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Music Music Features

This Is the End

The 62-year-old Bob Frank was born and raised in Memphis, where he attended East High School. He was also a cohort of Jim Dickinson and others on the city’s underground folk scene in the Sixties. After a high-profile eponymous album for Vanguard Records in 1972 went awry, Frank moved to Oakland, California, and basically retired from the record business, re-emerging with a few obscure, self-released albums earlier this decade.

The 27-year-old John Murry was raised in Tupelo, relocated to Memphis as a teenager, and made a name for himself on the local music scene via first-rate alt-country bands the Dillingers and his own John Murry Band. Murry was quickly recognized as a major talent but never lived up to his promise while in Memphis. He followed his new wife to San Francisco in 2003.

Though separated by a generation, these two musical underachievers and kindred spirits came together in California, making a mark this year with World Without End, an album of original murder ballads that received a positive notice in Rolling Stone and has garnered rave reviews, particularly, in British music magazines. This week, the duo returns home to perform songs from the album in Memphis for the first time.

“He came out here, and a friend of ours from back in Memphis, Don McGregor, told him to look me up,” Frank says, explaining the roots of this unlikely musical tandem.

McGregor was an old acquaintance of Frank’s from his days on the Memphis music scene and had befriended Murry in recent years.

“Don used to play a bunch of Bob’s songs, but I didn’t know that they were Bob’s songs,” Murry says. “When I got [to California], Don told me that this was where Bob lived. So I gave him a call, and we got together.”

The idea to do an album of murder ballads came from Murry, but after recording a few covers of traditional songs at Frank’s home studio, the duo decided to go in a different direction.

“When we started singing [those songs], they sounded too old and corny and moralistic,” Frank says. “So we decided to write new songs in the same tradition. They would sound like old songs and be from stories that happened or are part of legends.”

To do this, Murry and Frank drew partly from their own knowledge and experience. “Tupelo, Mississippi, 1936,” a tale of a black man who was abducted and lynched on the town square, is a story Murry remembers learning about as a kid. The murder took place in 1926. The “1936” of the title refers to a tornado — one of the deadliest in recorded history — that ravaged the city a decade later and, according to local lore, was predicted by the lynching victim before his death.

Similarly, “Madeline, 1796” is a Mississippi story that Murry already knew. It takes place at King’s Tavern in Natchez, which Murry visited as a child. In the story, which is believed to be true, the tavern owner’s wife finds out her husband has been having an affair with the teenaged Madeline. She hires two men to kill the girl, then poisons the men and has them all entombed in the tavern’s fireplace. In the 1930s, the fireplace was opened up, and the remains of three people were found.

Frank’s Memphis-set “Bubba Rose, 1961” is even more personal, recounting an event from Frank’s own teen years: “We were sitting ’round the table when Uncle Bud goes/’It’s a shame what happened to old Bubba Rose,'” the song begins.

“We were sitting in my grandmother’s house, over on Vance,” Frank says. “And Bubba Rose had actually grown up right next door to my uncle. We were sitting around the table eating dinner, and my uncle says, ‘That’s too bad what happened to old Bubba Rose.’ Then he told us about how [Rose had] gone to work and shot his boss and was in jail. This was the day or so it happened. I was in high school and didn’t know anybody who would shoot someone, but there’s this guy who lives next door to my uncle and who’s in jail for killing his boss with a shotgun.”

Bob Frank

Other stories came from research, usually by Murry, usually on the Internet. “Wherever we could find a good story,” Frank says.

On the album, Murry and Frank alternate lead vocals, with the songs Murry sings typically in first-person — sometimes in the voice of the murdered, sometimes the murderer — and Frank’s performances mostly third-person. In the CD’s liner notes, Murry and Frank include quotes from source materials referencing the stories behind the songs — from newspaper and magazine articles, letters, wanted posters, and other sources. In concert, the duo has fashioned these materials, as well as photos and other visuals, into a slide show that accompanies the songs.

“I wanted to do the record because of a personal fear of dying and of death in general,” Murry says of his interest in such morbid material. “I don’t intend to be that way. It has far more to do with fear than it does with a ‘costume.’ This isn’t like Nick Cave’s Murder Ballads record, which I’m not knocking. Okay, maybe I am in a way. I thought it was kind of silly.”

“John thinks like that,” Frank says. “Even his love songs come out like that. That’s how he is.”

Frank’s attraction to the concept was more about craft than compulsion.

“To me, it was an interesting way to write songs,” Frank says. “It’s fun to write songs like that, and it’s fun to sing them — to get into those roles. To me, that’s what it was, the art of it.”

Frank and Murry initially bonded, in part, over the contrarian impulses they shared as expatriate Southerners in California.

“I still hate California,” Murry says, more than four years after making the move. “I never wanted to come here, and I don’t like it at all. I’d much rather be [in Memphis]. But it eases it a lot to have Bob here. And I’ve certainly done more musically here than I ever did in Memphis. But I really hate California.”

Murry says that his liberalism has been challenged by the more strident variety California offers.

“I started reading a lot of [French philosopher Michel] Foucault when I got out here, and fascism exists on all sides of the political spectrum,” Murry says. “Just walk down the street in Berkeley and try to put a cigarette out on the sidewalk and see what happens. People [shouldn’t be] treated with dignity and respect because of a political stance. It [should be] about a whole lot more than politics. That’s something I’ve learned since I’ve gotten out here.”

Frank, who relocated to California full-time more than 30 years ago, is much more settled in his new home, but he identifies with his younger partner’s sense of dislocation.

“I remember back in the Sixties, I’d go back and forth between Nashville and California, and it was like two totally different cultures,” Frank remembers. “Nashville had that country music culture, and California was all the hippies. When I was in California, I’d think, I guess I’m not really a hippie. I don’t fit in here. I guess I’m more of a country musician. Then I’d go back [to Nashville] and think, I don’t fit in here. These guys are too slick. I think I’m more like a hippie or something. Wherever you are, you don’t think you quite fit in.”

World Without End has taken Murry and Frank on two brief European tours this year and will finally bring them back home this week, where the pair will perform at the Hi-Tone Café and at Two Stick in Oxford with an “all-star” backing band, including Tim Mooney of the San Francisco band American Music Club and Memphis-based friends and mentors Dickinson and McGregor. Local band J.D. Reager & the Cold-Blooded Three will open the Memphis show.

Up next could be a sequel that features original murder ballads written about contemporary stories, such as slain American journalist Daniel Pearl and American activist Rachel Corrie, who was killed in Gaza a few years ago by Israeli troops.

But taking the same approach to such immediate material could be risky.

“If we were to take modern stories and look at them with the same amoralism that we did with the older stories, I don’t know how pleased people will be,” Murry says. “But I think it’s more powerful to leave something completely open-ended, to the point that the listener is forced to think about it.”

Murry says he hopes World Without End taps into listeners’ fears rather than manipulating their emotions. “I hope that’s what this record does,” he says. “I hope it haunts people.”

John Murry and Bob Frank
The Hi-Tone Café
Friday, December 7th
Showtime is 9 p.m., admission $5

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We Recommend We Recommend

Great Performances

“And with honey out of the rock should I have satisfied thee,” says Psalm 81, suggesting God as a source of sweetness and strength. That biblical passage was also the source for a popular spiritual called “Honey in the Rock,” which was recorded in Memphis in 1927 by Mamie Forehand. Add the word “sweet” to the title, and you get Sweet Honey in the Rock, the all-female, Grammy Award-winning a capella singing group that has been entertaining and inspiring audiences since 1973. Sweet Honey will be doing just that as guests of the Cultural Development Foundation of Memphis at the Cannon Center on Friday, December 7th.

Sweet Honey’s founder, Bernice Johnson Reagon, retired in 2004, but that still leaves current members Ysaye Barnwell, Nitanju Bolade Casel, Aisha Kahlil, Carol Maillard, Louise Robinson, and Shirley Childress Saxton to combine spirituals and jazz, gospel and blues. Harmony ties it all together. Harmony’s also the key to Sweet Honey’s repertoire, which speaks out against injustice on every front.

And appearing with Sweet Honey in the Rock at the Cannon Center … You may know them as “Three Mo’ Tenors,” or you may know them by name as Cook, Dixon & Young. Their full names are Victor Trent Cook, Rodrick Dixon, and Thomas Young, and they’ve got gospel and jazz going too. But add arias, show tunes, and soul classics, and you’ve got a trio that’s a little hard to categorize. But PBS didn’t think so. Cook, Dixon & Young have been featured on the series that goes by the name, pure and simple, Great Performances.

The women in Sweet Honey in the Rock? They’ve been saluted by a PBS series too. The show, pure and simple: American Masters.

Sweet Honey in the Rock and Cook, Dixon & Young at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts on Friday, December 7th, 8 p.m. Tickets are $20.50-$51.50, plus service charge. For tickets, go to ticketmaster.com or call the Cannon Center at 576-1269.

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Film Features Film/TV

Cruel, pretentious ending ruins King creature-feature.

The Mist opens on a dark and stormy night in Castle Rock, Maine, in the home of a book-cover artist (Thomas Jane) whose horror, fantasy, and sci-fi images cover his living room. If you’ve read much Stephen King, you sense the author’s presence even if you haven’t seen the Stephen King’s appendage on the film’s title.

For a while, The Mist, adapted from a novella at the end of his ’80s-era story collection Skeleton Crew, seems like it’s going to be a pretty good King adaptation.

The bad storm wrecks the artist’s house, so father and son head into town to stock up on supplies, getting trapped in a grocery store with an assortment of stock townsfolk while a mist enshrouds the store and rumors swirl of unseen dangers.

An entertaining, low-key cast fills out the broadly drawn collection of refugees — the hot checkout girl, the existentialist bagger, three soldiers from a nearby military base, a Bible-thumping town loon, a couple of rough-edged blue-collar guys, etc.

Into this familiar set-up, King and director Frank Darabont (of prestige King adaptations The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption) conspire on something that’s half monster movie and half nature-of-man talkfest. An octopus-like creature sucks a bloodied Norm the Bag Boy out into the mist. The ensuing in-store conflict pits fundamentalists against rationalists against existentialists.

But, despite that bid for significance, The Mist is at its best as a gee-wow horror/action movie: Pterodactyl-like creatures break through the glass and invade the store, warded off with makeshift weapons (and one revolver) created from store items. Jane’s protagonist leads an expedition through the fog to the drug store next door, which is enshrouded with webbing from a breed of spiders that would have scared away anything from Arachnophobia.

Darabont isn’t satisfied with making a minor pleasure, though, so he turns the film into a major monstrosity, with an ending that made me angrier than anything I saw at the movies this year. I never read The Mist as a kid King fan (one of the few King titles of the era I skipped), but I skimmed the end of the book recently to see if King himself was to blame. He wasn’t.

Unsatisfied with King’s open-ended conclusion, The Mist tacks on an extreme ending (which I won’t give away, though I’m tempted), more worthy of an ironic Eli Roth horror movie than the middling creature-feature The Mist actually is. There’s something smug, pretentious, and self-congratulatory about the utter pessimism and cruelty of the ending. It might have worked in a better, more severe movie, but it angered me here because I didn’t think the movie earned it. Or maybe even because the movie — or at least its actors — actually earned better.

The Mist

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Film Features Film/TV

Enchanting

As I write this, my almost-3-year-old daughter is having the bedding in her room changed over to a Disney Princess theme. She’s Disney Princess mad. Apparently, so is every other American girl age 2 and up, judging by the myriad products offered for purchase by the Mouse Factory this holiday season — Cinderella, Snow White, Aurora, Ariel, and a handful of others making up the Disney retail blitzkrieg. I am, quite simply, worn out by Disney Princess sensory overload.

So with that qualification, on to my review of Enchanted, the new animated/live-action Disney film about a princess who gets sent to the real world (our world) by a wicked queen, with a dashing prince following to rescue her. Though I was primed to see it as a cynical cash-in on a popular brand, I’m obliged to report the opposite: Enchanted is an excellent family film that touches upon and updates an iconic cinematic formula without diminishing it. Take that, Cinderella III: A Twist in Time!

Enchanted starts off animated, showing the beautiful Giselle (Amy Adams) pining away in song for a prince with whom she can share true love’s kiss. Jump to Prince Edward (James Marsden), the dashing heir to the Andalusian throne, who hears her song and rushes to her side to complete it with his own lyrics. Once met, they fall immediately in love and get set to marry right away.

Fearing the loss of her power, Edward’s stepmother, the evil Queen Narissa (Susan Sarandon), tricks Giselle into a portal that sends her to New York City, where she becomes live-action amid the ugly cacophony of product placement in Times Square. Edward and a chipmunk follow to rescue Giselle, and the Queen’s lackey, Nathaniel (Timothy Spall), follows to foil their efforts. Things get off-formula, though, when Giselle meets and starts falling for Robert (Patrick Dempsey), a single-father divorce lawyer.

In New York, confronted with such prosaic mechanisms as showers and buses, the Disney protagonists turn out to be functional idiots. This is more a mild commentary on the studio’s history of simple-stroked characters than it is an entrée into mean-spirited humor, though. As a postmodern take on cinematic fairy tales, Enchanted recalls the Shrek films, particularly Shrek the Third‘s booty-kickin’ princesses. But where Shrek dripped with sarcasm and irony, Enchanted chooses to entertain with cheerful, positive storytelling. Its beneficence is maybe the film’s greatest strength as a family film. Instead of relying on bodily functions to make the kiddies laugh or smug literary allusions to get to the parents, Enchanted goes old-school: engaging the whole audience, together, with a solid story, character-derived humor, and palatable themes.

In the wonderful 2005 film Junebug, Adams played charming, funny, rustic, and a little naive, creating what seemed like a real person from her script directions. In Enchanted, Adams has to go the opposite direction, this time asked to embody a fictional icon based on the same set of characteristics. Once again, she hangs the moon. With giant, doe eyes and piles of red hair, Adams is perfectly cast. But it’s the spirit she brings that’s so winning.

I haven’t seen Patrick Dempsey acting since 1991’s one-two punch of Run and Mobsters. (I don’t partake in Grey’s Anatomy.) I never thought I’d say this, but Dempsey brings a degree of maturity to his role. His deft application of world-weariness (but wanting to believe) is probably as important in making Enchanted good as Adams’ charming daffiness.

Add original music by the multi-Oscar-winning Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz, traditional 2-D animation methods, and narration by Julie Andrews, and Enchanted fits quite nicely in the Disney canon.

Enchanted

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Music Music Features

Return of the Third Man

Because Memphis music is so consumed by its roots heritage — blues, soul, rockabilly, garage-rock, alt-country — creative success can often be had by fighting against those expectations. In recent years, artists such as Snowglobe, The Coach and Four, Lost Sounds, and Jay Reatard (among others) have made some of the most exciting local music outside the boundaries of what most listeners immediately associate with Memphis music. And so it is with The Third Man.

The Third Man is composed of multi-instrumentalists Jake Vest and elder brother Toby Vest, guitarist/keyboardist Jeff Schmidtke, bassist/keyboardist/trombonist Dirk Kitterlin, and drummer Preston Todd. At this juncture, the band is probably better known to local music fans by its original name: Augustine.

“There is a Hawaiian nü-metal band called Augustine,” says Jake Vest, explaining the name change. “They sound like P.O.D. or Disturbed and sent us a few e-mails that stated they were about to go on tour and if we didn’t change our name, they would take us to court.” Something else also helped the band with their decision: “All of their e-mails were in all-caps, and I don’t like it when people send us e-mails in all-caps,” Vest says.

Along with a name taken from the classic 1949 film that stars Orson Welles, another noticeable change came with the sound of the band’s new album, Among the Wolves.

When they were known as Augustine, these local faves probably deserved a few of the Radiohead comparisons with which they were saddled. But, as the Third Man, the band has dialed down that frame of reference with an incredibly realized, catchy blend of ’70s hard rock, bluesy boogie, and ’60s psychedelia. This bevy of interesting influences does wonders with the band’s lingering indie-rock elements, emerging as a best-case scenario of what might happen if Scandinavian cult favorites Dungen were, well, from the South.

“The Stones’ Exile on Main Street was a big influence on the making of this record, as was the Love, Peace, and Poetry series of compilations, especially the Brazilian one,” explains Jake Vest. Each volume of the Love, Peace, and Poetry compilations, released by Normal Records, showcases a selection of late-’60s/early-’70s garage/psychedelic tracks from a particular country or continent. But a local influence in the same vein also provided inspiration for the Third Man’s current direction: underground Memphis rock band Moloch.

“I love that self-titled album by Moloch from ’69,” says Vest, a longtime friend of Ben Baker, son of the late Moloch guitarist and Memphis music legend Lee Baker.

The Third Man is a team effort (all of the members are in their early-to-mid 20s), though the Vest brothers form the songwriting core. “At this point, my brother and I come up with the basic ideas for the songs, which we then bring to the band for everyone to work out,” Jake says.

Keyboards, a Mellotron, and a 12-string acoustic guitar are among the instruments that take a front seat on Among the Wolves. “We were going with a more organic sound with this record, but it’s a natural progression,” Jake continues. “You can hear those instruments creeping in on the Augustine album.”

Augustine’s 2005 debut Broadcast was released to local critical acclaim on the Makeshift Music imprint and was recorded at Easley/McCain Studios. Among the Wolves will be self-released and was recorded at Young Avenue Sound. Continuing with the band’s DIY approach, the Third Man plans on self-releasing future albums, and they are in the midst of constructing their own practice space and studio.

To support Among the Wolves, the band plans on organizing a tour in early 2008 around a performance at Austin’s South By Southwest Music Festival.

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News

Guy Sebastian’s “Memphis” Album Is Actually Good

Fans of this website know that on weekends and holidays, we tend to get, um, less “news” directed.

A few weeks ago, we became enamored with a story about Australian Idol winner Guy Sebastian’s sojourn here to record an album with some legendary Memphis musicians.

Well, the album is out now and we decided to see what it sounded like, so off we went to Guy’s website. There’s a nice montage of videoclips of the Bluff City and samples from the songs. We were somewhat surprised (being cynical Memphians) to discover that the little sonofagun can really sing. He nails these tunes.

Sebastian is currently touring Australia with Memphis legends Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn, Lester Snell and Steve Potts.

Check it out. (And yes, we know we’ll get a zillion website hits from Australia. Hey, it’s Thanksgiving. Traffic is traffic, you turkeys.)

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Film Features Film/TV

Tangled up in Dylan lore.

In 1998, Todd Haynes released Velvet Goldmine, a rapturous but prickly ode to glam-rock that referenced genre stars such as David Bowie and Iggy Pop but clung to a fan’s perspective.

He tries something similar with I’m Not There, a pop meditation “inspired by the music & many lives of Bob Dylan” that is less concerned with presenting Dylan’s life in a realistic sense than on ruminating on the character of Dylan as experienced by his most ardent fans.

To do this, Haynes employs six actors — Christian Bale, Richard Gere, Ben Whishaw, Heath Ledger, Cate Blanchett, and African-American adolescent Marcus Carl Franklin — to play otherwise unconnected roles (none of them named “Bob Dylan”) that each embody a different facet of Dylan’s protean public persona.

Bale is the early, serious folkie Dylan in his first signs of dissatisfaction with the earnestness of the scene. Ledger is an actor who played lead in a “Dylan” biopic whose real life — in his courtship, marriage, and break-up with a sad-eyed lady of the lowlands played beautifully by Charlotte Gainsbourg — represents the most widely known segment of Dylan’s own domestic life. Whishaw plays a man in an interrogation-style interview who claims to be (Dylan influence) Arthur Rimbaud. Franklin is a boxcar-hopping musician who dubs himself “Woody” after Woody Guthrie and eventually visits the great folksinger (as Dylan did) on his deathbed. Blanchett is a scream as the most iconic of Dylan figures, the messy-haired mid-Sixties rock prophet. And Gere — in a dull recurring segment that threatens to stop the movie dead — actually plays an aging Billy the Kid in a reference to the film Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid, which Dylan acted in and provided music for.

Through the weaving of these six sections, Haynes touches on reams of Dylan lore, iconography, and soundbites — his electric folk-festival debut, being called “Judas” in London, his relationship with Joan Baez, his motorcycle accident, his chauvinism, his embrace of Christianity, etc. The Blanchett scenes are the strongest, filmed in black-and-white to make them not just a reference to that period of Dylan’s career but to the way it’s been perceived through the lens of D.A. Pennebaker’s documentary Don’t Look Back.

The result is probably the most personal and most ambitious musical “biopic” ever attempted. For remotely obsessive Dylan fans, it’s endlessly compelling, if not always successful. For more casual fans, it’s likely to be entirely inexplicable.

I’m Not There

Opens Wednesday, November 21st

Studio on the Square

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Film Features Film/TV

On the Hunt

Early in No Country for Old Men, Joel and Ethan Coen’s acclaimed adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, Vietnam vet Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) puts his wife Carla Jean (Kelly Macdonald) on a bus to send her away from potential violence. Moss has recently made off with a satchel of cash left over from a drug deal gone bad, and he warns his wife that she isn’t used to the kind of trouble they may be facing. Carla Jean’s response: “I’m used to lots of things — I worked at Wal-Mart.”

In print, this exchange is typical Coens — a telegraphed laugh-line delivered for the audience at the expense of the character. But, on film, it doesn’t play that way. Macdonald withholds the effect. She says the line but in a flat murmur, like she’s hoping no one will notice. She seems to be protecting her character from a mistake in the script. She also saves the Coens from perhaps the only potentially bad moment in what is otherwise their best film.

The Coens are working with an entirely new group of actors here after utilizing an extended company of familiar faces for most of their career. The result is that no one acts like they’re in a Coen Brothers movie. Each actor stays true to character rather than pandering to the perceived superiority of the audience, and the Coens themselves follow suit (or perhaps lead the way), overcoming the smug, cold snarkiness that animates most of their work (or ruins it, depending on your perspective). The result is the duo’s most measured film ever, a tense, virtuoso thriller where violence is undercut by legitimate sadness.

Intricately designed and richly photographed by Roger Deakins, the film is basically a three-way chase film. It’s set in 1980, in a West in which the wide-open landscapes are more likely to be a home to drug trafficking than cattle drives. The plot is set in motion when Moss, while hunting in the West Texas prairies, comes upon the aftermath of a massacre, a botched exchange with heroin and cash left behind amid unspeakable carnage — even a dog has been shot.

Moss leaves the dope but takes the cash and is soon being hunted by Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem), a psychopathic hitman trailing the money. Following behind them both is Sheriff Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones), a third-generation lawman troubled by the shifting nature of the crime he’s forced to confront.

All three leads are terrific in roles that are relatively solitary and less talky than the Coen norm. Brolin is vivid as a man on the run, about to find out if he’s as capable as he thinks he is. Bardem makes for one of the most compelling and frightening screen villains ever, a calm, implacable killer whose glazed hint of a grin and Prince Valiant hairdo make him an unsettling presence even before he acts. And Jones plays effectively to type as a tart, unsentimental observer of a world gone mad.

No Country for Old Men is a strikingly violent film: Chigurh is introduced in the process of being apprehended, soon strangling the arresting officer with his handcuffs, turning a small-town police-station floor into a Jackson Pollock of blood and scuff marks. Soon after, the Coens film a gripping scene where a pit bull charges across a shallow river after Moss, only to meet her doom. The novel yet realistic staging of these moments of violence is enhanced by terrific thriller mechanics involving the hunt for Moss and his hiding of the purloined loot. But most impressive is the discipline that the Coens show in eliding Chigurh’s killings as the film develops.

Like any other Coen movie, No Country for Old Men is more about their cultural source material (McCarthy’s novel, film thrillers from ’40s noir to Sam Peckinpah) than about real life. But here, unlike most of their work, they treat their influences right. It’s Blood Simple sans bullshit. As a lean, self-contained thriller about a human monster, it lies somewhere between the pure poetry of The Night of the Hunter and the grim waking nightmare of (the original) Cape Fear. And it’s more worthy of those comparisons than any modern movie I can think of.

No Country for Old Men

Opens Wednesday, November 21st

Studio on the Square

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Wines To Warm Up To

It’s nearly winter and time for palates to adjust from lighter dishes and wines to something more substantial. And while full-bodied reds and rich dessert wines are delicious year-round, they are even more enjoyable when there’s a chill in the air.

One of the most versatile and food-friendly red grapes is Syrah. The earthy flavors of a bubbling pot of diced lamb, carrots, sweet potatoes, tomato, red wine, rosemary, and Yukon gold potatoes are a perfect match for a well-made Syrah. In the U.S., quite a few regions produce top-quality wines with this grape, which is native to the Rhône Valley of France. Washington State winemakers are creating wines reminiscent of those from the northern Rhône. Earthy flavors are prominent, along with hints of spice, smoke, and bacon. Many winemakers in the Central Coast area of California are also producing impressive Syrahs. In addition to aromas of dried meat, their wines are typically laden with blueberry, blackberry, and plum.

Malbec is another grape that matches wonderfully with winter dishes. Its traditional home is the Cahors region of southwest France. It’s also used in Bordeaux but merely as a blending grape to add certain flavor, texture, and color dimensions to their wines. Likewise, in Northern California vintners harvest the Malbec grape for the purpose of blending into Cabernet Sauvignon-dominated wines. However, in Argentina this hearty berry is the star.

Nicolas Catena is a perfect example of the ingenuity and forward-thinking occurring in Argentina’s wine world. He brought this humble grape to the world-renowned level that it enjoys today. The Malbec typically produces a full-bodied, bold, spicy wine with hints of mocha, black licorice, blackberry, and earth. What Catena does so well is offer different expressions of Malbec at different price points for different occasions. If it’s a Tuesday-night red wine to sip on while reading a book, he has the Alamos brand. To pair with a rib-eye on a Friday night, choose the Catena Malbec. For a special occasion, the Catena Alta Malbec is the choice. The berries that go into this Alta Malbec are hand-selected from vineyards as high as 3,800 feet above sea level in the Andes. The stress of growing at such an altitude forces the grapes to work hard, thus producing concentrated berries with flavors and textures that are haunting.

Dessert wines can add another layer of warmth and comfort to a meal. However, many wine drinkers still don’t experiment with them the way they do with reds and whites. These wines are written off by many as merely sweet. Much as the right red wine can combine with a piece of meat to create amazing flavors, a luscious dessert wine can pair beautifully with a gorgeous dessert or cheese.

One of the best pairings is Vin Santo, or “Ice Wine,” and Cabrales (a blue-veined cheese from Spain, available locally at Mantia’s). Vin Santo is a dessert wine produced in the Chianti region of Tuscany. The grapes are hung in drying rooms to concentrate into rich nectar, leaving very little juice behind to ferment into wine. The lively acidity prevents the wine from being too sweet.

There are other unbelievable dessert wines being produced around the world. But be forewarned: They can be expensive due to their labor-intensive production and limited amounts. That doesn’t mean there aren’t values available to begin a journey into dessert wines.

Recommended Wines

Chateau Ste. Michelle 2003, Columbia Valley, Washington $15.99

Ventana Syrah 2003, Monterey County, California $21.99

Cusumano Syrah 2005, Sicily, Italy $16.99

Clos la Coutale 2005, Cahors, France $18.99

Alamos Malbec 2005, Mendoza, Argentina $11.99

Catena Malbec 2005, Mendoza, Argentina $24.99

Catena “Alta” Malbec 2003, Mendoza, Argentina $55.99

Jackson Triggs Ice Wine 2005, Ontario, Canada $20.99

Rudolf Muller, Eiswein, Germany $19.99

Alois Kracher Cuvée Beerenauslese 2005, Austria $33.99

Felsina Vin Santo 1999 Chianti, Classico, Italy $35.99

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Music Music Features

Jim Dandy & Skinny Pimp: Together at Last

Over Thanksgiving weekend 2006, local conceptual hip-hop faves Lord T & Eloise assembled what they called a “Memphis Legends” concert, featuring themselves, Neighborhood Texture Jam, Memphis rap legend Al Kapone, and DJ unit Feelharmonic Orchestra. It would be a gross understatement to say that the self-proclaimed “Aristocrunk” outfit has outdone itself for this year’s followup concert, scheduled for Newby’s Saturday, November 24th.

A simple glance at the talent is enough to raise some eyebrows: Lord T & Eloise headlining a bill that will include local rap pioneer Skinny Pimp, Southern rock enigma Black Oak Arkansas, and up-and-coming rapper Kaz. Perhaps readers need a second to let that sentence sink in.

“Even though we were private-school kids, my friends and I absorbed a lot of rap in the early ’90s, and I loved what Skinny Pimp and Al Kapone were doing back then,” says Lord T, who donned his signature 18th-century powdered wig for the duration of our discussion … at 2:30 in the afternoon. “The music industry didn’t have an ear for Southern rap back then, so the real groundbreakers like Al Kapone and Skinny Pimp went totally overlooked,” he continues.

Known to append “Kingpin” to his moniker, Skinny Pimp began circulating mixtapes in the late ’80s. He was also an early collaborator with DJ Paul and Juicy J who were nurturing a little project of their own called Three 6 Mafia.

Though Allmusic.com lists 2000’s Controversy as the debut album by Skinny Pimp and 211, the rapper made his first significant local impact in the early ’90s with the Kingpin Skinny Pimp and 211 Vol. 1. cassette release. It was on these tapes that Skinny Pimp and his contemporaries showcased what critics would later refer to as “horror rap,” and there’s no doubt that they had a massive impact on the future “crunk” movement.

Skinny Pimp’s nascent version of the genre was marked by stark minimalism and XXX-rated, hyper-violent lyrics. Upon hearing this tape as a senior in high school, I remember it being the only instance in which a form of music made me think I really don’t want my parents to find this tape. Part of the impact came from the sonic makeup. The rudimentary pounding of the drum machine and creepy simplicity of the cheap keyboards gave the recordings a chilling quality.

“I used to buy up the local rap section at Cat’s on Union, and the Skinny Pimp and Al Kapone tapes were my favorites. It was so exciting and surprising to realize that it was Memphis,” says Lord T.

If your frame of reference for Memphis hip-hop history is limited to Three 6 Mafia or the Hustle and Flow soundtrack, do yourself a favor by checking out Skinny Pimp’s set Saturday night.

(Note: Skinny Pimp’s CD releases from the past few years are obtainable and worth it — depending on one’s capacity for sometimes over-the-top subject matter — but the early cassettes are next to impossible to locate, and sometimes command high prices on eBay.)

Black Oak Arkansas rocking the same lineup as Skinny Pimp is something that supports the adage “Only in Memphis.” Though they never achieved the success of fellow Southern-rock bands like the Marshall Tucker Band or the Allman Brothers Band, frontman Jim Dandy Mangrum and Black Oak Arkansas were at it first with an unparalleled raw, primal stomp. They have recently enjoyed a prosperous chapter in their almost four-decade existence, with Rhino Handmade‘s reissue of their classic 1973 live set Raunch ‘N’ Roll, several high-profile overseas festival appearances, and an upcoming album of new material on the SPV label.

“We’re big fans of Black Oak Arkansas, and they created a visual style of hard rock that would be copied for years. It opened the floodgates,” says Eloise. “We tried to put together an evening of great performances,” adds Lord T.