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Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, November 4-10

Singer/songwriters are particularly well-suited to live-streaming, and certainly many of our most reliable online performers have been solo artists of that genre who take advantage of the intimacy afforded by streaming devices. This week sees a proliferation of singer/songwriters, with an assortment of such artists at B-Side Memphis on Sunday, and a two nights of appearances by Arlo McKinley, the last artist that John Prine signed to his Oh Boy Records before his death. Of course, there are local standby entertainers as well, from Will Sexton to Richard Wilson, all hoping to transport you with the simplest of ingredients.

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, November 4
8 p.m.
Arlo McKinley & full band — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

9 p.m.
Devil Train — B-Side Memphis
Facebook YouTube Twitch TV

10 p.m.
Velvetina’s Harvest Moon Revue — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Friday, November 5
8 p.m.
Arlo McKinley & full band — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

10 p.m.
The Tennessee Screamers and The Sheiks — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Saturday, November 6
10 a.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

8 p.m.
Will Sexton — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

10 p.m.
Vines — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Sunday, November 7
3 p.m.
Golden Roses —Chicken $#!+ Bingo at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

3 p.m.
Singer/Songwriter Showcase — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

10 p.m.
Richard & Anne — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Monday, November 8
10 p.m.
Evil Rain — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Tuesday, November 9
No live-streamed events scheduled

Wednesday, November 10
5:30 p.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

8 p.m.
Riley Downing and Kassi Valazza — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

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Music Record Reviews

Jacob Church Traces Tales of Anguish and Love in Lush Acoustic EP Lines

One of the striking aspects of the earliest Big Star tracks was their pairing of lush acoustic reveries with a most disarming frankness. The vulnerability of Chris Bell’s lyrics, mixed with the dry bluntness of Alex Chilton’s, all woven into gloriously rich acoustic and vocal harmonies, was a potent combination.

That combination doesn’t always survive the many bands who now recreate the sonic elements of the band. But with Jacob Church’s latest EP, Lines, dropping today on Bandcamp, it seems effortless.

Not that he was necessarily channeling Big Star or any other group. Rather, Church’s songwriting has a natural grace that belies years of internalizing and re-imagining pop harmonic shifts in a personal, organic way. And that only contributes to the sincerity of these tracks, which draw you into their raw, emotional narratives with simple, beautifully recorded acoustic guitar and piano settings.

Jacob Church

Church describes the making of the album as an exercise in restraint. As he writes, “I got my old cassette four-track from my parents’ house. I’d been writing songs during the pandemic, and I thought it would be an adventure to try to record a quick project on my old deck. It would be just like those late nights in high school. I’ve always loved recording with limitations. I think some of our best work comes out when we’re restricted in some way and limiting myself to just a few tracks would be a great way to do that. It was good enough for the Beatles!

“That lasted about a day, when I realized that what I wanted to do with these songs was a little bigger than four tracks. I still kept that mentality as I worked, though. I decided not to lean too heavily on the technology, recording as if I were cutting to tape. No autotune, no letting the computer play for me. If a part wasn’t right, I would just do it again until it was. Every part needed to add something to the track. It was all recorded at home, with help from some friends and family.”

That restraint, combined with instruments captured with cleaner fidelity than cassettes offer, has led to a startlingly intimate album, not unlike Julien Baker’s early work, albeit with more of the earthy pop chord changes one might hear in classic ’60s and ’70s albums.

The standout for this listener is “Nineteen,” which presents mental health struggles with an intimacy that’s all the more gripping for its plainspoken candor. “When I was nineteen/I lost my mind/I lost my mind/Knuckle white in dying light/I shattered like the cold ice into pieces.”

At times, Church adds flourishes to the sparse piano and acoustic guitar foundation, such as when Tammy Holt, Jana Misener, and Krista Wroten add strings to “Words and Music,” inspired by Church’s wife Sarah, who also co-wrote the title track.  As Church comments, the track “is a song for Sarah, about how words are the hardest part for me, both in life and in songwriting. Hopefully my music can convey my love, since I don’t think my words do it justice.” He need not hope in vain: in musical settings this rich, every word packs a punch.

Jacob Church celebrates the release of Lines with a live-streamed show at B-Side tonight, Friday, March 12, at 8 p.m.  YouTube   Twitch TV

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Music Music Blog

Erin Rae, On the Verge of Big Things, Plays the Music Mansion

Erin Rae

Erin Rae McKaskle now hails from Nashville, though she’s a Jackson, Tennessee native and was born in Memphis. Small wonder that she gravitated to Music City, given her easy and natural way with a tune. And small wonder that she’s now on the cusp  of much greater recognition. Her show at the Memphis Music Mansion may be our last chance to see her in such an intimate setting.

With so many singer/songwriters unconsciously internalizing the vocal mannerisms of the time, morphing their voices into a common denominator of the current trends (can you say “vocal fry”?), Erin Rae presents a disarming, unaffected frankness, and that is her greatest strength. The final product, as on her recent album Putting On Airs (Single Lock Records), is light and breezy, yet cut with the gravitas of her plainspoken lyrics and delivery.

“Love Like Before” reads like a prosaic list of the features of a new apartment, but suggests an inner turmoil and longing beneath the low key observations. The kicker comes at the end, “Been sitting right here and I could not find/Love that I knew before,” made all the more powerful by the unadorned lyrics preceding it.

The new album, recorded at Refuge Studios, a former monastery in Wisconsin, offers plenty of air. The spare adornments, such as tasteful pedal steel, piano, organ, or even Mellotron, never detract from the front-and-center acoustic guitar that grounds her voice, yet add a dreamy quality to the affair. You can hear the consummate blend on the official video for “June Bug”:

Erin Rae, On the Verge of Big Things, Plays the Music Mansion

Her band will be with her, giving listeners a chance to hear those ethereal, spot-on arrangements from the record come to life. For those chasing that perfect blend of sincerity and craftsmanship, this show is not to be missed.