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Music Music Blog

Cooper-Young Festival Taps Doug MacLeod as Headliner

The Cooper-Young Festival, slated for Saturday, September 16th, has named a nationally recognized artist to headline its musical stages this year — though he’s not exactly a household name.

Doug MacLeod doesn’t do arena tours with multiple costume changes, but he’s the real deal, and has been for 40 years. That’s when he made his recording debut on Pee Wee Crayton’s Make Room For Pee Wee, and the guitarist and singer has been celebrated as both a side man and solo performer ever since. And while the award-winning blues man grew up in New York City, it’s only fitting that he now calls Memphis home.

MacLeod’s bio notes that he first studied with a one-eyed country bluesman from Toano, Virginia named Ernest Banks, who also gave him the principles of music and performance that have guided him ever since: “Never play a note you don’t believe” and “Never write or sing about what you don’t know about.”

Unlike many blues artists, MacLeod plays only his own compositions (and he’s written over 300 songs), but his music has also been recorded by many other artists, including Dave Alvin, James Armstrong, Eva Cassidy, Albert Collins, Papa John Creach, Big Lou Johnson, Albert King, Chris Thomas King, Coco Montoya, Billy Lee Riley, Son Seals, Tabby Thomas, and Joe Louis Walker.

Local and international fans of the Blues Music Awards know his name well, and just this May The Blues Foundation announced in its 44th Annual Blues Music Awards that MacLeod was the winner of the 2023 Acoustic Artist Award. Earlier this year, Downbeat also named MacLeod’s 2022 record as an album of the year.

“Doug MacLeod’s A Soul To Claim, like many of his 21 previous albums, makes it clear that he’s an archetype of the top-level blues storyteller: wry, sharp-witted, virile, inclined to poke fun at sentiment,” wrote Frank-John Hadley in Downbeat Magazine. “MacLeod bestows his music with a human intimacy that’s a function of his affable personality and the original material he works with. With natural authority and charisma, he communicates one-on-one with listeners.”

Meanwhile, there will be plenty of other music at this year’s Cooper-Young Festival, as is only fitting for the neighborhood calling itself “Memphis’ largest historically hip neighborhood dating back to 1849.” Here’s the full lineup:

Memphis Grizzlies Stage
12:30 pm             Steve Lockwood and Old Dogs
1:30 pm               Robots Attack
2:30 pm               Switchblade Kid
3:30 pm               Avon Park
4:30 pm               SKIFF

Guaranty Bank Stage
11:15 am             Brian Blake
12:15 pm             Mike Hewlett & The Racket
1:15 pm               Short in the Sleeve
2:15 pm               Raneem Imam
3:15 pm               Rowdy & the Strays
4:15 pm               Max Kaplan & The Magics
5:15 pm               Headliner – Doug MacLeod

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Bruce Newman

Music Video Monday is on the march!

Bruce Newman is a lawyer and accountant specializing in small business and entertainment law. He’s also the host of Folksong Fiesta, airing Wednesdays at 8 a.m. on WEVL. A true polymath, when he’s not helping his clients navigate the difficult world of the music business, he’s writing songs of his own. Like most people nowadays, Newman is concerned about the state of the world, and in the best folkie tradition, he lays it all out in his new tune “Doing The Best We Can”. It’s a song of protest and solution which urges us all to listen to our better angels.

To help record the song and film the video, he gathered a crew of Memphis all-stars including vocalists Susan Marshall and Reba Russell, James Alexander of the Bar-Kays, blues guitarists Eric Lewis and Doug MacLeod, horn players Art Edmaistan and Marc Franklin, keyboardist Gerald Stephens, and multi-instrumentalist Paul Taylor. Director Laura Jean Hocking combines footage of the musicians taken at Music + Arts Studio with extensive animation to create a lyric video which really gets Newman’s point across. Take a look, then make sure you’re registered to vote.

Music Video Monday: Bruce Newman

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

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Music Music Blog

Maria Muldaur Makes Special Memphis Appearance For Protect Our Aquifer

Maria Muldaur

Maria Muldaur is one of those perennial luminaries in the music world that we all too easily take for granted. But even though her biggest hit, “Midnight At the Oasis,” came out in 1973, she has consistently created a body of quality, genre-spanning work that has one foot in the past and one eye on the future. It’s no small feat, then, that the annual Acoustic Sunday Live! series was able to add her to its roster this year, along with several other Americana talents. As with last year’s show, all proceeds benefit the nonprofit Protect Our Aquifer, dedicated to warding off threats to the pristine quality of this city’s natural underground water supply. I caught up with Muldaur to see what she’s been up to lately, and it turns out that it’s been quite a lot.

Memphis Flyer: Is your stop in Memphis part of a tour, or is this a one-off thing?

Maria Muldaur: First of all, I’m always doing a lot of shows. I haven’t slowed down at all. I started the year with a Grammy nomination for my 41st album, and did a couple of tours this year. In the fall I was awarded the Americana Music Association’s Trailblazer Award. And so in that sense I am doing a lot of shows, most of the time, but my stop in Memphis is to do something very special: a benefit for the aquifer. And then I’ll be doing some Christmas shows with an amazing guitarist named John Jorgenson. I’m looking forward to that. And that closes out the year for me.

MF: I know the progressive community in Memphis appreciates you lending your voice to this cause. You’re no stranger to wedding your musical talent to a political vision.

MM: Well, first of all, environmental causes shouldn’t be just for progressive communities. These different environmental crises and situations we’re facing are things that concern all of us, as a human, or even an animal, on the planet. These are universal issues. But I’ve always really cared about the environment, and about social issues.

In 2008, I put out an album called Yes We Can!. After making almost forty albums, I was searching for a theme for the next one, and I thought about all the issues that were weighing on my heart and mind at the time. So I came up with the idea of doing a protest album. But I quickly realized after a few days that I had never really liked “protest music” that much when it was first coming out in the early 60s. I totally believed in the causes they were singing about, but the music itself seemed a little dreary and overly serious for me.

So over a couple of days, the idea morphed into doing a pro-peace album. And I used a lot of songs that soul and R&B artists had written and recorded in the late 60s and early 70s. So I switched my focus a little bit and put together some wonderful songs from that era, including three Bob Dylan songs, and also songs by Marvin Gaye and so forth. And I formed something called the Women’s Voices For Peace Choir which included Bonnie Raitt, Joan Baez, Jane Fonda, Odetta, Phoebe Snow, Holly Near, Jenni Muldaur, and others. I gathered up a bunch of women who had raised their voices in the cause of peace and social justice and the environment. Whether it was through singing or another medium. And anyway, we all got together and did that album. I always like to do songs that address those issues. As long as they’re full of spirit and good music. I guess I would call it protest music to dance to.

MF: And the song “Yes We Can, Can” is a perfect example of that. Was that recorded in New Orleans?

MM: No, it was recorded here in the San Francisco Bay Area. But I have recorded many albums in New Orleans, including my last one, which was my 41st album. That was called Don’t You Feel My Leg, and it was a tribute to a wonderful blues woman from New Orleans named Blue Lu Barker. And I did that with a band of all-star, killer players from down there. My music is very informed by New Orleans music. So I have a special connection with that. But the “Yes We Can, Can” song was written by Allen Toussaint, one of New Orleans’ greatest musicians and songwriters, so you weren’t far off on that one. We lost a good one when he left us.

I also did the song “War.” And three Bob Dylan songs, “Masters of War,” “License to Kill,” and “John Brown.” To think that he wrote two of those when he was but 21 years old is kind of amazing.

MF: The song “John Brown” was fairly obscure — something he recorded under the name Blind Boy Grunt, for the Broadside Ballads album back in 1963.

MM: Possibly, but I actually first heard it sung by the Staple Singers. I’m a huge fan of the Staple Singers. In fact, I’ve known Mavis and the family since 1962, before they even broke out. I used to go hear them in a little church in New Jersey. I grew up in New York City. So Mavis and I go way back. And of course Pops Staples sang that one. And it’s just a riveting, really powerful, poignant song. I wanted to definitely include that one.

MF: It sounds like you’re somewhat familiar with the Memphis Sand Aquifer.

MM: I don’t know too many of the details, but the minute I heard a little bit about it, I said ‘Sign me on.’ It’s one thing when people make stupid choices without knowing any better, but now we do know better and it’s just sad that we even have to make an issue of it. It should be, ‘Oh, is this threatening to cause damage to our water supply? Oh, of course then we won’t do it!’

MF: Who will you be performing with in your Memphis show?

MM: Well, this is part of Bruce Newman’s benefit that he does every year, Acoustic Sunday Live! He does a benefit every year in the form of a hootenanny. It’s what we used to call ‘open mic’ back in the 60s. So I’m gonna be onstage with all of the other performers, including Ruthie Foster, who I dearly love. She’s just wonderful. Guy Davis, a wonderful guitarist. And Don Flemons. And also Doug MacLeod. So we’ll all be sitting onstage together, each doing a couple of songs. And they all play guitar and can back themselves up, but I explained to Bruce that I don’t play guitar. So I’m bringing my piano player from my band, the Red Hot Bluesiana band.

Blues is where I’ve comfortably settled after taking a 56-year odyssey through various forms of American roots music. My keyboard player for over 26 years, Chris Barnes, is going to back me up, because I need someone to accompany me. And I think there’ll be some nice interaction between us artists. There may be some duets and this and that. It’s a very informal and intimate format, really, and I’m really looking forward to it.

I think we’ll have fun because we’re all kind of musically interrelated in the styles of music we do. It ought to be a fun and creative evening. And I just hope that the folks of Memphis will come out to support this really good cause. It’s something that affects all of them. Besides raising money, we have to raise awareness about this and make people ever more aware and ever more vigilant about issues that are directly impacting the health of their environment.

I don’t care what party you support, we all have to breathe and we all have to have clean air and water. That these kind of things should even be an issue means we’ve got a long way to go to catch up with a lot of the rest of the world. The rest of the world is waking up and placing more of a priority on cleaning up the environment and rehabilitating it. We need to do everything we can not to further damage the environment.

I love Memphis, the people, the culture, the music, not to mention the food of Memphis. And I actually built in an extra day on my trip so I could spend a whole day at the wonderful blues museum down there. And it’ll be a special treat to be up on the stage with my brothers and sisters. I hope everyone will turn out and make it a success. Amen!

Maria Muldaur appears at Acoustic Sunday Live! The Concert to Protect Our Aquifer, with Ruthie Foster, Dom Flemons, Guy Davis, and Doug MacLeod. Sunday, December 8th, First Congregational Church, 7 p.m. Proceeds go to Protect Our Aquifer. To purchase tickets, go to acousticsundaylive.eventive.org.