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We Recommend We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: Craft Food & Wine Festival

Brandon Claybon, a native Memphian now living in Los Angeles, was one of 636 guests at the fifth annual Craft Food & Wine Festival, which was held June 23rd at The Columns.

The fundraiser for Church Health featured more than 30 food-related businesses.

Jervette Ward and Jason Hendrickson
Chastity Pointer-Gibson and Courdria Pointer
Marcus Hamilton, Kula, Debra Westbrook, Verlisa Westbrook, 
and Verles Westbrook

“It was my first time at the event,” Claybon says. “I thought it was amazing. Absolutely extraordinary for Memphis to have something like this. And bringing people from all walks of life to come together, break bread, and drink wine. It was amazing.”

Asked how many stations he frequented, Brandon says, “I probably stopped at about 20. And then I ate a hamburger after. I waited the entire day for the festival, so I didn’t eat before.”

Justin Gallagher and Veronica Gomez
Betty Joyce (BJ) Chester-Tamayo
Caleb Knight, Vino Wright, and Josh Mutchnick

Claybon and event organizer Cristina McCarter were best friends at Bolton High School. “This year, it was just in the cards. So, basically, I had wrapped up a shooting with Tyler Perry in Atlanta.”

This year’s Craft Food & Wine Festival raised about $7,000, McCarter estimates. That brings the total raised over five years to “close to $60,000” for Church Health, she says. 

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Cover Feature News

Crosstown Concourse: The Vertical Village Comes to Life

Saturday will be a crazy Memphis moment. At least, that’s how Todd Richardson sees it.

Richardson is a co-founder of Crosstown Arts, the group that spurred the redevelopment of the massive, empty Sears Crosstown building.

Since 2010, Richardson’s mind has been focused on recruiting partners, signing tenants, finding funding, construction schedules, paperwork, designs, plans, and meetings, meetings, meetings. But at its core, Richardson still calls Crosstown a “miracle.”

“Yeah, at the end of the day, what a crazy Memphis moment?” Richardson says with a laugh. “It was the middle of the recession, and it couldn’t be done. It’s a completely unique redevelopment; there’s not another one like these in the country. So, we’re really celebrating the tenacity of the city for this miracle to happen. To me, that’s what August 19th is all about.”

Saturday is the Crosstown Concourse Opening Celebration, a moment eight years (or, nearly 90) in the making. The celebration starts at 3 p.m. with a dedication ceremony in the Central Atrium. The day continues with tenant open houses, live music, and a screening of a feature-length documentary about the Crosstown project.

Much of the building is already alive with residential and commercial tenants. But loose ends will be tied up as the year goes on — more apartments will be filled, programs will be started, and office workers will soon move into now-empty floors.

At full tilt, nearly 3,000 people will come and go there each day, according to Crosstown officials. That impact (economic and otherwise) will hit the area like an “atom bomb,” at least, in the words of a city official years ago. That energy will flow from a long-neglected “big empty” and revitalize a neighborhood that’s already feeling positive effects, with the potential for transforming a whole section of the city.

The (Way) Backstory

Company men from Sears, Roebuck & Co. quietly arrived in Memphis in the late 1920s, seeking sites for a retail center and catalog order plant. They knew if local property owners thought Sears was interested in their property, their prices would skyrocket. So, the Sears officials drove around town, pointing to sites from their car windows, while, behind them, real estate brokers followed in another car and took notes.

The company eventually settled on Crosstown, a then-suburban neighborhood about two miles from downtown. One hundred and eighty days after construction began, on August 27, 1927, Memphis Mayor Rowlett Paine cut the ribbon on a 640,000 square-foot facility that would employ more than 1,000 people.

That first day, almost 30,000 shoppers came to visit the 53,000-square-foot retail center. At its peak, nearly 45,000 catalog orders left Sears Crosstown each day.

The building also had a small hospital, cafeteria, ladies recreation area, administrative offices, a credit union, board rooms, and “The Cypress Room,” for executive dining.

Forty years later, Crosstown had grown to a mammoth 1.5 million square feet on 19 acres. Unfortunately, like the original mammoth, it had become outdated. Shoppers had headed east and elsewhere. Sears closed the Crosstown retail store in 1983.

The site remained a regional distribution center for Sears. But less than 30 years later, due to the decline in the company’s mail-order business, Sears closed many of its warehouses across the country, including Crosstown. The building was left vacant in 1993 and remained an iconic emtpy tower for more than 20 years.

The (Recent) Backstory

Richardson can tell the story of Crosstown’s recent history in about a minute. He’s an art historian, a professor at the University of Memphis, but he knew the Crosstown property owner. Richardson asked about the building, and that started a “wouldn’t-it-be-cool conversation,” he says, which hasn’t stopped.

“The biggest challenge we had was to get people to see beyond what they see,” Richardson says. “This was a building the size of the Empire State Building that had been empty for 20 years in Memphis. It was in the middle of the recession, so, where do you start and could [anything] ever happen?”

Richardson and Christopher Miner formed Crosstown Arts in 2010 as a nonprofit arts organization that would serve as the building’s developer and would one day also be building tenant.

Two years later, the two had commitments from eight local tenants willing to lease a total of 600,000 square feet, nearly half of the building. By the time Crosstown officials asked the Memphis City Council for $15 million (the project’s final piece of funding) a year later, the building’s tenants included Church Health, Methodist Healthcare, Gestalt Community Schools, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, ALSAC, Memphis Teacher Residency, Rhodes College, and, of course, Crosstown Arts.

So, What Is It?

The Crosstown website now calls its facility a “vertical urban village,” and some variation of that term has been used to describe it from the beginning. The website also tries to invoke Crosstown’s spirit by calling it “a local heart for the cultivation of well-being, shifting focus from products to people, from commodity to quality of life,” adding that Crosstown will build “on three of Memphis’ strongest community assets — arts, education, and health care. Concourse is now a mixed-use vertical urban village with a purposeful collective of uses and partners.”

So, what’s in the village?

The building will include Crosstown Arts, Crosstown High School, and numerous health-care agencies. It’ll also be home to the Curb Market grocery store, numerous restaurants, a pharmacy, a nail shop, a FedEx Office store, apartments, and more. To anyone in commercial real estate, it looks like a classic mixed-use development, a mix of residential, commercial, and retail spaces. Many of the tenants, including Curb Market, FedEx, Farm Burger, Mama Gaia’s, and others, are already doing business in Crosstown.

But Richardson says it’s more than that and that it “can’t be managed like any other building in Memphis.” He said the building and the tenants who fill it have a deliberate tone, personality, and a spirit of inclusivity. They all “are intimately related, interconnected, and interdependent and, as a result, better because they are together.”

The building was designed for tenant interaction. Those tenants who have have chosen to locate in Crosstown did so because their individual missions will be lifted through those interactions, a Crosstown official says. All of the tenants, whether in arts, education, food, or health care, intersect at wellness, an idea that Ginger Spickler, Crosstown’s director of strategic partnerships and projects, said serves as an overall ethos for Crosstown Concourse.

“We’ve all been to office parks, where you’ve got lots of people in different buildings, none of whom interact with each other,” Spickler says on a recent tour. “So we knew even if we put people in this building, they would not necessarily interact unless we create spaces and experience for them to share together.”

So, Spickler says, the design of the building deliberately includes common spaces — a small open theater, large balconies, a massive central atrium — “where those unexpected connections and intersections can happen.”

That’s precisely why Gary Shorb, the new executive director of the Urban Child Institute, says he wanted to move his organization there, noting they’ll “be right next door to Pyramid Peak Foundation and the Poplar Foundation.”

“Geography always helps with collaboration,” Shorb says. “The closer you are, the better it will be.”

Crosstown Now

Bowties and sport coats mingled easily with hard hats and work boots during an early afternoon last month. The smells of electrical work pierced the aroma of roasting vegetables close to Curb Market. The mid-tempo thump of chilled-out EDM at Mama Gaia was often overcome by the scraping whine of power tools. It was easy to see how far the building had come — and that it still had a little way to go. Richardson says the building is mostly full: About 98 percent of the office space is leased. The apartments are around 80 percent occupied. Retail spaces were about 60 percent leased. The next step will be getting everyone moved in.

Curb Market

The celebration will be gratifying, Richardson says, but Crosstown Concourse’s true success won’t be realized Saturday.

“Success for us will be five or 10 years down the road,” he says, “when people are still here and enjoying it, and Crosstown is still the vibrant vertical village we all hoped and dreamed it would be.”

A Closer Look

Some of the tenants that will be based in Crosstown Concourse

Church Health

One of the founding tenants of Crosstown, Church Health spans 150,000 square feet over three floors in the building’s West Atrium. According to its mission, Church Health strives to provide affordable health care to Memphis’ working, uninsured population and their families. It’s served some 70,000 people since its inception in 1987.

But after the move to Crosstown, for the first time in those 30 years, all of Church Health’s services are in the same building. At its former location, 120,000 square feet of clinics, exam rooms, and offices were spread over 13 buildings on Peabody, Bellevue, and Union, says communications director for Church Health, Marvin Stockwell.

Church Health

The move to a space 30,000 square feet larger, yet still all under one roof, he says, will enable the center to “serve more people and serve them better.”

Stockwell says Church Health now has 62 medical rooms, compared to 34 in its previous locations. This increase, as well as more than twice the number of dental, eye, and counseling rooms, Stockwell says will vastly increase the amount of patients Church Health is able to treat.

In step with Crosstown’s “better together” vision of cross-organizational collaboration, Stockwell says the move has already paved the way for partnerships with other organizations, like the YMCA. Together they formed the Church Health YMCA for Church Health patients and others in the community to utilize.

He says when leadership from both organizations discussed their programming and missions, much of it overlapped, like fitness and “creative movement” classes, such as Zumba, yoga, and pilates. “The organization has grown because of partnerships now that we’re tucked into an urban village,” Stockwell says.

Church Health CEO Scott Morris says partnerships with more tenants such as Southern College of Optometry, Teach for America, Crosstown Arts, and others are also in the works. All of the partnerships, Morris says, will help Church Health be more effective at caring for its patients, adding, “We truly are better together for all of Memphis.”

Morris says the move has also made it possible for expansions into “new, vibrant areas such as culinary medicine — or food as medicine,” which he says will enrich Church Health’s overall work.

Church Health’s new teaching kitchen, located on the first floor, is more than twice the size of the former kitchen, says Stockwell. A larger, new, modern kitchen allows Church Health to offer coursework for a culinary medicine certificate from Tulane University, as well as community nutrition and cooking classes on how to prepare healthy food.

A notable part of the new kitchen is the commercial section, where Stockwell says Church Health is ramping up its own bread line, Whole Heart Bread.

He says after speaking with some local restaurant owners around the city, Church Health staff realized there was a need for locally-sourced bread in Memphis.

Stockwell says the bread line will be a way for the kitchen to do mission-type work while bringing in revenue to fund Church Health’s efforts to serve the community.

Another goal for the kitchen is to eventually partner with Memphis Tilth, which plans to hire someone to manage the kitchen full-time, and work with local food entrepreneurs who need access to commercial equipment.

Other spaces of Church Health’s operation include a chapel, community meeting room, child-care center, and “control room,” which will eventually be a broadcast workspace, producing health- and faith-related podcasts, Stockwell says.

The Parcels at Concourse

Creating something new from something old — that’s how Laura Anna Hatchett, senior community manager for LEDIC, describes the process of the realty company’s newest project: The Parcels at Concourse.

The Parcels are comprised of 265 apartments on floors seven through 10 at Crosstown. The unique interior of the building and the infrastructure of those top floors — once a Sears warehouse — shaped how the Parcels were designed, says Hatchett.

In order to fit 265 units on the top four floors of the building, 38 unit layouts were created, which are available in studio and one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartments.

Hatchett says the renovation focused on “maintaining the integrity of what the building used to be” by keeping the historical elements intact, such as the exposed brick walls and wood floors.

The Parcels

“Better together,” the idea behind Crosstown, inspired the various gathering spaces and community seating areas throughout the Parcels, including the leasing office itself, which protrudes from the seventh floor of the central atrium and will serve as a “living room” for residents, Hatchett says.

Another design element meant to foster community building, she says, are the indoor front porches that several of the units have and that residents are able to personalize.

“It’s a true live, work, play environment,” Hatchett says. “Residents can participate in numerous activities that are only an elevator ride away.”

The apartments — between 1,000 and 1,100 square feet per unit, run about $1.40 a square foot per month. Hatchett says an affordable housing grant allows 20 percent of the units to be rented at affordable market rate.

Of the 265 units, about 103 will house Memphis Teacher Residency residents, families of St. Jude patients, along with scientists working at the hospital, Church Health Scholars, Crosstown Arts residents, and Iris Orchestra Artist fellows. Residents began moving into the units in January and, as of press time, the Parcels were 82 percent occupied.

Madison Pharmacy

Though Madison Pharmacy’s old location is less than two miles down the road from its new home at Crosstown, owner Rende Bechtel says, and the biggest challenge in relocating is the logistics of moving and setting up the new space.

“It’s very scary,” Bechtel says, “But it’s a risk that could lead to a lot of opportunities.”

The privately owned pharmacy has stood on Madison near Auburndale for about 13 years, and Bechtel says they were happy there. But when she heard that Crosstown was looking for a resident pharmacy, it was an opportunity she couldn’t pass up.

“It was like fate,” she says, explaining that her parents both worked in the old Sears Tower and that that was where they first met.

Bechtel, who’s owned the pharmacy since 2012, says they have about 300 regular customers now and after the move are hoping to expand by taking advantage of the other health-care services housed in Crosstown, perhaps partnering with Church Health to serve some of its patients.

Madison Pharmacy

“Once we get there, I’m sure we’ll be right at home,” Bechtel says.

The new pharmacy will not only be larger than the old one, it will also become a convenience store, offering an expanded dollar section, essential oils, dog food, household products, makeup, and “a little bit of everything you might need.”

The hope, Bechtel says, is that “people who live and work here will come in on a regular basis and we’ll get to know them, while providing them with what they need.”

Area 51 Ice Cream

Area 51 Ice Cream, a family-owned ice cream shop out of Hernando, Mississippi, will make Crosstown its second location.

Karin Cubbage, who owns Area 51 Ice Cream with her husband, says they have been looking for a second location in Memphis for a while now, but no location seemed just right — until they saw the Crosstown space. She says they knew immediately that Crosstown was a good fit for the company and it was a project they wanted to be a part of.

Area 51 has been serving homemade ice cream along with fresh-baked goods at its location in Hernando for about three years. Cubbage says their foods are made with no artificial flavors — only fresh, locally-sourced ingredients.

“We try to do as much by hand as we can,” Cubbage says. “We even hand-make the chocolate chips that go into our mint chip ice cream.” Cubbage says she and her husband have good relationships with local farmers, like those at Cedar Health Farms, where they often buy seasonal berries.

Like its mother shop, the new location at Crosstown, will offer 12 ice cream flavors, as well as a specialty cookie and brownie each day. Since the new space is significantly smaller than the shop in Hernando, Cubbage says the ice cream will be made daily in Mississippi and transported to Crosstown.

After wrapping up the finishing touches on the new shop, including installing sidewalk-style cafe tables, Cubbage says the Crosstown location will open in late August. “We’re excited about exposing our product to another part of town that we haven’t been able to reach yet … and to be a part of the larger project in general.”

Crosstown High School

Around this time next year, 125 ninth-graders will walk through the doors of Crosstown as the inaugural class of Crosstown High School.

Ultimately, it’s expected that 500 students will comprise the student body at the public charter school. Those students, who will be chosen through a lottery, will be part of a learning experience that’s never been tried in Memphis. Instead of a teacher lecturing in front of a class, students will learn with hands-on projects based on student interest or on challenges issued by other tenants inside the Concourse.

Church Health, for example, may ask the students to help them design a wellness campaign for senior citizens in the Klondike neighborhood, says Spickler. “The students might then accomplish some of their math or English standards through creating different signage or something else by actually solving a community-based challenge.”

Students’ interests, talents, and learning pace will be taken into consideration at Crosstown High, and each student will have a personal learning plan.

Spickler says the school plans to have a diverse student body by reaching out to the community to recruit students to the school’s entrance lottery in hopes of making a school “that looks like Memphis.”

All of this will be fueled with a $2.5 million grant from XQ: The Super School Project, an initiative that challenged education officials to rethink the high school model.

For Crosstown’s model, school personnel talked with students, parents, teachers, and employers. Much of the school’s model is based on the design challenge, which Crosstown High began in November 2015.

Categories
Music Music Features

10 Years of Rock

Now in its 10th year, Rock for Love has become one of the most successful local music festivals around. The premise is simple: get some of the best local bands together to raise money for the Church Health Center — the largest faith-based health-care organization of its kind in the country. Last year the festival raised $50,000 for the Church Health Center, bringing the total amount raised by Rock for Love over the last decade to more than $250,000.

While each and every band brings something unique to the table, I’ve selected a handful of must-see acts each day at Rock for Love. With breakout stars like Julien Baker alongside local favorites like Mark Edgar Stuart and Star and Micey, the Rock for Love weekend kicks off a spectacular month of Memphis music that includes Cooper-Young Fest and concludes with the 13th annual Goner Fest.

Friday, September 2nd.

Graham Winchester — arguably one of the hardest working men in local music — was tapped to curate night one of Rock for Love at the Hi-Tone. The kick-off show features an all-local lineup of Winchester and the Ammunition, Chickasaw Mound, Mark Edgar Stuart, the Subtractions, J.D. Reager & the Cold-Blooded Three, Faux Killas, Big Baby, Devil Train, and DJ Andrew McCalla. Fun Fact: Each band will only be playing songs that were recorded in Memphis.

All the bands on Friday’s bill are worth checking out — and for only $10 at the door, you should plan on staying the whole time, but you’ll definitely want to get there early to check out opener Mark Edgar Stuart. The singer-songwriter recently released the great “Don’t Blame Jesus” single as a follow up to his excellent 2015 album Trinity My Dear, and national outlets like NPR and Paste Magazine have started to realize what Memphians have known for years — the man can write a damn good folk song.

The Faux Killas play at 10 p.m. on Friday, and their recently released album Time in Between serves as a primer for the Killas’ unpredictable and unruly live shows. Front man Jeremiah Jones has a voice that you won’t soon forget, and his backing band is starting to hit their stride after a couple years of gigging locally. Other Friday night highlights include Devil Train, Chickasaw Mound, and DJ Andrew McCalla. Radio personalities Jon Roser, Chris Vernon, and Gary Parrish will also be inducted into the Rock for Love Hall of Fame.

Saturday, September 3rd.

The second day of Rock for Love offers up a double header, first at Loflin Yard and later at Otherlands Coffee. Loflin Yard will feature Crockett Hall, Summer Avenue, HEELS, and Papa Top’s West Coast Turnaround.  Not to be confused with Southern Avenue (the band that recently signed to Stax / Concord Music Group), Summer Avenue is one of the many up and coming local bands affiliated with Archer Records.

Later on at Otherlands, Me and Leah, the Dead Soldiers, and Julien Baker are set to play. Set times haven’t been announced for the Otherlands show, but it has been confirmed that Baker will play early in the night. With a breakout year in 2015 that made way for festival dates this summer, Baker is far and away the brightest star on the Rock for Love 10 lineup. Given that she’s played major festivals and opened up for some of the biggest bands in her genre, seeing her in an intimate setting like Otherlands should be spectacular.

Sunday, September 4th

The tenth anniversary of Rock for Love concludes on Sunday evening at the Levitt Shell. Like Saturday’s shows, the set times for Sunday haven’t been announced yet, but Amy LaVere, Star and Micey, and Jack Oblivian are all must-see acts. Amy LaVere has had a busy past few months, and there’s really no better way to end a productive summer than with a show at the Shell. Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks also continue their reign of 2016 terror. The band took Europe by storm with newly acquired member Seth Moody, and after releasing the excellent Lone Ranger of Love album, they might just be the best rock-and-roll band in Memphis. Star and Micey have also had a busy year, and the band is a perfect choice to close out the exceptional music weekend known as Rock for Love.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Two Great Beers, Two Great Causes

John Klyce Minervini

Church Health Center’s Marvin Stockwell and Citizens to Preserve Overton Park’s Jessica Buttermore enjoy craft brews for a tasty cause.

I’ve heard it said that Memphis is the biggest small town in America. To judge from the beer, I think it might be true. This weekend, Memphis Made Brewing debuted two craft beers, each tied to a local event and an important cause.

The first is Rocket #9, an IPA that will be served over the weekend at Church Health Center’s 9th annual Rock For Love concert series. (click here to see the complete schedule)

Where flavor is concerned, Rocket #9 is understated and oaky. Made with Pacific Gem Hops from New Zealand, it’s a contemplative pale ale with notes from the forest floor. Perfect for a late-night conversation, or unwinding after a punk rock concert. Pezz, anyone?

John Klyce Minervini

Memphis Made’s Rocket #9 IPA will be served this weekend at Rock For Love.

The cause is even tastier. For 28 years, Church Health Center been providing low-cost health and wellness care for the working uninsured. Today, more than 60,000 people in Shelby County are counting on them.

“We’re helping this city get healthy and stay healthy,” says CHC communications director Marvin Stockwell. “And one of the ways we do that is by taking care of Memphis’s hardworking musicians.

“What an amazingly generous group of people,” he continues. “Not to mention, they make the best music in the world. I mean, come on. You can’t go wrong with that.”

This year, in addition to a badass music lineup, Rock For Love will feature a dunk tank, a comedy showcase, and a pop-up fitness park. So drink a beer already! It’s for charity.

The second craft brew is Memphis Made’s Greenswarden. It will be served this Saturday at Get Off Our Lawn’s Party for the Greensward, which features a great lineup of local bands.

Here’s the issue. The City of Memphis allows the zoo to put their overflow parking on the Greensward (the big field in Overton Park, the one by Rainbow Lake). They’ve been doing it for about 20 years. But Citizens to Preserve Overton Park (CPOP)—the group behind Get Off Our Lawn—say they’ve had about enough. 

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John Klyce Minervini

Memphis Made’s ‘Greenswarden’ hefeweizen will be served at Saturday’s Party for the Greensward.

“It’s public land, and they’re making a profit off it. We think that’s wrong,” says CPOP president Jessica Buttermore. “They’re not planning for their parking needs. Instead, they’re dumping it on the city and the surrounding neighborhood.”

“Our mission is to protect the park,” she continues. “As public land, it should be free for us to use.”

As a hefeweizen, Greenswarden is slightly cloudy with a balanced, fruity flavor. Don’t laugh: at my tasting, we even thought we detected notes of bubblegum. Only we couldn’t decide which one. Bubblicious? Fruit stripe?

“I don’t know if I would go brand-specific,” cautions Memphis Made co-founder Andy Ashby. “I guess I don’t really chew enough gum to pin it down.”

As for Memphis Made, Ashby says brewing beers for important local causes is right in the brewery’s wheelhouse.

“We’re not like these big breweries,” Ashby says. “We can’t make it rain t-shirts and coozies. But one thing we can do is make a beer for a cause we believe in.”

John Klyce Minervini

Memphis Made Brewing co-founder Andy Ashby

Categories
Music Music Features

Rock For Love 9: Music as Medicine

The 9th annual Rock for Love festival benefitting the Church Health Center takes place this weekend at multiple venues across Midtown. Started in 1987 as a health-care provider for the working uninsured in Memphis, the Church Health Center now provides services to over 40,000 people annually. Rock for Love is the biggest fund-raiser for the Church Health Center, and last year’s concert raised $50,000, while the concert series has raised over $250,000.

One of the coolest things about Rock for Love is that the performers are all local. Not many cities can boast a quality lineup of over 30 comedians and bands of all kinds plucked straight from it’s own backyard. Another perk about Rock for Love is that most of the shows are free. The shows that are taking admission at the door are only $5, although other donations are encouraged. With so many great bands scheduled to perform over the weekend, we’ve selected 10 must-see Rock for Love acts. This list is by no means all-encompassing, and we encourage you to check out as many (or all) of the great shows happening around Crosstown.

Thursday, September 3rd

Chris Rex has been on the local comedy scene for a while, honing his deadpan delivery and off-kilter jokes at places like the P&H, the Hi-Tone and Rocket Science Audio. If awkward comedy is your thing, get to the Hi-Tone for the Don’t Be Afraid to Laugh for Love event at 7 p.m. on Thursday.

Friday, September 4th

Mary Owens released her excellent debut album Sweet Soul earlier this year on the University of Memphis label Blue TOM Records and has been gaining momentum since the record came out. Owens combines classic southern R & B with pop country, and fans of locals Deering and Down should take note. Owens plays Amurica Studio at 6:45 p.m. on Friday.

Goner co-owner Zac Ives has been spinning records since before you were punk. The Midtown musician/record collector/DJ has an amazing monthly DJ-night at Bar DKDC in Cooper-Young, so bring your dancing shoes when Ives deejays Co-Motion Studio at 7:30 p.m. on Friday.

Here’s where things get tricky: While Ives will be spinning wax at Co-Motion , >mancontrol<, one of the most interesting local bands to emerge in the past five years, will be playing at the same time (7:30 p.m.) at Crosstown Arts. With their crowd-controlled laser light show, >mancontrol< are a perfect way to turn up the heat early in the evening on Friday. Flip a coin, and decide your fate.

Kyndle McMahan of local bluegrass-fusion band Mason Jar Fireflies doesn’t play solo often, so her concert at Midtown Crossing Grill on Friday should be one to remember. Like Owens, McMahan is affiliated with Blue TOM Records, and also like Owens, her versatile voice demands attention. McMahan plays Midtown Crossing (behind the Hi-Tone) at 8 p.m. on Friday.

James and the Ultrasounds’ ability to craft two-to three-minute garage punk songs should be reason enough for you to catch their set at 10 p.m. at the Hi-Tone. While James Godwin has shined as a former member of the New Mary Jane and occasional bassist for Jack Oblivian, the Ultrasounds is definitely his main gig, and the bands’ frantic live show is second to none.

Two issues ago I made the mistake of claiming that NOTS weren’t playing locally again until Gonerfest 12, so fans of female-fronted post-punk will rejoice at the fact that the Memphis quartet is playing the Hi-Tone at 11 p.m. on Friday. By now, given the amount of local, regional, and national press that the band has received, NOTS should be on your radar. You know what to do.

At Midnight, Jack Oblivian ends an insane night of music with special guest Godwin on bass. Oblivian deserves the headlining spot for loads of different reasons, but the humble, yet legendary Memphis rocker would probably be content to play any slot on Rock for Love 9. That’s just the type of guy he is. Stay up late and watch him close out the second night of Rock for Love. It’ll definitely be a party.

Saturday, September 5th

While Friday is obviously the “main attraction” of Rock for Love 9, Saturday still has a lot to offer. All of Saturday’s shows take place at Lafayette’s Music Room in Overton Square, and admission is $5. While the show starts at 5:30 p.m., you’ll want to make sure and be there by 9:30 p.m. when Deering and Down take the stage. Dreamy pop duo Lahna Deering and Neil Down have been working on their latest album for BAA Music Group, and if the single “You’re the One” that they dropped earlier this year is any indication, the album should be a stunner.

Sunday, September 6th

Closing out Rock for Love 9 are the legendary North Mississippi Allstars. The Allstars don’t play locally too often (probably because they are busy touring the world), but everyone knows that when the Dickinson brothers book a gig, it’s best to be in attendance. The North Mississippi Allstars’ latest project is the Word, a band comprised of Robert Randolph, John Medeski, and, of course, the Allstars. The group’s album Soul Food was recently ranked the 17th best album of 2015 so far by Relix magazine, but we think it should have gotten No. 1.

For the complete schedule and more information, visit rockforlove.com.

Categories
News News Blog

Tour of Church Health Center’s New Space in Crosstown Building

The Church Health Center (CHC), one of the main tenants to be located in the Crosstown Concourse building, gave a hard hat tour on Thursday afternoon of what will be their new space when construction on the million-square-foot former Sears Crosstown building wraps up in early 2017.

The CHC is consolidating their entire operation, including their Church Health Center Wellness facility on Union, into the Crosstown building. Currently, the CHC operates out of 13 buildings. Their main space will occupy all of the second floor of the Crosstown building, but they’ll also inhabit some of the first floor and have some office spaces on the third floor.

The move will allow the CHC to increase their square footage from 120,600 feet to 149,000 feet. The building will also house Memphis Teacher Residency, Gestalt Community Schools, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Christian Brothers University, A Step Ahead Foundation, Crosstown Arts, and several other health and education institutions and foundations.

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Categories
News The Fly-By

Church Health Center To Open Acupuncture Clinic

Though a practitioner of Western medicine, Church Health Center (CHC) CEO Dr. Scott Morris turned to alternative therapy to deal with chronic knee pain.

After several treatments from local acupuncturist Dr. Judi Harrick, Morris said his knee pain went away — at least for a while, until he eventually had to get a knee replacement. But now, through a soon-to-open community acupuncture clinic at Church Health Center Wellness, Harrick and Morris are making the acupuncture alternative available to Memphians who might not be able to afford the therapy otherwise.

“Unfortunately, in America, we’ve come to believe too much that drugs will solve our health problems, and we’ve become overly enamored around issues of technology,” Morris said. “We believe our bodies are little machines and there is some technology that can fix them. And that’s just not right.”

The community acupuncture clinic will treat all sorts of conditions, from pain to anxiety to allergies to digestion issues. It begins September 19th, but the CHC is already taking appointments. The clinic will be open to everyone (not just CHC patients), and fees will be based on a sliding scale from $15 to $40. There’s an extra $10 fee on the first visit.

Valery Kraynov | Dreamstime.com

“Our mission is to provide the best possible care and make it available to everyone. There’s no need to prove your income. It’s all on honor,” Harrick said.

Harrick has been in private practice in Memphis for more than 25 years, but the community clinic will operate a little differently than an appointment in her office would.

“Community acupuncture is done in a group setting in big, comfortable chairs. You get the dynamic of the group energy while getting individual treatment. No one undresses. We use points from the knee and elbow down,” Harrick says. “We ask people to wear loose clothing, so they can sit comfortably.”

The clinic will treat six patients at a time, and treatment can last anywhere between 20 minutes and an hour “depending on what we’re working on and the person’s energy,” Harrick says.

As for how it works, Harrick explains that acupuncture is energy medicine, and the points on the body where the needles are placed are reservoirs of energy, or chi. Each point is believed to have a certain effect when it’s stimulated.

“If you have symptoms, that is seen as an imbalance. And when we stimulate that innate energy, it stimulates it to move. That’s the nice thing about energy. It always wants to go toward balance,” Harrick said. “Energy can get stuck or deficient, and this brings it back to balance.”

Acupuncture has been practiced as a part of Oriental medicine for centuries, and some modern medical studies have shown that it can be effective for a number of conditions. Morris doesn’t purport to understand how all that energy stuff works, but he said experience made him a believer.

“I find acupuncture fascinating, but it eludes me in terms of the theory, as I think it does for most allopathic doctors,” Morris said. “But I can tell you that I would go in, and Judi would perform the [acupuncture] treatment. And when I walked out, I had no pain. I walked in with a healthy skepticism, but at least for awhile, my knee didn’t hurt, and that was consistent for every treatment.”

To make an appointment for the community acupuncture clinic, call 259-4673. The clinic will be open Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3 to 7 p.m. and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., beginning September 19th.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Rock For Love Announces 2015 Lineup

Memphis punk band Nots play Rock for Love on Friday, September 4th.

Rock For Love, The annual concert benefiting the Church Health Center has announced it’s 2015 lineup. This year the festival will mostly be at the Crosstown complex that houses The Hi-Tone, Crosstown Arts, Amurica studios and more. Rock for Love continues to be a marquee event for the Church Health Center and in 2014 the festival raised $50,000. 

Friday, September 4

Crosstown Block Party
Amurica Studios
Mary Owens
Faith Evans Ruch
Couple Skate
Stephen Chopek
Mark Edgar Stuart

Crosstown Arts
Don Lifted
Mancontrol

Co-Motion Studio
DJ Witnesse & Zac Ives

Visible Community Music School Stage
VCMS Student Ensemble
Tooken
Rebecca Davis
Elder
The Passport

HiTone Café (main stage and small room)
Hannah Star
J.D. Reager & The Cold-Blooded Three
Sleepwlkrs
Pezz
James & The Ultrasounds
NOTS
Jack Oblivian

Saturday, September 5 at Lafayette’s Music Room
Memphis Ukulele Band
Deering & Down
Hope Clayburn & Soul Scrimmage

Sunday, September 6 at The Levitt Shell
North Mississippi All-Stars

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fitness, Art Projects Coming to Crosstown

The Church Health Center (CHC) won’t be moving into the Crosstown Concourse building until 2017, but it’s already focusing on improving it’s future North Midtown neighborhood.

Operation Crosstown, the CHC’s volunteer-driven effort to make Crosstown “healthier, safer, and more livable” has just released its 2015 lineup of neighborhood improvement projects with a focus on fitness and art.

Last September, CHC hosted an idea lab for Operation Crosstown, and community members were invited to submit ideas for how to improve the neighborhood. In a test run for the organization, Operation Crosstown hosted a trash-can painting event after the idea lab. Afterward, volunteers installed them along Cleveland.

Church Health Center

Operation Crosstown trash cans

On Giving Tuesday in December, it launched a crowd-sourced fund-raising campaign for Operation Crosstown and netted its goal of $10,000. Operation Crosstown narrowed down a list of feasible projects from the idea lab, and now it will start initiating some of those ideas.

“The project calendar we just announced is about making the ideas that the community sourced a reality,” said Dylan Sandifer, program manager for Operation Crosstown.

This spring, volunteers will install a bike repair station near the bus stop shelter at Poplar and Cleveland. The station will consist of a concrete pole with various bicycle repair tools and an air pump. Its installation was originally set for May 9th, but shipping problems have pushed the date back.

“The Poplar/Cleveland bus stop is the number two hub of public transit in the city. It’s a very popular area for people who use buses and bikes as their primary transportation,” Sandifer said. “We’ll have a free bike repair station there so if someone gets a flat tire, they won’t have to miss work.”

On June 20th, outdoor fitness equipment will be erected on a yet-to-be-announced “prime piece of green space in Crosstown,” Sandifer said.

“It will be similar to RiverFit [in Tom Lee Park], but we’re making it with what Crosstown wants,” Sandifer said. “We’ll have some picnic tables and some outdoor games, like bocce and horseshoes. We’ll have a community meeting to let people vote on what they want. It’s a fitness area, but it’s also a community park. It won’t be just a workout area.”

On the following Saturday, June 27th, the CHC will host an outdoor block party at the new fitness park. There will be food trucks and demonstrations on how to use the equipment.

Operation Crosstown will partner with Clean Memphis on August 22nd to pick up litter and brush on the V&E Greenline, which begins just north of Crosstown Concourse and runs through the Rhodes College area.

And some time in the summer, with a date to be determined, the CHC will host a pop-up dental clinic for people without insurance in the Crosstown neighborhood.

They’re also working on adding more public art to the area. Operation Crosstown is currently seeking artist proposals for a mural on the south wall of Midtown Crossing Grill. The application form is available at churchhealthcenter.org, and there is a May 22nd submission deadline.

In October, Operation Crosstown will oversee another public mural project in the area, but the location for the artwork has not yet been released.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Perea: A Bright Spot on WKNO

They say first impressions are lasting. And Memphis documentary filmmaker Willy Bearden has vivid memories of the first time he ever visited Perea Preschool with Memphis musician John Kilzer. The two men were working together on a project about the relationship of art and religion when Kilzer asked Bearden if he’d be interested in making a film about Perea, an experiment in early childhood education created by the Church Health Center in 1999.

“That’s exactly what I’m about,” Bearden answered. “I want to show people all the good things happening in Memphis.” His concise, 30-minute documentary, Perea: A Bright Spot, collects stories that illustrate the positive impact this unconventional preschool is having on students and parents in Memphis’ economically disadvantaged Klondike neighborhood. It starts airing on WKNO Channel 10 Thursday, May 14th.

Perea: A Bright Spot airs on WKNO on May 14th

“Everybody looked so happy and so engaged,” Bearden says, recalling his first visit to Perea. “There were 120 students, all 3 year olds and 4 year olds. And there were parents there, too. And the whole place just had this palpable vibe. Everybody was on the same page and getting along. You walk in and think, ‘Something is really going on here, and I want to find out what it is.'”

Perea preschool only accepts students whose parents agree to become active participants in the educational process.

“[Church Health Center CEO] Scott Morris told me that Perea requires a lot [from its] parents,” Bearden explains. “You’ve got to come in a couple of times a month and read to the kids. What does this do for the parents? Well, maybe they don’t read well and maybe they’re not comfortable with that. So what do they do? They practice up on their reading. Then the kids see parents taking part in the classroom and it has this ripple effect that is just incredible,” Bearden says.