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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.

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We Saw You: Josh Cosby at Crafts & Drafts

Josh Cosby took a spin on his bike to Crosstown Concourse to check out Crafts & Drafts, the Memphis Flyer’s Fall gathering that features brews, arts and crafts, and food trucks.

The Star & Micey singer, who released a music video today (November 15th), was impressed with the event held Saturday, November 13th.

“First off, I just happened upon it,” Cosby says. “I didn’t know what was planned. And I was blown away by the artists, all the people with their crafts. They had so much amazing stuff. I wanted to spend a lot of money there, but I don’t have any. I’m an artist. I’m broke, too.

“And I loved the beer. It was amazing. You get a little buzz. You loosen up. It was good to run into a lot of people from the community that I knew there. A lot of folks from the scene were around there, which is nice.”

Cosby released his music video for his solo project.

“It’s called ‘Black Bettie.’ It was filmed in a 100-year-old church building. On the fourth floor. With asbestos and lead peeling off the wall. In Memphis.

“‘Black Bettie’ is named after my 17-year-old dog that passed away. It’s just an outlet for me to release songs that are kind of from my heart that you can’t fit into the band. Star & Micey is a little more upbeat. Friends and family. These are songs straight from my heart that might be kind of sad. It’s an outlet for me to let go of personal stuff.”

Star & Micey is still around, but, Cosby says, “We don’t do much because we’re all so old and it’s hard for us to get together.”

He released his EP solo project, Black Bettie, last year. “Lately, I’ve just been doing singles. And I’ll put a video to the single. This is the second single in a series.”

To watch “Black Bettie,” click here:https://youtu.be/P_g9EaDsgyQ

Among the folks at Crafts & Drafts:

Kristen Fisher, Shea Kissell, Amie Eoff, Ryan Azada ,and Maria Applegate at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ali and Aliyana Muhammad with Delilah at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
The Keith and Meredith Clinton family at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Samuel X. Cicci and Bruce VanWyngarden at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Matt Badalucco and DaMon Smith at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Justin Tilley and October Summerfield at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Derek Hardaway, Tyrell Bradley, and Ivy Hardaway at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Mary Moss VanWyngarden at Crafts & Drafts (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
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Music Music Features

Star & Micey Celebrate 10 Years

The members of Memphis folk-pop band Star & Micey radiate a solidarity that calls to mind a Southern Fab Four-era Beatles, an impression that was driven home for me when I met Josh Cosby and Nick Redmond, the main songwriting duo, for coffee. The two look like an odd couple, the scholar and the handyman, but they field interview questions like an Olympic volleyball team. Cosby sets up a joke, and Redmond spikes it, or vice versa, again and again, putting proof to the fact that the two have spent a decade leaning on and learning from each other on stages and in the studio.

All that hard work pays off, as this month, Star & Micey celebrate 10 years as a band, a mile marker few groups ever reach. The festivities kicked off two weeks ago with an anniversary show at Railgarten, and continue this weekend at the Levitt Shell with a long-awaited co-headlining concert with Memphis indie-pop heavyweights Snowglobe.

Samantha Smith

Star & Micey

“Jeff Hulett from Snowglobe is my neighbor,” Cosby says. “We’ve been throwing it around: ‘When are Snowglobe and Star & Micey going to play together?'”

The 10-year mark represents an unusual time in the life of Star & Micey. Having recently amiably ended a near-decade-long contract with Ardent, the band is in uncharted territory. Cosby and Redmond seem happy, open to the possibility of a new direction and pleased with a summer bookended by a spot on the Beale Street Music Fest lineup and a hometown blowout show at the Shell. But after six-and-a-half years of near-constant touring and almost a full decade with the same label, the band is taking stock. “For the first time in 10 years,” Redmond says, “we’re 100 percent free agents — and with a stack of material.”

But let’s back up. Redmond was already working at the famed Ardent Studios when Cosby and bassist Geoff Smith welcomed him into the band, so it was natural that they wound up at the Memphis label when the time came to sign a deal.

Star & Micey toured, released an EP and a full-length with Ardent, learned to play drums with their feet, toured some more, and added a drummer, Jeremy Stanfill. Their shows became more extravagant. “It was crazy. There was confetti; there were back flips,” Cosby says. They released a third record, Get ‘Em Next Time, in collaboration with Ardent and Thirty Tigers (who handled distribution), made a few laps around the U.S. and Canada, and went back to stomping their feet for a while. “In the meantime, we had recorded five records that just sat on the shelf,” Redmond says.

“Contractually, we had to stay,” Redmond says of the label entanglements that left them tied to the studio but unable to release their newest recordings. And after the deaths in 2014 of Ardent founder John Fry and John Hampton, one of the studio’s chief producers, there was no one to let the band go. “I don’t think there’s blame,” Redmond says. “We got lost in the cracks.”

Meanwhile, over at Thirty Tigers, the death of vice president and co-founder Bob Goldstone sent the company into a period of drastic change. Star & Micey was locked into a deal with Ardent with no one to handle distribution. Eventually, after years in a sort of limbo, the contract was dissolved.

Now it’s back to the band’s origins. “I jumped in the van, and we took off — for 10 years,” Redmond laughs. Those first tours built the band’s chops and taught them how to depend on each other, how to survive long days in a van, and how to roll with the punches.

“If something happens, we’ll all show up,” Redmond says, demonstrating the Get ‘Em Next Time ethos that so defines the band. “We’ve all decided, all four of us, this isn’t over,” Cosby says, putting words to a feeling that permeated the conversation from start to finish. Never for a moment did I doubt that, even after 10 years, Star & Micey have a lot more to give.

Star & Micey and Snowglobe play the Levitt Shell, Friday, September 14th,
7 p.m. Free.