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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Musicians Go Back To The Source With Mr. Handy’s Blues at Indie Memphis

Joanne Fish was in Florence, Alabama with her documentary about rockabilly queen Wanda Jackson when she had the idea to make a movie about W.C. Handy. “Music and history are my favorite subjects, so it just made sense.

Doing justice to the origin of the blues was a task that had frustrated many other writers, but Fish, a veteran producer and director for the History Channel and CMT, figured she was up to the challenge. “The history of the blues is a deep subject,’ she says. “You can go down a rabbit hole. The trail led me to Memphis, which is the heart of the Handy story.”

Fish worked on Mr. Handy’s Blues for almost a decade. She made repeated trips to Memphis, where she had the help of Mark and Cathy Caldwell, who she calls “my boots on the ground.” She says her favorite memory of the shoot is arriving on Beale Street for an early morning shoot. “Beale Street at 7 in the morning is completely different from Beale Street at midnight. I would soak up that feeling. It took me back in time.”

Her subject was every bit as deep and fascinating as she had hoped for. “What I learned about Handy was his positive attitude and his brilliance. He was a visionary…He heard something in the music. It’s like he had a vision of where this could go. He wanted to be part of that movement…He studied classical music. He was very aware of what composers were doing around the world. All of the big, classical composers were taking elements of the folk music in their country and incorporating it into their music. He was trying to classicalize blues with his arrangements, and his thinking about what should be done with the form. He took it from its raw form and, in his words, ‘put it on a silver platter.’ Little did he know how much he would influence the future of the city.”

The film features performances by Memphis musicians like Ruby Wilson, Dr. Herman Green and Low Society, the Stax Choir Street Corner Harmonies, and Eric Hughes “He’s a Memphis treasure,” she says of Hughes. “He plays quite a prominent role in the film…The musicians are so generous and kind. We have so many Memphis musicians performing and interviewing in the film.”

Fish hopes Mr. Handy’s Blues brings the composer’s work into the new century. “I feel like his legacy is getting lost,” she says. “I wish the film could be shown all the time on Beale Street. I think it would enhance people’s experience, to see what was going on a hundred years ago.”

Mr Handy’s Blues screens at 1:00 PM on Saturday, November 4 at Playhouse On The Square. For tickets and more information, go to the Indie Memphis website.

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Music Music Blog

Ruby Wilson, the “Queen of Beale” Has Died

Ruby.

There’s a clip from 1988 of Ruby Wilson singing “The Thrill is Gone,” at the Peabody Hotel with B.B. King and Rufus Thomas. When Ruby steps up to the microphone B.B. steps back. “You think I’m gonna sing behind that, you’re crazy,” he says, getting out of the way. And who can blame him? Wilson who passed Friday, Aug. 12, following a severe stroke, was a one woman wall of sound. Her voice could be a precision tool or a wrecking ball, and when even B.B. yields the floor, it’s not hard  to see how she earned her reputation as the Queen of Beale.

Wilson, a 40-year veteran of the Memphis nightclubs, grew up in Texas where she worked in the cotton fields as a laborer, picking and chopping the stuff. Her mother was a maid, and the director of her church choir. Her father was a self-employed handyman, mechanic, and friend of guitarist and Federal recording artist Freddie King. Between the two parents Wilson was firmly grounded in gospel and blues traditions and she started singing in public when she was only 7-years-old. By the time she was 15 she was touring as a backup singer for gospel star Shirley Caesar, and by the time she was 20 she was singing with B.B. King, who called her his goddaughter.

Following advice given to her by Isaac Hayes Wilson moved to Memphis in the early 1970’s, and went to work in the Memphis City School system as a kindergarten teacher. She wrangled 5-year-olds by day and continued to pursue her career as a singer at night, performing at a club called The Other Place on Airways. She soon became a fixture on Memphis’ club scene, playing all over town in venues like Club Handy, Club Royale, Rum Boogie, Mallards, Alfred’s, Silky’s, Neil’s, Bosco’s, and Itta Bena to name only a few. She appeared in several films, including Craig Brewer’s Black Snake Moan, and performed on stage with Beale Street Ensemble Theatre, a summer stock company working out of Southwest Tennessee Community College. 

Ruby Wilson, the “Queen of Beale” Has Died

Wilson toured the world numerous times. She has played for presidents, prime ministers, princesses and Queens. She performed alongside artists like Willie Nelson and Ray Charles, and recorded 10 solo albums.
She was also a survivor who reclaimed, not only her speech, but her ability to sing and perform following her first stroke in 2009.

The thrill may have gone away when B.B. passed last year. But, as anybody who ever partied with Ms. Ruby on Beale knows, now it’s gone away for good.