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Memphis is My Boyfriend: Running, Jumping, and a Little History

It’s time for another tween/teen-friendly Memphis weekend! Keep in mind, my kids are 15, 12, 12, and 10 years old. As littles, there was always something fun for them — playdates, Mommy and Me classes, and park hops. As they crested in tweenhood, there seemed to be fewer fun options, so I’ve set out to find fun, safe, and engaging activities for the whole family.

Jumping World

After a long day of Friday testing at school, my teens are ready to let loose! But it’s too cold, so it must be indoors. The teens have been sitting quietly all day and need to be able to get loud. I think of just going home, but I recall the illegal “building” they tried to construct in the past, the crack in the glass door that still needs to be replaced, and the fact that we’ve just spent a whole weekend cleaning the walls and baseboards. So going home was not an option. Then I remembered Jumping World.

Jumping World is a trampoline park for kids who someday want to be on Ninja Warrior. They also have ball pits, slam dunk areas, and tumbling lanes. After putting on our required socks, my kids headed to the tumbling lanes. They jumped, bounced, yelled, and laughed from one end of the lane to the other. After about 15 minutes, they sat down next to me. (Yes, I’m sitting down. There’s only so much jumping my “baby bladder” can take.) They take a short break before it’s on to the next spot. They bounce and jump to slam dunk a ball. They bounce and jump to land in a ball pit. They even bounce and jump just to see if they can bounce higher. Lastly, an obstacle course. We have one child who is naturally competitive. Only no one knows that it’s even a competition until he announces that you’ve lost. After an hour and fifteen minutes, the teens are officially worn out!

Memphis Museum of Science History (MoSH, aka The Pink Palace)

MoSH is one of the few places where we have a family membership. (The other is the Memphis Chess Club.) If your kids are nerdy like mine are, you will want to get a membership here. And I love dinosaurs. I have a tattoo of tiny dinos down my arm. So when I heard about the new dino exhibit, I added it to the family calendar. Upon arriving, the teens went to their favorite spot, the gift shop. But after realizing that they would have to spend their own money, they quickly exited. Next, we went to see Sue. Did you know that dinosaurs can get arthritis? Or have you ever wondered what their breath smelled like? Do you like to watch suspenseful scenes where the predator sneaks up on the prey? All of that can be found in the exhibit. I loved the piece where you could feel the vibrations of a dinosaur’s roar. It was oddly satisfying. After having our fill of dinos, we went through the historical part. My teens still enjoy the Piggly Wiggly. They find it funny that a low-tech Kroger ClickList existed back then. (You see, back then, shoppers would give the clerk a paper grocery list. They would shop for you and bring it to you. Now, we do pretty much the same thing, but electronically.) Lastly, we went to see the “Everyday People” exhibit. This showcase is by Memphis artist Eric Echols. It shows the life of African Americans from 1900 to 1950-ish. It’s important for my kids to see images that show the history of African Americans in America that doesn’t only end in slavery. While the systemic struggles are real, so is our perseverance. During the first walkthrough, they just looked at the pictures. During the second, they took time to read some of the captions. They learned about the Black church, important Black Memphians, and how a picture can provoke a thousand emotions.

Belltower Cafe at Shelby Farms

We are a cafe-loving family! I love the coffees, and my teens love the pastries and free Wi-Fi. Belltower’s newest location at Shelby Farms is perfect. Instead of my typical Lavender Latte, I decided to be daring. (It helps that the featured latte was written all pretty-like, too.) I ordered a Raspberry Nutella Latte. I don’t have the words to express how good this latte is! The teens order their favorite snacks, pair them with hot chocolate, and set up their laptops. While they may look studious, the only thing they’re studying is how to get to the next level of their game. I’ve told you all before the boys love to go out, but to do the same thing they would do at home. But since they’re good kids, I don’t mind at all.

After about an hour, the sugar has fueled their souls. Now they run! They go into the open field and play, laugh, and, well, be teens. As for me, I watch them from the warmth of the central heat. I don’t feel bad not joining them. Because since we arrived, Hubby has been running miles around Shelby Farms and I truly believe he’s burning enough calories for the both of us.

Patricia Lockhart is a native Memphian who loves to read, write, cook, and eat. Her days are filled with laughter with her four kids and charming husband. By day, she’s a school librarian and writer, but by night … she’s asleep. @realworkwife @memphisismyboyfriend

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WE SAW YOU: Science of Beer

Consuming beer is the norm at most beer events, says MoSH special events coordinator John Wesley Mullikin. “People go to drink beer.”

But, he adds, “That’s not what I am.”

Guests at Science of Beer, which was held January 12th at Memphis Science & History (MoSH) Museum, drank beer — and learned about it at the same time.

“The thing that makes me different is I’ve got the education component. Where people are actually learning things. I try to get everybody to talk about what’s different about your beer. What makes your beer special.”

They usually say, “We’re in Memphis because of the water. The aquifer. Memphis makes the best beer.”

John Wesley Mullikin (Credit: Will Goodwin)

Rhodes College was back this year. They made and offered a fact sheet about how to make “liquid nitrogen ice cream.” With beer.

People might not be thinking about ice cream on a January evening with temperatures dropping from the lower 30s to the upper 20s, but summer will be rolling around before long.

The recipe begins about like most ice cream recipes with one quart of half and half and one quart of whipping cream as well as granulated sugar.

Then weird science takes over. According to the recipe, “Add about two to three liters of liquid nitrogen slowly and in small portions into the mix and stir with a wooden spoon. Pour a little at a time and stir; then continue adding small amounts of liquid nitrogen until you have the desired consistency. One person should be stirring while another pours in the LN2.”

Makers of regular ice cream might drip some half and half on their clothes, which is no biggie. But, liquid nitrogen ice cream makers shouldn’t drip anything on what they’re wearing. According to the fact sheet, liquid nitrogen is “extremely cold” — as in more than 320 degrees below Fahrenheit. “Pouring some on unprotected skin is actually less dangerous than on clothing in contact with skin.”

As opposed to vanilla extract or some other ingredient people use making conventional ice cream, the fact sheet goes on to say, “There is an initial shielding effect called the Liedenfrost Barrier that offers short-term protection against the freezing effects of LN2.”

But, it continues, “Keeping it in contact with LN2 for more than a few seconds, however, will cause enough heat to be drained away from your skin to minimize the Liedenfrost Barrier effect and allow the LN2 to come in contact and cause serious frostbite burns. 

“Pouring it on clothing is potentially more dangerous since it ‘soaks’ into cloth and if the cloth is right against the skin that can cause quicker frostbite burns.”

So, don’t get burned when you’re trying to get chilled. And don’t forget to add the beer.

Manning the Rhodes booth this year were Sam Lippe, Lauren Boughter, Keith Hoffmeister, and Dr. Gregory Vieira.

In addition to the Rhodes physics department, Protect our Aquifer, The University of Memphis’ Center for Applied Earth Sciences and Engineering Research (CAESER), and Wolf River Conservancy featured demonstrations. Board to Beers had four stations of games for guests to play. Guests also could pay Giant Jenga and mini golf while wearing beer goggles. And they could win prizes by giving the right answers to trivia questions about Memphis, science, and beer.

Eighteen beer vendors, local and regional, as well as several local eateries took part in this year’s Science of Beer.

Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Allie Trotter and Madison Pesey at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ross Turner, Liz McCarty, and Andrew Geraci at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Stephen Traina, Hunter Halford, and Will Goodwin at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Asher Tupman, Nichalous Cox, and Andrew Foster at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Laura Gentry, Sara Streete, and John Streete at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)

About 550 people attended, Mullikin says. “It was perfect. It was a sellout. I had 200 tickets for the VIP room. And then I had 350 in the general area. The VIP sold out weeks ago. And then it was just like maybe a week before when all the general tickets sold out. I got so many phone calls from people trying to buy tickets.

“The reason I can’t go over that is everything is donated. And that’s one of the reasons everybody just comes on board. They know it [money raised] goes to community engagement and the outreach we do.”

Kelvin Kolheim at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
James Donohue and Katie Califano at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Austen McKinney, Andrew Maloney, and October Williams at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Erin Gallagher, Rachael Brill, Jeff Dreifus, and Jill Guskin at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Debra and Willly Weddle at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Zach Meyer, Grace Minnes, Sarah Krizan, and Matthew Weeden at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Grady Goodwin McDonald and Anna Lovely at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Guests voted for their favorite beer and eats. Hampline Brewing won first place. MFS Brewing came in second, and Cooper House Project, third. Crave Sweets won first place in food, Gus’s World Famous Fried Chicken came in second place, and Vanelli’s Deli, third place.

Chase Rydeen, Zach McWilliams, and Michelle McWilliams at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Self at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Geordon Duncan, Mason Hester, and Sabrina Taylor at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Kat Bollheimer and Joe Dowling at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Josee Chalut, Gaby Hochu, Josh Hollowell, John Hochu, and Lance Gehring at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Grace Kiel and Nathan Wolcott at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Jackson Fain and Clair Mulvihill at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Giovanni Aziz Lucchesi and Basma Lucchesi at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Michael Isbell and Genie Bettencourt at Science of Beer (Credit: Michael Donahue)
No, it’s not the scientist from Back to the Future at Science of Beer (Credit: Will Goodwin)
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MoSH’s Science of Beer Is Back for More Hoppy Times

Ah, beer. The great connector of people. One of the oldest drinks in the world. The third most popular beverage after water and tea. It’s no wonder that the Museum of Science & History’s annual Science of Beer event is so popular. This year’s event, happening on January 12th, is likely to sell out, says John Milliken, the event’s coordinator.

As in years past, the Science of Beer is an opportunity to taste some of Memphis’ beer, enjoy snacks, and participate in interactive beer-themed activities. All of the proceeds go to MoSH’s education department, with the breweries and food vendors donating drinks and food. “People don’t realize that pre-pandemic we reached out to over 141,000 kids,” says Milliken. “We’re just now rebuilding our education and community engagement. We’re not where we were at before, but that’s our goal.”

Photo: Courtesy MoSH

Eighteen beer vendors, local and regional, will join the event as will several local eateries. “When you come to the Science of Beer, you’ll get a commemorative glass and then you’ll make a personal necklace and put around it your neck, and when you go and see the different beer stations, in between them you can clean your palate with a pretzel,” Milliken says.

But, wait, there’s more! There’ll be trivia about Memphis, science, and beer, with prizes. The University of Memphis’ Center for Applied Earth Sciences and Engineering Research (CAESER), Protect Our Aquifer, and Wolf River Conservancy will offer demonstrations, and Rhodes College’s physics department will create beer-flavored ice cream with liquid nitrogen. Board to Beers will have four stations of games for guests to play and enjoy, and attendees can play Giant Jenga and mini golf while wearing beer goggles.

VIP tickets are available and include early access and special food vendors in a VIP lounge. Tickets are $75/VIP, $55/general admission, and $40/designated driver. Tickets for members are offered at a discounted rate. Find out more at moshmemphis.com/event/science-of-beer-2.

Science of Beer, Museum of Science & History, 3050 Central Ave., Friday, January 12, 6:30-9 p.m., $35-$75.

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We Will Rock You

There’s an epic tale unfolding in the Memphis music world these days. You might call it “The History of the Decline and Fall of the Rock Empire,” though it’s still not clear how much of a fall has been suffered. The local rock scene is a creative hotbed, as we’ll see, but that’s in the wider context of “rock music,” whatever that is, suffering an overall drop in popularity.

Six years ago, Salon noted that a Rubicon had been crossed in the music industry. “For the first time in Nielsen Music history, R&B/hip-hop has become the most consumed music genre in the United States,” wrote Taylor Link. “It’s a watershed moment for the Black-dominated genre. Former longtime volume leader rock … dropped to second with 23 percent of the total volume.” And only last year, Louder magazine decried, “There’s not one new rock/metal album among this year’s 200 best-selling albums in America.”

Such a sea change would have been unimaginable in the last century. Rock, aka “rawk,” the stepchild of rock-and-roll, arguably born with the opening power chords of The Kinks’ “You Really Got Me” in 1964, marked a whole new approach to the electric guitar, trading on its capacity for noise. If British musos were inspired by American innovators like Bo Diddley and local hero Paul Burlison, a whole new sound was forged once Kink Dave Davies leaned into the metallic sound of his distorted guitar chords — loudly. Suddenly that lurching cousin of the blues, the rock riff, was selling records. Now, nearly 60 years on? Not so much.

Museum Relics

That’s put in perspective with a visit to the Memphis Museum of Science & History (MoSH), where two current exhibits shed perspective on rock by looking at its chief tool and icon: the guitar. Both “America at the Crossroads: The Guitar and a Changing Nation,” curated by the National Guitar Museum, and MoSH’s own “Grind City Picks: The Music That Made Memphis” trace the instrument’s evolving design and cultural importance with more than 40 examples of the luthier’s craft on display. As Harvey Newquist of the National Guitar Museum notes, rock, hard rock, and metal were more than just a sound. They expressed the whole ethos of the counterculture.

Julien Baker’s guitar at MoSH. (Photo: Alex Greene)

“It was the first generation that had guitar sounds of its own,” he says. “And they were distorted guitar sounds. Post-British Invasion, the first insanely heavy guitar sounds in America came from people like Jimi Hendrix, who inspired later bands like Aerosmith and Van Halen. The rise of that sound was very much a reflection of American youth culture, more so than country-western and the blues and everything else because it was so very integrated with teen angst, as it were.”

Angst and good times, that is. “I want to rock and roll all night — and party every day!” as KISS sang. The rock riff captured the zeitgeist in all its contradictions. “Hard rock and metal, and the sound of a distorted overdriven guitar, was a sound that had never been heard before,” says Newquist. “Here was a generation that didn’t want saxophones and pianos and horns. They wanted something raw and powerful to represent them, and hard rock and metal fit the bill perfectly.”

In the exhibit, changes in the guitar’s sound are tracked visually, as the instruments come to embody either futuristic utopianism or pre-modern warfare. “The iconic, heavy rock guitarist was playing Les Paul,” Newquist explains. “But B.C. Rich created extraordinarily angular guitars that were embraced by bands like Slayer and Lita Ford because they were so aggressive looking. They’re all points and angles, which gives them kind of a lethal look.”

It was all happening in Memphis, as well. At the end of the nationally touring exhibit comes MoSH’s Memphis addition, “Grind City Picks,” where you can see, mixed in with blues, soul, funk, jazz, and rockabilly axes, signs of heavy rock taking up permanent residence on the Bluff.

Hear Rock City

One of those signs in “Grind City Picks” is Steve Selvidge’s Fender Stratocaster. That single artifact captures an entire genealogy of heavy guitar rock in Memphis, in part because Selvidge is “following in his father Sid Selvidge’s footsteps,” as the signage says. But it goes deeper than that. The Selvidges were especially close with fellow Mudboy & the Neutrons member Lee Baker, a local pioneer of heavy guitar. “Baker would be over at the house a lot, or we’d be over at Baker’s house,” Selvidge noted of his childhood in a 2021 interview. “He had a guitar … and I was just fascinated with the guitar, any guitar.”

Indeed, Baker was an innovator in the realm of loud, distorted riffs. The influence of the 1969 debut by his pre-Mudboy band, Moloch, was obvious three years later when Jeff Beck, cutting an album in Memphis, covered their version of “Going Down.” The song’s slow, sinking rock riff was the perfect transformation of the blues into a wholly new genre, and Beck kept it in his set for decades to come.

Today, Selvidge the younger, arguably the city’s biggest Moloch fan, has repeatedly distinguished himself in the rock riff department, sporadically in the ’90s funk/alt-rock band Big Ass Truck and today with The Hold Steady, a Brooklyn-based group combining a pile-driving rock sound with Craig Finn’s trenchant, literate lyrics, with whom Selvidge has played with since 2010.

But that’s just the tip of the hard rock iceberg in this town, where, despite national trends, the rawk sound marches on. Memphis has had its hand in that game for decades. Having played with classic rock-leaning Target in the ’70s, singer Jimi Jamison then led the band Cobra, which in turn led to his joining the mega-group Survivor combo in 1984 (after they’d already hit it big with “Eye of the Tiger”). Jamison helped keep them in the charts with hits like “I Can’t Hold Back” and “High on You.” Like the bigger hard rock bands in the charts, Survivor was a prime example of “Album Oriented Rock” (AOR), which mixed heavy guitar riffs with catchy choruses and sparkling production values. Meanwhile, a Memphian who’d previously dabbled in country rock, Jimmy Davis, adapted to the times and dove into AOR himself, fronting Jimmy Davis & Junction. Their debut, Kick the Wall, was produced by Jack Holder, who’d helped pen songs for Southern rock outfit 38 Special, and the title song became a minor hit.

Tora Tora in their heyday (Photo courtesy Anthony Corder)

Those artists in turn inspired many younger groups in their wake. Take Tora Tora, sometimes considered a “hair metal” band. Singer Anthony Corder recalls those times in the late ’80s when he and three other high schoolers were just learning their craft. “We were into older bands like Target, one of Jimi Jamison’s bands, who were on A&M [Records],” he says. “We won some local competition and the prize was a day at Ardent. And when we went in, the engineer happened to be Paul Ebersol.” As it happened, Ebersol was to become a key figure in the heavy rock coming out of Memphis, ultimately producing local angst-metal hitmakers Saliva in the early 2000s. “Paul just saw something in us that we didn’t even see,” says Corder.

Championed by Ebersol, Ardent took the band under its wing, and it was a particularly charmed era to be playing hair metal. “As we were coming up, the scene was exploding,” Corder notes. Before long, with Corder still in high school, Tora Tora was signed to A&M as well, and their debut album reached #47 on the charts. By the dawn of the ’90s, other Memphis groups, like Roxy Blue, Every Mother’s Nightmare, and Mother Station (featuring guitarist Gwin Spencer and singer/songwriter Susan Marshall), were also thriving, albeit not with the same success as Tora Tora. But even as Memphis metal was going big time, the seeds of its demise had already been sown.

Metal Meets Punk

Even before Tora Tora’s ascent, an alternative approach to hard rocking sounds had been gestating in the legendary Antenna Club, originally known as The Well. While some punk was morphing into what’s now called hardcore, played at a frenetic pace and with little melodic content, others, like the Modifiers, played metal-inspired music that retained a punk attitude. “The Modifiers poured their sweat and souls into every performance, breaking ground and opening doors for every original punk/alternative band in this town,” wrote J.D. Reager in the Memphis Flyer after the band’s guitarist, Bob Holmes, died in 2019.

Reager quotes Memphis native David Catching, who, after playing with the Modifiers for 10 years, went on to be a producer and guitarist for the Eagles of Death Metal and Queens of the Stone Age: “I’ll never forget meeting Bob at the Well,” says Catching. “He and Alex Chilton were my first guitar heroes I could actually talk to.”

While the Modifiers never dented the charts, to some extent they prefigured Nirvana’s breakthrough smash Nevermind in 1991, which spelled the end of hair metal’s dominance. The so-called grunge movement proffered “seventies-influenced, slowed-down punk music,” as producer Jack Endino told Rolling Stone in 1992. Like the heavier bands at the Antenna, grunge bands rejected the more pop elements of glam metal but kept the riffs, and their audiences followed suit. Ironically, by 1995 the Antenna Club had closed its doors. But a new hybrid hard rock was just getting started.

One unique Memphis group from that era was Son of Slam, whose album Trailer Parks, Politics & God was released in 1994. According to LastFm.com, they “spit in the face of pretty boy glam bands” and “found legions of loyal fans in cities throughout the South and the Midwest.” Fronted by the flamboyantly unhinged Chris Scott, the group also featured guitar virtuoso Eric Lewis and the rhythm section of Terrence “T-Money” Bishop (bass) and John “Bubba” Bonds (drums). All four, especially the latter two holding down the rhythm, continue to impact the scene today.

Only slightly later, other artists fond of killer riffs were getting their start. Local bluesy punks the Oblivians inspired young James Lee Lindsey Jr. to begin a career of his own that, like the Modifiers before him, would sometimes straddle the line between punk and metal.

Taking the name Jay Reatard, Lindsey began firmly in the punk camp, yet as the century turned, he partnered with Memphis songwriter/guitarist Alicja Trout to form the Lost Sounds, slowing the tempo slightly and adding synths to their guitar crunch. Beginning in the early 2000s, long after hair metal’s star had fallen, the Lost Sounds and other Goner-affiliated bands kept the torch of hard rock riffs burning. Hard rock was already giving way to hip-hop and electronic music on the charts, but it still percolated in Memphis with a fierce, rebellious energy.

Lost Sounds ca. early 2000s (Photo: Dan Ball)

“We were trying to challenge ourselves,” Trout says today of the Lost Sounds’ debut, Black-Wave. “It was not quite prog rock because there weren’t any jam-out moments there. We called it Black-Wave because we were trying to mix black metal and new wave.”

The Lost Sounds challenged listeners’ preconceptions as well, not least because a woman playing heavy guitar riffs was not a common sight. “When I started playing, it was novel to have a woman playing guitar and playing heavy,” Trout says. “Now, it’s no longer a novelty to be a female playing guitar in a band, although I feel like rock is still mainly dude territory.”

Trout ultimately parted ways with Lindsey, who carried on as Jay Reatard, eventually releasing the popular punk/metal hybrid albums Blood Visions and Watch Me Fall in 2009. Tragically, the next year a likely overdose took his life, a loss that the city still mourns. But Trout had already struck out on her own years before, recruiting Bishop and Bonds to found the River City Tanlines in 2004.

“I think the River City Tanlines is the most rock-and-roll band of any band I’ve ever been in,” Trout says today. “The Lost Sounds were just getting further and further from conventional songwriting, getting into time changes and epic outros and noise intros and all these layered keyboards. It really came down to me thinking, ‘Man, I just want to do something simple and fun.’ Going back to basic songwriting with a good verse or chorus riff. And then Terrence and Bubba put their rock experience twist on it.”

The Son of Slam rhythm section was perfect for Trout, for whom the “punk” label never was quite appropriate. “Whenever I’m put in with punk,” she notes, “the only thing I can think of is the Ramones, Blondie, and maybe The Velvet Underground — the New York definition of that word. Other than that, I only like smatterings of punk. It’s not me at all.”

We Will, We Will Rock Us

Despite all labels and market trends, artists like Selvidge and Trout epitomize hard rock’s staying power. The River City Tanlines still play today, as does Trout’s other group, Sweet Knives. That band’s 2022 album Spritzerita is a masterful punk/hard rock hybrid not unlike the Lost Sounds and, as Trout explains, that’s no accident. “I formed Sweet Knives to play all the Lost Sounds songs that had been put to sleep,” she says. “But it wasn’t long until [original Lost Sounds drummer] Rich Crook and I started writing songs together.” Now they continue with an evolving lineup.

Other bands that began in the ’90s have enjoyed similar longevity. The 30-year-old band Pezz, who, according to the Flyer’s Chris McCoy, has always had “a melodic streak that endeared them to pop-punk fans,” continues to play today and is featured in the MoSH exhibit. And the Subteens, who also feature Bonds on drums, have soldiered on for nearly as long, releasing what is perhaps their greatest work, Vol. 4: Dashed Hopes & Good Intentions, only last year. It’s full of “propulsive anthems, driving riffs, and soaring solos that offer portraits of an underground community teetering between hope, exultation, rage, and despair,” as noted in the Flyer.

Still more groups straddling punk and hard rock have sprouted up in the past decade and a half, including the Dirty Streets, whose rocking guitar sound harks back to the Faces or The Rolling Stones; HEELS, who combined Clash-like politics with up-tempo riffs in last year’s masterpiece, Pop Songs for a Dying Planet; Opossums, who skew towards pop punk melodicism in their latest, Bite; and the duo Turnstyles, who’ve perfected the rock sound in its most minimalist expression: a guitarist and a drummer, both of whom sing.

Simultaneously, some masterful guitarists are keeping the classic rock spirit alive here. The originals on Robert Allen Parker’s recent double album, The River’s Invitation, mine a classic mash-up of Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, and the Allman Brothers. Mama Honey, a trio led by guitarist Tamar Love, relies on her Hendrix-inspired, unabashedly rock-and-funk-fueled riffs.

And no group tours more regularly than Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre, the brainchild of guitarist Joey Killingsworth, who’s specialized in masterminding charity albums that draw on cameos from the metal, rock, and punk worlds (such as J.D. Pinkus from the Butthole Surfers), often in tributes to classic ’70s rockers like Black Oak Arkansas and Nazareth (with an MC5 tribute to be released later this year). Killingsworth is also the axe man behind A Thousand Lights, who started as a Stooges cover band but soon morphed into an original goth rock band in their own right.

Perhaps the clearest sign that hard rock is rooted here for good is the revival Tora Tora has enjoyed in recent years, having released an album of all new material, Bastards of Beale, in 2019 — still with the original four members that met in high school. “There’s still an audience here that I’m playing to, and they’re like super fans,” says Corder. “They’re super passionate. We jumped on the Monsters of Rock Cruise for the first time back in 2017, and man it was the most awesome experience. We’ve rediscovered our heavy metal tribe.”

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MoSH Celebrates the Guitar

“Once the Europeans came to America in the late 1400s — Columbus, colonial invasion, all that stuff — they brought three things with them: guns, foreign influence, and guitars,” says Harvey Newquist, the founder of the National Guitar Museum. “Ever since then, the guitar has been a part of the American nation. … You can track American history through the way people have used guitars, not only for music but also as symbols of what they’re doing.”

Indeed, within the National Guitar Museum’s traveling exhibition “America at The Crossroads: The GUITAR and a Changing Nation” each of the 40 or so guitars represents a snapshot in U.S. history — “whether it’s an emblem or a symbol of the blues and emancipation of enslaved people going out and playing the blues circuit, onto country and Western music that became popular in the late 1800s, onto Hawaiian music which actually changed America in the early 1900s, on up into protest music and folk music,” Newquist says.

The exhibition, now on display at the Museum of Science & History, even has a bit of a Memphis touch, with one of B.B. King’s Lucilles and one of Elvis’ stage guitars on display. It also coincides with the museum’s “Grind City Picks: The Music That Made Memphis” exhibit, which centers around the guitar’s role in Memphis music history. “It’s a celebration of music and Memphis, but it’s not trying to be comprehensive,” says Raka Nandi, director of exhibits and collections. “We have 15 guitars and each one of them has an amazing story.”

From Albert King’s Flying V to The Bar-Kays’ James Alexander’s very first guitar to the guitars of Eric Gales and Sid Selvidge, the exhibit borrows guitars from “the people that you expect to hear about” and guitars from people who are newer to the scene like MonoNeon, Julien Baker, the Lipstick Stains, and Amy LaVere, who has lent her banjo. “These guitarists have really been at the forefront of the evolution of music in Memphis,” Nandi adds.

To accompany “Grind City Picks,” the museum also created a downloadable Spotify playlist for those who visit the exhibit. Additionally, MoSH will host “The Way They Play” every second Saturday of the month for the duration of the exhibit. The event will spotlight special guest musicians, who will demonstrate and talk about their quirks, techniques, and styles. “You’ll get an insider view on how an artist sort of thinks about that, and how they manipulate the instrument and how they’re creative with it,” says Nandi. The museum, she adds, will also host a monthly Laser Live, where Memphis musicians will perform live to a full laser light show in MoSH’s planetarium.

For more information on either exhibits and their programming, visit moshmemphis.com.

“America at the Crossroads: The Guitar and a Changing Nation” and “Grind City Picks: The MUsic That Made Memphis,” Museum of Science & History, on display through October 22.

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MoSH’s “Artificial Intelligence” Exhibitions

We are all scared of the robots overtaking us. Is this a gross generalization? Of course. But if horror movies (*cough* M3GAN) have offered us any insight into humankind, it’s that a lot of us are a little bit skeptical of what has been dubbed artificial intelligence (AI) even though we use it every day, from opening our phones with facial recognition to asking Alexa to play our favorite jams. In most cases, you could even say we take AI for granted without truly understanding what it is or how it works. That’s what the Museum of Science & History is seeking to rectify, with two new exhibitions opening this week: “Artificial Intelligence: Your Mind & the Machine” and “Web of Innovation: AI in Memphis.”

The “Artificial Intelligence” exhibition has traveled throughout the country and features interactive displays that will demonstrate, for instance, how a computer recognizes faces or how a self-driving vehicle navigates a street. “It really tries to explain how the human brain and how computers interact in the world, and how our brains and AI will work in the future,” says Raka Nandi, director of exhibits and collections. “Visitors will learn about the history of AI, what it is, what it isn’t. … AI is really the way in which we try to make machines behave and think like humans.”

To accompany the traveling exhibition, MoSH has also curated “Web of Innovation,” which highlights the use of AI technology among local entrepreneurs and researchers, such as those at the Institute for Intelligent Systems at the University of Memphis, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and even FedEx. “We tend to think that all of this is happening on the West Coast, but right here in Memphis there are innovators who are doing a lot of good stuff that is making the city better,” Nandi says. “We’re hoping that the local component, as well as the traveling one, inspires young people to focus on career-connected learning and to really think about how AI is part of their daily world and also how it’ll be a big part of their life in the future.”

Nandi adds that the museum hopes people of all ages will see and enjoy the exhibit with all its interactives that make complex ideas much more accessible (and fun). Prior to working on these exhibitions, Nandi admits that even she didn’t know much about AI. “I think we all feel like we understand AI, but we don’t,” she says.

By the time visitors leave the exhibits, Nandi hopes that they will also consider philosophical questions that might be raised. “Machines are using complex mathematical equations to recognize things, to make decisions,” she says. “But it’s just that — it’s math. It’s not a moral code. It’s not societal cues; it’s not social cues. Those are all human ways of thinking that cannot be mimicked by a machine.”

“Artificial Intelligence: Your Mind & the Machine” and “Web of Innovation: AI in Memphis,” Museum of Science & History, Sunday, January 22 – May 6.

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News The Fly-By

Year That Was: Violence, Environment, and Health

January

2021 was twice as deadly as 2020 for Covid-19 in Shelby County. In 2020, 903 died of Covid here. In 2021, 1,807 passed from the virus.

A consent decree forced Horn Lake leaders to approve the construction of a new mosque.

Family members wanted $20 million from the city of Memphis; Memphis Light, Gas and Water (MLGW); and the Memphis Police Department (MPD) for the 2020 beating death of a man by an MLGW employee.

New DNA testing was requested in the West Memphis Three case for recently rediscovered evidence once claimed to be lost or burned. 

February

An ice storm knocked out power to nearly 140,000 MLGW customers.

The new concourse — in the works since 2014 — opened at Memphis International Airport.

Paving on Peabody Avenue began after the project was approved in 2018.

Protect Our Aquifer teamed up with NASA for aquifer research.

A prosecutor moved to block DNA testing in the West Memphis Three case.

March

A bill before the Tennessee General Assembly would have banned the sale of hemp-derived products, like Delta-8 gummies, in the state. It ultimately provided regulation for the industry.

The project to fix the interchange at Crump Ave. and I-55 resurfaced. Bids on the project, which could cost up to $184.9 million, were returned. Work did not begin in 2022 but when it does, it could close the Memphis-Arkansas Bridge (the Old Bridge) for two weeks.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee temporarily cut sales taxes on groceries.

April

The Mississippi River ranked as one of the most endangered rivers in America in a report from the American Rivers group.

Critics lambasted decisions by Memphis in May and Africa in April to honor Ghana and Malawi, both of which outlaw basic LGBTQ+ rights.

The federal government announced a plan to possibly ban menthol cigarettes.

Lawmakers approved Gov. Lee’s plan to update the state’s 30-year-old education funding plan.

Tom Lee Park (Photo: Memphis River Parks Partnership)

May

Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi prepared for the likely overturn of the Roe v. Wade decision, ending legal abortions in the state.

The Greater Memphis Chamber pressed for a third bridge to be built here over the Mississippi River.

Cooper-Young landlords sued to evict the owners of Heaux House for “specializing in pornographic images.” 

The Memphis City Council wanted another review of Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) plan to remove coal ash from the shuttered Allen Fossil Plant.

June

New research showed Memphis-area women earned 83 percent of their male counterparts income in the workplace from 2000-2019.

Gov. Lee ordered schools to double down on existing security measures in the wake of the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.

MPD arrested four drivers in an operation it called Infiniti War Car Take-Over.

A key piece of the Tom Lee Park renovation project won a $3.7 million federal grant, which was expected to trigger nearly $9 million in additional funds.

Tennessee Republican attorney general fought to keep gender identity discrimination in government food programs.

Jim Dean stepped down as president and CEO of the Memphis Zoo and was replaced by Matt Thompson, then the zoo’s executive director and vice president.

Locals reacted to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

July

Memphian Brett Healey took the stage at Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July Eating Contest.

One Beale developers returned to Memphis City Hall for the fourth time asking for financial support of its luxury hotel plans.

The Memphis-Shelby County Schools (MSCS) board placed Superintendent Joris Ray on paid leave as they investigated whether he violated district policies with relationships with co-workers and abused his power. 

The project to forever eliminate parking on the Overton Park Greensward got $3 million in federal funding.

Tennessee’s attorney general celebrated a win after a federal judge blocked a move that would have allowed trans kids to play sports on a team of their gender.

Tennessee’s top Pornhub search was “interracial” in 2021, according to the site.

August

A panel of Tennessee judges did not give a new trial to Barry Jamal Martin, a Black man convicted in a Pulaski jury room decked out in Confederate portraits, flags, and memorabilia.

Shelby County Clerk Wanda Halbert caught flak from the Tennessee Comptroller after traveling to Jamaica while her offices were closed to catch up on the controversial backlog of license plate requests from citizens.

MSCS superintendent Joris Ray resigned with a severance package worth about $480,000. Finance chief Toni Williams was named interim superintendent.

Officials said the Memphis tourism sector had made a “full recovery” from the pandemic.

A new bail system unveiled here was touted by advocates to be “one of the fairest in the nation.”

Eliza Fletcher (Photo: Memphis Police Department)

September

Memphis kindergarten teacher Eliza Fletcher was abducted and murdered while on an early-morning run. Cleotha Abston, out of jail early on previous abduction charges, was arrested for the crimes.

MLGW’s board continues to mull the years-long decision to, possibly, find a new power provider.

Ezekiel Kelly, 19, was arrested on charges stemming from an alleged, hours-long shooting rampage across Memphis that ended with four dead and three injured.

A Drag March was planned for the “horrible mishandling” of a drag event at MoSH. Event organizers canceled the show there after a group of Proud Boys arrived armed to protest the event.

October

Workers at four Memphis restaurants, including Earnestine & Hazel’s, sued the owners to recover alleged unpaid minimum wage and overtime. 

Shelby County was largely unfazed by an outbreak of monkeypox with only about 70 infected here as of October.

Animal welfare advocates called a University of Memphis research lab “the worst in America” after a site visit revealed it violated numerous federal protocols concerning the care of test animals.

While other states have outlawed the practice, Tennessee allows medical professionals and medical students to — without any kind of permission — stick their fingers and instruments inside a woman’s vagina and rectum while she is under anesthesia.

Joshua Smith, a co-defendant in the election finance case against former state Sen. Brian Kelsey, pleaded guilty in court.

The Environmental Protection Agency told South Memphis residents little could be done to protect them from toxic emissions from the nearby Sterilization Services facility.

West Tennessee farmers struggled to get crops to market because of the record-low level of the Mississippi River.

November

Groups asked state officials for a special investigator to review the “very real failures that led to [Eliza] Fletcher’s tragic murder.”

A group wanted state officials to change the name of Nathan Bedford Forrest State Park.

The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that mandatory life sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional.

A plan to forever end parking on the Overton Park Greensward was finalized by city leaders, the Memphis Zoo, and the Overton Park Conservancy.

December

The Commercial Appeal dodged layoffs in the latest round of news staff reductions by Gannett.

Federal clean-energy investments will further ingrain Tennessee in the Battery Belt and help develop a Southeast Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub (H2Hubs).

The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee criticized Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare (MLH) for canceling gender affirmation surgery for a 19-year-old patient.

State and local officials investigated an alleged milk spill into Lick Creek.

MLGW rejected Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) 20-year rolling contract but will continue to be a TVA customer “for the foreseeable future.” 

Former state Senator Brian Kelsey’s law license was suspended after he pled guilty to two felonies related to campaign finance laws last month.

Visit the News Blog at memphisflyer.com for fuller versions of these stories and more local news.

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News News Blog News Feature

Fighting the ‘Right Wing Apparatus’

Kids invented drag. 

This is Moth Moth Moth’s (Mothie for short) response to an argument that seems to be at the top of Tennessee news feeds for the past few weeks. “Are drag shows appropriate for younger audiences?”

According to Mothie, it’s a stupid argument. 

“Watch your kids as they play. What do they play? They play dress up.”

“Queer people get to be in charge of our sexuality,” says Mothie. “But that does not mean that straight people and the rest of the world get to constantly sexualize us in all that we do.”

In between balancing a nine-to-five job as the program director of the Focus Center Foundation and performing drag shows throughout the week (you can catch Mothie at Black Lodge’s Rainbow Rumble), Mothie and others have been “refighting a fight” against the “right wing apparatus.”

“I think that there is some like algorithmic, like internet demonic magic, that is going on that is systematically shutting out queer people in our art and our views and our expressions.”

On September 23rd, a family-friendly drag show at the Museum of Science and History (MoSH) was scheduled as the ending celebration of the Summer Pride programming at the museum. However, the event was canceled by event organizers after a group of armed Proud Boys arrived at the event.

Drag shows are no new phenomenon, especially in Memphis. In fact, the landscape has changed drastically in the last 20 years. 

Keleigh Klarke is the entertainment director of Dru’s Place (Dru’s Bar), producer of “Beauties on Beale” drag brunch at the Hard Rock Cafe in Memphis, and the host of the Around the Pink Table podcast. He moved to Memphis in the early 2000s and remembers the days where there were only three to four venues that had drag shows.

Keleigh Klarke (Credit: Keleigh Klarke)

Klarke says that as drag became more “mainstream,” it found its way into more spaces, presenting opportunities for performers to perform in other venues. This even extended itself into places such as the Hard Rock Cafe, allowing for drag shows to take place outside of LGBTQ+ bars. Klarke refers to them as “straight bars” and “straight establishments.”

Mothie and Klarke both say that drag has been around for years in the media, whether it was used for comedic relief, or through John Travolta’s show stopping performance in Hairspray

Mothie explains that much of the media that children consume such as Mrs. Doubtfire and Tyler Perry’s Madea even contain the same elements of drag that opponents have used to fuel the fight.

While these forms of media have always existed, shows like RuPaul’s Drag Race and social media platforms like TikTok and YouTube have exposed more people to the art and nuances of drag. 

Mothie explains that the demographics for drag are changing drastically. They explain that it’s not an art that is solely reserved for adults, but that the age range now includes 14-22 year olds. With this in mind, Mothie believes that younger audiences deserve to have a “piece of this culture.”

Exposure to material like this can be beneficial for children, says Mothie. They that there are queer and transgender children in the world, and they are going to be “queer and trans whether I’m around or not. That’s just the way that they are.”

With more exposure, though, comes the opportunity for misinformation and harmful stereotypes that contribute negatively to the conversation.

“Drag for me is not about anything of a sexual nature, or anything to do with my sexual identity,” says Klarke. “Drag for me is all about my expression of that character that I play. It is an expression of my feminine side, but there’s nothing of a sexual nature attached to it.”

For Klarke, the character that they play is just an elevation of their personality. However, it’s not 100 percent them. He sees no difference between drag and seeing someone play a character in a play. It’s the same thing essentially, but in a different format and in a different setting.

“Every entertainer I’ve worked with is smart enough to, you know, understand what they are doing,” he adds.

Every other Sunday, Klarke and others perform at the Hard Rock Cafe for a show that is catered to all ages. 

“There’s not anything done at that show that is a fraction spicier than the Hokey Pokey,” he says. “What I would do in a nightclub at 10:30, 11, 12 o’clock at night is not what I am going to do at noon on a Sunday, in the middle of the day, when there are children sitting in front of me.”

According to Klarke, the idea that it is an individual right to police others is somewhat of a national issue. He explains that performers have the agency and intelligence to be able to navigate what’s appropriate for certain venues and audiences, however the power of exposure essentially lies in the hands of the parents.

“We’re all intelligent enough to know that and what we’re getting into. But at the same time, if you don’t want your kids to see it, there’s nobody telling you that you have to go.”

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News News Blog News Feature

Drag March Friday a “Direct Response” to MoSH Drag Show Cancellation

A Drag March is planned for Friday evening for the “horrible mishandling” of the recent drag event at MoSH. 

Event organizers canceled a drag show there last Friday after a group of Proud Boys arrived armed to protest the event. Kevin Thompson, executive director of MoSH, told WMCTV that the museum is “fine with protesters” but “not armed militia” with “military-grade weapons.”

In response, a group called Memphis TransLove has planned a march for Friday, September 30th at 5:30 p.m. The march will roll from the metal statue at the corner of Cooper and Madison in Overton Square to the gay pride rainbow crosswalk at the corner of Cooper and Young. A rally will follow the march featuring speeches from community leaders in the First Congo parking lot.   

Memphis TransLove says the event is “in direct response to the horrible mishandling of the safety of the children and adults at MoSH’s drag event.” 

“We will be loudly expressing that people that intimidate us with guns and violence are not protesters but terrorists,” reads a statement form the group. “We will be expressing that our community deserves to be protected and allowed to express our queerness without fear of violence. 

“This march will be a spectacular display of color, glamour, and beautiful queerness. We will be taking over the streets and taking back our safety!  

“We stand strong as queer people and refuse to be forced to only express ourselves in spaces deemed ‘gay.’”

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We Recommend We Recommend

Blue Suede Sisters Host Cocktails & Chemistry at MoSH

If you’ve ever seen a loud gaggle of nuns of various genders in white face paint, you’ve come across the Blue Suede Sisters, one house of the international Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, known for their community service and advocacy (and outlandish drag). And if you haven’t met them yet, you’re missing out.

Originally from California, Blue Suede Abbess Krisco Kringle says, “Since I was probably in my late 20s, I wanted to be a sister because I admired the work they do. But I was never in the right career, time, city, and I’m in Memphis working and I’m in one of the local bars and sisters walk in, and I was like, ‘Oh. My. God.’ … I said, ‘I’m joining now.’ For me, it’s the impact they have on society and people, and my personal mission is to spread joy [and] bring smiles.”

A few years later, sisters Twinkle VanWinkle and Kat Ion would feel a similar calling. “I have seen sisters and known about them probably since the early ’90s, late ’80s, somewhere in there,” says Twinkle, but she admits that she assumed the group was only for gay men. However, after reaching out to the group about hosting a volunteer event, they explained that the sisterhood is open to anyone, no matter their gender, sexuality, age, religion, etc., and before Twinkle knew it, she was going through the process of becoming a sister herself. “Once a sister gets her little claws in you,” she says, “they just don’t ever let you go. Although Krisco really likes the clowning aspect, what really fills my heart when I work with the sisters is the fact that I have the opportunity to work with so many different charitable organizations and so many different groups. And the fact that we get to dress up and do silly things and get away with stuff that we’d never be able to get away with until we put that white makeup on, it’s an added bonus.”

Sisters Krisco Kringle, Twinkle VanWinkle, and Kat Ion (Photo: Courtesy Blue Suede Sisters)

Indeed, the group aligns itself with a number of community issues, from advocating for the unhoused community to marching for reproductive justice. “If there’s a protest or a need to bring attention to it, having a white-bearded man in a full-on nun outfit with white-face, it brings attention,” Krisco says.

“That is what we would call ministry of presence,” Twinkle adds. “We are present and using our presence to inform, educate, to make people smile. Krisco’s always got a joke or some smart-ass little comment to make. I’m always the one with business cards and contact info.”

“And I’m just running late walking in shoes that I can’t really walk in,” quips Kat.

Kat, for her part, is a novice, yet to become a full-fledged sister, and part of that process is coming up with a novice project for the community’s behalf. Serendipitously, a representative from the Museum of Science & History had reached out for the group’s insight for its exhibition about LGBTQ+ history in Memphis, “Memphis Proud.”

“They said, ‘We want the sisters to be involved,’” Kat says, “And I said, ‘Well, I could sorta do chemistry while dressed up.’” And what unfolded are the Cocktails & Chemistry sessions, at which Kat, as part of her novice project, will lead participants through “actual, real experiments. It’s very college-level and intense, but it’s none of the hard stuff, none of the math, none of the ‘Oh my god, I’m going to fail,’ none of that. It’s all the fun stuff. Without giving too much away, we’re just doing some really cool stuff with metal — stuff that you wouldn’t think that anyone would let me play with but they do.

(Photo: Courtesy Blue Suede Sisters)

“I like to tell people I’m not a mad scientist. I’m a bad scientist.” 

In fact, this attitude inspired Kat’s name choice. She explains, “In science, a positive or negatively charged molecule is known as an ion. If it’s a positive ion, it’s known as a cation. If it’s a negatively charged molecule, it’s an anion. I feel like a cation. If it’s positive that means it’s lost electrons, so I’m a few electrons short of a whole atom.”

“We agree with you, but only in love,” Twinkle adds. “Which is why Sister Krisco and I will be mingling and enjoying the signature cocktails while Sister Kat deals with all the chemicals far, far away.”

As such before the experiments, participants will get a chance to mingle and enjoy cocktails with the sisters. Tickets for the 21+ event on Friday, August 19th, can be purchased here. Two sessions will be available to choose from, one at 6 p.m., the other at 8 p.m. Another set of Cocktails & Chemistry sessions will be held on September 16th. 

In the meantime, the sisters are hard at work preparing a sexual health educational session for young people in the fall, as well as a job fair for previously incarcerated people. And they’ll be making an appearance at Memphis Public Libraries’ Pride Kickoff at the Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library on September 3rd. To keep up with the sisters, visit bluesuedesisters.org.

Cocktails & Chemistry, Museum of Science & History, Friday, August 19, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m., $25, 21+.