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The Sword at the 1884 Lounge

Brian Tamborello

The Sword

Austin TX’s The Sword came together at the beginning of the last decade as a hybrid of doom metal, first-wave thrash metal like Slayer, late-70s classic New Wave of British Heavy Metal (Iron Maiden, etc), and what was then being called “stoner metal,” though that term has proven its uselessness as time went on. With a tenacious work ethic and great, pounding live show that often transcends what the band is able to offer on record, The Sword eclipsed the success of many of its contemporaries and became a self-sustaining unit seemingly built for the live arena. After playing together for a couple of years and releasing two demos and an EP titled Freya in 2004, The Sword was signed by NYC’s Kemado Records (parent label of Mexican Summer Records) on a recommendation by Lamb of God guitarist Mark Morton, and this initiated a long and fruitful relationship that saw The Sword release four full lengths, contribute several songs to various versions of Guitar Hero as well as two special heavily-promoted one-offs for the Volcom label and iTunes.The Sword has also toured the world with Lamb of God, Lucuna Coil, Witchcraft (with whom the band shared a split EP), Machine Head, …and You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead, Clutch and eventually Metallica, who the band supported for two tours in 2010. The band’s more hard-rock oriented conceptually-based third album, Warp Riders,  sold 9000 copies in its first week and peaked at #47 on the Billboard 200 album charts. 

In early 2012 The Sword switched labels and signed a multi-album deal with Razor & Tie Records. It’s fourth album, 2012’s Apocryphon, debuted at #17 on the Billboard 200 and was produced by Jawbox/Burning Airlines founder and notable knob-twirler J. Robbins. The Sword also released its own hot sauce during this period, known as Tears of Fire, as well as two lines of its own craft beer, Winter Wolves Beer and Iron Swan. The Sword released its fifth album in August of this year, titled High Country, and then embarked on doing what it does best, hitting stages the world over, which will bring things to Minglewood Hall tonight. 
     
Opening for The Sword will be Atlanta, GA’s excellent Royal Thunder, a hard-rock/metal/blues-rock/prog-rock band fronted by the distinctly haunting vocals of singer Miny Parsonz. Doors: 8:00pm Show starts at 9:00pm and admission is  $20 – $22.

The Sword at the 1884 Lounge (2)

The Sword at the 1884 Lounge

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North Mississippi Allstars at Minglewood Hall

The Dickinson brothers return to Minglewood Hall this Friday night, along with special guest Jim Lauderdale. With the way the show is being promoted, it’s a safe bet that Lauderdale will be joining North Mississippi Allstars onstage, in addition to playing songs from his new album, Soul Searching Vol. 1 Memphis/Vol. 2 Nashville. Recorded in Memphis, Mississippi, and Nashville with Luther and Cody Dickinson (of the North Mississippi Allstars), Soul Searching was released in September to rave reviews. Paste Magazine called the Grammy Award-winning artist’s latest album “vibrant and deceptively simple,” and other media outlets like NPR and Country Weekly have given the album their seal of approval.

North Mississippi Allstars

With a career that spans three decades, Lauderdale has long been at the forefront of the Americana movement, working with artists like Elvis Costello, George Strait, Lee Ann Womack, and Old Crow Medicine Show in the process. The North Mississippi Allstars certainly aren’t a small-time act either, making the pairing of these two songwriting institutions an exciting match. Lauderdale was also the subject of the documentary Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts, and hosts a critically acclaimed SiriusXM radio show with Buddy Miller, the aptly titled “Buddy & Jim Show.”

As for the North Mississippi Allstars, the band has been riding the wave created by their 2015 album Soul Food. Luther and Cody have set out on two tours so far this year, one with Anders Osborne in February, the other with The Word this past October.

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Dope Lyfestyle

When I reach David Parks, cofounder of Lyfe Is Dope, he’s just finished a sound check at the Hard Rock Cafe in Miami, a venue he’ll perform at later that night with platinum-selling artist Jason Derulo.

“I’m in Los Angeles about six months out of the year, on tour for about three months, and then back in Memphis for about three months,” Parks explains, while he tries to find a quiet place in the club to talk.

When he’s in Memphis, Parks and longtime friend Damien Woods curate Lyfe Is Dope, a production/clothing company that’s grown from a small block party-type event to an anticipated annual gathering, hosting artists and socialites like Drumma Boy, Bruno Mars member Kameron Whalum, Shanell, and K97’s Devin Steel. Parks and Woods first met while working at Club 152 on Beale, and quickly decided to join forces.

“We had started putting our ideas together, and around that time I was doing a lot of touring and going to a lot of live events, so I just started taking notes,” Parks says.

“I would go to happening shows in L.A. and New York, and I noticed that there was just a huge void in the Memphis hip-hop community. At the time, most of the hip-hop shows in Memphis weren’t well planned out, and the sound was almost always bad.”

After settling on the name —Woods had a production company named “Nice Life,” and Parks had a company called “Rated D for Dope”— Lyfe Is Dope was born. With the notion that this wasn’t going to be just another hip-hop show, Parks and Woods started to come up with the ideas that are now staples at every Lyfe Is Dope event: a live band backing a rapper or artist who normally wouldn’t perform with one, visual artists, projection screens throughout the venue, merch stations, body paint booths, and even a live chef.

The first Lyfe Is Dope events were held at 409 S. Main, but the packed shows quickly outgrew that space, leaving Parks wondering what the budding production company’s next move would be.

“It grew beyond South Main, and I started thinking about trying to move the event to Midtown to bring in as many people as possible. If you’re going to go to a big show, you’re going to go to Minglewood Hall, and so that was just the obvious choice.”

On Wednesday, November 25th, at Lyfe Is Dope Volume 6, Memphis legend Project Pat will perform with backing band Trump Tight for the first time, along with Lord T & Eloise and DJ Dnyce. Parks says that there will also be a jookin’ contest, in addition to shoe painting stations where attendees can customize whatever kicks they bring to the show. If you were holding out to find out who the live chef is going to be, you’ll be happy to know Chef Kenna — an upcoming contestant on the television show Hell’s Kitchen — will be in the house.

“You won’t see Project Pat with a live band anywhere else,” Parks says.

“It’s very important to include the live band aspect, because that is what Memphis is known for. We don’t want it to be an average show; it has to be a next-level experience every time. My band will be behind Project Pat, and I’ll be serving as the music director, taking all the skills and knowledge I’ve gained over the past five years playing with some of the biggest artists in the world.”

Still, the idea of Project Pat performing songs with a full band off his club-ready albums Ghetty Green or Mista Don’t Play seems a little bit weird, but Parks insists the crowd will like what they hear.

“The misconception is that rap music would be easy to play, but you have to lock in to all those grooves and hooks to make it feel right. There’s a lot more going on than what people think,” Parks says.

“We approach the artist ahead of time and make sure it works for both parties, but I think Project Pat already knew about Lyfe Is Dope because of his relationship to Damien. The band [Trump Tight] will normally spend about a week practicing the set, and then the artist will normally come in and do a couple of days of practice before the show. I’ve noticed that when you get to a certain level of musicianship, it’s not that hard to pull off. Everyone involved just has to do their homework.”

As for Park’s intense touring schedule, he sees the experience as a way to make Lyfe Is Dope one of the best hip-hop events in the country.

“I had to turn down an Australia run to do this show,” Parks says.

“But this is my dream. This is something I believe in. This goes further than me just being a side man for someone else. You’ve gotta sacrifice, and the band isn’t gonna miss me for too long. Right after Lyfe Is Dope, I go to Angola, then I come back to L.A., and then I go to the U.K. in December.”

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Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall

Danzig.

Including this year’s installment, Danzig has taken the “Blackest of the Black” tour on the road six times: 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, and in 2010. Past outings of the several-band package have included a cross-section of supporting acts, both old and new movers in the metal underground like Marduk, Toxic Holocaust, Possessed, Behemoth, Mortiis, (the criminally overlooked) Withered, Skeletonwitch, and Moonspell, to name a few. This return of the brand after five years is no exception. 
       
Portland’s Witch Mountain will kick things off with their excellent take on contemporary doom metal of the blues-driven variety. The band formed in the late ’90s and self-released some material under its original incarnation before going inactive for most of the ’00s. When vocalist Uta Plotkin joined in 2009, and her arresting reach and versatility on vocals initiated an ongoing run of full activity. On the strength of a second self-released album, 2011’s South of Salem, Witch Mountain secured a deal with the best underground metal label going, Profound Lore Records, and followed with two more full-lengths, 2012’s Cauldron of the Wild and last year’s great Mobile of Angels. Though Plotkin departed after that release, Witch Mountain remarkably found a suitable replacement (after vowing to wait as long as it took to do so ) in January of this year: The 19-year-old Kayla Dixon, front-woman of Cleveland metal band Demons Within and a stage singer since age 5. Let’s hope that Witch Mountain don’t suffer from the sound-and-volume challenges that seem inherent to first-slot bands, or the meager turnouts.

Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall (5)

Veterans of heavy hybridization Prong will anchor the evening’s bill with its kitchen-sink metal/hardcore/industrial/groove riff volleying. Emerging from NYC’s mid ’80s anything-goes scene with a metal, hardcore and soon enough, industrial flair to its unique sound, Prong released a run of records that eventually lead to a modicum of popularity in the early-to-mid-90s. Centered around ringleader guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Tommy Victor (also part of modern Danzig lineups), Prong went in and out of active status in the late ’90s and early ’00s but reemerged over the last ten years with full-lengths of new material as well as the band’s most recent release, Songs From The Black Hole, an album of cover versions.

Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall (3)

Chicago’s Veil of Maya is a popular name within the realm of impossibly-complex progressive death-metal/deathcore and appropriately part of the Sumerian Records roster. The band is sometimes associated with the “djent” movement, so named for the sound of a riff (say it out loud) that could only come from a guitar with a minimum of eight strings and a neck that resembles a fence plank. Like many bands of this ilk that have road-dogged it for a stretch before reaching a certain level of success/exposure, Veil of Maya has seen a revolving door of members across its discography (now five full-lengths strong), including the addition of a new vocalist on this year’s Matriarch who brought clean singing into the fold, though the constant sonic element throughout this band’s set will no doubt be drum triggering. 

Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall (4)

Superjoint Ritual, now known simply as Superjoint, was formed in the early ’90s by then-Pantera front-man Phil Anselmo as an early (if not the first) outlet to more some of the more underground forms of metal of which he has always been a rabid supporter and participant. Superjoint Ritual originally featured longtime Anselmo associate Hank Williams III on bass and was named after a lyric by black metal legends, Darkthrone. Sporadically active while Anselmo weathered a notoriously difficult and chaotic narrative during the ’90s and early ’00s run of Pantera, and overshadowed by the better-known Down (another of Anselmo’s countless bands over the years), Superjoint Ritual released two full-lengths of lurching, black-metal informed sludgy nihilism in the early ’00s and then went inactive. The band reformed last year for Anselmo’s 2014 Housecore Horror Film Festival in Austin TX but has remained active (touring-wise) since.

Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall (2)

What to say about the headliner? Well, I wouldn’t expect any Misfits or Samhain songs in the set but some renditions of other people’s songs might be on the menu as per next month’s release Skeletons, Danzig’s album of cover songs. As the band’s 10th studio full-length, Skeletons features Prong’s Tommy Victor and Type-O- Negative drummer Johnny Kelly, and versions of songs by ZZ Top, The Everly Brothers, Black Sabbath, The Litter, and The Troggs (it was previewed last month by a now-out-of-print “Devil’s Angels” 7”, a cover of the theme song from the late-60s cult biker film of the same name). But the cover version Memphians can expect more than any other will likely be Danzig’s version of Elvis’ “Let Yourself Go”, also on Skeletons (as if an album of Danzig covering other artists would make any sense without an Elvis song).

Blackest of the Black Tour at Minglewood Hall

Note: Danzig concerts are known for strict rules when it comes to the omnipresent elevating of phones into the air or usage in general, but these days it’s not like the absence of this is unwelcomed or needed. Regrettably, no footage could be found of Danzig addressing a concertgoer with “Homeboy, if I see you with your Go-Pro again, it’s on,” as was reported from a Houston TX performance earlier this summer, but above is a full set from 2014’s Rock Fest. Doors at 6:30, Show at 7:15. Tickets are $35 – $38.

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Music Music Features

Run the Jewels at Minglewood Tuesday

You know you’re doing something right when you announce your cat-themed remix album, and people are actually excited about it. That’s just what New York City hip-hop duo Run the Jewels did following the hype of their Run the Jewels 2 album that came out late last year, and music critics and fans alike were thrilled. The super group will return to Minglewood Hall this coming Tuesday, right in the middle of an incredibly star-studded lineup for the Midtown music venue that includes appearances by Danzig, Father John Misty and Death Grips. With politically-conscious lyrics and mastermind production, Run the Jewels have been widely considered to be exactly what the hip-hop world needs in 2015. One of Killer Mike’s strongest lyrical traits is his ability to speak on police brutality, and the subject even brought him to tears at a now infamous live show in St. Louis in which he spoke out on the verdict of the Mike Brown case.

Run the Jewels

Joining Run the Jewels on Tuesday’s bill is CUZ Lightyear, the Little Rock, Arkansas, M.C. who recently dropped the CUZ mixtape. Little Rock isn’t exactly known as a hotbed for emerging hip-hop talent, but CUZ has been gaining a steady following after releasing the singles “Return Call” and “Choppa Go Bang.” Also on the tour is Boots, the rapper most known for his involvement with the Fifty Shades of Grey version of the Beyoncé mega-hit “Drunk in Love.” Boots has also worked with FKA twigs and produced Run the Jewels 2, pushing his hipster hip-hop cred into critical overload. Consider buying tickets in advance, because just like the Danzig gig the next night, there is a good chance the show will sell out. As for Meow the Jewels, it’ll drop this fall.

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Beach House at Minglewood

This Monday night, Baltimore dream-pop act Beach House will perform at Minglewood Hall. Beach House are no strangers to the Midtown venue, as they played there in 2012 with Wild Nothing. Since then, the band has released multiple albums, including this summer’s Depression Cherry. While the band can still be considered underground, they are on the fringe of “making it,” along with other accessible dream-pop performers like Mac DeMarco. Beach House have such a strong following that the band recently revealed their “Set List Creator,” a function of their website that allows fans to choose any three songs from their extensive catalog. If the song gets picked enough, the band will play it or something similar, as the band explained on Facebook: “While on tour, we change our set list every night, and certain songs get played only a few times per tour. This device will allow us to know if there is a large number of people wanting to hear a certain song in any one place. It’s not that we will definitely follow it, but it will certainly influence our set lists.”

Joining Beach House on tour is San Francisco songwriter Jessica Pratt. Birth Records, the semi-active label run by Tim Presley of White Fence, DRINKS, and W-X, released Pratt’s debut album. Pratt has an amazing voice and quickly made the jump from Birth to Drag City (Ty Segall, Wand, White Fence) for her second album On Your Own Love Again. While Beach House definitely sound like a modern band, Pratt’s music has a distinct timelessness to it, which should make for a interesting contrast at Monday night’s show. As mentioned earlier, Beach House’s fan base is growing at a rapid rate, so you may want to get tickets in advance.

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Godspeed You! Black Emperor at Minglewood Hall

Eva Vermandel

This Friday, esoteric post-rockers (and pioneers of unique punctuation) Godspeed You! Black Emperor will play Minglewood Hall. The Canadian band was extremely active in the late ’90s before going on a hiatus for over 10 years, but it seems like the groundbreaking group is back in action. Currently touring on their latest album, Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress, Godspeed You! Black Emperor are joined by the two piece band Xylouris White on Friday night’s bill. Check out songs from each band below, then get to Minglewood Hall by 8 p.m. on Friday with $25 bucks in hand. 

Godspeed You! Black Emperor at Minglewood Hall

Godspeed You! Black Emperor at Minglewood Hall (2)

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Danzig coming to Minglewood Hall

Danzig plays Minglewood Hall in October.

MInglewood Hall announced yesterday that Danzig will be coming to Memphis as the headliner of the “Blackest of the Black Tour.” The show is set for Wednesday, October 7th.  Most will remember Danzig as the singer for The Misfits, but the prolific man in black has also had a hell of a solo career, in addition to publishing books of his own and comic books through his company Verotik.  Joining him on the tour is Superjoint, Veil of Maya, Prong, and Witch Mountain. Check out some videos of Danzig below, and purchase tickets to the show here.

Danzig coming to Minglewood Hall

Danzig coming to Minglewood Hall (2)

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Raekwon, Ghostface Killah at Minglewood Hall

Few groups have had a stranglehold on the hip-hop community over the last 25 years like the Wu-Tang Clan. The rap collective produced superstars like Method Man, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, RZA, and GZA, along with breakout MC’s like Masta Killa and Inspectah Deck. Now that most of the members of the Wu-Tang Clan have been focusing on their solo careers, Memphis has been a tour destination for a few of the group’s artists, including Masta Killa and Inspectah Deck (who played at the old Hi-Tone a few years ago) and Raekwon (who played at the Young Avenue Deli in 2012). But no Wu-Tang Memphis appearance has had more hype than this Friday’s show that features Ghostface Killah and Raekwon at Minglewood Hall.

The duo is touring in support of the 20th anniversary of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx, the masterpiece of an album that launched Raekwon into superstardom. Every track on Only Built 4 Cuban Linx is a classic, from the hard-hitting lyrical content of “Guillotine (Swordz)” to the classic anthem “Ice Cream,” featuring Method Man’s infamous chorus, which isn’t exactly fit for print. While Ghostface Killah went on to create seminal albums like Bulletproof Wallets, Put It on the Line, and The Pretty Toney Album, there is something about the staying power of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx that just oozes classic Wu-Tang Clan. RZA produced most of the album, and while many have tried to replicate/rip off his beats, few have come close to re-creating that classic ’90s Shaolin sound. If you’ve been paying attention to hip-hop at any point in the last two decades, be at Minglewood Hall on Friday and remember, “Wu-Tang is for the children.”

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Photo Recap: Live from Modest Mouse at Minglewood Hall

Josh Miller

We sent our resident music photographer Josh Miller to the sold out Modest Mouse show at Minglewood Hall last week. Check out some of his favorite shots from last Wednesday night below.  Josh Miller

Josh Miller

Josh MIller