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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Memphis-filmed drama Free In Deed Nominated for Four Independent Spirit Awards

Jake Mahaffy’s made-in-Memphis drama Free In Deed was nominated for four Independent Spirit Awards today in an announcement ceremony in New York City.

Actor David Harewood was nominated for Best Male Lead alongside such other decorated thespians as Viggo Mortensen, Tim Roth, and Casey Affleck. A Best Supporting Female nomination went to Edwina Finley, who will compete with Paulia Garcia from Ira Sach’s film Little Men. Cinematographer Ava Berkofsky was also nominated, and director Mahaffy is nominated for the John Cassavettes Award for best film made for less than $500,000.

Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight got the most nominations with six. Memphian writer/director Ira Sach’s Little Men received a second nomination for Best Screenplay. Mid-South connected director Jeff Nichols received a Best Director nomination for Loving, and the film’s female lead Ruth Negga was also nominated.

After a successful debut at the recent Indie Memphis Film Festival Free In Deed will open theatrically in Memphis on Friday, December 9. The Independent Spirit Awards ceremony will take place the day before the Academy Awards, on Saturday, Feb. 25 on IFC.

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Music Music Features

Shangri-La Turns 25

This weekend is full of stuff to do in celebration of the 25th anniversary of Shangri-La, a Memphis institution that has taken on many forms: a “flotation tank emporium,” a record store, a welcome center for the world’s music pilgrims, a record label, and a film production company.

Along the way, Shangri-La has become a sort-of Morgan Library of bonkers Memphis culture, serving as a touchstone in the days before the internet and the Stax Museum. In the 1990s, it was a place where everybody who wanted to make records went.

The store at 1916 Madison is hosting a weekend-long anniversary throwdown. From Friday through Sunday, November 29th to December 1st, there will be a sale at the shop with everything 25 percent off. There will be live music in the afternoon with Dead Soldiers. Also playing will be Shangri-La employee and Flyer contributor J.D. Reager, who is only one of many in the record-making community to work at the shop. The Grifters will play at Minglewood Hall’s 1884 Lounge on the night of Saturday the 30th.

In the late 1980s, during a semester in Pomona, California, Sherman Willmott met Eric Friedl, and the two began publishing a ‘zine, in the parlance of the day, called Kreature Comforts. They parted ways, with Friedl going to Boston to work with bands and Willmott famously introducing Memphis to flotation tanks in the shop on Madison. The tanks tanked, but Willmott had another business model in mind.

“As I learned more about Memphis music, it really pointed toward what Ruben Cherry did at Home of the Blues,” Willmott said. “Where the Elvis statue is on Beale Street, he had a record shop and a niche-oriented record label that was strictly R&B with people like Willie Mitchell and the 5 Royales. They didn’t have to be from Memphis, but most of them were. I’m sure it helped promote his record shop as well as making money as a record label. So I wasn’t doing anything new. But it hadn’t been done in a long time.”

“I was up in Boston and not really doing anything,” Friedl said. “So moving to Memphis and working in a record store seemed like a good idea for some reason. Sherman had his flotation-tank business, and even when it was busy, it was dead in there. So, he was into music and started selling records. Sub Pop was taking off, and we got a box of those in and brought some people in. It grew from there. We were selling a bunch of them. There was no other place to get it — maybe Cheapskates at the time. But there was definitely a lack of record stores.”

“In the late ’80s, there was a big explosion of independent labels, what they later called alternative rock,” Willmott said. “There was very little distribution for it in Memphis at the time. Coinciding with that was the local band scene. We wanted to provide a place where people could buy that kind of music, and things just kept growing and exploding in the ’90s with indie rock and the resurgence of independent labels here in Memphis.”

The store spawned not only its own label but was a hub of activity for one-offs and imprints such as Sugar Ditch Records, started by Andria Lisle and Gina Barker in the early 1990s. Scott Bomar, owner of Electraphonic Recording, also worked in the shop. Friedl left the store in 1995 to start his own label, Goner, which spawned its own store in 2004 and a yearly festival.

“We’re proud of Goner because they kind of came out of this,” says current Shangri-La owner Jared McStay, who bought the store in 1999 when Willmott became the curator of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. “We obviously compete with all of these places. But it’s friendly competition. I send people to them every day.”

Before the internet, the store served as a guidepost for musical travelers who today would go to the Stax Museum.

“That was a very exciting aspect of the store and still is to this day,” Willmott said. “I guess it was underground at the time. But there was a niche of music fans who weren’t just into Elvis. They were into Charlie Feathers. Or people who now come to the Stax Museum. Back then you couldn’t even find [Stax Records]. It was either boarded up or torn down.”

“People from all over the world were coming through there,” Scott Bomar said. “I’m trying to think of all the crazy people I met. Courtney Love would come in and ask about Alex Chilton. I learned a lot from the people who would come in from all over the world looking for Memphis music.”

The tourist market has only grown stronger.

“It’s a real big part,” McStay said of that market. “Our local customers are our bread and butter, but we’ve kind of become a tourist destination now. We do well when they come through, and we appreciate them. It’s significant.”

But the local aspect endures in what is a larger community and economy.

“It was a great time to be here,” Friedl said of the local alternative music scene in the ’90s. “When I moved down, I didn’t know anybody besides Sherman. Everybody came through the store. I ended up in the Oblivians. It was a great way to meet people. The Antenna was rocking.”

“Shangri-La was the epicenter,” Bomar said. “It was like going to the library before the internet. That was where you had to go to find out what was going on.”

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Music Music Features

Holly in Memphis

An avowed fan of blues practitioners such as Memphis Minnie, Ike Turner, and Sleepy John Estes, British singer Holly Golightly is happy to discuss her affinity for the minted-in-Memphis style as she tools eastward on Interstate 8, traveling from San Diego to Tucson on a tour that will land her in the Bluff City this week.

“English people are realists, not escapists. We like the dirt, the imperfections, and the spirit of getting up and getting on with it,” says the performer, who will play the Hi-Tone Café on Friday, October 19th. “I’ll take Memphis Minnie every time, because I like her grit.”

Golightly — yes, it’s her given name — acknowledges her grandfather, a Welsh miner who sang in a close harmony choir, her parents, who she says had “fairly eclectic tastes in music,” and the punk scene of the early 1980s for instilling her love of blues, rockabilly, and other American roots genres.

Born and raised in Medway, a seaboard town that sits between the Thames river delta and the English Channel (“Living in Medway is like living in a wind tunnel,” Golightly notes), the singer began playing music with local cult hero Billy Childish. She then formed an all-girl group called the Headcoatees, a spin-off of Childish’s band the Headcoats.

“I went backward,” Golightly explains. “My taste developed from going to see punk bands who did covers of obscure R&B songs. I didn’t go out looking for this musical style. It found me.”

Content to play small club dates and release albums on an array of indie labels (she has recorded 13 full-lengths for labels such as Damaged Goods and Sympathy for the Record Industry in as many years), Golightly has been branded a “musician’s musician,” an artist who’s lauded by the likes of filmmaker Jim Jarmusch and the White Stripes and perennially lands on critics’ best-of list. But she hasn’t translated that critical acclaim into platinum record sales.

Golightly, however, couldn’t care less.

“To begin with, I don’t know anything about contemporary music,” Golightly says, insisting that her vocal contribution to the White Stripes’ “It’s True That We Love One Another” is “fairly inconsequential, in the scheme of things.”

“Whether people reading my name in their credits equates them coming to shows or buying my records, I don’t know,” she says. “I’ve been involved in reasonably high-profile collaborations before working with the White Stripes. I’m playing the same places I’ve always played, and I’m making the same records I’ve always made.”

Those records, cut at London’s famed Toe Rag Studio, run the gamut from Nancy Sinatra-style rave-ups to better than Amy Winehouse blues-powered ballads.

On albums ranging from 1995’s Good Things to You Can’t Buy a Gun When You’re Crying, which was released last April, Golightly offers up a large number of originals along with dozens of well-picked covers, such as Ike Turner’s “Your Love Is Mine,” Wreckless Eric’s “Comedy Time,” and Bobby Womack’s “It’s All Over Now.”

“I was the first person to record at Toe Rag. I was the guinea pig,” says Golightly, describing producer Liam Watson as a good friend.

“Historically, it’s very easy to work with someone you’ve known that long. We’ve got very similar reference points, and we both have a clear idea of what we want things to sound like.

“We’ve known each other since ’84, I think. He’s always been interested in getting this old gear, and now he’s got an empire of amazing stuff,” she says of Watson’s copious collection of analog recording equipment, which has been utilized by British soul singer James Hunter, rock group the Kills, and pop outfit Supergrass over the last decade.

Then Golightly’s mind turns back to the road.

“We just passed an ostrich farm, which was an amazing thing,” she says. “You know, I had trouble with my work visa, and we had to cancel the first three shows of the tour. It was a real shame, but now that my visa has come through, I’ve got three years’ grace. A lot of other British bands have been refused, but I kicked up a fuss about it and got an immigration lawyer involved.

“I guess I pose an international threat,” she notes with a hearty laugh. “I’m on the most wanted [list] for not being a good guitar player!”

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Music Record Reviews

Modest Mouse rides a road to nowhere to the top of the charts.

As I write this, We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank, the third major-label album from Northwest indie-rockers Modest Mouse (and “major-label indie-rock band” is no longer the oxymoron it was), is the number-one album in the country, according to the Billboard charts. Happily, this isn’t as unusual as it sounds, as Modest Mouse is the third “indie” band this year to open big, following the Shins and Arcade Fire.

Unlike Modest Mouse, the Shins (who record for Seattle’s Sub Pop) and Arcade Fire (Chapel Hill’s Merge) still qualify as actual “indie” bands. But though Modest Mouse has the power of Epic Records behind them and though We Were Dead … was launched off the strength of the band’s platinum-selling 2004 album Good News for People Who Like Bad News and its breakout single “Float On,” I still find Modest Mouse’s commercial triumph more unlikely. Unlike the Shins, there’s no romance — however melancholy — to Modest Mouse’s music. And Arcade Fire traffic in a grandiosity to which U2 fans can relate.

By contrast, the music made by Modest Mouse leader Isaac Brock and his cohort is positively forbidding. They’ve gotten over without compromise: The band’s music may have more expansive production now, but it’s as insular and depressive as ever.

Brock doesn’t do choruses. He does mantras, which he puts over with Tourette’s Syndrome vocals that howl, grunt, shriek, and whisper. There are echoes of the Talking Heads and Pere Ubu in the way Brock’s spastic voice bobs along atop his band’s jerky rhythms.

Partly recorded and mixed in Oxford, Mississippi, We Were Dead … marks the addition of former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr to the band, though his impact is, um, modest. The record mostly sounds like the same old Modest Mouse.

We Were Dead … is another excursion into one of Brock’s dystopian dream worlds — fidgety, unsatisfied, bemused in its isolation and sense of entrapment. The lyrics, as always, are simultaneously sharp and gnomic, filled this time with nautical imagery for reasons probably known only to Brock.

The single “Dashboard” sums up the effect, Brock singing, “You told me about nowhere/It sounds like the place I’d like to go.” This is music in constant motion on a road shaped like a figure eight. It makes “nowhere” seem like the place to go. — Chris Herrington

Grade: B+