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Gettin’ Real Buck

Dancing his way into his third major-label album cycle, megastar rapper Hammer, who’d only recently dropped the “MC” prefix, released the bombastic “2 Legit 2 Quit” single and video. The song served as a not-so-veiled retort to critical voices from within a growing hip-hop music fandom whose appetite for harder-edged reality rap had begun to shift the archetype of success in the genre. While this renewed and rejuvenated Hammer returned with one of the most expensive and glitzy videos of popular music history — a 15-minute production with staged explosions and a dizzying array of celebrity cameos — he came across as a tougher, more street-wise version of himself. As the party winds down in the song’s latter half, Hammer pauses for a dance break, offering a repetitive chant of “Get buck!” to the beat.

What would’ve been an innocuous phrase to almost all who heard the 1991 song, a platinum seller that peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100, was a dog whistle to rap fans in Memphis, Tennessee. It especially pricked the ears of Pretty Tony, who’d help popularize the chant at numerous talent showcases in the city, releasing his own single titled “Get Buck” on a cassette the year prior.

“I wrote ‘Get Buck’ in 1986. But I didn’t drop it until 1990,” Tony, whose real name is Anthony Davis, says. “I saw something missing in hip-hop, a real, raunchy club sound that wasn’t in the industry.” That sound, he says, was his own attempt to capture the atmosphere of Memphis’ fledgling underground rap scene, where a crop of young performing artists and producers converged with larger-than-life street jocks, whose mixing and hosting skills circumvented the conventions of commercial radio. Behind the doors of night spots like Club Expo, Studio G, and 21st Century, major players provided a proving ground for a new style of rap, and everyone involved worked to find their own way to get it on tape.

Much like the origins of its older, more established siblings in New York and Los Angeles, the Memphis hip-hop contingent had been born as an offshoot of a nightclub culture where disco and funk had only recently given way to a slick, synthesized sound.

Pretty Tony (Photo: Courtesy Pretty Tony)

Trumpeter and Somerville, Tennessee, native John Moore credits the shift for changing the course of his life. Setting his sights on Memphis, immediately after graduating high school, he jokes that he was hanging outside Stax Records before his school band could finish “Pomp and Circumstance.”

Shortly after that day in 1974, he began to notice that splitting money on a bandstand in small local clubs was not an easy living. “When disco came, the bands started using keyboards to replace the horns. So the Memphis horn sound wasn’t as valuable as it used to be,” Moore says.

With the global dance craze beckoning eager partygoers in clubs across the city, Moore answered the call, enlisting as a DJ at Club Expo on Lamar Avenue. “To me, it was a no-brainer because if I can get 1,000 people in line to see two DJs, I was better off than having to split $200 with 20 guys in a small club,” he says.

“During the disco era, we, pretty much, put bands out [of business]. That was before hip-hop came in. But it was on the way.”

Beginning his tenure behind the turntables with a DJ named Soul Searcher, Moore, who is renowned locally by his moniker Disco Hound, began to recruit other mixers and personalities to increase Club Expo’s profile. Soon, his core of street jocks would include a young DJ Spanish Fly; a Chicago import named Soni D, whose progressive disco stylings introduced Memphis to an early iteration of house music; and a fast-talking lifelong media man and lightweight insult comic known as Ray The Jay.

“A lot of club owners were against me for fear that they’d lose their clientele with rap coming in,” Ray The Jay says. “And a lot of the club DJs were doing what club owners told them to do. And the radio DJs couldn’t play it because they were doing what their program directors said. But we got it so hot in the club that [if you came late], you’d only be able to stand at the back.”

Born Jay Raymond Nealy Jr., in Little Rock, the child who would become known as Ray The Jay spent his formative years in Chicago with his father. But injuries sustained in an automobile accident prompted his mother to move him back South. As a student at Little Rock Central High School, he played basketball alongside future football coach Houston Nutt. In his junior year, he completed a vocational training program that certified him as a licensed radio broadcaster. His special endorsement also certified him to read radio transmitters. The precocious teenager quickly found work on a local radio news program. Just as swiftly, his trajectory was derailed by robbery charges for a crime he maintains he was falsely accused of committing. Today, Nealy states he wasn’t even in the area of the incident when it occurred. Nevertheless, legal troubles sullied his reputation with college basketball scouts, and Nealy finished his senior year intent on making his mark on-air, studying radio, TV, and film with a minor in sales at Memphis State University.

In time, his voice would cut through. Even today, he can recite his common opening, “News and information continues from WMC in Memphis. I’m Ray Nealy, and here’s what’s happening today!” While partying as hard as he was working, he took a colleague up, partly on a dare, to buy his way into a small after-hours spot called The Golden Nugget on South Bellevue, rebranding the club as the deliberately on-the-nose All Night Disco. His knack for radio gave him an in, as he took to cutting commercials with his signature flair. However, it was his penchant for promotions that took over when he began marketing gimmicks for each night of the week. And, when his DJ didn’t show for a gig, his showmanship won out and he created the Ray The Jay persona to entertain his guests. When his business arrangement at All Night Disco came to an end, he’d hone his repertoire during a brief stint in New Orleans’ French Quarter. After the hiatus, he returned to Memphis nightlife, bouncing from club to club for close to a decade, until he found a home at Expo. On its dance floor, rap was already beginning to bubble.

“All the locals came up with their own songs,” Nealy says. “As soon as they gave it to me, I would play it. If it was good, we’d jam it. If it wasn’t, I’d talk about they ass! I used to check people.” His early favorite, a Westwood rapper named Travis “Homicyde” Townsell, emerged as an influential figure in Memphis’ early rap circle.

Homicyde (Photo: Courtesy Larry Clark)

“Homicyde was going from one hood to the next hood, promoting the rap and putting on shows,” Nealy says.

“Homicyde was the first gangster rapper I’d ever heard,” says producer, rapper, and multi-instrumentalist Tyrone “Psycho” Bell. “He had that passion when we were just teenagers.”

Bell, who tried his hand at everything from guitar to piccolo in his school band, moved from South Memphis to Westwood with his family as a teenager. After school, he’d rush home to tinker with four-track recorders, making demos of the ditties he came up with in solitude. With his window open, the sound permeated the streets of his new neighborhood.

“The next thing you know, I’d have a yard full of people at my bedroom window,” he says. The ring leader of the small audience was Homicyde, and he wanted in on the experience. Joining with other top rappers in the neighborhood, Homicyde and Psycho formed America’s Most Wanted and signed with a manager. Naturally, Homicyde’s twisted, deranged lyrics proved too violent, and Psycho’s ambitious production technique eventually left them on the outs with management and group mates.

America’s Most Wanted (Photo: Courtesy Larry Clark)

“They call me insane because I’m homicidal, fuck Roger Rabbit, Charles Manson is my idol,” Homicyde would rap on the track “Paranoid,” the early ’90s song that he points to as the launching point of his solo career.

“When we were in America’s Most Wanted, we’d rehearse outside with speakers. People would come and say, ‘This shit is amazing,’” Homicyde says. “But after I put the little gangster touch to it with ‘Paranoid,’ everything just skyrocketed, as far as the [more sinister] Memphis sound.”

Both Homicyde and Psycho would leave the group to mentor, influence, and team up with other known quantities in the Memphis rap canon, with Homicyde working closely with the camp that included the likes of Skinny Pimp, DJ Paul, and Juicy J, and Psycho starting a new group called Men of the Hour featuring an emcee named Al Kapone.

On The Strength (OTS) Records CEO Reginald Boyland notes that the switching around of artists from group to group became emblematic of a scene still finding its footing. In it, the roles of the individual artists at this primitive stage had little priority over the whole. “All these cats were around each other, and they really were friends,” Boyland says of the camaraderie of Memphis rap’s early period. “They were young, ambitious, and they were like brothers, and they stayed out of trouble because they had somewhere to go.”

Much like Disco Hound had showed up to Memphis, trumpet in hand, with the hope that standing outside Stax Records might afford him an invitation inside, the young rap faithful arrived in throngs to Boyland’s OTS Records in Orange Mound to learn from one another. In the early 1990s, artists affiliated with and signed to the label included the likes of Radical T, Pretty Tony, 8Ball & MJG, and Psycho. However, its flagship artist was Patrick “Gangsta Pat” Hall, son of prolific soul drummer Willie Hall, who played with The Bar-Kays, The MG’s, and The Blues Brothers. Prior to Pat’s affiliation with OTS, he’d been primed by heavy-hitter Anthony Collier, a friend of Boyland’s, as the star of his own production house. Pat would achieve breakout success when he became the first Memphis rapper with a major label contract when Atlantic Records reissued his 1990 album #1 Suspect, a year after its original OTS release. Tragically, Collier died as an assailant shot into a vehicle at the corner of Danny Thomas Boulevard and Beale Street in May 1990, prior to Pat’s grand success. The shots rang out mere blocks from Memphis hip-hop mecca, Studio G, a club at 380 Beale Street. Boyland took up the mantle, steering Pat’s career, in the wake of Collier’s death.

For those artists, and numerous others looking for a safe haven, a youth center on Winchester Road near Tchulahoma named 21st Century aimed more specifically at providing rap hopefuls with a playground, of sorts, to hone their craft. Following its opening in 1989, an unwitting promoter named Larry Clark stepped forward to manage the venue while its owners filled it with performance and studio spaces. Among the most popular attractions at weekly talent shows were iterations of America’s Most Wanted and 2nd Level, a group including DJ Jus Borne, Cody Mack, and a soon-to-be standout Whitehaven rapper named Tela.

2nd Level (Photo: Courtesy Larry Clark)

Clark, a die-hard Bar-Kays fan, got hip to the music promotion game after connecting with the legendary funk band’s bassist James Alexander, who in the 1980s enjoyed a second career pounding the pavement for several labels — his most steady work coming from Memphis’ Select-O-Hits. Working on projects with Alexander, Clark began carrying a camcorder to document the impact of their activations and promotional displays. The hobby evolved into a public access show for local Cablevision customers called UGTV, launched in the early ’90s. “It was the only game in town for rap music on TV,” Clark says.

“Everybody in the region would call me and ask, ‘How can I get on your show?’” he says, laughing. “I’d say, ‘Well, if you let me do your music video, I’ll play it on the show!’”

That proposition kept Clark a very busy man, as it did for Ralph McDaniels’ pioneering Video Music Box program on New York City’s public station WNYC-TV years earlier when hip-hop’s first music videos hit television airwaves.

“I knew how to walk right up to the edge without going over the edge,” Clark says. “I would do stuff that I knew I wasn’t supposed to be doing, like putting booty on TV. I’d go to the shake junt, turn the cameras on, film the girls shaking this and that. The folks at Cablevision would say, ‘We can’t show that!’ But I’d say, ‘It ain’t showin’ [that much].’”

Elsewhere in the land of broadcast media, a rivalry brewed between two jocks looking to earn their piece of the hip-hop spilling over from streets into the office parks that beamed music across the region. Returning to his former station in his hometown market, after a short tour away from Memphis radio, Downtown Jackson Brown stepped behind the microphone at Magic 101 in 1991 with one directive from his station owner: knock K97’s Stan Bell down a peg in the ratings.

Brown, psyching himself up for battle, egged on the station owner, throwing fuel on the matter.

“I told him, ‘Stan is killing everybody [in Memphis radio] at night, he’s talking about people, he’s degrading people, making ’em feel bad because he’s the king of the throne,’” Brown says. “‘In order to fight that, I need to be able to play a lot of Memphis records, because I got an ear to the street.’”

Brown’s station owner obliged. And Brown had his marching orders. He took to the clubs, often emceeing special events in and around Memphis to ingratiate himself with the underground.

“A lot of the club jocks at the time had mixtapes on cassette. You could get them volume by volume by different guys: DJ Spanish Fly, DJ Zirk, DJ Squeeky, and later DJ Paul and Juicy J,” Brown says. “I took stuff off the cassette tape like ‘Slob on My Knob,’ took it in the studio. We’d take a reel-to-reel machine, mark, splice, and flip the words out that we didn’t want to play on the radio. DJ Juicy J became bigger than life after that. I did the same with the bad language from DJ Paul’s ‘Where Is Da Bud?’”

“That rivalry made me better,” Stan Bell says. “It almost got personal, at one point, because we all want to be number one.”

Labeling them playfully as “radio wars,” Bell says, “We used to take shots at each other, saying things like, ‘The real hits are over here.’ It was fun. It was a friendly competition. But it was serious. And the ratings were good.”

Though he may not have had the green light to play some of the more suggestive street records creeping up from the Memphis underground, Bell did find a creative solution to crowdsourcing content directly from the Memphis streets. In the ’90s, he launched his signature segment “The Roll Call,” opening up the phone line for brave callers to freestyle about neighborhood news, shout out to local crews, and deliver dedications to their crushes. And he found an even more express route to Memphis’ youth: through the schools. In 1993, he returned to his alma mater, Northside High School, as an English teacher, breeding a captive audience and de facto street team within the student body.

A similar exchange between generations facilitated a passing of the torch between multiple Memphis soul legends whose children and their friends made convenient use of the resources left intact by their elders. Like Willie Hall and Gangsta Pat, James Alexander’s son Phalon Alexander (later known as Jazze Pha) parlayed his charisma and father’s tenacity as a promotions professional into a release distributed by Elektra in the form of 1990’s Rising to the Top. Phalon regularly won talent shows in town with the help of a talented body-rocking sidekick named Act-A-Fool, who’d punch his ticket out of Memphis as a part of MC Hammer’s noodle-legged troupe of dancers. Thus was the link between Memphis’ burgeoning underground and the chart-topping pop-rap sensation.

Around the corner from that South Memphis-based clique, brothers Archie “Baldhead” Mitchell and Lawrence “Boo” Mitchell carried on their family business, utilizing their grandfather’s Royal Studios to record their album For Deposit Only in the same facility where Al Green cemented hit-making status two decades prior.

“He was open all the way [to allowing hip-hop in his famed studio],” Archie says of his grandfather, Willie Mitchell. “He’d say, ‘Anything is worth a try. You never know until you do it.’”

Recorded together as M-Team, the brothers’ single “Rolling Samurai,” an ode to Suzuki SUVs, outfitted with custom speaker systems was met with a cease and desist from the Japanese automotive manufacturer.

“They told him they were gonna sue him if he put the record out because I was rapping about outrunning the police,” Boo laughs. “But that’s a joke because anyone with a Suzuki Samurai knows those jokers are slow as hell.”

Pop was like, “Well, we gotta put it out now!”

It was that level of support for his son’s newfound joy of music that found the elder Mitchell shopping his grandson’s tracks to labels in New York, one of which asked that they change the lyrics to their song “This Is Hip-Hop.”

“They were like, ‘You can’t say that,’ But what they were basically saying was, ‘Y’all are from the South, and this shit isn’t hip-hop.’”

With 50 years of hip-hop in the books, Memphis rappers routinely top the streaming charts, with Complex magazine regarding our city at No. 5 on their 2023 list of “The Best Rap Cities Right Now.”

Boo says this moment in time is “vindication.”

“From being one of the first Memphis rappers and the labels in New York to shun us, for us to be [what I consider] the No. 1 city in hip-hop right now, it feels good. I’m just proud of all the amazing artists who picked up where I left off and ran it up!”

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Film Features Film/TV

Memphis Film Prize 2018

Memphis Film Prize Filmmaker’s Liaison David Merrill says he’s proud of what the young film festival has accomplished since it spun off the Louisiana Film Prize in 2016. “Our $10,000 annual prize has spurred the creation of more than 120 films in Shelby County,” he says. “Some of them might have happened anyway, but the Film Prize got a lot of people off the couch … We’ve given away $20,000 to Memphis filmmakers. The first year’s winner was McGhee Monteith with ‘He Could’ve Gone Pro’. Last year, it was Matteo Servante’s ‘We Go On’ with a screenplay by Corey Mesler.”

Compared to other festivals, creating a short film for the Memphis Film Prize is a more intensive process. Prospective filmmakers must register their projects with the organization, and then check in periodically during production. The films that make it to completion are then put before a panel of judges, who pick 10 films to screen at the two-day festival. The winner is determined by audience ballot, but there’s a catch: In order to vote, audience members must watch all 10 films at the festival. This prevents ballot stuffing by people who would watch their friends films, then leave. “With this rule, we’re trying to build in a certain sense of fairness,” says Merrill.

The program’s success can be judged by the number of returning filmmakers. “Going into the third year, we’ve got ‘Opening Night’ by Kevin Brooks. I believe this is his third year to be in the top 10. Marcus Santi is also back in the top 10 for the third time with his film ‘Jack Squat: The Trial’. Rob Rokk has a film called ‘Outside Arcadia.’ All of these filmmakers have returned every year and gotten in the top 10 every year. We’ve got fresh blood — people who weren’t in the top 10 before — and we’ve got returning champions back to duke it out.”

Mario Hoyle (Don), Ricky D. Smith (Boss) in ‘Dean’s List’

Daniel Ferrell competed in the Memphis Film Prize last year, but didn’t make the cut. “That experience really inspired me to work hard and hone my craft so I could make it to the top 10 this year,” he says.

Ferrell’s film “Dean’s List” was the first to be called out at the announcement party. “I was jumping for joy. I couldn’t even believe it!”

The director, who started out making backyard movies with his friends, says “Dean’s List” came about almost by accident. “We were trying to make a movie about a female graffiti artist, but we couldn’t get it off the ground,” he recalls. “We had decided to shoot on April 28th, and we wanted to keep that date. So I got together with my friends and we quickly wrote the story about a young college kid who has to deliver a backpack to his boss, and something bad happens. It just kind of came together.”

Actor/director Donald Myers is a familiar sight on the Memphis film scene. He appeared in last year’s winner “We Go On,” written by Burke’s Book Store owner Corey Mesler. Myers says he found himself in the director’s chair when “Corey sent me the [‘Hypnotic Induction’] script and asked if I wanted to take it on.”

Myers and Mesler worked on the script over a couple of weekends to get it into filmable shape. “Corey’s a master of dialogue,” Myers says. “It’s about a bartender who has a smoking and drinking problem, and he doesn’t know how to cure it. He visits a hypnotherapist for treatment for his addictions. The encounter turns into a test of wills.”

Caroline Sposto and John Moore were tapped to play the lead roles. “I liked their chemistry, and when we put them to work at the table read, it all just came alive,” says Myers.

First time writer/director Lauren Cox was inspired to write “Traveling Soldier” by a Dixie Chicks song. “Since I was in middle school, I’ve always thought that would be a good movie,” she says.

After the birth of her first child, Cox, an actor who has appeared on House of Cards, decided to make a movie in Memphis. “My film work was out in California. I had zero Memphis connections,” she says.

2016 Film Prize winner McGhee Monteith recommended Andrew Trent Fleming, who co-directed and shot “Traveling Soldier,” while Cox took the lead role. “I would never have thought I would make an emotionally driven World War II movie, but then I just got really attached it to,” Fleming says. “It’s Lauren’s baby, but it means a lot to me. My grandad and grandma were so similar to these characters. I tried to help her achieve her vision, but I put my own touches in there, too.”

This year’s Memphis Film Prize festival takes place on August 3rd-4th at Studio on the Square. “The real winner is Memphis,” says Merrill. “Certainly someone is going to walk away with $10,000. But we get to see all these great films. Every year, they’re upping the ante.”

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I Hate Hamlet at Germantown Community Theatre

It’s the day of dress rehearsal, and John Moore, who plays the ghost of actor John Barrymore in Paul Rudnick’s comedy I Hate Hamlet, is about to get his tights. “Ah yes, the tights,” he says. “You know, they don’t hide a lot. Like Barrymore says, ‘This is the history of Prince Hamlet. Tight pants. That’s what Hamlet‘s about. A young man full of vigor.”

This year marks the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, and the Bard, whose work is always in heavy rotation, is getting a little extra love. In addition to producing his plays, Memphis companies are also staging works inspired by Shakespeare. As was the case with Theatre Memphis’ very funny production of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged), one doesn’t have to know all that much about Elizabethan theater to get the jokes in I Hate Hamlet, though some familiarity will make for a better experience.

Hamlet — a man in tight pants

“It’s like being in the live studio audience for a sitcom,” Moore says. It’s a good description, too.

I Hate Hamlet tells the story of Hollywood actor Andrew Rally, the popular star of a TV show that’s just been cancelled. The good news, he’s been offered the title role in Shakespeare in the Park’s production of Hamlet. The not-so-good news: He’s not a fan. The weird news: He’s living in John Barrymore’s old apartment, and the actor’s martini-swilling spectre keeps showing up to offer acting and life advice.

“He’s called a ham,” Moore says of Barrymore, who swills, swaggers, staggers, and sword fights his way through the play. “So I’m playing him like he’s always on.”