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Twenty From The Teens: Top Albums Of The Decade, 2010-2019

Aquarian Blood

“One thing I’m doing more of during shelter-in-place is listening to great local records that I hadn’t had a chance to catch up on.” So said songwriter Mark Edgar Stuart in a recent interview for our 2020 music issue. It’s something we’re all doing more of, and, given that this year marks not only a new decade, but a new way of living (optimistically speaking), we’re seizing the moment of this special issue to reflect on what’s come before. Here are the Memphis Flyer’s top 20 albums of the past decade.

Granted, such lists will always be subjective, and this one’s no exception. But I can personally attest to the fact that these albums, once played through my stereo, were then played again and again. And they continue to be played, as we look to an uncertain future, doing double takes at the recent past and muttering, “What just happened?”

But I’m not alone in my feeling that each of these is a masterpiece of innovation and expression. This is the cream of a very impressive crop, each album like the tip of an iceberg suggesting greater depths below. Look under the hood of Aquarian Blood’s 2019 release, and you’ll find an entire gritty noise-rock backstory; follow the sounds of The Barbaras and you’ll find yourself picnicking with the Magic Kids; and prepare to be astounded once you hear the individual releases by the artists of the Unapologetic collective who delivered the one-two punch of Stuntarious IV.

Part of this depth can be excavated by following each title’s link, which will take you to the original articles by me, Jesse Davis, J.D. Reager, Andria Lisle, Chris McCoy, Chris Herrington, and Chris Shaw, quoted sporadically below. And of course, part of the depth comes from the list’s breadth. For Memphis not only produced some of the past decade’s finest music, it spanned nearly every genre and generation while doing so, from acoustic punk to surreal hip hop to seasoned works by sorely-missed lifers like Sid Selvidge and John Kilzer. For your listening pleasure, we present music of the ages, in alphabetical order.

The Top 20 Albums of the Decade, 2010-2019
Aquarian Blood – A Love That Leads to War (Goner, 2019)
“Dark observations and wry commentary are surrounded with unassuming acoustic ostinatos, (mostly) subtle keyboard textures, and inventive bass counterpoints.”

Julien Baker – Turn Out the Lights (Matador, 2017)
“Meditations on love, rejection, God, rage, and redemption … piano- and cello-tinged ensemble pieces captured on tape at Ardent.”

The Barbaras

The Barbaras – 2006-2008 (Goner, 2012)
“Able to turn on a dime, unafraid to be goofy, and gifted with a breezy sense of irony that simultaneously celebrates and mocks the Nuggets psychedelia that infuses their sound.”

The Sensational Barnes Brothers – Nobody’s Fault But My Own (Bible & Tire, 2019) 
“All the songs on the new Barnes Brothers record were songs that artists on the Designer Records catalog had done. Basically, they came in, I used my studio musicians, and we made that record.” And Lord, do those studio musicians rock.

Harlan T. Bobo – A History of Violence (Goner, 2018)
“The band [is] now rocking harder, with a more sinister edge … his singing now addressing a world swirling around him more than the romantic entanglements of his earlier work.”

Don Bryant

Don Bryant – Don’t Give Up On Love (Fat Possum, 2017)
A return to form by one of the city’s great songwriters from the golden age of soul, backed unerringly by those specialists in vintage vibes, the Bo-Keys.

The City Champs – The Set-Up (Electraphonic, 2010)
“The instrumental soul-jazz trio absolutely floored me … The Set-Up is one of those records that just keeps getting better with repeated listening, so now I can’t put it down.”

DJ Paul – Power, Pleasure, & Painful Things (Scale-A-Ton, 2019)
“Interspersed with spoken segments in which the artist recalls pivotal moments in his Memphis youth, the tracks make use of a wide-ranging musicality and inventive, turn-on-a-dime production to create what may be Paul’s best work yet.”

Hash Redactor – Drecksound (Goner, 2019)
“The songs come in fast and hard, propelled by booming bass and tight drums. Watson and Lones share an easy comfort playing together … McIntyre sneers the vocals, an antihero decrying humanity’s self-destructive tendencies … The guitars alone are worth the price of admission.”

John Kilzer – Scars (Archer, 2019)
“I wrote on different instruments. I wrote a couple on a mandolin, a couple on ukulele, and several on the piano. I would have never, ever considered doing that earlier in my career. So that kind of creative tension manifests in the songs.”

Lucero – Women & Work (ATO, 2012)
“I think Women & Work is the band’s best album yet … it captures the live sound of a band that has always excelled on stage and how fully they commit to a soulful, opulent Southern rock style.” 

Magic Kids – Memphis (True Panther Sounds, 2010)
“[A] genial, ramshackle deployment of myriad traditional, pre-punk influences. The album’s earnest romances play out against a Memphis presented as a relaxed, sunny playpen.”

Mellotron Variations – Mellotron Variations (Spaceflight, 2019)
“Local players Robby Grant and Jonathan Kirkscey were joined by Pat Sansone (Wilco) and John Medeski (Medeski Martin & Wood), presenting semi-improvised original pieces that showed off the evocative range of multiple Mellotrons being played at once.”

New Memphis Colorways – Old Forest Loop (Owl Jackson Jr., 2018)
“‘This is music I deliberately made for people to take summertime drives to — they can grill to it or swim to it.’ … Old Forest Loop has the citrus punch of an orange sherbet popsicle.”

Jack Oblivian & the Sheiks – Lone Ranger of Love (Mony, 2016)
“Well done, boys. I find it very hard to believe a local artist tops this record in 2016. Might as well flip this sucker over and start again.”

The Oblivians – Desperation (In the Red, 2013)
“The band doesn’t pretend that the past 15 years never happened, and most tracks are sonically closer to the musicians’ individual recording projects but goosed-up Oblivians-style.”

Marco Pavé – Welcome to Grc Lnd (Radio Rahim Music, 2017)
“Pavé is a charismatic frontman, equally at home flowing about the school-to-prison pipeline or barking his shins while getting out of bed…Overall, this is one of the most meticulously constructed, finely paced albums to come out of Memphis in recent memory.”

Sid Selvidge – I Should Be Blue (Archer, 2010)
I Should Be Blue retains Selvidge’s usual folk setting but with a new musical texture that can stand up to his strikingly beautiful vocals.”

Various Artists – Take Me To the River – Soundtrack (Stax, 2014)
Soul and blues legends pair off with current rappers at Royal Studios. “It’s fun to be a fly on the wall in these recording sessions held in historic spaces, and the camaraderie and respect between the players is evident. The talent, discipline, and instincts on display are amazing.”

Various Artists – Stuntarious IV (Unapologetic, 2019)
“The Stuntarious series explode[s] with sonic and verbal ideas, and Stuntarious IV is no exception. This time around, the album has a cinematic feel … It sets the stage for the wide-ranging palette of sound design elements that percolate throughout the tracks that follow.”

They Also Served: A Baker’s Dozen More From a Decade Packed with Dynamite
Once you get started, it will be hard to stop listening to releases from one of the city’s most extraordinary musical decades. That’s saying a lot, of course, but the depth and breadth of these albums attest to what a simmering hotbed of creativity we have in Memphis. That’s not even mentioning some striking singles from the period (“Uptown Funk,” anyone?).

So for those with ravenous ears, here are 12 more to groove to, from the underappreciated Stereolab-meets-dank-Southern-humidity of Cloudland Canyon to a Memphis-centric offering from the young Young Dolph, before he grew to dominate the airwaves so thoroughly.

Cloudland CanyonAn Arabesque (Medical, 2016)
Dead SoldiersThe Great Emptiness (American Grapefruit Tapes, 2017)
Detective No. 1 (2019)
Don LiftedContour (2018)
John Paul KeithMemphis Circa 3 AM (Big Legal Mess, 2013)
Jonathan KirksceyWon’t You Be My Neighbor? (Mondo, 2018)
Amy LaVerePainting Blue (Nine Mile, 2019)
Memphis DawlsRooted in the Bone (Madjack, 2014)
Motel MirrorsIn the Meantime (Last Chance, 2018)
Joe RestivoWhere’s Joe? (Blue Barrel, 2019)
SpacefaceSun Kids (Jet Pilot, 2017)
Mark Edgar StuartBlues for Lou (Madjack, 2013)
Young DolphKing of Memphis (Paper Route Empire, 2016)

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Music Music Blog

Exclusive Video Premiere: Memphis Masters Series Celebrates the Bar-Kays

With so many classic albums of 1969 celebrating their half-century mark this year, it would be easy for music fans to sleep on an especially stellar LP reissued with extra care this month — and that would be a shame. The Bar-Kays’ Gotta Groove, originally released on Volt Records, a Stax subsidiary, was a watershed moment for Stax, for the group themselves, and for all things funky.

Besides helping to launch an approach to a harder-hitting funk/rock that would come to define the 1970s, the album was the result of the sheer tenacity and invention that kept Stax going. The label, having learned in late 1967 that Atlantic Records claimed ownership of the entire Stax catalog up to that point, was being reborn in a flurry of era-defining releases, celebrated by the double Soul Explosion album, which contained several hits generated by the newly restructured label in 1968.  Meanwhile, while the label lost one its greatest stars in the plane crash that claimed Otis Redding’s life, the Bar-Kays, who started out as the label’s youngest band in 1966, and enjoyed immediate success with their Soulfinger LP, lost most of their members in the same crash. But James Alexander and Ben Cauley, Jr., the only surviving Bar-Kays, forged ahead, and Gotta Groove was their shot across the bow in the name of rebirth, reinvention and survival.

This year, Craft Recordings launched a painstakingly-crafted reissue series, celebrating many of the works that marked the rebirth of Stax in the 1968-69 period. The select titles have been cut from their original analog tapes by Jeff Powell at Memphis’ Take Out Vinyl and pressed on 180-gram vinyl at Memphis Record Pressing, making this a labor of love by some world-class local establishments.

JD Reager

Jeff Powell

Along with the records, Craft has created The Memphis Masters—a limited video series celebrating the reissued albums and showcasing Stax’s enduring musical legacy, as well as its influence on Memphis, TN. Created in partnership with Memphis Record Pressing and Memphis Tourism, and directed by Andrew Trent Fleming of TheFilmJerk Media, the multi-part series was shot in several locations around the city, including Sam Phillips Recording Service, Royal Studios and the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

Each episode—available on YouTube—will revolve around an album or collection from a singular artist or group on Stax’s roster, starting with Melting Pot from Booker T. & the M.G.’s. Other titles covered include Home, from husband-and-wife songwriting duo Delaney & Bonnie, Who’s Making Love from Johnnie Taylor and Victim of the Joke?…An Opera from acclaimed producer and songwriter David Porter. The Staple Singers will also be honored with a deluxe, seven-LP box set, Come Go With Me: The Stax Collection, available in early 2020. The majority of the single albums were recently released on November 1st, while LPs from Porter and Taylor will be reissued on December 6th.

The Bar-Kays today

And today, The Memphis Flyer is proud to announce Episode Two in The Memphis Masters series, celebrating Gotta Groove by The Bar-Kays, It’s a rare deep dive into the making of an era-defining work, with commentary by artists young and old on its lasting influence. Watch here to see how the album was created, literally from the ashes of the tragedy that claimed the lives of so many, and amidst the turmoil surrounding the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Then, get out to Record Store Day and get yourself a copy.

Exclusive Video Premiere: Memphis Masters Series Celebrates the Bar-Kays

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Music Record Reviews

Datadrums Celebrate LP Release At Shangri-La’s Sweat Fest 5 on Saturday

“I try to read it too deeply, everything becomes absurd,” intones local guitarist and singer Chuck Vicious on asyndeta, the new record by his band Datadrums, before ramping up to double-time: “Absurdity! It’s how you feel! It’s how you think! It’s how you believe!” It’s on the last track of the album, but could have easily been the first, summing up as it does the feel of the entire work.

“You know I like it when you hollow out my soul,” as one song announces. This is an LP that simultaneously laughs and rages at the arbitrary nature of existence. Conjuring up a sound and attitude reminiscent of the the Fall’s Mark E. Smith fronting the Stooges, with a bit of Clash-style chanting and rave-ups thrown in, the band rocks both earnestly and sardonically.

“Twenty! Twenty! Twenty! Twenty! Nine! Nine! Nine! Nine!” sings Vicious, as the band pounds away. Somehow it works, with the Da-Da lyrics setting up an anything-goes atmosphere that promises and delivers surprises.

Datadrums has been around for fourteen years  now, and the power of this record is a testament to the staying power of the classic lineup of bass, drums and dual guitars. The band makes the most of such instrumentation, with perfectly dialed-in, crunchy guitar tones, all with the spontaneous energy that comes from being recorded live. There are occasional flourishes of synth or walkie-talkie vocals, as on “Robot Repair,” but this affair is grounded in a kick ass rock band.

The band’s rock solid 70s hard rock sound, complemented by oblique lyrics and an unfussy recording and production style, is a perfect setup for the wry observations that do cut through the murk.  Perhaps keeping the band’s sounds relevant over such a stretch of years lies behind the lyrics of “Vacuume Sealed,” both a desperate demand and a plea:  “Please don’t throw me away. I’ll be fresh another day…”

asyndeta by Datadrums is out now on Also Tapered Records. Release party at Shangri-La Record’s Sweat Fest 5, Saturday, August 24 at 2 pm. Other bands include The Sheiks, The Heels, Louise Page, Risky Whispers, the Tennessee Screamers, and James Walker.