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Memphis Music Hall of Fame Inducts Seven Heroes

“Hold On, I’m Coming,” “Cry Me a River,” “Behind Closed Doors,” “Have Guitar, Will Travel,” “Grinder Man Blues,” “Green Onions,” “Two Cigarettes in the Dark.” What do all these iconic songs have in common? They were all written/recorded by Memphis folk, amazing artists who rode the charts, started trends in popular music, or just flat-out rocked like no other. These song titles belong to the likes of Sam & Dave, Justin Timberlake, Charlie Rich, Scotty Moore, Memphis Slim, Al Jackson, Jr., and Alberta Hunter, all pioneers of their respective genres, all distinctly Memphis-made musicians who left their mark (or are still leaving it) on the music world.

Yes, it’s safe to say that Memphis is home to some of the greatest to ever take the stage, and now, thanks to a new location for the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, these groundbreaking artists will be remembered forever. Saturday’s festivities at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts will center around top-notch musical performances and tributes, with honorees Justin Timberlake, Sam Moore and Scotty Moore all scheduled to appear. This year’s honorees join the 47 previous inductees including B.B. King, Elvis Presley, Big Star, Carl Perkins, Sam Phillips, Otis Redding, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Howlin’ Wolf, and other world-changing musicians, bringing the total number of Memphis Music Hall of Fame inductees to 54. The induction ceremony will be produced by Royal Studios’ Boo Mitchell, and Mitchell will bring back the Hi Rhythm Section to serve as house band for the evening. 

Justin Timberlake

Let’s start with the obvious. In the world of local heroes, Justin Timberlake is unrivaled. The boy-band-member-turned-pop-icon is one of the most successful musicians to ever come out of Memphis, and his collection of nine Grammy Awards and four Emmy Awards make him the “headliner” of Saturday’s ceremony. Timberlake has kept Memphis music on the popular music map like no other current musician, and quite frankly his induction is long overdue.

Charlie Rich started out as a Sun Records session player, recording songs with Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis before embarking on his own successful career in country music. Rich reached No. 1 on the country charts with hits like “Behind Closed Doors,” and “The Most Beautiful Girl,” but the singer also borrowed a little something from many genres, and his songs included elements of jazz, rockabilly, soul, and blues. Rich passed away in 1995, but thanks to the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, his music will be once again celebrated, 20 years after his death.

Samuel Moore and Dave Prater (known simply as Sam & Dave) are widely regarded as the greatest soul duo of all time, mostly thanks to their domination of the music charts during their time working together. The duo produced 10 consecutive Top 20 singles and three consecutive Top 10 LPs, and the pair was instrumental in bringing soul music to white audiences. Prater passed away in 1988, but Moore is scheduled to appear on Saturday night.

Memphis Slim has been covered by everyone from Ray Charles to Jimi Hendrix, and his music from the ’40s and ’50s went on to become blues standards. Slim passed away in 1988, but his legacy lives on at the Stax-affiliated Memphis Slim House, a place for Memphis musicians of all kinds to learn, collaborate, and hone their craft.

Getting his start as Elvis Presley’s session guitarist, Scotty Moore helped define the era of rock-and-roll that put Memphis on the map. Imitated by many but duplicated by none, Moore is also a member of the Rockabilly Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Moore also cracked the Top 30 of Rolling Stone‘s 100 Greatest Guitarists and provided an intimate look at Elvis Presley with his book That’s Alright, Elvis: The Untold Story of Elvis’s First Guitarist and Manager.

Alberta Hunter and Al Jackson, Jr. round out Saturday’s list of honorees. Hunter is already a member of the Blues Hall of Fame, and her classic song “Downhearted Blues” was included in the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry in 2002. Jackson, Jr. is best-known as the timekeeper in Booker T. and the MG’s, but he also performed as a session drummer for Tina Turner, Eric Clapton, and Al Green, among others.

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Jimmy Fallon, Keith Richards to appear at MMHOF

Keith Richards will be in Memphis Saturday night for the Memphis Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

This Saturday night, seven Memphis musicians will be inducted in the Memphis Music Hall of Fame. Alberta Hunter, Al Jackson Jr., Scotty Moore, Charlie Rich, Sam & Dave, and Justin Timberlake will all be honored at the induction ceremony on Saturday night, however it was just announced that Jimmy Fallon will induct long-time friend Justin Timberlake and Keith Richards will induct Scotty Moore.

Scheduled musical performers for the 2015 Memphis Music Hall of Fame include Steve Cropper, guitarist and former member of Booker T. and the MGs, who will join famed drummers Jim Keltner and Steve Jordan in tribute to inductee Al Jackson, Jr. Tracy Nelson, blues vocalist and lead singer for Mother Earth will be performing in tribute to inductee Memphis Slim.

Also, scheduled to perform will be Grammy-winning R&B artist, Melanie Fiona. Charlie Rich’s son, musician Charlie Rich, Jr. will also honor his father in song.  You can read our coverage of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony at the Cannon Center in the latest issue of the Memphis Flyer, hitting news stands now. For more information on the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, click here, and to purchase tickets click here, or call 1-800-745-3000. 

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Remembering Ben Cauley of the Bar-Kays

Isaac Washington

Ben Caulley continued to play professionally after surving the plane crash that killed Otis Redding.

The legendary Bar-Kays trumpeter Ben Cauley passed away late Monday night at the age of 67. Cauley was most known as the lone survivor of the plane crash that killed Otis Redding and Bar-Kays members Phalon Jones, Carl Cunningham, Jimmy King and Ronnie Caldwell. He was 20 years old when the plane went down. Cauley returned to the crash site at Lake Monona in 2007 for the 40th anniversary. “I knew one day I would be back,” he told an AP reporter. “There were a number of times that I thought about it but didn’t have the strength. I’m coming this time.” 

After the crash, Cauley experienced a lifetime of success as a horn player, re-forming the Bar-Kays with bass player James Alexander and playing on the iconic Isaac Hayes album Hot Buttered Soul. Cauley also toured with Aretha Franklin, and The Doobie Brothers, among others. The Bar-Kays were inducted into the Memphis Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2013. 

Remembering Ben Cauley of the Bar-Kays (3)

Remembering Ben Cauley of the Bar-Kays

Remembering Ben Cauley of the Bar-Kays (2)

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Memphis Music Hall of Fame to Announce 2015 Inductees

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame opens this Friday.

After nine months of construction and preparation, the Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum will celebrate the grand opening of the new Memphis Music Hall of Fame museum at 6 p.m. on Friday, August 21st. The new museum is located at 126 Beale Street at Second Street, in the same entertainment complex as Hard Rock Cafe and Lansky’s Clothing Store.

Prior to the ribbon cutting, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame will announce the names of the seven new Hall of Fame inductees for 2015. They will be honored at this year’s Memphis Music Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, to be held on October 17 at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets for the Induction Ceremony will also go on sale on August 21. 2015’s new inclusions will bring the total number of inductees to 54. Read Chris Davis’ cover story on the Memphis Music Hall of Fame Here.

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Rockin’ the Halls

“I have gladly given my life to Memphis music, and it has given me back a hundred-fold. It has been my fortune to know truly great men and hear the music of the spheres. May we all meet again at the end of the trail.” — Excerpted from the last words of Jim Dickinson.

Justin Fox Burks

The ceiling of the hallway leading to the museum’s second-floor space is lined with guitars that point the way to the exhibits.

Jim Dickinson liked to “watch shit rot.” Those are Dickinson’s own colorful words, of course. The storied producer, musician, Memphis Music Hall of Fame inductee, and provocateur, always placed “decomposition” at the heart of his personal aesthetic. He believed you could hear the sounds of decay in the songs he recorded with Alex Chilton and Big Star. You could see it represented visually in the paintings he labored over, then left outdoors for nature to complete.

Until very recently, visitors to Dickinson’s Zebra Ranch recording studio, were encouraged to touch a broken-down piano decomposing in the yard. In its former life, the crumbling instrument, propped up on cinder blocks like some old jalopy and covered in filth and leaves, had belonged to the Stax recording studio. It was in the building when Isaac Hayes and David Porter were songwriting partners cranking out hits like “Soul Man,” and “Wrap it Up.” It was there when Booker T. and the MG’s was the Stax house band, and when Otis Redding wrote “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay.”

Dickinson’s widow, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, says some people understood her husband’s fondness for decay. It also made a lot of people angry to see a beautiful piece of music history left out in the weather to fall apart.

Justin Fox Burks

Jim Dickinson’s piano detail.

Justin Fox Burks

Jim Dickinson’s piano

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum, describes what’s left of the old Stax piano as, “a piece of Jim Dickinson’s soul.” He says it’s a perfect example of the kinds of things a visitor can expect to find on display at the Memphis Memphis Music Hall of Fame museum, which opens for business this week at the corner of Second and Beale, in a cozy two-story space nestled between the newly relocated Hard Rock Cafe and Lansky Bros. Clothier to the King. The exhibits are primarily on the second floor, where the Lansky brothers once stored their formal wear. It’s the place where Johnny Cash was taken after he came to Bernard Lansky brandishing a Prince Albert tobacco tin, wanting to buy a black frock coat just like the prince’s. “That may be the beginning of the ‘Man in Black,”‘ Doyle speculates.
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, Executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, shows off a few of the museum’s treasures including Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cadillac, Johnny Cash’s black suit, and an original Elvis jumpsuit.

Although the two museums share administrative staff, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame isn’t Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum Jr. The latter Smithsonian-affiliated museum, located in the FedExForum, has been telling the story of Memphis music for the past 15 years. The Memphis Music Hall of Fame has only been inducting members since 2012. Its new brick-and-mortar facility will give visitors a chance to spend some digitally interactive quality time with the legendary heroes of Memphis music.
Justin Fox Burks

A customized emblem on Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cadillac.

“I asked myself, if I had the opportunity to hang out with the musicians we’re inducting each year, what would that cocktail party be like?” Doyle says, explaining his vision for the Hall of Fame exhibit. “I’m pretty sure it would not look like the Smithsonian. It would probably be weird. So we’re positioning the Memphis Music Hall of Fame as a museum where our exhibits are as outrageous as our inductees.”
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, discusses the layout of a large case with Pam Parham, director of operations.

That explains decorative touches like a ceiling hung with St. Blues guitars and the full-sized piano suspended upside down and transformed into an enormous light fixture. That’s also the philosophy behind both Dickinson’s decomposing keyboard, and a lifelike python built to accompany Larry Dodson’s costumes in the eye-popping Bar-Kays exhibit.
Justin Fox Burks

John Doyle, executive director of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, stands art the top of the stairs where a glowing piano stands in for a traditional light fixture.

“In Europe, they’re protecting Rembrandts,” Doyle says. “In Memphis, we’re protecting a pink shorts set with a cape that Rufus Thomas wore at WattStax. It is the funkiest-looking thing ever. But in Memphis it becomes an art museum treasure.”

Additional treasures collected in the Hall of Fame include an acoustic guitar that belonged to Memphis street sweeper and blues legend Furry Lewis. The well-documented guitar is on loan from a North Dakota collector, as is the original guitar case on which Lewis painted his name.

The seeds that grew into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame were planted in 2007, when Doyle asked his Rock ‘n’ Soul board to brainstorm new ways for the museum to enhance its mission to tell the Memphis music story and grow beyond the walls of the FedExForum. It was Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau President Kevin Kane who first suggested the idea of opening a hall of fame. The concept was an immediate hit, although nobody seemed to know for sure what form such an entity might take. “It could be a chicken dinner we have every year, with special performances and trophies,” Doyle says. “It might be a public art installation somewhere downtown. Or a comprehensive website with music and pictures.” Doyle thought a new off-site exhibit would be cost-prohibitive. Then, about a week after the hall’s first induction ceremony, Memphis Mayor A C Wharton approached the Rock ‘n’ Soul director with news that Beale Street’s Hard Rock Cafe was moving from its original location on the eastern stretch of Beale, into the old Lansky’s building. The club, Wharton said, was looking to partner with a museum.

“As the executive director, my heart sank,” Doyle jokes. “I could tell this was going to mean a lot of work.” With nearly six million visitors annually, Beale Street is Tennessee’s largest tourist destination, and although it’s home to the W.C. Handy House and Museum, there’s no visitor center where people can find out about the Memphis Zoo or the Stax Museum of American Soul Music or the newly opened Blues Hall of Fame on South Main or anything else.

“We felt like we could assist in doing all that by having a presence here,” Doyle says. Between the licensing appropriate music and photos and the hiring of top-notch music writers and designers, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame’s website was costing the Rock ‘n’ Soul museum $90,000 a year. “That’s a good-size burden for a not-for-profit museum,” Doyle says. “Fortunately, because of our relationship with the Memphis Grizzlies and because of our location at the FedExForum, we’ve been able to sustain that and grow our mission outside the walls they provide for us.”

Even in a tourist-rich zone like Beale Street, that kind of “assist” might not sound like a big deal. But Memphis music tourism is already on the rise and Elvis Presley’s Graceland Public Relations Director Kevin Kern thinks the new Hall of Fame will only help to promote that upward trend. “[It] will add to our story, while expanding the list of options for the traveler to keep them in town,” Kern says. Memphis, he adds, has finally grown into something “more than a long weekend destination.”

More than 600,000 tour Graceland annually, making it Memphis’ second largest music-related destination after Beale Street, and the second-most-visited residence in America after the White House. More than 150,000 people visit Sun Studio annually, and another 60,000 tour the Rock ‘n’ Soul museum and the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.  

Tim Sampson, communications director for the Soulsville Foundation, agrees with Kern. “Our attendance at Stax is way up,” he says. “We’ve got people here in the museum from every continent every single day.”

Sampson welcomes the new Memphis Music Hall of Fame, just as he welcomed the Blues Hall of Fame, which opened in May. He credits the recent boom in music tourism to the fact that music-related destinations are more collaborative than competitive. He also believes that additions to the landscape such as music-related murals and an increasing number of historical markers and museums also help the Memphis tourism industry.

Memphis Rock ‘n’ Soul hit 60,000 tourists annually in 2013, and had its best month ever in April. Each subsequent month has broken previous records. Doyle thinks this is strong evidence that the stage is perfectly set for a facility like the Memphis Music Hall of Fame.

“There is no other city in America that can host its own music Hall of Fame,” Doyle boasts. “Some states can. Alabama has one. Texas has one. But Memphis is the epicenter of American music.

“When we first sat down and started coming up with the names of potential inductees it was so easy,” Doyle says. “There was Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley, Otis Redding, Rufus Thomas, Al Green, Isaac Hayes, The Staple Singers, and on and on. In that first evening, we listed 300 well-known performers from different musical traditions — jazz, blues, rural field-holler-type music, jug bands, rock ‘n’ roll, rockabilly, gospel, R&B, rap, hip-hop. In a very short time, our list of potential inductees became enormous.”

On the morning before his latest documentary, Best of Enemies, was scheduled to screen in Los Angeles, author and Memphis music historian Robert Gordon offered some perspective regarding the potential of a Memphis Music Hall of Fame compared to other music towns.

“Lots of cities can say they’re home to a star,” he said. “Buddy Holly’s from Lubbock, Texas, for example. And so is Waylon Jennings.  So they can make a little Buddy Holly shrine in Lubbock. But Memphis? What decade do you want to talk about? What musical genre?

“People ask how can it be possible that Carl Perkins wasn’t selected until the third year of the Memphis Hall of Fame?” says Gordon. “He’s the first guy to have a number-one record on the pop, country, and R&B charts at the same time,” Gordon says. “And that frustrates some people. It’s something we should celebrate. Our music history has been so rich that we can not induct Carl Perkins until the third year, because each year we’ve wanted to recognize our musical diversity.

“What I want to know is, when will Booker Little get into the Hall of Fame?” Gordon asks, rhetorically. Even though Little died young and his name isn’t a household word, his contributions were significant. It may be next year or 10 years from now, but the Manassas graduate and hard-bop trumpet innovator who performed alongside John Coltrane will eventually be enshrined alongside the better known heroes of Sun, Hi, and Stax.

The answer doesn’t matter, Gordon finally concludes, because the Hall of Fame isn’t a popularity contest.

In a telephone interview, Mary Lindsay Dickinson remembered the day the big truck with “Amro” painted on the side pulled up to the family’s Zebra Ranch recording studio in Coldwater, Mississippi. It had come to take her late husband’s special piano to its final resting place in the Memphis Music Hall of Fame. “There are no better piano movers in the world, I don’t think,” she said. But in spite of their expert handling, the wooden portions of the once-fine instrument fell into shreds as the movers lifted it from its resting place. “It had rotted completely,” Dickinson said, unable to conceal her delight that her late husband Jim had gotten exactly what he wanted.

Spooner Oldham, the great keyboard player, known for his work with Bob Dylan and Aretha Franklin, described Dickinson’s piano as the perfect metaphor for both mortality and immortality. He told Mary Lindsay that even when the wooden bits on the outside had returned to ashes and dust, “there will still be a harp inside.”

“And a harp is what was left,” Dickinson said, reiterating Doyle’s desire to collect edgy artifacts. “The harp was left. And when it finally goes up in the hall of fame it will be the oddest, ugliest, and most unique exhibit in any museum anywhere in the world.”

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame opens to the public on July 27th at 126 Second. Hours of operation will be 10 a.m.-7 p.m. 205-2532 memphismusichalloffame.com/

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Induction Ceremony Slideshow

Patrick Lantrip

Denise LaSalle sing Carl Perkins’ song, “Blue Suede Shoes.”

On a chilly Saturday evening in Downtown Memphis, a diverse cross-section of locals congregated at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts to honor the achievements of an equally diverse selection of the city’s more euphonious residents. The tertiary edition of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony enshrined nine more members at the event hosted by actor and comedian Marlon Wayans. This year’s class included Carl Perkins, Ann Peebles, Big Star, Al Bell, Lil Hardin Armstrong, John Fry, Furry Lewis, Chips Moman, and Jesse Winchester, and was indicative of the heterogeneous hodgepodge of diverse styles that defines Memphis music.

Memphis Mayor A C Wharton was on hand to deliver a crowd-rousing commencement speech that began the night of performances, biographies, and genuinely touching acceptance speeches.

“This is what we’re all about, this is who we are,” Wharton said. “As the young folks say, this is the way we roll. We’re just full of soul.”

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However, it was Wayans and his impromptu rapport with announcer, Leon Griffin, whose voice Wayans repeatedly referred to as “Black God,” that set the tone of the event and provided a lighthearted counterbalance to some of the evenings more solemn moments. Wayans delivered a solid performance as MC, and playfully poked the crowd while cracking jokes about Memphis weather, its size, and Elvis’ late in life wardrobe.

The first inductee to be honored was Lil Hardin Armstrong, the wife of Louis Armstrong, who as an accomplished jazz singer in her own right. “Hot Miss Lil” made a name for herself up and down the Mississippi River in the 1920s before she met Armstrong, and she is cited as a major reason for his success. Joyce Cobb performed a tribute to Hardin that harkened back to the smoky Chicago nightclubs that launched Hardin’s career.

Next, soon-to-be inductee John Fry introduced power pop pioneers, Big Star. The band took their name from an eponymous, now defunct area supermarket, took their sound of the Beatles, The Who and The Byrds and made into something uniquely their own. As the last living original member, Jody Stephens performed with next-gen members Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow, of Posies fame, after accepting his award. The trio was joined on stage by Drew Hummel, the son of original member Andy Hummel, and Steve Selvidge.

Selvidge stayed on stage to present the award for Walter “Furry” Lewis, a depression-era delta bluesman that also played a major role in the blues revival scene of the 1960s. Contemporary bluesman Ronnie Baker Brooks performed the musical tribute to Lewis.

Dixie Fried Rockabilly virtuoso and Million Dollar Quartet member, Carl Perkins was honored next with a performance by “Queen of the Blues” Denise LaSalle, who was a close friend of Perkins. She also reminisced about a story Perkins told her about his most famous hit, “Blue Suede Shoes,” before performing the song much to the delight of the crowd.

Jesse Winchester may not be a household name in the States, partly due to the fact the he became a Canadian citizen to avoid the Vietnam War, but the CBHS graduate’s folk-style music influenced a number of artists, including six-time CMA Musician of the Year, Mac McAnally, who also performed his tribute. Sadly, Winchester passed away earlier this year, just one month after receiving an invitation to be inducted in the MMHoF. His family was on hand to accept the award on his behalf.

Owner and founder of the legendary Ardent Studios, John Fry was next. Stephens returned to present the award to his old friend and colleague, and then the quartet of Selvidge, Stringfellow, Auer, and Stephens returned to play another set.

For a musician there are few compliments that rank higher than being told by John Lennon that one of your songs is “the greatest ever written,” but for Ann Peebles that is just one feather in her cap. Her husband Don Bryant, who co-wrote “I Can’t Stand the Rain” with Peebles presented the award. Peebles, who spoke to the Flyer before ceremony, said that encounter was one of the highlights of her career.

“It was the very first time I traveled abroad,” Peebles said. We sat down and talked, and even he came to my show one time. It was one of the most exciting times in my career.”

Sam Moore of Sam and Dave fame performed a rousing version of “I Can’t Stand the Rain,” with some help from Peebles and Bryant in the audience, and Lawrence “Boo” Mitchell played the electric timbales that are responsible for iconic rain sound at the beginning of the track.

“I feel blessed to have all of my accomplishments recognized,” Peebles added.

Chips Moman was responsible for engineering the sound of many artists, but perhaps he is most famous for Elvis Presley’s revival, producing such hits as “In the Ghetto” and “Suspicious Minds.” Another one of his collaborators, B.J. Thomas of “Rain Drops Keep Fallin’ on My Head” fame accepted the award on behalf Moman, and performed a version of the Moman-produced hit “Hooked on a Feeling.” 

The final act of the evening was in honor of former Stax owner and Motown executive, Al Bell. Bell was an integral part of the Stax sound that tore up the airwaves in the 1970s and was the mastermind behind the Wattstax Music Festival, and the subsequent Golden Globe Award winning documentary. William “Born Under a Bad Sign” Bell and Memphian, Al Kapone joined forces for an updated rendition of the Stax-era classic “I Forgot to be Your Lover.” For the finale, Bell remained on stage to perform an extended version of “Knock on Wood,” that brought the crowd to a standing ovation.

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Memphis Music Hall of Fame 2014: Lil Hardin

Memphian Lil Hardin Armstrong (1898-1971) will be inducted into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame this evening. She was already at the top the jazz world in 1922 when Louis Armstrong showed up in Chicago to play for King Oliver. She had been the piano player for a year. Hardin thought Armstrong looked country and clothed him. She also helped him work through his divorce. Then she married him. She played piano and composed songs for what are arguably the most important recordings in American musical history: The Hot Five and Hot Seven sessions. Hardin wrote “Struttin With Some Barbecue,” probably the most Memphis song ever. She became a solo artist and eventually led her own all female orchestra. She collapsed at the piano in 1971.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame 2014: Lil Hardin

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Celebrate Hard Rock Cafe’s New Digs

The Bar-Kays threw down a housewarming party for the Hard Rock Cafe’s new location at 126 Beale. That building is now a Memphis music volcano housing the Hard Rock, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, and Lansky’s Clothiers. The scene spilled out onto the street as media, fans, and tourists lined up to see the Bar-Kays donate a couple of slammin’ suits and knock out a set of pile-driving soul. Have a look a the photos. 

The celebration continues all weekend, most notably with a tribute to the late Jimi Jamison on Saturday.

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Memphis Music Hall of Fame on Jeopardy!

jeopardy19.jpg

The Memphis Music Hall of Fame will be a category on today’s broadcast of the game show Jeopardy!, in the “Double Jeopardy” round.

The five answers will draw from the inaugural class of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame, which was announced last year and which includes both obvious names (Elvis Presley, B.B. King, Otis Redding) and less well-known contributors (Lucie Campbell, George Coleman, Jimmie Lunceford). I’m guessing the likes of W.T. McDaniel won’t figure but if the good folks at Jeopardy! don’t get an audio clue out of all of this material they’re not really trying.

Jeopardy! airs locally at 3:30 p.m. on channel 3.

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Bobby Bland Highlights Memphis Music Hall of Fame Induction

Bobby Blue Bland at the Memphis Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

  • JUSTIN FOX BURKS
  • Bobby “Blue” Bland at the Memphis Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

It didn’t have the star power it might have, with living inductees such as Jerry Lee Lewis, Al Green, B.B. King, and Mavis Staples not among the night’s performers, but Thursday’s inaugural induction ceremony at a roughly half full Cannon Center for the Performing Arts was still a nice, if occasionally wordy and slightly overlong, celebration of the breadth of Memphis music.

And when 82-year-old, Beale Street-bred soul-blues titan Bobby “Blue” Bland took a seat on stage and sang his classics “Goin’ Down Slow” and “Stormy Monday Blues,” this alone was, as they say, worth the price of admission.

Bland’s voice was worn but still graceful, with a range that went from his deep “yeah” to quavery high notes. He was helped to the stage and to a chair. When an early bit of feedback disrupted the beginning of his first song, Bland smiled and said “That’s my fault.” And then he dug into “Goin’ Down Slow,” adding extra gravity to the lines “Somebody please write my mother and tell her the shape I’m in/And tell her to pray for me and forgive me for all my sins.”