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“All About That Feel”

With the Mempho Music Festival back this week — and bigger than ever — it’s worth noting that three of its biggest acts have a history of recording here in the Bluff City. Though two are legends of hip-hop and one is rockabilly royalty, they have much in common. For one thing, all three acts rely on the younger generation, direct heirs to the musical bedrock their forerunners created, to carry the torch forward. And, even more significantly in this age of cut-and-paste sampling, all three acts hold live musicians in high regard. It’s all about that mysterious quality called “feel.”

Wu-Tang Clan: Sonic Roots in Memphis

Few hip-hop groups have maintained the ongoing credibility and viability of the collective known as the Wu-Tang Clan. The group has risen above differences to work collaboratively for decades, even as appreciation of its individual members — rapper-producer RZA and rappers GZA, Ol’ Dirty Bastard (deceased), Method Man, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, U-God, Masta Killa, and Cappadonna — has made them stars in their own right. And one distinctive element in their sound has always been the use of old-school Memphis soul and R&B.

Kyle Christy

Wu-Tang Clan

This dates back to their third single, 1994’s “C.R.E.A.M.,” which made extensive use of “As Long as I’ve Got You,” a 1967 single on the Volt label by the Charmels. The group dug even further back for “Tearz,” which used Wendy Rene’s “After Laughter (Comes Tears),” a 1964 Stax track. It was part of a distinctive Wu-Tang sound that arguably culminated in 2000’s double platinum disc, The W. Even then, Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s participation was hampered by prison time he was serving during its creation, though he was able to literally phone in some vocal parts.

After Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s death in 2004, the group members focused more on solo recordings, though Wu-Tang did release 8 Diagrams in 2007. Then came a long hiatus, the end of which was marked by RZA’s renewed commitment to live-recorded ensemble tracks that evoked older soul records. A significant chunk of those tracks was done at Memphis’ own Royal Studios, for what would become the album A Better Tomorrow. Hiring classic local players from the heyday of Hi Records hits, RZA played guitar himself and created that rare thing, a comeback album that broke new ground.

It also marked more participation than ever from erstwhile Wu-Tang member Cappadonna. And, though some in Wu-Tang were not enthused about RZA’s focus on live-cut tracks, Cappadonna was happy to roll with it. “Yeah, I was there. I worked out of Royal,” he tells me in a recent phone chat. And, for him at least, RZA’s approach worked out well. “Like I said, I’m just trying to get it popping the best way I know how. As soon as they give me the cue, I’m on my ground with it. We can adapt to any situation.”

The fact that those sessions were all of five years ago makes Wu-Tang’s Mempho appearance especially meaningful for Cappadonna. “That’s why it’s gonna be so beautiful. It’s gonna be like a reunion. We’ve all been on this tour pretty much, with the exception of Method Man here and there. He’s constantly doing movies and stuff like that. Other than that, everybody’s present and accounted for. And we also have Young Dirty Bastard, to fill in for his father, Ol’ Dirty Bastard. He’s doing a great job. He’s bringing the energy, and that’s more than we can ask.”

That energy is more of a precious commodity as the collective grows older. Cappadonna is trying to be prudent, even as he brings his distinctive flow. “Now we’re touring. I’m just coming off a 23-hour drive from Texas, and I need a blunt, like right away, yo. We’ve been on the road for three months straight. My neck went out in Chicago, I couldn’t do the show. I cancelled Atlanta. So it depends on my health. I just turned 51 on September 18th. So depending on my health, that comes first. If I gotta take another day off, so be it.”

Nonetheless, Cappadonna is especially energized for the Mempho show. “Man, it’s gonna be crazy, yo. I might have to bring my derby out for that. You know what I mean? Cappuccino Gambino! And my gold teeth are ready, man! I’ve got diamonds in ’em this time. Tell all the ladies I said, ‘Bring me some flowers.’ Yo, mad love to the South. Memphis, hold your head up. I’ll see you soon.”

DJ Paul: Hometown Hero Talks Musical Roots

The fact that his Mempho appearance will be in October is especially meaningful to DJ Paul. It’s a pivotal homecoming for the star, who now lives in Los Angeles. On this trip, the group he rose to prominence with, Three 6 Mafia, received a key to the city from Shelby County Commissioner Edmund Ford, but the significance of this trip goes beyond any such official recognition.

DJ Paul

For one thing, he’s performing material from his highly autobiographical album, Power, Pleasure & Painful Things, released earlier this year. Interspersed with spoken segments in which the artist recalls pivotal moments in his Memphis youth, the tracks make use of a wide-ranging musicality and inventive, turn-on-a-dime production to create what may be Paul’s best work yet.

As he puts it: “1986 was the year that me and Lord Infamous, may he rest in peace, told ourselves on Halloween night that we wanted to be rappers. So Halloween is that anniversary. October is a very special month for me to be in Memphis. A lot of my closest family members, including my daughter, have birthdays in October. And where I live, we don’t get a fall. So I’m so happy to be back in Tennessee where we’ve got the prettiest falls in the world. I’m doing two back-to-back shows in my hometown, in my favorite month and my favorite season. You can’t beat it.”

The personal importance of his Memphis roots also resonates with some of Paul’s guest rappers, Seed of 6ix, on his latest album and recent performances. “Seed of 6ix is actually my nephews. One of ’em is Lil Infamous, son of Lord Infamous, my brother who passed away. That’s his son, Ricky Dunigan Jr. The other one, Locodunit, is my nephew from one of my oldest brothers. They’re signed to my label, with an album out and some EPs and mixtapes and stuff. They still live in Memphis. They’ll be there with me at Mempho.”

Their raps at the end of the track “Easy Way” are a highlight of the album, with surprising rapid-fire verses marked by disorienting rhythm changes. It’s in keeping with an album full of surprises, not the least of which are the creative chord changes performed by a string section in the same track, taking Three 6 Mafia’s use of film sountrack motifs to an even more inventive level. As Paul himself notes, “You don’t hear music like that in most rap.”

According to DJ Paul, it’s all in keeping with his first exposure to music. “I took organ lessons. I didn’t take piano lessons, I went straight to the organ. That’s what helped me create Three 6 Mafia’s sound. That’s why we always had an eerie, underground, spooky feel. Because that’s what I had back in the day, I had an organ. I still have the same organ that my daddy bought me in 1985, in my house here in L.A. It’s a Wurlitzer.”

And it wasn’t just Paul’s own musicality that shaped his latest album. “I work with a lot of Memphis musicians who we brought out to L.A. We actually moved ’em out here. There’s a guy named Billy West and a guy named Kyle Brandon. They’ve played for Stevie Wonder, the Jackson 5, Macy Gray, and people like that.”

As with the Wu-Tang Clan, the instrumental musicianship of Memphis has had a profound effect on the quality of Paul’s work. And, as he notes, that live musicianship will only be more pronounced with a new EP he expects to drop soon. “The new project’s coming out on Halloween,” a significant date in his life and career. “I’m gonna start doing more movies and television stuff as well. And I got a restaurant opening up in a few months in Beverly Hills. So just stay tuned.”

Jerry Phillips: All About That Feel

Meeting Jerry Phillips, son of legendary Sun Records producer Sam Phillips, at the headquarters of the Phillips radio empire in Florence, Alabama, seems appropriate. The Shoals area is where Sam got his start in the music industry, and radio is just as much at the heart of his legacy as the iconic studios, Sun and Phillips, that helped put Memphis on the map. Jerry and daughter Halley still identify strongly with both Memphis and the Shoals, splitting their time between the two metro areas. And, as Jerry sees it, both have similar musical qualities that are hard to find elsewhere.

“In the ’60s and ’70s, we’d swap musicians from both cities a lot,” he tells me. “The Swampers [from the Shoals] would go to Memphis. Or we’d send Travis Wammack down here, when he was living in Memphis. Even today, Halley’s been recording with different people and using that same combination, as a producer. They’re definitely sister cities. I think the closest thing to Memphis and Muscle Shoals might be New Orleans in a certain way. They have their own thing going on down there, too.”

Jerry & Halley Phillips

That “thing,” is hard to pin down, but to Jerry Phillips, it’s something that unites Mempho acts as disparate as Wu-Tang Clan, DJ Paul, and the all-star tribute to Sun Records in which he’ll perform at Mempho Fest. “It all has a common denominator to me, which is feel,” Phillips says. “Whatever the genre is, if it doesn’t have any feel, I’m just not interested in it, period. Sam was the same way. He kept the telephone ringing in one of his recordings. His secretary was gone, phone started ringing, and the noise bled through the wall. So everybody said, ‘We gotta do it again,’ and Sam was like, ‘Are you kidding? We’re keeping that one, that’s got the feel.’ You couldn’t have planned that, the phone ringing in the middle of it. He was all about things that just happen. The magic, when it happens, it happens.”

Much like the tribute to Royal Studios at 2018’s Mempho Festival, the Sun Records Tribute will feature an all-star cast of players in addition to Jerry Phillips, including Jason D. Williams, Amy LaVere, Will Sexton, David Brookings, John Paul Keith, Pete Degloma, Seth Moody, and Graham Winchester. That will also mark the official announcement of a new note on Beale Street devoted to the Phillips family. “It’s gonna have my mother’s name on it, my name on it, Judd Phillips, my cousin, and then Sally Wilbourn, who was Sam’s right-hand person for 50 years. So that’s gonna be interesting,” says Jerry.

He’s especially looking forward to the set’s closing act, Jason D. Williams, who has fueled a decades-long career with a manic emulation of Jerry Lee Lewis’ most fiery rock-and-roll days. “You don’t want to follow Jason D. He’s crazy. He does a great job, he’s got a great band. I think he’s fantastic. I worked with him years ago in the studio. And he’s gotten to be a lot better. His live performances, man — he goes between so many different extremes.”

Halley adds, “I always give it up for his band. His performances are never the same. The tempo is never the same. It depends on his mood or what he’s had that day. His band members are just watching him and reading him. He throws them curveballs all the time.”

To Jerry, this is the true spirit of rockabilly and rock-and-roll. “There’s a lot of imitation rockabilly, but rockabilly’s a feel. You can be influenced by those licks, but when you copy it note for note, that’s not gettin’ it, man. Whenever I cover one of those old songs, I tell the musicians, like the guitar player, when it’s time for you to solo, don’t play Carl Perkins. Play you. With that feel, but play you. I don’t want you to sound like Carl Perkins.”

If Jerry Phillips is not a household name, it’s understandable. Through most of his life, he did not pursue the spotlight. He even gives his brother Knox the lion’s share of the credit for keeping the family recording business afloat through the ebb and flow of trends in the music industry. His first taste of performance, in fact, was not musical at all.

As detailed in Robert Gordon’s indispensable book, It Came from Memphis, Jerry was about 12 when local professional wrestling hero Sputnik Monroe helped cook up a plan to bill him as “The World’s Most Perfectly Formed Midget Wrestler.” Not having the proportions of bona fide little people, who did indeed occupy a niche at pro-wrestling events, Jerry jumped in the ring with them anyway, on the thinnest of pretexts. “If I had been 25 and the size of a midget, it might have been believable, but I was obviously a kid,” Phillips told Gordon. “They’d have me walk through the crowd, chewing a big cigar, taunting people. … The audience knew I wasn’t real, and I just made ’em madder.”

Halley gleefully recalls, “Last year we were walking down Main Street in Memphis, and a guy comes up, pointing at dad, and says, ‘Hey! Hey! Aren’t you that wrestler? The midget wrestler?”

Jerry finds this chapter of his legacy amusing. “It’s gonna follow me forever. When I first met Bob Dylan, he said, ‘You’re the wrestler, aren’t you?’ But that was a great experience for me, my introduction to showbiz. Between Sputnik Monroe, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Sam Phillips, and all those guys, it really gave me a taste of what real rock-and-roll was all about. Those guys were not fooling around. They were all in.”

For a time in the ’60s, Jerry performed with Jim Dickinson in the Jesters, and he’ll be tipping his hat to that group during his Mempho set, playing their version of “My Babe.” But even as he nods to his sporadic musical past, he’s laying the groundwork for the first proper solo release of his life. Noting his increasing interest in writing songs and performing, he points to an odd moment that crystalized his embrace of such pursuits, as he rolls up his sleeve.

“You know it’s funny, this tattoo, in some kind of weird way, completed my life. Isn’t that weird? I just feel like I’ve been branded the way I should be branded. Like I’m in the right pasture. I put Howlin’ Wolf on there because he’s my favorite artist, and he was Sam’s favorite artist. And I sign everything ‘Rock On.’ So something about it made me feel complete. I’ve seen so many Sun tattoos on people, with the exact label and everything, but I was like, ‘No, I just don’t want that.’ That’s following the same path. Like my dad said, ‘If you’re not doing something different, you’re not doing anything at all.'”

Mempho Must-Sees

True to its spirit of diversity, this year’s Mempho Fest sports a dizzying lineup of eclectic acts; and true to its commitment to its hometown, there is plenty of local talent swapping sets with national acts. Aside from our featured performers, here are some others you won’t want to miss.

The Raconteurs

The Raconteurs — After taking stages by storm nearly 15 years ago, the classic rock sounds of this combo, which includes Jack White of Third Man Records and the White Stripes, went dormant for a time in 2010. The past year, though, has seen reissues of their old work and a new album, Help Us Stranger, which bodes well: It was the group’s first U.S. No. 1. Saturday, Oct. 19th, 9:15 p.m., First Horizon Stage.

Brandi Carlile — Having begun on the more alt-country and folk side of things 15 years ago, Carlile has gone from success to success, with seven Grammy Awards to her name. Though she’s made quite a dent in the rock charts, her lifeblood is still classic country songwriting, especially with her new collaborative project, the Highwomen. Sunday, Oct. 20th, 8:15 p.m., First Horizon Stage.

Margo Price — Though she’s also considered alt-country, Price is of a more traditionalist bent than Carlile. Not that she can’t rock out with the best of them; it’s just in a rootsier mode. She lists Tom Petty as a great influence. Memphians especially appreciate that she’s made her mark via recordings involving local producer/engineer Matt Ross-Spang, with 2017’s All American Made cut at the legendary Phillips Recording. Saturday, Oct. 19th, 5 p.m., First Horizon Stage.

Reignwolf — Eschewing the uber-thrash of all-out metal, Reignwolf, in their bluesier, more chooglin’ moments, may appeal to fans of local favorites the North Mississippi Allstars. But they also take the riffs to more hard-edged urban spaces, with dirges like “Fools Gold” wallowing in their sheer heaviness. Saturday, Oct. 19, 6 p.m., AutoZone Stage.

Marcella & Her Lovers

Marcella & Her Lovers — This groovy, Louisiana-tinged/Memphis-based ensemble put out one of the best, if under-recognized, albums of last year. Intricate soul, swamp, and world grooves all serve to support the expressive voice of Marcella Simien, who gumbos things up when she straps on her accordion. Stalwarts of the Memphis nightlife, watch for these local favorites to really light up when given a chance on the big stage they deserve. Saturday, Oct. 19th, 2:15 p.m., AutoZone Stage.

PJ Morton — Though he first sprang into the public eye as a member of Maroon 5, Morton is especially notable for taking R&B back to some earthier, though still very funky places as a solo artist. Though his album Gumbo didn’t dent the Billboard 200, it won the hearts of fans and critics alike with old-school grooves, full of vintage sounds, that are nonetheless full of surprises. Sunday, Oct. 20th, 4 p.m., First Horizon Stage.

lovelytheband — For some pure electro-tinged pop, at turns spacey or danceable, you can’t go wrong with lovelytheband. Singing about “trust fund babies” who say they “like that you’re broken, broken like me,” among other things, these hyper-produced alt-popsters invest surprisingly dark shadows and angsty vibes into their shimmering songscapes. File under world-weary escapism. Sunday, Oct. 20th, 7:15 p.m., AutoZone Stage.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Marcella & Her Lovers with Spooner Oldham

Today’s Music Video Monday’s got soul to spare.

Last year, Marcella Simien got a temporary new addition to her band, Spooner Oldham He’s a keyboardist, songwriter, and producer who has worked with Chips Moman at American Studios in Memphis and FAME studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The studio produced hits like The Boxtops’ “Cry Like A Baby” and Wilson Pickett’s “Mustang Sally.”

Oldham joined the Lovers at the Midtown-famous P&H Cafe to shoot a live video for Beale Street Caravan’s I Listen To Memphis series. The song they performed was “I’d Rather Go Blind”, a song Rock-and-Roll-Hall-Of-Fame-inductee Oldham first recorded with Etta James. Prepare to get smoky with this video, directed by Christian Walker and produced by Waheed Al Qawasmi.
 

Music Video Monday: Marcella & Her Lovers with Spooner Oldham

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

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Music Music Blog

WEVL’s Blues on the Bluff: A Worthy Tradition

Kenny Brown played the first Blues on the Bluff

It’ll be an idyllic scene this Saturday, just before sunset, as mic’s are checked, amps are tweaked, and kegs are chilled on the grounds of the National Ornamental Metal Museum, all in the name of WEVL FM 89.9. The venerable volunteer radio station brings the Blues on the Bluff® tradition into it’s 30th year this weekend, so expect an extra bit of euphoria. 

The music alone will be effervescent, in a very North Mississippi/Memphis way. Things kick off with one man powerhouse Lightnin’ Malcom, whose feet lay down a groove with kick and snare while his hands execute perfect drone and jump blues licks. On top of that, he sings with an unassuming conviction. Great stuff.

The one and only Kenny Brown then makes a rare full band appearance. Seemingly forever on the North Mississippi scene, the young Brown was immersed in a world of miraculous music, from Otha Turner to Junior Kimbrough, to his mentor, R.L. Burnside. He carries their traditions well, laying down solid, heavy grooves punctuated with mad flashes of dexterity. This will be a special show for both WEVL and Brown, as he played the original Blues on the Bluff thirty years ago. 

And as for the big finish, it will be none other than a singer that producer Boo Mitchell called “one of the most soulful artists I’ve heard since the glory days of Memphis soul music. Her sound and stage presence is a constant reminder that soul music is still alive and well.”  Marcella & Her Lovers embody the idea of deep-as-the-earth swamp soul, and they’ve dug especially deep into Memphis soil. In the end, Marcella Simien’s voice fuels the entire proceedings, implying grooves and subtleties that the band picks up on immediately. Though dubbed soul, the covers and originals alike are impressively eclectic; always expect surprises with this gang.

Meanwhile, Memphis Made craft beer, wine and non-alcoholic beverages will be sold, along with victuals from the Central BBQ Food Truck. A silent auction will be ongoing throughout the evening, with art, merchandise and gift certificates from Memphis businesses. And of course, die hard fans will want to stock up on Blues on the Bluff posters, WEVL T-shirts and other bling.

The food, drink, and Marcella & Her Lovers will leave everyone well-boogied and wondering, where now? Hopefully, the night will have helped raise a bit more coin for simply soldiering on; but the cool of the evening may also lead to a bit of reflection, a savoring of our good fortune to live with a station like WEVL FM. It offers a daily dose of the independent spirit that many cities simply don’t have.

Blues on the Bluff, Saturday, July 21. Guests may bring chairs and blankets, but are asked to leave pets and outside food and drinks at home. Gates at 6:00 p.m., show time 6:30, ends at 11:00. $25 admission price ($12 for kids 11 and under) entitles guests to free guarded parking and benefits WEVL FM 89.9. Discounted advance tickets can be purchased online at www.wevl.org.

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Music Music Features

Michael Jasud, Marcella Simien, and Blair Combest at the Memphis Music Mansion.

Earlier this year, Memphis road warriors Dead Soldiers announced an indefinite hiatus after five-and-a-half years together. Michael Jasud, singer and guitarist for the raucous folk-rock band, says it wasn’t an acrimonious breakup. “People were being pulled by life in ways it made it hard to keep doing it like we’d been doing it. People grow, people change. For the most part, it’s a better and healthier place that people are in now.”

No one is ruling out reuniting in the future, but “there’s no plan. If there was a plan, I’d be thinking about that and not devoting the time and energy to the thing I’m trying to do now.”

That thing is a new album he’s writing. “It’s funny to say ‘solo project.’ It’s really just me writing songs. You say ‘Michael Jasud Project’ and it sounds like a prog-rock band.”

He’s recording the album with producer Toby Vest at American Studios. “It’s nice,” he says, “because we’ve been working on it in real time. If we’re about to start sketching out a song that I’ve been working on, there’s a good chance that I might have heard something the day before that will influence the way we go today. You can get so hung up in creating proof of your genius that you forget that you’re just making a document of where you are at that point.”

The rough mixes expand on the Dead Soldiers’ eclecticism, which seems consistent with Jasud’s state of mind, which he described as sometimes Springsteen, sometimes “thinking about mass shootings and listening to electronic music.”

To shock himself further out of his comfort zone, Jasud has put together a show at the Memphis Music Mansion with two of his friends in the American Studios circle.

He’ll be trading songs with Marcella Simien. “Marcella has a record that is totally finished,” Jasud says. “If it comes out this year, it’s going to be the best record of 2018. If she doesn’t release it until next year, it’s going to be the best record of 2019.”

Simien demurs. “He’s such a smooth talker.”

Her new album, which should see a first single released in the early fall, is called Got You Found. “It probably took 10 years for me to write all the songs on it. I never really, until recently, had that drive to sit down and really work on a song, like a real songwriter. It’s only been in the last year, after I finished this record. I’ve written like 50 songs since then. I don’t want to stop. … And the way it came together was just magical, with all of the people who came together to play with us.”

Simien says she will perform songs from Got You Found as well as material from her post-recording creative burst. She might even strap on a guitar. “I never really play guitar in public, but it was one of the first things I learned to play as a kid.”

The third name on the bill is Blair Combest, who has largely disappeared from the Memphis stage in recent years. Jasud says Combest inspired him as a young musician. “There was a moment when I was really getting into the poetry and art of songwriting, and I saw Blair play. I thought, this guy is really in control of his medium. I’m excited for people who have never seen Blair perform before. This is one of the great singer-songwriters in Memphis.”

Simien agrees. “Blair needs to be doing more shows, and people need to hear his songs.” She says she’s excited to be sharing a stage with Combest and Jasud. “They both have great voices, and they’re really textural. They sing to you, not at you. You feel like you’re hearing something from a deep place.”

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Music Music Features

Beale Street Caravan Produces “I Listen to Memphis” Video Series

Kevin Cubbins, executive director of Beale Street Caravan, says it was time for the long-running radio show to change directions.

“About three years ago, we redefined our mission. We turned everything on its ear. We were NPR’s blues radio program. I felt we would be better served, and be better aligned with our funder’s mission, if we focused more on the city of Memphis.

Cubbins says the thinking was that the change would “keep our messaging simpler and more effective and allow us to expand the genres we aired. Instead of just blues, that meant soul, gospel, hip-hop, and rock-and-roll. A lot of people thought we were nuts to do that, but in a 12-month span we went from 230 stations in the U.S. to 404. I think the message is so much cleaner and easier to get into. ‘I Listen to Memphis’ is just another step. The mission of Beale Street Caravan is sharing the music and culture of Memphis with the world.”

The response has been overwhelming. “People absolutely love the music from this town,” Cubbins says. “Sometimes I wish all the local artists could see all the feedback and responses that we get, so it would change our opinions of ourselves. What we have here is so vibrant, so authentic, and so original. There’s just nothing like it anywhere else in the world.”

NPR’s audience has grown significantly in recent years, as the organization has embraced the digital world by adding video components to its programming. Cubbins says “I Listen to Memphis” is Beale Street Caravan’s entry into new media. The web series films Memphis music artists playing live in front of their hometown crowds.

Christian Walker, who plays with Memphis punk legends Pezz, was tapped to direct. In a gruelingly short schedule, Walker and his crew filmed 10 acts in 10 Mid-South music venues. “Some places have historical significance, some places only have significance to Memphians,” says Cubbins. “Our international audience is going to hear about Wild Bill’s for the first time.”

Midtown punks HEELS played in front of what’s left of the Buccaneer, the underground music club that burned last year. Motel Mirrors filmed at the Galloway House on Cooper, where Johnny Cash played his first gig. “That sanctuary sounds incredible,” Walker says. “That could be Memphis’ Ryman.” Rev. John Wilkins recorded the classic “May the Circle Be Unbroken” with his daughters in his Como, Mississippi, church. “His dad was making blues records here in the 1930s,” Walker says.

Marcella Simien’s performance was captured at the P&H Cafe. “We called Spooner Oldham from Fame Studios in Florence. He played on so much amazing stuff, and wrote or co-wrote so much of it. So we did two videos for her: ‘I’m Your Puppet’, which he wrote, and ‘I’d Rather Go Blind.’ Marcella does that song anyway, and Spooner played on the original Etta James version. I think if we do this again, we want to do a lot of more of those mash-ups.”

Cubbins says adding video to the Beale Street Caravan formula was a steep learning curve for the combined crews. “I met some of the smartest people I have ever met in my life. I didn’t know the depths of talent we have in the Memphis film scene.”

“I Listen to Memphis” premieres this week, with Cedric Burnside playing in Royal Studios. The 10 videos will be released weekly throughout the summer. Cubbins says he hopes the series not only reaches music fans around the world, but also helps Memphis discover its own rich music scene. “Get off your couch and go see a band,” he says. “If you don’t do that, you’re missing out on the coolest part of our culture. It’s like living in Florida, and never going to the beach.”

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Music Music Blog

Beale Street Music Festival 2017 Day 3: Sunday Funday

It’s Monday, and we’ve managed to make it through three glorious days of the 2017 Beale Street Music Festival. Four stages hosted 60 acts under the most beautiful late spring weather Memphis could ever imagine. Few hiccups, a bevy of tremendous performances and tens of thousands of visitors to the park made for the perfect kick-off to Memphis in May’s annual festivities.

Brian Anderson

Ani DiFranco

Before I start talking about the music, I’ve learned Memphis in May has gone out of its way this year to become a bike-friendly event and, according to Memphis in May Director of Marketing Robert Griffin, is working to encourage bikes as a preferred method of transportation to and from the park. I’m an avid bicyclist who loves the freedom riding a bike provides in Memphis. Next year, try riding your bikes in a group to the festival to cut down travel time and traffic congestion. I rode from Cooper-Young to the south entrance of Tom Lee Park in a mere 30 minutes, and the same was true going back.

E.J. Friedman

Memphis Police Department spent much of Sunday shooing boats away from the festival grounds.

Ok, let’s talk about some music! Sunday had, what I’d consider, the best lineup of all three days in terms of quality and diversity.

Louisiana-born Memphian Marcella & Her Lovers is coming into her own as a performer. As she and her band become more distinguished, a meaningful passion breathes life into her cajun-influenced brand of soul-driven music. Replete with a newly-minted horn section, Marcella Simien’s wide range and musical dexterity seem destined to propel her towards a wider audience.

A million-selling mother of two who is currently penning her memoir, folk artist Ani DiFranco stopped in Memphis to deliver a politically energized set. In addition to many well-known songs, fans past and present got a glimpse into material from DiFranco’s forthcoming album Binary (due out June 9th). With fellow New Orleanian Terrence Higgins on percussion, DiFranco demonstrated why she is an archetypal music veteran & one of the most successful fully-independent recording artists of all time.

Brian Anderson

Super Chikan in the Blues Tent at BSMF ’17

Meanwhile, in the Blues Tent, Clarksdale-native James “Super Chikan” Johnson and his band served up a taste of his signature electrified Delta blues music prompting many in the crowd to get up and dance.

Funky Los Angelino by-way-of Detroit Mayer Hawthorne and his band came to Memphis determined to get on the good foot. Hennessy in tow, Hawthorne grooved his way through several of his most-well known songs, including “Backseat Lover”, “Time For Love”, “Breakfast in Bed” and “Her Favorite Song” to a crowd clearly ready to party.

E.J. Friedman

Mayer Hawthorne

Despite nearly 45 years together, Australia’s Midnight Oil have lost none of their punch. Currently on an American tour, songs like “Dreamworld”, “Power and the Passion”, “Blue Sky Mine” and “Beds Are Burning” have never sounded as politically current or puissant as they did through the voice of lead singer Peter Garrett.

“I would like to thank the organizers of the Beale Street Music Festival,” rang out Ben Harper’s voice, “which is the best music festival in America.” And to show his love, Harper and his Innocent Criminals tore through 1.5 hours of their extensive musical canon as the sun set over the Mississippi River to an absolute capacity early-evening audience. If you came to the festival a fan of the band Bush, then I think you probably walked away more than satisfied. The band delivered their hit songs with nary a hitch to a sea of devout listeners.

E.J. Friedman

Jill Scott

One of the real highlights of this year’s festival was the ambitious soul of Jill Scott. A consummate performer and consistent favorite of the Memphis crowd, she delighted the audience with a vocal tour-de-force, interspersing classics like “Getting In The Way” and “Golden” with songs from her 2016 album Beautifully Human: Words & Sound Vol. 2.

E.J. Friedman

In the crowd at the River Stage, Nashun Wright sings along to Jill Scott.

On the other side of the festival, those in the Blues Tent had the opportunity to experience Memphis soul music legend Booker T. Jones. Playing as part of a four-piece with his signature Hammond B-3 organ, he played some classic Booker T. & The M.G.’s songs, more recent solo material & even picked up the guitar to deliver a moving version of Prince’s “Purple Rain”.

E.J. Friedman

Booker T. Jones on the Hammond B3 organ in the Blues Tent.

Ending this year’s festival, no act could have been more anticipated than the reunited Soundgarden. For this Memphis audience—most of whom would have been unable to see them in over 20 years—hearing them perform songs like “Spoonman”, “Outshined” and “Black Hole Sun” provided a heady bookend to an already phenomenal Beale Street Music Festival.

E.J. Friedman

Soundgarden closing out the festival.

As a long-time fan, I discovered moments that may have veered towards the self-indulgent—Chris Cornell’s vitriolic explanation of the meaning behind the semi-obscure “Kyle Petty (Son of Richard)” before it was played. For the briefest moment, time seemed to stand still over Tom Lee Park as the sonic echoes of familiar refrains brought the festival to a memorable close.

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We Recommend We Recommend

In Sod We Trust at the Hi-Tone

Nothing brings Memphians together like good food, good music, and an opportunity to publically demonstrate to prevent cars and car-related interests from wrecking Overton Park. This Easter Sunday, while others are parading about in their finest seersucker, hunting eggs, and driving the 240 loop in their fancy Easter bonnets, friends of Overton Park can gather at the Hi-Tone Cafe for an all-ages fund-raiser benefiting both the Overton Park Conservancy legal fund and the Get Off Our Lawn initiative to prevent overflow zoo parking on the Greensward.

Conceived by singer and multi-instrumentalist Marcella Simien, and arranged by drummer-turned-frontman Graham Winchester, In Sod We Trust is an epic, six-hour concert showcasing some of Midtown’s most creative musicians, including sets by both of its organizers.

A $10 donation at the door buys access to all the music and vending.

Bands scheduled to appear include Artistik Approach, Chickasaw Mound, Chinese Connection Dub Embassy, Dave Cousar, Faux Killas, Hope Clayburn, Marcella & Her Lovers, Southern Avenue, Tony Manard, Winchester and the Ammunition, Zigadoo Moneyclips. Participating Vendors: Dirty Cotton, Eponymous Print Co., Farmhouse Marketing, Guerilla Stone, MEMPopS, Shangri-La Records, Sushi Jimmi, and Yanni’s Food Truck.

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Music Music Blog

Grammy Membership Celebration at Stax

Kirk Whalum performs at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music tonight.

The Memphis chapter of The Recording Academy will hold a listening session at Stax Museum of American Soul Music Monday night to celebrate their regional membership. A listening session will once again be held at this year’s event, and featured artists include:

Those Pretty Wrongs

Grammy Membership Celebration Tonight at Stax


Kirk Whalum 

Grammy Membership Celebration Tonight at Stax (2)

Cedric Burnside 

Grammy Membership Celebration Tonight at Stax (3)

Marcella Simien, and more.  

Grammy Membership Celebration Tonight at Stax (4)

The focus of the event is to premiere new music and spotlight the best recordings in the region the chapter serves. The event is open to Grammy members only, but anyone interested in in joining can find out more here. The listening session and celebration is from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday. For more information, contact the Memphis Chapter at memphis@grammy.com or call 901-525-1340.

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Music Music Features

Bringing Memphis to the Masses

For the past 19 seasons, Beale Street Caravan has broadcast a commercial-free hour of Memphis-centric music to 2.4 million listeners worldwide, on more than 400 radio stations. Hosted by Pat Mitchell Worley, the show covers local artists ranging from the Reigning Sound to Rev. John Wilkins, in addition to favorites from New Orleans, Chicago, and everywhere in between. Their annual fund-raiser always packs a punch, and this year cuisine by Chef Michael Patrick of Rizzo’s Diner will be paired with wine and beer and the music of Marcella & Her Lovers. The blowout — at Memphis Made Brewing on June 18th — also includes a silent auction featuring regional treasures of music, art, dining, and vacation getaways, in addition to vinyl grab bags and more. We sat down with Worley to learn more about the most widely distributed blues radio program in the world. — Chris Shaw

Flyer: How long has Beale Street Caravan been around and when did you become host of the show?

Pat Mitchell Worley: The show is about to enter its 20th season. I’ve worked on the show since the very beginning. Originally, I was hired to be Sid Selvidge’s assistant, and I had already been working in radio. At the time, I was the blues director at a radio station, but my role at Beale Street Caravan was just to get artist clearances for Sid and things like that. After six months, I moved on to the Blues Foundation and started working on things there, but I was still doing stuff for the Caravan, and the hosts were the Memphis Horns. They did two seasons telling stories, and the whole thing was scripted.

After the Horns left, Joyce Cobb and Sam the Sham took over, and they were around for a while, but when they left, we didn’t know what we were going to do next. So Sid put me on for a season just to try it out. Daren Dortin joined me for a while, but once he left and we got a new producer, we wanted to change things up and so we brought Kevin Cubbins on board. Having Kevin was really refreshing, because it didn’t just feel like I was talking at people. Since then, I’ve been hosting for the past 16 years.

Where did the name Beale Street Caravan come from?

I always thought it was a combination of things. We have always featured blues musicians, and when it first started, we didn’t have hosts. It was just guys performing. Now we air pre-recorded sets and famous sets from festivals, but we started out live at B.B. King’s club. We’d also go to blues festivals in Chicago and festivals like King Biscuit and the Waterfront in Portland. That was the precursor to what we do now. We’ve had shows that have taken place everywhere. We even have a show from Venezuela that we air. When we first started, we were able to capture stuff from Rufus Thomas, because some of the greats were still with us.

How has the audience reach grown since the show started?

It’s always been sporadically picked up all over the world, but it’s been picked up by a lot more networks as we’ve grown, like Armed Forces Radio, for example. Having them air our show puts us anyplace that American troops are, which is everywhere if you think about it. We are in so many places now. We didn’t used to have such a big presence in the Middle East, and we also have a lot of sessions recorded online for people to hear all over the world.

What are the criteria for the types of music you play on your show? Does it ever venture out of blues? Do you ever record in-studio?

Kevin Cubbins will record things live sometimes, depending on where he is. One of our engineers, Matt Brown, might get sent somewhere to record something. But some shows that we play are older and were recorded long ago. Other times, people just submit something they recorded themselves. New Orleans Jazz Fest also records their festival and sends it to us. Kevin lets our audience and contributors know what he’s looking for, but most of the stuff we air stays within the region.

How is Beale Street Caravan different from something like Rocket Science Audio, Ditty TV, or the now-defunct Live From Memphis?

I think we are a little more focused than the shows you mentioned. We promote the brand of Memphis, and we want people to listen to our show and decide to make a move to Memphis or at least come here and track down an artist. We have a focus on the region, but we’ll have acts from all over on the station. The center of [Beale Street Caravan] is always the blues-roots sound that made Memphis famous, and we like to have fun on air and show the reach that Memphis music has across the world and on other musicians. That’s why we fit within the NPR format. Our message takes people behind the scenes.

How big is the annual fund-raiser in terms of keeping Beale Street Caravan in business?

It’s our only fund-raiser. It’s changed over the years, and we’ve become bigger and bigger, but we only do one thing in terms of raising money.

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Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater

Jason Da Hater performs at the Hi-Tone this Sunday.

After being on the road for nearly three weeks, I’m back in M-town with another Weekend Roundup for you. There’s a lot going on around town this weekend, including the first show from a new local group called My Mother’s Family (featuring Daniel Mckee, Joel Gradinger, Graham Winchester and Richard James). Between the free shows at the Levitt Shell and a stacked weekend at the Hi-Tone, there are plenty of reasons to get out of the house. 

Friday, May 29th.
AJ Ghent Band, 7:30 p.m. at the Levitt Shell, free.

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater

Strong Martian, Other Stories, Lagoonas, 9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $5.

My Mother’s Family, 11 p.m. at the Buccaneer.

Saturday, May 30th.
Glen David Andrews, 7:30 p.m. at the Levitt Shell, free.

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater (5)

Eric Lewis, Andy Ratcliff, Caleb Sweazy, 6 p.m. at the Harbor Town Amphitheater, free.

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater (2)

Dead Soldiers, Marcella and her Lovers, 9:30 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10.

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater (3)

Bluff City Backsliders, 10 p.m. at Bar DKDC.

Sunday, May 31st.
Earl Thomas, 7:30 p.m. at the Levitt Shell, free.

Jason Da Hater, 9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10.

Weekend Roundup 18: My Mother’s Family, Caleb Sweazy, Jason Da Hater (4)

Water Spaniel, 9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone Small Room, $5.