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‘I Am the Cosmos’ at 50

Where the Downtown skyline overlooks the Wolf River harbor and the Mississippi River, cosmic sounds will soon reverberate from the Maria Montessori School Amphitheater, where local musicians will come together to perform the songs of the late Chris Bell at the school’s ongoing River Series. Bell, the mastermind behind Big Star and his posthumous solo record, I Am the Cosmos, was born and raised in Memphis. While he saw little commercial success in his lifetime, neither his still-growing international cult fanbase nor his family have forgotten about his acclaimed body of work. 

One of those carrying the torch for Bell is Brittain Wells, whose mother, Cindy Bell Coleman, is Bell’s younger sister. Wells now helps manage the school’s River Series concerts and wanted to honor the 50th anniversary of Bell recording the song “I Am the Cosmos,” the title track of Bell’s lone solo album. “Maria Montessori School is where our 3-year-old son attends,” Wells says. “How sweet that we can celebrate 50 years of this magical music as a family, a school family, and a Memphis community, while also raising money for Chris’ great-nephew’s school.” 

The concert, set for Saturday, June 8th, at 5 p.m., will feature Big Star drummer Jody Stephens, Van Duren, Greg Cartwright, Adam Hill, Alex Greene, Krista Wroten, and more. The Turnstyles open the show. 

A post-Big Star era Chris Bell performs an outdoor show in 1975 in London. His brother and then-manager David Bell funded the promotional trip to England. (Photo: David Bell)

Wells, 38, was born years after Bell was tragically killed at age 27 following a 1978 car wreck on Poplar Avenue. “It’s amazing. I never knew him, but I feel him all the time through his music and his fans,” Wells says. “Seeing how many people are devoted to his legacy and music makes me happy. I’m thrilled he can live on in so many ways.”

Along with “I Am the Cosmos,” Bell will also forever be entwined with the brick hallways of Ardent Studios in Memphis. That’s where the guitarist/vocalist spent countless nights co-engineering his band’s now-classic 1972 debut, Big Star’s #1 Record (Ardent/Stax Records). On that disc, the original Big Star lineup, which comprised Jody Stephens and the late Alex Chilton and Andy Hummel, crafted pristine power-pop standards like “In the Street,” “Feel,” and “Thirteen.” 

After the LP failed commercially, a distraught Bell tumultuously exited the band and even quit music for a year. But from that dark period came inspiration, and a born-again Bell ultimately landed on his feet inside Shoe Productions, where he tracked “Cosmos,” his melancholy magnum opus. It all started at Huey’s on Madison Avenue, where Bell happened to sit next to sound engineer Warren Wagner, who’d just co-founded Shoe.  

“We were sitting at the bar talking, and Chris said he liked what I put together over at Shoe,” Wagner told me while I was researching my book, There Was a Light: The Cosmic History of Chris Bell and the Rise of Big Star. “Within the next day or two, Chris calls, and we end up in the studio one night with just him and me. … He made some acoustic recordings, and then we got a band over there with him. We ended up doing ‘I Am the Cosmos’ in one night. We probably didn’t do more than two takes.”

For the “Cosmos” session, Bell enlisted drummer Richard Rosebrough and bassist/keyboardist Ken Woodley of the band Alamo. Though both have since passed away, they were interviewed for There Was a Light and shared vivid memories of recording “I Am the Cosmos.” 

“Chris was fun to work with at Shoe,” the late Rosebrough recalled in 2013, two years before his death. “He always had a smile on his face, a kind of evil grin. The ‘cat that just ate the canary’ expression, but he wouldn’t talk a lot. He was this shining star over in the corner of the room. He was excited to be in a different studio with different people, playing his own songs.”

Woodley, who died last year at 74, also recalled an eccentric, witty Bell. “He was quiet and could sometimes look a bit stern. He could also be a perfectionist,” Woodley said in 2017. “He’d say, ‘I know you can do better than that.’ I’d be like, ‘Chris, I just learned it!’ But we always got along great. I wasn’t a part of the Big Star clique, the people he’d grown up with, so we were friends on a different level.” 

Though often described as introverted in daily life, he was anything but quiet in the studio, especially while tracking “I Am the Cosmos.” “Chris would turn it up just as loud as he could,” Rosebrough recalled. “He’d get this piercingly bright, brilliant sound. It’s all distorting and melting down, but it’s just a dynamite sound.”

The song still powerfully resonates for many, including Jody Stephens, who will play drums on “I Got Kinda Lost” and “Get Away” at the River Series concert. “It just comes in so heavy. Not as people define ‘heavy’ these days, but emotionally heavy — and instrumentally, too.” 

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Music Music Features

Down By The River

Now in its third year, the River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater behind the Maria Montessori School has quickly become one of the best places to see live music in Memphis. Featuring some of the best live bands the city has to offer (the Reigning Sound’s original lineup, NOTS, Chickasaw Mound, etc.), River Series shows are fun for the whole family, drawing a diverse crowd made up of rock-and-roll enthusiasts of all ages.

This Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m., the African Jazz Ensemble will take the waterfront stage. Made up of members who have toured with Michael Jackson, Al Green, B.B. King, Eric Clapton, the Dells, Luther Allison, and Rufus Thomas, the African Jazz Ensemble originally played as the soul group the Exotic Movement before changing their name to Galaxy. The 10-piece band rarely performs live, and this is their only scheduled 2016 show. I caught up with River Series founder Zac Ives to find out more about the outdoor concert series.

Memphis Flyer: How did the River Series start?

Zac Ives: I was trying to figure out a way to do something to give back to the school. We’d done these school events in that location on campus at the amphitheater behind the school, but they were always private. There are Memphis musicians who have students who go there, and the shows were always awesome. It’s one of the best places to see a show, but it had never been open to the public.

After we decided to start having public shows there, I went to the Downtown Music Commission to find some funding for it, and I got them to give me a starter fund to pay bands. Then I went to Wiseacre, who agreed to sponsor the series, and so did Miss Cordelia’s. After that, I got with Robby [Grant] and came up with a handful of bands we wanted to see play. It’s grown organically from that into what it is now. The cool thing about it is that’s how shows started there in the first place. The teachers [at the Maria Montessori School] are parents first, and they wanted to teach their kids in a different way. I think the River Series is a reflection of that.

How do you decide who’s going to play? The longer the series has gone on, it seems like the more diverse the shows have gotten. Would you agree with that?

I think when we initially started there were enough interesting bands that it was cool, and there was a fee that made people want to play it. I didn’t want it to just be a Goner set up. It was important to have other people’s input on the lineup too. I wanted it to be more diverse and push boundaries — find different bands that people don’t usually get to see. It’s fun to throw those things out there, because we can count on different people showing up each time. We’re curating it interestingly enough so that people can always get something out of it. I know what I’m going to like, but I want to think about it in terms of “What’s my mom going to want to come out and watch? What are my kids going to want to watch? What are the parents going to want to watch?”

One of my favorite things about the River Series is it seems like you’re constantly trying to outdo the last show. Do you think that’s true?

Yeah, it probably is. The idea of having the African Jazz Ensemble play actually came to us from another parent. The band rarely plays live, and the members have musical ties that go back to the early ’70s. They were all in soul bands, but at some point they wanted to work on more African-influenced music. They play a little bit of everything — taking the soul and R&B that they played in huge bands and mixing it with the stuff that they do now in African Jazz Ensemble. They are basically this cosmic jazz, 10-piece band with all different kinds of instruments. They don’t play very often. Their first show was at the Stax Museum, and this is the first time the band has played this year.

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Music Music Blog

The River Series in Harbortown Announces Fall Schedule

John Wesley Coleman plays the Harbor Town River Series on Saturday, November 5th.

The River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater will kick off their first Fall season this Saturday night. Steve Selvidge and Daniel Bachman will perform at the Harbor Town Amphitheater on Saturday, September 24th, followed by the African Jazz Ensemble on Sunday, October 23rd. The series will wrap with a performance from John Wesley Coleman and Will Courtney on Saturday, November 5th.

Now in it’s third year, the River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater is a series of live music shows that benefit the Maria Montessori School. Founded by Goner Records co-owner Zac Ives, the River Series has showcased local talent like NOTS, Motel Mirrors, and the Reigning Sound in a great outdoor location overlooking the Mississippi River.

The River Series spring schedule will be announced later this year. Check out music from Daniel Bachman and John Wesley Coleman below. 

The River Series in Harbortown Announces Fall Schedule

The River Series in Harbortown Announces Fall Schedule (2)

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Music Music Features

Motel Mirrors live in Harbor Town

The River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater concludes this Saturday with a performance from Motel Mirrors and Marcella & Her Lovers. Now in its second year, the $5 summer concert series put on by Goner Records has already become one of the best and most affordable musical experiences downtown, with Reigning Sound and NOTS both delivering killer sets to children, Harbor Town residents, and everyone in between. The Reigning Sound appearance in mid-May solidified the River Series as the best (and only?) place to experience live music outdoors in Harbor Town, and the poor folks working at Miss Cordelia’s grocery store felt the effects two Saturdays ago when the vendors ran out of beer before the headliners had even taken the stage.

Motel Mirrors

Now it’s Motel Mirrors’ turn to rock on the river. Formed by Amy LaVere, Will Sexton, and John Paul Keith, Motel Mirrors should be more than up to the challenge, as each member’s resume (including drummer Shawn Zorn) is chock-full of memorable performances both in Memphis and abroad. Motel Mirrors recently debuted a new song from their forthcoming sophomore album on the PBS show Sun Studio Sessions, and the track follows in the same vein as their acclaimed debut LP, which means you’ll probably dig it.

Opening the show is Marcella & Her Lovers, a band that was made for serving as the soundtrack for sunsets on the mighty Mississippi. Marcella is still performing all over the city, and her residency at the Zebra Lounge is one of the highlights of the week for the Overton Square piano bar. Both bands are must-see acts, so bring the kids, bring a cooler, and get down to the Harbor Town Amphitheater (it’s behind the Maria Montessori School) early this Saturday.

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Music Music Blog

The River Series Returns to Maria Montessori School

courtesy of Goner Records

Ross Johnson plays the River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheater on Saturday, October 24th.

The last group of River Series shows at the Harbor Town Amphitheater were such a success that the organizers have decided to go for round two! The River Series is sponsored by Goner Records, The Downtown Memphis Commission, Wiseacre Brewing, Miss Cordelia’s, and Shoulder Tap Records. The Wiseacre beer is free, but each show requires a $5 donation to benefit the school. All shows start at 6 p.m., with the first band on by 7. The schedule is below. 

Saturday, September 12th. 
Impala

James & the Ultrasounds

DJ Hot Tub Eric

Saturday, October 3rd. 
Toy Trucks

Jeff Hulett & Leah Keys

Saturday, Oct 24th. 
Jeff Evans and Ross Johnson

The Maitre D’s

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John Paul Keith at Harbortown on Saturday

The River Series at Harbortown is back this Saturday, September 20th, with Memphis workhorse John Paul Keith, who will be joined by his former sidekick-turned-spinoff, Mark Edgar Stuart. If you’ve never been to the small space behind Miss Cordelia’s, you’re just nuts. You can see the Pyramid. The series benefits Maria Montessori School. Like my daddy said, “I’m not asking you. I’m telling you.” Go support that school in a cool location while listening to great music and enjoying delicious food and satifying beer. And stop fighting everything.

John Paul Keith at Harbortown on Saturday