Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Memphis Ukulele Band

Happy holidays from Music Video Monday!

Mark Edgar Stuart, Kyndle McMahan, Jason Freeman, Logan Hanna, and Jon Hornyak, aka The Memphis Ukulele Band, bring you a very Bluff City Christmas. Director Kim Lloyd mixed live footage of the band playing at Lafayette’s with 8mm home movies from the Sam Phillips archive showing the mastermind of Memphis music at home with his family. Lloyd dedicates the video to Becky Phillips and Louise Layton, and we dedicate it to you, our loyal MVM readers, on this holiday season.

Music Video Monday: Memphis Ukulele Band

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Jason Freeman at Poplar Lounge

hh.jpg

In a city that’s launched several young, blues-based artists to various levels of prominence over the past decade or so — the North Mississippi Allstars, Alvin Youngblood Hart, and Valerie June, to name three — singer/songwriter/guitarist Jason Freeman has been a fixture, but one always just outside the spotlight.

He co-founded the string-band-based Bluff City Backsliders more than a decade ago, prepped Samuel L. Jackson for his bluesman role in Black Snake Moan, has played with local artists such as June and Amy LaVere, and fronted, briefly, another band, the Midtown Lowdowns. But this winter Freeman finally made his solo debut with the impressive album Hex & Hell, released via filmmaker Craig Brewer’s BR2 imprint. (The longtime collaborators also became brothers-in-law a few years ago.)

Tonight, Freeman celebrates the vinyl release of the album as well as the debut of a third video connected to the album, this one from local filmmaker Christopher Reyes, with a free record-release show at the Poplar Lounge.

J.D. Reager talked with Freeman for a feature in this week’s Flyer. I also talked to him for a profile in next month’s Memphis magazine, which should be out in a few weeks.

Categories
Music Music Features

The Year in Local Music

The local music scene took a holiday hit with the recent announcement that the city’s most prolific club for touring bands and original local music, the Hi-Tone Café, would be closing in February. While it’s impossible to say how much this news will impact the immediate future of Memphis music, there are no such complications looking back. Here, three of our writers put the spotlight on their favorite local albums and artists of 2012.

Chris Herrington:

1. Women & Work — Lucero (ATO): After more than a decade on the road and with a discography eight full-length albums strong, Lucero hit a new stride this year, embracing and mastering their Southern-rock big-band sound like never before. Onstage and on record, I don’t think frontman Ben Nichols has ever led his band with this much assurance, and Women & Work hits all its diverse marks, from hip-shaking opening anthem (“On My Way Downtown”) to boogie-rock party-starter (the title song) to country-soul torch ballad (“It May Be Too Late”) to blues stomper (“Juniper”). And those are just the first four songs.

2. Ex-Cult — Ex-Cult (Goner): As with a couple of other recent faves — Ex-Cult labelmates Eddy Current Suppression Ring and California’s No Age — this is rhythmic art-punk that doesn’t let the former curdle into pretension or the latter curdle into regiment. Honestly, I would prefer the recording quality to be a little less lo-fi, but the band’s power and insistence still break through.

3. The Wandering Diaspora: At the dawn of the year, Luther Dickinson had the eureka-quality idea of bringing four talented regional roots musicians, all women, none who had collaborated in any serious way, into the studio together: guitarist Shannon McNally, bassist Amy LaVere, drummer Sharde Thomas, and guitarist/banjo player Valerie June. With Dickinson producing and filling in where needed, the Wandering was born. On their debut album, Go On Now, You Can’t Stay Here, this Mid-South Monsters of Folk cover everything from the Byrds (“Mr. Spaceman”) to Robert Johnson (“If I Had Possession Over Judgement Day”) to “You Are My Sunshine” with a spirited interplay and a beautiful blend of voices.

As good as they are together, they’ve been perhaps even busier apart. Dickinson was nominated for a Grammy for his instrumental album Hambone’s Meditations and reteamed with ornery partners Alvin Youngblood Hart and Jimbo Mathus for “Old Time’s There …,” a nervy second album from their South Memphis Jug Band. LaVere and McNally took their newfound chemistry on the road and into the studio with their recent EP Chasing the Ghost — Rehearsal Sessions. And June, whose wayward career earns the band’s moniker more than most, struck a deal with a French label and released the terrific single “Workin’ Woman Blues” with a Hungarian gypsy-folk backing band. Her looming debut album is likely the most promising Memphis-connected album on tap for next year.

4. Guerilla/Help Is on the Way — Don Trip: Trip has the surest flow, most grounded perspective, and most soulful sound of any hardcore Memphis rapper since 8Ball, and if an actual major-label-released debut album is proving predictably elusive, that hasn’t stopped him from dropping mixtapes well above the form’s norm. Released early this year, around the time Trip landed on the cover of national rap magazine XXL as part of its latest “Freshman Class” of up-and-comers, Guerilla is probably his most cohesive collection, with the more recent Help Is on the Way not far behind.

5. Mutt — Cory Branan (Bloodshot): The Memphis ex-pat, now Nashville-based singer-songwriter’s third album richly earned the over-deployed “long-awaited” descriptive. It has been six years since Branan’s 12 Songs, and Mutt shows his songwriting chops undiminished. The opening “The Corner” is a sardonic deconstruction of Branan’s own good press and gallows-humor appraisal of his stop-and-start career. “Survivor Blues” is an escape scenario in the Springsteenian tradition, but the romance is laced with a darker, more dangerous undercurrent.

Honorable Mention: Barbaras 2006-2008 — The Barbaras (Goner), Hi-Electric — Hi Electric (Evangeline), I Can’t Wait — Star & Micey (Ardent Music), Coast to Coast — River City Tanlines (Big Legal Mess), The Switchblade Kid — The Switchblade Kid (Miss Molly Music), Hex & Hell — Jason Freeman (BR2), Life’s Quest — 8Ball (eOne).

J.D. Reager:

1. Hex & Hell — Jason Freeman (BR2): This long-overdue debut from one of Memphis’ most distinctive voices contains just the right amount of Beale Street swagger without foraying into that cheeseball “Blues Hammer” territory that so many white blues bands can’t seem to avoid. This record is rough, raw, and fun and features cameos from several noteworthy local musicians, including Amy LaVere, Krista Wroten Combest and Jana Misener (both of the Memphis Dawls), Adam Woodard, and the vastly underappreciated Daniel Farris (Coach and Four), whose thunderous drumming helps keep things interesting in the jammier bits.

2. The Switchblade Kid — The Switchblade Kid (Miss Molly Music): Local musician/producer Harry Koniditsiotis distills his various projects — the Angel Sluts, Twin Pilot, the Turn-it-Offs, etc. — into one megaband. And it totally works.

3. Coast to Coast — River City Tanlines (Big Legal Mess): The venerable Memphis power trio stretches out a bit on this latest release, incorporating elements of indie-pop, metal, and noise-rock into the mix alongside pop-punk gems like “Pretty Please.”

4. Loud Cloud — Tanks: A ferocious 26-minute slab (all contained in one track) of heavy metal.

5. I Can’t Wait — Star & Micey: This EP sneaks in to the top five on the strength of the hauntingly gorgeous opening track, “No Pets Allowed.” At other times, it seems a tad overproduced but still showcases the band’s impeccable songwriting and vocal arrangements.

Honorable Mention: New Black Sea — Good Luck Dark Star; Hello Monday — Chad Nixon, Snorlokk — Hosoi Bros; Ex-Cult — Ex-Cult (Goner); I’m Just Dead I’m Not Gone — Jim Dickinson (Memphis International).

Chris McCoy:

1. Barbaras 2006-2008 — The Barbaras (Goner): The recordings for the debut album of this young Memphis band that splintered into the Magic Kids and the late Jay Reatard’s backing band were thought lost, but last year they turned up on a hard drive of Reatard’s and got a Goner release this year. The album is nonstop brilliant and four years after the last note was recorded still sounds ahead of its time.

2. The Memphis Dawls live: High school friends Holly Cole, Krista Wroten Combest, and Jana Misener took off in a big way this year, building on the success of an excellent 2011 EP by releasing a music video for their song “Hickory” and scoring an opening slot for Jack White. Their live shows got better and better as the year went on, culminating in a perfect afternoon set at the Cooper-Young Festival. If you get a chance to see these women do their folky thing live, go. It will be well worth your time.

3. Ex-Cult — Ex-Cult (Goner): The Midtown punk group’s debut record is an atomic blast of straight-ahead power. The album’s “Shade of Red” is my favorite song produced by a Memphis band in 2012, and their debut Gonerfest performance in September made fans out of the entire packed room.

4. The Modifiers return: This year saw the rebirth of a Memphis legend. For more than 20 years, Bob Holmes and Milford Thompson’s pioneering punkers the Modifiers have been spoken of in hushed, reverent tones by those who saw them destroy the Antenna club in the ’80s. Thompson passed away several years ago, and Holmes had retired, but Flyer contributor J.D. Reager, whose father had been in the original band, convinced Holmes to play his classic tunes with Reager and the crack River City Tanlines rhythm section of Terrence Bishop and John “Bubba” Bonds. Catch one of their rare appearances, and hear some lost Memphis gems.

5. Hex & Hell — Jason Freeman (BR2): Jason Freeman has played guitar for the Bluff City Backsliders and Amy LaVere, so we knew he was good. But his debut album is still a revelation, taking blues-based rock into the 21st century with explosive slide guitar and blistering vocals. Hex & Hell makes Stonesy rock loose and fun again.

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Local Record Reviews

About halfway through Ex-Cult’s eponymous debut album, the song “Shade of Red” introduces itself with a fanfare of clanging power chords. It’s a move that barely registers on the standard scale of rock-and-roll bombast, but coming in the context of the Memphis punk band’s austere aesthetic, it feels huge and portentous.

Even though it is produced by San Francisco garage-punk wunderkind Ty Segall, Ex-Cult eschews the Nuggets psychedelic nostalgia that manifests itself in much contemporary garage rock with singsongy choruses and tossed-off girl-group harmonies. There is nostalgia here, but it is for ’80s American hardcore. Ex-Cult sounds like a band in a hurry, with no time for messing around. The tempos of these 12 songs stay frantic, even though the lengths of the songs often go beyond the standard hardcore two-minute mark.

But Ex-Cult is not a doctrinaire hardcore band. The closest analog is Fugazi, whose members, like Ex-Cult’s singer Chris Shaw (currently a Flyer intern) and guitarist J.B. Horrell, cut their teeth on hardcore but moved beyond its restrictions. If that sounds like high praise, it is. Ex-Cult may not be breaking ground like Fugazi did, but songs like the album-opening “Knives on Both Sides,” where the band coils through the verses and punches on the choruses like a boxer softening up his opponent, would not sound particularly out of place on 13 Songs. The lead single “MPD” contrasts the pounding drums and pulsing bass with Horrell’s impressionistic guitar work. The soaring guitar lines on “Better Life Through Chemistry” evoke the Dead Kennedy’s masterpiece “Moon Over Marin.” And Shaw’s vocals on this track, as on most of the album, function more like a rhythm instrument than a supplier of melody. He is the charismatic glue that keeps the rest of the ensemble grounded, seeming to egg them on with wicked laughter in “Day To Day” and trading sneers with bassist Natalie Hoffman on “Young Trash” before stepping aside to let the reverb guitars wash over everything.

Ex-Cult is another entry in what has been a great year for Memphis music, and the poise and potential displayed on this debut album makes me eager to go back to punk’s future with them again. — Chris McCoy

Grade: A-

Ex-Cult plays an album release show at 1372 Overton Park on Saturday, December 15th. Doors open at 8 p.m., show is set to end before midnight. Cover is $5. True Sons of Thunder open.

Jason Freeman, a longtime fixture of the modern Memphis string band the Bluff City Backsliders and the man who tutored Samuel L. Jackson for his bluesman role in Black Snake Moan, releases his debut solo album with Hex & Hell, a 10-song collection put out via filmmaker Craig Brewer’s BR2 imprint. (The slow-burning “Magic in My Home” previously appeared on the soundtrack for Brewer’s Footloose remake.)

Where the Backsliders are an acoustic lot, Hex & Hell is electric, at times evoking the classic hill-country blues of the past couple of decades and at other times suggesting the Sun Studio moment when blues (the music) merged into rockabilly (Freeman’s voice).

The album of original songs was recorded in Memphis and Los Angeles with Daniel Farris on drums and, primarily, Jayme Silverstein on bass. Freeman’s slide-guitar drives the core trio on the opening “Dirty Heart,” but after that several other ace local players come aboard to add color to Freeman’s gutbucket blues foundation. Adam Woodard (Tearjerkers, Star & Micey) provides some Memphis organ to “Florida Watah.” On the title track, Freeman spars with the strong response of his “Hexen Trio” — Heather Trussel on violin and Memphis Dawls Krista Wroten on violin and Jana Misener on cello. Suzi Hendrix joins on the stomping “Love Baby” to suggest what it might have sounded like if Howlin’ Wolf added a saxophone to his band. And bassist Amy LaVere adds some strut to “Teasin’ Me.”

Rather than traditional liner notes, Hex & Hell comes with a four-page comic book from Memphis filmmaker and artist Mike McCarthy titled Haunted Sounds of Hex & Hell, whose cover proclaims “Beware the Curse of the Voodoo Guitar!” and creates a mythology for the album. See hexandhell.com for purchasing info.

Chris Herrington

Grade: B+