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Music Video Monday: “Voices” by Joecephus and The George Jonestown Massacre

Today’s Music Video Monday takes a troubling, high-energy, color-saturated trip into the minds of Joecephus and The George Jonestown Massacre. “Voices” is a riff-heavy banger about, well … maybe about being your own best friend?

“No one ever calls one me,” Josephus sings. “That’s OK cuz I’ve got voices in my head.”

Well, maybe it’s a bit more sinister than that. 

“Voices that talk to me all through the night/Voices that tell me everything’s alright/Voices that tell me things untrue/Voices that tell me everything about you.”  

The band tapped Memphis director (and the Flyer’s own film and TV editor) Chris McCoy to capture the anxiety and paranoia of it all. And McCoy did it all, too — producing, directing, shooting, and editing, with some help from his wife and Memphis film editor Laura Jean Hocking for finishing touches. 

The finished product is a dizzying, dazzling display of disquieting imagery. Silent-movie-era Satan, fairies, and a guy spitting up … coins? 

“Since I was doing everything myself, I tried to keep it simple,” McCoy said. “I was going in an entirely different direction with it until I showed [singer Joey Killingsworth] the first cut. 

“He introduced me to the films of Segundo de Chomón, a Spanish filmmaker from the very early silent era who was kind of a proto-Surrealist. So, I threw away what I had and started over, remixing Chomón’s images with the band’s performance.” 

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

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday (On Tuesday): “Get Out” by Dirty Streets

It’s a rare Tuesday edition of Music Video Monday featuring Dirty Streets. Memphis’ hard-hitting guitar rock trio has a new record out, produced by Matt Ross-Spang. Guitarist Justin Toland, bassist Thomas Storz, and drummer Andrew Denham are currently barnstorming the West Coast. If you’re in San Francisco, you can find them tonight playing at the legendary Bottom of the Hill with El Perro.

“Get Out” is a road song that is relevant to their current touring regime. “The first line refers to ‘moving out west to the rolling hills’ which is really just the concept of any place other than here,” Toland recently told Wildfiremusic.net. “Moving around throughout my life and going on tour has really made me think more about how the idea of going to a new place can be so inspiring, but can also be a trap within itself. The song is really just about how there is no escape from life itself.”

Toland says the band found inspiration in working with the soon-to-be-legendary, Grammy-winning producer. “Matt Ross-Spang is like nobody I’ve ever worked with. There is a knack some people have for sensing a feeling in one bone of a song and building a whole skeleton. Matt is one of those people. He works more like an artist than a producer, shaping sounds and guiding without effort.”

The video, directed by Blake Heimbach, brings you into Matt Ross-Spang’s new Southern Grooves studio with the band as they “Get Out.” Rock on!

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: “Please Don’t Judas Me” by Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre

Music Video Monday is doing it for a good cause.

Memphis guitar hero Joey Killingsworth’s Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre has been laying down the heavy sound for years. In addition to a prolific output of original material, Killingsworth has a long-running side project of doing tribute albums for charity, beginning with Mutants of the Monster: A Tribute to Black Oak Arkansas. The latest album benefits the FSHD Society, dedicated to finding a cure for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, which took the life of beloved Memphis music supporter and FSHD poster girl Jonelle Spicer in 2018. Heirs of the Dog is a recreation of Nazareth’s 1975 Brit metal classic Hair of the Dog, featuring an amazing lineup of guest performers, including J.D. Pinkus of the Butthole Surfers, Luther Dickinson, and Nazareth’s own Manny Charlton.

For “Please Don’t Judas Me”, Neil Fallon of stoner rock legends Clutch takes the lead vocal duties. The video is another spectacular creation by Memphis animator and tattoo artist Nathan Parten, whose work for Louise Page earned him Music Video Monday’s Best Music Video of 2019. This one takes an appropriately gothic tone, and incorporates live action into the mix to send his menacing creatures stalking the streets of the Bluff City.

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: trillcloud

Happy Music Video back to school Monday!

Many Memphis area minors are back to the grind this morning after what we hope was a slackful summer. In honor of student struggles, today’s MVM is from trillhouse aka Galen Hicks. “no diamonds” is a chill little number about being broke and not caring. Reclaiming hip hop identity from capitalism is a pretty heavy subject, especially considering Hicks and his video collaborators Sam King, Michael Price are rising juniors at Central High School. Our musical future is in good hands.

Music Video Monday: trillcloud

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