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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.

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Music Music Blog

Reigning Sound Live from the Stream

This Saturday, Memphis garage-rock gurus Reigning Sound will perform live (streamed to your computer or device via Twitch and Facebook Live) from the stage of B-Side, presented by Goner Records, to celebrate the upcoming Merge Records rerelease of the band’s 2005 album Home for Orphans.

The Home for Orphans reissue isn’t Reigning Sound’s first association with Merge. Their excellent 2014 LP Shattered was released on Merge Records, as was last year’s reissue of Abdication … for Your Love. “Featuring,” Merge’s website boasts, “the original Memphis lineup of singer-guitarist [Greg] Cartwright, bassist Jeremy Scott, drummer Greg Roberson, and [Flyer Music Editor] organist Alex Greene, Home for Orphans presents Reigning Sound’s classic sonic blueprint.”

Home for Orphans

That the record is made up of outtakes, demos, and rarities makes it feel like a glimpse of something elusive and wild. The songs are moody and raw, oozing atmosphere and warbling organ chords. “It was a record almost by accident,” says bassist Jeremy Scott. “We had a whole third record pretty much ready to go when Alex left. (He had a youngun’ to raise, and probably didn’t need to hang with us heathens so much anyway.) The more rockin’ material was lifted for what became Too Much Guitar, along with some newer things we developed as a trio; the moodier stuff, which contains some of Greg’s best songs in my opinion, formed the basis of this record.”

Scott adds, “Great to see it available again, in a jacket which features not one but two pictures of us! We were ugly then and we’re uglier now!”

“Love is a funny thing,” Cartwright sings over a bed of acoustic guitars, slide, and burbling bass. “Don’t know it’s real till it’s caused you pain.” The drums are unobtrusive for most of the song — a light tok! on the snare, shimmery cymbals and hi-hat to keep the beat — until the fills come in, big and dramatic as anything drummer Howard Wyeth played on Bob Dylan’s Desire.

Reigning Sound: (left to right) Jeremy Scott, Greg Cartwright, Greg Roberson, and Alex Greene

“If Christmas Can’t Bring You Home” is plaintive. Shakers and whining electric guitars that riff off of the melody of “Joy to the World” are almost too maudlin, but in the end, it works wonderfully, the sound of a lonely, drunken holiday distilled. And of course, the woeful organ chords work wonders as well. “Medication Blues #1” swirls with Byrds-like chiming guitars and an uptempo drum shuffle. The format for many of the songs — acoustic guitars, swirling organs, electric guitars played crisp and clean, bass and drums high in the mix, and harmonies galore — represents a particular sound Memphis seems to do so well in any genre, be it garage, soul, or power-pop.

“The out of town shows we did in March demonstrated that we can still bring it,” Scott says, obviously amped about the upcoming full-band performance. (Scott, like many musicians in the age of coronavirus, has streamed solo performances from his couch.) “I’m looking forward to having another opportunity to play with these guys, who are like brothers two through four to me.”

The folks at Goner have this to say about Goner TV: “We are all bummed out and we can’t get out and see a show. See our friends. Hang out and have some laughs late into the night in a dark dingy bar. Remember those days? So we wanted to do something about it. Goner TV is our attempt to bring the good times to you.”

Goner Presents: Reigning Sound Live From B-Side Saturday, June 20th, at 8 p.m. Catch it on Facebook Live or on the Goner Twitch channel: twitch.tv/gonerrecords.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Reigning Sound

Today’s Music Video Monday is coming home. 

The Reigning Sound, Greg Cartwright’s post-Oblivians band, has gone through some lineup changes over the years, necessitated by Cartwright’s evolving songwriting style and a move to Asheville, North Carolina. This past weekend, the original lineup of Cartwright, Jeremy Scott, Greg Roberson, and Alex Greene—of the best Memphis combos ever—reunited to play the River Series at Harbortown Ampitheatre, and then a second show at the P&H Cafe. Both shows saw a huge turnout, and the band sounded as great as ever.

Here’s “Never Coming Home” a music video from the Reigning Sounds’ 2014 album Shattered on the Merge label. Directed by Jonny Look, the video doesn’t feature that classic lineup, but it does give you a sense of Cartwright’s soulful songwriting. 

Music Video Monday: Reigning Sound

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

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News The Fly-By

Memphis Curling Club Hopes to Grow Through Exposure, Education

Greg Roberson wants to put Memphis on ice.

Curling hooked the Memphis musician a decade ago and he’s now looking to hook locals on the sport, too.

Americans typically only see curling during the Winter Olympics, during which they’ll see a player slide a large, rounded stone down a long lane of bright, white ice. Then, two other players will sweep the ice in front of the stone, hoping to land it onto what looks like an archery target at the other end of the lane.

“I find that people have seen it on the Olympics, but they don’t quite understand it,” said Roberson.

Toby Sells

Greg Roberson

But he’s hoping to change the minds of Mid-Southerners with a series of Learn to Curl events that get underway this weekend at the Mid-South Ice House in Olive Branch. The first two Saturday events (April 11th and 18th) have sold out. But slots are still available for Saturday, April 25th. The two-hour lessons cost $15 per person.

Roberson hopes the events (which have been hosted at the Ice House since 2012) will jump-start the curling scene in Memphis as feeders into the Memphis Curling Club. The club’s spring league begins at the end of April and the summer league will run from July to August. Roberson hopes these leagues will snowball Memphis curling into an avalanche.

“The Atlanta club started with eight people four years ago and now it has more than 100 people in it,” Roberson said.

The Memphis club has already drawn a broad array of locals, Roberson said, from doctors, engineers, musicians, writers, housewives, and college students. He envisions a curling scene here that includes teams from corporations, bars, fraternities, sororities, universities, high schools, and more.

Curling is certainly not mainstream in Memphis or the South, for that matter. But it got an acknowledgment here as a sport (or at least a healthy activity) from the Church Health Center (CHC). The clinic recently added curling to its list of approved activities for its employee wellness program. If employees go to a Learn to Curl event, they get points that could earn them an extra paid day off.

“Curling is an Olympic sport so it would definitely qualify for physical activity [in our program],” said Kimberly Barksdale Baker, a manager at the CHC’s Wellness Center. “We know that curling increases your strength, flexibility, and your overall endurance.”

Roberson is aware that curling has a ways to go in Memphis. But for anyone on the fence about getting started, he offered this advice:

“I’d tell them to spend $15, bring a clean pair of shoes [no leather soles] and maybe a windbreaker and come on out and learn to curl,” Roberson said. “We’ll spend two hours, give you some instruction, we’ll play a short game, and you can actually get a chance to do it.”