Categories
Music Record Reviews

In the Land of the Snowblind, Joecephus is King

Trapped in the house with icicles glittering all through my window, the slick street throwing sunbeams back in my face, the day’s listening material practically screams out to be played: Joecephus & the George Jonestown Massacre’s Snowblind in the Rising Sun. As the early days of the pandemic taught us, being housebound is the absolute best time to get your choogle on. And this is the group to do it with.

The success this group’s had with staging all-star charity tribute albums (Heirs of the Dog: A Tribute to Nazareth, Five Minutes To Live: A Tribute To Johnny Cash, and Mutants Of The Monster: A Tribute to Black Oak Arkansas) might cause casual listeners to forget that they’ve put six albums out over more than a dozen years’ time, all crammed with quality originals. They not only know their way around a riff, they can forge it into a song. And that’s exactly what they do on their latest outing, released last fall.

There could be no better album kickoff than “Voices,” a boogie riff that won’t stop, except when it does, allowing singer Joey Killingsworth to toss out “All by myself, always the same/Stare into the the lie, it’s always a game,” as one verse goes, perhaps making sure we know the “voices in my head” are nothing to worry about.

A spirit of rollicking, rocking fun permeates every minute of this album, even when the chords are laden with doom. And the plainspoken, everyman voice of Killingworth underscores the good times, placing the group squarely in the Mid-South with a refreshing lack of affectation that’s all too rare in this genre.

As for what kind of fun they’re celebrating, the band is quite up front about what makes for their good times, tagging themselves as “country rock,” “hard rock,” and “stoner rock.” And the lyrics pull no punches when it comes to calling out their favorite substances. “Summer of ’93” seems to make references to “windowpane,” and one can assume that someone took a heavy trip thirty odd years ago; the title track sings of being “snowblind in the House of the Rising Sun, on the lam and on the run,” suggesting the involvement of snow-like contraband; and “The Border” offers some sage advice to a galloping beat that recalls the early days of cow punk: “Don’t take weed across the border, or you might get patted down.” Quick on its heels comes “Nothing to Lose,” an ode to “a wake and bake morning, come on stop snoring, get your ass in here and get out of bed/Pack yourself a bong, come on sing along, follow ‘long to the words in my head.”

And yet there’s a more serious side to these voices in Killingsworth’s head: “Life falls apart in the blink of an eye,” he sings on “Life of the Party,” which alternates between a nervous, scratchy riff and a thunderous power-chord chorus. “Company Man” is a portrait of a man who “wants to go out on the town” with a sardonic twist that skewers anyone that “lives for the company” even as twin guitars in perfect Allman Brothers-like harmony kick in with an intoxicating hook. “Cities will crumble, burn to the ground” goes the opening line of “Bleed the Day” which combines a Black Sabbath mood with a Metallica-like crunch. And “Change the Channel” celebrates our ability to snap out of an apocalyptic rut, with Gerald Stephens’ John Lord-like organ wailing through the intro.

One thing that the many excellent records of 2022 prove, from the Subteens to the Drip Edges to HEELS, is that Memphis rocks, and this offering from Joecephus & the George Jonestown Massacre is Exhibit A. The pounding chords and solos of this album are irresistible, and sure to knock any case of blindness right out of you.

Joecephus & the George Jonestown Massacre open for The Supersuckers at the Hi Tone Cafe, Saturday, February 4, 8 p.m.

Categories
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.

Categories
Music Music Features

Heirs of the Dog: George Jonestown Massacre’s Riffs Raise Money and Awareness

Hearing Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre rock a heavy groove, you might feel compelled to exclaim, “Righteous!” And for once this assessment would be spot-on. For these purveyors of Southern rock laced with metal and a dollop of punk have combined righteousness with their pounding riffs for some time now. In fact, it’s their specialty.

The core trio, led by founder Joey “Joecephus” Killingsworth with Brian Costner on bass and Daryl Stephens on drums, has excelled at the tribute album, wherein the works of a beloved artist or band are recut with a 21st century urgency and celebrity cameos, with the profits earmarked for charity. Previous star-studded outings have included Mutants of the Monster: A Tribute to Black Oak Arkansas and Five Minutes to Live: A Tribute to Johnny Cash. Now they’ve dropped what may be their best tribute yet, Heirs of the Dog: A Tribute to Nazareth (Saustex Records). This time, they focus their tribute spotlight on one album in particular, the iconic Hair of the Dog, recreated track by track and bursting with cameos that read like a Who’s Who of heavy alt-rock. Recently, Joecephus filled me in on the details.

Memphis Flyer: What does Nazareth mean to you?

Joey Killingsworth: When I was 13 or 14, my cousin played me Hair of the Dog and Alice Cooper’s greatest hits. And both of those really stuck. One night, I had had a couple of margaritas, then came home and had a beer. I heard a Nazareth song on the radio, and I immediately called [co-producer] Dik Ledoux and said, “Hey, man, I’ve got an idea. We’ll do Hair of the Dog all the way through!” So we went to his studio and knocked out all the basic tracks in one day back in 2019. Then we started getting the guests.

Once I get one guest locked in, we’ve got a record. Fast forward a couple of months, I was talking to Ruyter Suys of Nashville Pussy about it. She said, “I’m in, and Blaine [Cartwright, also of Nashville Pussy] calls ‘Hair of the Dog.’ He wants that song.” So I called up Dik and said, “We got two guests, we got an album!”

Did you ever dream you’d get Nazareth guitarist Manny Charlton on there?

No! That was a surprise. But on each charity album, we try to get one member of the original band we’re doing a tribute to. And getting Neil Fallon was a big shocker. I’ve been a Clutch fan forever, so when he got on board, that was a whole other ball game right there.

The roster is impressive. You also recruited J.D. Pinkus of Butthole Surfers and Luther Dickinson. And there’s a cameo by Eddie Spaghetti of the Supersuckers.

He had helped us before on the Black Oak Arkansas record. Then I sent our version of “Love Hurts,” which features Eddie’s vocals and Eric Lewis’ steel guitar, to Ruyter, and she was like, “I never cared for that song much, but I love that steel. And I love Eddie. Ask him about me singing a duet with him.” Eddie just said, “Fuck yeah!” It’s got a little Gram/Emmylou thing going on. Sounds like they’re a little hungover. And Eric Lewis knocked his part out of the park.

The album’s profits will go to the FSHD Society for research into facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, which took the life of Jonelle Spicer in 2018. Tell me about her.

She was a big Memphis music supporter, and so motivational. She would always come out to the shows. We’d been buddies with her and her partner Rudy [Forster] for a while. He was in Blackbone back in the day. So I told Rudy, “Let’s do this record in her honor. And Rudy, we gotta get you playing on here, man.” It’s all about helping Jonelle and the spirit of her.