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Beale Street Music Festival 2018: Saturday

Nothing was going to stop the near sellout crowd in Tom Lee Park from having a good time on the second day of the 2018 Beale Street Music Festival.

Chris McCoy

Sunset over Tom Lee Park.

The day started early for Memphis music fans, with Chinese Connection Dub Embassy and Tav Falco & Panther Burns starting ten minutes apart on two of the festival’s three main stages. CCDE greeted the crowds trickling into the park with a strong beat, and they responded with an ecstatic sing along to their song “Heavy Meditation”.

Chris McCoy

Chinese Connection Dub Embassy on the FedEx stage.

We then hoofed it the quarter mile or so to the Bud Light stage where Memphis punk legend Tav Falco was holding court. The current touring incarnation of the immortal Panther Burns is a much tighter and more conventional band than the musical terrorists who set the standard for Midtown punk in early 1980s, but compared to the other acts on offer they were still bracingly raw. Sitting in on keys was Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene.

Chris McCoy

Tav Falco and Panther Burns tear it up on the Bud Light stage.

Falco was spry, loose, and utterly confident as he switched freely from shockabilly wildman to tango sophisticate. When he left the stage, the entranced crowd called for an encore, much to the visible consternation of the stage manager who called time as Falco returned for his victory lap. But the beleguared staffer did not know who he was dealing with. He could only look on helplessly as Panther Burns held the stage with a blistering rendition of “New World Order Blues”. Falco spit fire, poetically condemning Trump and the current state of America as the crowd egged him on. It was only the second act of the day, but already I had added to my list of all time great Beale Street Music Festival performances.

If the stage manager was worried about Panther Burns putting the show behind schedule, it turned out to be a moot issue, as Mother Nature had the last word. It had been drizzling on and off all morning, but as Calexico was about halfway through their set, more serious weather set in.

Laura Jean Hocking

Storm clouds loom over Tom Lee Park.

We sought shelter in the Beer Garden tent as the rain intensified. Then, a great gust of wind whipped through the park, accompanied by a torrential deluge and, for about five minutes, nickel-sized hail.

Chris McCoy

4:14 PM: Hail on the ground in Tom Lee Park.

It was a scary few moments as the hail poked holes in the tent where we were sheltered along with several hundred of our fellow festival goers. But just as quickly as the unexpected cell materialized, it dissipated.

Chris McCoy

4:39 PM: Blue skies over the Hernando de Soto Bridge.

Pro Tip: Always wear rain boots to the Beale Street Music Festival, even if it’s sunny and dry while you’re getting ready that morning. There were quite a few regretful women in sandals and heels getting stuck in the mire for the rest of the evening. But no one who saw Al Kapone and his posse perform as the FedEx stage resumed music was in the least bit regretful. Kapone’s set was somewhere between a Memphis music lesson and a pep rally. The climax came when he transitioned from “Hard Out Here For A Pimp” to the other Hustle and Flow hit “Whoop That Trick”, which has become something of a rallying cry for the Grizzlies. There were about ten thousand people in front of the stage, and every one of them were pumping their fists in the air.

Laura Jean Hocking

Commercial Appeal photographer Yoshi James capturing the local wildlife.

By late afternoon, the weather radar was clear, and people were streaming into the park in the tens of thousands. As All Time Low took the stage, singer Alex Gaskarth said “Wow, our stuff still works after getting hailed on!”

Chris McCoy

Artist Lauren Lazaru takes a break from working on the mural she and Curtis Glover created live on the festival grounds.

We retired to the Blues Tent to hear Eddy “The Chef” Clearwater and his crack band wail as the sun went down.

Laura Jean Hocking

Sunset at the Blues Tent.

Chris McCoy

Fans gather for Ludacris.

By the time David Byrne began his transformative set by sitting at a table and singing a song to a human brain like a postmodern Hamlet, the area in front of the Bud Light stage was packed. Byrne alternated songs from his new album American Utopia with deep cuts from his decades-long career. His twelve-piece band, playing all wireless instruments and featuring a percussion section instead of a single trap drummer, ranged freely across the blank stage, flawlessly executing both intricate choreography and layered experimental funk. New songs like “We Dance Like This” and “Everybody’s Coming To My House” took flight when liberated from the studio, and he breathed life into reconfigured classics like “I Zimbra”, “The Great Curve”, and “This Must Be The Place”.

Chris McCoy

David Byrne

At age 65, Byrne delivered the most radical and visionary performance of the entire festival by completely disregarding the conventions of the rock and pop show and incorporating new elements from Broadway, modern dance, and even marching bands. I hope some of the young performers were watching him burn down the house he helped build.

Laura Jean Hocking

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Saturday: The Klitz with Ross Johnson’s Panther Burns

If you haven’t seen the footage of the Klitz at the Orpheum from 1979, put down that goddamn baloney sandwich and watch the video below. Once the video is over, wipe the mustard off your face and get ready for Saturday night at the Hi-Tone, when the always editorially unconscionable Ross Johnson takes over the Panther Burns and opens for the Klitz. Dear God. 

We talked to original member of the Klitz Gail Elise Clifton, who is excited to play these songs to honor Panther Burns founder Tav Falco. Clifton, her sister Marcia, Amy Gassner, and Lesa Aldrege were the original members. More below.

Saturday: The Klitz with Ross Johnson’s Panther Burns (2)

“It’s totally a tribute,” Clifton says. ” I love Tav. We opened for them back in the day, and we’ll open for them, I guess in spirit. But Panther Burns is opening. So I guess that means we’re headlining. But we did happen before the Panther Burns if we’re going in chronological order. I have taken my two favorite Panther Burns songs, and I am going to perform them. I hope we have blessings. I ask Ross all the time, and he keeps saying yes.”

Since the band claimed the title of Memphis’ first lady punk rock ensemble, the band has reunited to play in 2006 and to cut some records with Greg Roberson and Adam Hill in 2011. But Clifton is psyched about this gig and pleased to honor Falco and Alex Chilton, who produced the Klitz.

“I know that Alex’s death had something to do with it,” Clifton says. “We can always feel close to Alex through those early tracks. He was my producer. He was Amy’s first producer. Since his death, people are interested in those tracks. It made Amy and Marcia want to rejoin. We’ve got three songs from Like Flies on Sherbert and one song from Sister Loves. The interesting thing about Hook or Crook, which was a song Alex recorded on us that had been on Like Flies, but he rewrote the words for us to do at Sounds of Memphis. We’ll be doing that Saturday.”

That night at the Orpheum is a special memory for Clifton.

“I love Cordell Jackson,” Clifton says. “She saw us perform. When we played at the Orpheum she saw us perform in ’79. There was a Memphis Press-Scimitar article, and they quoted her. She just loved us. She got the Panther Burns, she got the Klitz, and she got the Cramps. At that time, we all had rockabilly roots. So, it’s exciting that I’m able to do that.”

[Correction: I misstated Tav Falco’s age in an earlier version. I apologize and regret the error.]

Saturday: The Klitz with Ross Johnson’s Panther Burns

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Music Music Features

Approaching the Unapproachable

Since the last time Tav Falco and his “unapproachable” Panther Burns played Memphis, in 2000, much has changed: Musical iconoclasts like Cordell Jackson, Sam Phillips, Otha Turner, Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, and Jessie Mae Hemphill — all championed by Panther Burns — are dead, while many of the group’s hang-outs, like Pat’s Pizza, the Beer Joint, and the Pop Tunes record store on Summer Avenue have bitten the dust as well.

From a telephone in a friend’s Paris apartment, Falco sighs. “All that is inevitable,” he declares, “but there’s something eternal about the ethos and the spirit in Memphis that cannot be denied or extinguished. Even though some of the great artists and landmarks have vanished from the Memphis scene, the legacies live on.”

Evoking a wise line uttered by his friend and co-conspirator, the late Randall Lyon, Falco says, “Let it go — it all moves anyways.

“That’s where Panther Burns come in,” he continues. “We started performing with the notion that you can’t look at the future without looking at the past. We always represented that missing link to more archaic forms of art, like rock-and-roll and tango music. We’re interpreters of this exuberant, un-self-conscious musical form.”

When he launched Panther Burns at the end of the ’70s, Falco’s single-minded inclination toward artifice, theatrics, and an honest-to-God appreciation for regional folk musicians like Burnside, Turner, Jackson, and Charlie Feathers, photographer William Eggleston, and painter Carroll Cloar, shocked and befuddled most Memphians — most notably, WHBQ-TV morning host Marge Thrasher, who declared the group’s appearance “an all-time low” for local television.

Nevertheless, Falco’s infamous rendition of Leadbelly’s “Bourgeois Blues” — in which Falco, dressed as Charlie Chaplin’s Little Tramp, delivered an earsplitting guitar solo via an electric chainsaw — amazed others, including Box Tops/Big Star frontman Alex Chilton and a cast of hundreds, including Doug Easley, Ron Easley, Eric Hill, Jim Duckworth, Ross Johnson, Jack Yarber, and Scott Bomar, all of whom have backed Falco at one time or another, and Lorette Velvette, Lisa McGaughran, Diane Greene, and Misty White, who operated as Panther Burns’ all-female side group, the Hellcats.

To say that Panther Burns inspired an era of Memphis music would be an understatement: The oft-disparaged, loose-knit, seemingly a-step-away-from-utter-chaos band dominated and defined the Midtown scene for an entire decade.

Yet, Falco claims, “We were always on the outside in Memphis. We were never part of the establishment. We had a group of people who played with us or came to see us who were very eccentric in their own right.

This month, Falco — who currently lives in Paris, on Rue des Solitaires (“I finally made it to the ‘Street of the Lonelies'”) — is bringing his latest incarnation of Panther Burns to the U.S. for three gigs: in Los Angeles, in New York, and a Memphis appearance this week at the New Daisy Theatre.

“Once you’re in Panther Burns, it’s not so easy to get out,” he says, noting that Ross Johnson, the band’s beleaguered former drummer, will also perform at the Memphis show.

Asked about Johnson’s legendary “Panther Burns Confessional,” published by Shangri-La Records in the mid-’90s, Falco says, “I endorse the diatribes.

“There’s an element of truth in it which makes it even more piquant and interesting,” he says, obviously relishing remembrances of endless squabbles (“a band full of drama queens” is how Johnson described the group), critical commentary (“All the wasted effort and heartache, and still the records sounded like toilets flushing,” Johnson wrote of albums produced by Chilton and Jim Dickinson), and touring with the Clash (in Johnson’s words: “After the opening date in Nashville, a member of the road crew asked which one of us was Alex Chilton. The reply: the one eating ice off the stage”).

Falco, who makes semi-annual pilgrimages to visit family in his tiny hometown of Whelan Springs, Arkansas, will have just 24 hours in Memphis this go-round.

“I really feel like a citizen of the world,” he says. “Or maybe the cosmos. Sometimes I miss listening to Eggleston playing Chopin on his Steinway at 3 a.m., but other than that, I’m okay over here.

“I’m going back to Beale Street, which has been paved over and changed so much, but somehow, the blackness, the blues, are still around. Those street corners are really haunted — in the middle of the night, you can still feel it, even though Uncle Ben [Perry, a street musician] is gone. While it’s lost some of its indigenous qualities, the vibe, the Beale Street mambo, is still there, and I want to be connected to that.”

Falco also plans to take a jaunt down to the riverfront, where, in his words, “the Mississippi, deep and wide, with Arkansas on the other side, is something to behold. I feel compelled to have a look at that once again.

“Then it’s back to Europe,” Falco says, “where the topic around Panther Hall is our ongoing struggle and the battle to place our next album, Wellfire: Séance for Deranged Lovers, with the proper record label.”

www.MySpace.com/PantherBurns

Tav Falco’s Unapproachable Panther Burns

New Daisy Theatre

Saturday, October 21st

Doors open at 7 p.m., tickets $10