The 2022 Evolve Bank & Trust Cooper Young Festival, slated for Saturday, September 17th from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., has announced its musical lineup.
The headliner will be Bailey Bigger, backed by a band featuring Mark Stuart (bass guitar), Wyly Bigger (keyboards) and Danny Banks (drums).
Growing up in small town — Marion, Arkansas, just outside of Memphis, Tennessee — Bigger began writing and performing seriously in Memphis at the age of 14. It’s been quite a journey from that to Bigger’s debut full length album, Coyote Red, released by Madjack Records in March and featured in the Memphis Flyer‘s music column at the time.
At the time, we wrote of her strong-yet-delicate singing and evocative songwriting, with echoes of Joan Baez and similar artists. Bigger noted that when producing the album, Mark Stuart told her, “I think this record’s about you showing who you are, in a genuine, down-to-earth way.” It’s not to be missed. Visit baileybigger.com to learn more and find tour dates near you.
Here is the complete music lineup for the 2022 Cooper Young Festival:
Memphis Grizzlies Stage 12:30 pm Joy Dog – Danny & Joyce Green 1:30 pm Rachel Maxann 2:30 pm The Delta Project 3:30 pm Jay Jones 4:30 pm Generation Gap
Evolve Bank & Trust Stage 11:15 am SoundBox 12:15 pm Rodrick Duran 1:15 pm Elevation 2:15 pm The City Fathers 3:15 pm Chinese Connection Dub Embassy 4:15 pm Carlos Guitarlos 5:15 pm Headliner – Bailey Bigger
While many have been celebrating the return of indoor concerts for some time now, open-air concerts haven’t gone anywhere. They have an inherent appeal with or without the pandemic, especially from spring to fall in Memphis. In recent days and weeks, many of the key venues for outdoor concert series have released their planned line-ups. Here’s a roundup of all the acts to expect under the sun, moon and stars, from this weekend until October. Be sure to watch for our in-depth guide to the Beale Street Music Festival in next week’s issue of the Memphis Flyer.
Click the link for each concert series to learn more.
Cooper-Young Porchfest This Saturday, April 23rd, from noon til 6 p.m., the Cooper-Young neighborhood will run riot with live music as the Cooper-Young Community Association revives its annual Porchfest. This all-volunteer event will feature an eclectic mix of bands playing on residents’ front porches and at the Cooper-Young gazebo, not to mention a community yard sale that morning.
Please see the Cooper-Young Porchfest website for a full listing of names, times and locations, but some of the highlights include Greg Cartwright, J.D. Reager, Bailey Bigger, Jeff Hulett, the Church Brothers, Los Psychosis, Alice Hasen, San Salida, Flamenco Memphis, the Turnstyles,and Model Zero.
The River Series With an amphitheater boasting an incredible view of the Memphis skyline, as well as naturally superior acoustics, Harbor Town’s Maria Montessori School has made its bi-annual fundraising series a touchstone of musical happenings. Curated by Goner honcho Zac Ives, the artists are always intriguing, even as they depart from typical Goner fare.
This spring’s line-up features: Greg Cartwright’s Whelk Stall with Aquarian Blood (Saturday, April 30th), Jeremy and the Drip Edges with Tm. Prudhomme’s FAKE (Saturday, May 14th), and Mouserocket with Ibex Clone (Saturday, June 4th). All shows begin at 4 p.m.
Overton Park Shell The newly rechristened Shell has not missed a beat as it moves into its next chapter, a fully Memphis-based nonprofit once more. Just as in the Levitt Shell years, the stage will host the Orion Free Music Concert Series through the summer and fall, along with a few ticketed Shell Yeah! events to serve as fundraisers.
The latter will include Durand Jones & The Indications (June 16th), St. Paul & The Broken Bones (July 16th), Almost Elton John Masquerade (September 15th), and an as-yet undisclosed fourth artist on September 23rd. As Overton Park Shell executive director Natalie Wilson notes in a statement, “In order to provide accessibility to our free concerts and events, we rely on revenue raised from Shell Yeah! Benefit Shows and generous donations from the Memphis community.”
As usual, the Shell will bring national and international artists to Overton Park, alongside many notable local acts. Memphis-related groups include the Memphis Symphony Orchestra’s Sunset Symphony (May 29th), which opens the season, followed by the Sensational Barnes Brothers (June 9th), Reigning Sound (June 10th), the Stax Music Academy (June 25th), Cameron Bethany (July 2nd), Don Lifted (September 16th) and the North Mississippi Allstars (October 14th). See the Overton Park Shell website for the full line-up.
Gonerfest With Gonerfest 18 taking place entirely at Railgarten last year — a first for the festival — Goner Records is taking the same approach in 2022. Gonerfest will once again be centered on Covid safety, and while many slots still need to be filled, the marquee names have been announced and tickets are now on sale for the event, which takes place September 22nd through 25th.
Headliners will include Bay Area garage/soul weirdo masters Shannon & the Clams, wild lo-fi R&B rockers King Khan & BBQ Show, pre-Oblivians/Reigning Sound Memphis legends Compulsive Gamblers, lo-fi punks Gee Tee and garage rocker Michael Beach, both from Australia, and Nashville’s own Snooper. The complete festival will be live-streamed for those unable to attend.
Mempho Music Festival Just as we are about to enjoy one major event, the Beale Street Music Festival, we’re also hearing about the finalized line-up for another, the Mempho Music Festival, scheduled for September 30th through October 2nd. Different ticket packages can already be found here, and, given the quality of the performers slated for the event, early ticket purchases might be prudent.
The Memphis Botanic Garden will thrill to the sounds of The Black Keys, alternative rock mainstays Wilco, and decorated Americana outfit Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, as well as a double-dose of Athens-based ensemble Widespread Panic returning to the lineup by popular demand. Appearances by Portugal. The Man, Fantastic Negrito, Tank and the Bangas, Allison Russell, and Celisse will also be a highlight. Local favorites Bobby Rush, Big Ass Truck, Amy LaVere and Elizabeth King will also share the spotlight’s glow.
When the quarantine era struck in 2020, one major piece of collateral damage was the Beale Street Music Festival (BSMF) that May, which was first postponed until that fall, then pushed into 2021. Those contingency plans didn’t pan out either, but now at long last the Memphis in May concert event is back. Today, the final lineup was released for the 44th edition of the festival, scheduled for April 29-May 1, 2022.
For the first time, the gathering will take place at the Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, to make way for the construction of the redesigned Tom Lee Park. The 2023 Beale Street Music Festival will return to Tom Lee Park and the Memphis riverfront after park construction is completed in April 2023.
The lineup is appropriately packed with blockbuster acts, including the Foo Fighters, Weezer, The Smashing Pumpkins, Counting Crows, Sarah McLachlan, Three 6 Mafia, Death Cab for Cutie, Stone Temple Pilots, and Modest Mouse.
Two notable headliners include Lil Wayne, making his BSMF headline debut, and Van Morrison, who last performed in the city at BSMF in 1996. The latter is sure to face a rocky reception, due to the anti-vaccine and pro-white nationalist leanings of his recent interviews and songs, but those may be irrelevant to many, amidst a back catalog as venerable as his.
Local luminaries will be well represented, including Cory Branan, Kenny Brown, and Blvck Hippie. There will be an especially strong contingent from Memphis’ hip-hop community, including MoneyBagg Yo, NLE Choppa, Project Pat, Al Kapone, Lil Wyte, Jucee Froot and White $osa. This year will also mark the first BSMF appearance for Memphis legends Three 6 Mafia in a decade.
As part of the festival’s month-long salute to Ghana, the organization’s honored country for 2022, two of that country’s hottest artists join the lineup: Sarkodie and Stonebwoy.
As in previous iterations, the BSMF is but one of several events planned for the 2022 Memphis in May celebrations. Other dates associated with the month-long event include: the Honored Country Salute to Ghana, May 1-31, 2022; the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, May 11-14, 2022; and the Great American River Run,May 28, 2022.
The Beale Street Music Festival takes place at the Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, April 29 – May 1, 2022.Information about single-day tickets will be released next week. Three-day passes are $175. VIP passes start at $809. Visit www.memphisinmay.org/bsmftickets for details.
Day three of Goner Records’ cavalcade of talent was on the toasty side, and the same could have been said for many of the fans milling through the Railgarten grounds. But the sheer sonic appeal of the afternoon, hosted with aplomb by Tim Prudhomme of the band Fuck, did away with any flagging spirits. After a noon opener by Seattle’s Zack Static Sect, things were brought back closer to home with Nashville’s Snooper, Memphis’ Ibex Clone, and Hattiesburg’s MS Paint.
Then Prudhomme took to the stage and announced “I saw these guys in a record store in 2019, and they were great. And it’s really hard to tell great in a record store. From New Orleans, Silver Synthetic!” The band, whose Third Man debut album has received a lot of buzz on the grapevine this year, kicked in with a uniquely upbeat sound that somehow blends the twin guitar attack of Television with the pop sensibilities of the Zombies, or “mid/late ’80s C86/Flying Nun guitar jangle,” as the Goner booklet puts it. And perhaps a bit of Nerves thrown in? A beguiling blend, carried off with precision and a bit of abandon.
The Exbats feature the young drummer and singer Inez McLain, immersed in ’70s punk and ’60s jangle pop, who proudly wore a “Help Me Rhonda” T-shirt. “I dressed up like Brian Wilson,” she deadpanned, “but it was too hot for the bathrobe.” Her father Kenny stood nearby, serving as guitarist, singer, and hype man with vigorous enthusiasm, while he, the bassist, and the second guitarist channeled their inner teens. Their pounding beats, crisscross riffs, and singalong choruses soon had the audience jumping. The highlight: a joyous rendering of their 2018 tune, “I Got The Hots For Charlie Watts.”
And then came an artist who requested that Prudhomme present him only as “a man who needs no introduction.” In the case of Eric Goulden, aka Wreckless Eric, that was probably true, at least within Goner’s orbit. He’s been well loved since his 1978 hit, “Whole Wide World,” which he played with his usual dynamism, but the clincher is how his songwriting has evolved since. He carries off his mini-masterpieces of gritty prose/poetry with naught but an acoustic guitar and a few pedals, which he uses sparingly to great effect, at times conjuring the illusion of a full band behind him, so great is the cacophony.
After the set, none other than Reigning Sound’s Greg Cartwright, shaking his head, expressed his utter admiration for Goulden’s craft as both a songwriter and storyteller, and the minimalism with which he enacts it. A local poet of Memphis also expressed her love of his lyrics. But his artistic zenith may have been his banter.
“The rest of the set’s going to be a story in about 14 halves,” he quipped after the first two songs (it wasn’t). And, echoing the words of Miss Pussycat two days before, he commented, “I can’t believe I’m here, really. I mean, it was so weird. The whole fucking thing was weird. I mean, it still is weird!” Later, he elaborated how a case of Covid-19, mistakenly diagnosed, led to a full-on heart attack last year. Yet now, that seemed a distant memory, as he delivered his songs with a quiet energy that sometimes exploded into a very punk-inspired anger.
Like many festival-goers, your stalwart reporter had to miss Spread Joy from Chicago and G.G. King from Atlanta, though by all accounts, they both rocked. I picked up the thread as Omaha’s Digital Leather hit the stage, and hit it they certainly did, as group founder Shawn Foree led the band through driving, synth-inflected rockers with a dark edge. The guitarist, brandishing a red Flying V axe, literally lept (or dive-bombed) into one solo after another as the rest of the band gyrated sympathetically. No Saddle Creek flavors here — this was not from your mama’s Omaha!
Digital Leather’s power was a perfect appetizer before the tasty main course served up by local heroes Jack Oblivian and the Sheiks. Igniting their set at a pummeling, fast pace is nothing new for this group, but they had an extra fire to them this night. Early on, Jack noted that “Amtrak doesn’t go west! If you’ve been stranded, you know what I mean.” No one doubted that Jack O. has been stranded. Later, he bemoaned the cancellation of one of Detroit’s finest bands. “I really wish we could have seen Negative Approach!” he exclaimed. From then on, the band’s name became a running joke. After a screaming chorus of “Mass Confusion all around!” came to a close, a band member helpfully pointed out the song’s negativity.
But that was but a foreshadowing of the whole world being negated by adolescent ennui, when Jack called friend Abe White of the Manatees up to sing Alice Cooper’s classic “I’m Eighteen.” White delivered the song with manic abandon, gracing the audience with flipped birds and hurtled beer cans as he sang lines like, “I’ve got a baby’s brain and an old man’s heart!” By the end, fellow Oblivian Greg Cartwright had jumped up to join in the chorus. It was a perfect celebration of the coming of age of Gonerfest. “Next year,” Jack pronounced, “Gonerfest is gonna be able to vote!”
After a steamroller version of Television’s “I See No Evil,” Jack and the Sheiks handed the keys to Nots, Memphis’ greatest post-punk synth-and-riff shouters. Seeing them is a rare treat these days, with drummer Charlotte Watson now living in New Orleans, so this was a welcome blast from the past, as she and bassist Meredith Lones pounded on with their trademark finesse behind Natalie Hoffman’s vocals, guitar and synth layers.
Speaking of blasts from the past, the evening’s true exemplars of that were the Spits, nearing their 30th year together. Having cultivated a back-to-basics approach to punk, all rapid-fire verses and singalong choruses, one might easily forget the more theatrical side of these skate-punk legends. That was revealed right out of the gate, as the synthesizer player was led out, landing strip style, in a full-on budget robot suit. He then conjured up the sound of an air raid siren, and the games were off. Once filled out with the rest of the quartet, his synth drones merely added a thickener to the choppy, guitar-driven punk at which they excel. And yet this was no mere oldies act. Sure, old punks were singing along with every song, but from the first downbeat, the mosh pit — populated with fans likely younger than the band itself — lit up as if the ground below was electrified.
It was a fitting end to the final night of the festival, but there was yet more music to come. Aside from the many after parties that carried on well into the wee hours, Sunday afternoon beckoned with the last official performances.
With our brief taste of fall on hold again, the afternoon was brilliant and warm. That, and perhaps the previous three days of responsible hedonism on the crowd’s part, made the set by Aquarian Blood go down like a Bloody Mary. Focusing the quieter recent albums recorded at home by J.B. and Laurel Horrell, Aquarian Blood nonetheless brought a full band to the proceedings, emulating those records’ exquisite, low key arrangements with exactitude and soul. At center stage, beside Laurel, sat J.B., forced to play sitting down due to an injured hand. He nonetheless directed the affair with assurance, occasionally shouting cues, or, if they didn’t quite take, appreciating the chaos that ensued. “That was a good ending right there!” he exclaimed after one breakdown.
And then, after a few words of thanks from Goner’s finest, the Wilkins Sisters stepped up to put a capstone on the four-day event. The appearance of the four singers, all daughters or granddaughters of the late Rev. John Wilkins, was a poignant moment, given the many times the Reverend himself used to close the proceedings in years past.
“As you may know, our dad passed last year from Covid,” said one of the sisters. “We’re trying to keep his legacy going. I don’t sound like my dad, but we do the best that we can with what we’ve got.” Indeed they did, as a fine band that included Al Gamble on organ delivered tracks of thumping, blues-infused gospel to back the sisters’ soaring four part harmonies.
“Y’all give it up for my daddy!” they exclaimed after one number, and the people did. Noise-hardened punks, skate brats, and rockers all accepted a bit of Mississippi into their souls, raising their hands in the air as if they’d seen the light. More so than ever, the sacred soul captured that almost holy sense of communion that so many expressed throughout the weekend, often using a phrase heard many times: Gonerfest 18 was no less than a family reunion.
Railgarten has long been a leader in supporting local musicians, as was clear when they were among the first clubs to resume presenting live music last fall. At the time, co-owner Jack Phillips noted, “We’re seeing a lot of musicians, and talking to a lot of artists in town, and people are struggling. Not to say that everyone in the hospitality and restaurant business isn’t hurting, but we’ve got somewhat of a captive audience and wanted to see what we could do to go the extra step and really show our love for Memphis musicians. Music is in our blood, and I hate to see musicians struggling.”
It wasn’t just because national acts weren’t touring that the venue remained committed to local performers: They want to see the local scene flourish. Now, to that end, Railgarten and their partner Old Dominick Distillery have announced the first ever “901 Fest,” celebrating everything that is Memphis, musically speaking. Starting on Wednesday, September 1, and running through Labor Day weekend, the Railgarten stage will host some of the crème de la crème of Memphis music.
The scheduled acts will include Mononeon (September 1); Lucero (September 2); Detective Bureau and Lord T & Eloise (September 3), Obruni Dance Band, The PRVLG, CYC, and Dead Soldiers (September 4); and Lucky 7 Brass Band, Max Kaplan & The Magics, and The Sensational Barnes Brothers (September 5).
As Mason Jambon of Railgarten emphasizes, “We are committed to promoting local Memphis musicians, so we thought that having a festival centered around all local acts would be something music lovers in the city would embrace.”
There will also be specialty cocktails for purchase for the extended weekend, provided by Old Dominick. “We love events like this that promote the culture of our community, and we are excited to be a part of it,” says Alex Castle, master distiller and senior vice president of Old Dominick Distillery.
And local Memphis artists from Arrow Creative will be selling their goods that Saturday and Sunday, September 4 and 5. “As a new business in the Central Avenue community, we love the idea of teaming up with neighborhood businesses to help promote our artists. Railgarten always does a great job attracting a diverse group of customers, and we look forward to having a similar offering with our local artists and makers,” says Abby Phillips, executive director at Arrow Creative.
We’ve passed the post of the vernal equinox once again, and spring is in full swing. As the leafy branches bud out for sunlight, so too are Memphis music fans lending their ears to the swirl of sounds that will float through the air from now until Halloween. While next week’s Memphis Flyer will feature special coverage on the fairs and festivals that await us, there are a few kicking off the season this weekend, before that issue hits the streets. Here’s a tip sheet for those itching to dust off their camping chairs right away.
The River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater kicks off it’s fifth year this weekend, and its combination of a stunning view of the city’s waterfront, spring weather, and expertly curated music always delivers a superb experience. This Sunday will feature Detroit’s Craig Brown Band, who Rolling Stone recently named one of 10 new country acts you need to know, describing them as “dive bar-ready insurgent country and ragged, punk-fueled folk-rock with witty lyrical musings about the mundane.” More importantly, Third Man Records and the good folks at Goner clearly dig them. Opening the show will be local favorites Aquarian Blood, who have, as event organizers note, “recently returned to the home-recording moon-warped folk/psych more reminiscent of their early days.”
More shows will follow, of course: April 28 brings Meridian, Mississippi native Pat Sansone (Wilco, The Autumn Defense, Mellotron Variations), paired with Alicja Trout; and May 19 features the Obruni Dance Band with opener Yazan (a current musician-in-residence at Crosstown Arts).
A lesser-known music series also kicks off this weekend, and will continue into May: the Spring Music Series at Overton Square. Setting up in the tiny Chimes Square, live local bands make the intersection of Madison and Cooper ring with harmonies, adding their sounds to those already wafting out from the surrounding clubs. This year’s performers will include:
Saturday, April 6, 7 – 9 p.m. – Josh Waddell
Sunday, April 14, 5 – 7 p.m. – Andrew Best Music and Confetti Park
Saturday, April 20, 7 – 9 p.m. – The City Fathers
Saturday, May 11, 7 – 9 p.m. – Abbye West Pates
The Falling and the Rising
Just a stone’s throw from those live bands, a wholly different sort of festival will be going down, as the Midtown Opera Festival 2019 takes over Playhouse on the Square for a week. The centerpiece of the festival is the premiere of The Falling and the Rising, a new American opera conceived by Sergeant First Class Ben Hilgert of the U.S. Army Soldiers’ Chorus. Based on the imagined journey of a soldier suspended inside a coma after a roadside attack, the story takes us through a coma-induced dreamscape punctuated by “encounters with other fellow service members, each on the brink of discovery…in a strange and ever-shifting universe.” The story was based on interviews with returning soldiers at Walter Reed National Medical Center, Arlington Cemetery, and Fort Meade.
The festival also includes a host of other “fringe events,” as well as a new staging of Mozart’s The Magic Flute as a Sunday matinee at Harris Concert Hall at the University of Memphis.
Further afield, blues fans up for a short road trip should get ready for the 16th annual Juke Joint Festival in Clarksdale, MS. Describing itself as “half blues festival, half small-town fair and all about the Delta,” the festival will feature over 100 blues acts. Clarksdale, of course, has been called home by such greats as Son House, John Lee Hooker, Junior Parker, Ike Turner, Eddie Boyd, Sam Cooke, Muddy Waters, Pinetop Perkins, Earl Hooker, Lil Green, and Big Jack Johnson, but current-day blues fans may love contemporary artists like Super Chikan, Kingfish, Big A and Watermelon Slim even more.
The festival kicks off on Thursday, April 11, with a performance by Rev. John Wilkins and band, just returning from a brief stint in France (see next week’s feature for more about Wilkins). Then the festivities carry on through Sunday, April 14. See the website for schedule details.
And if you want more, pick up a copy of our cover story in a few days. There, you’ll find a skeleton key to as diverse a collection of fests, throw-downs and parties as you could want. While the days grow longer, and before the heat shuts down all your ambition, get out there and treat your ears to the glorious noise that only Memphis can offer.
Note that the River Series at Harbor Town has been moved to Loflin Yard.
Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee, celebrates its Sweet 16 this year as the festival opens this Thursday, June 7 and runs through Sunday, June 10. That teenage energy is somewhat evident in the line-up, which, unlike years past, lacks an impressive veteran rock band headliner.
The 2018 lineup — headlined by The Killers, Muse, and Eminem — may appeal more to Millennials and Gen-Xers without much to offer for older Baby Boomer festival-goers. In recent years, the festival has wrapped up with performances by Paul McCartney, U2, Phish, Elton John, and the remaining members of the Grateful Dead. But, Eminem will close out the main stage on Saturday, promoting his new album, Revival, which has been widely criticized as a mediocre release that fails to adapt to the changing sounds of hip-hop. Long-time fans will surely be hoping Eminem plays plenty of his late ’90s classics, as he did at his last Roo performance in 2011. Andrew Jorgensen
The Killers close out the festival on Sunday. They’ll likely perform works from 2017’s Wonderful Wonderful, but they’ll certainly get the most fan reaction from 2004 breakout hits, like “Mr. Brightside” and “Somebody Told Me.” Andrew Jorgensen
Other lineup highlights include indie folk rockers Bon Iver, pop-country crossover artist Sheryl Crow, rapper Future, emo rockers Paramore, and electronic acts Bassnectar, The Glitch Mob, and Kaskade. Click here for the full line-up.
Those looking for more of a rave experience than a rock festival can dance the night away at the Kalliope stage, featuring both well-known and obscure DJs spinning into the wee hours of the morning.
Andrew Jorgensen
Bonnaroo is so much more than music though. The festival offers plenty in the way of cultural activities, and this year they’re pushing new “Campground Experiences” at plazas located across the general campgrounds. Family game nights, yoga, puppet-making workshops, and even a Roo Run 5K are among the highlights, along with the old standards — a water park, a Ferris wheel, a food truck court, a craft brew tent, and more.
Beale Street Music Fest has announced that three day passes are now on sale. The music festival has changed ticket providers, opting to use TicketFly instead of Ticket Master. Memphis in May also announced a special discounted sale of three-day passes for the 40th edition of the Beale Street Music Festival. A limited quantity offered at $85, plus service charges, will be available exclusively at TicketFly starting at 10:00 a.m. on Friday, January 15th. This is the lowest price offered for the 2016 Beale Street Music Festival and tickets are available on a first come first served basis. Three-day passes will escalate to $95 once this limited quantity is exhausted, so Beale Street Music Festival fans should act quickly.
Once the first tier of tickets sells out, the prices will escalate to $95 and then to $105. Single day tickets for the 2016 Beale Street Music Festival, priced at $45 will go on sale on Wednesday, February 24th when the line-up for the music festival is announced. Click here to purchase tickets.
With an impressive list of traditionalists, revivalists, and torchbearers, including Lee Rocker of the Stray Cats and Sonny Burgess and his Legendary Pacers, the first installment of Memphis’ International Rockabilly Festival promises to deliver something no other music festival in the world can: two solid days of live music and nostalgia, all taking place a few hundred feet away from Sun Studio.
On March 3, 1951, Willie Kizart’s, water-damaged guitar amp malfunctioned, giving a recording of Ike Turner’s “Rocket 88” a distinct and fortuitous buzz. Two years later, a starry-eyed kid named Elvis Presley walked in the front door looking for an audition, and the corner of Union and Marshall officially became ground zero for the big bang of rock-and-roll. Howlin’ Wolf, Rufus Thomas, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Roy Orbison all launched recording careers at Sun. Now, 64 years after Kizart’s amp went all fuzzy, festival organizers Darrin Hillis and Mark Lovell are bringing rock-and-roll back to the place where it all started.
Hillis says he has no idea why it’s taken so long for someone to finally organize a major vintage music event in Memphis during Elvis Week, when tourists flock to Whitehaven to visit Graceland and celebrate the King’s life and legacy.
“We’re selling tickets all over the world, from Australia to Japan,” Hillis says. “A whole movie crew is coming from the United Kingdom.”
Hillis, who first partnered with Lovell to launch the Delta Fair in 2007, isn’t from Memphis, but he says he’s always been drawn to the city and its music. It started when he was only a kid living in a trailer park in Gainesville, Florida, playing Jerry Lee Lewis singles on his sister’s record player. “I wore it out,” says Hillis, who was encouraged to finally act on a longstanding desire to organize a rockabilly festival by Memphis’ rocket-powered piano man Jason D. Williams and his wife/manager Jennifer James.
“We really want this to be an experience,” Hillis says. “We want people to feel like they are walking back in time.” To achieve a sense of temporal displacement, Hillis has organized a hot rod car show and offered discounts to all festival vendors who dress in a vintage style reminiscent of the 1950s. To help complete the vibe, tattoo artists will be available to give music fans the ultimate souvenir. Those looking for a less permanent remembrance can visit pinup photography specialists, the Memphis Bombshells. They’ll be giving hair and makeup tips and performing retro makeovers in the Premiere Palace.
In addition to the shows, fans hoping to get up close and personal with their favorite rockabilly artists will be able to visit the Dizzy Bird, a 70-seat venue housed in the former Hattiloo Theatre. Selected performers will be available before or after their main-stage shows to tell stories, sign books, and play songs in a more intimate environment.
Sun Studio sax man Ace Cannon is scheduled to perform, as is Johnny Cash’s longtime drummer W.S. Holland. The first-wave rockers are playing alongside notable innovators like Memphis guitar prodigy Travis Wammack, whose quirky instrumental recordings “Scratchy” and “Fire Fly” inspired a generation of hot-lick guitar pickers including Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page. The schedule is rounded out by contemporary Memphis players like Nancy Apple, Jason Freeman, and the Motel Mirrors, featuring John Paul Keith and Amy LaVere, who played rockabilly star Wanda Jackson in the 2005 Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line.
Memphis music has few champions as outspoken as Texas troubadour Dale Watson, who is scheduled to perform Sunday evening at 6 p.m. Watson’s based out of Austin, but since 2001, he’s recorded five albums’ worth of material at Sun Studio.
“I’ve been recording at Sun for almost 20 years now,” says Watson, who launched the Ameripolitan Music Awards in 2014 as a means of recognizing artists performing original music inspired by the sounds of traditional honky-tonk, rockabilly, and western swing. “Something about that room is so magical. A lot of it’s because of Elvis, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee’s having been there. But even more, it’s just the sound that you get recording in that room. It’s like nowhere else. And the talent that came to perform there made the perfect storm.”
The Rockabilly Festival also showcases the talents of newly-minted octogenarian and human jukebox Sleepy LaBeef, who takes the stage Sunday afternoon at 4:30 p.m. LaBeef wasn’t a Memphis artist, but he was definitely around for the “perfect storm” Watson describes.
“At the beginning, it was all country, hillbilly, rhythm and blues, bluegrass, and the old foot-stomping, hand-clapping gospel rhythms all put together,” says LaBeef, recalling his early days on the road with all of the original rockabilly artists.
“I never made a record in that building there in Memphis,” says LaBeef, who became a Sun recording artist in the 1970s, after the label moved to Nashville. “Now, in 1954 and 1955, I was opening some shows for Elvis, Scotty [Moore], and Bill [Black]. We also did some shows with Fats Domino, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Gene Vincent, and all these different people.
“We were mixing a lot of stuff together back then to see if it worked,” LaBeef says. “And if it worked, we done it.”
Laura Jane Grace of Against Me! performing at Bonnaroo.
We weren’t going to let the biggest music festival in Tennessee slip between our fingers! Long time ‘Roo fan Bianca Phillips gives us the details. -Chris Shaw.
Bonnaroo Recap, Thursday and Friday:
The 13th annual Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival is underway in Manchester, Tennessee, and about 80,000 people from all over the world have descended on the rural town to see a bevy of musical acts spanning multiple genres — rock, rap, folk, punk, EDM, etc.
We got a bit of a late start leaving Memphis on Thursday morning, so we didn’t arrive to Manchester until about 3:30 p.m. After setting up camp, we’d already missed several acts, including the teen thrash metal act, Unlocking the Truth. We’d never heard them, but the premise was intriguing. By the time we ventured into Centeroo, the festival’s main grounds with five large stages and a number of smaller performance tents, we were just in time for indie rockers Glass Animals. But the sound was off, and from our spot just outside their stage at The Other Tent (Stages at Bonnaroo are named This, That, Other, Which, and What), all we could hear was the bass. We wandered around Centeroo, but failed to find anything else that held our attention.
Bonnaroo has taken some flack this year for its weak line-up, and Thursday’s lack of big-name acts made for, perhaps, the worst opening day since the Flyer began covering Bonnaroo six years ago. At least, that’s my opinion anyway. Friday had more on offer though, including a guest appearance by 1980s teen actor Corey Feldman. This is the 30th anniversary of The Goonies, and they were screening the film in the air-conditioned Cinema Tent, where cult classics and newer films are shown all weekend.
Feldman was there for an audience Q&A, and while we missed that, we did arrive just in time for a performance by Feldman’s weird ‘90s band, Corey Feldman and the Angels. The lyrics sounded like they’d been written by a 15-year-old, and Feldman admitted that, in fact, some of the songs were written when he was a kid. He was backed by some scantily clad ladies in angel wings. Next up was anarcho-punk band Against Me! I was most excited to see them perform because lead singer Laura Jane Grace recently transitioned, and she’s become quite the role model for trans teens. The last time I saw them at the Hi-Tone, the band’s lead singer had not yet made her transition and was performing as a man. But at Bonnaroo, Grace seemed to have come into her own. She commanded the stage and brought an amazing amount of energy to my personal favorite Against Me! Song, “I Was a Teenage Anarchist” (It’s my favorite because I, too, was a teenage anarchist).
Bianca Phillips
Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes at Bonnaroo 2015.
The Alabama Shakes rocked it out on Roo’s largest main stage, the What Stage. The roots band’s lead singer Brittany Howard led the band through a powerful set that made me realize that I should really give the band another listen. I’d dismissed them as “just another band that hipsters like.” But I think they may actually be pretty good. Compton-based hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar tore it up late into the night. As he made his entrance, the bass from his speakers literally made my ears vibrate, and I could feel my nose hairs move. Seriously. I’ve never considered wearing ear plugs at these events until Lamar’s energetic set.
The night closed out with glowsticks and LED hula-hoops shimmering all over Centeroo’s grounds as headliner Deadmau5 played his chilled-out style of progressive house music. We expected the set to have a little more energy, but that’s only because, in the past few years, Bonnaroo has boasted a heavy dubstep line-up. Deadmau5’s music is more trance-y and laid back. But that didn’t keep the people from dancing. And once Deadmau5’s hour-and-a-half set was over, the raving festival-goers just kept dancing since the EDM lasted until about 4 a.m. last night with sets from Odesza and STS9. I caught a few minutes of each of those performances and called it a night though since we have to do it all again today. I’ll write about what Saturday had to offer in the next recap.