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Music Music Blog

Music and Muscle: The Supercharged Sounds of the Liberty Bowl

When you’re a musician, football games hit a little differently. Take this Wednesday’s AutoZone Liberty Bowl Football Classic, a record-setting nail-biter if ever there was one. “The longest game in the Liberty Bowl’s 64-year history set 24 records, including total points (108), total offense by one team (681 yards by Arkansas) and first downs (32 by Kansas),” a report from the Associated Press tells us, but for this roving pair of ears, it was all about the music.

I was accompanying the mother of a former piano student who now plays clarinet in the University of Arkansas Razorback Marching Band. And hints of the music to come appeared as we walked to Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium: There in the parking area, one could see the Shelby County Sheriff’s Ceremonial Guard milling around in their kilts with assorted bagpipes and drums. And pushing through the throng, one could spy the glint of silvery sousaphones, making their way from the band busses. Those horns would guide us to our seats, as we would be embedded adjacent to the Razorback band.

Settling in, we heard the familiar strains of “Soul Man” being piped through the jumbotron, and although it was the Blues Brothers’ version, not Sam and Dave’s, it still carried enough Memphis bona fides to strike a note of pride in our hearts.

And then suddenly, the pre-game show was upon us! The Razorback band had filed down to the ground level, and were sprinting out onto the field. What followed was an impressive, swinging arrangement of selections from West Side Story.

The music by Leonard Bernstein ranks among the classics of American jazz and theater, yet there was a surreal quality to hearing the poignant strains of “Somewhere” echo from the gridiron, played by young people who may have never before heard it. Later, I asked our clarinetist, Ella Thomas, about the experience.

“‘America’ was the only one I knew,” she said. “But as a section, we had a movie night and all watched the original West Side Story. And I thought the music was really good. Though it was really hard for the clarinets. My favorite part was the finale, a medley of ‘America,’ ‘Maria,’ and ‘Gee Officer Krupke.’ And the clarinets and the low woodwinds have kind of a feature in that one. We play the higher, faster melody. It’s very hard!”

For their part, the Kansas University Marching Jayhawks also brought jazz history into play, featuring a piece by native Kansan Stan Kenton in their halftime show. But it was their version of Cameo’s “Word Up” as the game raged below that really caught my attention.

Meanwhile, the remorseless sadism of football fandom brought other sounds into play. “Break his neck and twist it!” yelled one jolly spectator nearby; and other Razorback fans would gleefully boo injured Jayhawks off the field. Having been raised a Nebraska Cornhusker, I was used to it. But, as Thomas explained, the camaraderie between the opposing teams’ bands transcends any rivalry among the players.

Razorback Marching Band clarinetist Ella Thomas mentally prepares for the pre-game show. (Photo: Alex Greene)

“The Jayhawks band sounded really good!” she remarked. “The Kansas fans weren’t so nice, but the band was really nice to us. The day before, they all came to meet us at the parade, and when we were doing our show, they were cheering for us.” After the game, as musicians from both bands gathered at their busses, Thomas’ comments were borne out by the copious high-fives and back slapping between those wearing opposing colors.

Of course, marching bands aren’t the only source of music at a major bowl game, and this year’s Liberty Bowl was no exception. Naturally, the jumbotron pumped out classic party bangers to get folks revved up. Think Guns N’ Roses’ “Welcome to the Jungle.” But classic rock also held court in the form of the halftime headliner, officially known as Starship featuring Mickey Thomas.

These hit-makers hold the dubious honor of having built a career on one of the world’s most reviled songs. This is especially interesting given the band’s genesis out of the ashes of two of rock’s biggest bands, Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship. But that pedigree mattered little when Blender, Rolling Stone, and GQ magazines all named a song by Starship (with “Jefferson” removed for legal reasons) as the ultimate in bad taste. Indeed, it so trounced the competition in Rolling Stone‘s poll for that title that the magazine noted it “could be the biggest blow-out victory in the history of the Rolling Stone Readers Poll.”

Yes, I’m speaking of “We Built This City,” perhaps the only song lamenting corporate rock that is itself the most perfect exemplar of that genre ever recorded. Yet here in a city where the late Jim Dickinson’s Roland keyboard once proudly bore a sticker with the message “Corporate Rock Sucks,” enthusiasm for Wednesday’s performance was high.

While I share most jazz musicians’ reflexive disdain for the 1985 number one hit, as an anthropologist I am fascinated by its simultaneous popularity and unpopularity. Yet all such musings proved irrelevant as the Mickey Thomas and company knocked out a rendition that included a drop-out for the crowd to sing “Rock and rolllllllllll” without a trace of irony. Take that, Rolling Stone!

And then it was back to the game. Even I can tell you that it was one of the most gripping matches in the history of the sport, as the Razorbacks squeaked out a victory in triple overtime, after a stunning second half rally by Kansas. As the moment of victory settled in, the Razorback band launched into its standard choice for such moments, “It’s Hard to Be Humble.” And the fans sang along:

Oh, Lord it’s hard to be humble,
when you’re perfect in every way!
I can’t wait to look in the mirror,
I get better looking each day!
To know me is to love me,
I must be one hell of a fan!
Oh, Lord it’s hard to be humble,
when you’re an Arkansas Razorback fan!

As Thomas later noted quietly, “We don’t play anything if we lose.”

Naturally, there are many theories bouncing around the internet as to why the game ended as it did: bad referees, faulty and/or brilliant coaching, lucky breaks, or even the weather. But Ella Thomas and I know the real reason for the Liberty Bowl’s greatness that day: it was the music.

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Music Music Blog

Jason D. Williams to Rock Halftime at the Liberty Bowl

Pounding pianist and showman Jason D. Williams has carried the torch for old school rock-and-roll for decades now, having left his native El Dorado, Arkansas for Memphis so long ago that we might as well call him a true blue Memphian. Now, his identification with the Bluff City is assured, as he will represent the city to the world during halftime at the Liberty Bowl next Tuesday, December 28th.

Another Memphis native will be featured the night before: Andy Childs will receive the Bowl’s Outstanding Achievement Award at the President’s Gala and headline the entertainment with his band Sixwire on December 27th at The Peabody at 6:30 p.m.

Yet, perhaps because he’s often associated with the oeuvre of Jerry Lee Lewis, it’s Williams who is arguably the most historically “Memphis” of practically anyone playing music today.

“Jason D. is a high-energy entertainer with his own great songs to go along with the rock-and-roll classics he puts his own special touch to such as ‘Great Balls of Fire’ and ‘Whole Lotta of Shakin Goin’ On’,” said Steve Ehrhart, Executive Director of the AutoZone Liberty Bowl. “Jason D. will make this year’s halftime finale a show we’ll all remember for a long time.”

I rang Williams recently to hear his thoughts on taking the stage as the television cameras — and the world — looked on.

Memphis Flyer: Thanks for taking a minute to speak with us.

Jason D. Williams: Just take your time, I’m just sitting around here eatin’ a pickle.

Congratulations on being chosen to play the AutoZone Liberty Bowl.

Thank you! I think it’s quite an honor. They wanted to feature somebody that lived in Memphis, who was an international touring act, so they kinda got the best of both there. I’m very excited about playing it!

Anything out of the ordinary planned?

As far as the performance goes, I’m doing one original called ‘Going Down to Memphis.’ And then I wanted to do the Chuck Berry song, ‘Memphis.’ And then there will be 600 band members that’ll be marching to me playing. So God help ’em! And they’ll help me play ‘Great Balls of Fire’ and ‘Whole Lotta Shakin’.’

It’s great you’re keeping that tradition of boogie woogie and rock-and-roll piano alive.

I thank you for saying that! I wonder if that music is conveyed anymore. A lot of people are doing that music, without a big name, and I’m not sure it’s conveying anymore. Even though to me, it was a storybook, a lesson. Those guys gave me a direct history lesson in Music 101. From the roots of it through the other directions it took. For instance, you take somebody like Jerry Lee Lewis singing ‘Five foot two, eyes of blue,’ and that was a lesson on the chords of the 1800’s. Or ‘Alabama Jubilee,’ or ‘Sweet Georgia Brown.’ Between him and Leon Redbone, you could just about get all the storybook you needed on how to play good ol’ chord changes. Because those songs have a lot of the changes that go through everything, not just the pounding rockabilly stuff. You listen to that stuff, or even Al Jolson, and you’ll get all the changes you need to be a great musician.

With those old songs, you can give them a rock-and-roll treatment or whatever …

You sure can! They allowed themselves the chord changes and the phrasing. Now, when Jerry and that bunch came along, they had not been interchanged at all. So when Jerry would come up and do a country version of ‘Sweet Georgia Brown,’ everybody went, ‘Wow, didn’t know that could be changed like that!’ And I don’t know a lot about what I’m talking about, because it just comes naturally to me. I don’t even know how in the world I got to where I am.

Those old standards really influenced early rock-and-roll. Like Little Richard doing ‘Beautiful Dreamer.’

That’s what I’m talking ’bout!

Do you have songs like that in your set?

Oh yeah! I’ll go from ragtime up to some Elton John or ‘Freebird’ or whatever. Whatever comes to my mind. I usually am the first one to hear what I’m doing. I’m just an audience member too. My fingers take off and I start singing, and it could just be something somebody said in the audience, and my fingers take off, and I go, ‘Okay, here I go!’

The best way to describe it is: I’m Jackson Pollack meets Joe Namath meets Vladimir Horowitz. And I sit there, just like an audience member, and I’m entertained. And if you’re not entertained as a musician, I figure nobody else is either. Not long ago I said to myself, I’m not going to go see another band that’s rehearsed. And if you look at all the people that influenced me, not one of them were these real rehearsed people.


I always say, me and the band are in the same book, a lot of times on the same paragraph, but very rarely on the same sentence. You have to let the sentence just sort of come about.

Jason D. Williams plays the halftime finale at the AutoZone Liberty Bowl, featuring Texas Tech vs. Mississippi State. It can be viewed on ESPN, Tuesday, December 28th, at 5:45 pm CST.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

HBCU Battle of the Bands

The Magic City-All-Stars Alumni Band from Birmingham came to Memphis Friday night to battle the Memphis Mass Band, at Oakhaven Stadium for  the HBCU Alumni Weekend. These bands are composed primarily of former band members from historically black colleges like Tennessee State and Jackson State, although the bands seemed to contain some high school students and college students home for summer break. 

Memphis Mass Band plays Stax artist Johnnie Taylor’s “Running Out of Lies.”

HBCU Battle of the Bands (2)

Magic City All Stars Percussion Battle Round

HBCU Battle of the Bands (4)

Memphis’ Entrance

HBCU Battle of the Bands (3)

See more here.

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Cover Feature News

The Sound of Success

Kenneth Crawford is packing his bags. He’s not singing the blues. But he is singing.

“I’m headed to the White House and singing on Saturday with my college choir,” Crawford says. He’s a student at Wiley College in Marshall, Texas, and his choir is headed to the White House in Washington, D.C., for the second time. Crawford is a graduate of the Soulsville Charter School in Memphis, and he is on a full-ride scholarship to Wiley College.

Crawford’s success is one story. But the truth is that there are many success stories emerging from the area’s school music programs. It’s nothing new, but it’s seldom noticed among the naysaying and the never-ending chorus of complaints and arguments about schools. The importance of music education sometimes gets lost, as we celebrate rock and soul music on the marquee. But music education has deep roots in Memphis and remains a vibrant force for good. Music is alive and well in our schools.

It’s time to take note.

“I had two young ladies who started playing trumpet in the 10th grade,” says Ollie Liddell, director of bands at Central High School and previously at East High. “Most people start playing an instrument in the sixth grade. I worked really hard with them, and they were able to get a scholarship their senior year just upon their work. So it’s possible, even at that late age, to get a scholarship in band. But it depends on the child and what level of work ethic they have.”

Liddell knows this not only firsthand but also second-generation.

“My father was the director of bands at Jackson State for almost 20 years,” Liddell says. “He retired in 2011. Without a band scholarship, he wouldn’t have been able to go to school. I didn’t come up from nothing. But he did. My dad went on a band scholarship.”

Liddell himself benefited from music education.

“I would have been able to go to college on an academic scholarship, but I would not have been able to stay on campus,” he says. “Then, midway through my sophomore year, I had a daughter and lost my academic scholarship. Without that band scholarship, I wouldn’t have made it through college.”

This musical path to success is working all over Memphis for lots of otherwise underserved kids.

“If you look at [scholarship] availability, [music] is what’s easiest,” Liddell says. “It takes time, effort, and work. But the money is out there, and band scholarships are readily available. I make a promise to every student: If they come to school and do what they are supposed to do, they can get a scholarship.

“It’s easier to get a band scholarship than a football or basketball scholarship,” Liddell says. “There are more scholarships offered per college program. Football in Division I only offers 70 or 80 scholarships. Basketball? Fifteen. In a band, you can have over 200 kids on scholarship, depending on the school’s program.

“One thing we do at Central is require all seniors to audition for scholarships,” Liddell says. “We set a goal. I did the same at East. Many of them are receiving a college education based on band scholarships.”

Historically, music has been a driving force for Memphis. The blues are the city’s pedigree, its claim to fame. Memphis’ tourism industry is based on its musical history. People have been coming to Beale Street for music long before the NBA came to town. African Americans on their way out of the Delta created a musical culture that still draws visitors from all over the world. Now, music culture is creating opportunities for at-risk and underserved Memphians. In fact, music may be one of the best ways to address the city’s big-picture problems: poverty and a lack of education.

In November, the Stax Music Academy hosted the Berklee City Music Network Conference, which brought together nonprofit music programs like the Stax Music Academy from all over the country. Administrators and teachers got together for networking and brainstorming at the Westin Hotel on Beale Street. The speakers were no strangers to the problems facing America’s cities.

Sandra Bowie is the executive director for arts education at the National Urban Alliance. She developed scholarship paths for underserved kids at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts before taking her current job, located in Newark, New Jersey. She has been on the education front lines for decades and knows that there are capable, talented kids who can’t afford the next step in attaining the American dream.

“Colleges and universities cost so much money,” Bowie says. “We need programs like this to be connected to the colleges and universities. The child’s role is to find in themselves their own capacity and build that and their discipline. But we don’t have a system for doing that. There are a lot of children who are losing their lives because they are undereducated. They become underemployed and overincarcerated. This is a national crisis.”

Certainly, some aspects of the benefits of music education have been exaggerated: The “Mozart Effect” — making babies smarter by playing them classical music — has been oversold. But serious research abounds on the effects music has on the brain, even after childhood and adolescence and into adulthood.

A 2012 study in the Journal of Neuroscience found that “adults who received formal music instruction as children have more robust brainstem responses to sound than peers who never participated in music lessons. … Our results suggest that neural changes accompanying musical training during childhood are retained in adulthood.”

A 2013 study in Progressive Brain Research confirmed the benefits of music education: “The beneficial effects of musical training are not limited to enhancement of musical skills, but extend to language skills. … Taken as a whole, these findings suggest that musical training can provide an effective developmental educational strategy for all children.”

Cognitive benefits aside, music education has made a tremendous practical difference for many generations of Memphians and continues to provide a path for advancement not only in the private schools and charter academies but in our public schools as well.

“This is a time of high-stakes accountability,” says Dru Davidson, the fine arts adviser to the Shelby County Schools (SCS) system and former chair of arts education for Memphis City Schools (MCS). “We have 100 percent instruction in K through 5 in Shelby County Schools. Every child in a public school in the SCS receives music education. There are 100,000 kids served.”

In fact, it’s law in Tennessee, thanks to Title 49, Chapter 10, Part 6 of the annotated code. Formerly SB 2920, the bill was sponsored in 2008 by Memphis state senators Beverly Marrero and Ophelia Ford and reads: “The course of instruction in all public schools for kindergarten through grade eight (K-8) shall include art and music education to help each student foster creative thinking, spatial learning, discipline, craftsmanship, and the intrinsic rewards of hard work.”

“There’s not much like it at the state level, especially for elementary schools,” Davidson says. “We’re not doing it because it’s the law but because it’s a great idea.”

Not every kid will succeed in college. But those who make it to that level, if only for a while, learn something about how to set goals for themselves. It’s a net positive. The skills of collaboration and self-expression are essential to success at any level.

“Most of these kids are not going to play in orchestras for the rest of their lives,” says Carol Johnson, former superintendent of the Minneapolis, Memphis, and Boston school districts and a panelist at the Berklee City Music Conference. “But the athletes aren’t [going to be playing sports all their lives] either. Here is another pathway for them to learn something that is a lifelong joy.”

Johnson recalls an evening during her Memphis tenure when the benefits of music education revealed themselves to her firsthand.

“We had an orchestra performance of Memphis City Schools students at the Cannon Center. There was one child who didn’t have a ride home. This student was a ninth-grader from Frayser. His parents had not come to hear him perform. He played the cello. I said to him, ‘How did you get interested in the cello?’ He said, ‘I never knew what the cello was. I never knew about the orchestra. When I went to high school, one of my music teachers asked if I’d like to learn the cello. I just said yes. I can’t believe it. Here I am playing at the Cannon Center tonight.'”

“So when you think about it, it makes you want to cry. His parents didn’t even come. He didn’t have a ride home. His life chances are pretty difficult to imagine. Nobody in his family had gone to college.

“We need to nurture the talents that people have, to engage them in positive ways. If we fail to do so, it’s a lost opportunity. It’s lost not in just the musical sense, but in whether they will be useful participants in the democracy. They are getting a college opportunity and getting doors opened to them. This kid who was at the Cannon Center: What is the likelihood, growing up in Frayser, that he attends anything at the Cannon Center? It’s very low. His parents didn’t have discretionary income. They were intermittently homeless. What is it that keeps him grounded? He was very proud of playing the cello, that sense of accomplishment carries over.”

But music education offers more than anecdotal benefits. It’s one of the best values the district — and the city — has in terms of return on investment.

“MCS students earned $6.1 million in scholarships for music,” Davidson says of the last available annual figures for the now-defunct district. “It’s about the return on investment — allocating the budget, getting instruments that work, maintaining them. It’s a lot less money spent than the scholarships [bring in].

“The message is to develop 21st-century skills,” Davidson says. “Employers want people who are creative, innovative, and collaborative. We corner the market in creative skills. When kids are engaged in that, they will be one of the valuable people that employers want.”

Investment measures aside, Davidson is proud of the musical legacy of MCS and the work being done under SCS.

“Melrose is currently in a renaissance,” he says. “They are doing amazing work. Whitehaven has one of the top marching show bands in the country.”

Overton High School is the district’s official Creative and Performing Arts Academy. Principal Brett Lawson is himself a beneficiary of musical education. He sees music and arts instruction as essential pedagogical tools.

“When you study something that deeply, it teaches you how to learn,” he says. “You become not just a musician but someone who can learn to do something really well. That’s not automatic. You don’t come out of the womb knowing how to play the French horn. You have to work at it. You are hardwired to walk and talk, but the other things that people have to do to succeed in this world require effort. As a matter of fact, most things require effort. Our students are learning a skill at a very deep level. That’s what I’m looking for, and it translates to scholarships later on.”

In 2011, 26 students from Overton High School were offered $591,810 in music and art scholarships. Sixty-four students were offered academic scholarships totalling more than $2.2 million. The University of Memphis, for example, offered more than $1.2 million in music performance scholarships to more than 100 students last year.

A walk through the Overton campus is like getting baptized in the river. It’s profoundly inspiring to watch kids play together as an orchestra. We’re bombarded with musical noise all the time, but the sound of people playing together in real time and in real space has an immediate connection to our brains. To watch and listen to a performance is to be part of something.

And performing together is what Memphians need to learn to do more often.

“There’s a special thing that’s being put out from this campus,” says Justin Merrick, artistic and operations director for the Stax Music Academy. “These are music ambassadors who speak strongly and have a strong connection. They will be financial leaders as well and will be able to help build the communities of music for tomorrow.”

Memphis has problems, and we like to talk about them. In fact, problem analysis might be our civic pastime. But focusing on the negative eats away at us as people and as Memphians. This is especially true when it comes to discussing education — so much so that it’s sometimes hard for Memphians to imagine something wonderful coming from their schools. But a closer look — and a listen — might convince you otherwise.

Correction: There was an error in the print edition. The number of students receiving music scholarships is not greater than those receiving athletic scholarships. The point is that a typical band offers more scholarships than any particular sport or team at a university. We regret the error. — JB

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Opinion

The Benefits of a Big School System

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You work with what you have, and what the transition team and the citizens of Shelby County are going to have in 2013 is a big consolidated public school system — probably one of the ten biggest in the country for the first year or two.

The transition team has held its first of many meetings. There are so many big and small decisions to be made in the next two years by the transition team and the new school board, but bigness is a given. So what are the benefits? Here are a few that come to mind.

Marching bands. As Flyer editor Bruce VanWyngarden wrote this week, there is a lot of pride, excitement, talent and diversity in a high school band. Charter schools, which are proliferating, can’t offer this.

Sports teams, gyms, and playing fields. One more reason why it is so important to try to persuade the suburbs that it is in their best interest to stay with the county system and not form their own districts. John Aitken and David Pickler are going to be key spokesmen.

Superior experienced teachers. The best Memphis and Shelby County schools are holding their own with private schools if the number of National Merit Scholars and the dollar amount of scholarship offers is any indication. In five years, the new Shelby County system could be competing with more than 50 charter schools, DeSoto County schools, private schools, and new suburban school systems. Good teachers, already a hot commodity, are only going to get hotter. The future Shelby County system must aggressively recruit and retain talent, and that will mean better pay, benefits, and fighting lies with facts and fire with fire when it comes to that.

Special programs. MCS spends nearly $11,000 per pupil because it serves so many students with special needs. And MCS, under Kriner Cash, has attracted hundreds of millions of dollars worth of foundation and philanthropic support. Can you “buy” college-bound students with programs such as the International Baccalaureate Program? We’ll find out.

Structure. Starting a school, much less a school system, is not easy, as Memphians learned in the busing years in the 1970s and as they are learning today with charter schools. Money, buildings, maintenance, transportation, and leadership can all go haywire. Why take a chance on your child’s education? Better to go with the established professional. At least that’s the argument.

Tax money. By no means should the new county system let it leak away to breakaway systems. For the middle class families, if you’re paying for Shelby County public schools anyway, you might as well use them. Why double-tax yourself?

Distinguished alumni. Thousands of them. If it worked for them, it can work for you.

Community spirit. New and different. Be a part of history. Move forward together. Pride in place. Idealism won’t convince everyone by any means — not even everyone on the transition team — but this has to be the pitch. Don’t underestimate the talent on the transition team or the willingness of people to give the big new system a shot for a variety of reasons.

Above all, compete, compete, compete. Everyone else is.