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Lucero: Among the Ghosts

With the release of Lucero’s first album since 2015’s All a Man Should Do this week, a new page has been turned in the band’s life. With Ben Nichols, the group’s singer and songwriter, settling into married life and fatherhood, and the band celebrating its 20th year this spring, the new songs strike out for new territory with a wistful nod to the past. As with the cover image of Among the Ghosts — a homespun church blurring into reflections of the floodwater surrounding it — the sounds of the new album are deceptively spare, but full of shadows.

Ghosts has the cinematic sweep of classic Springsteen, but it’s a cinema filled with dread and ominous foreboding. It’s no great stretch when, near the album’s end, Nichols’ voice drops out and one hears a noir-inspired monologue by actor Michael Shannon. Not unlike Harlan T. Bobo’s recent foray into fatherhood, which resulted in the darkest music of his career, Nichols turns from his new grounding in parental life to cast an eye at the broken world our children will inherit.

When Nichols called me from his home in Ohio, he contrasted the bliss of his current life with the brooding songs he’s created.

Flyer: It seems your lyrics have become more writerly. Does this grow out of being more of a dad and homebody these days?

Ben Nichols: It’s kinda like living in the witness protection program. Nobody knows me. We’re out here in the middle of nowhere. We’ve got a couple acres out in the country. It’s all dairy farms and fields, and it’s real nice. I don’t do anything, I just hang out at the house with the family. I’m happier than I’ve ever been, but I’ve written some of the darker songs that we’ve written recently. Now the stakes are higher. I’ve got something to lose. I’ve got something I actually care about. In the past, it didn’t matter which direction the world went, but now, I’ve got a little girl. And things matter more now than they used to. And things are scarier now than they used to be.

I love all the old Lucero songs, all the drinking songs and heartbreak songs, which pretty much came straight out of my life, but I don’t have to write those again. It was nice going in a slightly different direction this time. I was trying to think of the songs more as short stories. I think it fit the music as well.

What authors have you been inspired by?

For “Long Way Back Home,” which we just filmed a video for, I was definitely thinking about Larry Brown and Ron Rash. And also my little brother, Jeff Nichols, and his films, like Shotgun Stories and Mud. I wanted to capture that kind of Southern storytelling. Songs like “Everything Has Changed,” the whole idea of that song, the guilt in that song, is straight outta that Tim O’Brien story, The Things They Carried.

There’s a yearning for home that plays through the record. It’s very specific in the title track, “Among the Ghosts.” That one is most directly from my point of view: being on the road and missing my family. But then you’ve got “To My Dearest Wife,” which is more from a soldier’s perspective. It’s based on some Civil War letters that I found, but I didn’t wanna make it too specific.

Dan Ball

Lucero at Sam Phillips Recording

The tracks also evoke wide open spaces, but with big guitar tones instead of horns.

We were taking a step back from what we’d done on the last three records, recorded at Ardent, which was a very Memphis-centric sound. We had the big horn section and the boogie-woogie piano that Rick Steff was playing. With this one, I was deliberately taking a step away from that. We changed studios; we went to Sam Phillips. And we changed producers; we worked with Matt Ross-Spang. And we deliberately went in more classic rock direction. Something that was more cinematic and more melancholy.

Does touring have a more melancholy edge now?

It’s a whole new kind of heartbreak, leaving a two-year-old daughter at home. Before, you’d leave a girlfriend or your friends behind for a month or two. Leaving your little girl behind is tougher. But overall, it’s a pretty sweet setup. Come up with guitar parts at home with my daughter running around, and then go down to Memphis and record ’em in a place like Sam Phillips Studio? Yeah, you can’t beat it.

Lucero releases Among the Ghosts (Liberty & Lament / Thirty Tigers) on August 3rd.

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Music Music Blog

Mempho Music Fest Announces 2018 Schedule, Opens Ticket Sales

Nas

Now gunning for its second year, and rolling with the momentum of its 2017 turnout, the Mempho Music Festival lit up the Mid South some days ago when it announced its slate of 2018 performers. Today, they’ve announced the details of the schedule and are opening ticket sales. The Flyer’s advice: get ’em while they’re hot. This is a lineup of artists that rivals any festival in the business (see below). 

Beck

Grammy Award winners Beck and Phoenix will headline on Saturday, October 6. On Sunday, October 7, the legendary Nas, who has just dropped a new album, will headline, along with Post Malone. The festival will also bring us Grammy-nominated funkstress and Prince protégé Janelle Monáe, indie-rock favorite Mac DeMarco, German folk rockers Milky Chance, Atlanta-based rapper Rich The Kid, Danny Barnes’ Space Program, and “Stones Throw”, led by The Rolling Stones’ musical director Chuck Leavell and featuring current and former backing band members. And let’s not forget the brilliant collective that is George Clinton & Parliament-Funkadelic.

Talibah Safiya

First and foremost, the festival lives up to its name with plenty of local talent.

Mempho is fully committed to the #BringYourSoul city branding movement, celebrating the originality, soul, and change that Memphis is known for. Accordingly, we’ll see shows by many a local legend: Juicy J, Project Pat, Lucero, Eric Gales, The Bar-Kays, Don Bryant & The Bo-Keys, Big Ass Truck, John Nemeth & The Love Light Orchestra, Boo Mitchell & The Kings featuring URiAH Mitchell, Lil Al & G Reub, and The Product, Talibah Safiya, and Cory Branan.

Jamie Harmon

The real Lucero

Especially notable will be a tribute set dedicated to Royal Studios. Led by Grammy Award-winning producer Boo Mitchell, the Royal Studios Tribute will feature Grammy Award winners William Bell and Bobby Rush, Oscar Award winner Frayser Boy, and Grammy Award-nominated Hi Rhythm Section.

Also on the local tip, by way of Como, Mississippi, will be Dap-Tone Records’ stars, the Como Mamas. 

Como Mamas

“We are thrilled to be back at Shelby Farms Park for year two of the great Mempho Music Festival,” says Mempho Music Festival founder, Diego Winegardner. “We couldn’t be more excited to announce this year’s lineup, which includes an extraordinarily diverse
roster of today’s hottest artists, legends of rock, funk, and soul, as well as a healthy dose of local Memphis talent.”

Big Ass Truck will make a rare appearance

One lesser-known aspect of the Mempho Music Festival is Mempho Matters, a non-profit organization committed to developing “Learn To Rock”, a philanthropy-based arts education and funding initiative. Working with Memphis area businesses and community leaders, the initiative provides Memphis area music teachers and their students admission to Mempho at no cost.

Project Pat

Mempho Music Festival is also partnering with the Memphis Area Women’s Council to promote the Memphis Says NO MORE campaign—aimed at raising awareness for domestic violence and sexual assault—by providing a safe, inclusive, and welcoming environment for all attendees.

Finally, Mempho has teamed up with the Oceanic Global Foundation—a non-profit that educates individuals on issues impacting our ocean through art, music, and emerging technologies. One specific impact of this partnership is Mempho’s pledge to make the festival completely straw-free. Plastic straws, of course, constitute a major proportion of the plastic waste currently accumulating in the Pacific and other oceans.

Love Light Orchestra

This year, Mempho Music Festival has partnered with CID Entertainment to provide VIP and Super VIP experiences, including on-site camping and glamping options. 

Janelle Monáe

A limited supply of GA, VIP, and Super VIP pre-sale tickets and packages are available on Monday, June 11th, for returning fans, starting at $79 for Single Day and $139 for 2-Day tickets.

General on-sale begins on Friday, June 15th, at 10 A.M. CT, starting at $89 for Single Day and $159 for 2-Day tickets. Prices will increase on July 13th and September 28th, so reserve your tickets while supplies last. 

https://memphofest.eventbrite.com

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Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins

Nots play the Harbor Town Amphitheater this Saturday.

Welcome to the 59th edition of my Weekend Roundup. Beale Street Music Fest is fast approaching, but there are plenty of reasons to leave the house this weekend, including Nots at the Harbor Town Amphitheater and Smashing Pumpkins at the Orpheum. From dive bar shows to theater performances, here’s everywhere you need to be this weekend. 

Friday, April 22nd.
Wreckless Eric, 8 p.m. at the Galloway House, $8.

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins (5)

Kyle Gass Band, 8 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10.

The Ethan Parker Band, 10 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room. 

Saturday, April 23rd.

Lucero Family Block Party with Cory Brana, Mark Edgar Stuart & Young Valley, 2 p.m. outside Minglewood Hall, $25.00-$30.00

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins (2)

Nots, Chickasaw Mound, 6 p.m. at the Harbor Town Amphitheater, $5, all ages.

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins

Puscifer, 8 p.m. at the Orpheum, prices vary.

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins (3)

Alicja Pop Album Release show with DJ Andrew McCalla, 9:30 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $7.

Nick Black, 10 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room.

Sunday, April 24th.
Sharks In The Deepend, Footshooter, Joybomb, 9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10.

Old Stuff Trio, 7 p.m. at the Galloway House.

Smashing Pumpkins, 7 p.m. at the Orpheum Theater, 7:30 p.m., prices vary.

Weekend Roundup 59: Nots, Lucero, Smashing Pumpkins (4)

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Music Music Blog

Lucero Announce Family Block Party

Lucero

After a successful Christmas show and their first Family Picnic in Memphis, Lucero has recently announced a block party set for April 23rd at Minglewood Hall. The show will feature St.Paul and the Broken Bones, with more acts announced closer to the show. Minglewood will be blocking off S. Willett Street and the surrounding areas, and a portion of the proceeds generated from the show will go to charity. Check out the show flyer and Lucero’s latest video below. Tickets go on sale Friday (January 8th) and can be purchased here. Or, if you can’t wait, fan club tickets are available through Lucero’s website here. 

Lucero Announce Family Block Party

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Music Music Features

Lucero Family Christmas at Minglewood Hall

Lucero kick Christmas off early this year when they play Minglewood Hall Saturday night. The band will play two sets — one acoustic and one electric — and a portion of the night’s proceeds will go toward an undisclosed charity. More than 1,500 people attended Lucero’s Family Picnic this summer, and a turnout that size on Saturday is a safe bet. 2015 saw a new record from Lucero called All a Man Should Do, and singer Ben Nichols described it as an effort that took 25 years of mistakes to get done, in addition to calling it the album he’s wanted to make since he was a teenager. All a Man Should Do was recorded at Ardent Studios with Ted Hutt (a producer the band has worked with multiple times) and features a cover of the Big Star classic “I’m in Love With a Girl.” Jody Stephens is featured on the recording of that track, and one can only hope Lucero brings him onstage for a live version this Saturday. While they might be a national treasure to alt-country fans nationwide, Lucero is still definitely a Memphis band, and the upcoming Christmas show as well as the block party are testaments to their love for the Bluff City.

Jamie Harmon

Lucero

After releasing All a Man Should Do, Lucero hit the road. Currently on tour in the South, the Family Christmas gig will serve as a homecoming show as well. The band is also set to tour Europe extensively early next year, presumably making Saturday’s show the lone local Lucero show in the immediate future. If you feel like starting the party early, the second annual “Deck the Hall” event that benefits Le Bonheur kicks off at 4 p.m. at Minglewood. Ben Callicot, Drew Erwin, and more will perform. Both events are all ages.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Lucero

Today’s Music Video Monday features gratuitous automotive destruction. 

Back in 2012, hard-touring Memphians Lucero got a new van to replace their worn-out old one. They could have sold the old one for scrap, but instead they chose the rock and roll option: Trash the van, and make a music video out of it. Director Jonathan Pekar captured the celebratory destruction and created this raucous video for “Women & Work”. 

Music Video Monday: Lucero

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

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Music Music Features

Four new Memphis-related albums you need to know

With so many Memphis-related releases coming out each month, it’s tough to keep track of every new mixtape, EP, album, or boxed set that comes out, but we do our best. This week our reviews cover everything from gospel rap to alternative country, with some rare soul and a covers album thrown in for good measure.

Ironing Board Sam Super Spirit (Big Legal Mess)

It’s safe to say that Sammie Moore, aka Ironing Board Sam, is back. After being named the Comeback Artist of the Year by Living Blues Magazine in 2012, the 73-year-old spent the last two years touring Australia and France before hunkering down at Dial Back Sound in Water Valley, Mississippi to record Super Spirit with Bruce Watson, Jimbo Mathus, and others. Super Spirit features 10 cover tracks from the catalog of everyone from Ann Peebles to local hero Jack Oblivian, all re-worked to feature Sam’s soulful signature sound. Ironing Board Sam was a regular on the 1960s TV show Night Train, and his 45s from that era are still highly sought-after today. As for his nickname, it was earned after continually mounting his keyboard on an ironing board with a strap that allowed him to walk on-stage while playing, a practice he continues to this day. Super Spirit is in stores on October 2nd.

Favorite Track: “Loose Diamonds”

Lucero – All a Man Should Do (ATO)

“I was 15 years old in 1989. This record sounds like the record I wanted to make when I was 15. It just took 25 years of mistakes to get it done.” That’s how Ben Nichols describes the latest Lucero album, a record the band is calling a “love letter to Memphis.” Recorded at Ardent Studios with longtime Lucero producer Ted Hutt, All a Man Should Do (named after a Big Star lyric) finds Lucero at perhaps their most vulnerable, trying on new sounds and even throwing in a cover of the Big Star song “I’m in Love with a Girl” on their first studio album since 2012’s Women & Work. Big Star’s Jody Stephens sings backup vocals on the cover track, making for a memorable moment between past and present Memphis music stars.

Even if Lucero is trying out new things in the studio, Nichols’ voice is still as familiar as ever. The 10 songs on All a Man Should Do might see Memphis’ most recognizable band moving in a slightly different direction, but, more importantly, they show a band at the pinnacle of their potential. All a Man Should Do is out September 18th.

Favorite Track: “I’m in Love with a Girl”

Groove & Grind: Rare Soul ’63-’73 (RockBeat)

Boxed sets can be a little bit intimidating. As someone who blows most of my money on records, I’ve often asked myself if I really need four-plus albums’ worth of material in one package. In the case of Groove & Grind: Rare Soul ’63-’73, the answer to that question is: absolutely. Released by RockBeat Records, Groove & Grind features over 100 rare soul songs, with each of the four discs covering a different area of the genre.

Disc One: Urban Soul covers some of the rarest soul releases from R&B capitals such as New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and Detroit. Disc Two: Group Soul features vocal groups who hoped to follow in the footsteps of the Temptations while Disc Three: Southern Soul covers over 28 Southern singers, including Carla Thomas and Sam Hutchins. Disc Four: Funky Soul is pretty self-explanatory, but remember, these aren’t songs you know the words to — that would defeat the whole purpose of this extensive compilation.

In addition to being jam-packed with unreleased material, Groove & Grind is housed in a 127-page hardcover book, featuring rare photographs, 45-r.p.m. record art, and encyclopedic liner notes by Bill Dahl on every track. Groove & Grind allows the modern listener to go back in time and dig through some truly great overlooked 45s, without depleting his or her life’s savings to do so. The boxed set is available now.

Favorite Track: “You Stood Me Up” By the Specials

Terrence TB Boyce – Sinner 2A Saint (Fire Proof)

Terrence “TB” Boyce got his start in the streets, selling his mixtapes to whomever would buy them in parking lots across the country. After hocking CDs for a couple of years, Terrence found his niche in the gospel rap community, performing at local churches with Three 6 Mafia affiliate-turned-gospel-rapper Mr. Del. Released on Fire Proof Records, Sinner 2A Saint is a religious testimony presented as a modern mixtape. With track titles like “Been Saved” and “Keep God First,” Boyce is certainly wearing his religious beliefs on his sleeve, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the mixtape is watered down. Boyce compared himself to 50 Cent or Master P in a recent interview with Memphis Magazine, and there are hints of classic Memphis rap production throughout Sinner 2A Saint, even if Boyce’s message is more “walk with Christ” than “tear da club up.” As for how Boyce’s positive message is affecting the city, he says: “It’s growing pretty big. When I first started rapping, churches didn’t want to incorporate rap; they were more about the singing. But every church wants a gospel rapper now.” Sinner 2A Saint is out now.

Favorite Track: “JC Walkin”

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Music Music Blog

Rick and Roy Release Superfluidity

Rick Steff and Roy Berry will celebrate the release of their new album Superfluidity with a listening party and performance Friday night at Memphis Made Tap Room. Doors open at 7 p.m., followed by a listening session of Superfluidity at 8 p.m. and a performance at 9 p.m. Released on Archer Records, Superfluidity is the duo’s debut album, and is available on limited vinyl as well as CD. Stream the entire thing below, then get to Memphis Made Tap Room by 8 p.m. on Friday. The event is free.

Rick and Roy Release Superfluidity

Rick and Roy Release Superfluidity (2)

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Music Music Blog

Local Beer Brewed for Lucero Family Picnic

Memphis Made’s All Sewn Up English Pale Ale, brewed in honor of Lucero.

Memphis Made has done it again. After brewing the Guitar Attack IPA for Goner Fest 11, the folks at Memphis Made honor another Memphis music institution with the All Sewn Up English Pale Ale. Named after a song on Lucero’s debut album, All Sewn Up will be available at the Lucero Family Picnic, The Madison Avenue Growler Shop in Cash Saver, The Young Avenue Deli, and the Memphis Made Tap Room in Cooper Young. It won’t be around forever, so act fast.

According to Memphis Made’s Andy Ashby, All Sewn Up is an English Pale Ale (5.7 percent ABV) brewed with Target hops (a UK variety) and has a restrained bitterness with a bit of earthiness and spiciness. Sounds good to me! Check out “All Sewn Up” below, then get to the Lucero Family Picnic by 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 18th. 

Local Beer Brewed for Lucero Family Picnic

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Music Music Features

Lucero at Minglewood Hall

The Lucero Family Picnic comes to Memphis for the first time ever this Saturday at Minglewood Hall. The venue will host the event outside, and Willet will be blocked off as well as the entire Minglewood Hall parking lot. Lucero has been throwing a picnic for more than five years now, but the event has frequently taken place at Riverside Park in Batesville, Arkansas. Central BBQ and Pabst Blue Ribbon are sponsoring the picnic, but there will also be food trucks, beer vendors, and local merchandise retailers on site. The FBM BMX crew will also be doing a routine on skate ramps an hour before the music starts.

Amurica.com

Lucero

BMX Stunts and beer and barbecue are all pretty cool, but the main attraction at the picnic is obviously the music. While the past Lucero Family Picnics have featured groups that fit within the alt-country genre, this Saturday’s lineup features a diverse group of local talent. The North Mississippi Allstars join Lucero as the special guests, and locals Marcella & Her Lovers, Clay Otis, and Robby Grant are all joining in to rock the Minglewood Hall parking lot. While the set times for the Lucero Family Picnic haven’t been announced yet, each act at Saturday’s show deserves to be checked out.

Grant recently released Let The Little Things Go, his last album under the Vending Machine moniker, and there’s really no telling what evil genius Otis has planned for his performance. Marcella & Her Lovers have a whole slew of April shows planned, and the Dickinson brothers are also staying busy with a Sons of Mudboy appearance on Sunday, April 19th, at Shangri-La Records. One can only hope the Lucero Family Picnic leads to more outdoor shows at Minglewood Hall during the spring and summer.