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Gonerfest 20 Saturday and Sunday: Snow White and The Mummies

When Shalita Dietrich, vocalist and bassist for Lewsberg, left the stage after entrancing a full house at Gonerfest 20, I asked her, “Did you have fun?”

“No!” she said, her shoulders slumping. “It’s hot up there! We’re from the Netherlands. We get maybe five days like this a year. I’ve never been so hot!”

“We get about 200,” I said. “Stay hydrated!”

Marrit Meinema and Shalita Dietrich of Lewsberg onstage at Gonerfest 20 (Photo: Chris McCoy)

Lewsberg’s Velvet Underground-inspired grooves went over like a cool drink of water on Saturday afternoon. Traditionally, this has been the outdoor portion of Gonerfest, with bands playing all afternoon in the back parking lot at Murphy’s. But since the pandemic forced the festivities to move to Railgarten, it’s always the outdoor portion. The new venue also has the advantage of a larger capacity, and this year, Gonerfest hit it. On Thursday night, I remarked to Goner co-owner Zac Ives that it was the largest opening night crowd I had ever seen, and he replied that more than 200 people had yet to pick up their passes. By the time the Gories tore the house down on Friday night, the sprawling nightclub compound was bulging at the seams.

The Gories rip it up on Friday night at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

Dietrich was not wrong. It was hot as blazes Saturday afternoon, and the sun was shining mercilessly on the converted shipping containers that make up the Railgarten stage. After Osaka’s The Smog sent people scrambling for their smartphones to figure out which of the many bands with that name they should add to their playlists, Dippers from Melbourne, Australia (where at least they have some experience with heat), doled out the catchy hooks. Then ’90s Memphis punk supergroup Cool Jerks proved they can still get nasty with the lowest of ’em.

Jack Oblivian sings with the Cool Jerks at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

I was doing double duty with the Gonerfest Stream Team and as Flyer correspondent, so I was happy to see Christopher Reyes of the revived Live From Memphis running around with his giant lens, so we could get some good pics for this post. We’ve been livestreaming Gonerfest since before it was either practical or cool to send live music over the intertubes, and this year, under the direction of Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury, it was better than ever. HD cams! Wireless setups! B-roll! Is Gonerfest finally growing up?

Vital equipment for the Gonerfest 20 Stream Team (Photo: Chris McCoy)

Maybe. Much of the audience was looking a little grayer in this twentieth year of the gathering of the garage punk tribes. But there was a lot of new blood, too. On Thursday, the first night of the fest, I asked randos if they’d ever been to Gonerfest before. Five people in a row said it was their first time in Memphis. The newbies were treated to a lineup that combined stalwarts with new, wider ranging sounds. In the case of Bill Oreuett & Chris Corsano, they were assaulted with sounds. The guitar/drum duo went free jazz with squalls of lashing distortion and thundering rolls. Railgarten’s stage is right in front of the railroad tracks that run through Midtown, and a freight train rumbled through about halfway through their set — a dream come true for an abrasive noise band!

OG Gonerfest was represented by the sundown set. King Louie Memorial Family Band gathered players from the many bands of the late, great Louie Bankston to play his songs one more time. It was a primal scream of grief and love, with each perfect rock song hitting harder than the last.

Bennett Bartley of Missing Monuments sings to Abe White during the King Louie Memorial Family Band set at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

As the day’s heat dissipated, Philadelphia’s Poison Ruin laid down some sludge. Courettes got the swelling crowd dancing by exposing the thick vein of girl group melodies that flow through garage rock. Singer Flavia Couri had everyone in the palm of her hand from the opening beat.

Flavia Couri of The Courettes works the crowd at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

Gonerfest vets Marked Men took some poppy melodies and rolling around in the dirt with them as a warmup to the night’s main event. If you hear there’s band called Mummies, your first question is probably, “What, are they guys who play punk rock dressed as mummies?” The answer is yes, that is what they are, and they are the best at what they do. The cult San Francisco band caused the capacity crowd to erupt in mayhem. High energy doesn’t begin to cover it.

Crowd surfing with the Mummies at Gonerfest 20 (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

On Sunday afternoon, I was marveling at the Mummies’ performance with Meredith Lones, who played Friday with Ibex Clone. “How many organs has that guy broken, I wonder?” she said.

Turnt, the Lamplighter house band led by the high priest of Memphis punk, Ross Johnson, gave one of the most memorable performances of this or any other Gonerfest. Johnson was the drummer for the chaos-billy godfathers Panther Burns, and this current ensemble, which meets every two weeks at 2 p.m. at the Lamp, delivers the full, disorienting noise experience. Guitarist Jimi Inc. directed the band through what I can only describe as song-like sonic sculptures. Little Baby Tendencies’ Haley Ivey stole the show going full Yoko, interjected with punishing jazz flute runs, while dressed as Snow White. The band was dressed in T-shirts specifying which of the seven dwarves they were, and burlesque artist Felicity Fox appeared as the Evil Queen to feed Snow White a poisoned apple. Then, Monsieur Jeffrey Evans joined the band to help things make even less sense.

Turnt’s Haley Ivey as Snow White swoons from a bite of Felicity Fox’s poisoned apple at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Chris McCoy)

Olympia, Washington’s Morgan and the Organ Donors made a rare appearance outside the PacNor, with some garage rock that harkens back to the ’60s origins of the form.

Olivia Ness plays bass with Morgan and the Organ Doners at Gonerfest 20. (Photo by Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)
Olivia Ness plays bass with Morgan and the Organ Donors at Gonerfest 20. (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

Gonerfest loves to close out Sunday afternoon with a nod to North Mississippi roots music. Sharde Thomas of the Rising Star Fife and Drum is the granddaughter of the late Othar Turner. She carries her handmade bamboo fifes in her boots after losing one of the irreplacable instruments when she checked her luggage on a European trip. The banging “Switzerland” came from a jam that appeared on the first day of the tour, when she was forced to make do with a standard flute. The deeply charismatic Thomas swept up the audience with “Minnie the Moocher” and closed with the oddly appropriate “May The Circle Be Unbroken” before she and drummer Andre Turner Evans descended into the crowd for a final up-close-and-personal drum jam.

Andre Turner Evans and Sharde Thomas of the Rising Star Fife and Drum Band closing out Gonerfest 20 (Photo: Live From Memphis/Christopher Reyes)

As he thanked the crowd for making the biggest Gonerfest ever so great, Eric Friedl said, “Don’t tell anyone else about it. We can’t fit any more people in here!”

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Music Record Reviews

Tyler Keith Throws Down with Hell to Pay

Though Tyler Keith is based in Oxford, Mississippi, he’s a well known voice among Memphians. That’s as a rock and roll singer, of course, though Keith has also cultivated an authorial voice with a noir novel, The Mark of Cain. But don’t expect any of the usual trappings of the author-turned-songsmith in Keith’s rock and roll records. They are not filled with intricate word plays or flights of verbal finesse. But he does have a way with a phrase.

Take the catchphrase of his new album, Hell to Pay (Black & Wyatt). It rolls off the tongue in the title song as naturally as fallen fruit. And that’s what a big, pile-driving rock song needs. Right after that comes one of the album’s best, “Ghost Writer,” which steers clear of literary tropes even as he sings about writing.

“I tried to write my book/All by myself/I couldn’t find my hook/I needed somebody’s help/I need a Ghost Writer/I need you!” he sings with the perfect primitivism of the Ramones, and the simplicity of it allows the words’ meanings to breathe. Most importantly, it provides a chant-worthy chorus over an ace guitar riff.

Keith has been known to rock Memphis clubs for over 20 years now, and The Last Drag, his previous album, also reveled in guitar crunch. Yet this time around, the riffs are a little grittier, and one might say a bit more “seventies.” As opposed to the neo-60s rock of the last outing, this is neo-70s rock that borders, at times, on Stooges territory. Yet unlike that seminal group, it’s not drenched in guitar solos. It’s all about the riff.

Most of the album leans to the more thundering side of the guitar, sometimes complemented with ragged-but-right harmonies and swooping falsetto “oooohs.” The Apostles — Max Hipp (guitar, vocals), Van Thompson (bass, vocals), and Beau Bourgeois (drums, vocals) — can all carry a tune, and do so with gusto. Their playing is a perfect match for Keith’s songwriting, loose but on point.

One outlier is “Nothing Left,” which evokes the stomp of Neil Young and Crazy Horse. And like the best Young, Keith can philosophize regret and faith with a deft touch. “All I had were some words that washed away/Nothing left for me to do but pray.” Even then, the narrator isn’t sure what he’s praying to. “I don’t know if I believe in anything that I can’t see/For these times today have brought me to my knees/I’m asking someone to help me please.”

Tyler Keith and the Apostles celebrate the release of Hell to Pay at Bar DKDC, Saturday, May 6th, in an incredible lineup also featuring Jack Oblivian & the Sheiks and power pop adventurers Silver Synthetic.

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Music Music Features

Gonerfest 19 Saturday: Compulsive Gamblers Top The Longest Day

The annual gathering of the punk tribes known as Gonerfest climaxed on Saturday with a 12-act bill that stretched a full eleven hours. After two nights of pleasant, early fall temperatures, the weather became a factor at Railgarten’s outdoor stage.

Meredith Lones of Ibex Clone plays Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

 The afternoon heat was starting to take a bite when first Memphis band on the agenda took the stage at 3 PM. Ibex Clone — Alec McIntyre, Meredith Lones, and George Williford — delivered one of many sweaty sets of the day. 

Andie Luman of Crimes of Passing sings at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

Even though their music is better suited to the dark, the sun was really bearing down when Cincinnati, Ohio’s Crimes of Passing fired up. Vocalist Andie Luman channeled Siouxie Sioux’s banshee wail, while the band spun out vivid sonic textures. 

Msr. Jeffrey Evans plays at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

Msr. Jeffrey Evans is no stranger to the Gonerfest stage. The singer/songwriter made a string of legendarily shambolic shockabilly records with ’68 Comeback in the 1990s, and his later partnership with Panther Burns drummer Ross Johnson was a comedy rock highlight of the festival for years. His solo appearance was a slightly more serious affair, with the reverent crowd eating up his renditions of his songs and some classics. 

A member of New Buck Biloxi at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

New Buck Biloxi (formerly Buck Biloxi and the Fucks) toned down their name, but not the confrontational nature of their rock. They laid down the first of many big screams as the afternoon’s music got progressively harder and louder. 

Only the latest technology is good enough for the Gonerfest Stream Team! Pictured: Camera 3. (photo by Chris McCoy)

I have filmed Gonerfest many times, first with Live From Memphis, then with Rocket Science Audio, and now for the official Gonerfest Stream Team. Since live streaming has really come into its own in the last few years, partially fueled by the pandemic, now you can see what we do in real time, rather than waiting for somebody to get the time to edit it all together. The good news (or maybe the bad news, depending on your perspective) is that we’ve gone to the lo-fi roots of Goner music by filming with 20-year-old Sony Handicams. (Don’t laugh, they’re free!)  The stream was devoured by Goners from all over the world who couldn’t make it to Memphis. It’s hard work, but I hope the folks watching at home could tell how much fun we were having.

Michael Beach at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com}

The first artist I’m stationed on stage left to film is Michael Beach, an Aussie with a new album out on Goner. He’s an excellent songwriter, who can both grasp pounding rockers and the occasional more quiet, heartfelt piano song. 

Sick Thoughts at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

Sick Thoughts are another Gonerfest veteran. The New Orleans combo, fronted by Drew Owens and including most of the Trampoline Team, threw down a searing, spitting set that brought the moshers out and sent beer cans flying. 

John Brannon of Negative Approach at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

Here’s a safety tip: Don’t bean Negative Approach’s John Brannon in the head with a water bottle during the first song. You’re just going to piss him off more. The ’80s Detroit hardcore legends have long, grey beards now, but their breakneck tempos and punishing sonic assaults haven’t missed a step.

Ron Sakowski of Negative Approach at Gonerfest 19.(Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

As they were taking the stage, lightning was crackling in the middle distance. In the streaming control booth, we nervously tracked the thunderstorms that roared through the area Saturday night. But luckily, the cells went north and south of Central and Cooper, and the crowd got only a few sprinkles and a refreshing cool breeze from thunderstorm outflow. (A couple of miles away, the Memphis Power Pop fest at the Overton Park Shell wasn’t so lucky.) In the end, mother nature provided the light show, and Negative Approach provided the thunder. 

Kevin Boyer of Tyvek kicking up a storm at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

Fellow Detroiters Tyvek, a fan favorite of past Gonerfests, returned with a refreshed lineup and new energy. The crowd, many of whom had been baking in the sun for hours, somehow kept up with bandleader Kevin Boyer’s breakneck pace. 

Jack Oblivian sings with the Compulsive Gamblers at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

The headliners brought the night to a close with a stunning display of Memphis talent. The first band Greg Cartwright and Jack Yarber formed together in the 1990s was  called Compulsive Gamblers. The pair of Antenna punks from Mississippi and Frayser went back to the well of pre-Beatles r&b 45s that had inspired rock in the beginning, and wrote their own songs from that template. With The Reigning Sound on indefinite hiatus, the Gamblers did a recent swing through the Midwest and arrived at Gonerfest as a tight unit— or at least as tight as you want punk-infused covers of The Bar-Kays to be.

Alex Greene plays with the Compulsive Gamblers at Gonerfest 19. (Photo By Christopher Reyes – Live From Memphis.com)

With Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene on keys, Graham Winchester on drums, and John Whittemore providing sonic assistance with a Flying V and EBow, they kept the capacity crowd on its feet all night with songs like the Cartwright-penned Oblivians’ classic “Bad Man” and Yarber’s pounding “Pepper Spray Boogie.” The highlight of the set was a swaying rendition of Cartwright’s doom waltz “Sour and Vicious Man.” As the crowd dispersed to the afterparties, it was clear Gonerfest 19 was one for the ages. 

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Music Music Features

The Return of Harlan T. Bobo

Let no one accuse Karen Carrier of thinking small. When she opened The Beauty Shop Restaurant in 2002, she brought the legendary Wild Magnolias from New Orleans to celebrate. Five years ago, they were back for the 15th anniversary. For her brainchild’s 20th anniversary on Saturday, August 6th, she’s still thinking big and keeping that NOLA flavor with a second line and the Lucky 7 Brass Band, followed by Jack Oblivian. But Carrier really moved heaven and earth to get the night’s closing act, Harlan T. Bobo.

Some of us feared we’d never see the ragged-but-right troubadour play again. “When that last record came out [2018’s A History of Violence], we did a little tour, and that’s when I got sick,” Bobo recalls. Indeed, the singer and guitarist found he was losing the use of his left hand. Since then, he’s been riding it out in his adopted home of Perpignan, France.

“I had a lot of nerve damage in my hand from lupus,” says Bobo. “I pretty much thought I was done. I can’t do construction anymore, and I just assumed that I was done playing music. Even my physical therapist thought I was done.” And yet, it was through that very practice that Bobo kept the guitar in his life.

“A year ago, I was figuring out how to cut meat, how to use a knife and fork,” he recalls. “Then I started playing guitar as physical therapy. Just to see what I could do with my fingers. And it’s still a little weird, but I’ve got two fingers that work. By doing a lot of weird tunings I can get a pretty full sound.”

That in turn led him back to the craft of songwriting. “And through that two-fingered approach, I wrote new songs, with which I just finished a bunch of demos, and I’ll probably come back in the spring to record,” he says, sounding amazed that he can play again at all. “And then when Karen offered me that show, I said okay. But when I sat down to play the old songs, I realized, ‘Fuck, I’m only using two fingers!,’ so I had to completely change things and [learn] how to manage those songs.”

Reinventing his approach to his own music, Bobo did a trial run in France. “I just did a show in Perpignan as preparation for The Beauty Shop’s anniversary. God, it felt good to do that! I hadn’t done it in so long, but surprisingly enough, it worked. I think I played a kooky Halloween show three years ago, and I almost died doing that.”

He emphasizes that he’ll be playing his older material at Bar DKDC, complete with some familiar faces in his band. “I’ve got Bunny on guitar, Tim Prudhomme on drums, and possibly Jonathan Kirkscey on cello. I can’t resist getting together with all of my buddies. I’m just trying to do songs people will know. The new stuff is weirdly moody and super quiet and acoustic, and I don’t think it’ll be good for that night. It’s gonna be a party there. And we’ll still be super mellow for a party, but the new stuff would just be painful.”

Yet we can still hear his weirdly moody, super quiet side, thanks to a new album, Porch Songs, arriving on August 5th via Goner Records. Bobo will be celebrating that release at an in-store show that evening at 6 p.m. Though recorded before Bobo’s battle with lupus, the songs offer a stripped-down version of his songcraft. “Around 2016, I went to see this guy in Perpignan who’s got an old 8-track set up,” he says. “It sounds very Sun Studio-y. I just sat down for a day and recorded, like, 20 songs I had around, but never knew what to do with. I think there’s 13 on the new record. It’s mostly just guitar and voice, and drums on a couple of takes.”

Now, on the verge of a homecoming, Bobo reflects on his recent show in Perpignan. “Before that, I hadn’t played any Harlan music in ages. It just felt good to know that I could stand up and entertain a crowd. It was something I had kind of forgotten. It was like, ‘Oh, I can do that!’ And I can still handle drunks from the stage.”

The Beauty Shop 20th anniversary show featuring the Lucky 7 Brass Band, the Jack Oblivian band, and Harlan T. Bobo will be at Bar DKDC August 6th, beginning at 8 p.m.

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Music Record Reviews

Black & Wyatt Goes Global in New Comp

It bodes well for Black & Wyatt Records that their catalog has already been anthologized. And hearing the label’s finest moments gathered together in one place casts their releases in a new, impressive light, as Always Memphis Rock & Roll, a new collection of the label’s best and brightest tracks, reveals.

Part of the revelation in hearing this new compilation, out now on both Black & Wyatt and Dresden’s Head Perfume Records, is realizing that the label can no longer be considered a “newcomer.” It’s an established voice of Memphis that’s recognized globally. Five years have passed since the Memphis Flyer’s Chris McCoy first profiled the two Memphis doctors who launched the label out of a sheer love of gritty rock-and-roll. And yet the historical sweep of the compilation goes far beyond that half-decade, as Head Perfume’s website proudly announces tracks spanning “1956-2019!”

And that’s technically true, with the lead cut being none other than Black & Wyatt’s archival release of two takes of “Steady Girl” by the Heathens, a teen band who recorded at Sam Phillips’ Memphis Recording Service in 1956 but didn’t make it onto wax at the time. Fittingly, Side B opens with Mario Monterosso’s reimagining of “Steady Girl,” also recorded in the very studio that Sam Phillips designed, 63 years later.

Those bookends are a good indication that Black & Wyatt’s heart is in the right place, a place of bacon grease and mud clods and the buzz of old amps. Indeed, hearing these cuts jump from one artist to another, one hears certain common denominators: great guitar sounds, with many varieties of crunch delivered, track by track; punchy songwriting that’s willing to dwell on the dramatic edge, from Turnstyles’ “Cut You Off” or Jack Oblivian & the Sheiks’ “Fast Friends” to Fingers Like Saturn’s “Candy’s Dead” or Tyler Keith’s “Born Again Virgin”; and a glorious preponderance of driving drums and bass. One notable exception? Ironically, a demo recorded by Jack Oblivian & the Dream Killers way back in 2000, the tough-yet-wistful “Loose Diamonds,” which sports only the sparest of snare-hits.

Better yet, for those working on their own Black & Wyatt collection at home, each track opens a potential rabbit hole, as it sends you to the albums from which these tracks are sourced. Such was the case on hearing Toy Trucks’ “Schoolbus,” which led me to marvel at that group’s Rockets Bells and Poetry LP, a power pop diamond in the rough. With Always Memphis Rock & Roll, one can discover such gems all over again.

Always Memphis Rock & Roll will be featured tonight, Friday, May 20, in Memphis Listening Lab’s SoundRoom. Albums will be available; music starts at 6:30 p.m.

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Music Music Blog

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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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. 

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Music Music Blog

Harbert Ave. Porch Show Rides Again, With a New Label in the Making

Robert Jethro Wyatt and Moke O’Connor introduce Jack O & the Tennessee Tearjerkers, Sept 2012.

If this city has music coming out its ears, with pop-up shows, festivals, house shows, buskers, and impromptu jam sessions springing up in every corner, none of these is quite as Memphis as the Harbert Avenue Porch Show. Held at least once a year in the normally staid environs of Central Gardens, the porch show has become a tradition that brings together generations and neighbors from all walks of life.

Fans throng to see Snowglobe in 2017

The brainchild of Robert Jethro Wyatt, the porch show is a perfect expression of its host’s love of music. Indeed, one might not expect such levels of fandom from a Professor of Pediatrics at University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, such a love of garage rock from a Pediatric Nephrologist at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. But Memphis is a city of iconoclasts and mold-breakers. A regular at many of the area’s hardest-rocking shows, Wyatt has given back to the rock ‘n’ roll community every year since 2012, on his very doorstep.

Jack Oblivian at the inaugural Harbert Avenue Porch Show.

This year’s show marks the return of Jack Oblivian, who played the inaugural performance six years ago. Keth Cooper, Frank McLallen, Graham Winchester, and Seth Moody, aka the Sheiks, continue to serve as his dream band.

When the tradition started, as Wyatt notes, “the event was attended by over 100 neighbors and friends. Since then we have held at least one porch show a year featuring musicians and bands from our region. Over 250 folks of all ages attended the 2017 Snowglobe show.”

Some  were documented and simulcast by the short-lived Rocket Science Audio project, taking the porch show to international audiences through the magic of the internet. 

This year also finds Wyatt on the cusp of an even deeper commitment to local rock, as he lays the groundwork for a new record label. “Black and Wyatt Records is me, Dennis Black and Mike McCarthy. Dennis is the Research Director at Le Bonheur – but he goes back to working at a radio station in Millington when he was younger – and keeps motel rooms booked in Tullahoma for Bonnaroo every year. One Monday about 10 years ago Dennis and I flew to San Francisco to see the New Pornographers at the Warfield.” Mike McCarthy, of course, is the punk film auteur, community activist, sculptor, comic artist, and underground film auteur behind Guerrillamonster, the catch-all enterprise for his many ventures. He and Ronnie Harris have designed the T-shirts for this year’s show, and he’ll be involved in curating the Black & Wyatt roster. The trio are brimming with enthusiasm for their new venture, although, as Wyatt says, “I’m just not ready to give out hundreds of handbills this soon.”

The Harbert Avenue Porch Show featuring Jack Oblivian is free; a donation to the band of $5 to $10 is suggested. Free beer and food in the driveway (while it lasts) including beer Memphis Made Brewing. The music starts at 6:00 PM. Eat at Eric’s Food Truck will be on the street.
Sponsors – Memphis Made Brewing, Memphis Sports Academy, Goner Records, Utopia Animal Hospital and Dennis Black.

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Music Music Blog

Gonerfest 14: Saturday

A Saturday afternoon in September was approaching the time of twilight, and the vast tract known as Memphis embrowned itself moment by moment. I settled into day three of Gonerfest 14. For the record, let it be known that we enjoyed glorious weather. Murphy’s drew us in with the promise of delicious suds in the open air.

Know from the start that this is a selective chronicle, damned from the start by too much of the world imposing itself to allow me a full day of frivolity. And yet, while I regret missing the enigmatic Hartle Road bringing the ‘Ssippi synth sound, not to mention their worthy predecessors, I can report that Cobra Man tore the place up with manic electro-funk, and even converted a once-retiring teen boy to crowd surfing on a sheet of plywood. The Heavy Lids lived up to their name with pounding ferocity; everyone was raving about them. “Sick of Being Sick!” Hash Redactor chilled things down with a dose of angst, focusing on the texture of their sonic guitar drones. They proved a perfect palate cleanser for the main attraction: historic proto-punk sonic sculptors X__X.
Alex Greene

X__X

Now, I wouldn’t call them historic to their faces, time-worn as they may have been. On second glance, one could see that X__X helmsman John D. Morton’s face was not time-worn, but marked with random Sharpie scribbles. On third glance, one could see that they were actually tattoo marks made to look like Sharpie scribbles. With things going so meta, Morton donned a tinfoil hat, resembling a Hershey’s Kiss with a Gibson Thunderbird. They soon played themselves into a time and space where age was meaningless. Unpredictable bursts of rhythm and guitar riffage might be in sync, then go pointedly off the rails, then return, as Morton chimed in with wry anger. If mad ranting is an art, with poet John Giorno being the Picasso of the form, then Morton could be its Monet. He cut an almost hippie-ish figure with his loose clothes and earth tone beads, which gave a sense of the kinds of contradictions one was likely to embrace, growing up in the 1970s rust belt as he did. But if there was any hippy idealism in the group’s striving for trance-inducing noise, it was forever foiled by the sounds of the factory floor.

At one point, Morton’s banter even seemed to acknowledge a twisted debt to hippiedom: “Ah, the Summer of Love was magical, it was when I got my first golden shower. It was so beautiful… I was alone.” Musically, free form assault and even playing with power tools would give way to a blessedly simple rock riff tune, with echoes of the Dead Boys and chants of “Transmogrification!” Then back to more twisted sounds, perhaps a chant of “Don’t wear sandals!” concluding with the Dylan quote, “twenty years of schoolin’ and they put ya on the day shift!”

All in all, a satisfyingly dark, layered, and rocking time was had by all. The only dim spot from these incandescent players was a theremin sitting front and center before Morton, waiting to be played. A few tantalizing seconds were heard early in the set, the arcing sound of “The Day the Earth Stood Still” seemingly ready to be unleashed amid the industrial clamor. But no, the theremin only stood there, mostly unplayed. As I left, I saw a solitary tear falling from the elderly electronic instrument.

Golden Pelicans

As night descended, the partiers shifted over to the Hi Tone. When I arrived, ever the unfaithful correspondent, everyone was raving about Traumahelikopter. So What, who would back the Equals’ Derv Gordon later that night, were playing a set of their own, great choppy power pop replete with harmonies. Then Vanity took the stage with a bit of New York grandiosity; yet all previous bands were swept away by the hurricane force winds of Florida’s Golden Pelicans. They mercilessly pounded Memphis down like a crushed can of Schlitz. Coltrane Duckworth, local lad about town and bassist extraordinaire, took to the crowd surf with aplomb, resting his head on his hand like Betty Grable in repose as the audience bore him along to the riffs of accelerated sludge. Viva Golden Pelicans!

Memphis threw its hat in the ring with the formidable Jack O’blivian and the Sheiks, who combined the sonic attack, common enough during the festival, with honest-to-god songs. Seth Moody was on board for extra sax and synth zing. Jesse Davis joined on tambourine. One highlight was Jack’s masterpiece, “War Child,” played tightly with abandon. The set was bookended by brilliant covers, opening with Roxy Music’s “Remake/Remodel” and its earworm chorus of “CPL 593H!!”, closing with a fast and ferocious “I See No Evil” that gave Television a run for their money.

Jack Oblivian & the Sheiks

Next came the enigmatic intro by the night’s emcee, Dan Rose, “The Detroit Hammer,” who had crafted a ritual to situate the festival headliners in the twisted times we are living through. A slow beat of dread pounded as he took the stage in a wolf’s head, calling out and calling down the powers of Babylon that lord over us at the moment. If some in the crowd got testy, waiting for the big beat to begin, most were gobsmacked, held in suspense. It all ended with Rose leading the room in the chant, “Let’s go to the moon! At the Equals show!” — a line from one of many brilliant Equals tracks.

Derv Gordon & So What

Derv Gordon and So What took to the stage. “This is the oddest intro I ever had!” proclaimed Derv, and in a flash the band were laying full throttle into “Softly Softly.” So What did a fine job of staying true to the old Equals arrangements, harmonies and all, but with a bigger, louder sound courtesy of Jason Duncan’s Gibson SG through a Marshall. Derv’s voice was in fine shape, from crooning to belting to singalong mode. Most of your favorite Equals tunes were revived and given a new jumpstart by So What: “Diversion,” “Police on my Back,” “Michael and his Slipper Tree.” Of the latter, Derv confessed that it was originally written as a “nutmeg tree,” until Derv himself made the more enigmatic lyrical change. The crowd was revved up, joining the band in nearly every chorus of every song, not satisfied until the encore brought the house down. Clearly Memphis is Equals territory.

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Music Music Features

Cassette Set: Nashville Meets Memphis

Less than two years ago, Seth and Coco Moody — the musical power couple that fronts Cassette Set, a new-ish local project featuring a pair of well-known Memphis musicians, Graham Winchester and Jack Oblivian — were gearing up for a big move from Wilmington, N.C., to Nashville to pursue new jobs and musical opportunities. As luck would have it, for what would be their last night in town, one of Seth’s bands, Deadly Lo-Fi, got offered a gig opening for a touring Memphis act, Jack O and the Sheiks.

“That was a pretty random card throw,” he says. “We were packed and about to move to Nashville, and Travis (Burdick, Deadly Lo-Fi frontman) hit me up to do a Monday night show, opening up for Jack and the Sheiks. We were literally driving the U-Haul on Tuesday, so my inclination was to skip it.” His wife, however, would have none of it.

“Coco, I remember, said, ‘Come on, it’s Jack Oblivian. You gotta do it!’ So I did the show. [Jack O and the Sheiks] had me sit in on sax, and we had a blast of a night, musically, and those guys are a blast without the music.”

A week later, when the tour rolled through Nashville, Seth sat in with the band again. Friendships and a musical bond were formed, and for six months, Seth traveled from Nashville to Memphis for gigs.

“After the Nashville show, I came down and did Gonerfest with them, stayed the weekend, and played a DKDC show as well,” he says. “Then, I guess every show after that, I’d get asked to come down. I’d stay the weekend, so it was fun despite the commute.”

Wary of the music industry infrastructure and unable to make connections in the local underground scene, the couple grew restless in Nashville. After only six months in “Music City,” Seth and Coco relocated to Memphis.

“Every time I’d come to Memphis, I’d meet more and more oddballs like myself, who were also coincidentally good musicians and songwriters,” says Seth. “I’d stay at Jack’s, and he’d drive me around the city, showing me the good thrift stores, where to get a goat burrito, etc. So as the six-month lease on our expensive Nashville apartment started nearing renewal time, we made the decision to get ourselves here.”

Winchester, one of Seth’s new bandmates, takes credit for playing at least somewhat of a role in that decision.

“Every time I saw Seth, I would tell him how much more of a Memphis dude he was than a Nashville one and how we were going to steal him one day.” 

Seth has quickly become a local staple. In addition to playing with Jack O and the Sheiks, he’s performed live and/or recorded with Kelley Anderson, Jesse Davis, and Faux Killas, to name a few, and has two original projects — Turnstyles, a duo with Winchester, and Moped 10, a trio with Coco and Oblivian.

Last year, Seth and Coco decided to start a covers band with Coco as the lead singer and Seth on guitar and keyboards. Winchester and Oblivian were quickly recruited to play bass and drums, respectively, and Cassette Set was born.

“The idea of the band is to do songs from the ’70s and ’80s but not to worry about the details so much,” says Seth. “If you’re coming up to a part that’s intricate, just plow through it like the Kool-Aid guy entering a kid party.”

Cassette Set has built a repertoire of over 40 revved-up versions of songs by Tears for Fears, Soft Cell, the Cure, the Cars, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, adding a “Memphis garage-rock flair” to new-wave classics.

“These are songs we grew up with. They’re fun,” says Seth. “We have a good time, and that’s the whole point, right?”

Cassette Set, Loflin Yard, Saturday, March 18th, 10 p.m. Free.