Categories
Music Music Features

Southern Avenue’s Be the Love You Want

The title of Southern Avenue’s latest album, Be the Love You Want, debuting Friday, August 27th, on Renew Records/BMG, could hardly be more apt. Lately, the band embodies love on multiple levels, what with Tierinii and Ori Naftaly, the band’s singer and guitarist, respectively, celebrating their second year of marriage in October and a baby girl due in November.

But before any of that, there were other bonds between them. As Ori says, “I always loved Tierinii like a sister. It was so platonic from 2015 to 2018. Almost four years. But then we traveled the world together and experienced our lowest and highest moments together. I’ve never before had a girlfriend who was my best friend at first. So that’s a different experience. We got married in October of 2019 in Israel, with my family. So we’re a true family band. Her sister, my sister-in-law, is on the drums. And I have another sister-in-law, Ava, she’s 22, and she just joined us full-time as a background singer and percussionist.”

Putting a finer point on it, Ori emphasizes that Southern Avenue is a collective working unit. “It’s not a couple band, it’s a family band, so we’re not that mushy-mushy together when we’re working. It’s not about me and her; it’s about all of us.”

That “us,” according to Ori, is expressing itself more fully on the new album than ever before, thanks to the freedom afforded them by their label. “BMG heard the demos, and they were like, ‘Cool, make an album, here’s the money.’ ‘Who do you want to produce? Okay, cool. We love Steve Berlin.’ And I wanted to co-produce it, and they were like, ‘Cool.’ They didn’t hear anything up until the mastered tracks. We could have made a polka album!”

In having free rein and a sympatico producer with decades of know-how behind him, the band has crafted a statement of their diverse talents more compelling than any previous work, including their Grammy-nominated Keep On. “This is as us as we’ve ever been. We explored a lot of ideas that are in us musically, but we’d never had the opportunity to either write or record,” says Ori. “Some songs, like ‘Push Now’ and ‘Heathen Hearts,’ we wrote with Cody Dickinson less than a month after Keep On was released. There’s a special freedom right after releasing an album, knowing nobody’s going to ask you for another one for a while. A lot of the songs have these twists and chord progressions that are a bit more sophisticated, maybe jazzy, or maybe more of a fusion of blues/soul/gospel/R&B.”

For his part, Berlin simultaneously encouraged the band and pushed them out of their comfort zone. “I’m such a perfectionist, and he was more like, ‘Let’s make it dirty,’” Ori says. “I recorded a solo on ‘Push Now,’ and it was good. But Steve said, ‘No no, make it sound like crap. Make your guitar sound crazy. Turn all your pedals on!’ We were all respectful of the studio and always trying to be clean and tight, and he kind of broke that for us. He was like, ‘Make it sound like shit and record it!’ I learned a lot from him, like how to let go.”

Perhaps surprisingly, Berlin, a saxophonist, was not the main motivator for the dazzling horn parts all over the album. “Our first album was very primal,” Ori notes. “But with Keep On and this one, the horns were our decision. We’ve only ever used Marc Franklin and Art Edmaiston. Art arranges half, Marc arranges half, and they decide which ones. It helps freshen things up.

“Sometimes Steve didn’t think a song needed horns, but I insisted. We will always have horns on our albums, and hopefully always Marc and Art. They’re part of the band, even though they’re not touring with us. It’s not just having horns; it’s having them specifically because of the style and the feel they bring. It elevates the songs to a different place and grounds it in the Memphis mud. The melting pot. It’s like I turn up the heat of the melting pot by 200 degrees once I have these guys on it.”

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: FreeWorld and Friends

Music Video Monday is bringing you all the colors of the rainbow.

Memphis jam band monarchs FreeWorld have been around long enough to know nearly everyone in the Bluff City music scene. The Beale Street stalwarts have spent their pandemic-enforced time off the stage in the studio, says bassist Richard Cushing. “We’ve been in Cotton Row Studio for the past several months working on this amazing project, and we’re all extremely proud of the way it turned out! The end result of all our dedicated work is a city-wide, multi-genre, multi-racial, multi-cultural music video meant to celebrate and exemplify Memphis’ (and the whole world’s, for that matter) diversity, and was created purely as a way to showcase the concept, the lyrics, the voices, the faces, and the overarching idea of diversity as an essential quality of life!”

When I say FreeWorld knows everyone, I mean it. “D-UP (Here’s to Diversity)” boasts a whopping 23 vocalists and 15-member band, including Al Kapone, Hope Clayburn, Marcella Simien, Luther Dickinson, and Blind Mississippi Morris.

Cushing says “D-UP” was originally a FreeWorld tune that the band decided to rework to reflect the lyric’s ideals and celebrate the struggling Memphis music scene. “The song, with lyrics written by David Skypeck and accompanying video produced by Justin Jaggers, came bursting forth with new life through the amazing production talents of Niko Lyras, along with the instrumental and vocal contributions of over three dozen established entertainers, talented newcomers, and legacy artists (see below), who all came together and donated their time and talents to create a work of art that celebrates and exemplifies the musical, cultural, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual unity and diversity inherent in our city and the world beyond.”

Music Video Monday: FreeWorld and Friends

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

Categories
Music Music Blog

Listen Up: The Harbert House Band

Shelby Kennedy

The Harbert House Band: Max Kaplan, Jad Tariq, Andrew McNeill, and Danny Banks.

The Harbert House Band is a band of the times.

Max Kaplan, 22, recently put the group together because of the COVID-19 outbreak. The band, which includes his roommates, is based at their home on Harbert, where all except one of the musicians are quarantined.

Most of them play in other bands. “All our gigs have been cancelled,” Kaplan says. “In an effort to generate some income we devised a plan to record a small EP and put it out on Bandcamp and make as much money as we can for it.”

The Harbert House Band, which includes Kaplan on guitar and vocals, Danny Banks, 27, on bass, Andrew McNeill, 24, on drums, and their friend Jad Tariq, 23, on lead guitar, basically is the lineup of the Max Kaplan Band. McNeill also is in Ghost Town Blues Band and Banks plays drums in the Nicole Atkins Band.

“The Harbert House Band” is “an all-encompassing name to give credit to everybody and split the money,” says Kaplan, who wrote and sang all the songs on the EP, Eponymous: The Harbert House Band.

The Harbert House Band will perform its second live stream show from 6 to 7:30 p.m. April 4th on the Ruthie’s BBQ & Pizza Facebook page. That’s his dad and stepmom’s restaurant in Montclair, New Jersey.

The Harbert House Band live streaming March 28th.

As for the music, Kaplan says, “What we’re trying to do is take that old soul music that’s been coming out of Memphis for decades and put a little pop sensibility to it.”

They want to adapt it “for the modern listener. We want to touch on things that matter to us. The feelings everybody feels, like loneliness, sorrow, joy, fun.”

“Read Your Letter,” one of the songs on the EP, is about a man who gets a letter in the mail addressed to his loved one, but it’s not from anyone he knows. “He reads his partner’s secret letter. And it’s all the pain that comes from an experience like that.”

Kaplan’s “feel good song” is “Hey Baby Look,” which he describes as a “party blues song meant for having a good time. A quicker, shuffle beat.”

“Lonely Boy,” which will be featured on Kaplan’s upcoming Max Kaplan Band album, is “about being far from your original home, New York City, where your parents live. It’s about living away from the people that love you the most.”

Kaplan, who was born in New York City, grew up sitting in with blues bands at Ruthie’s BBQ & Pizza.

Max Kaplan selfie

Max Kaplan relaxes with a cup of coffee on Harbert House porch.

He stood out on stage. “I was always an eclectic kid when I was young. I had a big red ‘Jewfro.’ We’re Jewish. I’d always wear colorful clothes back then. I’ve tamed down some. I had these high top purple Converse.”

His dad, a chef as well as a guitar player, wanted Kaplan to learn to play the guitar, but Kaplan was more interested in “socializing, playing outside with other kids.”


Kaplan gave in when he was 10 years old. “He bought me a Stratocaster for my 10th birthday and the rest is history.”

Recounting his music influences, Kaplan says, “It started with Hendrix. After Hendrix, the Beatles. And from the Beatles I found the Rolling Stones. And from there I found the blues.”

He discovered the blues while listening to records in his dad’s vinyl collection. “I came across a song, ‘Have You Ever Loved a Woman’ by Freddie King. I was sitting in the living room. I heard that song and I said, ‘This is it. This is what I want to do.’ It wasn’t only do blues, but do rock at that point. ‘I have to be a musician.’”

When he was 17, Kaplan moved to Memphis to major in music at Rhodes College.

“When I got here, it was a huge culture shock. People don’t talk or move the same as they do in the North, for sure. I think what originally enticed me when I got here was the expansive music scene. I think when I got here I expected to see a lot of soul. I expected to see a lot of Stax and American Studio style soul music. And what I got was a lot of different things: rock, punk, rap, indie rock stuff, jazz. I think I was surprised about how deep and well-done each genre of music is in this town.

“After I graduated and started playing professionally, what surprised me the most was how welcoming this town is to professional musicians. How well they treat them.”

Originally, Kaplan was going to move back to New York City after he graduated to take a job as a booking agent. He then was offered a job in blues player Tony Holiday’s band in Memphis.

Kaplan recorded bass and background vocals and he co-wrote songs on Holiday’s Soul Service album, which was produced by Ori Naftaly, who Kaplan describes as “an incredible producer, songwriter.”

Now that Kaplan is in quarantine, the emphasis definitely is on music at Harbert House. “It definitely helps for all of us to be musicians. We’re all professionals.

Max Kaplan

Jad Tariq plays guitar in Kaplan’s bedroom at Harbert House.

“Really, what it all boils down to is we’re getting all this free time and we’ve been using it to make the best possible recorded music we can from our house. I’ve been setting up these sessions in my living room and running them through Innerface into my laptop. I’ve been recording everything myself.”


So, what will happen to The Harbert House Band after the quarantine? “I don’t think it will necessarily be a thing of the past, but it is our quarantine project right now. I think I could definitely see us getting together and deciding to create another project ‘cause we do love each other very much.”

And, he says, “I see us recording Harbert House Band again under lighter circumstances.”

Kaplan and the other musicians don’t constantly play music at Harbert House though. “We’ve been watching Harry Potter. I’ve never seen it before.”

To stream the EP click here: harberthouseband.bandcamp.com

Max Kaplan

Harbert House living room studio, where the EP was recorded.

Categories
Music Music Features

Southern Avenue Soars

“Never in our lives did we imagine we’d be in this situation. Not so fast, not like this,” says Memphian, by way of Israel, Ori Naftaly, the virtuoso guitarist and bandleader for the Memphis gospel/blues/soul outfit Southern Avenue. Naftaly, who spoke to the Flyer via cellphone while riding with the band from New York to Philadelphia last week on tour, says that quick success (more on that in a second) has definitely not gone to the band’s head.

“Of course, we’re excited about all the attention and everything, but we have to stay consistent and humble, work hard. The industry will spit you out as soon as they chew you in.”

So, what exactly is Naftaly referring to? Well, few bands from Memphis have enjoyed a more meteoric rise to both the top of the local scene and national relevance. In less than two years’ time (the band’s first gig was in September of 2015), Southern Avenue has gone from a relatively unknown commodity to one of the hottest acts in town, packing local clubs and receiving rave reviews from the local press — including the Flyer, which put Southern Avenue lead vocalist Tierinii Jackson on the cover of its “Summer Music Issue” last July. And while Southern Avenue’s ascendance is certainly justified by the band’s undeniable talent, a little bit of luck certainly didn’t hurt.

Last March, the band was playing a St. Patrick’s Day gig at Bar DKDC in Cooper-Young, and by pure coincidence, in walked John Burk, president of the Concord Label Group, and thereby, the legendary Memphis soul imprint Stax Records, which Concord has owned since 2004.

“It’s a classic, clichéd story,” says Naftaly. “He was in town working on Melissa Etheridge’s Memphis record with Boo Mitchell at Royal. So, after the session, he comes in at like 1:30 in the morning and hangs out for our last set and says he loves us.”

After six months of negotiations, Southern Avenue signed to Stax Records, becoming the only current act on the label from Memphis.

“[Burk] said they had been looking for the right Memphis band to sign to Stax for years but could never find the right fit,” says Naftaly. “It means the world to every single person in this band that they chose us. Words can’t describe it.”

Even before signing to Stax, the band worked the road hard, touring as much as possible. But with the label behind it, Southern Avenue has been getting better and better gigs — including some major blues and jam festivals — and the media attention that goes along with them. Recent write-ups in Relix magazine, American Blues Scene, and Elmore Magazine come to mind.

“None of that would be possible without Stax. We have a great team behind us,” says Naftaly.

On February 24th, the band released its self-titled debut, which was produced by veteran local engineer Kevin Houston (Lucero, North Mississippi Allstars, Amy LaVere). The record has already shot to No. 1 on the iTunes blues charts.

“I knew working with the band, early on, that we were on to something special,” says Houston. “They were a pleasure to work with, and I’m thrilled with how the record came out.”

In speaking with Naftaly about Southern Avenue’s apparently bright future, his humility and appreciation for what the band has accomplished in such a short time is striking. He remains dedicated to earning what Southern Avenue has been given and sees this as only the first step. “In the end, Stax is just a label,” he says. “We still have to make good music. We have to make sure we do the best we can and we’re true to ourselves.”

To celebrate their album’s unveiling, Southern Avenue is holding two events this week: a free listening party at Shangri-La Records on Thursday, March 2nd at 6 p.m., and a live show at Loflin Yard on Friday, March 3rd at 9 p.m. Admission $10.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Welcome to the 2016 International Blues Challenge

Ori Naftaly and the Southern Avenue Band will represent the Memphis Blues Society in the 2016 IBC.

The 2016 International Blues Challenge starts this evening (Tuesday, January 26th) and runs throughout the weekend. Now in its 32nd year, the International Blues Challenge is the world’s largest gathering of blues artists and serves as the premier search by the Blues Foundation to find the best blues band, blues duo, and blues singer ready to take their performance to an international level.

This year, the International Blues Challenge features bands and performers from as far as Israel, Australia, Columbia, and the Philippines, in addition to numerous acts from around the country. Local performers include Rodney Polk and Johnny Riley, The Southern Avenue Band, and the Stax Music Academy. Over 250 acts are expected to perform at this year’s Challenge.

Last year, Eddie Cotton of the Vicksburg Blues Society won Best Band, Noah Wotherspoon won the Gibson Guitar Award, and Randy McQuay of the Cape Fear Blues Society won Best Solo/Duo. Ben Rice of the Ashland Blues Society won the St. Blues Guitar Award for Best Solo/Duo, Nico Wayne Toussaint won the Lee Oskar Harmonica Award, and Cryin’ Mercy of the Grafton Blues Association won Best Self-Produced CD. 

Passes to the 2016 International Blues Challenge can be purchased here. Tickets to individual events are also available on site. Check out the complete schedule below, or click here to download the entire schedule in PDF form. 

Tuesday, January 26th
5:30-9:00pm WILL CALL Club 152 2nd Floor
5:30pm International Showcase Beale Street
8:00pm Tas Cru’s Generation Blues Fundraiser Jam Rum Boogie Cafe Donation at door

Wednesday, January 27th
11:00am- 4:00 pm Pacific Northwest Showcase Club 152 First Floor
12:00pm–5:00pm Blind Raccoon Showcase Purple Haze Nightclub
12:00pm-2:30pm IBC Act Registration Tin Roof (315 Beale Street)
12:00-10:00pm Will Call, IBC Merchandise & CD Sales Club 152 2nd Floor
1:00-3:30pm Health Fair (cholesterol, blood pressure, diabetes, etc. screenings) Club 152 2nd Floor
1:00-2:00 pm Affiliate Roundtable Hard Rock Café 2nd Floor
2:30pm IBC Act Orientation Meeting Tin Roof (315 Beale Street)
4:30/5:00/5:35pm First Night of 32nd IBC Quarterfinals Beale Street IBC Pass or $10 wristband

Thursday, January 28th
10:00am Blues Foundation Board of Directors meeting The Blues Foundation Office @421 S. Main St.
10:00am Blues in the Schools with Tas Cru and Cole and Logan Layman Downtown Elementary School
11:00am-4:30pm Galaxie Agency Showcase B.B.King’s
11:30am Great Canadian Polar Bear Blues Showcase Kooky Canuck
12:00pm–5:00pm Blind Raccoon Showcase Purple Haze Nightclub
12:00-10:00pm Will Call, IBC Merchandise & CD Sales Club 152 2nd Floor
1:00pm FILM – America’s Blues Blues City Cafe
1:00-3:30pm Health Fair (cholesterol, blood pressure, diabetes, etc. screenings) Club 152 2nd Floor
2:00-4:00pm A Cast of Blues with artist, Sharon McConnell-Dickerson and photographer, Ken Murphy The Blues Hall of Fame 421 S. Main
4:30/5:00/5:35pm First Night of 32nd IBC Quarterfinals Beale Street IBC Pass or $10 wristband
11:00pm International Jam Club 152 First Floor
11:30pm All-Star Jam with Jonn Richardson, Sean Carney and many more!! Tin Roof
When the scores have been tabulated, the semi-finalists will be announced at various Beale Street clubs.

Friday, January 29th
11:00am-2:15pm IBC Youth Act Registration Hard Rock Café
11:00am 2016 Keeping the Blues Alive Awards Doubletree Hotel, Tennessee Ballroom
11:00am Blues Kids Foundation Hard Rock Café
12:00pm–5:00pm Blind Raccoon Showcase Purple Haze Nightclub
11:00am Beale Street Brass Note/Walk of Fame Dedication to Little Laura Dukes Alfred’s
Noon- 4pm National Women in Blues Alfred’s
12:00-10:00pm Will Call, IBC Merchandise & CD Sales Club 152 2nd Floor
Noon-4pm 17th Annual Blues Jam by The Stella Vees Blues Hall
2:15pm IBC YOUTH Act Orientation Meeting Hard Rock Café
4:00-7:00/10:00-1:00pm Blues at the Hard Rock Hard Rock Café
4:20/5:00/5:40pm Youth Showcases Beale Street IBC Pass or $15 wristband
5:20/5:40/7:00pm 32nd IBC Semi-Finals IBC Pass or $15 Beale Street
The following events will begin when the semi-finals are concluded in the club somewhere between 10:00 and 11:00pm IBC Pass or $15 wristband
Youth Jam B.B. Kings
11:30pm All-Star Jam with Jonn Richardson Tin Roof
When the scores have been tabulated Friday, the finalists will be announced at various Beale Street clubs.

Saturday, January 30th
11:00am Doors Open for Finals Orpheum Theatre IBC Pass or $42.50 at door, if available
11:00am Silent Auction
12:00pm 32nd IBC Finals & Best Self-Produced CD Winner Announcement

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Ori Naftaly Band @ Newby’s Friday

Israel’s best blues band hits the Highland Strip. That is one fierce blues woman. Phillip Roth, call your office.