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Gonerfest 18: Saturday and Sunday

Day three of Goner Records’ cavalcade of talent was on the toasty side, and the same could have been said for many of the fans milling through the Railgarten grounds. But the sheer sonic appeal of the afternoon, hosted with aplomb by Tim Prudhomme of the band Fuck, did away with any flagging spirits. After a noon opener by Seattle’s Zack Static Sect, things were brought back closer to home with Nashville’s Snooper, Memphis’ Ibex Clone, and Hattiesburg’s MS Paint.

“Gofer Nest” Rolls On (photo by Alex Greene)

Then Prudhomme took to the stage and announced “I saw these guys in a record store in 2019, and they were great. And it’s really hard to tell great in a record store. From New Orleans, Silver Synthetic!” The band, whose Third Man debut album has received a lot of buzz on the grapevine this year, kicked in with a uniquely upbeat sound that somehow blends the twin guitar attack of Television with the pop sensibilities of the Zombies, or “mid/late ’80s C86/Flying Nun guitar jangle,” as the Goner booklet puts it. And perhaps a bit of Nerves thrown in? A beguiling blend, carried off with precision and a bit of abandon.

Silver Synthetic (photo by Alex Greene)

The Exbats feature the young drummer and singer Inez McLain, immersed in ’70s punk and ’60s jangle pop, who proudly wore a “Help Me Rhonda” T-shirt. “I dressed up like Brian Wilson,” she deadpanned, “but it was too hot for the bathrobe.” Her father Kenny stood nearby, serving as guitarist, singer, and hype man with vigorous enthusiasm, while he, the bassist, and the second guitarist channeled their inner teens. Their pounding beats, crisscross riffs, and singalong choruses soon had the audience jumping. The highlight: a joyous rendering of their 2018 tune, “I Got The Hots For Charlie Watts.”

The Exbats (photo by Alex Greene)

And then came an artist who requested that Prudhomme present him only as “a man who needs no introduction.” In the case of Eric Goulden, aka Wreckless Eric, that was probably true, at least within Goner’s orbit. He’s been well loved since his 1978 hit, “Whole Wide World,” which he played with his usual dynamism, but the clincher is how his songwriting has evolved since. He carries off his mini-masterpieces of gritty prose/poetry with naught but an acoustic guitar and a few pedals, which he uses sparingly to great effect, at times conjuring the illusion of a full band behind him, so great is the cacophony.

After the set, none other than Reigning Sound’s Greg Cartwright, shaking his head, expressed his utter admiration for Goulden’s craft as both a songwriter and storyteller, and the minimalism with which he enacts it. A local poet of Memphis also expressed her love of his lyrics. But his artistic zenith may have been his banter.

Wreckless Eric exhorts the crowd (photo by Alex Greene)

“The rest of the set’s going to be a story in about 14 halves,” he quipped after the first two songs (it wasn’t). And, echoing the words of Miss Pussycat two days before, he commented, “I can’t believe I’m here, really. I mean, it was so weird. The whole fucking thing was weird. I mean, it still is weird!” Later, he elaborated how a case of Covid-19, mistakenly diagnosed, led to a full-on heart attack last year. Yet now, that seemed a distant memory, as he delivered his songs with a quiet energy that sometimes exploded into a very punk-inspired anger.

Like many festival-goers, your stalwart reporter had to miss Spread Joy from Chicago and G.G. King from Atlanta, though by all accounts, they both rocked. I picked up the thread as Omaha’s Digital Leather hit the stage, and hit it they certainly did, as group founder Shawn Foree led the band through driving, synth-inflected rockers with a dark edge. The guitarist, brandishing a red Flying V axe, literally lept (or dive-bombed) into one solo after another as the rest of the band gyrated sympathetically. No Saddle Creek flavors here — this was not from your mama’s Omaha!

Digital Leather (photo by Alex Greene)

Digital Leather’s power was a perfect appetizer before the tasty main course served up by local heroes Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks. Igniting their set at a pummeling, fast pace is nothing new for this group, but they had an extra fire to them this night. Early on, Jack noted that “Amtrak doesn’t go west! If you’ve been stranded, you know what I mean.” No one doubted that Jack O. has been stranded. Later, he bemoaned the cancellation of one of Detroit’s finest bands. “I really wish we could have seen Negative Approach!” he exclaimed. From then on, the band’s name became a running joke. After a screaming chorus of “Mass Confusion all around!” came to a close, a band member helpfully pointed out the song’s negativity.

Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks (photo by Alex Greene)

But that was but a foreshadowing of the whole world being negated by adolescent ennui, when Jack called friend Abe White of the Manatees up to sing Alice Cooper’s classic “I’m Eighteen.” White delivered the song with manic abandon, gracing the audience with flipped birds and hurtled beer cans as he sang lines like, “I’ve got a baby’s brain and an old man’s heart!” By the end, fellow Oblivian Greg Cartwright had jumped up to join in the chorus. It was a perfect celebration of the coming of age of Gonerfest. “Next year,” Jack pronounced, “Gonerfest is gonna be able to vote!”

Greg Cartwright, Jack Oblivian and Abe White sing “I’m Eighteen” (photo by Chris McCoy)

After a steamroller version of Television’s “I See No Evil,” Jack and the Sheiks handed the keys to Nots, Memphis’ greatest post-punk synth-and-riff shouters. Seeing them is a rare treat these days, with drummer Charlotte Watson now living in New Orleans, so this was a welcome blast from the past, as she and bassist Meredith Lones pounded on with their trademark finesse behind Natalie Hoffman’s vocals, guitar and synth layers.

Nots (photo by Chuck Vicious)

Speaking of blasts from the past, the evening’s true exemplars of that were the Spits, nearing their 30th year together. Having cultivated a back-to-basics approach to punk, all rapid-fire verses and singalong choruses, one might easily forget the more theatrical side of these skate-punk legends. That was revealed right out of the gate, as the synthesizer player was led out, landing strip style, in a full-on budget robot suit. He then conjured up the sound of an air raid siren, and the games were off. Once filled out with the rest of the quartet, his synth drones merely added a thickener to the choppy, guitar-driven punk at which they excel. And yet this was no mere oldies act. Sure, old punks were singing along with every song, but from the first downbeat, the mosh pit — populated with fans likely younger than the band itself — lit up as if the ground below was electrified.

The Spits (photo by Alex Greene)

It was a fitting end to the final night of the festival, but there was yet more music to come. Aside from the many after parties that carried on well into the wee hours, Sunday afternoon beckoned with the last official performances.

With our brief taste of fall on hold again, the afternoon was brilliant and warm. That, and perhaps the previous three days of responsible hedonism on the crowd’s part, made the set by Aquarian Blood go down like a Bloody Mary. Focusing the quieter recent albums recorded at home by J.B. and Laurel Horrell, Aquarian Blood nonetheless brought a full band to the proceedings, emulating those records’ exquisite, low key arrangements with exactitude and soul. At center stage, beside Laurel, sat J.B., forced to play sitting down due to an injured hand. He nonetheless directed the affair with assurance, occasionally shouting cues, or, if they didn’t quite take, appreciating the chaos that ensued. “That was a good ending right there!” he exclaimed after one breakdown.

Aquarian Blood (photo by Chris McCoy)

And then, after a few words of thanks from Goner’s finest, the Wilkins Sisters stepped up to put a capstone on the four-day event. The appearance of the four singers, all daughters or granddaughters of the late Rev. John Wilkins, was a poignant moment, given the many times the Reverend himself used to close the proceedings in years past.

“As you may know, our dad passed last year from Covid,” said one of the sisters. “We’re trying to keep his legacy going. I don’t sound like my dad, but we do the best that we can with what we’ve got.” Indeed they did, as a fine band that included Al Gamble on organ delivered tracks of thumping, blues-infused gospel to back the sisters’ soaring four part harmonies.

The Wilkins Sisters (photo by Alex Greene)
The Wilkins Sisters (photo by Alex Greene)

“Y’all give it up for my daddy!” they exclaimed after one number, and the people did. Noise-hardened punks, skate brats, and rockers all accepted a bit of Mississippi into their souls, raising their hands in the air as if they’d seen the light. More so than ever, the sacred soul captured that almost holy sense of communion that so many expressed throughout the weekend, often using a phrase heard many times: Gonerfest 18 was no less than a family reunion.

Gofer Nests: Always Evolving (photo by Chris McCoy)

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Gonerfest 18: Friday

“I feel like tonight, we’re all Henry Rollins,” said MC Joel Parsons from the stage on Friday night of Gonerfest 18. 

Rollins, the legendary Black Flag frontman, was scheduled to travel to Memphis to be the MC for the show, but canceled because of Covid’s Delta wave. So Parsons, his replacement, simply claimed to be the punk icon all night. The pandemic hovered over the event, which was 100 percent virtual last year, but moved to Railgarten for a vax-only, hybrid event this year.

Joel Parsons

Masking compliance was generally very good in the crowd, which swelled steadily as afternoon aged into evening, except when they were drinking Gonerbrau, the Memphis Made craft beer brewed specially for the fest. (“Chuggable!” brags the official program.) 

Total Hell

The festival’s move to the open-air Railgarten has definitely changed the vibe. Gonerfest is usually something that happens late at night, hidden in cramped clubs, defiantly underground. But these are times that call for change. Goner Records’ Zac Ives said he and co-owner Eric Friedl were skeptical at first, “… but we got in, started looking around, and thinking about our crowd here, and thought, ‘This can work.’” 

Thursday night had started off tentatively, but it ended up being a rousing success. I spent most of Thursday with a camera in my hand as a part of the newly minted Goner Stream Team. The live-stream, under the direction of Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury, is bringing  the music to the far-flung masses with an ingenious kluge of 20-year-old Sony Handycams, analog hand switchers, and a cluster of mixing boards and dangerously overheating laptops. Gonerfest was actually a pioneer of online streaming, but this year, with the international bands from Australia, Japan, and Europe kept at bay by the pandemic, it’s more important than ever. 

Miss Pussycat and Model Zero’s Frank McLallen.

By the time Model Zero took the stage on Friday afternoon, it was clear Ives was right. The crowd had adapted to the space, which Parsons joked was a “beach volleyball and trash-themed bar.” Model Zero locked into their dance punk groove instantly, and got the afternoon crowd moving with their cover of Buffalo Springfield’s “Mister Soul” and their banging original “Modern Life.” 

Total Hell ably represented the New Orleans trash-metal contingent that has been a Gonerfest staple for years. Nashville’s Kings of the Fucking Sea started their set off by providing noise accompaniment to Memphis’ Sheree Renée Thomas, poet laureate of the New Weird South, before heading off into a set of Can-infused psych jams. 

Nick Allison

Usually there’s several hours after the afternoon sets to change venues, but noise ordinances have forced this outdoor Gonerfest to start and end earlier, so afternoon spilled into evening as Austinite singer/songwriter Nick Allison took the stage with a set that was, dare I say it, kinda Springsteen-y. 

Optic Sink

Another sign that Gonerfest’s audience’s taste has broadened from the old days of all caveman beats, all the time, is Optic Sink. NOTS Natalie Hoffman and Magic Kids’ Ben Bauermeister’s electronic project never sounded better, with the big sound system bringing out their nuances. They, too, debuted a new song that embraced their inner Kraftwerk. 

Sick Thoughts

Gonerfest frequent flyer Drew Owens returned with his long-running project Sick Thoughts. Their set was loud, offensive, and confrontational, and sent beer cans flying across the venue. As Ben Rednour, who was working the Stream Team camera at the edge of the stage, said afterward “When they started sword fighting with mic stands, I knew it was anything goes.” 

Violet Archaea

The Archeas’ album  has been a big pandemic discovery for me, and the Louisville band’s Gonerfest debut was hotly anticipated. Violent Archaea was the charismatic center of attention as the band ripped through a ragged set that reminded us all of why we like this music in the first place. 

Sweeping Promises

The greenest band on the bill was Sweeping Promises. Arkansans Lira Mondal and Caufield Schung have gone from Boston to Austin recording their debut album Hunger for a Way Out, but they haven’t played out much. “I think this is like their fourth show,” said Ives in the streaming control room (which was a tiki bar in the Before Time) as they set up. They’re going to get spoiled by all the attention their Gang of Four-esque, bass-driven New Wave brought from the rapt crowd. 

Reigning Sound’s Greg Cartwright duets with Marcella Simien as John Whittemore and Alex Greene rock along.

The climax of Friday night was Greg Cartwright’s Reigning Sound. After a successful return to the stage with the original Memphis lineup of Greg Roberson, Jeremy Scott, and Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene at Crosstown Theater earlier this summer, the “original lineup” has expanded into a Bluff City A-Team with the addition of Graham Winchester, string sisters Krista and Ellen Wroten, and multi-instrumentalist (and dentist) John Whittmore. The Crosstown show had been a careful reading of the new songs from the new album A Little More Time With Reigning Sound. This set transformed the big band into a raucous rave-up machine. (With Cartwright as band leader, set lists are more suggestions of possible futures than concrete plans for how the show will go.) Cartwright invited Marcella Simien onstage for washboard and vocals, duetting with the singer on two songs from A Little More Time, transforming the evening into something between a family reunion and a reaffirmation of Memphis music after a long, scary era. 

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Gonerfest 18: Thursday

It was all a bit dream-like, filtering into the Railgarten compound on a bright, balmy afternoon, seeing many friends for the first time since lockdown, faces half-covered as if convening some mad masquerade ball. Later that night, Miss Pussycat would proclaim “This is so weird!” from the stage, as she gazed out at the crowd, and she spoke for all of us. And yet, it was reassuringly familiar as well.

Many had begun their day to the sounds of DJ Matt Uhlman, co-founder of the Royal Pendletons and New Orleans’ Mod Dance Party events, who had set up shop at the Central Station Hotel. That veritable temple of vinyl was an apt setting for folks to receive their complimentary Gonerfest 18 EP, featuring tracks from Reigning Sound, Aquarian Blood, Archaeas and Silver Synthetic.

Gonerfest 18 EP (photo by Alex Greene)

As the beginnings of a crowd gathered at Railgarten and the opening ceremonies marked the festival’s start, Alicja Trout assembled the Alicja Pop band for a quick line check and Boom!, it was on.

Alicja Pop (photo by Chris McCoy)

The first surprise of the day was the guitar-heavy sound of this new Alicja Pop iteration, with Andrew Geraci on bass, Lori McStay on drums and Jared McStay on guitar. Trout stuck to guitar as well, leading the band through a batch of songs sans keyboards. The heavier vibes were more reminiscent of past Trout projects like River City Tanlines or even the Lost Sounds. Quite an appropriate start to Gonerfest.

DJ Jared Boydy’s interlude music during band tear down and set up set a seriously funky, Stax-y mood that played like a grand welcome to Memphis for all weary travelers. The next act, Rocket 808, was a unique palette cleanser, John Schooley III’s solo wailing guitar and vocals over classic drum machine beats. As the Goner guide puts it, “Link Wray meets Suicide madness,” from an artist whose record was Goner’s sixth release way back in 1996.

Next was Smirk from San Francisco, who took the evening up a notch with propulsive beats and restless guitar interplay cut with intriguing vocals, akin to the more rock ‘n’ roll side of the Fall, yet more singable. “Very drinkable,” as Goner co-owner Eric Friedl quipped about the dedicated Gonerbrau by Memphis Made, a “chuggable ale” that was quaffing thirst right and left. It paired well with the convivial-yet-cautious mood that prevailed as the crowd filled out and evening descended.

Throughout the proceedings, nimble-footed elves armed with Sony Handycams flitted on the perimeters of all the action, capturing every move for the well-coordinated live-stream, Goner’s concession to the continued need for socially distanced alternatives. A makeshift command center ensured that the best shots were compiled seamlessly into the online presentation.

The Goner “Stream Team” (photo by Chris McCoy)

Night was upon us, announced by the pounding drums of Detroit’s Human Eye, the latest project from Timmy Vulgar. The outlandish power of the drums was soon matched blow for blow by Vulgar’s guitar stylings, at times locking in with the rhythm in punk-metal riffage, then descending into more freestyle noise bursts. Listeners might have thought a boxcar behind the stage was screeching and careening off the rails, but no, that was Vulgar’s guitar, culminating with blasts of actual fireworks in the final throes of the sonic chaos.

Human Eye (photo by Laura Jean Hocking)
Human Eye (photo by Laura Jean Hocking)

And then, suddenly, the night reached its denouement, as Quintron and Miss Pussycat took the stage with their full band. Given the minimalism of past Quintron/Miss P shows, this was a revelation. A guitar and drums rhythm section augmented Quintron’s canned beats and scratchy organ, with extra freaky, funky texture brought by none other than Goner recording star BÊNNÍ, clad in chain mail, who nonchalantly manned a vocoder. A fellow dancer joined Miss Pussycat’s trademark dance moves, as did the entire audience. The danceability of this Q/P project is greater than ever, with BÊNNÍ’s vocoder either adding bassy funk figures or eerie, swamp-soaked drones. Quintron, for his part, supplemented his grinding organ with licks from a lap steel set atop his keyboard, not to mention his own vocoder in the final number, in tandem with BÊNNÍ’s.

Quintron and Miss Pussycat with full band (photo by Alex Greene)

At one point, Quintron exhorted the audience to consider his electronics. “Please don’t throw ice on the keyboards! Throw your ice at the guitarist! They don’t care what you throw at them. Throw anything on the singers, they love it. Pee on ’em if you want! Just don’t throw ice on the keyboards!”

Together, Quintron and Miss Pussycat swapped vocals, with catchy choruses like “My name is Jesus Christ, and I’m an alcoholic!”, “What do you do??”, “It’s gonna be all right!!” and “If I was you, I’d hate me too!” The audience was revved up, cheering wildly at the close of each song, and so all eyes were on Goner’s Zac Ives when he stepped up to consult with Quintron mid-set. Listening seriously to Ives, Quintron then turned to the crowd and proclaimed, “We can keep going! We didn’t even know it was a possibility that we could not keep going, but we’re just so excited now to learn that we really can keep going!”

Solo pre-puppet show music was provided by Quintron (photo by Alex Greene)

And even when they’d played their last number, they kept going. While Miss Pussycat prepped her puppets, Quintron played exquisitely lush lounge music. Then the puppet proscenium was presented, and the audience dutifully gathered around it, sitting in semi-circles on the ground like kindergartners.

The evening’s puppet show, a regular feature of Miss P’s for years, was perhaps her best yet, including finely crafted figures of a squarish werewolf and two baby maracas, who grew into a fully dressed and wigged dancing team that took the stage with aplomb. Quintron, for his part, participated in the puppetry as well, which also featured his pre-recorded incidental music.

Miss Pussycat addresses the crowd (photo by Alex Greene)

As the puppetry began, Miss Pussycat spoke warmly to the crowd gathered on the ground before her, offering heartfelt thanks. “Thank you so much! We’ve all been clamped down in New Orleans for the past year and a half,” she reflected, expressing amazement that we could be gathered at all. Indeed, it seemed a minor miracle, and all souls filtered out of the venue that night with rather dazed, happy faces, emerging from a collective dream.

Quintron, master of puppets (photo by Chris McCoy)

Visit Gonerfest.com for details on the continuing festivities today, Saturday and Sunday.

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The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, September 23-29

Naturally, the live-stream story of the week is Gonerfest 18, surely one of the most Covid-conscious musical events ever imagined. Some of the luminaries include Reigning Sound, Sick Thoughts, Wreckless Eric, Digital Leather, Wilkins Sisters and scads more. The live shows, all on an outdoor stage at Railgarten, require masks and proof of vaccination, but the real clincher is the virtual online feed of all musical events. Goner Records pulled out all the stops, using the best technology of the 1990s, the Sony Handycam. A phalanx of the devices is being deployed to ensure true widescreen drama on your device of choice, from multiple angles.

Meanwhile, the city’s other live-stream troupers soldier on as well. Check them all out, tip generously and stay safe!

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, September 23
5:30 p.m. — 5 p.m., Sunday, September 26
Gonerfest 18 — at Railgarten
Click here for the full schedule of artists
Website

9 p.m.
Devil Train — B-Side Memphis
Facebook YouTube Twitch TV

Friday, September 24
8 p.m.
Max Kaplan & the Magics — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Midnight
Turnstyles, Dry Guy, Solid Goldberg and True Sons of Thunder
— at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Saturday, September 25
10 a.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

9 p.m.
Eddie Clendening & Velvetina Taylor — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Midnight
Perverts Again, Predator and Curleys — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Sunday, September 26
3 p.m.
Imagene Azengraber — Chicken $#!+ Bingo at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

7 p.m. and 10 p.m.
Dustin Sims — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

8 p.m.
Jamalama — B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

11 p.m.
Richard & Anne — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Monday, September 27
10 p.m.
Evil Rain — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Tuesday, September 28
10 p.m.
Max Kaplan & Jad Tariq — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Wednesday, September 29
5:30 p.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook