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Get ready for the 31st Annual Memphis Music & Heritage Festival

Sharde Thomas and The Rising Star Fife & Drum Band

For Memphians, the days leading up to Labor Day are synonymous with good local music. For over three decades, the Memphis Music and Heritage Festival has filled the holiday weekend with select local sounds, often reaching far back into the region’s history. This coming Saturday and Sunday are no exception.

One strength of the festival is its eclectic sampling of local cultural traditions. Latino, Native American, gospel, jazz, bluegrass, electronica, hip hop, rockabilly, reggae, rock, and blues of all stripes will be available. This diversity has been cultivated since day one by Judy Peiser, co-founder and executive director of the Center for Southern Folklore, the non-profit that stages the festival. Peiser has just been honored for her dedication to promoting local music and culture with a brass note on Beale Street, to be dedicated on Sunday.

A recurring treasure of the lineup is Jimmy Crosthwait, erstwhile member of Mudboy and Neutrons and creative dynamo of Memphis for over forty years. This year, he’ll be joining country blues master Zeke Johnson, who learned a thing or two from Furry Lewis himself. Guitar virtuoso Luther Dickinson will also bring some folk and blues flavors to the proceedings.

Many other fine performers will grace the five stages (click here for a complete schedule). But surely the highlight will be Sharde Thomas and The Rising Star Fife & Drum Band. Thomas carries on the tradition of her grandfather Otha Turner, playing fife and leading a drum corps that epitomizes country funk and soul. Though they are based in North Mississippi, the band’s appearances in Memphis are all too rare. Not to be missed!

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The 30th Annual Memphis Music and Heritage Festival

The Center for Southern Folklore will turn two blocks of Main Street into a street festival this Labor Day Weekend, complete with live music, arts and crafts, dancers, and chefs from around the city.

Founded in 1972, the Center for Southern Folklore is a nonprofit that documents and presents the music, culture, arts, and rhythms of the South. Center for Southern Folklore Executive Producer Judy Peiser said the Memphis region is what makes the festival so special.

“This year marks our 30th festival. The first was produced in 1982 on Mud Island. From 1988 to the present, we used Court Square, Beale Street, and Main Street as the festival backdrop,” Peiser said.

“The Festival reaffirms the abundance of musical talent and this region’s love of music.”

The two-day festival will feature four outside stages in addition to two indoor stages at the Center for Southern Folklore. While the complete lineup has yet to be announced, festival highlights include Joyce Cobb, Elmo and the Shades, Domingo Montes, the Bell Singers, and Lonnie Harris.

The festival will also honor those who have passed on but where integral to the Center for Southern Folklore, including board member Deanna Lubin and quilt maker and storyteller Hattie Childress. Yvonne Sunshine Pascal, the founder and director of the Millennium Madness Drill Team and Drum Squad, will also be honored. All events at the Memphis Music and Heritage Festival happen between Union and Peabody Place, and all are free to attend. Over 100 performers, chefs, craftspeople, and dancers are scheduled to appear over the 48-hour shindig. For a complete list of bands and activities, visit www.southernfolklore.com.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Memphis Music and Heritage Festival

Bobby Rush

  • Bobby Rush

The most diverse gathering of local music and culture every year, the Center for Southern Folklore’s annual Memphis Music & Heritage Festival will take over the area surrounding Main Street and Peabody Place this weekend, with live music running from late morning thru late night on five stages over two days.

On Saturday, August 31st, chitlin’-circuit soul legend Bobby Rush will headline the Tennessee Arts main stage at 10 p.m. while Memphis roots-punk/art-damage legend Tav Falco will direct his Panther Burns on the Greyhound Stage at 8:45 p.m.

Among many other potential highlights on Saturday are: Hip-hop/soul duo Artistik Approach (2:45 p.m.) and Beale blues stalwart Preston Shannon (4:45 p.m.) on the Tennessee Arts Stage. Indie rockers Mouserocket (3 p.m.) and the latin Aztec Dancers (6 p.m.) on the Greyhound Stage. An interview with local jazz great Joyce Cobb (2:15 p.m.) and a jazz/funk party from Hope Clayburn’s Soul Scrimmage (9:15 p.m.) on the Comcast Stage. A kids’ music performance from University of Memphis musicologist David Evans (1 p.m.) and the jug band Bluff City Backsliders (9 p.m.) on the Center for Southern Folklore Stage.

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Joyce Cobb

  • Joyce Cobb

On Sunday, September 1st, Joyce Cobb will close the festivities as the honored performer at 9:45 p.m. on the Tennessee Arts main stage, while The New Agrarians (songwriters Kate Campbell, Pierce Pettis, and Tom Kimmel) will play the Comcast Stage at 9 p.m.

Among many other potential highlights on Sunday are: Memphis blues/folk inheritors Sons of Mudboy (7:45 p.m.), first-generation rockabilly artist Sonny Burgess (6:45 p.m.) and latin singer Marcela Pinella (4:45 p.m.) on the Tennessee Arts Stage. Vocal gem Susan Marshall (4 p.m.) and Daddy Mack’s Blues Band (8:45 p.m.) on the Greyhound Stage. Opera great Kallen Esperian (3:15 p.m.) singing the blues on the Comcast Stage. Reggae group Chinese Connection Dub Embassy (6:30 p.m.) on the ArtsMemphis Stage.

The event, which includes many cultural and culinary activities beyond the music schedule, is free. You can find a full schedule and other information at southernfolklore.com.