Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Don’t Fence Me In

Bruce is on vacation this week. Y’all let the man fish.

Some thoughts on this week’s issue and more …

• Last Monday, on my walk to the Big River Crossing from work, I crossed over the pedestrian bridge near the south entrance to Tom Lee and emerged into a cage, literally. What with all the rogue beavers and bears and zoo babies and new Blue Suede Brigade, the situation was if not startling then definitely weird.

It was, of course, just Memphis in May shoring up the park and preparing for load in for this weekend’s fun. You can read all about the Beale Street Music Festival in this issue, including a trio of features about Snoop Dogg, Booker T. Jones, and Dead Soldiers and a full rundown of all the acts performing. Fingers crossed for good weather.

The Flyer‘s building happens to be very close to Tom Lee. Even with all the Memphis in May-induced traffic hassles (which promise to be worse this year with all the construction at the Brewery … already feeling pre-rage), it’s a pretty ideal location. I’ve been a vegetarian for 14 years, but one of my greatest pleasures is taking the bluff steps down to the park during Barbecue Fest and giving the park a loop-around or two. (There’s also plenty of junk to eat, so don’t you worry about me.)

One new development with Barbecue Fest this year is that Wednesday night will now be open to the public. Wednesday has been, for as long as I can remember, friends and family night, just sort of a chill evening before all the craziness. According to a Memphis in May rep, there were so many folks in the park on Wednesday already, it made sense to open it to the public.

But the new NEW development is that there is a new event. Are you sitting? Sauce wrestling. Word is, there will be an actual wrestling ring covered in a tarp covered in barbecue sauce. So gross. I love it.

• How does so much dog hair get in the fridge?

• Michael Freakin’ Donahue, everybody!

• I just saw a commercial of a lady shaving her armpits … with a huge, huge grin on her face as if swept away in the bliss of shaving one’s pits. This does not happen. Nope. Stop it.

• I finally found a 901 Rock. Is this still a thing? Is Railgarten the new 901 Rock? I was told I need to put it back in the wild, but since I found it in a semi-scary, litter-strewn alley, I feel like I earned it. Can I throw it at somebody?

• Also in this issue is a viewpoint by Martha Park. She wrote the Flyer‘s cover story on the Ell Persons lynching last year. In the viewpoint, she writes about student involvement in the Lynching Sites Project, which “shin[es] the light of truth on lynchings in Shelby County, Tennessee.” One teen said, “We learn about Martin Luther King all the time, but we didn’t learn this history” — a notion shared by others in the viewpoint. At a time when Trump was quoted as saying, “People don’t ask that question, but why was there the Civil War? Why could that one not have been worked out?,” the more hard facts out there the better.

I’m not the first person to point out the parallel stories of Civil War monuments and the Lynching Sites Project. A statement from the city of New Orleans, which recently took steps to remove its Civil War monuments, reads, “[the monuments] failed to appropriately reflect the values of diversity and inclusion that make New Orleans strong today.” Shouldn’t we able to make that same statement here?

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

901Fest this Saturday

On Saturday, it’s the debut of the 901Fest, which replaces the Sunset Symphony as Memphis in May’s season capper.

Susan Elliott, Memphis in May’s director of programming, says that after weeks of celebrating the honored country, the festival will bring the focus back on Memphis.

“We want to bring the world to Memphis, and Memphis to the world,” she says. As such, the festival will be all Memphis, from food to music to vendors.

Another goal was to get millennials involved, so they partnered with Choose901 in an open vote for bands they thought should perform at the festival. Many of those bands can be seen on the FanBank stage, one of four stages at the festival.

Among those set to perform are Zigadoo Moneyclips, the North Mississippi Allstars, Al Kapone, Opera Memphis, School of Rock, Frayser Boy, the Iris Orchestra, New Ballet Ensemble, and more.

Muddy’s, Wiseacre, El Mero, Reverb, Delta Blues Winery, Central BBQ, and many others will be serving up food.

The event will be preceded by the Great American River Run, which has attracted 2,000 runners from 33 states and three countries. Olympic bobsledder Sable Otey will lead the run stretching, there will be entertainment along the course and yoga for non-runners, and there may be an Elvis sighting or two.

The day will close in the best way possible: a Memphis-themed fireworks show.

“We’re excited,” Elliott says. “This is what the city said they want.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

On the Scene at Barbecue Fest

Congratulations to this year’s winners of the Memphis in May World Championship Cooking Contest. 

Grand Champion: Jack’s Old South

Whole Hog: Jack’s Old South

Shoulder: Lillie’s Q

Rib: 10 Bones BBQ

Patio Porkers: Phat Chance

Kingsford Tour of Champions: The Shed BBQ & Blues Joint

Grilling Green Award: Sloppy Chops  

Check out more from the Barbecue Fest:

[slideshow-1]  

Categories
Cover Feature News

Where There’s Smoke … There’s Barbecue!

The Old

Teams. Tents. T-shirts. Team stickers. Private Port-A-Potties. Multi-night parties (and even unofficial party nights).

These are now some very basic staples of the Memphis in May (MIM) World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest. But they weren’t always staples. Someone had to invent this stuff, right? You know who invented it? Rednecks.

Call them innovators. But Pete Gross and Woody Coleman self-identify as Rednecks first. They founded the Redneck BBQ Express, the very first team to ever compete at (what locals call) Barbecue Fest or, more simply, Barbecue.

Toby Sells

Redneck BBQ Express founding members Pete Gross and Woody Coleman look over memorabilia.

When the Rednecks fire up their grills this weekend, it’ll be the team’s 39th appearance at the 39th annual Barbecue event. While they look like pros now, the first year in the lot in front of the Orpheum Theatre was very different.

They had a Dodge van with a canopy and a stereo, coolers, and a grill. They were cooking a whole hog so they had to get started on it Friday night to be ready for the competition Saturday. So, they did what they always did — they invited all their friends down to drink beers.

That night, some of the festival organizers dropped in to check the lot. They found Gross, Coleman, and all their pals ” just having a ball,” as then-MIM president Lyman Aldrich told Memphis magazine in 2006. Seeing those Rednecks, just doing what they do, sparked the idea in Lyman that Barbecue could be a multi-night event.

“They said, ‘Who are you guys?'” Gross remembers. “What do you mean? We’re just a bunch of guys called the Redneck BBQ Express. Y’all said you’re having a barbecue contest. Well, we’re here.”

They were the only team. Everyone else registered as solo competitors. Thus, the first real Barbecue team — the prototype for what we all know today — was born.

Few rules governed that first festival, Coleman says. Samples were given out freely to everyone. And judging was done right by the grill, no formal sit-down necessary. Coleman took a “Redneck nap” in the van in full view of the judges that year, and, after a day of handing out samples, “our hog looked like a ravaged dog,” Gross says. They came in 10th of 16.

The Rednecks had also decided to print up T-shirts for the festival. They printed more than they needed, decided to sell them, and, thus, Barbecue T-shirts were born.

The festival was moved to Tom Lee Park the next year, and all the teams for two years cooked under an enormous, circus-style tent. Tired of fighting the smoke and the haze, the Rednecks decided to get a tent of their own.

“Everybody was like, ‘What are y’all doing out there?'” Gross recalls. “Then, they all moved out and got tents of their own, and then the big structures started.”

The “sticker phenomena” — once a huge deal at Barbecue — came from the Rednecks. Even the idea of starting the party on Tuesday night began with the Express (though, partying commences nearly every night after Saturday load-in these days).

But it wasn’t like they planned to innovate. It’s just that when Gross and Coleman begin talking, they devise brand new ways to have fun. Hang out with them. You’ll feel it and see it in action. As for fun, that’s their main goal at Barbecue. Winning really does take a back seat with the Rednecks.

In their time, they’ve watched Barbecue change, and they wish MIM would create a commercial division for the die-hard, big-money, high-tech teams that show up to win. They praise the creation of the Patio Porker division, in which amateurs can compete on a smaller budget and scale.

What have they got to show for it all? Gross and Coleman can spin an absolutely true, absolutely hilarious, beer-soaked, high-volume, high-times, rough-and-rowdy tale of human celebration, as easy as breathing. Well, that, and the camaraderie of the 85-or-so Rednecks who have been on the team roster over the years.

Why do they do it?

“Because we can,” Gross says.

How long will they do it?

“As long as I can,” Coleman says.

Toby Sells

The (Sorta) New

Mark Renaud is not exactly a newcomer to Barbecue Fest. He says that he’s cooked at the contest and ones like it for 20 years. This year, however, he’s bringing a new team with a new focus.

Whole hog had been the game at past contests — top 10 but never the grand prize. Under the corporate sponsorship of the St. Louis-based restaurant Pappy’s Smokehouse, Uncle Charlie’s Ribs will focus on ribs. Uncle Charlie is a nod to Adam Wainwright, the Cardinals pitcher who is a friend of Pappy’s owner, Mike Emerson. (Uncle Charlie is slang for curveball, a Wainwright specialty.)

Pappy’s is a Memphis-style barbecue restaurant specializing in ribs. According to Renaud, Pappy’s introduced the Southern-style barbecue to a region where most barbecue was in the heavy-smoke Kansas City tradition. They turn out about 500 ribs a day.

Ribs, ribs, and more ribs

Uncle Charlie’s will be competing with Pappy’s ribs.

“The only thing to do in Memphis,” Renaud says, “is to compete against yourself. The ribs have to be absolutely perfect.”

There’s also what Renaud calls the “dog-and-pony show” aspect of the contest — the on-site judging. Renaud says he’s particularly adept at presentation for the on-site.

“You have 15 minutes with that judge one-on-one,” Renaud explains. “There are three facets to it. One is the actual visual as you walk into the spot. We want them to feel like they’re sitting down in their own kitchen. Second thing is getting their attention, where they lock into you and aren’t daydreaming. And then there’s the product. When I do presentations, I start at the cooker, make them really hungry, and get them to the table about five minutes in, and then I basically hand feed them. My job is to make sure they don’t forget me, no matter how many spots they go to.”

As for the team’s chances? “I’m extremely comfortable,” Renaud says.

Susan Ellis

Canadian Bacon

Rob Reinhardt is a Canadian Prometheus. Okay, maybe that’s an overstatement. He didn’t bring fire to the Great White North, exactly, but Reinhardt, an award-winning pitmaster who’s participating in his first Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, did introduce Saskatchewan to the manifold pleasures of Southern-style ‘cue cooked low and slow over a hardwood fire.

“We do have certain traditions in Canada,” Reinhardt says. “The West Coast Aboriginal community does smoked salmon. And we have lots of varieties of cured and smoked pork. But nothing resembling Southern barbecue existed here until enthusiasts and backyarders started spreading the word.” Gas grills, Reinhardt adds, had previously been the tool of choice for cooking meat outdoors. “Now, barbecue and barbecue traditions are growing like crazy.”

Rob Reinhardt

Reinhardt was always an avid and adventurous home chef, but until he made the switch to full-time barbecue cook and instructor four years ago, he was employed as a business analyst for a steel company. It was a good gig with a comfortable salary, nice benefits, and occasional travel opportunities, but something was missing. A work-related trip to Texas brought him into contact with open pit cooking and changed his life forever. “I stumbled across a real barbecue restaurant like I’d seen on TV and thought I’d try it out,” he says. After an order of beef brisket and pork ribs, nothing would ever be the same.

In 2006, Reinhardt hired a retired welder from Beausejour, Manitoba, to build a trailer-mounted offset smoker. Two years later, he upgraded to a 22-foot catering rig, formed the Prairie Smoke & Spice company, and entered the world of competitive barbecue. In 2012, he left his job and became a full-time pitmaster.

In Canada, barbecue is a very seasonal career choice. “People only seem to be interested in this sort of thing during the summer, with almost no demand January through March,” Reinhardt says. “But we’ve learned how to appreciate that.” He’s also learned how to appreciate the rapid growth of Canadian barbecue culture.

“In my hometown of 200,000 people, there are now five different businesses offering Southern-style barbecue catering,” Reinhardt says. “A lot of people would look at that level of competition as a stress factor. But I think more people doing barbecue raises the awareness. Competition is a good thing. I keep my knives sharp and make sure I’m putting out a good product.”

Chris Davis

The Name Game

The Bastey Boys, The Count Bastie Porkestra, Magically Piglicious, Squeal Street, Crosstown Neighborhood BBQ Cooking Team … Okay, so maybe not so much that last one, but you get the gist. A good barbecue team name, be it crude, punny, or funny, captures the joy of the contest.

The Usual Saucepects is one of those big operations: multi-level structure, huge banners. The team started last year with members from other teams, including Slab Yo Mama. They placed 10th in the rib category.

Matt Savard of the Usual Saucepects says, “We wanted to do it bigger and better. Push the limits — scaffold, lights, sound.”

He says the name was his girlfriend’s idea. He works in marketing and knows a good draw. Folks clamored for their T-shirts and other merchandise. Interest sparks more interest, which may, in turn, lead to more opportunities to help defray the $60,000 cost the team spends being in the contest.

Deeez Butts is made up of members from the local National Guard. Dale Burkett says that once they had enough members for the team, they set about for a name. One night, a team member and his wife were going through old ’80s hair band CDs fishing about for ideas, according to Burkett. “Somehow, he went from ’80s hair bands to Dr. Dre’s The Chronic album, and on that album, there’s this [comic skit] ‘Deeez Nuuuts,’ and he just replaced, obviously, ‘nuuuts’ with ‘butts’ for barbecue, and that’s how we came to be.”

It’s a perfect fit, Burkett says.

“It reflects what our team is,” Burkett says. “We like to let loose and party because we work really hard. We fly a lot of missions, so we don’t like to take it too seriously. We like to have fun and eat good barbecue.”

Last year, a video went viral of a man doing the “Deeez Nuuuts” routine. “That made our team get really noticed a lot more last year,” Burkett says. “People were stopping by our tents and taking pictures with our banner and wanted to buy our T-shirts.”

Yes, Deeez Butts is notorious. Says Burkett, “The funny thing is, this being our fifth year, every time I go to the team meetings to pick up our packages or go to Sam’s Club, they may not remember me specifically, but once I tell them the team name, they’re like, oh yeah, I know who you are.” — SE

Who’s the Piggiest of Them All?

The Swinos won last year’s Miss Piggy Idol contest. They placed the previous two years.

“We try really hard to put on a very fun, very creative, very original show,” says team president Matthew Heffington. “We don’t play to the judges. We don’t play to the competition. We like to do it our way.”

The Swinos have a team band named Tender to the Bone, a rotating crew of six, who are charged with coming up with the performance. They keep everything quiet until the day of the show. Even fellow members of the Swinos don’t know what will happen until the band is onstage.

The Swinos

Last year, it was a porkified version of the history of rap. One year, it was Miley Cyrus’ “Wrecking Ball” (“Beanz and Slaw”).

“The approach is to reach into the landscape of pop culture, take into account who’s playing at Barbecue Fest,” Heffington says. “We take into account our locality and, obviously, food. It’s all about paying your respect to the pig gods and putting out your best artistic version of your team and how you feel about the year.”

Heffington suggests we speak to Tender to the Bone’s Justin Taylor for more insight.

“Per our attorney’s advice, we are the Band Formerly Known as Tender to the Bone,” Taylor says.

“We are triple-crown champions. We have nothing to prove anymore. This is about the people. Pork the record industry, and long live Prince,” Taylor continues.

Taylor says they start about two weeks in advance of the contest, picking a theme by throwing rib bones at a target on the wall.

And the choreography? “Tight undergarments and man fat,” Taylor answers.

He then reiterates what the attorney has said about the Band Formerly Known as Tender to the Bone. And “Pork the record industry.”

Is this a hint? “Absolutely not,” Taylor says. “No. No one in their right mind would touch Prince.” — SE

Music to Barbecue By

No real barbecue experience is complete without some tunes. From Frayser Boy to Tom T. Hall, here’s a collection of songs to get your party started this Thursday night at the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest.

Deep Purple — “Smoke on the Water”: Okay, this one was pretty obvious, and the folks running the Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest must have thought the same thing, as this was the slogan for the competition a few years ago. Nevertheless, if the opening riff of this Deep Purple song doesn’t get you pumped to eat some ‘cue, you might be vegetarian.

Oblivians — “Call the Police”: “We don’t give a damn where you’re from,” sings Greg Cartwright on this cover of the Stephanie McDee classic. Let those lyrics serve as the welcome anthem to all travelers hitting Barbecue Fest, because you’re all Mid-Southerners this weekend. There are references to plenty of Southern and Cajun food, including chicken wings, crawfish, and jambalaya, and when Cartwright sings “You better call your wife, call your bossman, cuz we ain’t ever comin’ home,” you better believe he means it.

Oblivians

Creedence Clearwater Revival — “Proud Mary”: No barbecue is complete without a little Creedence. While many of their songs would fit perfectly in a pork-centric playlist, this one is especially fitting for cleaning a plate down by the mighty Mississippi.

Wendy Rene — “BBQ”: “I like barbecue, you like barbecue, we all like barbecue,” sings Wendy Rene on this Stax Records single from 1964, and sometimes it’s just that simple. This classic Rene track was made for every summer cookout, so add some Memphis flavor to your party and dig in.

Frayser Boy — “It’s Da Summa Tyme”: This might be a “deep track” from Frayser Boy’s catalog, but it’s arguably one of the best songs about spending the summer in Memphis. His line “Y’all about to barbecue, shit, I’m ’bout to roll through” perfectly captures the sentiment felt by most, if not all attendees at this year’s World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest.

Ted Nugent — “I Love My BBQ”: I’m only including this song in the playlist because it is so completely terrible that it must be heard to be believed. The Nuge loves his barbecue, so let him have it, I guess? Pull up a chair because ol’ uncle Ted has a beer for you, just don’t try to talk to him about animal rights while he’s eating. Best line: “A tossed salad might make you weak. I like to kill ’em and grill ’em.” Whatever you say, Ted.

Tom T. Hall — “That’s How I Got to Memphis”: This classic Tom T. Hall song is fitting for any trip to the Bluff City, but the lines “I haven’t eaten a bite or slept in three days and nights” are especially relevant to this weekend’s festivities. While I’m not suggesting you fast until the competition begins this Thursday, it may be good to lay off the barbecue while you wait for the gates to open at Tom Lee Park.

Chris Shaw

Shop Like a Pro

Mid-South pitmasters shop off the beaten path, a sort of Diagon Alley in the magical world of Memphis meatcraft. But those shops are mostly wide open to regular customers, too.

Memphis Barbeque Supply

The shelves at Memphis Barbeque Supply are stocked with bottles of local sauce and dry rubs, most of which is from local barbecue teams with names you know if you pay attention to Memphis in May results: Sweet Swine O’ Mine, Killer Hogs, Porkstars, and others. The latest and greatest (and biggest) smokers are presented on the showroom floor like upscale automobiles.

A wall of wood ensures you can get any smoke flavor profile you’d like, from standards like apple, mesquite, and cherry to blends like “Memphis Smoke,” a mixture of pecan and hickory. The wall on the other side is covered in any piece of cooking hardware you can imagine, from high-tech digital meat thermometers to spatulas emblazoned with the LSU logo.

Jimmy Shotwell and his business partner, Chris West, opened the store two years ago because, well, it just made sense in Memphis.

“We had furniture places [that sold smokers] and had outdoor fireplaces and your big box stores, but we did not have [a store with] everything but the meat — charcoal, wood, run, sauces — just a place dedicated to barbecue,” Shotwell said.

The Charcoal Store

Pert Whitehead has been involved in the charcoal business since about 1975 and has run the Charcoal Store in its current location on Florida Street since 1999.

“I’ve had people standing right here from Norway, Belgium, Denmark, a bunch of people from California, probably about every state,” Whitehead said.

He said “all the tops” in Memphis will cook with his Chef’s Delite brand, but he also carries lump charcoal, blended briquettes, and wood of all types.

He sells mostly to restaurants (noting Tops Bar-B-Q and the Rendezvous as customers) and to shops like Memphis Barbeque Supply. He does sell to individuals and some barbecue teams, but he doesn’t push that part of the business, he said. — TS

Categories
Music Music Blog

The Complete 2016 Beale Street Music Fest Lineup

Here is the complete lineup for Beale Street Music Fest 2016. This year the lack of hip-hop and rap artists is noticeable, but big names like Neil Young, Weezer, and Beck round out an otherwise (musically) diverse lineup. Order your tickets here, and read my rundown on artists not to miss here.  

Friday, April 29

Neil Young + Promise of the Real, Weezer, Train, Panic! at the Disco, Grace Potter, Gin Blossoms, Young the Giant, Trampled By Turtles, The Struts, Coleman Hell, Walter Trout, Julien Baker, Doyle Bramhall II, Larry McCray, Ghost Town Blues Band, Jimmy “Duck” Holmes, and Terry “Harmonica” Bean

Saturday, April 30
Meghan Trainor, Modest Mouse, Jason Derulo, Barenaked Ladies, Yo Gotti, Violent Femmes, Cypress Hill, Jonny Lang, Moon Taxi, Lucinda Williams, Houndmouth, Los Lobos, The Front Bottoms, Better Than Ezra, LunchMoney Lewis, Ana Popovic, Luther Dickinson, Will Tucker, Amasa Hines, Magic Dick and Shun Ng, Jack Semple, Charles Wilson, Duwayne Burnside, Blind Mississippi Morris, and Larry Long & Reverend Robert Rev  

Sunday, May 1
Beck, Paul Simon, Zedd, Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats, Cold War Kids, The Arcs, Bastille, Courtney Barnett, Indigo Girls, Blackberry Smoke, The Joy Formidable, The Lone Bellow, Bernard Allison, Those Pretty Wrongs, John Primer, Alex da Ponte, John Nemeth, Brandon Santini, Barbara Blue, Leo Bud Welch, and Bill Abel 

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis in May Introduces 901Fest to Replace Sunset Symphony

901Fest, a festival celebrating all things local, will be added to the month-long Memphis in May programming, replacing the long-running Sunset Symphony.

The festival will follow the inaugural Great American River Run on Saturday, May 28th. It will feature local musicians, artists, vendors, and merchants, as well as the annual air show and fireworks show that were a part of the symphony event.

“The mission of our organization is to celebrate Memphis’ culture and heritage. We plan on doing that in spectacular style this Memorial Day weekend by showcasing our musicians, artists, culinary arts, and unique Memphis products. 901Fest gives us an opportunity to turn the spotlight on Memphis and allow Memphians to enjoy our city’s assets,” said James L. Holt, president and CEO of Memphis in May.

Memphis in May is partnering with Choose 901 for the festival, and Choose 901 is holding a social media contest to gather input on what local artists and vendors should be featured at the festival. The full schedule for 901Fest will be released closer to the festival date.

The Sunset Symphony event, a performance in Tom Lee Park by the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, was retired last year after a 39 year run.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Beale Street Music Fest Passes Now On Sale

Beale Street Music Fest has announced that three day passes are now on sale. The music festival has changed ticket providers, opting to use TicketFly instead of Ticket Master.  Memphis in May also announced a special discounted sale of three-day passes for the 40th edition of the Beale Street Music Festival. A limited quantity offered at $85, plus service charges, will be available exclusively at TicketFly starting at 10:00 a.m. on Friday, January 15th. This is the lowest price offered for the 2016 Beale Street Music Festival and tickets are available on a first come first served basis. Three-day passes will escalate to $95 once this limited quantity is exhausted, so Beale Street Music Festival fans should act quickly.

Once the first tier of tickets sells out, the prices will escalate to $95 and then to $105. Single day tickets for the 2016 Beale Street Music Festival, priced at $45 will go on sale on Wednesday, February 24th when the line-up for the music festival is announced. Click here to purchase tickets.

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis In May Adds Half-Marathon Race

For years, the Memphis In May Sunset Symphony closed out the month-long celebration on Memorial Day weekend. But the Sunset Symphony is being replaced with two new events next year, one of which will be the Great American River Run — a half-marathon and 5K race. The other event replacing the symphony will be announced in January.

The Great American River Run will be held on May 28th, 2016. The race course will run along the bank of the Mississippi River and through downtown and feature live entertainment along the route. There will also be a post-race festival with music, food, and beverages on the river bluff.

Runners will have an opportunity to raise money for the Wounded Warrior Project, a service organization for wounded veterans of post-9/11 military actions. A portion of the race’s registration fees will also go toward the Wounded Warrior Project.

“Our city sits on America’s greatest river, and we want to celebrate this tremendous local asset with a healthy lifestyle event for local participants and running enthusiasts from across the country.” says James L. Holt, President and CEO of Memphis in May International Festival. “We also want to honor our veterans and celebrate all they do, and have done, for our country, which is the true purpose of the Memorial Day Weekend holiday.”

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Ida, Academy Award Winning Polish Film, Screens In Memphis

As a part of the Memphis In May Festival’s salute to Poland, Indie Memphis is presenting a film a week by Polish directors at Studio On The Square. 

Agata Trzebuchowska in Ida

The first film, screening tonight, is the 2015 Academy Award Winner for Best Foreign Language Film, Ida. Directed by Pawel Pawlikowski. Ida, stars Agata Trzebuchowska as Ida, a young orphan about to take her vows as a nun in 1961, who finds out her ancestors are actually Jewish. She embarks on a trip across communist Poland to find her family, who went into hiding from the Nazis during the war. The film has earned wide acclaim from not only the Academy, but also such notoriously tough audiences as The New Yorker’s David Denby, who called it a “compact masterpiece” and said he was “thrown into a state of awe.”

You can purchase advance tickets at the Indie Memphis website for tonight’s 7 PM screening at Studio On The Square. 

Categories
Music Music Features

Beale Street Music Festival 2015 – Lineup and Schedule for Sunday, May 3rd

SUNDAY, MAY 3

Bud Light Stage (South) …

Elle King 2:20 p.m.

Myslovitz (Poland) 3:50 p.m.

Kasier Chiefs 5:20 p.m.
Hozier 7:00 p.m.

Ed Sheeran 8:40 p.m.

FedEx Stage (Middle) …

Star and Micey 2:40 P.M.

Shovels and Rope 4:15 P.M.

Bela Fleck & Abigail Washburn 5:50 P.M.

St. Vincent 7:30 P.M.

Wilco 9:10 P.M.

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage (North) …

Prosevere 2:10 P.M.

Scott Weiland and the Wildabouts 3:40 P.M.

Of Mice & Men 5:20 P.M.

Rise Against 7:00 P.M.

Cage the Elephant 8:40 P.M.

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent …

Jarekus Singleton 2:15 P.M.

Indigenous 3:50 P.M.

Will Tucker 5:25 P.M.

Tinsley Ellis 7:05 P.M.

Bettye LaVette 8:45 P.M.

MetroPCS Blues Shack …

Deak Harp-n-Lee Williams Times Vary

Blind Mississippi Morris Times Vary

THE BANDS:

Blind Mississippi Morris

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Don’t miss Blind Mississippi Morris at the Blues Shack on Sunday, an artist known locally as “The Real Deal on Beale.”

Deak Harp-N-Lee Williams

MetroPCS Blues Shack (Times Vary)

Deak Harp has been playing the harmonica since he was 12 years old, and he knows all the hits from genres ranging from Chicago blues to Mississippi hill country blues. He’s also the owner of Deak’s Mississippi Saxophones and Blues Emporium in Clarksdale, Mississippi.

Prosevere

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 2:10 p.m.

Hard rockers, rejoice! Prosevere will be bringing the house down early when they play their blistering set of modern Memphis metal.

Jarekus Singleton

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 2:15 p.m.

Like the Ghost Town Blues Band, Jarekus Singleton has been nominated for multiple awards by the International Blues Foundation. Everyone from USA Today to Downbeat Magazine has heralded his latest album, Refuse to Lose.

Elle King

Bud Light Stage • 2:20 p.m.

Elle King sings about past loves in her song “Ex’s and Oh’s” and with a voice as mesmerizing as hers, it’s no surprise she’s breaking hearts across the globe. Fun fact: Elle King is the daughter of Rob Schneider.

Star and Micey

FedEx Stage • 2:40 p.m.

Another local act performing on Sunday, Star and Micey are familiar with the bright lights of Beale Street Music Fest. Hometown favorites for quite some time, Star and Micey represent the vastly talented indie rock scene in Memphis.

Scott Weiland and the Wildabouts

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 3:40 p.m.

Formerly of the Stone Temple Pilots, Scott Weiland is another rocker on the Beale Street Music Fest lineup who needs little introduction. With the Wildabouts, Scott Weiland sings over crunchy blues rock and his vocals are as rough around the edges as ever. It might be 2015, but one listen to the Wildabouts and you’d swear the 90s never ended.

Indigenous

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 3:50 p.m.

Indigenous is the project of Mato Nanji, a blues rock veteran of the Yankton Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. Nanji has toured with B.B. King and his songs have been featured on shows like Sons of Anarchy and The Deadliest Catch.

Shovels and Rope

FedEx Stage • 4:15 p.m.

Don’t miss this “sloppy tonk” duo from Charleston, South Carolina, featuring husband and wife team Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst.

Of Mice & Men

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 5:20 p.m.

Heavy metal band Of Mice & Men provide another chance to bang your head when they take the stage on Sunday evening. Fans of Linkin Park should be sure to catch these Rise Recording artists.

Kaiser Chiefs

Bud Light Stage • 5:20 p.m.

Indie-pop masterminds Kasier Chiefs found stardom behind hits like “We’re Coming Home” and “Ruby.” Taking cues from bands like the Strokes and Oasis, Kasier Chiefs should be on the radar of any fan of radio-friendly rock.

Will Tucker

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 5:25 p.m.

Another local who’s played the Beale Street Music Festival, Tucker can regularly be found playing one of many clubs on Beale Street. Don’t let his baby face fool you, this seasoned guitarist can shred with the best of them.

Bela Fleck and Abigail Washburn

FedEx Stage • 5:50 p.m.

Husband and wife duo Bela Fleck and Abigail Washburn will both showcase their banjo skills when the two perform Sunday. On their self-titled debut, Flecks and Washburn’s different playing techniques made for a memorable album that NPR called “welcoming and calm.”

Hozier

Bud Light Stage • 7:00 p.m.

Don’t miss Hozier. End of story.

Rise Against

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 7:00 p.m.

Seven albums into a hiatus-free career, Tim McIlrath and company (including founding bassist Joe Principe) have used the template of melodic hardcore (in this case, a somewhat rougher cousin to pop-punk) to gain a massive following and the band’s strongly held concerns (animal rights and PETA being foremost among them) haven’t seemed to waver over time or due to fame. Rise Against’s last four full-lengths have been produced by Bill Stevenson of the Descendents and ALL, the most recent being last year’s The Black Market.

Tinsley Ellis

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 7:05 p.m.

Blues rocker Tinsley Ellis has thousands of live shows under his belt and has shared the stage with everyone from Stevie Ray Vaughan to Widespread Panic. His latest album, Tough Love, was released earlier this year.

St. Vincent

FedEx Stage • 7:30 p.m.

Anytime a Grammy Award-winning guitarist comes through town, you should make plans to be there. St. Vincent has become a household name behind the tireless work ethic of Annie Clark, whos made an album with David Byrne and toured with everyone from the Black Keys to Death Cab for Cutie before blasting off to superstardom.

Ed Sheeran

Bud Light Stage • 8:40 p.m.

British mega-star Ed Sheeran brings his collection of pop hits to Tom Lee Park Sunday. Sheeran’s been a star abroad for years but recently picked up momentum in the United States after appearing on Taylor Swift’s album Red. Simply put, Sheeran might be the biggest rising star at Beale Street Music Fest this year.

Cage The Elephant

Rockstar Energy Drink Stage • 8:40 p.m.

Cage the Elephant have some major hits under their belt including “Cigarette Daydream” and “Shake Me Down.” Their 2014 album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Top 200, and they’ve toured with everyone from the Black Keys to the Foo Fighters.

Bettye Lavette

Pearl River Resort Blues Tent • 8:45 p.m.

The Detroit soul scene was just beginning to percolate in the early 1960s, when 16-year-old Bettye LaVette made her first recordings for Atlantic. “So many people have asked me, ‘What was it like to cut a record when you were only 16?And I tell them that in 1962 in Detroit thats just what you did,” LaVette told the Memphis Flyer in advance of her first appearance at the Beale Street Music Festival. “Everybody had a record or was cutting a record.” LaVette’s most recent recordings have found her experimenting with classic British rock and folk songs à la Marlene Dietrich. Critical accolades and a revived popularity following the release of Scene of the Crime contradict the old saw about the absence of second acts in America.

Wilco

FedEx Stage • 9:10 p.m.

These Grammy Award-winning alt-rockers are no strangers to headlining music festivals. Fresh off a 20th anniversary tour, Wilco should be primed and ready to close out the 2015 Beale Street Music Festival with a career-spanning performance.