Categories
Music Music Blog

The Smartest Man in the World: Michael Jasud Plays Well with Others

Many Memphians who loved the now defunct Dead Soldiers did so because of their eclecticism. What band more freely mixed their Americana leanings with art rock and a cinematic sweep? And yet, hearing the Dead Soldiers’ front man, Michael Jasud, tell it, the sounds in his head during that band’s heyday were even more eclectic than what we heard.

Exhibit A in that claim was Detective No. 1, Jasud’s foray into instrumental film music in search of a film (read Jesse Davis’ 2019 write up on that album here). Now he’s scratching that eclectic itch with another group and batch of recordings, under the name The Smartest Man in the World. They’re playing The Green Room at Crosstown Arts tonight, July 15, at 7:30 p.m.

I gave Michael a ring to hear a bit more about this latest musical journey, already boasting a handful of singles and with an album due in the near future.

Memphis Flyer: You’ve shown a lot of stylistic versatility in your musical projects. Where does that come from?

Michael Jasud: I’ve always wanted to do everything that I was inspired by, you know? Years and years ago I was into metal, then I got into country and singer/songwriting. And then I got really into movie soundtracks and weird, atmospheric instrumental music. I’m working on an electronic music project right now that I’m going to put out soon under some sort of different title. I think I’ve been on this quest to create the context for me to do whatever I want to at any moment — giving myself a vehicle to create and switch gears, depending on what I’m feeling at the moment. So for The Smartest Man in the World, I’d just been in Dead Soldiers forever. I’d been doing Americana, and I wanted the opportunity to write in a way that reflects all these other influences I have that don’t have an outlet. I had to make a new project to do that with.

So is this kind of a catch-all?

No, it’s more a vehicle for my more conventional pop songwriting, as opposed to pulling more from Americana or classic American influences. This stuff pulls from anything from, let’s say, David Bowie to Nine Inch Nails to the Beach Boys. I had all these influences floating around my head, and I wanted the opportunity to write freely as a postmodern millennial dude who grew up listening to everything. I wanted to have some place, identity-wise, that allows you to go, ‘Yeah, this is the weird David Bowie/Nine Inch Nails mash-up that I’ve always wanted to do!’

I feel like, if you have a vision for something, the only way to show people what you’re trying to do is to do it. If you explain an idea to somebody, they’ll say, ‘That’s never going to work,’ but if you just do it, it might. So this is a project where I had more freedom to do that.
I made this record with Toby Vest over maybe three years, just getting together over and over again. He was super supportive in setting up this auxiliary studio in our rehearsal space at the time. And it was really one of my biggest growth periods as a musician, because I was able to get out of my comfort zone, over and over again. Toby would encourage me to do that. Like encouraging me to play lead guitar more. And except for a couple tracks that Jake Vest played on, I ended up doing all the guitars on the record.

And I got to work with Rick Steff a lot, which was intimidating, because Rick is such a wizard, but he’s also a really big-hearted guy in terms of approaching the material. There’s always insecurity in being a songwriter, so it’s hugely confidence-inspiring when really talented musicians buy into your vision. So spiritually, being surrounded by great musicians like Pete [Matthews], Toby, Rick, Shawn Zorn, and Landon Moore really gave me a place as a songwriter to feel like, ‘Okay, these guys are willing to hang with me.’

These guys are badasses. If they’re going to give me the time of day, then that’s all I need to feel like it’s worthwhile. I get to play music with these guys! What a gift.

So that recording project led to this show at the Green Room? And an album will eventually come out under the name The Smartest Man in the World?

Yeah. I have four singles that I’ve put out, from that recording period. And lately, I’ve focused on finding the right people to bring this project to life as a live group. And part of that is finding a sense of collaboration in that band. I don’t love the idea of being The Guy. It’s a little too much. I don’t want to make every choice. And it took a long time to put together a lineup of people and then for us to figure out how to play this record as a live band, with totally different arrangements.

You can do all kinds of things in the studio that are really hard to do in real life. So we got into the rehearsal space, and Krista Wroten, who played strings on the record, helped me rearrange the songs for this group of people. And when you’re collaborating, things happen the way they happen, and the gift of that is a surprise. The surprise that came from this was — initially I wanted to have a solo songwriting project so no one would tell me no. And what I found was, I miss having someone say ‘No!’ or ‘Maybe this would work.’ That feeling of camaraderie and friendship, that feeling that comes from throwing ideas back and forth. I missed that. And now I’ve found a group of people I like collaborating with. And we’ve figured out a thing that we do well together. So I’m really excited, moving forward, to write new music and just find a place to exist creatively that doesn’t give a shit about anything.

I feel so uninspired by trying to make a career as a musician that never panned out. Now it looks almost impossible for anybody to do it! I tell young people, ‘Don’t think that these people getting millions of streams on Spotify are necessarily cashing checks for their music.’ Maybe they’re on the road, but even that’s getting harder to do. So many venues have closed. People are spending less money. Unfortunately, the streaming landscape has devalued music. Where is the financial structure to give musicians a platform to invest time in becoming great? There used to be a middle ground. Someone would give you money to make a record. Personally, I had to get to a point where I didn’t care about social networking, or even performing, if it’s not going to be fun or creatively satisfying.

I’d like to re-imagine what support for live music means as a community. There’s a cultural poverty which leads to people fighting over scraps in this town. It can be super petty and embarrassing to experience. I’m more interested in how we can make art as a community. I see people in the Black arts community doing that way better than in the thirtysomething white music community.

What will the band Friday night look like?

We lucked out, because the Green Room has a budget for string players. So we have a string trio from Blueshift Ensemble, two horn players, two synth players, bass, guitar, drums, and a backup vocalist. And we’re going to do this big, eclectic thing. For me, there’s always a big Brian Wilson influence happening in my brain. In terms of that kind of eccentric, furious approach to pop music and arrangements. Luckily I have Krista for writing out the scores. But a lot of times, I think of producing and arranging more as casting. Once you’ve got an actor in a role, you have some aspects of what that character is locked in. If you have a great horn player, you can describe the vibe you’re going for, and they do something cool on their own. I believe everybody has an original voice inside of them, whether they find it or not. So I encourage people in my band to speak in their own voice.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: “Maria” by The Tennessee Screamers

The trio of Keith Cooper, Frank McLallen, and Graham Winchester have been playing together since high school. They rock as The Sheiks, they’ve backed up Jack Oblivian, and, with the addition of Jesse James Davis, they play both kinds of music — country and western — as the Tennessee Screamers.

“Maria” was written by McLallen and recorded at Sun Studios by Crockett Hall, with Eric Lewis guesting on pedal steel.

Davis (who is often mistaken for Memphis Flyer editor Jesse Davis, and vice versa) directed this music video in 2021. “Almost a year ago, we invaded the drive-in to make a music video,” says Davis. “I finally finished it after a busy year back gettin’ educated at U of M. A lot of thanks to throw out on this one: Leanna Carey for shooting some vid on the river one fine spring day; cameos from Michael Jasud, Linton and Grace; thanks to Laurel and Charles for letting us shoot at the Lamplighter

Cooper says, “The city of Memphis once again proved to be a fine palette for the various locations needed to be shot. From the muddy banks of the Mississippi to the commode that Jasud’s ass rested upon at the Malco Drive-In.”

The lo-fi video drama sees McLellan being chased by Cooper and Winchester, presumably for eating beans and stealing the affections of the titular Maria. “I am glad I can use my position as editor of the Memphis Flyer to promote my own work,” says Davis*.

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

*Jesse James Davis, musician, comedian, and filmmaker, not Jesse Davis, musician and editor of the Memphis Flyer. I know. It’s complicated.

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Worrywart: Michael Jasud’s New Single

Michael Jasud, of Dead Soldiers and Detective No. 1 fame, released a new single using the name, The Smartest Man in the World, on Tuesday, May 19th. Though he’s worked on the project since the last days of Dead Soldiers, the new release could not be more timely for listeners with plenty of worries. The song, “The Ultimate Worrier,” is a sonic salve to soothe the listener’s jangled nerves.

The song opens with bright acoustic guitars and quiet percussion that at first calls to mind The Beatles’ “I’ll Follow the Sun.” The comparison is quickly dispelled by a turnaround that feels distinctly American — and by Jasud’s country-tinged vocal delivery.

Devotees of Jasud’s career will note that “The Smartest Man in the World” is the name of a track from Dead Soldiers’ 2017 album The Great Emptiness. About his new musical moniker, Jasud says, “As far as the band name is concerned, I’ve found that if you talk to any one person for long enough that they seem to know everything. Global warming, the economy, how to handle a pandemic? They’ll know. I’m certainly no different.” Jasud continues: “So does that make me the smartest man in the world? Technically, yes, because I’ve now released music on digital platforms calling myself that, so I think legally that’s my name now. In the future, once I have fans, I will call them the smarties or big heads or the big brains or maybe the brainiacs. I haven’t decided.”

Joey Miller

Michael Jasud

The song was recorded at High/Low Recording with Toby Vest and Pete Matthews, frequent creative collaborators with Jasud.

“The Ultimate Worrier” feels more in keeping with Jasud’s work with Dead Soldiers, though it has more of a ’70s high-and-breezy feel, whereas Dead Soldiers leaned into a rough and raucous persona they called city music. Still, though the production is as crisp as that of Detective No. 1’s multilayered, genre film-influenced instrumental vamps, there are fewer bells and whistles here. That’s not to say there isn’t plenty of ear candy on Jasud’s newest release. The guitars shimmer, and the organ conjures a hauntingly wistful mood. The bass walk-down at about 1:55, simple though it is, made this reviewer look up and smile. Musically, the song is a celebration of the joys of subtle touches put to good effect.


Lyrically, the song muses on the futility of worry, imagining a pugilistic worrywart stepping into the ring to take on catastrophe and uncertainty. “Because the only things that you can lose / Are the things that you already have / That’s the price you pay for living here, I guess / Is to have a future and a past,” Jasud sings.

So, dear reader, never fear. Jasud worries so you don’t have to.

The Smartest Man in the World’s “The Ultimate Worrier” is now available on all digital platforms.

Categories
Music Music Features

Michael Jasud, Marcella Simien, and Blair Combest at the Memphis Music Mansion.

Earlier this year, Memphis road warriors Dead Soldiers announced an indefinite hiatus after five-and-a-half years together. Michael Jasud, singer and guitarist for the raucous folk-rock band, says it wasn’t an acrimonious breakup. “People were being pulled by life in ways it made it hard to keep doing it like we’d been doing it. People grow, people change. For the most part, it’s a better and healthier place that people are in now.”

No one is ruling out reuniting in the future, but “there’s no plan. If there was a plan, I’d be thinking about that and not devoting the time and energy to the thing I’m trying to do now.”

That thing is a new album he’s writing. “It’s funny to say ‘solo project.’ It’s really just me writing songs. You say ‘Michael Jasud Project’ and it sounds like a prog-rock band.”

He’s recording the album with producer Toby Vest at American Studios. “It’s nice,” he says, “because we’ve been working on it in real time. If we’re about to start sketching out a song that I’ve been working on, there’s a good chance that I might have heard something the day before that will influence the way we go today. You can get so hung up in creating proof of your genius that you forget that you’re just making a document of where you are at that point.”

The rough mixes expand on the Dead Soldiers’ eclecticism, which seems consistent with Jasud’s state of mind, which he described as sometimes Springsteen, sometimes “thinking about mass shootings and listening to electronic music.”

To shock himself further out of his comfort zone, Jasud has put together a show at the Memphis Music Mansion with two of his friends in the American Studios circle.

He’ll be trading songs with Marcella Simien. “Marcella has a record that is totally finished,” Jasud says. “If it comes out this year, it’s going to be the best record of 2018. If she doesn’t release it until next year, it’s going to be the best record of 2019.”

Simien demurs. “He’s such a smooth talker.”

Her new album, which should see a first single released in the early fall, is called Got You Found. “It probably took 10 years for me to write all the songs on it. I never really, until recently, had that drive to sit down and really work on a song, like a real songwriter. It’s only been in the last year, after I finished this record. I’ve written like 50 songs since then. I don’t want to stop. … And the way it came together was just magical, with all of the people who came together to play with us.”

Simien says she will perform songs from Got You Found as well as material from her post-recording creative burst. She might even strap on a guitar. “I never really play guitar in public, but it was one of the first things I learned to play as a kid.”

The third name on the bill is Blair Combest, who has largely disappeared from the Memphis stage in recent years. Jasud says Combest inspired him as a young musician. “There was a moment when I was really getting into the poetry and art of songwriting, and I saw Blair play. I thought, this guy is really in control of his medium. I’m excited for people who have never seen Blair perform before. This is one of the great singer-songwriters in Memphis.”

Simien agrees. “Blair needs to be doing more shows, and people need to hear his songs.” She says she’s excited to be sharing a stage with Combest and Jasud. “They both have great voices, and they’re really textural. They sing to you, not at you. You feel like you’re hearing something from a deep place.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Beale Street Music Festival 2017: A Perfect Saturday

I can understand why some people don’t like to go to large, outdoor music festivals. They can be hot and dusty as the Sahara, or as rainy and muddy as the Western Front. Like any situation with a huge crowd, you can run into annoying people. And worst of all for music fans, the sound can be hit or miss: Either it’s so muddy you can’t hear the performances, or there’s so much bass bleed from the giant EDM party on the next stage, the band you came to hear gets drown out.

But Saturday at Beale Street Music Festival 2017 was an example of everything that can go right with an outdoor music festival. First and foremost, the weather couldn’t have been more perfect. The temperature topped out at 79 degrees, with brilliant sun only occasionally eclipsed by puffy clouds. Humidity was non-existent, and the steady breeze off the river drove away mosquitos and kept everybody cool. The sound was perfect, the acts were high quality, and the crowd, while enormous, was mellow and happy. Even the mud from last week’s rains had mostly dried by the time the first bands took the stage after 2 PM.

Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017

Memphian Amy LaVere was the first up on the FedEx stage at the southernmost end of Tom Lee Park. Backed by her husband Will Sexton and ace Memphis guitar slinger David Cousar, she won over the gathering crowd with an atmospheric take on her song ‘Killing Him”.

I watched about half of Amy’s near flawless set before hoofing it all the way to the other end of the park to catch another one of Memphis’ great live acts, Dead Soldiers (whom I interviewed for this week’s Memphis Flyer cover story). By the time I got to the River Stage, the band was going full throttle through songs from their new album The Great Emptiness. At one point, singer Michael Jasud realized he had a wireless mic and decided to take advantage of it. He leapt into the crowd and sang a couple of verses surrounded by the cheering audience. After returning to the stage for the climax of the song, the winded singer said “I just want y’all to know the level athleticism it takes to do that. It’s a level I do not possess.”

The Dead Soldiers’ Michael Jasud sings in the crowd during BSMF ’17.

A couple of songs later, drummer Paul Gilliam grabbed a tambourine and made his own crowd excursion.

Dead Soldiers drummer Paul Gilliam leads the BSMF crowd in a sing a long.

After the set, I ran into trombonist Victor Sawyer. The Dead Soldiers set was the third one he had played at Beale Street Music Festival, twice with the Soldiers and once with Victor Wainwright and the Wild Roots. “It’s always incredible!” he said. “It so cool to see a big crowd out there, with old faces and lots of new faces.”

Victor Sawyer (left) and Nashon Bedford play with Dead Soldiers at BSMF ’17.

I spent the rest of the day crisscrossing Tom Lee Park, trying to catch as many acts as I could. KONGOS from South Africa battled high winds as they meandered through a jammy cover of The Beatles’ “Get Back”, with singer Daniel Kongos pausing in the middle to deliver a rap. The crowd, which by mid-afternoon had swelled into the tens of thousands, went nuts for their ubiquitous hit “Come With Me Now”.

The Beale Street Music Festival lineups favor music performed by actual humans, but festival EDM was well represented by GriZ on the Bud Light stage. The Michigan producer had a major dance party going with his beats, to which he occasionally added saxophone solos. MUTEMATH was next, and judging by the ecstatic reception they got, the death of alt rock has been greatly exaggerated.

I always try to drop by the Blues Shack, and his year I caught Terry “Harmonica” Bean keeping a couple  hundred festival goers entranced with his strong Hill Country blues groove, tapped out with a strong booted foot. For Memphians, this kind of thing can seem old hat, but for at least some of the people gathered in front of the Blues Shack, Bean’s performance was a revelation.

Terry ‘Harmonica’ Bean at the Blues Tent.

Speaking of revelations, the Drive-By Truckers‘ sunset set proved to the best performance of a day filled with strong musicianship. It started off a little rough, and a few minutes late, but once the Athenians built up some momentum, they were incredible. As the sun went down, singer Mike Cooley commented on the beauty of the backdrop. This is the first year the I-55 bridge has been lit up during Memphis in May, and combined with the spectacular sunset, it made for a beautiful tableau against which the band played a muscular, searing set. In a heartfelt monologue recalling his own youthful days of partying, Cooley dedicated a song to Jordan Edwards, an African American teenager who was shot in April by Texas police as he left a party.

The view from the Memphis Flyer tent as the Drive-By Truckers’s sunset performance.

The big draw of the River Stage was the one-two punch of hip hop superstars. Dressed in black with his dreadlocks tied behind, the Atlanta rapper 2 Chainz played with his DJ E Sudd to an adoring, overflow audience, introducing songs from his upcoming album Pretty Girls Like Trap Music, and tearing the proverbial roof off with a triumphant reading of his hit “I”m Different”. I watched about half of the set before wandering over the the River Stage to catch some of Death Cab For Cutie, who were playing in front of an equally large, if somewhat more subdued, crowd. Death Cab made their reputation with small, intricately structured rock songs, but at Tom Lee Park, they traded their twee for a stadium pounding rendition of “The New Year” that was all feedback smears and power chords. Singer Ben Gibbard looked like he was having the time of his life.

When I returned to the River Stage, Wiz Khalifa was holding court with a blunt in one hand and a microphone in the other. I only was able to get within about a quarter mile of the stage area, which was packed to the gills with dancing humanity. By this time, the audience had swelled to a size that was as big as I’ve ever seen at BSMF. Maybe it was the idyllic weather, or maybe it was the clouds of pot smoke rising from Khalifa’s adoring fans, but everyone seemed very chill, happy, and friendly. In times past, it has not been unusual for me to see a fight or two over the course of the weekend. One memorable BSMF in the 1990s, I saw a full on brawl by the porta potties that resulted in overturned outhouses and a couple of very unhappy festival goers covered in blue sewage. This year, there was not even a hint of that. A couple of times, people bumped into me and actually apologized! As confetti rained down on the Wiz Khalifa crowd, I found myself thinking that this Memphis In May Saturday shows what’s great about Memphis, and what a great music festival can be.

Confetti rains on Wiz Khalifa.

Will Sexton plays with Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017.

David Cousar backs Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017

Michael Jasud, Paul Gilliam, and Krista Wroten Combest of Dead Soldiers.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday Special Thursday Edition: Dead Soldiers

Music Video Monday is on a Thursday and its time to PANIC!

On Friday, March 31 at the New Daisy Theatre, Dead Soliders is throwing a record release party for their third release The Great Emptiness. The band’s electrifying live shows and careful song craft have made them one of Memphis’ favorites, landing them on the Memphis Flyer’s Best of Memphis Best Band list. For the new record, guitarist and vocalist Michael Jasud says, third time’s the charm. ““If you make furniture, is the first table you make going to be the best? No! The last table you make is going to be the best one…If you want longevity, then lightening in a bottle is not the way to go about it. If it happens by accident, that might make a great record, but it doesn’t necessarily speak to the artistry behind it.”

“Prophets of Doom” is is the galloping first single from The Great Emptiness. The band indulges in a little media criticism, calling out the Fox News fearmongers and self-serving propagandists with lines like “We’ve got to keep you scared to keep our jobs.” In the video, directed by Jasud and shot and edited by Joey Miller and Sam Shansky, the band hits the streets to get the wrd out about the dangers of Candy Crush invites.

Music Video Monday Special Thursday Edition: Dead Soldiers

 For more about Dead Soldiers new record, check out the music feature in next week’s Flyer. Meanwhile, I’ll leave with a little more media criticism from Jasud: “I think the modern comic book movie is one of the worst things that’s ever happened to cinema. They’ve made enough of them, they’re using all the money, Hollywood won’t take chances any more, because they can just spend $300 million on an X-Men movie that has the exact same plot as every other superhero movie. I don’t care about aliens destroying the earth any more. I don’t care about ANYTHING destroying the Earth. In fact, I want something to destroy the Earth for real. I don’t want to go to work tomorrow. So I guess that’s why people go to see superhero movies, but I don’t like them, either.”

Preach it, brother!

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

2016 was a good year for music videos by Memphis artists, musicians and filmmakers alike. I resist making a ranked list of movies in my year-end wrap up, but I know the crowd demands them, so every year I indulge my nerdery by ranking the music videos that have appeared in the Flyer’s Music Video Monday blog series. Since I sometimes go back into the vault for MVM posts, this competition is limited to videos that were uploaded since my Top Ten of 2015 post. (This proved to be a source of disappointment, since Breezy Lucia’s brilliant video for Julien Baker’s “Something” was in the top five until I discovered it had been uploaded in 2014).  Last year, I did a top ten. This year, there were so many good videos, I decided to do a top 20.

Eileen Townsend in Caleb Sweazy’s ‘Bluebird Wings’

A good music video creates a synergy between the music and the action on the screen. It doesn’t have to have a story, but arresting images, fascinating motion through the frame, and meticulous editing are musts.   I watched all of the videos and assigned them scores on both quality of video and quality of song. This was brought the cream to the top, but my scoring system proved to be inadequately granular when I discovered seven videos tied for first place, five tied for second, and three tied for third, forcing me to apply a series of arbitrary and increasingly silly criteria until I had an order I could live with. So if you’re looking for objectivity, you won’t find it here. As they say, it’s an honor to just be on the list.

20. Light Beam Rider – “A Place To Sleep Among The Creeps”
Director: Nathan Ross Murphy

Leah Beth Bolton-Wingfield, Jacob Wingfield have to get past goulish doorman Donald Myers in this Halloween party nightmare. Outstanding production design breaks this video onto the list.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

19. Richard James – “Children Of The Dust”
Director: George Hancock

The Special Rider got trippy with this sparkling slap of psilocybin shimmer.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (2)


18. Preauxx “Humble Hustle”
Director: FaceICU

Preauxx is torn between angels and his demons in this banger.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (4)


17. Faux Killas “Give It To Me”
Director: Moe Nunley

Let’s face it. We’re all suckers for stop motion animation featuring foul mouthed toys. But it’s the high energy thrashy workout of a song that elevates this one.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (3)

16. Caleb Sweazy “Bluebird Wings”
Director: Melissa Anderson Sweazy

Actress (and former Flyer writer) Eileen Townsend steals the show as a noir femme fatale beset by second thoughts.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (5)

15. Matt Lucas “East Side Nights/Home”
Director: Rahimhotep Ishakarah

The two halves of this video couldn’t be more different, but somehow it all fits together. I liked this video a lot better when I revisited it than when I first posted a few months ago, so this one’s a grower.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (6)

14. Dead Soldiers ft. Hooten Hollers “16 Tons”
Directors: Michael Jasud & Sam Shansky

There’s nothing fancy in this video, just some stark monochrome of the two combined bands belting out the Tennessee Ernie Ford classic. But it’s just what the song needs. This is the perfect example of how simplicity is often a virtue for music videos.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (7)


13. Angry Angles “Things Are Moving”
Director: 9ris 9ris

New Orleans-based video artist 9ris 9ris created abstract colorscapes with vintage video equipment for this updated Goner re-release of Jay Reatard’s early-century collaboration with rocker/model/DJ Alix Brown and Destruction Unit’s Ryan Rousseau.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (8)

12. Chris Milam “Tell Me Something I Don’t Know”
Director:Chris Milam

Milam and Ben Siler riffed on D.A. Pennebaker and Bob Dylan’s groundbreaking promo clip for “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, and the results are alternately moving and hilarious.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (9)

11. Deering & Down “Spaced Out Like An Astronaut”
Director: Lahna Deering

In a departure for the Memphis by way of Alaska folk rockers, the golden voiced Deering lets guitarist Down take the lead while she put on the Major Tom helmet and created this otherworldly video.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (10)

Tune in on Monday for the Top Ten of 2016!

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Memphis Film Prize Draws Bluff City Talent

Gregory Kallenberg wanted to create a different sort of film festival when he founded the Louisiana Film Prize in 2012. After filming in Shreveport, he fell in love with the town and relocated from Austin, Texas, and brought a more competitive model to the festival world — along with a $50,000 prize.

After three successful years, the prize is branching out to create a feeder system of regional competitions, and Memphis was at the top of the list. They partnered with On Location: Memphis, and this weekend, the top 10 films from more than 50 local entries will screen at Studio on the Square. The winning film will receive $10,000 and a chance at the $50,000 Louisiana prize in September. I spoke with three of the nominated directors.

Ricky D. Smith in director Kevin Brooks’ street drama “Marcus”

“Marcus”

Dir. Kevin Brooks

Last year, the young filmmaker’s short, “Heat Vision,” earned him a slot in the Sundance Ignite program and a trip to Park City, where he was mentored by Nate Parker, director of the Grand Jury and Audience Award-winning Birth of a Nation. “I came back with a huge burst of energy!” he says. “I made ‘Marcus’ especially for the Film Prize.”

The film stars Ricky D. Smith, whom Brooks met while they attended University of Memphis together. “The movie tells the story of a young man who is struggling with the consequences of karma,” Brooks says. “It’s derived from the decisions he made to survive. I wanted to make it really realistic, and I wanted to talk to the issues that people of color face in these urban settings.”

Brooks’ goal, he says, is to return to the big leagues in Park City with a film of his own. “I have to stay focused and keep moving forward, because I want to be there someday.”

“Calls From the Unknown”

Dir. Edward Valibus

Edward Valibus, noted for his gonzo comedies with Corduroy Wednesday, wanted to tackle something a little more serious with “Calls From the Unknown.” “Our main character is a young woman. She’s a film student doing the usual documentary 101: interviewing her dad and hearing stories she’s never heard before,” he says.

His inspiration came from his experiences with his own father’s terminal illness. “I’ve been doing absurdist humor for so long, people who watch it have been calling it a dark comedy. People laugh, then they gasp, then they cry.”

Lead actress Lara Johnson directed the documentary “Geekland,” but Valibus says her comedic student films convinced him she could excel in the role. “A big philosophy behind doing this film was giving people chances to do something new.”

Jordan Danelz, normally a gaffer, was the cinematographer, and musician Michael Jasud, of Dead Soldiers, makes his acting debut. “All my gambles really paid off,” Valibus says.

The one sure thing was Mark Pergolizzi as Johnson’s father. “He’s my favorite actor to work with,” Valibus says. “I went through the entire thing with Mark, what I wanted out of her and what I wanted out of him. Then I sent them off together to work it out. I was trying to create a father-daughter bond. It worked out amazingly well; I just let the camera roll.”

“Teeth”

Dir. Melissa Anderson Sweazy

“Like a lot of my ideas, it came about through casual conversation with my daughter,” director Melissa Anderson Sweazy says. “She heard about the tooth fairy, and she was like, ‘Why? There’s a person coming to my house to get my teeth? Who is this person, and what are they doing with all those teeth?'”

Sweazy, whose previous works include the Indie Memphis-winning “John’s Farm” and “The Department of Signs and Magical Interventions” loves to work in fantastic realms. “I’m definitely drawn to stories about magic, either about the absence of magic in the world or the proof that it is there in reality. I like the world to look normal, except for a magical element at play.”

“Teeth” stars newcomer Gabriella Goble as the young child who wants to investigate the tooth fairy’s motives. Her father, Ryan, was the director of photography. “It was kind of a miraculous find. My day job is at a production company, so my entire crew was made up of co-workers who donated their time.”

Lindsey Roberts portrays the tooth fairy. “It’s going to be a take on the tooth fairy that you have never considered.”