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Music Music Features

Local Tina Turner Tribute Band Taking Off

Melanie Pierce has two Tina Turner wigs. She describes one as the “big hair ’80s” wig and the other, the “short, bouncy with curls” wig.

Turner’s later curly hair style still had “a rock-and-roll feel, but more of a classy rock-and-roll feel,” says Pierce, who, along with La-Shon Robinson, are founders of Elevation Memphis: A Tina Turner Tribute Experience. They will be part of the Beale Street Brass Notes Walk of Fame ceremony honoring the late singer November 9th at 3 p.m. at Alfred’s on Beale. Memphis guitarist, songwriter, and recording artist Robert Allen Parker also will be featured at the event.

There’s probably nothing you could ask Pierce and Robinson about the late singer that they can’t answer.

It all began when they went to see Tina: The Tina Turner Musical in February 2023 at the Orpheum Theatre. Both women were familiar with Turner, but they were awestruck after they went to the show.

“I am a child of the ’80s,” Robinson says, recalling when she saw the 1984 video for Turner’s “What’s Love Got to Do With It.” “I was like, ‘Woah. My God. Who is this mature lady? She’s walking with all this confidence in this video. I’ve got to find out more about her.’ And from there I became fan.”

A native of Grenada, Mississippi, Robinson, a sergeant in the Army National Guard, already had an alternative band, Elevation Memphis. “We do covers of all genres — from ’60s to today’s hits. And we also have original music.”

After the Tina musical at the Orpheum, she thought, “Hey, let’s add Tina.”

Robinson plays flute, tambourine, and a little percussion, and Pierce plays bass and the African djembe drum in the cover band. “Our keyboardist Derrin Lee has played an integral part in all of the arrangements for our Tina tunes. And he’s been with us almost since day one. And it’s been almost four years.”

The band also includes core member dancers and musicians. “We have great dancers and we do have some of the best musicians in Memphis,” Pierce says.

Robinson and Pierce write the originals. “We currently have six originals out right now streaming,” Robinson says.

Almost immediately after they put the Turner tribute together, she and Pierce were referred by Memphian Richard Day to perform their show at the Tina Turner Museum at the West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center in Brownsville, Tennessee. They met Turner’s granddaughter, great-grandson, and a lot of her first-cousins, Robinson says. “And they all look just like her.”

Robinson and Pierce became friends with the family members and they began Facebook-ing each other.

More and more people began asking them to play at their venues, she says.

And “next thing you know” they were invited to perform at the Brass Note ceremony, Robinson says. “We will perform 25 minutes of Tina’s biggest hits.”

Robinson doesn’t portray Turner in the tribute show. “I don’t do Tina. I wear a wig, but Melanie definitely has the look. And when I tell you she studies day in and day out to perfect her — I’ve never seen anybody put in so much work and dedication.”

“I’m learning her every day,” Pierce says. “Her elegance. The way she carries herself on stage. Her confidence on stage.”

And, she says, “Anybody would love to impersonate Tina just because of who she is and just the name. Everything about her.”

Asked how she’d describe Turner, Pierce says, “I would say that she’s very calm. Looking at her interviews, she’s very educated. She just has a peace when you listen to her speak.”

Pierce studies Turner’s voice. “I do try to talk like her. I have made some songs where my sound is similar to her, but I think because I’m bringing the look and that confidence and that presence on stage, sounding like her is not even the thing. ‘I can feel Tina in you.’ ‘You are the next Tina.’ That’s the type of feedback that I get.

“But I do work really hard to talk like her when I am talking in the microphone. I would say Tina’s stage voice is so powerful. It’s raspy. It’s very rock-and-roll.”

And, she says, “Tina Turner has the best legs. I definitely don’t compare to her legs, but I think I have pretty nice legs. I don’t need insurance on them, though. Tina definitely did.” 

A native of West Memphis, Arkansas, Pierce got into singing three and a half years ago. “It was just karaoke from time to time.”

Robinson, who worked with her in an office back then, invited her to try out for her Elevation band. “She asked me to come and audition because she heard me playing the djembe with my friend, jamming out at my house. And we had a video on Facebook [of us] jamming out. She said, ‘I really want you to sing. Do you sing?’ I said, ‘No, I’ve never been in a band. I don’t know anything about it.’”

Pierce sang but “just for fun around the house. But not thinking about growing up and being a singer.”

After being coached by Robinson, Pierce got in the band.

When they began getting ready to do the Turner tribute, Pierce began working on the Turner look. “I started off just ordering my first wig off of Amazon. Just because I needed something.”

When ordering it, Pierce says, “I just put in ‘Tina Turner’ and this big hair wig came in.”

Now, she says, “People make me custom wigs.”

In addition to her “rock-and-roll hair,” Pierce dresses like Turner. She describes the look as “female, classy, but sexy rock-and-roll. She wears the dresses with the tights. With the fishnet tights. With the high heels. I do dance in heels.”

Portraying Turner carries over into her daily life, Pierce says. “I have more confidence because I’m having to play a very confident woman.”

Pierce changes her persona from the cover band to the Turner tribute. “I get in ‘Tina’ mode as soon as I hit the stage. I’m ready to go. Ready for whatever crowd, whatever genre of music we do.”

And, she adds, “Tina is always ready. She’s bold. She’s daring. She’s a visionary. She’s fearless.”

They perform their Turner tribute at Memphis locations, including Neil’s Music Room and Lafayette’s Music Room, but not very often. “We don’t want to water it down here in the city,” Robinson says. “So, we’re just starting to go outside Memphis. Arkansas last weekend. St. Louis. Nashville.”

They’d love to one day take their Tina Turner show to Las Vegas. “People have already reached out.”

So, what do they think Tina Turner would think of their band if she were still alive? “I think that if Tina saw us from day one till now, she would definitely say she is very proud of us,” Pierce says. “She can see how hard we’ve been working to improve our show. And she would tell us we have what it takes to be the best Tina Turner tribute band of our time.”

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Tina and Aussies, and MPD Pride

Memphis on the internet.

Tina and Aussies

Tina Turner’s recent death uncovered an amazing connection between the artist and Australia.

Her song “Nutbush City Limits” about her West Tennessee hometown (just between Brownsville and Ripley) is practically embedded in Australian culture, according to a Sky News Australia anchor last week. The song and the line dance that goes with it are staples at Aussie gatherings like parties, weddings, and just about any other festivity.

Big Red Bash, a three-day music festival outside of Broken Hill in New South Wales, Australia, will try to break the record for the largest group dancing to the song next month. Organizers hope to get 5,000 to dance at once, beating the current record of just over 4,700 (above). Each dancer pays $15 to enter. The money goes to the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia, which provides emergency aeromedical evacuations throughout rural and remote Australia.

h/t to Craig Meek, Ashley Jones, and Dark Horse Band Canberra.

MPD Pride

Posted to Reddit by u/Genhauer

“Putting the P in MPD,” u/Genhauer posted to Reddit with an image of a convertible(?!) Memphis Police Department cruiser, apparently headed to the Mid-South Pride parade.

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Music Music Blog

Tina Turner and Memphis: Remembering the Late Star’s Thoughts on the Bluff City

Social media lit up yesterday when news of Tina Turner’s death was announced, especially in this city, with which the singer had a specially affinity. Her passing made for many moving testimonials to the power of her music and the personal depths it plumbed in her fans’ hearts. And with so few details given, what could one do but look back at her place in history? As the New York Times reported, the R&B and pop superstar “died on Wednesday at her home in Küsnacht, Switzerland, near Zurich. She was 83. Her publicist Bernard Doherty announced the death in a statement but did not provide the cause. She had a stroke in recent years and was known to be struggling with a kidney disease and other illnesses.”

The Memphis Flyer recently had an opportunity to hear some of that history straight from Turner herself, when she responded to questions on the occasion of the Memphis premiere of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical earlier this year. The show, written by Pulitzer Prize-winner Katori Hall, portrays Turner’s life with unprecedented veracity, and the premiere offered the singer a chance to look back at some of her less well-known ties to Memphis — and Clarksdale, Mississippi native Raymond Hill, with whom she had her first child. The Flyer, having already delved into Hill’s importance in the local R&B and blues scene, turned out to be a perfect vehicle for conveying the singer’s thoughts about this region. Below, in loving memory of the soulful firebrand who shook the music industry to its roots, we reprint our full email interview with Tina Turner from this February.

Memphis Flyer: Growing up in Nutbush, Tennessee, what did Memphis represent to you? Were you aware of the radio and records coming out of Memphis at the time?

Tina Turner: Memphis seemed another world away when I was growing up in Nutbush. Our town was so small and the access to the records coming out of Memphis was just from the radio. My life in Nutbush was very focused on my family, and the church and I suppose that was the music that I remember and how I started to sing. It wasn’t until I moved to St Louis that I started to be more aware of the Memphis music through the local R&B scene.

In the song “Rocket 88,” Jackie Brentson yells “Blow your horn, Raymond!” Ethnomusicologist David Evans has called Raymond Hill “an unsung hero of Black music.” Was this a significant relationship in your life? How do you feel about seeing that romance portrayed in the musical’s plot?

My relationship with Raymond was a very significant relationship in my life especially because of my son Craig. Raymond and I met when I was very young, and I had just started working with Ike when our romance began. Raymond had so many years of experience and I feel calling him an unsung hero of Black music is very true. I was very happy that the relationship has found its moment in the musical.

Was the fact that Katori Hall is from Tennessee important to you? Did you feel she could better relate to your upbringing because of that? How did that play out in specific scenes from the musical?

From the minute I met Katori I felt she was the right person to tell this story. We talked so much about growing up in Tennessee and our families’ experiences. Katori understood immediately what it took for me to get to where I did, given where I started. The odds I had to overcome time and again.

Some great Memphis soul songs are featured in the musical, from “I Can’t Stand the Rain” to “Let’s Stay Together.” Has the Memphis sound spoken to you over the years, and does the premiere of Tina: The Musical in Memphis take on extra meaning because of it? 

So many forms of music have their roots in Memphis, and my life and career has circled the city so many times. To bring my show to Memphis has huge meaning to me. If you had told me all those years ago as a small child picking cotton in Nutbush that this would happen … I definitely wouldn’t have believed you, and thought you were telling me a fairytale! It does feel almost like a full circle, to be returning home and to be able to tell my story in such an amazing way; through performance including all my music. How special and how lucky am I.  I feel very blessed that I have this opportunity

What is the most powerful moment of the musical for you? Did it lead to any epiphanies about your life, to see it portrayed that way?

Before Tina: The Musical opened in London, my producer Tali [Tali Pelman, the musical’s producer] snuck me into a preview performance. I sat on an aisle, watching the show, and no one ever knew I was there. Later in my hotel room, I turned to Tali and told her that they found the love. That I wished my mother and Ike would have been able to see the show. I remember she teared up. In this way I do feel the musical, though it brought up many painful memories again, also helped me gain acceptance and harmony of the highs and the lows.  

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “We Don’t Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)” by Tina Turner

With Memphis still buzzing from Tina: The Musical at the Orpheum Theatre (Read Alex Greene’s cover story), Music Video Monday is revisiting one of the strangest, and coolest, moments of Tina Turner’s career.

Tina Turner grew up in Nutbush, Tennessee, and found fame alongside rock and R&B pioneer Ike Turner. But her career didn’t fully flourish until after she left that abusive relationship and struck out on her own. Her single “What’s Love Got To Do With It?” was a massive hit in 1984. Tina’s comeback coincided with the golden age of MTV, but the song’s music video was, for the era, fairly subdued. It just featured the singer strolling around New York City, but Tina’s electric charisma is on full display, and that’s more than enough.

The video for the album’s title track, “Private Dancer,” is much more representative of the era’s visual excesses.

With her star in ascendance, Tina took a radical turn. Director George Miller was working on the third Mad Max movie, and after seeing Turner as The Acid Queen in the mid-70s film adaptation of The Who’s rock opera Tommy decided to write a part for her. Auntie Entity is the leader of Bartertown, the wasteland outpost where desperate survivors of the apocalypse have tried to re-create something like civilization. Turner, who had never done this kind of acting before, makes Auntie Entity one of the greatest sci-fi villains of all time. (In fact, I would argue that she’s not the real villain of the story. She’s just playing a bad hand the best way she can. The NAACP seemed to agree with me, because they awarded Turner the Image Award for Outstanding Actress for the role.) Watch as she asserts dominance at The Thunderdome.

Turner had two songs in the film. “One of the Living” was the first single from the soundtrack. The video, which premiered in 1985, plays up Turner’s rock star image, and cuts in altered clips from the movie. Say what you will about the filmmaking of the ’80s, but they knew how to use smoke and a klieg light.

The second video was for the theme, “We Don’t Need Another Hero (Thunderdome),” and here we get Tina in her full Auntie Entity glory. The chainmail dress reportedly weighed more than 100 pounds. Watch for the cameo by saxophone hero Tim Capello.

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Cover Feature News

Bringing It All Back Home

When Tina Turner, retired in Switzerland after many decades as one of the most powerful voices in American pop, soul, and R&B, first heard the idea of rendering her life story as a musical, she knew exactly how she felt about it. “No, I’m not interested. No. No. No.” As she wrote of the experience in Rolling Stone in 2019, “I didn’t feel like talking about that stuff from the past because it gave me bad dreams. I was just settling into retirement, a newlywed, content to be Mrs. Erwin Bach, and the last thing on my mind was working anywhere but in my garden.”

But after meeting with the producers proposing the show, her position softened. She thought about “all the people who tell me that my story gives them hope and is my legacy” and ultimately gave the project her blessing. “Then,” she wrote, “I sat back to watch director Phyllida Lloyd and writer Katori Hall do what they do best.”

Those two names alone must have reassured her. U.K.-based Lloyd already had a stellar track record as director of the stage and cinematic versions of Mamma Mia!, which, in using the songs of ABBA, reaffirmed just how successful the “jukebox musical” genre could be. She’d also proven her skills with more serious material like The Threepenny Opera, La Bohème, an operatic version of The Handmaid’s Tale, and the Tony Award-nominated Mary Stuart.

At the time, native Memphian Katori Hall was less of a known quantity but had made waves with a play she’d begun while studying at The Juilliard School, The Mountaintop, which reimagined Martin Luther King Jr. on the night before his assassination. After opening in London and winning an Olivier Award in 2010, it went on to a successful Broadway run starring Samuel L. Jackson and Angela Bassett. But for Tina Turner, perhaps Hall’s greatest qualification was that she was “a Tennessee girl, just like me.”

Zurin Villanueva performing “I Want to Take You Higher” as Tina Turner with the cast of the North American touring production of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical (Photo: Van Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

Taking over from early drafts by Frank Ketelaar and Kees Prins, Hall crafted a compelling book for the show, titled Tina: The Tina Turner Musical, which opened in London in the spring of 2018 before moving to Broadway the next year. When that production was nominated for a dozen Tony Awards in 2020 and Adrienne Warren won in the category of best leading actress in a musical, Tina Turner’s instincts were vindicated. And when Hall won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for drama for a later play, The Hot Wing King, it reinforced the impression that, despite the reputation of jukebox musicals for superficiality, Tina was cut from a different cloth.

Now the show has hit the road, making its Memphis debut on Valentine’s Day at the Orpheum Theatre and slated to run there through February 19th. While there’s no denying the importance of the show’s success in London and New York, the current production in Memphis may be its most significant staging yet, in terms of its historical and cultural impact — because for both Hall and Turner, bringing the show to Memphis means bringing it all back home.

Tina Turner (Photo: Craig Sugden)

Nutbush City Limits

As anyone who’s seen the 1993 Oscar-nominated film, What’s Love Got to Do with It, knows, Tina Turner was born Anna Mae Bullock in West Tennessee. Following Jackson Avenue some 50 miles to the northeast will bring you to the town of Nutbush, where a young Anna Mae grew up singing in the Spring Hill Baptist Church. Indeed, that may have been the most accurate thing about the film, which goes on to play fast and loose with the facts as it spins a fanciful version of Turner’s life. As Turner told Oprah Winfrey in 2018, “I watched a little bit of it, but I didn’t finish it because that was not how things went. Oprah, I didn’t realize they would change the details so much.”

As the musical was being created, Turner was determined to make it more true to life, and a crucial part of that was working with Hall. Even then, as Turner tells the Memphis Flyer via email, one shouldn’t assume that Memphis figured in her early life simply by virtue of its proximity.

“Memphis seemed another world away when I was growing up in Nutbush,” she writes. “Our town was so small and the access to the records coming out of Memphis was just from the radio. My life in Nutbush was very focused on my family and the church, and I suppose that was the music that I remember and how I started to sing. It wasn’t until I moved to St. Louis that I started to be more aware of the Memphis music through the local R&B scene.”

Nonetheless, Hall’s Memphis upbringing convinced Turner that she was working with someone who really understood her roots. “From the minute I met Katori I felt she was the right person to tell this story,” Turner says. “We talked so much about growing up in Tennessee and our families’ experiences. Katori understood immediately what it took for me to get to where I did, given where I started. The odds I had to overcome time and again.”

Hall feels the same way about their shared experience. “I grew up listening to Tina’s music because my mom was such an avid fan,” she says. “My eldest sister is named after her! So Tina’s influence and impact on my life has been ever-present. I do think, being a Southern gal myself, born of the Tennessee soil, really helped me step into her shoes a bit, in terms of thinking about everything she had gone through. Though we grew up through completely different times and different eras, the seeds of racism, planted so long ago, unfortunately bloom over and over again in that Tennessee soil. So both her lived experiences and mine inspired me to create this character of Tina that is in the show.”

Zurin Villanueva as Tina Turner and Ann Nesby as Gran Georgeanna (Photo: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

We Don’t Need Another Hero

Hall is careful to point out that she took great pains to represent Turner’s character with as much nuance as possible. “The beautiful thing about Tina the person, or Anna Mae Bullock, is that she very much is still Anna Mae,” says Hall. “She has lived her life so bravely, and there’s a fierce transparency to her. I feel as though the character I’ve created based on her and her life is very much closely aligned with the actual Tina. And it’s because we had this icon who was so honest about everything she went through, whether it was her highs or her lows. We have really gone on this journey with her just because of how open she’s been about sharing her story with the world.”

In spite of Turner’s public openness, Hall felt she needed to engage with the star more directly, telling writer Julie Vadnal in 2019 that, in preparing to write the book, she did “several interviews over a few years. I’ve been working on [the musical] for almost five years. And of course, there’s her autobiography — I, Tina — and a movie out there. But for me, it was very important to talk to her again about all the things she had already told the world. Now she had some distance from it and was able to retell it and actually revise parts of our story that had gotten out of her hands.”

Part of that, Hall says, was decentering Turner’s abuse by ex-husband Ike. “Her story characterizes her as a survivor,” says Hall, “like this ultimate survivor, particularly of domestic abuse. And I don’t think people realize that she’s a survivor in other ways. She’s a survivor in terms of her family. She didn’t have the greatest relationship with her mother — in fact, there was quite a toxic relationship there. She was a survivor in terms of the entertainment industry. I think all these dragons combined created an opportunity to really show, yes, there’s a great amount of resilience there when it comes to domestic abuse, but there are other things she had to slay. Whole systems.”

Yet even that broader view of the obstacles Turner faced wasn’t enough, according to Hall. “Oftentimes we don’t allow people who are that powerful and that strong their vulnerability. For me, that was one of the greatest joys of this creative process. I was really allowed inside these complicated feelings she had toward her mother, toward Ike. I’m really grateful she allowed me that opportunity to weave that into her story and into the musical. I think a lot of people are going to be really touched by how cracked-open we get to see Tina be in the musical.”

Naomi Rodgers as Tina Turner (Photo: Matthew Murphy | MurphyMade)

Blow Your Horn, Raymond!

One especially egregious omission in the Hollywood version of Tina Turner’s life was her relationship with a member of Ike Turner’s band long before Ike claimed her hand in marriage. As profiled in the Flyer in 2021, saxophonist Raymond Hill first appears in the history of recorded music when the singer in Ike Turner’s Kings of Rhythm, Jackie Brenston, shouts, “Blow your horn, Raymond! Blow!” on the breakthrough R&B hit, “Rocket 88.” Hill was with Ike’s band in St. Louis when young Anna Mae Bullock joined the group, and Hill and Bullock were involved long before Ike had any romantic inclinations toward his singer.

In the musical, Hill’s role in Tina Turner’s young life is at last being recognized; and that, Turner says, is deeply meaningful to her. “My relationship with Raymond was a very significant relationship in my life, especially because of our son, Craig. Raymond and I met when I was very young, and I had just started working with Ike when our romance began. Raymond had so many years of experience and I feel calling him an unsung hero of Black music is very true. I was very happy that the relationship has found its moment in the musical.”

For Hall, including Turner’s romance with Hill was crucial to the story. “When we talked,” Hall says of her interviews with Turner, “there was still this kind of girlish giddiness about Ray! So many years later! It became super apparent that I would need to not only include him, but also make him part of the narrative structure and drive of the show. Just because of how much he meant to her. As we all know, rock-and-roll is messy. Yet she was able to find love and have a child that she adored. She adored Craig, and it was so heartbreaking when he died in the past few years. So she’s just a woman who, even today, continues to experience so much tragedy.”

Garrett Turner as Ike Turner (Photo: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

A Second-Hand Emotion

If What’s Love Got to Do with It cuts quickly to Tina Turner’s relationship and troubled marriage to Ike Turner, skipping Raymond Hill altogether, it also arguably oversimplifies Ike’s character. That was also something Hall was determined to correct as part of getting the Tina Turner story right.

“I knew that was going to be a huge task,” says Hall of complexifying what’s perhaps the most famous abusive marriage in history. “Ike’s pretty much the villain in her story. That’s just the truth. However, as we all know, people are people. People make mistakes. People are a balance of bad and good. I did not ever want to excuse Ike’s behavior, but I wanted people to understand. So I felt that giving the psychological, the social context of where he grew up and what made him who he was so important. That to me allowed for the nuance. There’s a scene where they try to get into a hotel and can’t because of the color of their skin. They have to sleep by the side of the road, and so you have this man who created rock-and-roll, and is an icon himself, still feeling like he’s invisible. I felt it was important to show that psychological complication so people could understand why any human being would displace their anger and try to control another person, especially when that other person is flying higher than you are, when you are just as deserving of recognition and credit. That’s something I really felt proud about. Because I don’t think we’ve gotten that in any story, whether it’s journalistic articles or previous tellings of her story. It felt like a necessity, especially knowing that this may be one of the last retellings of Tina’s life, particularly from a musical perspective.”

The actors who portray Tina Turner on alternate nights of the touring show, Zurin Villanueva and Naomi Rodgers, appreciate this nuance as well. “We have to respect every single character in this show,” notes Rodgers. “Katori did such an amazing job of giving Ike a moment of vulnerability in the show. Even though things didn’t change afterwards, there were still moments of vulnerability where you could remind yourself, ‘Wait, maybe this was the moment Tina forgave him for a quick second.’”

Villanueva agrees. “In scene work, you have to find the love. You can’t just hate someone. It’s not where the interest is. Because you stayed with someone for a reason. If there was no love, you’d walk out the door and that would be the end of the story. So it’s always about the duality, the love and the hate.”

“It Breaks You, Then It Builds You Up”

Such a duality shapes the entire musical, especially as it’s appearing on a Memphis stage. As Hall notes, part of relating to Tina’s roots in the Tennessee soil was recognizing the seeds of racism. The show opens here just as Memphis dominates international headlines for the trauma of police-sponsored terrorism, the latest instance in a long history of such trauma. The idea is not lost on the musical’s two lead actors.

“You can never forget watching your people, your community, in pain, especially a wound that’s been reopened multiple times,” says Villanueva. “It’s really difficult, but we are here to uplift and inspire and give strength as we continue to try and get results, and change our policies so this stuff doesn’t happen. We’re just there to give strength.”

Or, as Rodgers puts it, “It breaks you, then it builds you up, and it comforts you, and then it reminds you of who you are. Because that’s what we went through. And it hits! It shows the most important parts of [Tina Turner’s] life; it includes the hard parts and how you get through it. This is a story for such a time as this, especially for Memphis.”

Ultimately, for Hall, that’s both the irony and the power of having one’s own writing debut on the Memphis stage. “It’s a dream come true, as a hometown girl, to have your work grace a Memphis stage. I definitely feel like I’ve checked something off my bucket list. And I’m overjoyed that in this moment of Tina’s life, after she’s struggled for so much, we’re able to be in the room with her in this figurative way. I just hope that Memphians love and enjoy it just as much as we, as a creative team, have loved and enjoyed bringing her story to the world.”

Turner underscores how deeply having the show debut in Memphis has affected her. “So many forms of music have their roots in Memphis, and my life and career have circled the city so many times,” she writes. “To bring my show to Memphis has huge meaning to me. If you had told me all those years ago as a small child picking cotton in Nutbush that this would happen, I definitely wouldn’t have believed you, and thought you were telling me a fairy tale! It does feel almost like a full circle, to be returning home and to be able to tell my story in such an amazing way.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Memphis Music Hall of Fame: Gala Event Honors Artists From Blues to Opera

Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Scott Bomar & Don Bryant

This past Friday evening in downtown Memphis, Tennessee, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame honored some of music’s most influential singers and songwriters at its eighth annual Induction Ceremony.

The event honored eight Memphis-area musicians whose lifetime contributions to music embody elements of the “Memphis Sound,” all central figures in the history of chart-topping music of the 20th Century.

The official nexAir Stage at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts was filled with luminaries, both presenting and receiving the night’s distinctions. This year’s roster of inductees was an impressive and diverse group: Don Bryant, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Charlie Musselwhite, The Memphis Boys, Steve Cropper, Dan Penn, Tina Turner, and perhaps the most surprising, posthumous inductee and “The First Lady of Grand Opera,” Ms. Florence Cole Talbert-McCleave.

McCleave was an American operatic soprano and one of the very first black female opera singers to receive acclaim and critical success in the 20th Century, as well as one of the first to record commercially. Though not originally from Memphis, it was here she eventually settled and during her time was a sought-after performer, trailblazer for African-American women, and active educator for young black musicians throughout Memphis, even co-founding the Memphis Music Association. It is a testament to their scope that the Memphis Music Hall of Fame has opened its arms to classical forms of music like opera: the tribute performance to McCleave, an excerpt from “Aida” by soprano Michelle Bradley, was second-to-none and, quite simply, breathtaking.
Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Don Bryant

Next up was Don Bryant, house songwriter for Willie Mitchell’s Hi Records throughout the 60s and 70s, husband to singer Ann Peebles, and gifted singer in his own right. Bryant is the rare combination of sincerely disarming, winsome, and talented. Backed by a bevy of some of the finest working musicians in Memphis, the Bo-Keys, Bryant let shine from that stage his unparalleled smile and inventive, heartfelt vocals. The Bo-Keys, who now tour regularly with Bryant, included: Joe Restivo on guitar, Scott Bomar on bass, Marc Franklin and Kirk Smothers on horns, Archie “Hubbie” Turner on keys, and the Memphis “Bulldog” himself, Howard Grimes on drums. The latter two bandmates, with Bryant himself, served as key members of the house band at Mitchell’s Royal Recording Studios, playing on some of Hi’s most celebrated recordings of the era.

One of the eight inductees was actually a group award. Six session musicians made up The Memphis Boys, the house band at legendary producer Chips Moman’s American Sound Studio, comprised of drummer Gene Chrisman, bassists Tommy Cogbill and Mike Leech, guitarist Reggie Young, pianist Bobby Wood, and organist Bobby Emmons. Together these men laid down the grooves for over 120 hit records between 1967 and 1972 for artists like Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, B.J. Thomas, Dusty Springfield, and notably, on Elvis Presley’s last number one hit “Suspicious Minds.”
Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Extended family of The Memphis Boys

Of the remaining members, keyboardist Bobby Wood gave a sincere thanks to the city of Memphis while drummer Gene Chrisman audibly held back tears of gratitude as he accepted his award, and in an endearing moment of appreciation of those years he reminisced, “I’ll tell you it was such a pleasure…We had more fun than two Christmas monkeys.”

As the room bubbled with cheer and nostalgia, the house band and guest singers led a medley of the Memphis Boys’ greatest hits: “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head,” “Hooked on a Feeling,” “Son of A Preacher Man,” “Suspicious Minds,” and “Sweet Caroline,” among others.

Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Charlie Musselwhite and Bobby Rush

Boundless blues entertainer Bobby Rush introduced his erstwhile touring partner, friend and Grammy-winning electric blues heavyweight Charlie Musselwhite. Charlie, gracious as always, serenaded us with his famous harmonica stylings on “Blues Overtook Me.”

It was a night of montages, as rapper Al Kapone stepped out to speak with an unexpectedly heartfelt appeal to support live Memphis music. As he stepped aside, dueling DJs live-mixed an audio mosaic of some of the most cherished hits to come from our city: “Hound Dog,” “Great Balls of Fire,” “Gee Whiz,” “Pretty Woman,” “Hold On I’m Coming,” “Soul Man,” “Shaft,” “Love and Happiness,” “Ring My Bell,” and many others, on through more modern Hip-hop hits like “Hard Out Here for a Pimp.” This was followed by a brief but thoughtful “In Memoriam” video paying tribute to those Memphians in music we’ve recently lost.
Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Dan Penn

Grammy-winning producer Matt Ross-Spang presented the next inductee, composer, instrumentalist, and singer Dan Penn. One of the most prodigious songwriters to come out of the Shoals, Penn’s songs possess a permanence that not many can boast – most famed among them, Aretha Franklin’s “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” and The Box Tops “Cry Like A Baby.” Penn gave a brief and witty acceptance and returned to play another of his seminal hits, “The Dark End of the Street,” a hit for James Carr on Goldwax in 1967. At 77, Penn’s stunning voice still commands a standing ovation.

Native Memphian and dynamic singer Dee Dee Bridgewater got her well-deserved accolades from Royal Studios’ Boo Mitchell, son of legendary producer Willie Mitchell. Mitchell spoke of the recent work he has done with Ms. Bridgewater on her last record Memphis… Yes, I’m Ready, and ready she was: attired in glittering silver from head to toe, Bridgewater dazzled and shone. The jazz singer, Broadway star, and Grammy-winner addressed her Memphis roots and mesmerized the audience with her rousing rendition of “Can’t Get Next to You.”
Courtesy Memphis Music Hall of Fame

Steve Cropper

Blues guitarist and brother to the late Stevie Ray, Jimmie Vaughan introduced the incomparable Steve Cropper. Guitarist, songwriter, producer, Stax house guitarist, and OG “G” of Booker T. & The M.G.’s, he’s responsible for some of the greatest songs ever recorded, having written for and worked with everyone from Otis Redding to John Lennon. Inducted in 2012 as a member of Booker T. & The M.G.’s, this year saw him inducted as a solo artist for his life-long accomplishments, and, a natural charmer, he treated us to a version of his Redding co-write “(Sittin’ On) the Dock of the Bay,” leading the audience through whistles at the end.

The final inductee of the night was to a lady born Anna Mae Bullock in nearby Nutbush, Tennessee, and known to the world as Miss Tina Turner. Though not present at the ceremony, we enjoyed an agreeable medley of her greatest hits to round out the festivities, performed by a collection of local female artists who did Miss Turner proud: “Rock Me Baby,” “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” “We Don’t Need Another Hero,” and “River Deep, Mountain High” among others.

Memphis is a town chock full of heavy contributions to the music world – and these ceremonies, presenting so many timeless artists and songs in one sitting, are mind-blowing. It was a night of sheer celebration and a night of sober reflection. It was, as Chrisman mused with his distinct Southern drollness, ‘more fun than two Christmas monkeys.’