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Music Music Blog

Live at the Garden Returns with Lineup of Legends

One hardly needs to add luster to the idea of “Live at the Garden,” as the very prospect of hearing world class music under the moonlit trees of the Memphis Botanic Garden is inherently delightful. Yet this year stands out with an impressive roster of A-list stars. Musical stars, that is.

It’s an astonishing distillation of pop radio icons, creators of the earworm melodies of our lives. Consider: The Live at the Garden series kicks off June 11 with jazz-pop fusion band Steely Dan, followed by country superstar Darius Rucker on July 15, country vocal trio Lady A on August 20, The Doobie Brothers 50th Anniversary Tour with Michael McDonald on September 3, and American pop-rock band Chicago on October 20.

It’s a bit awe-inspiring, imagining the collective memories mingling among the audiences for these shows, so enmeshed are those artists’ hits with our lived experience. That takes on a special meaning in the shadow of the pandemic, after which every new concert season is a gift, not to be taken for granted.

“We are excited to announce this year’s lineup and finally get back to what feels like a normal concert season, post-Covid,” Sherry May, Co-Director of Live at the Garden, said in a statement. “We have a lot of star power and fan favorites on this lineup. Collectively, these artists have sold over 175 million albums. This is the kind of lineup where you
know every word to every song.”

With all that musical power, it’s easy to forget that these concerts actually help maintain the very site where they’re held, which has repercussions in the entire community. David May, Memphis market executive for title sponsor Regions Bank, notes that “In addition to the enjoyment this concert series brings to thousands each season, we’re especially proud that our investment supports educational and outreach programs that connect students with nature and elevate awareness and appreciation of our environment.”

Speaking of the environment, attendees are encouraged to bring lawn chairs, blankets, and coolers as they gather around the Radians Amphitheater. Food trucks and bars will also be onsite, as well as pre-ordered catering. Free shuttles will run from Laurelwood to the venue from 5 p.m. to midnight for each concert.

There are a number of ways to buy tickets to the concerts. Season Lawn Passes are $255 for a regular-season lawn pass and $300 for a Premium Season Lawn Pass, which allows patrons in 15 minutes prior to general gates opening. Also new this year is a Season Pit Pass, which is a general admission lawn ticket with access to the standing-room-only Pit (directly in front of the stage). Season Pit Passes are $375 per person. Individual TruGreen lawn tickets start at $60 plus fees. All Season Lawn Passes and individual show tickets go on sale Monday, May 2, at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster.

Season passes can be purchased here; individual show tickets can be purchased here.

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Book Features Books

David Mamet’s Chicago.

David Mamet is one of my favorite playwright/screenwriters. His rapid-fire, cadenced dialogue, especially in the right mouths — William H. Macy, Joe Mantegna, Rebecca Pidgeon, Gene Hackman — is a distinctive music. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his play Glengarry Glen Ross, which was made into a dynamite movie. And he is the director of the films House of Games, The Spanish Prisoner, State and Main, Oleanna, and others. Add to these accomplishments a number of books of essays on theater and film, and a handful of novels.

The good news about this new book, Chicago, is that it’s his best novel. It’s dialogue-driven, making it such a pleasure to read that it’s hard to put down. His characters talk like Mamet’s movie characters — sly, fast, and with a street-smart poetic pulse. The staccato interchanges, not unlike machine-gun fire, suit this tale of reporters and gangsters during the Al Capone era in Chicago. It’s a great crime novel: It moves briskly, and the story is gripping. It’s also often very funny.

Best friends Mike Hodge and Clement Parlow both work in the City Room of the Chicago Tribune. They’re seasoned pros, cynical, tough, and skilled, even when they find themselves wandering into the gray area between crime and justice. Mike has fallen in love, and Parlow rags him about it, goading him by saying he should be writing the sob sister column rather than covering crime. “A romantic is just a cynic for whom, as yet, the nickel hasn’t dropped,” he tells him.

But, when Mike’s paramour is killed right in front of him, in an apparent gangland slaying, Mike goes on a bender. “I killed her,” he says to Parlow. Mike’s guilt upends his career, and he is a lost sheep for much of the book. “He had loved his job, and its proximity to violence, which, he knew was like a drug, and he had loved the Irish girl; and now he was sick and grieving in that impossible grief of betrayal at having your heart broken by life.”

The gunman kills the woman and, just as Mike glimpses his face, knocks Mike out cold.

The twist is that the slaying may have nothing to do with Mike’s coverage of Capone.

Capone, known as Mr. Brown, exists only in the crisp, blackened edges of the story. But his shadow is large and deep, and corruption is so rife in the city, even on the paper, that attempting to find what’s true and what’s smokescreen is like working on a Gordian knot.

Eventually, Mike finds his footing again, and now he has revenge on his mind. The story moves through the murky alleys of 1930s Chicago. There are hoods galore, cops — some straight, some crooked — and a particularly charming whorehouse, where much is known and only some of it revealed. Mike is a known quantity in all these places, and he’s comfortable in the dirt. He learned to kill in the Great War, and he recognizes that it’s still in him.

The story is episodic but builds accumulatively toward the only kind of sense these types of stories make. As Mike collects clues, more people are murdered. He’s not sure whether he’s up against Capone or the Irish Mob or something more esoteric, a crime which has nothing to do with the Mafia. “The weakness in the Mafia,” Mamet says, “was the absence of legitimacy. Anyone with sufficient ambition could rise through obedience and violence; but there was, culturally, nothing to check his rise.” Fans of Boardwalk Empire will find much here to admire.

As with Mamet’s intricate crime films, there are stories within stories. Chicago glistens with fascinating details, scams, anecdotal red herrings, beautifully rendered asides, and gorgeously wrought digression. The plot, which does have a satisfying denouement, is almost secondary to Mamet’s way with language, especially his crackling dialogue. Sometimes, if you concentrate too closely on the plot — which is, after all, similar to Hitchcock’s idea of the McGuffin — you may miss the author’s playfulness, his skill with a sentence, and his love for arcane information.

It’s Mamet. It’s underworld characters. What else do you wanna know?

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We Recommend We Recommend

Garden Party

It’s hardly your typical picnic. With blankets and chairs scattered across the lawn, people of all ages gather to hear musicians rock the picturesque Memphis Botanic Garden. Such an alluring environment has made Live at the Garden, now in its seventh season, a classic Memphis concert series, and this year’s opening act, Chicago, has music lovers especially enthused.

“Chicago is an act we’ve talked about every year but have never been able to get,” says Sherry Misner, co-director for Live at the Garden. “It’s such a natural fit. Getting Chicago epitomizes what we’ve tried to do creating the outdoor setting.”

Live at the Garden is a chance not only to hear great music but also to visit with friends and family. “Lots of people come an hour early just to mix and mingle,” Misner says. And because of the affordable ticket price and the garden’s central location, Misner adds, anyone can go.

While Misner is excited about Live at the Garden’s entire lineup — which includes Natalie Cole, Al Green, Chris Isaak, and Michael McDonald — she’s really thrilled about the Chicago concert. The horns-driven band has been pleasing audiences with their energetic blast of songs and sweeter-than-sweet ballads for 40 years.

“When we announced that Chicago was coming, I was getting phone calls all the time,” Misner says. “I was even stopped in the grocery store with people saying, ‘I can’t believe you got Chicago!'”

Live at the Garden presents Chicago at the Memphis Botanic Garden, Saturday, June 9th. Gates open at 7 p.m.; show begins at 8:30 p.m. $35 for general lawn admission. For more information, go to www.liveatthegarden.com.