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Memphis Library Foundation To Expand Innovator-in-Residence Program

Thanks to a new grant, the Memphis Library Foundation will be able to further aid in workforce development by helping residents grow in fields such as entrepreneurship, culinary arts, and digital media. This is all part of the foundation’s Innovator-in-Residence program, which will expand as a result of funds from Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development (TNECD).

Today, foundation officials announced they received a $300,000 grant from the department. This represents a portion of $167 million in grants TNECD has allocated across Tennessee for workforce advancement.

“This two-year grant will specifically enable the Foundation to expand upon successful Memphis Public Libraries programs and offer additional resources, expertise, and training to local community members seeking to enhance their digital skills and workforce development opportunities,” Memphis Library Foundation officials said in a statement.

As participants work to sharpen their skills, the program will connect them with professionals such as podcasters, chefs, lawyers, and more, who will help them “monetize their talents” while also contributing to growth in the city. 

​The Small Business & Entrepreneurship Industry Report 2024 by the Greater Memphis Chamber and Greater Memphis Economic Research Group found that as of 2021, small businesses accounted for 98.9 percent of businesses in the area.

“By providing access to professional guidance and resources, we aim to create a robust network of aspiring entrepreneurs, contributing to the overall economic growth in our city,” Christine Weinreich, executive director of Memphis Library Foundation, said.

Memphis has been referred to as a “hotbed for entrepreneurship” by Epicenter Memphis. The organization said the city has an advantage over places like San Francisco and New York, which tend to show “startup saturation.” 

The Urban Libraries Council noted the opportunities this Innovators-in-Residence program opens to the city — specifically to African-American communities the library serves.

“Memphis Public Libraries provides access to resources, opportunity, and hope,” the Urban Libraries Council said. “Cossitt Library serves Downtown, where 52 percent of residents are African American and 14 percent live in poverty. The area faces economic disparities, with wealthy neighborhoods near some of the poorest. Raleigh Library patrons are 76 percent African American, and 26 percent live in poverty.”

The program is tailored to the offerings of each library branch. Cossitt Library was home to the initial pilot of the initiative, which led to Ena Esco’s podcast, Verbally Effective. Weinreich said the grant will allow them to expand to five different innovators as opposed to one.

Other libraries will be involved in the program, including Raleigh Library, which houses an “on-site kitchen” where they will focus on culinary skills and development. Officials said they plan to bring in local chefs to help advise participants on how to secure funding for a business and how to manage restaurants.

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Lisa Nobumoto: Fanning the Flames of the Jazz Masters

Singer Lisa Nobumoto knows a thing or two about jazz history. In fact, when she lived in Los Angeles, she was a protégé of tenor saxophone pioneer Teddy Edwards, and that experience made an indelible impression on her voice and life.

All of her talent and experience will be on full display tonight, when Lisa Nobumoto and Her Sizzling Six will be featured in the Memphis Public Libraries’ Five Fridays of Jazz online music series.

“I’ve been playing with a sextet for the past 32 years,” she notes. “And the original players included Jimmy Cleveland and Teddy Edwards, but there were different instrumentalists. I played with them for four years in L.A., where we were voted the number one unsigned artist by Music Connection magazine.”

Now she’s put together a Memphis version of the group, and they’ve been playing locally for the past few years. “We’re also playing June 27th at the Railgarten,” she says. “Last time we played there, it was packed!”

Tonight’s performance will have a bittersweet quality, as it marks the group’s first show since saxophonist Michael Krepper passed away last year. “He used to play Teddy Edwards’ parts,” Nobumoto says. “Teddy wrote all my arrangements for the sextet. I have about 60 arrangements by him.”

Another event on April 9-10 also honored Krepper’s memory, as Nobumoto staged a massive audio and video recording production of her self-penned tribute to Nancy Wilson. “I put the big band together myself. Mike Krepper was supposed to do that. The show is dedicated to him. He was supposed to take care of the band part, but he passed away last year,” she says.

And what a band she put together: a twenty piece orchestra of the finest Memphis players, plus guest pianist Eric Reed, who teaches at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Photo courtesy Lisa Nobumoto

The recording session, an event in its own right, was the realization of a show that had been scheduled for last April. “Then Covid came along, and our rehearsals slowly came to a halt,” says Nobumoto.

Determined to carry on, the group staged the recording session that will be released as a video and CD later in the year. “What we did was, we took all the chairs out of the Memphis Drum Shop and made it into a rehearsal studio. And we did our recording there. All the guys in the band are from Memphis, though we had a special guest coming into town, a pianist named Eric Scott Reed. He teaches at UT Knoxville. He used to have a band back in L.A., and I had my band, the sextet with Teddy Edwards. I was like 28! At the time, I recorded with Teddy and had a release on Polygram. And recently I was talking to one of the guys at Polygram and he told me Eric was teaching in Knoxville. He’s great.”

Poster for what was to be a live performance of Lisa Nobumoto’s tribute to Nancy Wilson.

“This is all my creation. I wrote the script. And I’m playing Nancy,” Nobumoto explains. “There are 22 songs, and it’s kind of a parody. It’s about her life, but as a parody. Something cute. And I wear things, like my wig is really, really big. Huge. All of the band was spread out, socially distanced. And they were all fitted in Lansky’s jackets. It’s a Memphis thing.

“It’s all through my nonprofit called The Jazz Masters Series, which is sponsoring the band. Its mission is to honor, educate and preserve the music of jazz. Memphis is now the headquarters of the Jazz Masters Series. It was in L.A.” Nobumoto says to expect more large-scale projects from her nonprofit in the near future, including a tribute to Diana Ross.

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Edmund Ford Jr. Snags Memphis Libraries Position

Edmund Ford Jr., who was recently elected as a Shelby County Commissioner and is currently serving his last two weeks on the Memphis City Council, was named the Memphis Public Libraries’ new financial literacy coordinator Monday.

Dan Springer, the city’s deputy director of media affairs said Ford’s role is a newly-created position at the library. The salary is $78,000 per annum. 

A statement from the city on Ford’s new position reads:

“We are pleased to announce the addition of Dr. Edmund Ford, Jr. as our new Financial Literacy Coordinator. Our libraries have long been a central hub of learning, and this position will offer Memphians another important avenue towards financial freedom and stability.

Financial Literacy is one of the cornerstones to help lift citizens out of poverty. Dr. Ford will focus his work with the most impoverished and highest needs citizens primarily in the North and South Memphis areas. As Budget Chair on City Council, Dr. Ford demonstrated his passion for knowledge and strong financial background. Now, he will be able to share that with the greater community.”

Springer said the position is net-neutral, budget-wise, as “there was already a vacancy at the library.”

Ford, who is also employed as a teacher for Shelby County Schools, was elected to the county commission in August, and has yet to resign from the city council.