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Music Music Features

The Buccaneer is Back

The Buccaneer, a venerable Midtown dive bar, got a new owner last week. Jonathan Kiersky, the low-key impresario whose stint as owner and operator of the Hi-Tone in the 2000s made it one of the city’s premier music venues, announced via Facebook that he was taking over the Buccaneer effective immediately. 

“It’s a Memphis staple and a very important part of the Memphis music community,” says Kiersky. “I thought it was necessary that it stayed open.”

Tucked away on Monroe off Cleveland and located inside a former house, the Buccaneer has retained much of its old-school Memphis charm as it transitioned from neighborhood watering hole into a gathering place where Memphis musicians feel free to experiment and play their latest work in a welcoming, low-stress environment. That reputation has been threatened in recent months, as many musicians have posted on social media that they were boycotting the establishment due to increasingly erratic and abusive behavior by the tiny venue’s management. 

Chris McCoy

Kiersky reported that he had been in secret negotiations to take over the bar beginning in early May and received an unexpected phone call from proprietor Charles Lankford. “He called me this morning and said, ‘Hey, come get the keys.'” 

For the future, Kiersky says he wants to restore the Buccaneer’s reputation as a welcoming establishment featuring cutting-edge Memphis music.

“It’s not going to be much different than it was a year ago,” he says. “We’re going to have music seven days a week. The only thing that will probably change is that we’re going to implement some of the old Hi-Tone menu at the Buccaneer. But mostly it will be the same … a lot of local bands, a lot of touring bands.”

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Music Music Blog

The Buccaneer To Reopen Under New Management

The Buccaneer, a venerable Midtown dive bar, has a new owner today. Jonathan Kiersky, the low-key impresario whose stint as owner and operator of the Hi-Tone in the 2000s made it one of the city’s premiere music venues, announced via Facebook that he was taking over The Buccaneer effective immediately.

“It’s a Memphis staple, and a very important part of the Memphis music community,” says Kiersky. “I thought it was necessary that stayed open and kept doing what it was doing.”

Tucked away on Monroe Avenue off Cleveland, and located inside a former house, The Buccaneer has retained much of its old-school Memphis charm as it transitioned from neighborhood watering hole into a gathering place where Memphis musicians feel free to experiment and play their latest work in a welcoming, low-stress environment. But that reputation has been threatened in recent months, as many musicians such as guitarist David Cousar have posted on social media that they were boycotting the establishment due to increasingly erratic and abusive behavior by the tiny venue’s management.

“I don’t really know about that,” says Keirsky. “I was living out of town at the time. I heard stupid Midtown rumors, but I can’t speak to that.”

Kiersky reported that he had been in secret negotiations to take over the bar beginning in early May, and received an unexpected phone call from proprietor Charles Lankford. “He called me this morning and said, ‘Hey, come get the keys.’”

For the future, Kiersky says he wants to restore The Buccaneer’s reputation as a welcoming establishment featuring cutting-edge Memphis music. “It’s not going to be much different than it was a year ago,” he says. “We’re going to have music seven days a week. The only thing that will probably change is that we’re going to implement some of the old Hi-Tone menu at the Buccaneer. We’ll probably be bringing back things like Monday Wing Night, Tuesday Taco Night, stuff like that. Don’t know if we can do the pizzas there—I know there will be questions about that—but we’re going to try to figure it out. But mostly it will be the same…a lot of local bands, a lot of touring bands.”

The unexpected announcement that a Memphis nightlife legend was returning to the game to rescue an ailing institution spread quickly through social media. “I love it. It’s a little overwhelming today, but that’s to be expected. We’re going to bring back a lot of the same bartenders and stuff. It’s good,” says Keirsky.

The Buccaneer will reopen under new management tonight at 5 PM with guitarist David Cousar as the first musical act under the new regime. 

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Music Music Features

Sick Thoughts at the Buccaneer

Baltimore’s Drew Owen brings his home-recording wrecking machine to the Buccaneer this Thursday night when his band Sick Thoughts play with locals Aquarian Blood and Gimp Teeth. Since claiming the garage-punk crown from New Orleans provocateur Buck Biloxi last year, Owen has placed himself at the top of the trash heap, with his only real competition in massive-output perhaps being Martin Meyer of Lumpy and the Dumpers (St. Louis). Sick Thoughts released new music almost every month of 2014, throwing songs out in the form of singles, cassette tapes, and EPs. By the end of the year, Owen had worked with just about every relevant garage punk label in the game including Slovenly, Goner, Kenrock, Goodbye Boozy, and Going Underground.

Josh Miller

Sick Thoughts

With so much recorded output released in such little time, it comes as no surprise that Owen frequently changes up his sound, dabbling in power pop, hardcore punk, and even “techno synth sludge metal.” But no matter what genre of music he’s tackling/making fun of, Owen’s approach is almost immediately identifiable. And while it might be easy to knock Sick Thoughts for taking the quantity over quality route, Owen’s prolific discography seems to be the product of one thing: he’s having fun. And I don’t mean he’s having fun in an ironic pizza-party-thrash-metal way, or a tongue-in-cheek, dance-around-onstage-in-my-underwear type of way. His music is still authentic and believable, it’s just obvious that this perma-teen from Baltimore is enjoying what he’s doing, which is refreshing in a genre that has plenty of bands exuding a fake, tough-guy attitude.

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Music Music Features

5 and Dime Halloween Party

Halloween comes early to Memphis, thanks to one of the more intriguing recording studios that’s cropped up over the last five years. 5 and Dime Recording will hold their Halloween party/show this Saturday at the Buccaneer.

Bruiser Queen

5 and Dime founder Harry Koniditsiotis will play a rare show with his shoegaze band The Switchblade Kid, making them the de facto headliner of the evening’s free show. Switchblade Kid has a new single out now, and the band will hopefully have copies for purchase at the gig. Lifelong Memphian Tony Manard also joins the bill, bringing his brand of folk-ish blues music to the party. Two out-of-towners also take the stage on Saturday, serving as a testament to the reach that 5 and Dime has been able to achieve since becoming a full-fledged studio with affordable day rates that would make many a local recording-studio producer blush. Bruiser Queen from St. Louis is confirmed for the show, and they’ll bring their unique power pop to the Bucc earlier in the day-long party. Churchyard from Nashville are also on the bill, making for a homecoming for Alice Buchanan that seems long overdue. Buchanan cut her teeth with Scandaliz Vandalistz before joining the Memphis pop punch-ups Magic Kids and touring the world with her violin and knack for catchy string parts. Buchanan helped keep indie pop music alive in Memphis during the Magic Kids time at the top of the scene, and her new band Churchyard comes highly recommended. It’s a free show, so don’t mess this up.

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Curb Alert

Do you know about Nextdoor.com? It’s a social media site that links you with your neighbors, providing an online forum for discussing common concerns: garage sales, lost and found pets, garbage and recycling, criminal activity, references for chimney sweeps and handymen, and curb alerts, where someone announces they’re putting, say, an old couch on the curb. First come, first served.

Last Sunday, the greatest curb alert of all time was posted on the Central Gardens Nextdoor.com site. It read:

Curb Alert – Ole Miss Football Season

The Ole Miss football season is on the curb by the Liberty Bowl.

Frankly, it was a rare example of wit on the site. Most posts are pretty mundane and some are borderline paranoid. “Suspicious” is perhaps the most-used word on Nextdoor.com. As in, “suspicious-looking teens walking down alley behind my house on Vinton at 4:45 p.m. Be aware.” I leave it to you to guess what usually constitutes a suspicious-looking teen. But, occasional paranoia aside, the site is pretty useful.

As is a big win over that SEC team from Oxford.

I was out Friday night, listening to the City Champs at the Buccaneer. During a break, I got into a conversation with a couple of Ole Miss fans from Nashville. I could tell they were Ole Miss fans because they were dressed entirely in red and white, and they were a little drunk and a little loud. But they were raving about Memphis. Seriously.

“There’s no music like this in Nashville,” they said. “There are no little clubs like this. It’s all that country shit.” They’d just had a large time earlier in the evening in Cooper-Young, and then in Overton Square, where someone had told them that they’d hear the best music in town at the Buc.

Then talk turned, as it must when talking to people dressed in garish school colors, to football. The Rebel fans conceded that Memphis had a nice offense and that Paxton Lynch was a “good college quarterback.” But, they explained, helpfully, Memphis was not ready for SEC competition. “Y’all’s defense won’t know what hit them,” they said. “SEC football is on a different level. It might be a game for a quarter or so,” they said, “but our depth will wear y’all down.”

I blush to admit now that I sort of agreed with them. Like most Memphians, I was hoping the Tigers could score enough to make the game interesting, but I had few illusions that Memphis could actually beat Ole Miss.

I’ve never been happier to be wrong about something in my life. And I’m happy the Ole Miss fans at least had a great night in Memphis before their team got kicked to the curb.

They were right about one thing: It was a game for a quarter or so.

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Music Music Features

Trampoline Team Live at The Buccaneer

New Orleans punk rockers Trampoline Team return to the Buccaneer Lounge on Wednesday, August 12th. Fresh off an appearance at the Pelican Pow Wow Records Pow Wow (a two-night music fest in New Orleans), the three-piece joined a bill that included Memphis bands Manateees and Aquarian Blood. The New Orleans and Memphis punk connection seems to be getting stronger, with the two cities intertwined by New Orleans artist Giorgio Murderer releasing records on Goner and Manateees releasing their debut album on Pelican Pow Wow. While they might not have the harsh aesthetic that Manateees perfected on their debut album released last year, Trampoline Team packs a punch with plenty of shredding guitars behind Sam DeLucia’s pissed-off vocals.

Trampoline Team

Also on the bill is new-ish Memphis psych band Blackberries, who also have connections to local bands like Aquarian Blood, Lady Lapanto, and Richard James & the Special Riders. Blackberries are an exciting new band made up of mostly Memphis transplants who are barely old enough to play in the dive bars they’ve been frequenting lately.

Rounding out the bill is Buldgerz, an on-again/off-again hardcore punk band that features members of the Goner group No Comply. Buldgerz don’t play very often, but when they do they inspire all kinds of crowd interaction that the kids these days call “moshing.” It should be a great show, with three very different high-energy bands showing what they’ve got, and with only a $5 cover charge, there’s really no excuse not to be there. Shortly after their Memphis appearance, Trampoline Team will travel to Kalamazoo, Michigan, to play a festival with Memphis-based punk band Nots, strengthening the New Orleans and Memphis connection even further. Solidarity makes the world go round.

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Music Music Features

Brad Boswell Benefit at the Buccaneer

The dive bar on Monroe between Cleveland and Watkins is the closest thing to Cheers that Memphis musicians have. Spend a few weekends at the pirate-themed Buccaneer, and everybody knows your name. Known for their interesting take on last call and their willingness to let just about anyone perform in the tiny room next to the bar, the Buccaneer is usually the first place tourists of the Memphis bar circuit get a real taste of what late nights in this city are all about. One of the men who makes the Buccaneer a legendary stop for touring musicians and tourists alike is bartender Brad Boswell. There are two Brads at the Buccaneer, Boswell being the one with shaggy hair tucked into a St. Louis Cardinals hat.

Recently, Boswell faced very serious health problems that caused him to miss a substantial amount of work. With costly medical bills piling up for Boswell, local musicians have joined forces for an all-star night of Memphis music.

Organized by Joe Restivo, Bradley Swihart (the other Brad bartender at the Buccaneer), and Graham Winchester, the benefit starts at 6 p.m. and is $10 at the door. AGoFundMe page has been set up for those who aren’t able to attend the benefit, and so far over $1,000 has been raised. There will also be a silent auction, and those in attendance can bid on things like private instrument lessons in addition to tons of gift cards from places like Goner Records and Trilogy Tattoos. Co-organizer Winchester said he’s been overwhelmed by the response the benefit has received.

“It’s been pretty awesome seeing so many [people] help and chime in,” Winchester said. “I think it’s a testament to the type of guy Brad is and how many connections he’s made throughout the years.”

As for the night’s lineup, the following bands are confirmed: Dave Cousar, Deering and Down, Detective Bureau, Marcella & Her Lovers, Devil Train, the Sheiks, Jack Oblivian, Richard James, and Midnight Fistfight.

Brad Boswell Benefit, Saturday, July 25th, at the Buccaneer. Doors, 6 p.m. $10.

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Music Music Features

Graham Winchester’s New Record

If you go out to hear music, chances are you’ve heard Graham Winchester play drums. He’s played for Copper Possum, Mojo Possum, Jack Oblivian, the Sheiks, and the Booker T. & the MGs cover band the Maitre Ds. One wonders how in the world he found the time to make his self-titled solo record. But he did, and the album is evidence of a talent that goes beyond beatkeeping.

“I sit at the piano, and I hear a melody,” Winchester says about his songwriting process. “Sometimes, the usual chord that would go there doesn’t really bring out the emotion of the lyric I’m trying to write. So I definitely try to transpose the key wherever I can, depending on how I want the feeling to be.”

Those key changes, also known as modulations, are what separate great songwriters like Elvis Costello, David Bowie, and the greats of the early 20th century from, say, Grand Funk Railroad. Winchester is on the favorable side of that continuum. His mother plays classical piano and Jesse Winchester was a first cousin once removed. So he naturally comes by his chords.

“The Beatles are obviously a huge influence. I’ve been listening to a lot of Jesse Winchester, who I dedicated the record to. He’s got a lot of key changes. I definitely listen to a lot of Bowie, later Beach Boys stuff. I’ve been obsessing over Big Star and Dan Penn. Old Memphis stuff and all the Booker T stuff.”

While there are some smarts to the harmonies, Winchester kept an earthy vibe to the record by inviting bandmates Clint Wagner (fiddle), Randal Morton (National Bluegrass Banjo Champion), Bill Mard, and Daniel McKee (bass). There is an acoustic feel throughout, even to the electrified instruments.

“I think it’s more important when you’re using piano and fiddle and instruments like that. I’m into doing lo-fi stuff and all that, but when you’re using these stringed instruments, those don’t cut through so well when you are chunking it up. You don’t want to hear a great grand piano sound distorted or anything like that. I’m a pretty big fan of the Band and of Jeff Tweedy and Wilco. In the way that the Band had the Big Pink, and Wilco has their loft in Chicago, I really liked working at High/Low. I really felt nestled down in this nook with these vintage intruments and keyboards. It felt organic.”

Like with many initial solo projects, the songs span Winchester’s creative life from high school through the present.

“I wrote the fifth song, ‘Saenger Creek,’ when I was 17. Then ‘Walk on the Shore,’ the Booker T-ish one, was written a few weeks before we started the recording process in May. That was after we had the Maitre Ds, and it was directly influenced. I wanted, after all these lyrics and all these changes, to just have something kind of soothing and instrumental that speaks for itself to close out the album.”

After playing in groups and as a sideman, Winchester was more than ready to take responsibility for the songs and arrangements.

“One thing I like about the record is that usually somebody besides the drummer writes the songs. If it’s a record where you start with the drums and then piece on, usually, it’s not the drummer who wrote the songs. So I could play by myself on drums envisioning the energies that would be there and the dynamics. It’s kind of hard to tell that the record was layered on like that because there are some organic explosive moments.”

For those instrumental parts that he didn’t do himself, he relied on trusted collaborators who go back even further than do the songs.

“I had friends like Bill Mard, who came and played a majority of the guitar stuff. Then Daniel McKee played bass on everything. They both did a great job. Bill did ukelele, acoustic guitar. Bill was a former bandmate in Copper Possum and Mojo Possum. He’s a friend since childhood. Daniel and I also met in fourth grade at Lausanne. We go back to middle school playing in bands together. He was going to play on four or five tunes on bass. I was going to do the rest on a Moog synthesizer bass. But there was a point halfway through the session when Toby Vest looked at me and was like, ‘Man this guy is so good, you’d be a fool not to just let him play the album through.’ I was totally in agreement. He really just slayed it on this album.”

Winchester developed his network of players and his chops with many local bands. But the soul-revival project with the Maitre Ds finds him studying the masters in fine detail and playing with some of the city’s finest instrumentalists. Playing a set of Booker T & the MGs material is a pretty bold move in Memphis.

“It’s been a real challenge. With me, and with so many other drummers in town, we definitely sing Al Jackson’s praises. And touching his body of work — in the same way I’m sure it is for someone doing Cropper or Booker T or Duck Dunn —it’s intimidating. Not only are the beats and grooves he’s coming up with unique, it’s as much about how they are played as what they are. So you get a simple groove like ‘Green Onions.’ I’ve heard so many bands cover that song and do this bar-rock shuffle thing. But it’s really a specific groove that Al Jackson is doing. Even more specifically, the feel of that simplicity makes the song believable and is that Memphis sound.”

In undertaking such a task, Winchester, along with organist Adam Woodard, guitarist Restivo, and bassist Frank McLallen, demonstrates an easy-going confidence and affability that underlie his success. He also works harder than most musicians in town.

“I know there are plenty of drummers in town who are probably more worthy of taking on the project. But, like a lot of things in Memphis, it’s kind of down to whoever starts it. Eventually, you’ve got to have somebody get a band together and rehearse and start playing live shows. I feel like that’s the case with every instrument in the band. It seems like a band that a lot of Memphis music nuts would love to start. We finally just did it. It was really cool, right after we started it, getting to play at the mayor’s office. He did a speech downtown, and I think John Miller set that up. That’s the kind of group we want it to be. We want to be that band for when people are having a very Memphis party. We’d love to be the band that plays that kind of music that nobody really plays. We heard about another band in Austin that’s a Booker T tribute band. But they use seven-piece drums sets and a Nord [electronic] keyboard. That’s what’s really cool is that Adam has actually found a Hammond [organ of the type] that Booker T used on the first two albums. He’s got an M organ sawed down in half, so it’s portable. So there’s definitely a dedication in the band to get the tones right.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

A Peek Into Bars’ Lost and Founds

So, apparently, one night or day (who knows?) somebody up and left their shoes at the Buccaneer. Interestingly enough, the shoes abandoned at the Bucc are Bucks, in classic taupe. The owner may have been drunk. Maybe he had flip flops on and was going to change into the Bucks. Maybe he was the one who brought the pillow in and left his bike helmet, too. Justin Fox Burks suggests that the pillow was for a drum set, but I like to imagine something far less logical.

All of this, of course, is mere speculation, gathered from the beery anthropology pit of the bar’s lost and found box, which in this case is a lost and found booth as well as a lost and found closet/office (“cloffice,” we are told).

Justin Fox Burks

Candice Corum at the Buccaneer in the “cloffice”

A couple weeks ago I lost my wallet, and then I found my wallet. Somewhere in between, I called the Blue Monkey where I had lunch and am told they don’t have it. Desperately, I described the wallet, as if mere adjectives will conjure it up. “Oh, honey,” the woman on the phone told me, “all we’ve got are sunglasses and car keys.” This made me laugh because I figured this was true of all lost and found boxes. So I decided to check.

And, yes indeed, there are a lot of glasses (the Bayou has the most stylish) and car keys. (We even had reports of cars “lost” at two places.) Somebody left meds at Alex’s (nothing fun, we checked) and yet another person left a full cosmetics bag. If you can’t find your phone charger or music stand, you might check Murphy’s.

Justin Fox Burks

Benny Carter at Murphy’s

But mostly, it’s clothes — an array of shirts and jackets and sweaters and scarves. There is a swell tie with whales on it at Alex’s. At the Buccaneer, beyond the shoes, we unearth sweaters and jackets and a sweet-looking scarf. At Murphy’s, there’s a cool vintage leather jacket, a North Face jacket, and tons of sweaters and shirts.

It was also at Murphy’s where we witness an amazing reunion. “That’s my umbrella,” a man says. But then he comes over to the pile of lost and found stuff and picks up the umbrella, looks it over, and decides, “That’s not mine.”

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Music Music Features

King Eddie at the Buccaneer

In a world littered with psychedelic bands and with crunchy lo-fi bands, King Eddie stands out for several reasons. While I can’t find a full-length release, the band’s three tracks on Soundcloud speak to a cool mix of influences and of interesting things to come.

The most obvious win for the King is vocalist Aurora Adams, who takes the lead with a powerful presence. She has a voice that you’d have to stop and call indie on the way to calling it soulful. There is something immediately real in her sound. Her voice breaks and quivers around a note but adds to the performance. Hearing a perfect singer on these tracks wouldn’t have the same effect. First of all the songs are too weird/smart for too much polish. If King Eddie doesn’t fall into the soul-mimicry trap that keeps the Alabama Shakes stuck in almost-interesting territory, it’s because Adams and the instruments are equally compelling.

Adams came later to the band, which was founded by Joshua Thorington and Justin Maike. The guitars and bass compete with Adams’ voice at every turn. The bass playing is really good. It’s not busy or showy, but the lines are interesting and the tone is complex enough to draw your attention. The guitar playing and sounds have a similar charm.

King Eddie blends elements of soul that work to keep a smart band sounding human. There are Goneresque reverbs and surly tones that keep a mindful band from sounding too smart. While the influences and aesthetic choices are important, the tracks have a vitality that gets lost when people think too hard about being good.