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Feelin’ Festive

As you flip your wall calendars to the fresh, crisp September page, after Memphis’ humid, boiling August, you can exhale: It’s almost fall. And that means it’s time for more fairs and festivals, so crack open your planners, pull up your calendar app, tape a sticky note to your head, do whatever you gotta do to make sure you have these fairs and festivals tapped into your autumn plans.

SEPTEMBER

Southern Heritage Classic Cultural Celebration

Can I tell you what a yellow card is or what a running back does? No, but I can tell you that the Southern Heritage Classic, a premier sports and entertainment event, will be a good time. And if you don’t believe me, just take a look at the agenda: The O’Jays are putting on a concert, Landers Center is hosting a Classic Funk Fest, the Classic Parade will roll through Park Avenue, and so much more, including, of course, the Southern Heritage Classic football game featuring Jackson State vs. Tennessee State at the Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium.

Various locations, September 8-10

Germantown Festival (Photo: Courtesy Germantown Festival)

Germantown Festival

Some might say weenies aren’t cool by definition, but at this festival, the weenies will prove you otherwise as they gear up for the annual Running of the Weenies at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 10th. So don’t be a weenie! Go show your support at this festival of arts that, in addition to the famed race, offers children’s activities, rides and games, entertainment, a car exhibit, community displays, and more.

Germantown Civic Club Complex, September 10-11

Goat Days Festival

Bah-bah-bah, Bah-Barbara Ann, you got me rockin’ and a-rollin’, rockin’ and a-reelin’ from too long without goats. But take my hand and bring me to the Goats Days Festival and I’m yours. Starting at 7 a.m. with the much-beloved pancake breakfast, the day features goat yoga, live music all day, local vendors, food galore, a car show, an antique tractor show, a barbecue contest, an all-day kids zone, and so much more.

Millington Sports Complex, September 10

Memphis Rox Yoga Festival

This festival is yogalicious, definition makes yogis go crazy. (It’s hot, hot.) With more than 15 yoga classes, from acro yoga to handstand workshops, this festival also boasts a kids’ zone, live music, and lectures, including topics ranging from nutrition to personalizing yoga through astrology.

Memphis Botanic Garden, September 10

Collierville Balloon Festival (Photo: Courtesy Collierville Balloon Festival)

Collierville Balloon Festival

Enjoy the Wizard of Oz’s preferred mode of transportation at this festival all about the whimsical hot air balloon. Each morning will begin with a breathtaking release of the balloons into the sky, which the family can witness for free before the festival’s activities commence in the afternoon. The day will include a kids’ zone, food trucks, vendors, carnival rides and games, and of course some hot air ballooning. Once the sun goes down, the balloons will light up the sky with an evening balloon glow.

Maynard Way, Collierville, September 17-18

Cooper-Young Festival

Whether you’re young or young at heart, when you’re in Cooper-Young, you’re in for some fun with this festival all about celebrating the arts, people, culture, and heritage of Memphis. Bailey Bigger will headline a lineup of great local, original music, and a slew of artisans from Memphis and across the U.S. will be selling handmade, unique, and quirky art.

Cooper-Young, September 17

Mint Cream Market: Fall Fest

Shop from vintage collectors, craft goods, and unique art at this fest with live entertainment and food trucks.

Arrow Creative, September 17

Orion Free Concert Series

If you press your ear to a shell, you’ll hear the ocean for free. If you press your ear to the Shell, you might be too close to the stage, but you might also hear some country blues or powerpop, depending on the weekend, also for free.

Overton Park Shell, Country Blues Festival, September 17

Memphis Powerpop Festival, September 24

Gonerfest 19

Going, going, gone off to Gonerfest 19 for four days of rocking music, courtesy of Goner Records. The caliber of these artists is too hard to describe in a mere few sentences, which is why I urge you to read our cover story next week because it’s going to be all about Gonerfest.

Railgarten, September 22-25

Mid-South Fair (Photo: Courtesy Mid-South Fair)

Mid-South Fair

If you fancy yourself an old soul, perhaps reincarnated from bygone times, you’ll feel at home at this festival which has been a must-do event since 1856. Fair-goers can enjoy more than 50 rides, a wide array of ground acts, and of course favorite fair fare — funnel cakes, turkey legs, candied apples — you name it, they’ve perfected it.

Landers Center, September 22-October 2

50th Annual Pink Palace Crafts Fair (Photo: Courtesy Pink Palace Crafts Fair)

50th Annual Pink Palace Crafts Fair

Lots of things are celebrating their 50th this year. I mean, 50 years ago, The Godfather premiered its first installment in theaters, Watergate began to unfold, Jennifer Garner was born, and right here in Memphis, the Pink Palace Crafts Fair took place for the first time. And now, 150 artists in various mediums are coming from around the country to celebrate the fair’s big 5-0. Attendees can marvel at craft demonstrations, enjoy live music, and entertain the kiddos at the petting zoo and with a ride on the choo-choo train, some rock climbing, and pony rides.

Audubon Park, September 23-25

Mighty Roots Music Festival

We root for music, the mighty, mighty roots music. No longer a rookie, this music fest is back for year two, taking place at the same spot the famous blues singer-songwriter Muddy Waters began his love of blues music.

Stovall, MS, September 23-24

Aquatseli Bluegrass Festival

“Aquatseli” is Cherokee for “our,” so make this bluegrass extravaganza yours and check out the instrument workshops, open jams, square dancing, clogging, vendors, and more.

Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park, September 24

Latin Fest

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month at Cazateatro Bilingual Theatre Group’s Latin Fest, where friends and families can listen to and dance to live Latin music, taste Latin food and drinks, enjoy activities for kids, and shop from vendors.

Overton Square, September 24

Memphis Comic Expo

The Mid-South’s largest comic-creator con has answered the Bat-Signal and is back in Memphis to celebrate your favorite creators, with over 100 artists and writers, a cosplay contest, more than 50 vendors, panels, and more. It’s going to be a marvel.

Agricenter International, September 24-25

Wiseacre Oktoberfest

Zicke zacke, zicke zacke, hoi hoi hoi! Oktoberfest is back, boy oh boy. So dust off your steins and snap on your lederhosen for a day with food trucks, Mighty Souls Brass Band, the Grizzline, and more.

Wiseacre Brewing Company, September 24

Soulful Food Truck Festival

Saddle up your picnic blankets and lawn chairs for this journey to the center of your stomach and your soul as you enjoy food from food trucks and vendors, shop from local artisans, and take in music by Carmen Hicks, Angie P. Holmes, and Courtney Little, plus DJs Zoom and Swagg.

Tiger Lane, September 25

Bartlett Festival

With the Judge Freeman Marr Panther Pride 5K to kick things off, this festival boasts local music, arts and crafts, a car show, children’s activities, a barbecue cooking contest, concessions, and so much more.

W.J. Freeman Park, September 30-October 1

Mempho Music Festival

Mempho Music Festival (Photo: Courtesy Mempho Music Festival/Joshua Timmermans)

You know it, I know, the music at Mempho always hits the right note. I mean, how could it not with The Black Keys, Portugal. The Man, Bobby Rush, Amy LaVere, Elizabeth King, and so many more on the lineup?

Radians Amphitheater, Memphis Botanic Garden, September 30-October 2

OCTOBER

Wine on the River Memphis

You don’t have to be Carmen Sandiego and glide around the globe and flimflam every nation just to get a taste of the world. Instead, take your taste buds on a global journey as you sample wine from national and international vineyards along with bites of food from each cultural region.

Riverside Drive, October 1

King Biscuit Blues Festival (Photo: Courtesy King Biscuit Blues Festival)

King Biscuit Blues Festival

Hear ye, hear ye, King Biscuit Blues Festival is back for its annual three-day event, complete with the Flour Power 5K, the Tour da Delta bicycle race, and a Kansas City-sanctioned barbecue contest, all in historic Downtown Helena. Oh, and of course, there’ll be blues music — lots of blues music — on five stages.

Helena, AR, October 5-8

Soul of the City

Rock around the clock as Elmwood Cemetery’s residents take you through Memphis music history. You’ll meet Sister Thea Bowman, Grammy Award-winners, rock-and-roll stars, blues crooners, and more.

Elmwood Cemetery, October 6-8

Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival (Photo: Courtesty Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival)

Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival

Bacon? Good. Bourbon? Good. Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival? Good. That’s all you need to know.

Metal Museum, October 7

Big River Fit Fest

Let’s get physical in an HR-approved way. For the love of all things good and pure, this fitness fest is designed to expose (again in an HR-approved way) and educate the Mid-South community of all ages and skill levels on fitness, wellness, and health.

Mud Island Park, October 8

Edge Motorfest

If Cars taught me anything, it’s that life is a highway, and I wanna ride it all night long, and if you’re goin’ my way, well, we’re driving to the Edge, for a day to check out over 150 cool cars, food trucks, vendor booths, and more. Ka-chow, am I right?

Edge Motor Museum, October 8

Shell Daze Fall Music Festival

The music doesn’t stop when it comes to the folks at Mempho. Hardly a week after the big shebang, they are putting on a two-day mini fest, with a lineup featuring Moon Taxi, Tab Benoit, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Daniel Donato, Star & Micey, and Garrison Starr.

Overton Park Shell, October 8-9

Southern Soul Music Festival

Jam to your favorite soulful hits and songs by Tucka, Calvin Richardson, Sir Charles Jones, Ronnie Bell, Theodis Ealey, Karen Wolfe, and FatDaddy.

The Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, October 8

Deep Blues Festival

Of all the shades of blue, deep blues are my favorite, and you can bet the Deep Blues Festival will be just the right shade of fun as it celebrates traditional and alternative blues with musicians from all over the world.

Clarksdale, MS, October 13-16

Mississippi Delta Tennessee Williams Festival

Are you a streetcar? ’Cause you look like your name should be Desire. Oh, is your name Tennessee? ’Cause you’re the only 10 I see. I promise I’m not a player, just a play-lover, and if you are too, meet me at the Tennessee Williams Festival, where we can enjoy screenings, lectures, and performances.

Clarksdale, MS, October 13-15

Fall Fest at the Nest

Soar like an eagle right over to Fall Fest at the Nest and enjoy food, fun, family, music and free admission. Shop vendors, enjoy a car show, chili cook-off, cornhole tournament, rides, food trucks, music fest, $10,000 cash raffle, and more.

St. Benedict at Auburndale, October 14-15

Memphis Brewfest

Fifty-something bottles of beer on the wall, 50-something bottles of beer, take one down, pass it around, and you’ll still have 50-something breweries and cideries to sample from. That’s right, at the Memphis Brewfest, you can get unlimited samples from more than 50 breweries and cideries from around the world.

Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium, October 15

Memphis Food & Wine Festival

It’s wine o’clock somewhere. Sorry. I know what you’re thinking — that’s so cheesy, borderline offensive. If you’re of a certain age, you might even invoke the word cheugy. But I bet you’ll quit your whining when you get to wining and dining at this festival which not only benefits the FedExFamilyHouse but also showcases local chefs alongside acclaimed national chefs and top global vineyards.

Memphis Botanic Garden, October 15

Shop Black Fest

Support more than 50 local Black-owned businesses of all types at this festival of fun vibes, music, and food.

Downtown Memphis, October 15

Soulsville USA Festival

Treat your soul to a day of music, food, educational activities, games for kids, and free admission to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, all to honor the city’s rich spiritual heritage and its roots in soul music.

Soulsville USA District at College and McLemore, October 15

Indie Memphis Film Festival

Why Netflix and chill when you could be less run-of-the-mill at an independent film festival? The Indie Memphis Film Festival will screen a range of features, documentaries, and short films from all over the world. Plus, festival-goers can enjoy live music, parties, free panels, meet-and-greets with special guests, and the Black Creators Forum. For more information, be sure to check out our Flyer cover story on October 19th.

Various locations, October 19-24

Cooper-Young Beerfest

I don’t know if you’ve heard but Taylor Swift is releasing a new album on October 21st, which is worth raising a beer mug to and downing a couple more after. And there’s no better place than the Cooper-Young Beerfest the next day.

Midtown Autowerks, October 22

RiverArtsFest

The Mid-South runneth over with art, and the Mississippi River floweth with inspiration — two phenomena that merge only once a year to create RiverArtsFest, where more than 180 artists from around the country can show off and sell their fine arts. As an added bonus, the festival features artist demonstrations, hands-on art activities for all ages, and local music.

Downtown Memphis, October 22-23

World Championship Hot Wing Fest

Wing wing wing! Sorry the old chicken can’t come to the phone right now. Why? ’Cause she’s dead. But that’s okay. She died a winner — a winner, winner chicken dinner — well, depending on how things shake up at the World Championship Hot Wing Fest. So don’t let the old chicken’s death be in vain and head on over to sample the competing wings, all while supporting The Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis. As always, the contest will kick off with the Memphis Second Line Jazz Band leading a flock of chickens in a parade through Tiger Lane and across the main stage to the tune of “When the Saints Go Marching In.”

Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium, October 22

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival (Photo: Courtesy Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival)

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival

Dia de Los Muertos is deadicated to celebrating and honoring ancestors who lived before us. On this day, enjoy a parade beginning in Overton Square with floats and performers making their way to the plaza at the Brooks Museum, where you can enjoy art-making activities, face painting, music, costumed performers, dance performances, and more.

Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, October 29

Hambone Festival

Presented by artist and musician Stan Street, this music festival features a stellar lineup, a jam night, street parties, and Cruisin’ the Crossroads Car & Truck Show.

Hambone Art Gallery & the Shack Up Inn, Clarksdale, MS, October 29-November 1

NOVEMBER

Fieldaze Memphis

Unlike other fields during autumn harvests, Fieldaze doesn’t have any crop circles (or fields for that matter), but it will have UFOs — Unadulterated Fun Outside — with fitness classes, music, food, entertainment, a half marathon, a bike race, a kayak race, and more.

Downtown Memphis, November 4-6

Memphis Tequila Festival

Da-DA-dada-DA-da-da-da … Tequila! Da-DA-dada-DA-da-da-da … Tastings! Da-DA-dada-DA-da-da-da … Music! Da-DA-dada-DA-da-da-da … Photobooth (and more)!

Overton Square, November 4

Fall Beale Street Artcrawl Festival

Call me a 6- to 12-month-old baby ’cause I’m gonna be crawling down Beale for this artcrawl that welcomes artists of all mediums and styles from Memphis, Nashville, and surrounding areas.

Beale Street, Downtown Memphis, November 5

Memphis Japan Festival

Celebrate the history, culture, and people of Japan at this festival featuring food, entertainment, games, crafts, vendors, exhibitors, and more.

Memphis Botanic Garden, November 6

Memphis Crafts & Drafts Festival (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Crafts & Drafts Festival)

Memphis Crafts & Drafts Festival: Holiday Market

Draft your friends and family to the only sporting event that matters — holiday shopping. There are no fantasy leagues, only the real deal, and if you can get it done before Thanksgiving, the glory is legendary. So get a head start and do it all in one stop at the Memphis Crafts & Drafts Festival where local vendors will show off their goods, and local craft beers will make the experience all the more enjoyable.

Crosstown Concourse, November 12-13

DECEMBER

Holiday Spirits: A Christmas Cocktail Festival

This holly, jolly cocktail festival is sure to get you in the Christmas spirit, with its festive … er … spirits, plus the big man in red himself.

The Kent, December 9

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Memphis Comic Expo 2020 Canceled

Citing concerns over coronavirus and the safety and health of attendees, panelists, and volunteers, administrators for the Memphis Comic Expo (MCE) announced the convention’s cancelation for 2020 in a post to social media Friday, August 21st.

“We cannot move forward without risking the safety [and] health of our guests, attendees, and volunteers,” the post reads. Festival founder Donald Juengling launched the convention in 2014, and the MCE has grown every year since. The expo had already lined up an impressive array of talent for this year’s edition, including artist Greg Capullo (Spawn, Batman, DC’s Dark Knights: Metal).

The announcement included helpful information for vendors and artists who reserved booths at the event. They should look out for an email in the coming days with a link to a refund request form. “All vendors and artists are required to fill out the form linked in the email by October 17, 2020,” the post reads.

As in the hopeful tales of heroes that inspired the event, the MCE announcement ends with a note of optimism: “We hope to see everyone next year.”

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Art Art Feature

To the Max: Local Artist Heads to Memphis Comic Expo

Barbarians, walled-off cities, drone surveillance, and post-apocalyptic nightmare realms. No, this isn’t a prediction of climate cataclysm or World War Three. These are the imaginary worlds of Memfamous Comics, the comics company owned and operated by Memphis-based comic book and tattoo artist Anthony “Tony” Max.

To promote the release of the newest issue of Memfamous Comics’ The Crimson Hand, Max, who was voted best tattoo artist in the Flyer‘s 2018 Best of Memphis contest, will be at the annual Memphis Comic Expo at Agricenter International on Saturday, October 19th, and Sunday, October 20th.

Like Steven Spielberg running around his childhood backyard with a Super-8 camera or Alex Ross doodling the Hulk in crayon, Max got an early start. “I was born in Memphis, but I was raised on a farm in Mississippi,” Max says. “There was nothing around for miles to do, but my grandmother worked for stationery companies. We always had a pen and paper.” And with pen, paper, and an imagination fueled by sword-and-sorcery and adventure comics, Max set to work building imaginary worlds.

Another early influence for Max was Star Wars. “My family got me a subscription to Star Wars comics from Marvel Comics,” Max says. “My parents were always great about giving me extra art lessons and buying me art supplies. I think they saw it as a hobby that kept me out of their hair, and so they were proud to nudge me into it.”

Max continued writing and drawing his own comics, and he decided to pursue a degree in painting in college. At some point, though, he realized there might be a better way to translate his passion for illustration into a steady gig. So he decided to become a tattoo artist. “It was a good way to keep from being a starving artist,” he says. “I kept three jobs in college, working in warehouses mostly. It’s just real grunt work, and I didn’t necessarily want to be a tattoo artist but I wanted to make a living selling art. It was one of the few areas at the time where you could get paid well making artwork, and so I took it on and found that it was pretty suitable to my style.”

For a time, Max set his mind to making a mark in the world of tattooing. After stints at other Bluff City tattoo shops, he has practiced his craft at No Regrets for 13 years, and in November, Max will have been tattooing for 21 years. The medium that helped set him on his artistic journey was never far from his mind, though.

“I was always making comics as a kid, especially in high school,” Max says. “I stopped to pursue my career and put everything into tattooing for a long time. Then one day I realized that I was wasting a lot of time, and since working in comics as an adult had always been one of my dreams, there was nothing stopping me other than me sitting down to do it. I’ve been reading comics for most of my life, so there was just a day where I decided it’s time to give something back.”

So he put his imagination to work. Max publishes his own titles under the Memfamous Comics label, featuring The Golden Silence and its sequel, The Crimson Hand, and the anthology series Memfamous Comics Presents. He’ll add his fourth title in 2020. The books are all set in the same reality, in a walled-in Memphis 200 years from now. It’s a world steeped in the history of alternative comics — with disgraced former cops, barbarians at the gates, and crumbling society.

Max says his work on Donald Juengling’s Bethany’s Song was the first “real” comics gig he got. In a full-circle scenario common in the panelled pages of comics but rare in real life, Juengling is the mastermind behind the Memphis Comic Expo, where Max will debut the newest issue of The Crimson Hand. How’s that for a comic book ending?

Tony Max

Tony Max will sell and sign copies of his comics at Memphis Comic Expo ($25-$35 admission) at Agricenter International, Saturday, October 19th, and Sunday, October 20th. His books are for sale at No Regrets and Comics & Collectibles and on Amazon and Kindle. They can be read for free at tapas.io/rabideyemovement.

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Memphis Comic Expo at the Agricenter

The Memphis Comic Expo’s 2014 launch was a huge success in spite of unfortunate scheduling.

“We were up against so much,” festival founder Donald Juengling confesses. “There was the Cooper-Young Festival, the Southern Heritage Classic, a Japanese festival. It was like five other big things all at the same time.” Comic book fans turned out anyway to browse the vendor booths and meet their favorite artists and writers.

Memphis Comic Expo

“Our motto is ‘Creators Come First,'” Juengling says, describing his vision for shaping the Memphis expo into something that stands apart from hundreds of similar annual festivals, especially at a time when comic book companies are rapidly expanding their TV and movie universes. “I think there was an appetite for something of this nature,” he says. “There are tons and tons of comic conventions around the country where you can go meet [actors like] Kevin Sorbo or Lou Ferrigno or the dudes from The Avengers. But we’re old-school. When they started these things in San Diego back in the ’70s, it was strictly about comics. And so are we.”

“Well, maybe not 100 percent,” Juengling corrects, pausing to marvel a bit at the mainstreaming of cosplay. “When I was a kid, if you dressed like Captain America and it wasn’t Halloween, you got beat up,” he says, impressed by just how much that has changed. This weekend, June 5-7, expo is bringing in Nicole Marie Jean and other internationally known cosplayers to judge the event’s costume contest.

This year’s guests include writers such as the prolific Cullen Bunn and the multiple Eisner Award-winning Kyle Baker.

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News News Blog

Memphis Comic Expo Makes a Splash In its First Year

Artist Derrick Dent at the Memphis Comic Expo

  • Artist Derrick Dent at the Memphis Comic Expo

The first-ever Memphis Comic Expo debuted this year to throngs of comic fans looking to buy comic books, meet artists and authors, and revel with other fans. The inaugural year’s lineup included over 35 guests in the art and fiction world, hailing from all over the country. Even wrestler Jerry Lawler was a guest, displaying his Batmobile — a replica of the 1966 car Adam West and Burt Ward drove in the 1960s-era “Batman” TV show.

With the expo aligned in rows, comic book fans bobbed and weaved around cosplayers, large comic book collections, action figure displays, and huge art presentations. A podcast was even being recorded live on-site from the folks at Black Nerd Power, a podcast featuring thoughts on the science fiction and fantasy world from a black perspective.

Attendees could also commission a piece of art from an illustrator during the expo, get an autograph, or purchase completed pieces directly.

One Memphis artist, Derrick Dent, sold his illustrations as well as pieces that had been previously commissioned as part of the annual Bikesploitation event that had its fourth year last May. Dent has been illustrating since he was in college, and he was first commissioned his junior year. His style was originally influenced by “a lot of manga and a lot of video game art,” he said.

“I was a really big fan of traditional cartoonists, and I understood what they were doing was a form of drawing, but it was a magical kind of thing,” Dent said. “It was so clean and precise.”

The fast-talking artist brought his work to sell as well as promote, offering a table-length’s worth of art that attendees could view.

“A lot of my work is really kinetic,” Dent said. “There’s a confident line to my work that I think people are attracted to. There’s a sense of tradition because I do a lot of brush and ink drawings. That’s a timeless way of creating images — I don’t think it’s going anywhere anytime soon. I handle black-and-white images very well, and I think that’s always been a strength of mine.”

During the interview, Dent was working on an Elvis illustration — one that he admitted later to its recipient that it might have been more Johnny Cash.

Comic books were not the only facet of nerd culture at the expo. Science fiction and fantasy author Cecilia King was promoting her novel, Take It to the City in the Sky. King is also from Memphis and said she’s been writing since she was little. Her novel features a teenager named Avi, a juvenile delinquent in the year 3047 who has been arrested for the third time — this one revolving around drugs.

Even if comics were the overarching theme, any self-proclaimed nerd could have found his or her fill at the expo. The Memphis Comic Expo now joins the growing number of nerdy and geeky conventions, exhibitions, and gatherings staking their claim in the Mid-South.

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