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Music Music Blog

Big Star Rides Again

When Jody Stephens and Chris Stamey put together a new version of Big Star two years ago, the quintet was a new group. And yet the band, which also includes Pat Sansone (Wilco), Jon Auer (Posies), and Mike Mills (R.E.M.), was hardly a bunch of rookies. Indeed, they all were unapologetic fans of that ’70s band that never quite made it, even as it lived on in their hearts and creative minds. And so, when they played WYXR’s Raised By Sound Festival in 2022, it was a revelation and a delight, but no great surprise that they pulled off the tribute to the band’s debut album, #1 Record, with aplomb.

And yet, being a “new” band, they had some rough patches at the time. Mills, battling a cold, was just shy of bringing his A game. The group as a whole still had to work out some details, as evidenced by their grinding to a halt during the bridge of “O My Soul,” only to begin the song again with brilliant results.

Now, two years later, it’s the 50th anniversary of Big Star’s second album, Radio City, and the same quintet is back in the saddle this fall for a series of 10 select dates in the U.S. and Europe. The kickoff show for the tour was at Crosstown Theater this Tuesday, and in the two years since this more stripped-down group formed (compared to the more sprawling bands assembled for the Big Star’s Third concerts a decade ago), they have become even more of a living, breathing unit. While the 2022 show was excellent, Tuesday’s show was jaw-dropping.

It isn’t that the group has grown more precise; rather, they’ve now internalized the material to such a degree that they can loosen up with it. And that is entirely appropriate, given the nature of the album they’re saluting in this round of shows. When it was recorded, Radio City marked the reconfiguration of the band as a trio led by Alex Chilton. Chris Bell, who founded the group, had left in frustration to pursue a solo career. And the album, while intricately crafted and performed, thus reflected Chilton’s greater embrace of the raucous, the chaotic, and the wild. It was nothing like the shambolic masterpieces he would later create as a solo artist, but a bit unhinged nonetheless, and therein lies its charm.

There were still plenty of echoes of Bell’s sensibility in Tuesday’s concert. Indeed, the group kicked off the show with “Feel” and several other chestnuts from #1 Record, the album’s cover projected behind them. A few songs in, the background changed to Radio City, and Stamey quipped, “Something is trying to tell us to move on to the next album.”

And move they did, as they brought some of Big Star’s rowdiest material to life. “That’s just fun to play!” quipped Sansone after they’d ripped through “O My Soul,” this time with no confusion, full steam ahead. After an especially stomping version of “She’s a Mover,” where Stamey seemed to capture a bit of Chilton’s old cutting delivery as he sang, “She name was Marcia, Marcia the name, she look like a dove, now,” the singer exclaimed to the audience, “Can it get any better than that?”

Stamey lit up even more before they launched into “When My Baby’s Beside Me.” As he explained, “This was the first Big Star song I ever heard, and I had to pull my car to the side of the road to hear it. In the Winston-Salem area back then, we thought these songs were hits! They were playing on local radio!” Indeed, each player’s inner fan boy seemed to emerge before our eyes as they conjured up the sounds that had first captivated them as teens.

Pat Sansone, Jon Auer, Mike Mills, Jody Stephens, and Chris Stamey as the Big Star Quintet (Photo: Alex Greene)

The players’ enthusiasm for the material was contagious. And yet it wasn’t all raucous abandon. Several quieter numbers stole the show, including “Way Out West,” “India Song,” and “Thirteen,” where Stephens stepped out from behind the drums to sing. And, from the tender to the tumultuous, the voices of all five players created vocal harmonies of a richness and beauty rarely heard these days.

Not to be outdone, Sansone shone in a solo rendition of “I’m in Love with a Girl” that was so heartfelt, you might have thought he wrote it himself. Auer, too, sang with moving, vulnerable soul on the quiet sections of “Daisy Glaze.” Never did the lyrics “nullify my life” seem so desolate.

Mills, for his part, also shone, especially on a crisp, propulsive “September Gurls.” Before singing it, he thanked Jody for letting him take on the vocal duties, promising him that “the check is in the mail.”

Mills also sang as the band closed their encore with what Mills said was “a rare moment of earnestness from Alex,” the lovingly ambivalent “Thank You Friends.” The group, who made many comments about their admiration for each other, and the joy of working together, may have been singing it to the audience who shared their love for the city’s best loved “unsuccessful” group — or they may have been singing it to one another, now a tight-knit ensemble of El Goodos hell-bent on keeping their favorite music alive.

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Music Music Blog

Wilco’s Pat Sansone on Memphis, their WYXR Visit and Playing Mempho

When Wilco take the stage at Mempho Fest on Sunday, they’ll be returning to a kind of spiritual center for the band. As the band’s multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone reflects, “How can you do what we do and not have a crush on Memphis? Whether you’re pulling from early rock and roll, or from Big Star, or Memphis soul and Stax — whatever it is, there’s gonna be a thread that leads back to Memphis, somehow. I mean the first Wilco record was done at Easley-McCain Studios!”

Wilco’s Mempho appearance will kick off another round of two- to three-week jaunts the band has been making since spring, in an ongoing tour marked by its balance between large halls and smaller rock clubs. “Part of the band’s philosophy is to bring it to the people,” says Sansone. “Just recently we played Red Rocks, and then a week later we played a 1,300 seat rock club in Bozeman, Montana. And that little club show ended up being one of our favorite shows of the year. We try to make it approachable. It’s the nature of our band — we’ve got little pockets all over the place.”

These days, the band will be premiering songs from their latest album, Cruel Country, an album they backed into rather unexpectedly. “As we’ve been working on lots of tracks over the last couple of years, it seemed like we were making two records simultaneously,” Sansone explains. “One batch of songs had a country flavor and was more acoustic, and another batch was more the art pop side of Wilco. We were going to focus more on the art pop, but as we were getting close to our festival we do every two years in North Adams, Massachusetts, the Solid Sound Festival, it occurred to Jeff and to us that we had this country/folky body of work that was not far from being finished, so why not put the finishing touches on it, and offer it to our fans at the festival? Kind of as a gift for coming to the event. But as we started digging into these tracks and putting the finishing touches on them, it became apparent that, ‘Oh, this is our next album!’ This is a significant piece of work for us. So it wasn’t really planned to be the next official Wilco record until just weeks before it was released.”

And as for the live show, Sansone says “we’ve been playing a handful of the new songs in the set. And then a grab bag of stuff over the years. There’s a lot of material to choose from at this point! But we try to represent the different records of the band’s life.”

Pat Sansone (Credit: Sansonica, Inc.)

After their Mempho appearance, the band will make a slight detour: “We’re going to do an afternoon set at the festival,” says Sansone, “and then we’re gonna run over to Crosstown with some guitars and a snare drum and do two or three songs and have a chat on [community radio station] WYXR. I really want to show the rest of the guys what’s happening at Crosstown. I think they’ll be blown away.”

Beyond having his own program on WYXR, 91.7 FM, Sansone has seen Crosstown evolve and blossom since the earliest days of its renovation. “It all started with my friendship with [WYXR executive director] Robby Grant. I was involved in the Mellotron Variations project with him, and spending time at the Crosstown Concourse because of that. And I got to know Winston Eggleston. But I remember before Crosstown was even completed, we were in town for a Wilco show, and Robby picked me up to show me the building as they were developing it. And a couple years later, we performed the Mellotron Variations there. So Robby kept me in the loop as he was developing the ideas for WYXR, and when it became a reality, he asked me if I’d like to do a show, and I said I’d love to. There’s a radio station in Boston that I really love, WUMV, and I turned Robby onto it, and we’d trade other internet radio stuff. So we shared this love of radio as a medium.”

Having a radio show in the Bluff City brings things full circle for Sansone, who’s interest in Memphis far predates Wilco. “I grew up just hours away, in Meridian, Mississippi,” he says, “and I have an aunt and uncle and some cousins in Memphis, so it’s just always been a part of my life. Memphis was the big city. From a very early age, I felt the gravitational musical pull of Memphis. And when I was in my teens, and obsessed with the Beatles, I discovered Big Star and heard those half Southern/half English accents, and realized that this music had been made in Memphis, a place I had actually been to, I was hooked! There was no turning back.”

Wilco will appear at Mempho Fest on Sunday, October 2nd, 4:20 p.m., followed by a live appearance on WYXR 91.7 FM from 7-8 p.m.

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Music Music Blog

Wilco to Play Levitt Shell in First Fundraiser of the Year

Wilco

The band Wilco has longstanding ties to the Bluff City, reaching back to their 1994 debut, A.M., recorded at Easley-McCain Studio.

Even then, in their alt-country days, they displayed a reliable knack for both classic songwriting and sonic experimentation: a perfect fit with that renowned Memphis studio in its heyday. That such a spirit has remained and evolved with the band over the course of 10 subsequent studio albums is a testament to their collective restlessness with indie-pop conventions.

While the group has seen personnel changes over that time — a stable lineup featuring Nels Cline, Mikael Jorgensen, Glenn Kotche, Patrick Sansone, John Stirratt, and, of course, singer-songwriter Jeff Tweedy — it has endured since 2004. Now, in the wake of a marked ramping-up of Jeff Tweedy solo albums, they’re touring to support 2019’s Ode to Joy, which strikes a middle ground between the solo Tweedy’s more stripped-down approach and the wider sonic palette of previous Wilco albums.

Mellotron Variations at the Solid Sound Festival, 2019 (L-R, Pat Sansone, Robby Grant, Jonathan Kirkscey)

The band’s spirit of sonic exploration has lately infused the most recent Memphis/Wilco cross-pollination, in the form of the Mellotron Variations group, an ensemble of Mellotron players founded here by Robby Grant and Jonathan Kirkscey, which has grown to include John Medeski and Wilco’s Pat Sansone. The group’s concerts and rehearsals have made Sansone a more regular visitor from his home in Nashville, and when they played Wilco’s Solid Sound Festival in Massachusetts last year, the sympatico between Wilco and Memphis’ flair for the unconventional was sealed.

Thus, Wilco’s upcoming performance at the Levitt Shell on April 14th (just announced Tuesday) has a certain resonance with the Memphis music scene. Part of the Shell Yeah! Benefit Concert Series held at the iconic outdoor stage every year, this will precede the Shell’s regular Summer Orion Free Music Concert Series as a rare ticketed event — one of four this year — designed to raise funds for the many free concerts staged by the Levitt Shell.

Shell Yeah! Presents Wilco, Levitt Shell, Tuesday, April 14. 8:00 pm. Tickets on pre-sale February 5, public sale February 7.

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Music Music Blog

Pat Sansone: Making Memphis Mello Again

Sansonica, INC

Pat Sansone

“It’s gonna be a mellow acoustic set,” Pat Sansone says of his moment in the sun, down at the Harbor Town Amphitheater on Sunday, April 28th. His forecast matches that for the afternoon’s weather. It will be an ideal setting for that rare chance to hear Sansone’s songs, no doubt played with his usual musical dexterity. Better known as a multi-instrumentalist member of Wilco for the past 15 years, Sansone was a Wilco fan and a songwriter in his own right long before that.

He’ll be selecting from twenty years’ worth of songs he’s contributed to the band Autumn Defense, founded with Sansone’s friend John Stirratt in New Orleans. And even before that venture, Sansone was writing. “I was living in New Orleans for the back half of the 90s. At the studio where I worked in New Orleans, even before the Autumn Defense got going, I was working on a batch of solo material. I’m revisiting that stuff now to finally mix it properly and hopefully release it sometime later this year. It definitely has a kinship with Autumn Defense — very much influenced by the Zombies, the Beatles, the Kinks. English Psychedelic Pop.”

To these ears, there are also plenty of echoes of American renegades like Todd Rundgren or Emitt Rhodes. “Big Star and all sorts of other things were influences too. Shoegaze. A weird mish-mash of stuff, which is not very New Orleans-y. As much as I love New Orleans, and I love it dearly, and certainly John loves it as well, I think one of the reasons we connected so strongly was we both felt a little bit outside of what was happening musically in New Orleans. There just wasn’t much of an audience or interest for the kind of music we were making. I learned a lot in New Orleans, and I absorbed a lot of amazing music, but I didn’t necessarily feel like I was part of it, other than being a fan. That’s one of the reasons I left. I knew that the music that I was going to make and what I had to offer musically wasn’t something that New Orleans really needed or wanted,” he laughs.

Selections from the above mish-mash are what Sansone will be conjuring up Sunday, albeit in minimalist form. One of Autumn Defense’s strengths is their harmonies. Though Sansone and Stirratt are not kin, they sing harmonies like they are. On record, it can be difficult to distinguish their voices, especially when layered together on songs like the early gem “The Sun In California.”

“Working on that song was really a milestone in the realization of what we were about as a band,” Sansone recalls. That number from their second album was by Stirratt; naturally Sansone focuses on his own songs when playing solo. “I know I’ll be playing ‘The August Song,’ from our album Fifth, and I’ll play ‘Feel You Now’ from our self-titled album on piano.”

For Wilco fans who haven’t yet explored the Autumn Defense’s discography, the work holds up beautifully, and may be a kind of skeleton key into Wilco’s poppier moments.

“John and I had been doing the Autumn Defense for about five years before I got absorbed into the Wilco organism. It was a natural thing. I think the type of music that John and I connected over, was very much the same reason John and Jeff [Tweedy] connected. I remember hearing [Wilco album] Summerteeth. I guess it came out around the same time that John and I were working on the first Autumn Defense record. And there’s a similar heartbeat going on, between those two records.”

While the albums are available for the ages, a performance by Autumn Defense is a rare thing. “I don’t think we’re gonna do anything this year, except for a performance at Solid Sound.” That would be the Wilco-launched Solid Sound Festival, June 28th-31st in North Adams, Massachusetts. That festival will also notably play host to the Memphis-based ensemble behind last year’s Mellotron Variations, in which Sansone was a key player, along with Robby Grant, Jonathan Kirkscey, and John Medeski. (More on their new album and Solid Sound performance in the near future).

The Mellotron Variations project was clearly dear to Sansone’s heart. “I was really transported by it. And I have to say the Mellotron has been very helpful to me as far as arranging goes, because you have all those colors, and those instruments at your fingertips. It’s allowed me to do things I never would have been able to do without it.”

Indeed, that experience will feed right back into the Autumn Defense’s appearance at Solid Sound. “It will be fun,” Sansone says, “because it’s gonna be an acoustic performance with a string quartet. I wrote string arrangements for a handful of songs and I’m gonna be cranking out a few more. So, hopefully we can do an entire set with strings. That’s the only Autumn Defense performance on the books this year.”

As the band’s song “Things On My Mind” goes, “Let’s go, let’s get in the sun.” That, and the rarity of hearing those songs live, could well be an exhortation to attend Sunday’s gathering by the river.

Pat Sansone and Crystal Shrine will appear at The River Series at the Harbor Town Amphitheatre, Sunday, April 28, 3:00 pm. $5 admission.

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Opinion

What is the Impact of Free Concerts?

levitt-shell.jpg

Last weekend was a good one for concerts in Memphis, with Wilco at Mud Island Amphitheater and The Wandering at the Levitt Shell in Overton Park, both on Saturday night.

I have never seen so many people at Levitt Shell since the free concerts began. The hillside was packed by 7:30, and cars were parked (and towed) on Kenilworth, Overton Park, and other nearby streets. A Shell board member I ran into estimated the crowd at 2,500-3,000.

Two of my Flyer colleagues went to the Wilco concert and gave it great reviews, but said the amphitheater was about half full. Tickets were $42 plus handling charges.

The barbecue contest was also going on at Tom Lee Park Saturday night. All in all, a lot of people coming out downtown and in Midtown. And Sunday afternoon the zoo had such a big crowd that there were ten rows of cars parked on the grass outside the parking lot.

Back to the concerts, I wonder what performers, promoters, and fans think about the twin offerings of high-quality and somewhat similar music at the same time at the two venues. Most people bring food and drink to the Shell, where Ghost River was on sale for $3. At Mud Island beer was $5 and bringing in food and beverages was prohibited.

What impact is “free” having on the concert scene?

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Music Record Reviews

Wilco gets personal; Dino Jr comes back strong.

In the first verse of the first song on Wilco’s sixth studio album, Jeff Tweedy lays it all out: “Maybe you still love me/Maybe you don’t/Either you will or you won’t.” It’s generally agreed upon that the “you” he is addressing on “Either Way” and elsewhere on Sky Blue Sky is either his wife and family or his fans, but what’s perhaps more noteworthy is how closely that sentiment resembles one of the main tenets of A.A.: Let go and let God. Sky Blue Sky is Tweedy’s first collection of songs since he underwent rehab for painkillers, and the experience hangs over every aspect of the proceedings, placing Tweedy squarely at the center of each song.

As a result, Sky Blue Sky often feels more like a solo album than a band effort, despite Tweedy’s repeated statement that this is the best Wilco lineup yet. For the first time since maybe A.M. in 1995, the emphasis is on lyrical content rather than sonic innovation, producing Tweedy’s most direct and obviously personal songs to date. They’re also some of his best, eschewing the poetical obscurities of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot while showcasing his aggrieved passivity (on display in the 2002 documentary I Am Trying To Break Your Heart) as well as his uncertainties over family and music. “Oh, I didn’t die,” he sings plaintively on the title track. “I should be satisfied.”

If the songwriting is solid, however, the music, which approximates the no-frills Americana of the band’s early albums via the indulgences of their recent work, is confused, aimless, awkward, even annoying. The lineup so fondly touted by Tweedy has been wedged awkwardly into these songs, stranding ace drummer Glenn Kotche and multi-instrumentalist Pat Samsone with little to do but giving free rein to Tweedy and Nels Cline’s guitars. Every track gets a shrill and fumbly guitar solo, whether it needs one or not. “Impossible Germany” and “Side with the Seeds” both start strong, showcasing some of the album’s best melodies and, on the latter, Tweedy’s most soulful performance, but soon enough, both tracks veer off abruptly into noodly and aimless jams that actively detract from the songs’ impact. This is the rule, not the exception: Sky Blue Sky sounds unfocused and fragmented, lacking discipline, restraint, and transitions. It would have made a much better solo album. — Stephen Deusner

Grade: C+

(Nonesuch)

Does any release inspire lower expectations than a reunion album? Already 2007 has seen get-back-togethers that range from the forgettable (America) to the excruciating (the Stooges), with upcoming releases from Smashing Pumpkins, the Meat Puppets, and, um, Buffalo Tom falling between those two poles. So it’s a surprise that Dinosaur Jr’s reunion album, Beyond — the first in nearly 20 years to feature the original lineup of J Mascis, Lou Barlow, and Murph — not only exceeds meager expectations but stands up well against the trio’s original output.

Mascis, Barlow, and Murph recorded three albums together before clashing personalities drove bassist Barlow and then drummer Murph from the band. But during their four years together, they elaborated on hardcore’s loud-and-fast ethos with open-ended song structures, sprawling jams, and arty guitar effects that Mascis dubbed “ear-bleeding country.” Retrospectively vaunted as an also-ran Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr never gained a large enough audience for their music to be intrinsically linked to hardcore or any other scene, so their aesthetic still sounds as sturdy and fresh in 2007 as it did in 1987.

On Beyond, Mascis, Barlow, and Murph re-create their sound casually, slipping into their old, spiky dynamic as they pick up right where Bug left off. They bring convincing heavy-metal thunder to “It’s Me,” a lovely country shuffle to “We’re Not Alone,” and hardcore ferocity to “Pick Me Up.” Mascis’ eternally wounded vocals still contrast with the aggressiveness and abrasiveness of the music, and his guitar jazzily convolutes the riffs against Barlow and Murph’s agile rhythm section. The dynamics may not have changed, but they have grown deeper, thanks to lyrics that seem to address two decades of regret and uncertainty. “Will I crumble? Will I fly?” Mascis asks. Beyond is definitely the latter. — SD

Grade: A-