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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Idle & WIld

Today’s Music Video Monday is gonna patch things up. 

We’re going to wish you a happy first day of spring with a world premiere from Memphis duo Idle & Wild. Caleb Sigler and Sara Jo Cavitch have been playing together since meeting in church in 2014, and they have just released their first single “Come A Little Closer”, a bubbly homage to togetherness recorded at the Gove Studio.  “Every person involved was not only someone we respect at what they create,” Sigler said, “but also a dear friend.” The song is now available on iTunes, Amazon, and Bandcamp. Idle&Wild will be performing at Lafayette’s Music Room on Thursday, March 30.

This video, directed by Noah Glenn of Choose901, depicts Singler and Cavitch as relationship repair service, helping out a pair of lovers in a spaghetti fueled spat. It’s joyful ending montage of happy couples is just what you need to brighten your Monday.

Music Video Monday: Idle & WIld

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Dead Soldiers

Music Video Monday is feeling your Monday pain. 

Dead Soldiers are one of Memphis’ hottest live acts, and if you’ve ever seen them play, you know why. Their music is folky, but the energy with which they deliver it on stage rivals the raunchiest rockers. Their new music video gives you a little taste of their passionate delivery. “Sixteen Tons” is a country folk classic by Merle Travis that was made famous by Tennesse Ernie Ford. Joined by guests from Columbia, Missouri band Hooten Hallars, the Soldiers attack the song, bringing out the piece’s grinding, working class frustration with a death metal roar. Directors Michael Jasud and Sam Shansky and cinematographer Joey Miller cast the performance in a stark black and white. This one’s for all y’all suffering through yet another Monday morning working in the proverbial coal mines. 

Music Video Monday: Dead Soldiers

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Bryan Hayes

Country comes to town in this week’s Music Video Monday. 

Bryan Hayes’ new video highlights some familiar Memphis landmarks. Directed by Melissa Anderson Sweazy, “Farther Down The Line” features some excellent cinematography by Sarah Fleming of locations such as The Arcade, the Downtown skyline, and the Mississippi riverfront. Today marks the world premiere of this song by the Iraq War veteran, in which the singer ponders the present and future of America. 

Music Video Monday: Bryan Hayes

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Alexis Grace

Perhaps Alexis Grace speaks for you this Music Video Monday with her song “I’m So Done”. 

This video by Memphis songstress and former American Idol finalist heralded the release of her first EP earlier this year. Directed by Beale Street Studios’ Bart Shannon and shot by Memphis’ favorite cinematographer Ryan Parker, the video sees Grace confronting her inner demons, in the form of herself. 

Music Video Monday: Alexis Grace

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

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Scott Biram at the Hi-Tone on Friday

Here comes a whole lotta trouble with some FIERCE guitar sounds:

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Valerie June on the Tonight Show

Valerie June played the Tonight Show last night. She starts after the last hash mark in the video timeline. 37:42. You can see it if you watch a million commercials. Seriously, a million. You will watch 2 minutes 30 seconds of commercials; Xfinity seconds, not real seconds. It’s worth the wait. Compared to her David Letterman appearance, she seems more at home with her band and more comfortable in her role. She seems to be justifying all the recent publicity. All the best from Memphis.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Holly & the Heathens at the Hi-Tone

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I’ve always liked Holly Cole’s blend of girl pop, classic rock and hard corn honky tonk but her first EP Fearless and Free left me a little cold. With the exception of “Turtle Dove,” a sweetly crafted study in old school twang, the songs all sounded a little murky and too much alike. Even Cole’s full bodied voice couldn’t make me fall in love with the disc the way I wanted to. And there was so much potential on display on Fearless and Free that I really wanted to.

Cole’s second release, the eponymous Holly & the Heathens, represents at least the partial fulfillment of that initial promise. It’s an alluring hodge-podge of sounds and styles that show off Cole’s considerable talents while suggesting that this is an artist who’s still slugging it out with her influences, trying to figure out where she fits. Standout tracks include “Make Up Your Mind,” a folk-psyche ballad that calls to mind Burning World-era Swans. “All That Was Lost” begins with the freight train rhythm of an old Johnny Cash song but plays out as an answer to “As Long,” from , The Reigning Sound’s first CD Break Up Break Down. “All in One Day” is a hip shaking exercise in classic rock while the beautifully arranged “Holy,” is a spare waltz for guitar and violin that closes this completely satisfying disc with a classic country music koan: “How do you sleep at night when your baby’s aching?” Well, how do you?

Holly & the Heathens is a thoughtfully arranged, beautifully sung tangle of yearning and heartbreak. Cole and company celebrate its release on Saturday, July 24th at the Hi-Tone with Jeffrey James & the Haul.

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Music Music Features

This Is the End

The 62-year-old Bob Frank was born and raised in Memphis, where he attended East High School. He was also a cohort of Jim Dickinson and others on the city’s underground folk scene in the Sixties. After a high-profile eponymous album for Vanguard Records in 1972 went awry, Frank moved to Oakland, California, and basically retired from the record business, re-emerging with a few obscure, self-released albums earlier this decade.

The 27-year-old John Murry was raised in Tupelo, relocated to Memphis as a teenager, and made a name for himself on the local music scene via first-rate alt-country bands the Dillingers and his own John Murry Band. Murry was quickly recognized as a major talent but never lived up to his promise while in Memphis. He followed his new wife to San Francisco in 2003.

Though separated by a generation, these two musical underachievers and kindred spirits came together in California, making a mark this year with World Without End, an album of original murder ballads that received a positive notice in Rolling Stone and has garnered rave reviews, particularly, in British music magazines. This week, the duo returns home to perform songs from the album in Memphis for the first time.

“He came out here, and a friend of ours from back in Memphis, Don McGregor, told him to look me up,” Frank says, explaining the roots of this unlikely musical tandem.

McGregor was an old acquaintance of Frank’s from his days on the Memphis music scene and had befriended Murry in recent years.

“Don used to play a bunch of Bob’s songs, but I didn’t know that they were Bob’s songs,” Murry says. “When I got [to California], Don told me that this was where Bob lived. So I gave him a call, and we got together.”

The idea to do an album of murder ballads came from Murry, but after recording a few covers of traditional songs at Frank’s home studio, the duo decided to go in a different direction.

“When we started singing [those songs], they sounded too old and corny and moralistic,” Frank says. “So we decided to write new songs in the same tradition. They would sound like old songs and be from stories that happened or are part of legends.”

To do this, Murry and Frank drew partly from their own knowledge and experience. “Tupelo, Mississippi, 1936,” a tale of a black man who was abducted and lynched on the town square, is a story Murry remembers learning about as a kid. The murder took place in 1926. The “1936” of the title refers to a tornado — one of the deadliest in recorded history — that ravaged the city a decade later and, according to local lore, was predicted by the lynching victim before his death.

Similarly, “Madeline, 1796” is a Mississippi story that Murry already knew. It takes place at King’s Tavern in Natchez, which Murry visited as a child. In the story, which is believed to be true, the tavern owner’s wife finds out her husband has been having an affair with the teenaged Madeline. She hires two men to kill the girl, then poisons the men and has them all entombed in the tavern’s fireplace. In the 1930s, the fireplace was opened up, and the remains of three people were found.

Frank’s Memphis-set “Bubba Rose, 1961” is even more personal, recounting an event from Frank’s own teen years: “We were sitting ’round the table when Uncle Bud goes/’It’s a shame what happened to old Bubba Rose,'” the song begins.

“We were sitting in my grandmother’s house, over on Vance,” Frank says. “And Bubba Rose had actually grown up right next door to my uncle. We were sitting around the table eating dinner, and my uncle says, ‘That’s too bad what happened to old Bubba Rose.’ Then he told us about how [Rose had] gone to work and shot his boss and was in jail. This was the day or so it happened. I was in high school and didn’t know anybody who would shoot someone, but there’s this guy who lives next door to my uncle and who’s in jail for killing his boss with a shotgun.”

Bob Frank

Other stories came from research, usually by Murry, usually on the Internet. “Wherever we could find a good story,” Frank says.

On the album, Murry and Frank alternate lead vocals, with the songs Murry sings typically in first-person — sometimes in the voice of the murdered, sometimes the murderer — and Frank’s performances mostly third-person. In the CD’s liner notes, Murry and Frank include quotes from source materials referencing the stories behind the songs — from newspaper and magazine articles, letters, wanted posters, and other sources. In concert, the duo has fashioned these materials, as well as photos and other visuals, into a slide show that accompanies the songs.

“I wanted to do the record because of a personal fear of dying and of death in general,” Murry says of his interest in such morbid material. “I don’t intend to be that way. It has far more to do with fear than it does with a ‘costume.’ This isn’t like Nick Cave’s Murder Ballads record, which I’m not knocking. Okay, maybe I am in a way. I thought it was kind of silly.”

“John thinks like that,” Frank says. “Even his love songs come out like that. That’s how he is.”

Frank’s attraction to the concept was more about craft than compulsion.

“To me, it was an interesting way to write songs,” Frank says. “It’s fun to write songs like that, and it’s fun to sing them — to get into those roles. To me, that’s what it was, the art of it.”

Frank and Murry initially bonded, in part, over the contrarian impulses they shared as expatriate Southerners in California.

“I still hate California,” Murry says, more than four years after making the move. “I never wanted to come here, and I don’t like it at all. I’d much rather be [in Memphis]. But it eases it a lot to have Bob here. And I’ve certainly done more musically here than I ever did in Memphis. But I really hate California.”

Murry says that his liberalism has been challenged by the more strident variety California offers.

“I started reading a lot of [French philosopher Michel] Foucault when I got out here, and fascism exists on all sides of the political spectrum,” Murry says. “Just walk down the street in Berkeley and try to put a cigarette out on the sidewalk and see what happens. People [shouldn’t be] treated with dignity and respect because of a political stance. It [should be] about a whole lot more than politics. That’s something I’ve learned since I’ve gotten out here.”

Frank, who relocated to California full-time more than 30 years ago, is much more settled in his new home, but he identifies with his younger partner’s sense of dislocation.

“I remember back in the Sixties, I’d go back and forth between Nashville and California, and it was like two totally different cultures,” Frank remembers. “Nashville had that country music culture, and California was all the hippies. When I was in California, I’d think, I guess I’m not really a hippie. I don’t fit in here. I guess I’m more of a country musician. Then I’d go back [to Nashville] and think, I don’t fit in here. These guys are too slick. I think I’m more like a hippie or something. Wherever you are, you don’t think you quite fit in.”

World Without End has taken Murry and Frank on two brief European tours this year and will finally bring them back home this week, where the pair will perform at the Hi-Tone Café and at Two Stick in Oxford with an “all-star” backing band, including Tim Mooney of the San Francisco band American Music Club and Memphis-based friends and mentors Dickinson and McGregor. Local band J.D. Reager & the Cold-Blooded Three will open the Memphis show.

Up next could be a sequel that features original murder ballads written about contemporary stories, such as slain American journalist Daniel Pearl and American activist Rachel Corrie, who was killed in Gaza a few years ago by Israeli troops.

But taking the same approach to such immediate material could be risky.

“If we were to take modern stories and look at them with the same amoralism that we did with the older stories, I don’t know how pleased people will be,” Murry says. “But I think it’s more powerful to leave something completely open-ended, to the point that the listener is forced to think about it.”

Murry says he hopes World Without End taps into listeners’ fears rather than manipulating their emotions. “I hope that’s what this record does,” he says. “I hope it haunts people.”

John Murry and Bob Frank
The Hi-Tone Café
Friday, December 7th
Showtime is 9 p.m., admission $5

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Music Music Features

Johnny Cash’s Block Party

The Nixon years were not a good period for national unity. With American soldiers dying in Vietnam and American cites suffering the after-effects of resistance to the civil rights movement, the country saw its own citizens pitted against each other — Nixon’s Silent Majority against a growing, vocal counterculture.

Amid these rifts, there was a cohort of pop musicians who sought a third way: progressive, pluralistic, in opposition to the worst of America’s mainstream culture yet also respectful, even reverent, of tradition. This included, perhaps most prominently, the music made — together or independently — by Bob Dylan and the Band at the time, records such as Dylan’s John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline, the Band’s Music From Big Pink and The Band, and the jointly recorded “basement tapes,” which wouldn’t see release until later the next decade. Other artists, such as Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Byrds, and Neil Young, followed similar paths.

But the artist who embodied this spirit as much as anyone was Johnny Cash, who brought the spirit of a pluralistic, progressive, yet deeply traditional American culture into homes across the nation via his ABC-TV variety show, The Johnny Cash Show, which broadcast from Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium between June 1969 and March 1971.

The Best of the Johnny Cash TV Show, a four-hour, two-DVD collection of 66 musical performances selected from the show’s 58 episodes, marks the first time any material from The Johnny Cash Show has been released on video or DVD. The collection, which was released in late September, is hosted by Kris Kristofferson, of whom Cash was an early champion, scoring a hit with Kristofferson’s song “Sunday Morning Coming Down” and singing a full version of the song — including the lyric “wishing, God, that I was stoned” — on the show, against the wishes of ABC. Other interview subjects include Cash’s son, John Carter Cash, Hank Williams Jr., for whom Cash was something of a surrogate father, and people who worked on the show, including bass player Marshall Grant and hairdresser Penny Lane.

Cash’s first show featured Bob Dylan, rarely seen on television and still considered a counterculture icon despite the recent release of his more traditional Nashville Skyline album. But it also featured Cash and his standard ensemble — wife June Carter, band the Tennessee Three, sidekick Carl Perkins, and backup singers the Statler Brothers — doing the Perkins-penned remembrance of family gospel sing-alongs, “Daddy Sang Bass.” And that’s how it went. With the Vietnam War tearing the country apart, Cash did his best to put it back together again on national TV every week, reconciling the rebellious impulses of the counterculture with the home-and-family traditionalism of older, more mainstream America. It was like a country equivalent to Dave Chappelle’s Block Party with a much larger audience.

In the days before punk, disco, and hip-hop pulled American music in such far-flung directions, it was easier to insist on such a musical big tent, of course, and The Johnny Cash Show was both tribute to and tutorial on the blues and country roots of American pop music.

There were limits, despite Cash’s impeccable taste and ornery insistence on having his show reflect that taste. There’s no Sly & the Family Stone or James Brown here, for instance, though Stevie Wonder does give a sharp reading of his tough-minded “Heaven Help Us All” (with a key lyric likely to challenge much of the show’s audience: “Heaven help the black man if he struggles one more day/Heaven help the white man if he turns his back away”). But rarely (James Taylor’s wispy reading of “Sweet Baby James” is an exception) does a performance collected here seem unworthy of the show.

Within the context of Cash’s self-imposed musical mission, the breadth of music (and musicians) on display is tremendous. Pre-rock legends are given the showcases they deserve, including Bill Monroe doing “Blue Moon of Kentucky” and, most notably, an appearance by Louis Armstrong. The true titan of 20th-century American popular music, Armstrong is eight months from death and frail, when he appears, but he’s magnetic, playing trumpet alongside Cash as they duet on Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #9,” which Armstrong had recorded with Rodgers in 1930.

The collection also captures some of Cash’s early rock contemporaries (including Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis), country stars (Loretta Lynn, Conway Twitty), then-emerging songwriters (Kristofferson, Tony Joe White)), and some of the biggest and best rock acts of the day (CCR, Neil Young).

Highlights are plentiful: Ray Charles delivers a spectacular, bluesy reinvention of Cash’s own “Ring of Fire,” to a standing ovation. Cash and George Jones swap vocal sound effects on a duet of Jones’ “White Lightning.” Cash and Merle Haggard duet on Haggard’s beautiful prison ballad “Sing Me Back Home.” Eric Clapton leads Derek & the Dominoes through an inspired rendition of the Chuck Willis R&B standard “It’s Too Late.” You sense Cash’s drive to unite different audiences when he greets the British rock band onstage at the Ryman after the performance and says, “I really am proud to see that the people here love you like they do.” This followed immediately by Perkins joining Cash and Clapton on a fierce version of Perkins’ Sun-era hit “Matchbox.” And some of the finest moments come when the show is winnowed down to Cash and his own extended musical family, particularly on gospel numbers.

For those who weren’t privileged to see the show at the time, The Best of the Johnny Cash TV Show is a revelation, but these 66 performances seem to be only a sliver of what Cash presided over during the show’s 58 episodes. The entire series deserves to be given new life, if not on DVD, then via new television broadcasts. (CMT, are you listening?) Hopefully, The Best of the Johnny Cash TV Show draws enough attention to make that happen.

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Music Record Reviews

Porter Wagoner: another successful country comeback.

Porter Wagoner got old early and he stayed that way, thank goodness.

At 30, the craggy-faced, painfully thin hillbilly looked and sounded like a man twice his age. His trembling, overly emotive baritone brought authenticity to a morose catalog of hard-luck ballads about asylum doors, barroom floors, and every kind of gut-wrenching, tear-shedding heartache a man could ever know. With hits like “Sorrow on the Rocks” and “Cold Hard Facts of Life,” he repeatedly chronicled the short, treacherous journey from innocent disbelief to resigned disaffection. Even the glass-raising, break-out-the-bottle revelry of “Misery Loves Company” was framed as the hollow ritual of a man who has finally become comfortable with his numbness.

Although he’s now 79 and sporting grayer hair and deeper wrinkles, Wagoner looks pretty much the same as he always has, and it’s no overstatement to say that he sounds as good or better than ever. The only thing standing between Wagonmaster, his newest CD on the increasingly vital Anti- label, and total Wagonerian perfection, is the absence of a duet with his original singing partner, the fabulous, and largely forgotten, Norma Jean.

Although Wagoner covers a Johnny Cash song here, nobody should pick up Wagonmaster expecting cool, Cash-style covers of popular modern-rock songs. By the mid-1960s, Wagoner was already too old and set in his ways to learn new tricks. At a time when artists such as Ray Price, Merle Haggard, and Buck Owens were harmonizing with the rock-and-roll revolution and infusing traditional country music with urban grit and bluesy sophistication, Wagoner was running as fast as he could in the opposite direction.

He crucified himself on a cross of gospel-inspired melodies, mid-tempo waltzes, and impossible sorrow, and for these unforgivable transgressions against modernity and the march of progress he was rewarded with 81 hit singles and a long-running television show.

Forever out of step with the times, he wore a gravity-defying pompadour 20 years after they’d gone out of style. He refused to abandon the spectacular rhinestone-encrusted Nudie suits that Willie, Waylon, and the rest of country’s Outlaws turned into a symbol of everything that was ridiculous and wrong with Nashville pop. Wagoner’s brand of honky-tonk was excessively maudlin and precariously balanced between heartfelt emotion and outlandish camp. And in purely visual terms, that line was fully breached every time the gangly singer stepped in front of a camera to sing “Someone I Used To Know” alongside his cartoonishly voluptuous, joyously trashy, and much younger duet partner, Dolly Parton.

Wagoner’s ear for a soap-worthy storyline is still impeccable. His husky take on Cash’s “Committed to Parkview” may be Wagonmaster‘s guiltiest (and gothiest) pleasure, though it’s certainly no more deranged than “Be a Little Quieter,” which finds a sleepless narrator politely telling his noisy memories to “keep it down.” From the nostalgic rush of “11-Cent Cotton” to the impressionistic prose of “My Many Hurried Southern Trips,” each of Wagonmaster‘s 17 tracks is stuffed with imagery as spare and searing as a Raymond Carver short story.

In recent years, the California-based Anti- label has become a refuge for fussy master craftsmen such as Tom Waits and a safe haven for seasoned artists such as Merle Haggard who want to make music the way they know how without some wet-behind-the-ears industry honcho telling them how to hip up. Marty Stuart, Wagonmaster‘s inestimably talented producer, has assembled a top-notch group of musicians who have wisely done nothing to bring Wagoner’s sound into the 21st century. It’s hard to imagine that that particular mission could have been accomplished at any other label.

Every fan of golden-age honky-tonk should hope and pray that George Jones got an advanced copy of his old friend’s latest joint and that the old Possum knows how to take a not-so-subtle hint. It wouldn’t hurt Ray Price to take a listen either. — Chris Davis

Grade: A