Categories
At Large Opinion

Sick Burn

No doubt, many of you are familiar with Ray Bradbury’s 1953 novel Fahrenheit 451. It was on the recommended reading list in one of my high school English classes, and I loved it.

For those not familiar with the book, the title references the autoignition temperature of paper, which is relevant because the novel is set in a future America where books are outlawed. Any that are discovered are taken and burned by the “firemen,” who also burn down the houses of those who possess books.

Bradbury’s tale is weirdly predictive: Everyone in “future” America spends their evenings watching insipid melodramas and sports on their “parlor walls,” i.e. home screens. No one reads because books have been deemed by the nation’s rulers as too dangerous for the people.

Cut to Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, last week, where an evangelical pastor and rabid Trump supporter named Greg Locke held a book-burning — a bonfire of the inanities, so to speak. The blaze targeted Harry Potter books and the Twilight series, but other books were also burned, including a copy of Fahrenheit 451. The irony was lost, obviously. Still, you can’t be too careful. Some sexy wizard vampire freedom stuff might leak out into young impressionable brains.

On the surface, such activity seems scary, but in 2022, burning books to stop someone from reading them is about as useful as trying to stop someone from listening to a particular musician by burning his CDs. Two hundred years ago, torching tomes might have kept the locals in a village from reading a particular book, but that horse is now out of the barn and on Pixar. In 2022, you can listen to anything, read anything, or see anything you want with a few keystrokes. Burning books or records is a purely performative exercise, Kabuki theater for the gullible rubes. Nobody can “ban” anything, least of all from tech-savvy young people.

Speaking of … Do you know what the No. 1 song on the Billboard 100 chart is right now? I’m gonna guess you probably don’t. It’s “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” a Latin show-tune written by Lin-Manuel Miranda (of Hamilton fame) from the Disney film, Encanto. It’s sung by six different, mostly unknown, people and it’s been No. 1 for five weeks and counting.

How is it possible that this is the No. 1 song in America? Sure, it’s sort of catchy, in a classic Broadway musical sense, but according to those who track such things, that’s not why “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” has reached the top. Nope. “WDTAB” is No. 1 because it’s being streamed millions of times a week by elementary school-age kids, who love the film and the song and listen to it repeatedly. Stream counters don’t care who’s listening. Age doesn’t matter. Everyone’s just a number. You and I may not talk about Bruno, but American kids sure do.

Speaking of streaming … A lot of people smirked a couple weeks ago, when septuagenarian rocker Neil Young pulled his music from Spotify in protest of bro-magnon talker Joe Rogan’s podcast. It’s me or Rogan, said Young. Rogan is Spotify’s primary cash cow, so Spotify said, “see ya, Neil.”

Young’s protest was a meaningless, empty gesture, people said. Oops. Turns out Young’s protest spurred other content providers to pull their work from Spotify. Then, oops again, it was discovered that Rogan was not just an ivermectin-clogged dumbass spreading Covid misinformation, he was also a racist who casually used the “n-word” in more than 70 podcast episodes. Spotify quickly pulled the episodes in question, plus others of questionable taste and accuracy, and apologized to its users and to its employees.

Rogan’s supporters immediately began complaining about their hero being a victim of “cancel culture.” Which is different, somehow, from burning books or pulling them from school libraries, I guess.

Anyway, ol’ Neil got the last word. And we should recognize that none of this would have happened if one man hadn’t taken a conscientious stand on principle. Rogan’s racist crap would still be on Spotify. Now it’s not.

You might say that Joe Rogan got burned.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Listen Up: Brooke Fair — Taking Ukuleles Seriously. And a New Single July 17th.

Memphian Brooke Fair will release her new single ‘Universe’ July 17th.



Brooke Fair wrote her first song when she was in the third grade.

“No one told me I couldn’t do it,” she says. “I always assumed — which I know now isn’t the case — people who sang wrote their own songs. And I had this third grade pop star dream: ‘I’m going to write a song because I’m going to be famous.’”

“Escape” was the name of that song. “It was about my imaginary boyfriend. You just write a lot of bad songs. The more bad songs you write, the more good songs you have. I have 10 times as many terrible songs.”

Now 16, Fair has written more than 100 songs. On July 17th, she will release her new single, “Universe,” which was produced by Justin Timberlake guitarist Elliot Ives and Scott Hardin at Young Avenue Sound.

Born in Memphis, Fair began writing prolifically after she picked up the baritone ukulele when she was 12. “There’s this singer I really love, Dodie Clark. I’ve been obsessed with her since second grade. Her lyrics are very universal, but specific at the same time. She played ukulele. “

Fair, who doesn’t remember a time when she didn’t sing, began taking lessons at House of Talent when she was 8 years old. “I just got to go there and sing my heart out for an hour.”

She also studied with Timberlake’s former teacher, Bob Westbrook, but, she says, “I really liked belting and singing very emotional songs, but he was always trying to make me sing ballads. I wanted it to be more fun and lighthearted. At the time, I just wanted to be Ariana Grande. To be honest, I didn’t have my personality.”

Fair then began studying at School of Rock, which was a great experience, she says. Singing in front of audiences helped with her anxiety. She also liked the feedback from other musicians. 

One of the instructors, Sarah Simmons, and Simmons’ husband, Greg Langston, were “really important in making me realize I could record. All this stuff seemed so far away. I didn’t realize I could record music in Memphis.”

That was when Fair picked up the baritone ukulele. She had been playing a soprano ukulele, but she loved the sound of the baritone, which suited the emotional type of music she was writing. “It’s so simple-looking and simple to play. It’s not that difficult. But you can make it sound so pretty and use it to write a lot of songs. And you can translate it to the guitar because it’s the bottom four strings of a guitar.”

The first song she wrote on a ukulele was “Elevator Music” — “another love song,” she says. The song, which she wrote to her boyfriend at the time, begins, “When I’m with you, everything else is like elevator music. Nothing else matters.”

In 2018, Fair released her first single, “Love Songs on Loop,” which is “about being stuck on someone you’ve been with. Not being able to get over somebody. But in a lighthearted way, not a sappy way. It got on a few Spotify lists and got some traction. Almost 90,000 streams on Spotify. Which really is not an obviously impressive number. But when you take into account we didn’t do any publicity for this song — it kind of organically grew like that — I think it’s really cool.”

Fair released her first EP, All Queens Wear Crowns, in 2018.

She then began studying with her current teacher, Memphis musician/Memphis University School instructor Matt Tutor, who began teaching her “how to sing a little bit better.” But he also concentrated on her “potential as a songwriter.”

Fair went into Young Avenue Sound last February to record “Universe.” The song is “flipping the narrative on the whole type of songs I used to write, where I was the one being played or being strung along by some guy. Instead of being heartbroken, [I’m] being the heartbreaker.”

She released “I Can’t Breathe,” also produced by Ives and Hardin, last April before George Floyd was killed. The song is about “anxiety” and a lot of lines coincidentally pertain to the Floyd incident, she says. “A few days after George Floyd was killed, I realized that after listening to the song and going through my Instagram feed at the same time.”

People were telling her how much the song applies to Floyd. “There’s a line: ‘When the world mistreats me, I’m left in pieces.”

Fair had already decided to donate all the proceeds of the song to suicide prevention awareness charities, she says.

“I’ve always been a huge advocate of human rights and things like that. The fact I wrote a song applicable to ‘Black Lives Matter’ shows I’m kind of meant to use my platform to support things that matter to me.”

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Windows XP at Shelby Farms, Hip-Hop Samples Memphis Soul Playlist

A Reddit Grab Bag

The Memphis subreddit brimmed with internet gold last week. For example, u/bballin1204 captured the iconic Windows XP screen at Shelby Farms.

Cold Humor

Y’all heard the news about MEMpops?

Their assets are frozen!

Posted to Reddit by u/disgracedland

Sample the Mix

If you’re looking for some true Memphiana, look up reddit user u/goldchainnightmare’s “big list of Memphis soul songs and the hip-hop songs that sampled from them on Spotify.”

An example from the list includes “As Long As I Have You” by The Charmels, which Wu-Tang Clan sampled for “C.R.E.A.M.” Jay-Z and Kanye West sampled Otis Redding’s classic “Try a Little Tenderness” for their song “Otis.”

Virus Lane

Unfortunately, u/chris922001 had to take his wife for COVID-19 testing at Tiger Lane last week. Fortunately, it was a smooth process.

“She went through the questionnaire online yesterday and was called within 30 minutes, an appointment was made for this morning. We arrived a little early and we [were] out of there in 20 minutes. Everything and everyone we had contact with was extremely polite and professional. Now we wait!”