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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “See Her Again” by Jeff Hulett & the Hand Me Downs

Memphis’ own Jeff Hulett has been busy.

Snowglobe, the long-running musical collective of which he is a member, just released two new albums, The Climb and The Fall. His solo project, the Hand Me Downs, is prepping for their own record release party at The Green Room this Thursday, April 25.

Playing with Hulett in the Hand Me Downs are Leh Sammons, Ben Church, and Jonathan Schallert, and Jacob Church, who also engineered the new album Little Windows. The video for the first single, “See Her Again” was directed by Nicki Storey. It’s simple and sweet and, like the song, sincere. Take a listen.

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

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Sassy Stolen Song, Tweet of the Week, and That Smell

Memphis on the internet.

Sassy Stolen Song

Memphis troubadour Jeff Hulett turned out a gut-wrenching tune of loss and disappointment last month.

“Did you hear about Sassy girl?” he sings in a new song on Soundcloud. “The 250-pound statue of a neighbor in Cooper-Young.”

In one of the most Memphis things ever, Hulett’s song details the recent theft of Sassy, a beloved Sasquatch statue stolen in the neighborhood.

Tweet of the Week

“Happy Women’s Day to all the intelligent, beautiful, courageous, kind, and strong women out there,” MGLW Memphis, a parody account, posted to X last week. “And also Marsha Blackburn.”

That smell

Photo: Annie Pm | Unsplash

Neighbors on the Ring app wondered about/were grossed out by a “strange smell” all over Memphis last week.

From Cordova, across Midtown, and into Downtown something smelled “like manure or something sulfuric.” Ring users blamed “mulch, just mulch”; maybe something they stepped in; Bradford pear trees in bloom; Memphis Light, Gas & Water activity; a sewage leak; a gas leak; a cat; and, to one neighbor, “Memphis tends to stink.”

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “This Is Not The End” by Jeff Hulett

Music Video Monday frequent flyer Jeff Hulett has a new EP out, and it’s named after a friend. “The ‘Josh’ in ‘The Josh EP’ refers to my neighbor and friend Josh Cosby,” says Hulett. “While we’ve collaborated on some songs together, this is a full-bore, pedal-to-the-metal, all-in recording with Josh at the helm mixing, producing, and engineering. I just wrote and performed and let Josh do his thing.”

“This is Not The End” is a little dreamy, a little wistful, but full of hope. This video features some types of images I’m always a sucker for: backwards fireworks. Some day I’ll write a long piece about the relationship between the Second Law of Thermodynamics and the effective use of reversed video for the small number of you who would actually care about such things. But for now, just enjoy Hulett’s words, music, and vision.

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

Categories
Music Music Blog

Jeff Hulett Touts New Release at Memphis Listening Lab

Few would disagree with the claim that Snowglobe has been one of the most impactful bands of the past 20 years in Memphis. While they may appear in the occasional reunion show, they’re not too active in the city anymore, but one of the band members, Jeff Hulett, has been doggedly pursuing a solo career. This Friday, August 4th, his latest solo effort, The Josh EP (Something Borrowed), goes live on all streaming platforms, and Hulett will celebrate the release at the Memphis Listening Lab.

The sonic palette of the EP echoes Snowglobe’s unique blend of the intimate and the psychedelic, but while there are some grand sonic flourishes here and there, the collection feels rooted in an alt-folk sensibility. Perhaps that derives from the two-man team behind the record.

“The ‘Josh’ in The Josh EP refers to my neighbor and friend Josh Cosby,” Hulett writes in the release notes. “While we’ve collaborated on some songs together, this is a full bore, pedal to the metal, all-in recording with Josh at the helm — mixing, producing, and engineering. I just wrote and performed and let Josh do his thing.”

The instrumentation on the EP’s longest and most ambitious track, “You Can’t Stop It,” gives you some idea of the arrangements at work here. Hulett plays acoustic guitars, vocals, piano, organ, bass, percussion, and harmonica, while Cosby adds vocals, synth, organ, percussion, electric guitar, acoustic, and mellotron, all at the service of unabashedly pop songwriting. If that sounds reminiscent of Snowglobe, the end result is something different altogether, with Hulett’s originals bringing a more disarming vulnerability to the fore.

There’s also a refreshing restraint at work here: The first two tracks clock in at less than two minutes. Yet even these short ventures reveal the craft of a consummate builder of sonic worlds here that should translate well to the state-of-the-art audio system of the Memphis Listening Lab. The event begins at 6 p.m., and Memphis Made Brewing Company will supply the brews. After playing the release in full, Hulett and Cosby will perform a short set of songs live.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Local News” by Jeff Hulett

Local news is what we do here at the Memphis Flyer. Our local news is mostly about fun stuff, with some very unfun stuff thrown in here and there so we can continue to call ourselves “news.”

That’s a joke, of course. News can be good, bad, indifferent, or ambiguous, because it’s just stuff that happens in life. But some folks have to dress it up and spin it in an attempt to attract more clicks or better ratings. Hey, I get it. It’s hard out there for a content pimp. But constantly harping on the bad stuff, while good for attracting those sweet, sweet anxiety clicks, can make for very unpleasant viewing.

Memphis musician and friend of Music Video Monday Jeff Hulett takes on the needy fearmongering with “Local News” from his 2022 album Note To Self. With an assist from Jake Vest, Hulett takes us on a nightmare tour of local happenings, with giant cave dogs and the walking dead. Looks like a slow news day to me.

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

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Rarely Last” by Jeff Hulett

Snowglobe founding member Jeff Hulett continues his rich solo career with a new EP. “‘Rarely Last’ is about time more than anything else. The slipping away of time, wasting time, longing for simpler times, looking ahead to better times,” Hulett says.

For many, the pandemic gave us a visceral reminder that our time on Earth is limited. Hulett says “Rarely Last” is not about despair, but about the richness of life. “I’ve learned and realized slowly over time (see what I did there) that every year is hard, but that doesn’t have to be a bad thing. Every year is also filled with joy and beautiful moments. People die, careers change, friendships grow, but whatever the case may be — good or bad — the moments rarely last.”

For the “Rarely Last” music video, director Jenny Myers foregrounds Hulett’s lyrics in a unique way. Running human figures transform into the font, and the background becomes more visually complex during the song’s instrumental passages. The resulting synergy between song and image is quite beautiful.

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

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “This Bird” by Jeff Hulett

Jeff Hulett’s post-pandemic songwriting bounty continues to produce great songs. His latest, out as a single on Bandcamp, is “This Bird.” The lyrics, reminiscent of Laurie Anderson, describe a plane crash in progress, and the feelings that the passengers go through on the way down. It’s actually more hopeful and fun than it sounds. You can follow along for yourself with the lyric video for the song, which was created by Memphis expat artist Matt Fremstad.

Hulett will be the guest on J.D. Reager’s Back to the Light: Songs and Stories event at Crosstown Arts’ Green Room this Thursday, March 17. You can get your tickets here.

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

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Film Features Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: “Belong” by Jeff Hulett

Jeff Hulett is dropping his new album, What I Mean, this week. On Saturday, December 18th, at 4 p.m., Hulett will premiere the new album at his record release party at Memphis Made Brewing Company on Cooper.

The first music video from the new album, “Belong” was created by Jake Vest, the Memphis ex-pat musician and producer. The images reflect the song’s mixture of anxious, spoken-word lyrics and soaring melodies of hope. Take a look!

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

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

A Music Video for Father’s Day

Memphis musician and father Jeff Hulett’s been on a roll lately. He’s been rolling out his pandemic output with new music videos. This one is dedicated to all the dads out there. “Scene by Scene” is about what it’s like to watch your kids grow up. Get ready, because the kids in this animated video are absolutely adorbs. Happy Father’s Day, everyone!

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday on Thursday: “Chase The Sun” by Restless Townies

Music Video Monday is going to the fair.

Great Memphis music videos are pouring in to MVM World Headquarters, so we’re celebrating the abundance with another double-shot week. Restless Townies is a cross-country collaboration between Jeff Hulett, Melissa Goodwin Shepherd, and Adam Poor. Their 13-track album Miles Away is a collection of 2-minute dream pop gems, featuring Shepherd’s etherial vocals and swirling guitars.

In this video for “Chase the Sun”, Hulett collects some 50’s vintage footage of what looks like an awesome day of rollercoasters and Tilt-A-Whirls to set a bright, yet melancholy, mood.

If you’d like to see your music video on Music Video Monday — which at this rate could also mean Tuesday or Thursday — email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.