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Music Music Features

Nobody Waters the Flowers

Few musicians are as familiar around town as the indefatigable Graham Winchester, the drummer/multi-instrumentalist who plays with the Sheiks, Jack Oblivian, Turnstyles, Devil Train, the MD’s, and a few others. Along the way, he founded Blast Habit Records with Lori McStay and her late husband, Jared, and is now producing other artists — like Cheyenne Marrs — in his home studio. Yet that last achievement, ironically enough, was only made possible by the quarantine years of Covid, when Winchester was forced to relax the furious pace of his gigging schedule and delve into himself more, writing and recording songs entirely on his own. Now the product of that time is emerging as an LP, Nobody Waters the Flowers, on Red Curtain Records, and Winchester’s gearing up for a record release show at Bar DKDC on March 22nd.

The album has been available on streaming platforms since December of 2022, and, given the album’s provenance, it’s understandable that he was impatient to get it out in the world well before it could exist on vinyl. For this record is a document of another time, the lockdown prompted by Covid and those trepidatious months that followed it, from 2020-2021.

“I think that in the isolation of the shutdown era of the pandemic, anything I was writing was for me. I didn’t even know if there was going to be a future of playing on stage with my friends anytime soon,” Winchester says now. “The songs came from an intimate, personal place and most of them were written and recorded between 2020 and 2021. And a lot of them come out of a place of self-reflection, and reflection about the world we live in. Not being able to be busy made me meditate and think about my own life more.”

Song titles like “Quietly,” “Coming Down,” and “I’ll Be Sad With You” evoke Winchester’s frame of mind at the time. “It was a necessary slowdown for me, personally,” he says. “Obviously, I wish there was no Covid and no isolation, but I made the most of it, I guess.”

Indeed, many families untouched by Covid directly found more quality time during lockdown, and the Winchesters were no different. “There’s a song on the album called ‘From the Start’ that I’m singing directly to my children. And that was inspired from being around my boys all day every day for the first time. Since they’d been born, I’d spent any waking moment I could with them, but I’m a busy guy, a busy dad. To be able to just sit in the backyard on a picnic blanket with my sons brought us so much closer to each other.”

Other songs are not as bound to Winchester’s own life, but spring from his penchant for the pure craft of writing. “‘Nobody Waters the Flowers’ is more of a story song,” Winchester says. “That’s me trying to get into that old country music storytelling zone. ‘Can’t You See?’ as well — sort of like The Band’s approach, or even Creedence Clearwater Revival’s.”

While the album does include the odd garage stomper like “Lab Rat,” listeners who largely associate Winchester with the amped-up sounds of Jack Oblivian or Turnstyles may be in for a surprise. Yet he’s actually been cultivating his quieter side for some time now, often leading songwriter nights at Bar DKDC. The way Winchester tells it, the less raucous approach is really at the core of his compositional style.

“I’ll usually even write Turnstyles songs on the acoustic in sort of a folky way,” he says. “And then I’ll bring it to Seth [Moody] and go, ‘I need help rocking this up.’ So we might put a more aggressive beat on it, he puts his distorted, Jaguar guitar surf-ness on it, and then it becomes this rock song. But when I approach songwriting I think, ‘Is this a song that can be played in any style? Do the lyrics and the chords stand up on their own, to where anybody can adapt it?’ I’m not a huge riff songwriter. I like to start with melodies and chords. And a lot of times I’m writing on piano. I’m really coming at it from a songwriting standpoint, where the song can be taken any kind of way.”

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “I Don’t Know” by Cheyenne Marrs

As you can read in Alex Greene’s Memphis Flyer story, the debut album by Cheyenne Marrs, Everybody Wants To Go Home, is the product of a lot of hardship.

“First of all, thanks so much for having us on your Music Video Monday series and shout out to Shara too. She’s the best!” says Marrs.

We here at Music Video Monday love flattery and agree that Memphis Flyer Editor Shara “The Shark” Clark is the best. Now, back to the record. “The song was written lyrically while making this record,” Marrs says. “The death of my son’s mother had happened and it was just one thing after the other, and being in recovery for about a year and a half at the time, I was being asked if I was okay a lot. The words ‘I don’t know’ had become possibly my most-used phrase; kind of a way of being on the fence about some things.”

Marrs directed the video at the home studio of Graham Winchester, who produced the album. “The video is just me wanting to make a zombie movie with my friends. It turned out to be a lot of fun and my band mate Danny Stanford edited it too. We got together for two hours and he got that from it. A lot of things tend to gain some kind of meaning as time passes, so I’m sure with some time I could pin a way the video ties in to the meaning.”

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

Categories
Music Music Blog

Cheyenne Marrs’ Debut, Born in Tragedy, Finds a Home

A lot of budding songwriters languish away, hoping to be noticed by a record label that will recognize their gift. But Cheyenne Marrs found that such a deal fell into his lap. Of course, fortune favors the bold, and it didn’t hurt that Marrs, best known for his work with local band Spacer, already had an album ready to go. Still, he thought he was just previewing tracks for a friend — when lightning struck.

“You can’t make this stuff up!” Marrs says. “I went to Otherlands and saw a friend sitting outside with his laptop on the patio. He played me a couple tracks he’d recorded, so I pulled up the stuff I’ve been working on with Graham Winchester. And while I was playing it, the guy next to us at the other table was like, ‘Hey man, I really liked that song you were playing, it gave me Pink Floyd Meddle vibes!’ And I was like, ‘Dude, that’s my favorite Pink Floyd record!'”

Better yet, the bystander had a plan. “It turned out it was Patrick Carey of Out on the Eaves, and he was like, ‘I really liked that stuff. I’d like to hear more. And if you don’t have a home for it, me and Scott McEwen of Memphis Magnetic are starting a label, Red Curtain Records, and we’d love to release it.'”

Some months later, Marrs’ baby, the nine track album Everybody Wants to Go Home, will soon see the light of day, as he plays a 9 p.m. record release party this Saturday, August 26 at B-Side Memphis.

Preview tracks released to the press foreshadow a fine work of sonic craftsmanship, somehow evoking both Radiohead’s eerie melodies and chords and Tom Waits’ sonic palette, while remaining utterly unique. The imaginative use of the studio is all the more impressive for being cut at Graham Winchester’s up-and-coming home recording space.

“Working with Graham was just so easy,” says Marrs. “I went over to his house and I just didn’t know what to expect. Spacer, my other band, and Turnstyles played a show together, and Graham was talking about recording his solo record all with one mic. And I was like, ‘Man, I want to do that!’ He said to come on over, and I just expected to record one song. But it worked so well, and just came out so easily and organically, that I said, ‘Fuck it. I’ve been wanting to do a whole record. So let’s just do it here and now.'”

While Marrs didn’t record everything with one microphone, he did feel comfortable enough to play most of the instruments himself, with the occasional assist from Winchester on keyboards or drums. And the dynamics apparent in the tracks are sweeping and bold, ranging from quiet acoustic passages to full-blown guitar rave-ups and sonic collages built from bits of found sound.

Most of all, Marrs gelled with Winchester on a personal level, the bond between them becoming all the more important when Marrs suffered a horrific loss in his life. “I have a son who’s 12,” he explains. “He’s actually the kid on the record cover, falling in the snow. But his mother [Semelea Jensen] passed away in the middle of doing this recording. So it was pretty hard. It was a lot harder on me than on my son. He was my rock through it all.” As it turned out, so was Winchester.

“I told Graham, ‘Dude, your studio has become my therapist’s office and you’re my therapist. And the guitar and mic and drums are my couch,'” Marrs recalls. The emotional rawness of the record is a testament to that. Now, months later, Marrs is more philosophical about the experience. “I was pretty torn up over it,” he says. “But that’s the best time for me to write songs. It’s like through heartbreak, and shitty things happening, the songs just come out effortlessly.”

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Don’t Break The Dam” by Turnstyles

Today, we have a world premiere music video by two of the hardest-gigging musicians in Memphis. Seth Moody and Graham Winchester are Turnstyles, and if you’ve been out and about in the last few years, you’ve probably seen the garage-surf duo.

“As a band, and particularly a duo, Turnstyles has played so many random shows, from big stages to the corner of someone’s humid basement,” says Winchester, an acclaimed drummer who has accompanied everyone from Jack Oblivian to Devil Train. “But we always try to see the positive with every single show, and with that mentality, the music always takes us to a higher spiritual place.”

“Don’t Break The Dam,” is the first of many planned singles from their upcoming double LP on Black and Wyatt records. The video was conceived and directed by Coco Moody, and features cameos from Coco and Seth’s daughter Sulli and son Baker.

“I’m so glad Coco conceptualized a fun and funny video out of the lyrical message,” says Winchester. “Seth had the lyrics to the song over 20 years ago, but we just recently teamed up and put the words to music. I suppose the message here is that you can take a bad situation and gripe your way into a much worse place, hence ‘breaking the dam.’ I love how Coco used a blacklight room in the video to depict that preferred headspace. I’m also glad to have her making videos for us in general.”

Hop in the van for this world premiere from a pair of Memphis originals!

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

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Future Lover” by Oakwalker

Oakwalker’s song “Future Lover” has the easygoing lilt of a Laurel Canyon ballad from the 1970s, but listen to the lyrics and you’ll hear a uniquely twenty-first century sentiment. Singer/songwriter Victoria Dowdy says she “…wrote the song in a stream-of-consciousness style about the financial and existential anxiety that often ruins the societal plans and standards that are expected of Millennials. It hits on the themes of working-class people’s anxiety about making a living being higher on their list of concerns than finding a partner, or at least on par with it.”

The song was recorded at Sun Studios (you’ll see Dowdy sporting the iconic logo shirt in the video) by Crockett Hall and mastered by Matt Qualls. Dowdy and Ethan Baker, the core of the group, were joined by bassist Tyler Marberry and drummer Graham Winchester.

Filmmaker Yubu Kazungu directed the video, which puts Dowdy behind the bar at Midtown’s favorite dive, the Lamplighter.

“Future Lover was a joy to shoot. The main focus was to capture Oakwalker (Victoria and Ethan) in their natural element,” says Kazungu. “Their chemistry together on stage is beyond captivating, and I wanted viewers to experience that while watching the video. The rest of the narrative written by Victoria and Ethan played out especially well in the dive bar atmosphere provided by
the Lamplighter. Working with musicians who understand who they are and what they’re about, makes any director’s work easier!”

“He made the video on a short deadline and did a fantastic job,” says Dowdy. Take a look!

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

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Live Music, Memphis Don’ts, and Cold Chicken

Memphis on the internet.

Back to Live!

Posted to Facebook by Graham Winchester

The MEMernet overflowed with live music last week. Gonerfest celebrated its 18th year at Railgarten. The Memphis Symphony Orchestra performed at the Botanic Garden. Opera Memphis sang at Latin Fest. Ensemble X performed at Collage Dance Collective. Scheidt at the Shell brought the University of Memphis Wind Ensemble to Overton Park’s Levitt Shell.

Memphis Don’ts

Posted to YouTube by Wolters World

Travel blogger Wolters World gave more than 16 minutes worth of “the Don’ts of Visiting Memphis” in a YouTube video published this week. Here’s a sample:

Don’t worry about walking with your beer on Beale Street. Don’t complain about the heat and humidity. Don’t expect the ribs to be “sauced up.” Don’t feed the Peabody ducks.

Mem-bership

Memphian astronaut Hayley Arceneaux punched her Memphis membership card last week.

“One week ago I came back to Earth and celebrated with the best cold fried chicken of my life,” she tweeted.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Drum Theft Drama, Milk Crate Challenge, Gold Club Humor

Memphis on the internet.

Drum theft Drama

Graham Winchester, drummer in numerous Memphis bands, admitted he was having a rock-and-roll moment. On the last song of a Turnstyles set at Railgarten last weekend, he kicked his drums off the stage. Almost immediately, two guys walked off with pieces of his kit. Winchester took to Facebook with photos and a plea for help.

In a happy turn, Winchester reported the drums were found and returned: “I’m not interested in naming names or blasting anyone. That’s just not my style.”

Milk Crate Challenge

Posted to YouTube by Ken-Tenn Kustomz

Ken-Tenn Kustomz streamed Whitehaven’s huge milk crate challenge last week on YouTube.

This summer’s viral challenge has people climbing milk crates stacked like stairs. They fall, and the hilarity is the internet magic. But its danger brought an official tweet against the challenge from the FDA last week.

Dozens gathered at Whitehaven Lane Park last week to watch a handful try the challenge in a stream that lasted more than an hour.

Good One, Gold Club

Reddit user Adventure_Thyme13 captured some timely and fleeting humor last week from The Gold Club. “Sorry about OnlyFans,” read its sign. “We’re hiring.”

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Let’s Do It Again” by Reigning Sound

Music Video Monday is at it again!

Reigning Sound is currently on a high note. Since Greg Cartwright reunited his original Memphis lineup of Jeremy Scott, Greg Roberson, and the Memphis Flyer‘s own Alex Greene, and added in drummer Graham Winchester for spice, they’ve cracked the Billboard charts with their album A Little More Time, played a sold-out show at the River Series, and announced as GonerFest 2021 headliners (which is also sold out, so grab a streaming ticket instead).

The music video for the lead single “Let’s Do It Again” shows the rockers in full flight It’s the Monday kickoff you need right now.

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

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

My Favorite Burger …

Since it’s Burger Week and many Memphis restaurants are selling great burgers at a great price (see page 17 for details), we decided to ask a few local notables to tell us about their favorite burger. They gave us some very mouthwatering choices. Enjoy.

Fredric Koeppel, Writer

“Our favorite burger in town is the WJ Burger at Acre, a re-enactment of the original burger sold at Wally Joe restaurant that closed in 2007. Acre now offers these on Thursday nights. Beef dry-aged and ground in-house, confit tomato, roasted garlic mayo, truffle cheese, frisée on a house-baked horseradish bun — it’s just the best. Get it medium rare.”

The Office @ Uptown’s black bean burger

Jared “Jay B.” Boyd, Program Manager, WYXR

“My favorite? The black bean burger at The Office @ Uptown. I’m a new vegan, and having veggie options around town is helpful. With more Impossible and Beyond options popping up around town, this particular take on a black bean patty stands out for its taste and texture. Not quite like meat, but still flavorful enough to hold its own.”

LBOE garlic burger

Pat Mitchell-Worley, Executive Director, Stax Music Academy

“LBOE has a garlic burger. It’s no longer on the menu, but if you ask for it, they’ll make it. It has so much garlic, I can’t be around people after I eat it. But it is just divine. Not only is it flavorful, I love the smell of garlic. It’s just so relaxing. In another life, I would be a garlic farmer. Sometimes I get it as a turkey burger, too. And it’s consistently good.”

Marjorie Hass, President of Rhodes College

“I don’t eat hamburgers very often, but I am partial to the one served at Libro, the restaurant attached to Novel. A chance to browse at an actual brick-and-mortar bookstore is an increasingly rare treat. And then, to sit down to lunch over a new book and a delicious burger — perfectly cooked and covered in caramelized onions and melted cheese — makes for a perfect afternoon.”

Al Kapone

Al Kapone, Hip-Hop Artist

Al Kapone’s favorite hamburger is a toss-up between a Tops and a Dixie Queen cheeseburger. In both cases, he says, “There’s something about their cooked-to-order burgers. They both have that same almost diner burger thing about them. It’s the type burger you find in any mom-and-pop store that cooks burgers. And I want my onions grilled. Something about the grilled onion flavor I can’t explain. When they grill the onions, it gives a flavor the raw onions don’t give. I love that flavor. I think raw onions sometimes can be too strong.” And make sure and toast those buns. “If they toast the fresh bun and brush some butter on it as they toast it — oh, my God. I’m getting hungry. I want one right now.”

Mike McCarthy, Director, Sculptor, Preservationist

“I have to admit, my favorite burger is generally my most recent burger. Take last night, for instance. It was 9:30 p.m. and I was starving. Tops BBQ and Steak & Shake were closed, and the golden arches were as dark as burnt french fries. I found myself in the drive-through at Krystal on Poplar. I soon realized that I was having, perhaps not a favorite burger, but rather a most-ironic burger, a burger based in deep-rooted Memphis memories — yet no different than any other Krystal burger in any other American town. As I waited in line, I saw Krystal’s large poster advertising ‘The Hangover’ burger, which, naturally in these trying times, is now served 24-7.

“But I chose the No. 1 combo. I pulled into a parking space and began the time-honored process of getting shades of red and yellow all over my pants. I thought about how my parents would always eat at this particular Krystal when they would visit from Mississippi and how we process memories through physical shapes. But those dang Krystal marketing folks kept interrupting my thoughts with their class-struggle advertising: Each individual box containing my four burgers boasted the phrase ‘IF IT AIN’T BROKE …’ — which might really mean ‘If only we weren’t so bankrupt (in all meanings of the word), we could be eating somewhere else or enjoying a better life.’ If only Krystal restaurants looked as cool as they did in the 1950s, then I’d be feasting on Memphis history and I’d be doing it 24/7.”

Graham Winchester

Graham Winchester, Musician

Graham Winchester loves Memphis food as much as he loves Memphis music. His Instagram account has been his outlet for “Poor Man’s Food Reviews,” which he calls “30-second bursts of mania and sloppy eating. I love putting in my two cents about some food.”

Winchester won’t commit to naming an all-time winner but says his favorite burger “right now” is the B-Side Memphis Burger. “It’s new,” he says. “It’s kind of in that classic Soul Burger style, like Earnestine & Hazel’s, but it’s a little bit bigger. It’s a flat-top grilled burger. You get pickles and cheese and onions, and they give you mustard and mayonnaise on the side, so you can dabble with it as much as you want.

“It’s perfectly cooked, perfectly greasy so that the cheese and grease just kind of fill up the front of your mouth. It definitely reminds you of that Soul Burger flavor, but it’s really hardy. And it comes with fries, so you’re pretty fulfilled.”

Mark Greaney, Novelist

Memphis writer Mark Greaney (whose Bond-like Gray Man series of spy novels is now a staple on bookshelves everywhere), has two favorites: the house burger at Maximo’s on Broad for high-style days, and for everyday meals, the ever-popular Dyer’s burgers, famously marinated in their own ancient grease.

About the latter he says, “They are the perfect thickness, and the texture is amazing. (Anything fried is amazing!) They have an incredible beef flavor that blasts past the tanginess of the mustard and pickles.”

Categories
Music Record Reviews

The Turnstyles’ Two-Cylinder Engine Revs To Life

Duos hold an honored place in the rock-and-roll pantheon. In the ’80s, the concept seemed obscure, though the moderate success of the Flat Duo Jets and House of Freaks served as a proof of concept that duos could indeed rock. Before those bands, aside from folk duet singers or other non-rock arrangements, who was there? Suicide, featuring Marin Rev and Alan Vega, formed as early as 1970, but it was a keyboard-led affair. For that quicksilver sound of a guitar paired only with drums, you would probably have had to rely on North Mississippi’s She Wolf herself, Jessie Mae Hemphill.

The turn of the 21st century, of course, made the rock duo mainstream, with the ascension of first the White Stripes, then the Black Keys, to legit celebrity status. Many lesser-known bands have followed their example, but it’s still relatively rare. Which makes the Turnstyles that much more refreshing.

Seth Moody (guitar) and Graham Winchester (drums) both play in other incarnations, including Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks, so they know a thing or two about a good arrangement. They’ve played local stages for some time now, but it was only this April Fool’s Day that their debut, Cut You Off, was released on Bandcamp. Now the vinyl edition, pressed by Black & Wyatt Records, is out as well.

And the results are a true shot in the arm during these troubled times. If the White Stripes demonstrated that guitar/drum duos could be as heavy as Led Zeppelin, making much use of all that empty space between notes, the Turnstyles’ approach is to swing the pendulum back to the frenetic, upbeat sound that earlier duos mined.

Yet, for all that, the basic sound is just good ol’ rock-and-roll. The stylistic wheelhouse of the band seems like a less-is-more version of, say, the Flaming Groovies: basic riffs and chord changes evoking all the foundations of rock, from surf to country to Chuck Berry-esque story songs.

A few key elements ensure that these songs come across. For one thing, these guys are together, having tirelessly worked the club scene for so long, honing their arrangements. They can snap out of an unhinged noise wash into a tight chorus or bridge at the blink of an eye. Secondly, the guitar sounds are pitch-perfect. Perfecting a guitar tone is not an obvious thing, yet Moody has clearly done so. It’s not gimmicky, in a cruddier-than-thou manner, just a solid, gritty twang that can jump from country to surf in a heartbeat. Fourthly, Winchester’s architectural playing lends each song’s different sections distinct personalities, elevating the sound beyond some ill-defined noise wash. And finally, both of these guys can sing, so even if it’s just them yelling “Fish Taco!” in unison, it cuts through the wash and jumps out of the speakers.

All in all, it’s a great party record, propelled by their familiarity with the breakneck pace of some Jack Oblivian tunes. If the doldrums are making you feel claustrophobic, it’s the perfect platter to put pep in your step.