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Film Features Film/TV

The Invaders

In the summer of 2020, as protests against police violence spread in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, many Americans got a glimpse of what it was like during the height of the Civil Rights era. There was righteous anger, a sense of purpose, and a shared commitment to justice — but there were also bitter disagreements over which tactics were most effective, and a tug-of-war between those who believed state violence must be met with citizen violence, and those who believed nonviolent resistance was the only way. The newfound camaraderie of the street protests came with a frisson of suspicion — is one of us a Fed, reporting our plans and movements to the same law enforcement agencies whose methods and priorities we’re protesting?

All of this will sound familiar to anyone who saw The Invaders when it debuted at Indie Memphis in 2016. The film that director Prichard Smith and writer/producer JB Horrell made, tells the inside story of the Bluff City’s own homegrown Black Power group. Vietnam veteran John B. Smith founded The Invaders when he left the army after his tours of duty. The group aligned themselves with the militant rhetoric of groups like the Black Panthers. The Invaders first gained prominence during the sanitation workers strike of 1968, and then infamy when they were blamed for the riot which overtook Dr. Martin Luther King’s final march in Memphis. Later, the group’s claims that they had been the targets of a spying and smear campaign by the FBI’s COINTELPRO unit were confirmed.

Juanita Thornton

(In the spirit of full disclosure, this columnist worked briefly as a writing consultant on the film, but has no financial stake in the project’s success.)

“I don’t think there are enough stories looking at some of the inner pockets of the Civil Rights movement,” says Smith. “There are the main stories that you hear about the ministers and Dr. King and whatnot. But I would venture to guess that there are many, many more stories like The Invaders that should be told just to give a wider understanding of the whole situation. I think it will continue to be relevant. I think you could argue that if it came out in the middle of the George Floyd protests, that would have been the most relevant time it could have come out. But that’s not how it panned out.”

During the film’s 2016 festival run, which featured a stop at Doc NYC, The Invaders producers, including Memphis filmmaker Craig Brewer, made a deal with a distribution company to help get the film out. But later, Smith says, they asked, “When you say ‘Help,’ does that mean you’ll help us pay for these licenses for all the different archival stuff that we had to license?’ And they basically came back and said, ‘No, we can’t help you with that.’ So from there we were kind of treading water, spinning our wheels.”

With The Invaders in limbo, Smith got a job with New York filmmaker Sacha Jenkins, whose documentary Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues played at Indie Memphis 2022. “I happened to be on the subway train with him, on our ways away from work, and he was like, ‘Hey what’s up with that Invaders thing?’”

Jenkins showed the film to rapper Nas, who signed on to do a new voice-over for the film. “He actually showed up in my office and was like, ‘I’ve never heard of this story! It’s so great! I can’t wait to get this out!’” recalls Smith. “He actually said — and this just threw me — ‘I was having dinner with Colin Kaepernick last night and all I could talk about was The Invaders.’”

Memphis hip-hop superstar Yo Gotti came on board as executive producer to help get the project over the finish line. Now, The Invaders is set for release via video on demand (VOD), which means you can buy or rent it on streaming services or storefronts such as Apple TV, Google Play, and Amazon Prime Video. Smith says a wider release may be in the offing next year. For Smith, the release is the final milestone on a long journey. “It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life,” he says. “I guess it teaches you patience. There’s the things that you can control, and the things you can’t. Try not to sweat too hard the things you can’t because they will eat you up.”

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Cover Feature News

You Don’t Miss Your Water

Missing Memphis is a common condition, it would seem. Everyone’s heard about the curious travelers who come for a one week visit and end up staying a lifetime, but fewer talk about the many who leave, only to experience an epiphany about what was left behind and return with renewed fervor. It’s a theme that the creator of the Mempho Music Festival has in common with one of the festival’s greatest performers, William Bell. In harkening back to their hometown from afar, both created something musical that could last for decades, if not generations.

David McClister

William Bell needs no introduction to those who appreciate Memphis music. Though he lives in Atlanta now, he exudes our city’s history. And, as it turns out, his first hit was inspired by homesickness. Born William Yarbrough, he took his stage name after his grandmother Belle. And he needed a stage name at a very young age.

Like so many before and after him, he had Rufus Thomas to thank for his leap into show business. “His band played behind me when I was 14 years old. One of the Bihari brothers, Lester, he had a little label here called Meteor Records, out on Thomas. I was with the Del Rios then, a vocal group I had formed to work down at the Flamingo on Hernando Street. I was 14 years old, still in high school. And Rufus’ band, the Bearcats, played behind me. So the whole Thomas family is like family to me. Marvell, Carla, Vaneese, and I all grew up together.”

Ronnie Booze

Hi Rhythm: Leroy Hodges, Rev. Charles Hodges, Archie “Hubbie” Turner

Bell eventually became a featured performer with the best local band of them all, the Phineas Newborn Sr. Orchestra. When Bell was only 21, the orchestra scored a six-week residency at a New York club, which was extended to three months. That was when Bell’s longing for home kicked in, and when he returned he put that feeling into a song that evoked his days singing in church.

As Peter Guralnick wrote of the number, “‘You Don’t Miss Your Water,’ like most of Bell’s hits for himself and others (‘Share What You Got,’ ‘Everybody Loves a Winner,’ ‘Every Day Will Be Like a Holiday,’ ‘Born Under a Bad Sign’) retailed a familiar folk saying and expanded upon it with a simplicity and craft that rendered it quietly eloquent.”

Bell had been to Satellite Records’ studio once before, singing backup on Carla Thomas’ “Gee Whiz.” In 1961, he took in his own song, “Formula of Love,” to cut a single for the label, freshly re-christened Stax. For the B-side, he offered up the homesick/lovesick lament he’d penned after his New York stay. And that was what DJs all over the country literally flipped for. Six months later, it had put Stax on the Billboard charts.

Bell, of course, went on to become both a performer and songwriter at Stax into the next decade, and his voice and recorded masterpieces lived on beyond the label’s eventual bankruptcy. What’s striking, though, is the way the creation of his first hit echoes the genesis of the very festival he’ll be playing this week.

Jamie Harmon

Leroy Hodges, from sessions for Amazon’s ‘Produced By: Matt Ross-Spang’ series.

We have Diego Winegardner to thank for Mempho, whose career in the New York area gave him the means to jump-start the festival of his dreams last year. “I grew up in Memphis in the late ’70s and into the ’80s,” he says. “I think being here when Stax was prominent and all these great hits were coming out of Memphis, made me think Memphis was the music capital of the United States. It wasn’t Nashville, and it wasn’t Austin. So I wanted to be able to provide a platform for all these great local artists that are here, drawing inspiration from that past but also bringing it forward. So we’re always gonna tip our hat to some aspect of that rich music legacy. Last year, we did a tribute to Stax, with Steve Cropper and Booker T. And Eddie Floyd also sat in on that. And this year we’re gonna pay tribute to Royal Studios, Boo Mitchell, and his family’s contribution to Memphis music.”

Last year, Royal Studios celebrated its 60th anniversary, and Saturday evening’s tribute will offer a slice of Memphis, past and present, that will be hard to beat. It will feature an approach that was pioneered in the 2015 Royal-produced film, Take Me to the River, where old-school soul legends were paired with rappers and other younger performers. William Bell, for instance, collaborated with Snoop Dogg in a revisitation of “I Forgot to Be Your Lover,” Bell’s hit from 1968. The Mempho show will follow in those footsteps, featuring Bell and Bobby Rush alongside hometown hip-hop giants Frayser Boy and Al Kapone, and a cameo from Ashton Riker.

Image of Bell in his early Stax years.

But the real secret weapon behind the show will be the Hi Rhythm Section, named after the label that was synonymous with Royal Studios for decades. Having backed the likes of Al Green and other Hi stars, the band, with Charles Hodges on organ, Leroy Hodges on bass, Archie “Hubbie” Turner on keyboards, has been enjoying a renaissance of sorts, including last year’s Grammy nomination for their collaboration, Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm. But the band can collaborate on more than the blues, as the ongoing tours spawned by Take Me to the River proved.

Boo Mitchell, who runs Royal Studios and Royal Records with his sister Anna, notes that the seasoned players can easily adapt to hip-hop. “They’ve done it before. We’ve done several things with Frayser Boy and Al Kapone. Definitely not a stretch. They’ve played behind Snoop Dogg and played on records with the Wu-Tang Clan. That Better Tomorrow record has some of the Hi guys on that.”

In fact, Bell sees the Hi players having a beneficial effect on the hip-hop world. “It worked so great that Frayser Boy and Al Kapone said they would never work with pre-recorded tracks again. They love live music behind ’em now. Because the energy and the freedom of being loose on stage and conversing with the audience and everything, and not have to follow a track. A lot of the rappers now, Snoop and Jay Z and a lot of them, are working with live musicians.”

For his part, though he’s associated with Stax, Bell feels right at home at Hi as well. The familial spirit of the two studios was always similar and came to full fruition when Bell participated in Take Me to the River. “We did that movie and we won a lot of awards behind it, so it gave us a shot in the arm, career-wise,” he says. “So we toured for two months with Take Me to the River, part one. And we filmed a sequel that’s coming out soon, with New Orleans musicians.”

But that’s not all that’s keeping Bell’s name in the spotlight. His 2016 solo record, This Is Where I Live, stubbornly anchored in the classic soul sounds that put him on the map, won a Grammy for Best Americana Album. And he recently joined Margo Price, John Prine, and Al Green in the Amazon-sponsored sessions with Matt Ross-Spang at Sam Phillips Recording Studio, just released last month. And in a few weeks, Craft Recordings will release a massive compilation, Stax ’68: A Memphis Story, that heavily features some of Bell’s most iconic work.

“There are some gems,” he says. “Concord asked me to give my input, so I’ve listened to a lot of the stuff. There’s some unheard of gems in that collection. Any fan of Memphis music, you can’t go wrong in getting that ’68 compilation.”

Even with so much recent recording work going on, Bell is clearly thrilled to revisit his work of 50 years ago. “You know, a good song is a good song. It’ll come back around.”

Editor’s Picks for Mempho
Only in its second year, Mempho Music Festival has become a magnet for some of the nation’s biggest artists. Perhaps the most anticipated show is Nas, who’s just dropped his 12th album, Nasir. Beck, another artist rooted in the ’90s, has similarly become a major artist who continues to innovate. Newer megastars like Post Malone and Phoenix should draw massive crowds, but given the way Janelle Monae’s star has risen since her debut in 2010 and her parallel film career, she may outdraw all of them. There will be plenty of local genius on display, including Juicy J and Project Pat, Lucero, Don Bryant, Big Ass Truck, and the Lovelight Orchestra. As festival advisor Boo Mitchell notes, “It’s a music combination that’ll have something for every demographic.” And one distinctive Mempho feature, the all-star jam, blends diverse artists to entertain late-night groovers and those taking advantage of the new camping option. This year, it features Robert Randolph, Karl Denson, Cory Henry, Nate Smith, and Mononeon, among others. But the real triumph of Mempho may be in the shake-your-booty department. Says Mitchell, “We’ve got Parliament-Funkadelic AND the Bar Kays! That’s a whole lotta funk!”

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Music Music Blog

Mempho Music Fest Announces 2018 Schedule, Opens Ticket Sales

Nas

Now gunning for its second year, and rolling with the momentum of its 2017 turnout, the Mempho Music Festival lit up the Mid South some days ago when it announced its slate of 2018 performers. Today, they’ve announced the details of the schedule and are opening ticket sales. The Flyer’s advice: get ’em while they’re hot. This is a lineup of artists that rivals any festival in the business (see below). 

Beck

Grammy Award winners Beck and Phoenix will headline on Saturday, October 6. On Sunday, October 7, the legendary Nas, who has just dropped a new album, will headline, along with Post Malone. The festival will also bring us Grammy-nominated funkstress and Prince protégé Janelle Monáe, indie-rock favorite Mac DeMarco, German folk rockers Milky Chance, Atlanta-based rapper Rich The Kid, Danny Barnes’ Space Program, and “Stones Throw”, led by The Rolling Stones’ musical director Chuck Leavell and featuring current and former backing band members. And let’s not forget the brilliant collective that is George Clinton & Parliament-Funkadelic.

Talibah Safiya

First and foremost, the festival lives up to its name with plenty of local talent.

Mempho is fully committed to the #BringYourSoul city branding movement, celebrating the originality, soul, and change that Memphis is known for. Accordingly, we’ll see shows by many a local legend: Juicy J, Project Pat, Lucero, Eric Gales, The Bar-Kays, Don Bryant & The Bo-Keys, Big Ass Truck, John Nemeth & The Love Light Orchestra, Boo Mitchell & The Kings featuring URiAH Mitchell, Lil Al & G Reub, and The Product, Talibah Safiya, and Cory Branan.

Jamie Harmon

The real Lucero

Especially notable will be a tribute set dedicated to Royal Studios. Led by Grammy Award-winning producer Boo Mitchell, the Royal Studios Tribute will feature Grammy Award winners William Bell and Bobby Rush, Oscar Award winner Frayser Boy, and Grammy Award-nominated Hi Rhythm Section.

Also on the local tip, by way of Como, Mississippi, will be Dap-Tone Records’ stars, the Como Mamas. 

Como Mamas

“We are thrilled to be back at Shelby Farms Park for year two of the great Mempho Music Festival,” says Mempho Music Festival founder, Diego Winegardner. “We couldn’t be more excited to announce this year’s lineup, which includes an extraordinarily diverse
roster of today’s hottest artists, legends of rock, funk, and soul, as well as a healthy dose of local Memphis talent.”

Big Ass Truck will make a rare appearance

One lesser-known aspect of the Mempho Music Festival is Mempho Matters, a non-profit organization committed to developing “Learn To Rock”, a philanthropy-based arts education and funding initiative. Working with Memphis area businesses and community leaders, the initiative provides Memphis area music teachers and their students admission to Mempho at no cost.

Project Pat

Mempho Music Festival is also partnering with the Memphis Area Women’s Council to promote the Memphis Says NO MORE campaign—aimed at raising awareness for domestic violence and sexual assault—by providing a safe, inclusive, and welcoming environment for all attendees.

Finally, Mempho has teamed up with the Oceanic Global Foundation—a non-profit that educates individuals on issues impacting our ocean through art, music, and emerging technologies. One specific impact of this partnership is Mempho’s pledge to make the festival completely straw-free. Plastic straws, of course, constitute a major proportion of the plastic waste currently accumulating in the Pacific and other oceans.

Love Light Orchestra

This year, Mempho Music Festival has partnered with CID Entertainment to provide VIP and Super VIP experiences, including on-site camping and glamping options. 

Janelle Monáe

A limited supply of GA, VIP, and Super VIP pre-sale tickets and packages are available on Monday, June 11th, for returning fans, starting at $79 for Single Day and $139 for 2-Day tickets.

General on-sale begins on Friday, June 15th, at 10 A.M. CT, starting at $89 for Single Day and $159 for 2-Day tickets. Prices will increase on July 13th and September 28th, so reserve your tickets while supplies last. 

https://memphofest.eventbrite.com

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Music Music Features

The Infamous Mobb Deep at Young Avenue Deli

Mobb Deep

In the early to mid-’90s, New York was cranking out some of the best hip-hop the world had ever heard. From Notorious B.I.G. to the Wu-Tang Clan, Nas to Big L, the Big Apple was brimming with talent and putting the rest of the country on notice that New York was home to many hip-hop kings, including the group Mobb Deep. Formed in 1992 in Queensbridge by Havoc and Prodigy, Mobb Deep saw success with their second full-length, The Infamous, an album chock-full of harrowing stories about life on the streets, dodging the police, and violent behavior. The group also collaborated with Queensbridge hero Nas, and pretty much anything they touched from 1995 to 1999 is considered holy hip-hop.

After selling over 3 million records, Mobb Deep briefly disbanded before reforming in 2012 and subsequently adding “The Infamous” to their name. Calling themselves Infamous is a pretty bold statement, but seeing as how The Infamous shaped what New York hip-hop would become when it transitioned into the ’00s, the duo definitely deserve the title. The interesting thing about this gig is that it’s at the Young Avenue Deli — not exactly known as a hip-hop hub. However, the Midtown destination has hosted some certified amazing rap concerts, including fellow New York rap artist Raekwon. Speaking of Raekwon, he appears on The Infamous classic “Eye for an Eye,” along with Nas, making it an instant hit and my personal favorite song that Mobb Deep has ever created. If you’re a fan of New York hip-hop (who isn’t?) then this show should already be on your radar, but I’d recommend getting there early to make sure you can get it in. Remember, “there’s a war going on outside that no man is safe from. You can run, but you can’t hide forever.” — Chris Shaw

The Infamous Mobb Deep, Tuesday, March 15th at the Young Avenue Deli. 8 p.m. $20.