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Music Video Monday: Motel Mirrors

It’s a dreamy Music Video Monday!

Beale Street Caravan’s I Listen To Memphis series rolls on with the first-ever video from Memphis supergroup Motel Mirrors. John Paul Keith and Amy LaVere first teamed up in 2013 to create a perfect stew of elegant songwriting, countryfied harmonies, and twangy picking. For their long gestating second album, they were joined by LaVere’s husband Will Sexton on guitar and Shawn Zorn on drums. This version of “I Wouldn’t Dream Of It” was recorded live at the Galloway House, the former church in Cooper-Young where Johnny Cash played his very first show. The video series was directed by Christian Walker and produced by Waheed AlQawasmi. Take a look and listen!

Music Video Monday: Motel Mirrors

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Music Music Blog

Twin Releases by John Paul Keith and Motel Mirrors Celebrated at Railgarten

Jamie Harmon

Motel Mirrors

Today marks the long-awaited release of twin records by both John Paul Keith (Heart Shaped Shadow) and Motel Mirrors (In the Meantime), the latter being Keith’s side project with Amy Lavere and Will Sexton. The latter group’s record features the lovely blend of harmonies between Keith and Lavere, tending toward the country side of life, love and loss, though with dips into rock ‘n’ roll, country/folk rock and the New Orleans groove. Keith’s new record is even more eclectic, venturing into all of the above as well as soul and the Bakersfield sound. More than ever, his voice has matured into a nuanced instrument with rich hints of a young Roy Orbison. It’s been ages since we’ve heard new material from either group, so fans of their shared take on classic roots sounds should turn out in force at their dual record release party tonight at Railgarten. I spoke with John Paul Keith a bit about how these records came together and the way they changed his approach to songwriting.

Memphis Flyer: It seems like you’ve had the songs from your new album in your live set for about a year.

John Paul Keith: Yeah, the record’s been in the can for almost a year. It just takes insane amounts of time to get product released. I don’t have management and it’s just moving a boulder uphill by yourself, all the time. And I paid for it all myself, when I had a little bit of extra money where I could afford to go in the studio. We broke it up into two tracking sessions, and then two or three mix sessions, just whenever I had a little money, you know? On the cheap.

Are these self-released?

No, they’re both coming out on Last Chance Records out of Little Rock.

Is there anything new in your approach, compared to your earlier records?

Well, this is the first one I’ve made without the 145’s, Al Gamble, Mark Stuart and John Argroves. My other three records were with those guys. So this one I wanted to do a little differently. At that point, none of those guys were in my live rotation anymore. Just by circumstance. And at that point, Shawn Zorn was playing in my live band most of the time. He started out as the Mirrors’ drummer, and ended up being my drummer, too. So I thought since I had a bunch of different guys I was playing live with, I would just shake it up and do it differently. And just do different guys for different songs. So it was different that way.

And the Mirrors record was kind of a creative breakthrough with me. I hadn’t had a record in five years, and I didn’t know what I wanted to do. I started making the Mirrors record with Amy & Will, and it’s the first time I’d really worked with Will, or written songs with Will, or been in the studio with him. And that was kind of a creative breakthrough for me, where it broke this creative logjam I had. I had written a batch of songs that weren’t very good, and that had delayed my next record. I just didn’t know where I was going, musically. And then we did the Mirrors record and I felt like I knew what to do next.

So I asked Will to produce my record and we just kinda kept going. We did both in Scott Bomar’s studio, and it’s a very similar group of people. Will is on most of it, Shawn is on most of it, Amy plays bass on a couple songs on my record. One of the songs on my record was going to be on the Mirrors record. We cut it on those sessions, and then ended up shuffling it to my record. So it was kinda like one long session in a way, broken up over a two year period.

I take it that you wrote all the stuff on your record. Is the Mirrors record very collaborative?

Basically, because Amy & Will had a really busy tour schedule, we only had a week to get material together and a week to track it. We’d already booked the time. So when they got off the road we realized we only had a short time to get the material together. So I would just go over to their house every evening, and we’d sit in their kitchen. They had two or three that they had been writing, and I had two or three that I had been writing, but we didn’t have enough. So we wrote a few things together and just pulled it together. I’d say it’s about half separate compositions and then half collaborations of some kind. And then there’s one cover on there, “The Man Who Comes Around,” an old Western Swing tune.

Oh, I wondered about the reference to the Fuller Brush man, who “comes around to sell a brush.”

Yeah, and the ice! The ice delivery is mentioned in that song. Pre-refrigeration, that song!

So one of those nights while we were writing, we got the text that our friend Josh Benton had died. That’s where the song “Funerals in New Orleans” came from. And we ended up dedicating the record to him. He and I were born two days apart. My birthday’s July 1st, his is July 3rd, and we both turned 40 that year. He was having a birthday party on the 1st at Bar DKDC, which happened to be my birthday, and he asked me if I’d play, and that’s where that line, “You’re party spilled into my show” came from. I wasn’t going play on my birthday, but he asked me to, and we said, “Okay, we’ll make it into a double birthday party for us both.” So we did it, and then he was dead about two weeks later. I ended up playing his wake in the same bar, about three weeks after I played our fortieth birthday party.

So it kinda did a number on my psyche.
Matt White

John Paul Keith

It was that whole period…I got divorced in the middle of making my last record, Memphis Circa 3 am, and one of the reasons I haven’t been able to get a record out in all this time is that I was going through a personal crisis during all that time. And with Josh dying right in the middle of making the Mirrors record, that was kind of the lowest point, honestly. And so once we got through the Mirrors record, I knew exactly what I needed to do. I knew what kind of songs I should be writing and how to express things more fearlessly and to trust in the stuff that’s hard to say sometimes. Sometimes the stuff you don’t really wanna reveal is the stuff that, as an artist, you need to be revealing.

Now, time’s have changed in the time it’s taken me to get this record out, you know? From the writing to the release of this record, there have been these big cultural changes. I thought Hillary Clinton was gonna be president when we started these records. Trump won after all of it was written and a lot of it was recorded. The Mirrors was completely in the can. So I have no topical songs or anything. And I don’t really write topical songs either. That’s just not my forte. That’s never something I’ve been successful at. But I’d like to be better at it. I think we’re all gonna have to be better at it if we wanna be artists who create work of worth.

But that vulnerability is timeless. Reaching into yourself more… “Blue on Blue,” from the Motel Mirrors record, for instance.

That was a song Will and I wrote together. And that song was a total surprise. I remember very clearly writing in the van with Amy, years ago. I remember having this conversation about how I try not to use the word “love” in songs. It’s just something I try not to do. I try to say it another way, or veil it in metaphor, or whatever. It’s because I was coming from a place where I was afraid to reveal things. I had been in an unhappy marriage for a long time, and it’s kinda like the John Lennon “Norwegian Wood” thing: you don’t wanna write things that upset your spouse or that cause problems in your personal life. Or I’d try to be clever, and witty, and it’s kinda cynical to do that.

And the thing I got out of the Motel Mirrors record was that Will and Amy put a stop to that. With the songs they were bringing, they were expressing stuff that was very vulnerable. And deeply personal, like the title track, and everything Will writes is that way. So when we were sitting down to write, I’d bring certain things in that I felt strong about, and they were like, “Nah!” And eventually I’d show ’em something I wasn’t very confident about and they’d go, “That’s the best thing you brought!” Like “Let Me be Sweet to You,” where I didn’t even know if that was good enough to be on a record, and now that we’ve done it it’s one of my favorite ones on there. But I was afraid to reveal that. I was afraid to express that and for people to see that side of me. Working with Will and Amy made me understand, that’s what I’m supposed to do as a writer. Like the old tune says, “You’ve Got to Live the Life You Sing About in Your Song.”

So that gave me the clarity and the direction and the confidence I needed for the next record. Making the Mirrors record was what got me through the dark period I was going through, but it also got my writing to where I feel like it needed to be. Now I already have enough material for another record, written from that time. And I’m always writing, and I feel good about the future and how writing songs is what I do, it’s how I get through life.

And now I don’t plan on ever taking that long between records again. I want to put out a record every year, every 18 months, as much as I can. That’s just what I wanna do with my life, period.

To circle back, now I use “love” all the time. I was totally wrong when we had that conversation in the van. Now I’m writing all love songs and not hiding anything, just laying it all out there. I also really took to heart this Ernest Hemingway quote about writing. He said, “Write hard and clear about what hurts.” And I have that on a Post-it above my desk, I see it all the time, and I always keep it in mind when I’m writing now.

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Music Music Blog

Beale Street Music Festival 2017: A Perfect Saturday

I can understand why some people don’t like to go to large, outdoor music festivals. They can be hot and dusty as the Sahara, or as rainy and muddy as the Western Front. Like any situation with a huge crowd, you can run into annoying people. And worst of all for music fans, the sound can be hit or miss: Either it’s so muddy you can’t hear the performances, or there’s so much bass bleed from the giant EDM party on the next stage, the band you came to hear gets drown out.

But Saturday at Beale Street Music Festival 2017 was an example of everything that can go right with an outdoor music festival. First and foremost, the weather couldn’t have been more perfect. The temperature topped out at 79 degrees, with brilliant sun only occasionally eclipsed by puffy clouds. Humidity was non-existent, and the steady breeze off the river drove away mosquitos and kept everybody cool. The sound was perfect, the acts were high quality, and the crowd, while enormous, was mellow and happy. Even the mud from last week’s rains had mostly dried by the time the first bands took the stage after 2 PM.

Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017

Memphian Amy LaVere was the first up on the FedEx stage at the southernmost end of Tom Lee Park. Backed by her husband Will Sexton and ace Memphis guitar slinger David Cousar, she won over the gathering crowd with an atmospheric take on her song ‘Killing Him”.

I watched about half of Amy’s near flawless set before hoofing it all the way to the other end of the park to catch another one of Memphis’ great live acts, Dead Soldiers (whom I interviewed for this week’s Memphis Flyer cover story). By the time I got to the River Stage, the band was going full throttle through songs from their new album The Great Emptiness. At one point, singer Michael Jasud realized he had a wireless mic and decided to take advantage of it. He leapt into the crowd and sang a couple of verses surrounded by the cheering audience. After returning to the stage for the climax of the song, the winded singer said “I just want y’all to know the level athleticism it takes to do that. It’s a level I do not possess.”

The Dead Soldiers’ Michael Jasud sings in the crowd during BSMF ’17.

A couple of songs later, drummer Paul Gilliam grabbed a tambourine and made his own crowd excursion.

Dead Soldiers drummer Paul Gilliam leads the BSMF crowd in a sing a long.

After the set, I ran into trombonist Victor Sawyer. The Dead Soldiers set was the third one he had played at Beale Street Music Festival, twice with the Soldiers and once with Victor Wainwright and the Wild Roots. “It’s always incredible!” he said. “It so cool to see a big crowd out there, with old faces and lots of new faces.”

Victor Sawyer (left) and Nashon Bedford play with Dead Soldiers at BSMF ’17.

I spent the rest of the day crisscrossing Tom Lee Park, trying to catch as many acts as I could. KONGOS from South Africa battled high winds as they meandered through a jammy cover of The Beatles’ “Get Back”, with singer Daniel Kongos pausing in the middle to deliver a rap. The crowd, which by mid-afternoon had swelled into the tens of thousands, went nuts for their ubiquitous hit “Come With Me Now”.

The Beale Street Music Festival lineups favor music performed by actual humans, but festival EDM was well represented by GriZ on the Bud Light stage. The Michigan producer had a major dance party going with his beats, to which he occasionally added saxophone solos. MUTEMATH was next, and judging by the ecstatic reception they got, the death of alt rock has been greatly exaggerated.

I always try to drop by the Blues Shack, and his year I caught Terry “Harmonica” Bean keeping a couple  hundred festival goers entranced with his strong Hill Country blues groove, tapped out with a strong booted foot. For Memphians, this kind of thing can seem old hat, but for at least some of the people gathered in front of the Blues Shack, Bean’s performance was a revelation.

Terry ‘Harmonica’ Bean at the Blues Tent.

Speaking of revelations, the Drive-By Truckers‘ sunset set proved to the best performance of a day filled with strong musicianship. It started off a little rough, and a few minutes late, but once the Athenians built up some momentum, they were incredible. As the sun went down, singer Mike Cooley commented on the beauty of the backdrop. This is the first year the I-55 bridge has been lit up during Memphis in May, and combined with the spectacular sunset, it made for a beautiful tableau against which the band played a muscular, searing set. In a heartfelt monologue recalling his own youthful days of partying, Cooley dedicated a song to Jordan Edwards, an African American teenager who was shot in April by Texas police as he left a party.

The view from the Memphis Flyer tent as the Drive-By Truckers’s sunset performance.

The big draw of the River Stage was the one-two punch of hip hop superstars. Dressed in black with his dreadlocks tied behind, the Atlanta rapper 2 Chainz played with his DJ E Sudd to an adoring, overflow audience, introducing songs from his upcoming album Pretty Girls Like Trap Music, and tearing the proverbial roof off with a triumphant reading of his hit “I”m Different”. I watched about half of the set before wandering over the the River Stage to catch some of Death Cab For Cutie, who were playing in front of an equally large, if somewhat more subdued, crowd. Death Cab made their reputation with small, intricately structured rock songs, but at Tom Lee Park, they traded their twee for a stadium pounding rendition of “The New Year” that was all feedback smears and power chords. Singer Ben Gibbard looked like he was having the time of his life.

When I returned to the River Stage, Wiz Khalifa was holding court with a blunt in one hand and a microphone in the other. I only was able to get within about a quarter mile of the stage area, which was packed to the gills with dancing humanity. By this time, the audience had swelled to a size that was as big as I’ve ever seen at BSMF. Maybe it was the idyllic weather, or maybe it was the clouds of pot smoke rising from Khalifa’s adoring fans, but everyone seemed very chill, happy, and friendly. In times past, it has not been unusual for me to see a fight or two over the course of the weekend. One memorable BSMF in the 1990s, I saw a full on brawl by the porta potties that resulted in overturned outhouses and a couple of very unhappy festival goers covered in blue sewage. This year, there was not even a hint of that. A couple of times, people bumped into me and actually apologized! As confetti rained down on the Wiz Khalifa crowd, I found myself thinking that this Memphis In May Saturday shows what’s great about Memphis, and what a great music festival can be.

Confetti rains on Wiz Khalifa.

Will Sexton plays with Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017.

David Cousar backs Amy LaVere at BSMF 2017

Michael Jasud, Paul Gilliam, and Krista Wroten Combest of Dead Soldiers.

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Music Music Blog

Amy LaVere and Will Sexton at Bar DKDC Tonight

Amy LaVere and Will Sexton

Amy LaVere and WIll Sexton play Bar DKDC tonight at 6 p.m. during happy hour. Shows at Bar DKDC normally start later in the night, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the midtown bar will be any less packed. 

Check out videos from LaVere and Sexton below, and then brave the winter weather to hear some great local music. 

 

Amy LaVere and Will Sexton at Bar DKDC Tonight

Amy LaVere and Will Sexton at Bar DKDC Tonight (2)

Amy LaVere and Will Sexton at Bar DKDC Tonight (3)