As I’ve said before, there’s nothing like a Memphis Flyer party.
Even when I worked for another newspaper and attended the Flyer’s Best of Memphis parties, I was blown away. So many people. So much fun. Cool bands. Cool people. Cool everything.
And the venues each year were, well, cool. My favorite Best of Memphis or “BOM” party was held on the roof of the parking garage of what is now Crosstown Concourse. I also loved the one in the old Imperial Lanes bowling alley on Summer Avenue. And the one at the FedEx Event Center at Shelby Farms next to where Coastal Fish Company is now located was the BOMb.
I gathered new memories at this year’s Best of Memphis party, which was held September 28th at The Ravine.
For those who don’t know about The Ravine, I wrote about it after covering Loving Local, a Project Green Fork event, last June. That was the first event held at The Ravine, which is behind Memphis Made Brewing Company.
Ethan Knight, vice-president of development for Development Services Group, the lead master developer for a number of efforts in The Edge District, including The Ravine, filled me in for that story.
Knight described it as “a community gathering point, a public plaza, a park, and, ultimately, it creates a natural gathering point for The Edge District.”
He told me The Ravine was an old railway, which used to be the end of the old Norfolk Southern Railway. “There was a railroad station north of Madison back before Danny Thomas (Boulevard),” Knight said in the interview. “Tracks ran along The Ravine and underneath Monroe and Madison. In the ‘60s and ‘70s the train station went away and they put in Danny Thomas.”
The Best of Memphis’ Ravine party was held 20 feet below Madison Avenue. “You’re down in this bowl,” Knight says. “Down in this ravine. It’s a good bit cooler down there than up on Madison and Monroe.”
Well, the night of the BOM party, it was cool. Very cool. As in hip.
Food trucks, live music, and tons of people, including Memphis celebs, were on hand to party from late afternoon until it got dark. People would have stayed much longer, but the party was over at 8 p.m. on the dot. That’s when food trucks closed down. And, if you were lucky like I was, you got one of the last cupcakes from Cupcake Cutie, Etc.
About 1,000 guests attended. Entertainment was provided by Mighty Souls Brass Band, Blvck Hippie, and DJ Zetta. Alongside Cupcake Cutie Etc., food was provided by El Mero Taco, The Genre, Da Guilty Vegan, and Smoke and Ice.
Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until early 2017, when he joined Contemporary Media.