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“There are cool cats and there are cool Memphis cats but no one, not
Elvis, not Jerry Lee, not even the Wolf came close to epitomizing Memphis
and cool like Jim Dickinson did. He was the Top Cat Daddy, an
inspiration, a mentor and my friend.

If you knew his music and understood his role as one of the links between
black and white culture and between blues and rock and roll, you know what
I'm talking about. If he is unfamiliar to you, now's as good time as any
to get to know him, even though he's checked out of the motel.”

--Joe Nick Patoski


For more about Jim go to
http://www.zebraranch.com
http://joenickp.blogspot.com/2009/08/james-luther-dickinson.html

Friday, July 26, 2013

Here's a video of Jojo Hermann from Widespread Panic and Luther and Cody playing on the band "Missing Cats" tour.  Cody says that Jojo is frank about Jim teaching him to play keyboards when Jim was producing Jojo's original group, Beanland, at Sounds Unreal Studio in Memphis.   It is refreshing to hear how much Jojo sounds like Jim playing piano.  His joy in pounding out those rock 'n' roll eighth notes is the same as Jim's.  This video is reminiscent of the last verse of the song Luther wrote for his dad called "Ain't no Grave" on North Mississippi Allstar's  record, "Keys to the Kingdom:'
"If I had my way, he's be here today, sit down at the piano and play...."  

Jim wrote in his Last Words,  " As long as the music lingers, I'll be there." 

Listen and enjoy as Jim's legacy lives on....





Saturday, July 20, 2013

40th Anniversary Concert at the Levitt Shell on July 13, 2013

Last Saturday, Memphians, musicians and music fans alike, came together to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Memphis chapter of The Recording Academy.  Given the breadth and depth of music spanning those 40 years (and more), it would be quite a challenge to fit it all into a single evening.  Three hours after it began, it ended in a joyous finale of  the North Mississippi Allstars' "The Meeting"  with all the musicians on stage, much to the delight of both the musicians and crowd.

Larry Nager provided a first hand account of the evening which was published earlier this week on grammy.com (http://www.grammy.com/blogs/set-list-bonus-memphis-chapter-40th-anniversary-celebration-at-levitt-shell)  Many thanks to Larry and The Recording Academy.  There is a nice photo slideshow at the link.

The North Mississippi Allstars with Al Kapone
Photo: Greg Campbell/WireImage.com


What started as a celebration of history — the 40th anniversary of The Recording Academy Memphis Chapter — wound up making history, as the all-star concert on July 13 drew the largest-ever crowd at one of the city's most venerable venues, the Levitt Shell in Overton Park, where Elvis Presley played his first major concert on July 30, 1954, 59 years ago this month.

The King has left the building, but his spirit lived on in singer/bassist Amy LaVere's medley tribute to Sun Records, as she performed his first single, the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame-inducted "That's All Right." The performance opened a three-hour concert event that crossed genres, generations and state lines, showcasing the past, present and future of the region's diverse musical culture.

Despite a busy Saturday night that included a Robert Plant concert and a full slate of music on Beale Street, 6,500 Memphis music lovers gathered for a night that featured legendary artists such as Carla Thomas, who, in a rare appearance, sang her first hit, "Gee Whiz" (which was also the first Top 10 hit for the fledgling Stax/Satellite label). She was joined by siblings Vaneese and Marvell Thomas in one of the evening's most resonant performances. Along with the First Family of Memphis Soul, the show featured the Hodges brothers' Hi Rhythm Section — one of the greatest R&B sections ever — as the house band.

But this celebration wasn't just a master class in Memphis heritage. First-generation Stax star William Bell performed with the Bo-Keys, a group combining veteran soul singer Percy Wiggins with younger players. That mix of age spotlighted the timelessness of the region's music, as contemporary gospel powerhouse Sheri Jones-Moffett took everyone to church with her emotive "Take My Hand, Precious Lord" and the up-and-coming Memphis Dawls remembered the famous Dusty In Memphis sessions with "Son Of A Preacher Man." Singer/songwriter Shannon McNally paid tribute to two Chapter greats who've passed: Memphis soul pioneer Bobby "Blue" Bland and Louisiana's eclectic singer/songwriter Bobby Charles.

The GRAMMY-winning Rebirth Brass Band took the packed crowd down to New Orleans for a funky Mardi Gras, while Lafayette's Roddie Romero and Eric Adcock, of Roddie Romero And The Hub City All-Stars, added zydeco and Cajun sounds, creating a Louisiana-Memphis fusion with Hi Rhythm.

Legendary disc jockey Henry Nelson served as announcer, and video from The Recording Academy's GRAMMY Living Histories archive ran during set changes, bringing deceased icons such as Sam Phillips, Rufus Thomas, Willie Mitchell, Jim Dickinson, and Isaac Hayes to the party.

And the man who started it all, Knox Phillips, oldest son of Sam Phillips, whose tireless lobbying resulted in Memphis landing its charter 40 years ago, received a commemorative note on the Beale Street Brass Note Walk of Fame just before the show began.

The "working musician" nature of the Memphis Chapter's leadership was strikingly displayed in a segment introduced by former Chapter President David Porter. "The Presidents" (all one-time Chapter Presidents) featured hitmaking former Chapter presidents backed by Hi Rhythm, from the roots-rock of Jimmy Davis to the sweet soul of Susan Marshall to the hip-hop of Al Kapone. The latter paid tribute to Memphis with "The Music," with surprising accompaniment by a string quartet and a horn section that included veteran trumpeter Ben Cauley, the sole survivor of the 1967 plane crash that claimed the lives of eight people, including Otis Redding. The band also included former Chapter President Scott Bomar (bass) and current Chapter President Lawrence "Boo" Mitchell (percussion).

The North Mississippi All Stars closed the night, getting the crowd dancing one more time to the trio's full-tilt blues-inspired rock. Closing in style, all of the musicians came back for a finale featuring the gospel-fueled "The Meeting."

Many of Memphis' most important musical families were present — the Phillips, Thomases, Mitchells, Hodges, and Dickinsons. But on this unseasonably cool July night, the bonds transcended blood and borders, as rock, blues, soul, funk, country, Cajun, hip-hop, classical, and gospel musicians of all ages and several states — the Memphis Chapter's extended musical family — came together for an unforgettable reunion.

(Larry Nager is a Nashville-based writer, musician and documentary filmmaker. A proud former Memphian, he is the author of Memphis Beat (St. Martin's Press) and the writer and co-producer of the film Bill Monroe: Father Of Bluegrass Music. He has been a member of the Memphis Chapter for more than 25 years.)

Set list:
Amy LaVere
"That's Alright"/Sun Records Medley
"Often Happens"
"Never Been Sadder"

The Hi Rhythm Section
"Soul Serenade"
Sheri Jones-Moffett
"Precious Lord, Take My Hand"
"Shine"

The Memphis Dawls
"Son Of A Preacher Man"
"Turtle Dove"

Roddie Romero and Eric Adcock with the Hi Rhythm Section, with Wendy Moten and Stefanie Bolton
"Riverside"
"Party Down"

"The Presidents" with the Hi Rhythm Section
Jimmy Davis, "I Take What I Want"
Al Kapone, "The Music"/"Whoop That Trick"
Susan Marshall, "What A Man"
Stefanie Bolton, "I Can't Stand The Rain"
Wendy Moten, "Save Me"
Susan Marshall, Stefanie Bolton and Wendy Moten, "Let's Stay Together"

Shannon McNally with the Hi Rhythm Section (Tribute to Bobby "Blue" Bland and Bobby Charles)
"Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City"
"String Of Hearts"

Rebirth Brass Band
"Feel Like Funkin' It Up"
"I Like It Like That"

Carla Thomas, Marvell Thomas and Vaneese Thomas with the Hi Rhythm Section
"The Breakdown, Part 1"
"The Memphis Train"
"Gee Whiz"/"If There Were No Music"

The Bo-Keys featuring Percy Wiggins
"Writing On The Wall"

William Bell with the Bo-Keys
"Easy Comin' Out (Hard Goin' In)"
"Tryin' To Love Two"
"I Forgot To Be Your Lover"

North Mississippi Allstars
"Rollin' & Tumblin'"
"Snake Drive"
"The Meeting"