Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Played Out

It has been obvious to anyone who takes a moment to look that funding the Memphis Music Commission has been a waste of money for some time.

The biggest problem with the commission is that it treats other Memphis music organizations like competition and duplicates their efforts in an attempt to appear relevant. The best example is the fact that they think they need to provide local musicians with performance opportunities. There are plenty of clubs, house shows, and organizations, such as Rocket Science Audio, Goner Records, Ardent Studios, Memphis Rap, and Ditty TV that are better equipped to accomplish that mission and have a greater reach.

The commission’s amateurish performance videos have a very low number of views on YouTube, which are tangible, measurable stats for what these programs are contributing to Memphis music. They have no platform, fans, or following. Who do they think they are helping? 

To put it into perspective, my former organization, LiveFromMemphis.com, has been dormant for three years. In our time, we filmed and recorded thousands of Memphis music performances. The content we created is still generating views on our YouTube channel. Around 1.4 million views and counting. If Live From Memphis had been granted $250,000 a year (the Music Commission’s annual budget from the city), we could have more than quadrupled our output, as well as our reach. Can you imagine what would happen if MemphisRap.com, Goner Records, or RocketScienceAudio.com were similarly funded?

Then there was the not-for-profit Memphis Music Foundation, which, over four or five years, provided many of the same services as the Music Commission while blowing through somewhere around $4 million of private funds. Can anyone tell us what those funds did for the local music industry?

As for Councilman Jim Strickland’s proposal to fund Memphis Music Town, how will they be different? While I agree with Strickland that the Memphis Music Commission, in its current state of over-paid staff and lack of any measurable accountability, should not continue to receive funding, I fail to see how simply shifting tax dollars to a not-for-profit organization solves the problem. One glimpse at the Memphis Music Town web presence tells me that it’s a bureaucratic bad idea.

Why continue to provide educational resources to musicians when there’s no infrastructure for success? What’s the point of equipping musicians with industry knowledge when very few opportunities to put that knowledge to use exist? Without a focus on developing local industry, we are simply better preparing our musicians for when they eventually leave town in search of opportunity.

Memphis musicians don’t need another resource center that teaches them how to manage a MySpace account or to sign them up for antiquated organizations such as NARAS. Memphis certainly does not need to turn over its only source of music funds to an organization serving only one genre of music.

Memphis musicians need innovation. They need a way to be seen and heard beyond local showcases at the Hard Rock Cafe. They need an army of online content creators with as many avenues to get their music out to the world as possible. There are shows going on in all parts of the city. Go film them. Go record them. Help them get their stuff on the internet, where fans discover music today.

Don’t give millions of dollars to one organization. Instead, fund smaller, grassroots content creators, because you never know when one of those may blow up into something bigger. Maybe if Darius Benson (a 20-something content creator and the cover story subject of the Flyer’s May 7th issue) had received local funding or had an infrastructure to help move his career forward, he’d be staying in Memphis instead of heading to Los Angeles in search of greener pastures.

Fans don’t get behind an educational institution. They get behind artists, their favorite bloggers, records labels, studios, and TV/web shows. It takes a lot less capital to fund these kinds of style-curators and content producers and raises the community as a whole.

Please don’t throw money away on old industry or a not-for-profit educational model. Fund excellence, fund risk takers, fund innovators. The Music Commission, Music Foundation, Memphis Music Town or whatever they may call themselves in the future, are the old guard from a dying industry model. Getting rid of them is a no-brainer. Fold Memphis music and film into business and economic development and quit treating music like a charity case.

Instead, invest in its development by putting money in the hands of artists, content developers, and the infrastructure that directly supports them.

Categories
Music Music Features

Collective Front

In recent years, Memphis has had no shortage of music-industry organizations looking to help shape the city’s scene. The city boasts a very active regional chapter of the national Recording Academy, a government-funded Memphis & Shelby County Music Commission forever trying to find its footing, and the Memphis Music Foundation, a private group spun off from the commission that has in the past year ramped up its staff and programming.

Is another large-scale music organization really needed? According to the 32-and-counting local music businesses that have come together to form Music Memphis, the answer is yes.

The organization had its genesis at last year’s South By Southwest Music Festival, where Third Man guitarist Jeff Schmidtke organized a Memphis music showcase with help from his music-enthusiast friend Eric Ellis. In the process, they struck up a relationship with Louis Jay Meyers, a SXSW founder who relocated to Memphis a few years ago as the executive director of the Folk Alliance.

Back in Memphis, the trio called around to local music businesses to organize meetings with the purpose of finding out how everyone could help each other. Music Memphis was born.

“Music Memphis is a collection of Memphis music business, primarily focusing on people who deal with consumers,” Meyers says. “It was created with one purpose in mind: Put butts in the seats, get people into record stores, create more activity for local music businesses.”

Among the 32 local entities listed as Music Memphis members on the group’s website are record stores (Goner, Shangri-La, Spin Street, Cat’s), clubs (Hi-Tone, New Daisy, Minglewood Hall), labels (Makeshift, Madjack, Archer), music stores (Amro, Memphis Drum Shop, Guitar Center), and other organizations (Folk Alliance, Memphis Rap.com, Live From Memphis).

Despite the crowded field of music organizations in town, Meyers thinks Music Memphis has a niche of its own.

“We’ve worked hard not to be redundant,” he says. “Our goal is not to supplant other organizations. My experience is that most organizations in the music industry tend to be focused toward the artists. We’ve got people promoting Memphis to the world, and we’ve got people helping musicians with career development, but there was nobody dealing with the consumer aspect of the music business.”

Right now, Music Memphis is a pretty loose-knit group, but Meyers says the organization will be applying for legal nonprofit status and will be forming a board of directors. Most funding, however, is likely to be internal.

“A goal was for us not to pursue funding from governments and foundations and stuff like that,” Meyers says.

For Meyers, Schmidtke, and Ellis, all transplants to Memphis, motivation seems to be getting more locals participating in and appreciating the city’s music scene, with Meyers and Ellis both citing outreach and cultural development in East Memphis and the suburbs.

“Jeff and I are both from New Orleans, but I’ve never been in a city that, across the board, in so many genres, has this much talent,” Ellis says.

“It’s been awhile since we’ve had a real music city in America, the way Austin was at one time and Seattle was at one time,” Meyers says. “Memphis has the ability to be that music city.”

Here are some of the first initiatives Music Memphis is focusing on:

Memphis Music Night at Grizzlies Games: The organization has created a partnership with the Grizzlies to program a “Memphis Music Night” at one home game each month this season. The first one is on Saturday, November 22nd, against the Utah Jazz. Local music acts will perform throughout the arena — in the lobby, in each of the four restaurant/lounges, at halftime, and for the national anthem. In addition, the Grizzlies are supplying game tickets for Music Memphis to distribute among its member organizations to use as incentives to drum up business.

Music Memphis Card: The organization is working on a discount card to be purchased from member organizations and to be used for discounts and other opportunities to drive business. “Let’s say Minglewood Hall has a show, and they know they’ll have about 300 tickets they aren’t going to have sold,” Meyers says, providing an example.

“They could have a 2-for-1 special for Music Memphis card-holders. The idea is direct promotion to consumers.”

TV Show: The most ambitious of projects Music Memphis has announced is the development of a weekly local-music television program.

“It’s gone through a metamorphosis,” Meyers says of the project’s status. “We’re in the process of confirming the venue to shoot it in. We don’t know exactly what the final product will be like. It will have a live element but will be pre-recorded.”

Meyers says the group has been offered a weekly timeslot with a local network station. “I believe we’re looking for a pilot episode in December with a goal of launching on a weekly basis in mid-to-late January,” he says.

It sounds like a daunting undertaking for a new organization that currently lacks funding or central leadership, but Meyers says the television piece is key:

“We feel like we need the TV show to market everything else. We don’t want to be preaching to the choir. We want to reach the people who aren’t going out to clubs.”

South By Southwest: Promoting Memphis at Austin’s South by Southwest Music Festival was part of the origin of the Music Memphis idea, and Meyers, Ellis, and Schmidtke plan on building on this pre-existing relationship, working with the Memphis Music Foundation on “a massive Memphis presence at SXSW,” according to Meyers.

“As Music Memphis, we’re producing a second showcase and working on other unofficial events, but in a complementary role with the foundation,” Meyers says.

“Last year, when Jeff basically organized that whole thing, about a month later, SXSW called us and said, ‘We need what you did last year on paper.’ They’re taking what we did last year to other music cities and selling it: ‘Look at what Memphis did. You can do this.'”

MySpace.com/MusicMemphis

Categories
Music Music Features

Lord T’s New Gig

Cameron Mann has been the studio manager at Young Avenue Sound recording studio in Cooper-Young for the past few years, though Memphians may know him better as his alter-ego, Lord T — the white-wigged half of the comedic rap duo Lord T & Eloise. Last week, Mann, no longer on staff at Young Avenue Sound, added a new title to his music resume: He’s been hired as the director of music industry programs for the Memphis Music Foundation, working under foundation president Dean Deyo.

Mann will oversee the opening of the foundation’s Memphis Music Resource Center, which is housed within the foundation’s South Main offices and is slated to open May 30th.

The resource center is meant to be an educational and support mechanism open to the entire Memphis music community.

“What Memphis really lacks is a music-business infrastructure,” Mann says, citing that the city’s music scene has long been “DIY” (“do it yourself”) and asserting that the resource center will be a way for the foundation to help local musicians help themselves.

“What we hope to create is a place where anyone can come in,” Mann says.

The center will have computers loaded with software to help bands work on aspects of their career, from researching music-biz topics to designing show posters and CD covers. The center also will have an audiovisual room with a Pro Tools rig (purchased during the tenure of former commission and later foundation head Rey Flemings), which will be used to conduct recording workshops led by local engineers.

“We’re consultants, essentially, and we want to be able to assist [local musicians] in all areas of their work,” Mann says.

Mann began phasing himself out of the Young Avenue Sound operation a few months ago (the studio is owned by Mann’s father, Don Mann) and was looking for another avenue within the local music scene. When he saw the foundation job listing posted in March, “it spoke to me on a personal level,” he says.

“I’ve been waiting for one of the [local music] organizations to do something like this that’s real,” Mann says. “I think it’s been disappointing to the arts community that [these organizations] haven’t been able to do something tangible.”

Mann’s hire is the first of what could be a series of support-staff hires for the foundation, with a marketing position, a multimedia specialist, and a business coordinator potentially to follow.

Don’t expect Mann’s new gig to halt the momentum of his musical alter ego, though. Mann reports that Lord T & Eloise are putting the finishing touches on a sophomore album that features cameos from local rap stars Eightball, Al Kapone, and Nakia Shine. Mann hopes to have the album ready for release by mid-to-late June.

The Stax Museum of American Soul Music and Stax Music Academy welcome the family of Stax legend Otis Redding to town this weekend. Redding’s widow, Zelma, and his three children, sons Otis III and Dexter Redding and daughter Karla Redding-Andrews, will be in town for two events.

The family will be guests at the music academy’s SNAP! After School Spring Concert at the University of Memphis’ Michael D. Rose Theater Saturday, May 17th. Otis III and Dexter will perform with the students. The concert starts at 7 p.m.; admission is $5.

The next night, Sunday, May 18th, the Redding family will sit on a panel discussion/Q&A at the museum’s Studio A to talk about Otis Redding as both artist and family man. Conversations with the Reddings will take place from 5 to 7 p.m.; admission is $10 or free to museum members. In addition, Stax’s current exhibit of items from Zelma Redding’s personal collection, Otis Redding: From Macon to Memphis, has been extended through May 31st.

The latest edition of The Ardent Sessions, a monthly concert/recording session hosted by Rachel Hurley, is up on BreakthruRadio.com. This month’s concert, recorded at the Midtown studio in April, features local rockers Lucero celebrating their 10th anniversary. You can hear Lucero’s Ardent performance at BreakthruRadio.com/index.php?show=3784.

Categories
News

Flyer’s Memphis Music Foundation Story Draws Fire

The Flyer‘s September 13th cover story on the Memphis Music Foundation/Commission has drawn fire from local musicians. From this week’s “Letters to the Editor”: “Dean Deyo is quoted as saying, ‘We create talent.’ The Memphis Music Foundation creates talent? Whew. Examples, please?

“It’s also reported that he ‘has entered negotiations to bring an independent recording studio to Memphis’ and bargain for tax breaks in the effort. Excuse me, but wouldn’t Ardent, Young Avenue Sound, Royal Recording, Sam Phillips Recording, Cotton Row Recording, and countless other Memphis independent recording studios like to have tax breaks too?

“Musicians I know shake their heads in dismay and disgust at such big plans to tie ‘economic development’ to the ‘music industry.’ We’re kind of used to hearing it by now …”

Read more letters. And write your own to brucev@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Standing at the Crossroads

A longtime Memphis music insider calls the history of the Memphis and Shelby County Music Commission “labyrinthine.” The organization has existed under different names. It has changed agendas. The doors to the presidency and board of directors seem to revolve at a dizzying pace.

Public perception — insofar as Internet message boards and local-interest blogs can gauge — is that the commission has absorbed ample public funds and produced nothing enduring in return. Plenty of confusion remains, though, about what the commission is actually empowered and financed to do.

When asked how much money the music commission has cost, and to what results, Shelby County finance officer Jim Huntsiger reacts this way:

“That’s a good question,” he says.

Huntsiger explains that the county provided an annual grant in the $150,000 range for operating costs beginning in 2000 but that a scheduled, gradual reduction brought the county government funding to zero as of fiscal year 2008. The city continues to fund the jointly governed organization to the tune of $125,000 annually, while the county’s patience seems to have expired.

Last month, the Shelby County Board of Commissioners voted down a resolution to transfer $50,000 to the music commission for the purpose — in classic music-commission-style vagueness — of “enhancing the music industry.”

With government support waning and a suspicious public looking on, the embattled Memphis and Shelby County Music Commission is at a crossroads.

The music commission and the Memphis Music Foundation, the commission’s fund-raising arm since 2003, split earlier this year. The commission then voted former Motown Records producer Ralph Sutton — who came to the city three years ago to run House of Blues Studio D — its new chairman of the board.

Sutton hopes to adjust the music commission’s focus to the new rules of the music industry, empowering artists with business training and stressing independence — something his experience suits him for. “The most intriguing part of the challenge would be to put what I’ve learned from people like [Motown Records founder] Berry Gordy to work here,” he says.

Standing outside the House of Blues Studio D off Lamar Avenue, Sutton says he is so enamored of his new surroundings that he sometimes records the sounds of the Memphis night. Though Sutton has engineered and produced records by Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, and other giants of the Motown sound, the chorus of cicadas that fills the air after dark in Memphis is new music to the Los Angeles native.

Though the county funds for the music commission have dried up, the city’s share is enough to pay a new executive director. Sutton will participate in that search — the executive director is jointly appointed by the city and county mayors, but the commission board will have some input in the decision — and some insiders say that he needs to look no further than the nearest mirror for the best candidate.

Sutton is game. When asked how he’d do things differently from former commission president Rey Flemings — whose self-interested leadership coupled with the organization’s inertia during his tenure symbolize the commission’s failures in the public mind — Sutton says, “I’ve already been validated.”

Sutton says that certain of the commission’s struggles are attributable to unqualified leadership, mistakes the commission should have learned from. “The press and the public have a right to wonder what the commission was doing,” Sutton says. “The [next] executive director would need to be a true music professional. The city has tried to use a marketing person and a fireman. It has to be someone who has industry connections and the understanding of the creativity and human characteristics of a musician, record producer, or songwriter. It’s important that we select someone who has a running knowledge of the industry.”

While Flemings left the commission for greener financial pastures, Sutton says he’s already been there. “I’m human, and I believe that we’re all striving toward more recognition and better opportunity. I could always go work for Lionel [Richie] or Stevie [Wonder]. But I don’t really have an interest in that. I would prefer to participate in the rebirth of something here.”

It’s simple enough for Sutton to claim greater commitment to the city than Flemings showed, but he views the tasks ahead of the commission with a pragmatism missing from Flemings’ plans, which included bringing the MTV Video Music Awards to Memphis.

“We’re not attractive to major companies right now,” Sutton says. “Sony’s not thinking about coming down here. Universal’s not going to open an office here until we can show them that we have some infrastructure. Industry professionals as a whole need to know this information.”

The rebirth Sutton envisions will require planning for sustained growth and ground-up music industry development built around knowledgeable artists. Sutton says that business-savvy artists enjoy a heightened opportunity to succeed in the independent-driven digital music age.

“People can’t expect us to be able to start doing things like an established city like Nashville,” explains Sutton. “The realistic thing is to recognize that we have things to learn. We need to start industry programs for musicians here. What is a publishing-rights organization [PRO]? What’s the difference between a PRO and a publishing company? They need to know those types of things to know how to make a living. We don’t know who’s going to be a star, but we can help people make a living. We’re in a digital world now, and we have to start with the little things and work our way up.”

Justin Fox Burks

Left: Dean Deyo; Right: Ralph Sutton

Rather than aiming for a one-time big splash like the MTV awards, Sutton defines the role of the new music commission as empowering artists through high-level industry connections.

“ASCAP and BMI would be down here in a heartbeat,” he says. “They wouldn’t open offices, but they’d send high-ranking people to do seminars and Q&A’s. A digital music company like iTunes would love to come and help us with the process of getting our songs on there. We need to learn from Concord and gain from the publicity they’re bringing Stax. They’re the biggest independent record label in the world, and they’re masters of repackaging. They’re showing us how we can do this.”

In the meantime, the commission can still help musicians out in a pinch. They’ve used money from the unused executive director’s salary to subsidize local events like Goner Fest and organizations such as the Center for Southern Folklore. They also administer a health-care program for 15 qualifying music professionals, and they could accommodate more.

Finally, Sutton stresses visibility and accountability for the commission in the local music community. Monthly music-commission meetings take place at the Central Library. “If you’ve got a complaint, come on and say it. If I can’t answer it, then it’s something we’ll have to work on. We need to put ourselves in a position where the musicians can come and access the commission,” he says.

When asked how the commission will be financed after losing its fund-raising apparatus, Sutton says, “That’s going to be another thing. We’ve got to get some real sponsors.”

The organizations — the music commission and the Memphis Music Foundation — have begun to coexist, according to their leaders. “We’re at the front end of getting our relationship back,” Sutton says. “There was some confusion on both sides, but with Dean Deyo’s leadership at the music foundation, it’s getting better. They’re into promoting Memphis music, fostering new artists, and preserving the music. So, if they can do those things, we’re always going to get along.”

“We expect to support things they do, and we expect them to support things we do,” Deyo says.

The Memphis Music Foundation, launched in 2003 as the fund-raising arm of the music commission, split from the commission shortly after Deyo assumed leadership on January 1st. The foundation represents the influence of Memphis Tomorrow, a behind-the-scenes coalition of corporate leaders from the city’s largest companies that encourages economic development here. In 2002, following a series of economic development surveys, the organization targeted three industries as crucial to economic growth in Memphis: logistics and distribution, biotechnology, and music. Memphis Tomorrow formed committees within its membership, focusing on each of the target industries. Phil Trenary, CEO of Pinnacle Airlines, for example, chairs the music-industry development committee.

The foundation came out of the need for fund-raising beyond the $300,000 or so initially approved from the city-county arrangement. Memphis Tomorrow initiated a strategic plan for the music commission, which, in light of personnel changes and the commission/foundation divorce, is the only document available to gauge the organizations’ effectiveness over time.

The plan was based in part on an extensive survey of local music-industry professionals called “Get Loud.” The programs outlined in the plan were to have provided tasks for the commission and foundation. It shows the challenges facing the industry at the time — the lack of professional development opportunities here was cited as the chief obstacle to overall industry growth — as well as a series of proposed solutions, including a Memphis music festival that featured Memphis acts from across generations and genres.

A proposed Sam Phillips Independent Music Center hung its fate on a network of music-industry service “providers” who would donate their time to the center and assist Memphis music professionals. No such providers were identified in the plan, and their recruitment doesn’t seem to have been accounted for.

A proposed Memphis Music Venture Fund never grew beyond the idea that it would include $10 million in assets to invest in worthy local music businesses. Neither did a “music business district” or a Memphis counterpart to the pioneering live-music TV program Austin City Limits. A Memphis “Grand Ole Opry”-style venue, featuring perfect acoustics and state-of-the-art technical infrastructure, located at the corner of Beale and Third, obviously failed to materialize. The plan called for “sponsorships from major electronics manufacturers,” not otherwise identified, to fund the venue.

The strategic plan’s priority schedule rated developing the now-defunct music commission Web site a 10, for highest priority. Likewise, a “global concert event,” a Memphis Music Conference, and something called the “digital distribution initiative” were given top-priority ratings without ever materializing.

Flemings, who was hired in 2003, made an annual salary of $129,950, not including benefits, as president of the combined music commission/foundation. His hiring, insiders say, reflected the will of Memphis Tomorrow and alienated music-oriented members of the commission/foundation board to please the business-minded members. The rift foreshadowed this year’s amicable divorce of the music commission and music foundation, which both organizations deem as mutually beneficial.

The Memphis Music Foundation can now operate privately to promote economic development in the Memphis music industry. “We create talent. It’s just that when we create talent, their attorney is in Atlanta, their studio is in Nashville, and their publicist is in L.A. We want those people here in Memphis,” Deyo says.

While the music commission focuses on connecting local artists to outside resources, the foundation will concentrate on bringing music business to Memphis. “We’re not a foundation to hand out money,” Deyo says. “But if there are things we can do to help with our resources, we’d like to do what we can to help.”

The foundation plans to move into new offices at 431 South Main on October 1st. Deyo says his group can function more effectively without having its books open, like the music commission must do as a public entity.

“If you’re a public body, everything you do can be discussed in public,” Deyo says. “You have to give information to anyone anytime they want it. When you’re negotiating a deal and there’s another city competing for that deal, we don’t want them to know what our deal is.”

Deyo has entered negotiations to bring an independent recording studio to Memphis. He bargains for tax breaks for the prospective business and entices them with other incentives. “We started out against six different cities, and now it’s down to us and New Orleans. I don’t want New Orleans to know what I’m offering, and that’s hard to do when you’re a public body,” Deyo explains.

The potential studio relocation is precisely the sort of project the foundation will focus on in its new incarnation. “Our goal is economic development,” explains Deyo. “In 1973, the music industry in Memphis was the third-largest employer. There were all these different pieces of it that we lost. We want to regain that.”

Deyo says that the foundation will open a musician resource center at its South Main facility to provide up and coming musicians with “knowledge, networks, and connections,” he says. “We’re not going to start a record label. We’re not going to do anything but provide them with a place where they develop a marketing brochure for a band, talk about legal needs, or ask any question about the music business. We’ll provide answers. We won’t tell them what to do, but we’re going to give musicians access to the knowledge of how other bands who have made it have done it.”

In order to establish the music business in Memphis, the foundation must first establish the legitimacy of music and the opportunity it represents to the business community at-large.

“Memphis music is well thought of outside Memphis,” Deyo says. “I couldn’t raise 50 bucks in Memphis today to fund a music business. The business community considers it risky and not for any particular reason. It’s just kind of an attitude. My background with Time Warner helped me build relationships with CEOs of companies here. Part of my job is to rebuild the credibility of the music industry in the eyes of the business community.

“There is a lot to do. I don’t know if we will ever get back to where we were in 1973. That’s pretty heady stuff. I see it as something we don’t have to build from scratch or reconfigure our education system for,” Deyo says. “It can be part of the city’s economic engine and provide jobs.”

Categories
Music Music Features

Flemings Feedback

“There are two sides to every story,” Memphis Music Foundation president Rey Flemings said last week.

Responding to last week’s Local Beat column — which reported that multiple sources close to the foundation say that Flemings is on his way out and will likely move from the foundation to a position with Justin Timberlake‘s organization — Flemings is now saying, simply, “I have not resigned.”

Flemings wouldn’t elaborate on his future but did have plenty to say about his three-year tenure:

“Look at the MTV Video Music Awards story. We went out to get ’em [in 2004], and we didn’t get it. It’s easy, in hindsight, to say we shouldn’t have tried to court the VMAs, but if MTV told you, ‘We’re seriously considering bringing them here, and this could have a $40 million impact,’ what would you do? We had to take that shot, and just because we failed to get the VMAs one year doesn’t mean that we’ll never get them.”

And, Flemings said, although we lost the opportunity to host the 2005 VMAs, we’re winners in the end. “The last time Viacom produced a music-related show in Memphis was [for the MTV Sports and Music Festival] in 1997,” he noted. “They had such a bad experience that they hadn’t been back. But since we brought the top brass here, Viacom-owned stations MTV, VH1, and BET have shot 18 programs in Memphis, including My Block: Memphis, Motormouth, and My Super Sweet Sixteen.

“With 800,000 people watching those shows,” he said proudly, “we think it’s a good thing.”

Flemings cited the Court Square Concert Series, now in its second season, an unsigned-artists vehicle dubbed ND Radio (twice-monthly urban and gospel programs broadcast on WHRK K97-FM and WHAL 95.7-FM and downloadable as iTunes podcasts), and educational seminars as positive results of his tenure at the Memphis & Shelby County Music Commission and, later, the Memphis Music Foundation.

“It’s not all Rey Flemings’ decision,” he said. “I have about 50 bosses, because I serve two boards. It’s a balancing act between all these competing interests and objectives, and nobody wants to pay for most of these programs. Do the math: How far can you really spend $150,000 of public money? I put together the digital-music proposal in three weeks, but it was a $750,000 deal, and we couldn’t find the money for it. The music commission’s Web site is still in development, because we don’t have money to pay for it.

“We’ve got $400,000 raised for the Sam Phillips Resource Center, part of the University of Memphis‘ music-business program,” he continued, “but the first three years of operations will cost an estimated $900,000. We’re not gonna open until we’ve got the funds to do so, but as soon as we reach $500,000, we’ll begin an executive search. I’ve written the business plan, and by the time we’re done, I will have personally raised every dollar for it.

“So many people throw out a few events that look good, but the lives of local musicians never change,” Flemings said. “We’ve had 30 years of self-congratulatory concerts and dinners in this town, but after everyone pats themselves on the back and goes home, nobody’s sold any more music.

“I’m not sitting up here, just chillin’ and looking out for Rey, and I think anyone who works for me would agree,” he said. “I genuinely care about Memphis music. If this takes years, so be it. This shit isn’t simple.”

Flemings’ focus is economic development. “I’m doing all this grunt work trying to get a big boulder — the local music industry — out of a stationary position. It’s been 30 years since we’ve had a music industry in Memphis. I can’t create that in three years.”

While he demurred on naming corporations, he said that he’s got “a number of things on the table” which will eventually benefit Memphis’ music and entertainment industry.

“It’s a farce to say I’ve done nothing for local music,” Flemings said. “The only thing we’ve done a really poor job of is publicizing our successes, but with the work we’re doing, I feel that I’ll be vindicated. What’s the end result? I think everybody’s trying to judge this thing a little too prematurely.”

After 14 years operating the Midtown studio Memphis Soundworks, owner Posey Hedges has announced he will close the studio and fold his operation into the studios at Young Avenue Sound. Hedges will hold an open-house sale of equipment and furnishings not making the move at 10 a.m. Wednesday, September 20th. Memphis Soundworks is located at 89 N. Cooper.

Categories
Music Music Features

On the Move

Just a little more than three years after he was appointed president of the Memphis & Shelby County Music Commission (and later, president of the Memphis Music Foundation, a private, nonprofit offshoot), Rey Flemings has flown the coop to work for Justin Timberlake‘s organization. Sources say that Flemings stepped down from his post a month ago, although no official announcement has been made and Flemings continues to be listed as the organization’s president on the joint commission/foundation Web site, MemphisMusic.org. Word has it that Flemings hopes to run the rumored Stax Records relaunch, along with Timberlake and his stepfather Paul Harless. Reached by cell phone, Flemings declined to comment on the situation.

It’s easy to say that the music commission will be better off without him. During his tenure, Flemings did little more than bring a portion of the New Orleans-based Voodoo Fest to town, post-Katrina. He failed to follow through on most of his original goals, which included plans to digitally distribute music by local artists, relocate a major music conference to Memphis, or even create a viable, timely, and artist-friendly Web site. Even the commission’s involvement with the Voodoo Fest came under scrutiny earlier this year, when organizers said that the city failed to ante up some $50,000 pledged as a sponsor of the event.

Whoever takes the job, however, will face a Sisyphean task: keeping local government, musicians, and the private sector on the same page about the future of Memphis music while honoring its past; bringing industry, beyond recording studios, to town; and balancing the needs of mega-successful homegrown artists like Three 6 Mafia with those of up-and-comers from every genre.

WEVL-FM 89.9 deejay Hayden Jackson has also left some mighty big shoes to fill. Since the Memphis Beat host moved to Chicago, Jeffrey Evans of The Gibson Bros. and ’68 Comeback fame has been filling in on the microphone. “I’m trying to have a little fun and stay on this side of the F-word,” jokes Evans, who describes his radio persona as “a composite character of inspirational people like Dewey Phillips, the Geeker in Your Speaker (George Klein), and the Mojo Man, a guy I’d hear on WOHO in Ohio, where I grew up.”

Evans, who has also pinch-hit on WEVL’s popular Friday night show Rockhouse, says that deejaying on air has been somewhat of a revelation. “Your record collection takes on a whole new meaning when you share it with somebody. There’s nothing like having a captive audience who you can share stuff like Moms Mabley doing ‘Abraham, Martin, and John,'” he happily notes.

Shangri-La Records employee Andrew McCalla — who spins records at local clubs under the name Buck Wilders — is likely to get Jackson’s slot full-time, however. “In clubs, I’m trying to make people dance. On WEVL, I’ll get to play more Memphis stuff — gospel and everything,” says McCalla, who lists late WDIA morning host Rufus Thomas as his favorite Memphis deejay of all time.

In the meantime, Evans is gearing up for Gonerfest III, slated for September 28th through 30th at the Buccaneer Lounge and the Hi-Tone Café (Evans and Ross Johnson will also conduct special tours of Sun Studio on Saturday, September 30th). Tickets for the three-day fest are now available at Goner Records or via Goner-Records.com.

Other news: Producer Doug Easley just cut an album with singer-songwriter Willy Mason at Longview Farms studio in Massachusetts, to be released on Astralwerks later this year. Scott Bomar recently wrapped demo sessions with longtime Justin Timberlake cohort Matthew Speaks (aka Matt Morris) and drummer Willie Hall. The trio recorded at House of Blues, Young Avenue Sound, and Ardent. Lucero‘s latest, Rebels, Rogues & Sworn Brothers, is scheduled to drop on September 26th. Produced by David Lowery and Alan Weatherhead at Sound of Music studio in Richmond, Virginia, the album features Memphis keyboard player Rick Steff, who plans to tour with the group this fall. Look for Lucero at the New Daisy Theatre on October 28th.