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Rock Docs: The Story of Memphis’ Black & Wyatt Records

Why would two doctors want to start a record label? Ask Dennis Black and Robert Wyatt of Black & Wyatt Records, and they’ll tell you it’s because they love Memphis music.

Black is a pediatric gastroenterologist, and Wyatt is a pediatric nephrologist. They met through their work at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and bonded over their love of music, particularly Memphis rock-and-roll.

Wyatt says even though he’s lived and practiced medicine in Memphis since the 1980s, for many years he was unaware of the city’s fertile underground music scene. “When I had a division to run, a research lab, and a family to raise, I missed out. My lab techs were going to the Antenna Club, but I never did.”

Dennis Black (left) and Robert Wyatt (right)

Black grew up in Covington and worked at the town’s radio station, WKBL, in high school, then for Memphis State’s WTGR “Music has kind of been my hobby all along,” he says. “Unfortunately, I can’t really play. But I like hearing live music, and I have a good record collection.”

“About the time $5 Cover came out, I started paying attention to Memphis bands and meeting Memphis musicians,” Wyatt says.

After he got to know several Memphis musicians through the cleaning company, Two Chicks and a Broom (“Valerie June cleaned our house for a fairly long period of time.”), he started hiring bands to play for yard parties at his home in 2012. The Harbert Avenue Porch Show has since attracted Jack Oblivian, the River City Tanlines, Snowglobe, and James and the Ultrasounds, to name a few.

“He’s his own little institution, with the porch shows,” says filmmaker Mike McCarthy, a Memphis punk pioneer whose daughter Hanna Star was also featured in a porch show.
“Mike approached me about wanting to put the Fingers Like Saturn album out,” says Wyatt. Fingers Like Saturn was a band McCarthy formed to feature Cori Dials (now Cori Mattice), a singer and actress he met while working at Sun Studios in 2006. He saw Mattice sing with her band the Splints. “They were good, but she looked like a Chrissie Hynde/Debbie Harry figure — lost in time, full of charisma.”

McCarthy wrote a bunch of songs and gathered keyboardist Shelby Bryant, sax player Suzi Hendrix, cellist Jonathan Kirkscey, and guitarist George Takeda. Then he put guitar wizard Steve Selvidge on drums, which, amazingly, works just fine.

Dan Ball

Fingers Like Saturn

“I introduced Cori to this group of talented eccentrics,” says McCarthy. “She jumped right into it.”

The band recorded at Sun Studios and at Selvidge’s home studio. “I’ve always played in punk bands, but I wanted this band to be a well-produced glam-rock band,” says McCarthy.

Filled with Memphis heavy hitters and held together with Mattice’s powerful alto, the glam influence is palpable, especially in songs like the Bowie-worshipping “Glam Lies.” But, since it’s Memphis, the sounds are more eccentric. “Satin (Pine Box Lullaby)” dabbles in Mexicalia by way of Johnny Cash. “Black Ray of Sunshine,” a ballad about the Black Dahlia, is an early example of the string-arranging skills that have made Kirkscey a sought-after soundtrack composer.

Before the eponymous record could find a label, Mattice’s career took her out of Memphis, and the band drifted apart. Ten years later, McCarthy played the recordings for Black and Wyatt. “We listened to the recordings, and they were really good!” says Black. “It was just a conspiracy of events that it didn’t get a wide release at the time. If we were going to do it, we decided to make it a really nice record.”

Fingers Like Saturn will reunite at DKDC on October 24th for Black &
Wyatt’s first record release party. But the label-mates are already looking forward to their next release: a single by the Heathens, a Memphis high school garage band that recorded at Sun Studios in 1956. Black and Wyatt plan to continue releasing a mixture of contemporary Memphis acts and lost gems from the 60-year history of Memphis rock.

“We’re not in it to become millionaires,” says Black. “We have our day jobs. We want to get the music out there.”

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Nashville to Saturn

Most Memphians don’t think of Nashville as having a booming soul scene, but as the group Charles Walker & the Dynamites attest, the town’s legacy is more than just twangy country tunes.

“The history of Memphis soul music is a big deal to the band, and we’ve looked at Memphis from the get-go as a second market,” says Doyle Davis, owner of Nashville record store Grimey’s and an ardent supporter of the Dynamites.

This Friday, June 29th, the group will roll into The Hi-Tone Café for a release party for Kaboom!, their debut album, released on Outta Sight Records, which is co-owned by Davis and the Dynamites’ founder/guitarist Bill Elder, aka Leo Black.

“We had to get the CD out for Bonnaroo,” Davis says, noting that the Dynamites played the East Tennessee music festival on June 16th:

“It was awesome. The Dynamites were on one of the small stages, but they packed in over 1,000 people. There were kids up front dancing up a storm and screaming, ‘Who are you?’ Charles kept screaming back, ‘I’m Charles Walker, and these are the Dynamites!’ It was the most enthusiastic crowd we’ve ever had, and the band ended up throwing away their set lists, because Charles took it and ran.”

Kaboom! features 10 show-stopping, James Brown-styled funk numbers, ranging from the propulsive “Body Snatcher” to the deep groove “Killin’ It.” The album has already garnered a distribution deal for Outta Sight with RED, which has placed it in mom-and-pop record stores and at national chains such as Barnes & Noble and Borders and online stores such as Amazon, iTunes, and Miles of Music.

“We pressed 5,000 copies to start with, which is our break-even point,” Davis explains. “We put this record out with the hopes that we can make some money and put it back into the label. Daptone (the Brooklyn-based label that’s home to Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings) has been a huge inspiration for us. We see ourselves as the Southeastern complement to what they’re doing.”

Locally, the explosive Kaboom! is available at several stores, or you can pick up a copy at the Hi-Tone on Friday night. Memphis DJs Buck Wilders and The Hook-Up will open the show, which costs $8 in advance or $10 at the door. For more information, go to www.MySpace.com/TheDynamitesBand.

“You have to use your imagination to tap into what really went on, and that’s what I like about rock-and-roll.”

So says local filmmaker John Michael McCarthy, best known for films such as Teenage Tupelo, E*vis Meets the Beat*les, and The Sore Losers.

This summer marks the 30th anniversary of Elvis’ death, but right now, all McCarthy can talk about is David Bowie.

“I’m looking for anybody who has stories about Bowie in Memphis,” McCarthy says. “His second Ziggy Stardust show in America took place at Ellis Auditorium in September 1972. The next year, he did Aladdin Sane at the Coliseum. And back in ’72, he visited Dolph Smith at the Memphis College of Art and bought some work from him.

McCarthy’s new Bowie-esque band, Fingers Like Saturn, will make its debut at The Madison Flame on Friday, June 29th, with openers The Limes and Sector Zero.

Although most people on the Midtown scene know McCarthy primarily as a filmmaker, the Tupelo native made his local debut 23 years ago as a guitarist in the punk group Distemper.

“I’m just lucky that all of these talented people help me with my crazy ideas,” he says of Fingers Like Saturn, which features Jonathan Wires, Susie Hendrix, Jonathan Kirkscey, Steve Selvidge, Cori Dials, and George Takaeda, McCarthy’s former musical partner in Distemper and its follow-up, The Rockroaches.

“When I saw Cori sing in her group The Splints and talked with George, whom I haven’t played with in 15 years, it was like the planets lined up,” McCarthy says.

Playing the Madison Flame, site of the old Antenna club, also makes sense, he says, citing the 1986 date when Distemper played the club’s first all-ages show and the numerous gigs that the Rockroaches performed there.

“My new songs,” McCarthy says, “are like short stories. They’re tightly structured glam pop songs about the South in a ‘what if Bowie came from Mississippi?’ kind of way.

“I think it’s interesting that with most bands in town, there’s no front person. I don’t want to be the front person myself. I like being behind the scenes or to a little left of the scene. Cori has the charisma to do it: She doesn’t just sing songs. She invades space.”

For more info, visit GuerrillaMonster.com.