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Nubia Yasin and Eillo

You might think you know UNAPOLOGETIC. How could a Memphis music fan not know the likes of Cameron Bethany, AWFM, and PreauXX — or producers like C Major, Kid Maestro, and IMAKEMADBEATS? And yet there’s always more simmering below the collective’s surface than what its public-facing (or face-masking) side reveals. For example, at 10 p.m. this Friday, August 30th, at Bar DKDC, some talent whose faces may seem new to UNAPOLOGETIC fans will top the bill. And yet, paradoxically, they’ve been involved in the organization’s background for years, part of what’s always “simmering below the surface” there. 

Take Nubia Yasin, whose first appearance on an Unapologetic release was in 2019, contributing to the track “Eve & Delilah” on the collective’s showcase album, Stuntarious, Vol. 4. It’s telling that her contribution to that track was, as she notes, “the poem at the end,” a spoken word passage, for that has been what her most public work has been centered on ever since … until now. 

Moreover, her writing has been unflinchingly political, from her poetry to her more overtly activist work, including a stint as “chief storyteller” for the Black arts nonprofit Tone and her 2020 TEDx talk on gentrification. As she told Memphis Magazine in 2021, “Because I’m a Black woman, all the intersections that I exist in don’t allow me to be apolitical.” And her response to politics, and much of the world, has always been through the written word, which “informs everything,” as she said in 2021. “I’m multidisciplinary for sure. I do visual art, I do installation work, I do film, but the writing portion informs all of it. I don’t remember a time when I didn’t know how to read. And I’ve been writing since I had the motor skills to hold a pencil.”

Nubia Yasin (Photo: A.C. Bullard)

And yet, ironically, her writing originally went hand in hand with her voice. “I was actually a songwriter before I was a poet,” she says now, “and I stepped away from singing because somewhere along the journey it just started feeling too audacious. Like, there’s something really bold about opening up and singing. So I stopped doing it when I was in my early teens, and pivoted more towards poetry because I felt more confident in that. It wasn’t until 2022 or 2023 when I worked as IMAKEMADBEATS’ assistant for a year, and I was just surrounded by music all day, every day, that my urge to do it just got bigger than my shame about not being perfect at it.”

Returning to music brought things full circle, in a sense. “When I was a kid, my first dream ever was to be a singer. I did choir, all those things. But I have a pretty unorthodox voice — it’s pretty deep for a woman vocalist. As I got older and deeper, I felt really, really insecure for a really long time about my singing. But over time I got prouder of how different I sound, and now I’m in a place where I’m really excited to share that with the world.”

Working with “MAD,” UNAPOLOGETIC’s founder and key producer, directly informed her return to singing, as the tracks that will be playing under her at Bar DKDC were collaboratively created by the two of them. The final product might surprise casual UNAPOLOGETIC fans, its reference points being more indie rock than hip hop. In truth, the label has always been eclectic, from Aaron James to Cameron Bethany, with many releases trading heavily on the poetry and wit of the lyrics. Yet Yasin follows her own star, her musings flowing over meandering melodies that might suggest The Smiths — if fronted by Nina Simone — or equally unpredictable destinations.

Speaking of long traditions at UNAPOLOGETIC, Eillo first showed up on my radar during my 2018 group interview at their old studio, when IMAKEMADBEATS quipped, “this young guy, 16 years old, he’s actually the son of Quinn McGowan, who is part of Iron Mic Coalition. He’s an intern here, and he’s amazingly talented.” By the following year, he was performing on the Stuntarious, Vol. 4 group project and was even name-checked in that album’s recurring comic book-like narration, where an arch villain decries, “And this child, Eillo, has continued to outwit you!”

Today, Eillo laughs at that moment and the talent who played the villain. “That was my dad on the vocal,” he chuckles. “He would be a super dope voice actor.” 

Over five years later, Eillo is no longer the “child,” having proven himself on countless contributions to recording sessions. In 2021, he was listed, with MAD, as coproducer of “Depression and Redemption” on MAD Songs, Vol. 1. Later, the multi-instrumental parts he brought to Aaron James’ Nobody Really Makes Love Anymore were key elements of that album’s musicality, and his other flourishes, like the jazz piano outro to PreauXX’s “Regret” in 2022, could be breathtaking. 

It all has flowed from Eillo’s fingers, who grew up in a creative, musical world. Not only is his father an especially savvy rapper; he drums and is a comic artist. His recently departed mother, Adrian Liggins, was a self-taught pianist and a well-respected soul singer under the stage name Mahogany. “She was an amazing singer songwriter,” Eillo says of her now, and credits much of his musicality to her support over the years. 

This Friday, that musicality will be on full display as an attraction in its own right. “I want to do all the things that I love about music,” Eillo confides. “So I’m going to be doing some raps, doing some singing, some original songs, and doing some, just, playing — just playing and building a vibe. I’m a huge believer in having the music speak for itself. I’m not the best with words, like talking to people and stuff like that. But when it comes to music, that’s the stuff that I want to speak for me. I guess it’s the purest way I can express myself.”

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Film Features Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday on Tuesday: “Brain Fluid” by Don Lifted

Music Video Monday is watching you.

Don Lifted’s 2021 is looking busy. Back in July, he released “Golden”, the first music video collaboration with Studio 143. Now, Fat Possum records has announced the release of his new album 325i with a second music video directed by Johsua Cannon and Nubia Yasin.

“Brain Fluid” continues Don’s evolution into dreamy, ambient-tinged sounds layered with confessional lyrics. Here, Lawrence Matthews sees himself as the perpetual outsider, either privileged or doomed to watch the people around him live their messy lives.

325i drops on October 22. “Brain Fluid” is live now:

If you would 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: “Lost In Orion” by Don Lifted

Music Video Monday got a new ride.

Don Lifted recently signed with Fat Possum records. He christens the new ride with his most ambitious music video yet, “Lost in Orion.” Matthews co-directed the video with Joshua Cannon, and co-wrote it with Nubia Yasin. Sam Leathers is the cinematographer behind some arresting images, including a spectacular location shot in the empty Orpheum Theatre.

“‘Lost in Orion’ feels confessional to me,” says Mathews. “The weight of feelings that through the summer of 2020 couldn’t escape me, personally and societally. So much of those fears and anxieties manifested themselves in introspection, mystical imagery and poetry. It’s a sacrificial and ritualistic piece of art for me. A culmination of growth and shedding of every version of myself that’s been informed by love, societal pressures and fear. This visual is a new beginning for me. The end of many other things but the start of something I’ve been on a journey to share for quite some time.

“Working with Josh, Sam and the folks at Studio One Four Three has been something long in the works. It’s funny ’cause once I reached out we both expressed when didn’t feel ready enough to collaborate. The shoot days were very special in all of the beautiful and challenging ways making art can exist. Nubia Yasin, Amber Ahmad, Joshua Cannon, Sam Leathers and myself all trying to work toward the best ideas and ways to approach everything, trying to match the vision in my head as best as possible. The subject matter and the elements definitely had effects on all of us in various ways and pushed us toward our goals. I look forward to expanding this world we are building together in conjunction with this music.”

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival Goes Virtual This Weekend

The Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival, preparing to go into its fifth year, is one of the Bluff City art scene’s big success stories. “What’s great about it is, it has expanded every single year,” says Indie Memphis’ Joseph Carr.

This year, like most events of its size, the Youth Film Festival has gone virtual. Carr says that has turned out to be an opportunity to expand the event’s reach. “We’ve always had a national block of of short films in the festival, but this year were actually able to record a Q&A with the student filmmakers from around the country. Those students can now access the local films and engage with the workshops as well. So the virtual setting, which at first felt like a restriction, isn’t really one. It’s opening us up to a lot more involvement from kids outside of Memphis.”

The festival, which usually takes place over a single, long Saturday session in September, has been broken into three days. “We didn’t want to ask students to sit at the computer for 12 straight hours on one day,” says Carr.

Usually, student filmmakers are paired with mentors from the Memphis filmmaking community to help them create short films. This year, gathering restrictions imposed by coronavirus epidemic has made that arrangement impractical. “We have 12 teams of three students with one professional filmmaker as their mentor, kind of guiding them through the process of conceptualizing and producing a short films. But this year, because of the obvious reasons, the students weren’t able to make their films. So instead we pivoted and have had the students put together pitch videos. It was kind of an idea that came from our Black Creators Forum pitch rally.”

The pitch videos will be streamed at noon on Saturday. It’s not the only opportunity student filmmakers will get to learn from experienced filmmakers. The seminars will include a lighting demonstration by cinematographer Jordan Danelz; a class in voice acting by Ashley Johnson, who recently won a BAFTA award for her work on the hit video game The Last of Us; and a seminar in creating for YouTube by Seren Sensei, who was selected as Indie Memphis’ Black Screenwriter resident. There will also be sessions with distinguished Youth Film Fest alumnae Nubia Yasin, and Vivian Gray, who is currently studying at the prestigious University of Southern California film school. “I put together four-person committee of active young filmmakers in Memphis who are part of the program, and that was a big thing for them. They want to hear from other people around their age, because after a while, it starts to feel too much like a classroom if it’s just a bunch of old people telling you how to make movies.”

The 2020 Youth Film Festival kicks off on Friday, August 28th, at 6:30 p.m. with the Memphis Youth Competition Screening, where 15 short films by Bluff City filmmaking crews will compete for cash prizes and a $5,000 production package from Via Productions. You can find out more on the Indie Memphis website.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

Today’s Music Video Monday is going long.

Don Lifted’s Contour album from 2018 is a saga of teenage love and loss. It’s been the source of some of the best Memphis music videos of the last two years. All along, Don Lifted’s alter ego Lawrence Matthews (or is it the other way around?) has intended it as a multimedia experience, and has released the visual album on a DVD for sale at his shows. Now, he’s releasing the entire album online, and we’re bringing it to you here!

Contour is a mesmerizing 23 minutes. The low-key masterpiece video for “Muirfield,” shot by Kevin Brooks, takes on new meaning in the larger context. Matthews’ collaborated with Nubia Yasin for cinematography and editing, and Martin Matthews on camera.

Here’s the long-form video your quarantine needs:

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

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

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Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018

Memphis music was vibrant as ever in 2018. Every week, the Memphis Flyer brings you the latest and best video collaborations between Bluff City filmmakers and musicians in our Music Video Monday series. To assemble this list, I rewatched all 34 videos that qualified for 2018’s best video and scored them according to song, concept, cinematography, direction and acting, and editing. Then I untangled as many ties as I could and made some arbitrary decisions. Everyone who made the list is #1 in my book!

10. Louise Page “Blue Romance”

Flowers cover everything in this drag-tastic pop gem, directed by Sam Leathers.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (13)


9. Harlan T. Bobo “Nadine” / Fuck “Facehole”

Our first tie of the list comes early. First is Harlan T. Bobo’s sizzling, intense “Nadine” clip, directed by James Sposto.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (11)

I used science to determine that Fuck’s Memphis Flyer name drop is equal to “Nadine”.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (12)

8. Aaron James “Kauri Woods”

The smokey climax of this video by Graham Uhelski is one of the more visually stunning things you’ll see this year.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (10)


7. Daz Rinko “New Whip, Who Dis?”

Whaddup to rapper Daz Rinko who dropped three videos on MVM this year. This was the best one, thanks to an absolute banger of a track.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (9)


6. (tie) McKenna Bray “The Way I Loved You” / Lisa Mac “Change Your Mind”

I couldn’t make up my mind between this balletic video from co-directors Kim Lloyd and Susan Marshall…

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (7)

…and this dark, twisted soundstage fantasy from director Morgan Jon Fox.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (8)

5. Brennan Villines “Better Than We’ve Ever Been”

Andrew Trent Fleming got a great performance out of Brennan Villines in this bloody excellent clip.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (6)


4. (tie) Nick Black “One Night Love” / Summer Avenue “Cut It Close”

Nick Black is many things, but as this video by Gabriel DeCarlo proves, a hooper ain’t one of ’em.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (4)

The kids in Summer Avenue enlisted Laura Jean Hocking for their debut video.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (5)

3. Cedric Burnside “Wash My Hands”

Beale Street Caravan’s I Listen To Memphis series produced a whole flood of great music videos from director Christian Walker and producer Waheed Al Qawasmi. I could have filled out the top ten with these videos alone, but consider this smoking clip of Cedric Burnside laying down the law representative of them all.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (3)

2. Don Lifted “Poplar Pike”

I could have filled out the top five with work from Memphis video auteur Don Lifted, aka Lawrence Matthews, who put three videos on MVM this year. To give everybody else a chance, I picked the transcendent clip for “Poplar Pike” created by Mattews, Kevin Brooks, and Nubia Yasin.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018

1. Lucero “Long Way Back Home”

Sorry, everybody, but you already knew who was going to be number one this year. It’s this mini-movie created by director Jeff Nichols, brother of Lucero frontman Ben Nichols. Starring genuine movie star (and guy who has played Elvis) Michael Shannon, “Long Way Back Home” is the best Memphis music video of 2018 by a country mile.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (2)

Thanks to everyone who submitted videos to Music Video Monday in 2018. If you’d like to see your music video appear on Music Video Monday in 2019, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Don Lifted Premieres Contour Visual Album

Lawrence Matthews combines two of his multi talents with his newest project. Like his first album under the name Don Lifted, Alero, Contour is an autobiographical remembrance of teenage trauma. Each song on the album comes with an accompanying video, created by the artist along with Martin Matthews, Kevin Brooks, and Nubia Yasin.

Contour the visual album will bow tonight at Studio on the Square with a free screening at 8 p.m. The album will then go on sale and hit streaming services at midnight Friday. To give you a flavor of the work, here’s “Take Control Of Me”, a video from Alero  directed by frequent Matthews collaborator Kevin Brooks.

Don Lifted Premieres Contour Visual Album

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

Skate into the week with Music Video Monday.

Don Lifted is back with the third single from his upcoming record Contour, which was recently mastered by Mike Bozzi (Too Pimp a Butterfly, Damn, Ctrl, Flower Boy) of Bernie Grundman Mastering in Hollywood, Calif.

Each of the album’s songs will come with a video, which means you’re going to be seeing a lot of Don Lifted around these parts in the coming months.

“Pull Up (Duratec V6)” was shot by Nubia Yasin, Kevin Brooks, Bailey Smith, and Martin Matthews. The skaters in the video are Kirkwood Vangeli of Fluxus Skateboard Co., Indigo, and Chuck Craig. Don Lifted, aka Lawrence Matthews, directed, edited, and also skateboarded for the video.

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

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