Hodges recalls. “We brought the piano in the house when I was about 11 years old. And there was about a year where I would get on the piano and just bang it. At about age 12 was when he came over my shoulder. He’d say, ‘No, do it like this.’ And I always watched him. So by 16, I was in the Memphis musicians’ union.”

The path from childhood to success, to addiction, recovery, and redemption, gives this book a philosophical bent, something that comes out in Hodges’ casual conversation to this day. “I’ve had some good times and some bad times. You don’t trade that for nothing,” he reflects. “That’s something to hold on to. Because you can grow from anything. I love adversity because it carries you somewhere else.”

Rev. Charles Hodges is the organist for Unity Baptist Church in Collierville and is still active in both the gospel and secular traditions, onstage and in the studio. His biography can be ordered from xlibris.com. He will discuss and sign copies of his book on Saturday, December 11, 3-5 p.m., at the Memphis Listening Lab.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: John Nemeth

Music Video Monday double shot got you feelin’ freaky!

John Nemeth has been grinding at the blues for more than 15 years. His last album Memphis Grease won the Best Soul Blues award at the 2015 Blues Music Awards. His follow up Feelin’ Freaky is set for release this Friday, May 19. Nemeth and his band Blue Dreamers—drummer Danny Banks, bassist Matthew Wilson and guitarist Johnny Rhodes—were joined by Charles Hodges on the Hammond B3, Mark Franklin on Trumpet, and Art Edumondson on sax. Producer Luther Dickinson recorded the album at Royal Studios and Zebra Ranch.

Nameth teamed up with Memphis filmmaker Edward Valibus for a series of videos leading up to this week’s album release. The first, filmed at Tad Perison’s famous indoor trailer park, is a performance video for the album’s title track, “Feelin’ Freaky”.

Music Video Monday: John Nemeth

The second is an appropriately moody clip for “Rainy Day”.

Music Video Monday: John Nemeth (2)

Nameth and the guys will celebrate their album release this Friday at Loflin Yard before hitting the road for a long U.S. tour. You can find out more about the record on his website.

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