tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-61029809204440974042024-03-20T03:12:07.604-07:00Jim Dickinson's LegacyDickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.comBlogger92125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-52205832464360429762016-01-31T11:37:00.002-08:002016-01-31T11:38:53.639-08:00North Mississippi Allstars Declared as Unofficial Musical Ambassadors for the State by MS Senate<p>On Wednesday, January 27, 2016, The North Mississippi Allstars were recognized by the State legislature of Mississippi as the unofficial Musical Ambassadors for the State of Mississippi. Check out this video of the reading of the proclamation on the Senate floor. An exciting day for all of us. Wish you all could have been there, but the video will help you share the moment with all of us.
<p>(video courtesy of Angie Galle Ladner.)
<p>"NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CONCURRING THEREIN, That we do hereby recognize the North Mississippi Allstars Band as unofficial Musical Ambassadors for the State of Mississippi and welcoming them on the occasion of the Mississippi Tourism Association Legislative Reception on January 27, 2016."
<p>Read the full Senate resolution here: <a href="http://billstatus.ls.state.ms.us/documents/2016/html/SC/SC0534IN.htm">Link to MS State Senate Resolution SC 534</a>. <br />
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<p>Posted by <a href="https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=6102980920444097404#" role="button">Angie Galle Ladner</a> on Wednesday, January 27, 2016</blockquote>
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Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-63745257341123546682016-01-31T11:15:00.000-08:002016-01-31T11:16:13.762-08:00Blues and Ballads - A Folksinger's Songbook<p>"Blues and Ballads- A Folksinger's Songbook" is Luther's new solo release on New West Records. NPR Music has chosen a cut off it called "Ain't No Grave" to be included in their "Songs We Love" section. It's a moving and informative essay and you can imagine how this song touches our hearts. <br />
<br />
<p><iframe src="http://www.npr.org/player/embed/464469652/464471060" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">"Ain't No Grave"</iframe><br />
<p>
From NPR Music:
<p>On "Ain't No Grave," a track from his new solo album, the singer-guitarist <a href="http://www.lutherdickinson.com/">Luther Dickinson</a> stares death right in the face, quite literally. The song's opening words are "I looked death dead in the eye as he passed me by." But the frontman for the <a href="http://www.nmallstars.com/">North Mississippi Allstars</a> isn't indulging in morbidity; he's delivering a deeply felt tribute to his late father, James Luther "Jim" Dickinson.
<p>Jim Dickinson was a larger-than-life figure in American music, active in rock, blues and R&B from the 1960s until his passing in 2009. As a producer and musician, he worked with everyone from Aretha Franklin and the Rolling Stones to The Replacements and Big Star, ultimately becoming an institution in his hometown of Memphis. "Ain't No Grave," first appeared on the 2011 Allstars LP, Keys to the Kingdom, in an electrified, full-band arrangement. But for Blues & Ballads (A Folksinger's Songbook: Volumes I & II), Luther strips things down, embracing the low-key balladeer format implied by the album's title. His re-recording of the song, with an assist from the legendary soul singer Mavis Staples (of the Staples Singers), follows suit.
<p>"One morning shortly after my father passed I woke up and wrote 'Ain't No Grave' before I even turned on my light," says Luther. "The words coming out as fast as I could write them. Mavis and I planned to cut another song but we decided to record 'Ain't No Grave' when she teared up reading the lyrics. What you hear is the first and only take."
<p>In his trademark husky tones, Luther sings of Jim's courage in facing death, his mother's steadfastness in her husband's time of strife, and seeing his father's likeness in his own child's face. He punctuates these observations with a refrain quoting the Claude Ely-penned gospel song that became a folk-blues standard, and which shares a title with Dickinson's tune. Ely's song takes on the perspective of a dead or dying man, while Dickinson's offers the view of the loved ones left behind. The addition of Staples' gospel-schooled voice on those choruses adds an extra level of gravitas.
<p>And preacher/songsmith Ely isn't the only songwriter quoted here. When Luther sings, "It has been my fortune to know truly great men and hear the music of the spheres" on the tune's bridge, he's not exercising poetic license; it's a line taken directly from the message his father wrote in a farewell note to the world, right before death. But like the narrator in Ely's song, Jim Dickinson was too big a presence to be obliterated from our earthly realm. Or as his son's song succinctly puts it, "Ain't no grave hold this body down."
<p>Blues & Ballads (A Folksinger's Songbook: Volumes I & II) is out February 5 on <a href="http://www.newwestrecords.com/">New West Records</a>.
Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-46040782490521089442015-08-18T18:30:00.001-07:002015-08-18T18:30:47.134-07:00Remembering Jim - Harris ScheunerI'm reprinting this visitor's post that Harris Scheuner wrote Saturday about Jim. Here's what I believe Jim would say about it:
"Not just yes, but HELL, YES!!!"
"World boogie is coming!"
Harris Scheuner:
As I begin to write about Jim Dickinson on the anniversary of his just being dead, not being gone, in my head I am listening to him playing, "There's No Place Like Home" which he played and sung with such an emotion......As soon as I could understand and speak words, I found my truths, my morality, my my strength, my solace on 70's AM radio...WHBQ and WMPS, my theme song, at age six was Sunshine by Jonathon Edwards....." He can't even run his own life, I'll be damned if he'll run mine" I would later in life understand that the song was about our government, but to me it was about my home life. To say the least, there was no positive role model at our house, and so, it went for years, messages about right and wrong, and fairness, and such came from my only true and respectable friend, Rock-n-Roll. Then, on Halloween 1985 at Handy Park on Beale Street, I saw Mudboy and the Neutrons for the first time, and had my life's one true epiphany. Jim was Rock-n-Roll and truth and justice all wrapped up in a brutal Rock-n-Roll rage, and for the first time in my life, I felt like I was in church the way church is supposed to be on it's best day, and for the first time in my life, I felt at home....Standing in awe in Handy Park, I felt at home for the very first time in my life.....and I felt that all this time, I had been right.....right to find what is right through Rock-n-Roll, and that there were others, and that of it all, Jim was the leader. That is Jim Dickinson's Legacy, Shouting truth with songs and with speech, and encouraging others to do so, not by asking them to, but by powerful example. Jim was not shy about what he had to say, he meant it, and he said it loud and clear. Going to see/hear him was the food for my spirit, for my soul. He was the closest thing to a pastor or rabbi I ever had, he never ever failed to talk about some injustice or wrong, or right both through speech and song, and it kept my spirit full and satisfied. Maybe it is the loneliest, most empty people....people with less love and family than need there church and there pastor the most. On August 15th 2009, I was set to have a pretty good night, I when to the Antenna for the Antenna Reunion the night before, and it was like the best high school reunion ever, and was set to reunite, after 20 years, with my band Los Pimpin' that night.....hadn't played out in a long while, and was excited to play, then Linda Heck gave me the news, and the bottom fell out. No words.....If you don't know who Jim was, he would say that you were better off, but if you have know idea of him, just think; he was the Perry Mason of Rock-n-Roll.....he is to Rock-n-roll what Moses was to the Jews......he was the king of goodness through Rock-n-Roll.....the wisest of wise men.....So after a few hours of no words, then I became enraged, like Lt. Dan in Forrest Gump up on top of the pole screaming at God that he had pushed me just too far, and that if he wanted to come fight for it just outside of Murphy's, that I was ready and not in the mood to wait.....and in a fist fight with God on that day, I would have won.....easily. So with that spirit we played our stupid little gig, and in honor of our fallen leader, we played "I've Had It" a song he is known for, or rather a song that is known because of him, with Greg Cartwright sitting in and singing it. Needless to say further, but I will, I wanted to be him when I grew up....He was and still is my role model. Sometimes when I speak up for or against something, I am often viewed as a jerk. I don't have the "it" that Jim had nor the grace, but when I get weak and think about not speaking up, I think of the video of him that I saw at his tribute. To paraphrase, he said when "they" don't like it, or "they" disagree, and they tell you to stop, he said don't tell them no, tell them HELL NO! So as I feel like George Bailey standing on the bridge, I'll use the same words he did; Dear Lord, if you are up there, and you can hear me.....please help us cultivate and grow that which Jim planted in us.....show me the way, Lord, show us the way. World Boogie is coming if it kills me!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-56527086557584969712015-08-18T18:25:00.000-07:002015-08-18T18:25:44.133-07:00Six yearsSix years ago, I walked into our home on the Zebra
Ranch for the first time as a widow. The phone was ringing. I answered
it. It was a reporter from Reuters, a world wide news organization.
Jim had been dead a handful of hours. I couldn't believe the news had
broken so fast. I hung up the phone in a daze after talking to the
reporter. The second I put the phone down, it rang again. It was my
niece from Florida, giving me her condolences for my loss. I wa<span class="text_exposed_show">s
bewildered. It was the first inkling I had of the magnitude of Jim's
fame. Since then James Luther Dickinson's legacy has spread. Cody
dedicated the magnificent movie he conceived and produced (with his
partner, Martin Shore), "Take me to the River," to his father, and
played with Luther on the NMA CD that Luther mostly wrote, "Keys to the
Kingdom." The music they play around the world keeps his legacy alive,
proving his now famous last words, "I'm just dead, I'm not gone." </span><br />
<br />
Surprise! The best is yet to come! That is a promise!<br />
<br />
Meanwhile, an important man in the life of Luther and his family, the
Rector of Gray St. Luke's Episcopal church and school, was so touched by
Luther's songs in "Keys to the Kingdom," that he asked Luther to play
for the church these songs and tell how he came to write them. I do
believe this is the best, most transcendent playing that has ever come
out of Luther's guitar.<br />
<br /> What do you think?<br />
<br />
As Jim would say, "Sit back, relax, pour some whiskey in your glass. Enjoy"<br />
<br />
World boogie is coming!<br />
<br />
<iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/107764174" width="500" height="375" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe> <p><a href="https://vimeo.com/107764174">Up Over Yonder: The Sights and Sounds of Heaven with Luther Dickinson from the band North Mississippi Allstars</a> from <a href="https://vimeo.com/gracestlukes">Grace-St. Lukes Episcopal Church</a> on <a href="https://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-3887752947522474412015-02-04T17:04:00.003-08:002015-02-04T17:04:56.347-08:00Remembering John Fry<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<span class="userContent">I can't let this week slip by without writing
more in tribute to John Fry, not the music man or the gentleman or the
friend of all who wanted to learn about everything from studio
engineering to aviation. (Yes, John taught many of his young<span class="text_exposed_show">
engineers to fly airplanes). The John Fry I want to remember tonight
was my prayer partner, my brother in Christ; a fearless, fervent witness
to whomever would listen about the Gospel, the good news that "God so
loved the world that He sent His only begotten Son that whosoever
believes in Him will not perish but have everlasting life." John ran the
Evangelism Explosion at Bellevue Baptist Church for eighteen years and
himself knocked on many a door asking people if he could come into their
homes and pray for them. Of course, John being John, music could not be
far behind and along with my nephew, Eddie DeGarmo and his band,
DeGarmo and Key, John had a great hand in recording the first Christian
rock music that still rocks our world. I can see John now- up in Heaven,
resetting the EQ in the great Control Room in the Sky and holding the
Keys to the Kingdom, while St. Peter takes a break.<br /> <br /> This photo
was from such a fun night in Nov. 2012. Al Kapone gave a smoking
performance, John accepted a Pyramid Award from the Blues Ball for Big
Star, and Jim was posthumously honored as one of the inaugural members
of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame. Two years later we celebrate the life
of our remarkable, unforgettable, and irreplaceable friend, John Fry,
and his almost fifty years of setting the bar for excellence in Memphis
music. I praise the Lord for the privilege of having known and revered
John. I will treasure his memory always.<br /> <br /> <span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>(photo courtesy Sharon Bicks)</i></span></span></span>Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-87868535154154352322015-02-02T16:00:00.001-08:002015-02-02T16:00:54.853-08:00Jim with Joe Hardy at Ardent Studios - "Quantizing"<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmXfZpd8VW-44rV5s5ewSZe3sqjOYKdbo16wjZlTzTFlRx5HC-pdj78EFCKZ-drW_HWhvU_iIq0iMcM8anfLi1Ck7OrWCSjpYAsRdu7mRVoXW81X4tsrE1A69F-43G-pA7uy9CJS9-aYnQ/s1600/ardent_jimd-joehardy.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmXfZpd8VW-44rV5s5ewSZe3sqjOYKdbo16wjZlTzTFlRx5HC-pdj78EFCKZ-drW_HWhvU_iIq0iMcM8anfLi1Ck7OrWCSjpYAsRdu7mRVoXW81X4tsrE1A69F-43G-pA7uy9CJS9-aYnQ/s1600/ardent_jimd-joehardy.jpg" height="313" width="400" /></a></div>
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<span class="fbPhotosPhotoCaption" data-ft="{"tn":"*G","type":45}" id="fbPhotoPageCaption" tabindex="0"><span class="hasCaption">Jim with Joe Hardy at <a data-hovercard="/ajax/hovercard/page.php?id=89414503055" href="https://www.facebook.com/ardentstudios">Ardent Studios</a>.
Jim and Joe were in the midst of inventing a process called
"Quantizing," using a Fairlight. This involved being able to move the
beats of a drum part around, eons (in recording time) before the likes
of Pro Tools. They were both high as kites from the sheer outrageousness
of what they were doing. (h/t Kelly Fisher/Ardent Studios)</span></span>Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-47581693010849379262014-12-20T17:58:00.000-08:002014-12-20T17:58:09.210-08:00John Fry - Ardent Studio founder<span class="userContent">Memphis lost another great one this week - John Fry, founder of Ardent Studios.<br /> <br /> <a href="http://acerecords.co.uk/news/2014/john-fry" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">http://acerecords.co.uk/news/2014/john-fry</a></span><br />
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<br />
<span class="userContent"><br /> 19th December 2014<br /> <span class="text_exposed_show"><br />
John Fry, founder of the world-class, world-famous Ardent Studios in
Memphis, and the genial, self-effacing mentor of cult act Big Star died
unexpectedly yesterday at the age of 69. Alec Palao pays his respects.<br /> <br />
JOHN FRY was a one-off. To be sure, in the annals of Memphis popular
music there are similarly important personages - Sam Phillips, Jim
Stewart, Chips Moman to name but three – and Fry stood as tall as any of
them. He was a true gent, without one iota of the high maintenance ways
peculiar to the recording industry. Anyone who ever met John could only
be struck by his warmth, generosity and genuine nature. Cordial but
never stand-offish, at times he resembled that one teacher you might
have actually liked at school, who was willing to share what they know
with you, and is completely encouraging along with it. Someone who
simply makes you want to learn from them.<br /> <br /> What John Fry had to
share was a tremendous expertise in the art of capturing sound.
Graduates from the Ardent School of engineering include Terry Manning,
Richard Rosebrough, John Hampton (RIP) and of course Chris Bell, along
with many others who benefited from absorbing his innate attention to
detail, as well as the unprecedented opportunity to use the Ardent
facilities after-hours to experiment. Fry could recognize the qualities
within an individual whether they fit the accepted mould of the music
business or not. Hence Memphis maverick Jim Dickinson’s tenure as house
engineer at the studio’s interim National location, or Fry’s careful yet
hands-offs stewardship of Big Star, from their inception as Icewater /
Rock City to the act’s dour denouement on their third album. Indeed, Big
Star’s career is symptomatic of the Memphis/Ardent paradox. Here was
one of the most impeccably maintained recording facilities in the United
States, yet its own roster was frequently at odds with the accepted
methods of producing records, both technically and artistically.
Ultimately this dichotomy is testament to the far-sightedness and
passion of John Fry, who was young enough to identify with the
excitement that overtook rock in the mid-60s, yet smart and caring
enough to harness it in such a classy and dedicated manner, allied to a
magnanimity rarely spotted in that era.<br /> <br /> An avid radio and
technophile at an early age, John built his first studio in the late
1950s in “Grannys sewing room” at the back of his house on Grandview in
Memphis. He and his partners recorded and released a handful of records
intermittently on Ardent over the next few years, including great items
by the Ole Miss Downbeats and Lawson & Four More, while studying
electronics at college and then running a radio station in Arkansas. Fry
opened the first proper Ardent studio on National Street in the late
spring of 1966, and soon was busy with the surfeit of work that other
local studios could not handle, including jingle and advertising dates,
and crucially, Stax overflow sessions. Ardent soon got a reputation for
its technical quality, and while the company continued to produce
masters to pitch to other companies, it was not until 1971 and a move to
the custom-built facility at 2000 Madison Avenue, where the studio
resides today, that the Ardent label was reborn with distribution by
Stax. Big Star, Cargo and the Hot Dogs constituted their small
catalogue, none of whom were successful at the time, but the powerful
legacy of Big Star – as much in part to the sonic quality of the
recordings as perhaps anything else – has made Ardent a name known
around the world. And from around the globe, musicians, fans and
aficionados have beaten a path to Ardent over the years, whether to
avail themselves of its impeccable facilities, or simply just walk those
hallowed halls.<br /> <br /> For almost fifteen years, I have been making
regular visits there, initially to go through the Ardent label’s own
small yet fascinating catalogue for “Thank You Friends: The Ardent
Records Story”. Compiling that set was not only ear-opening but also
quite clear evidence of not only John’s technical but his leadership
abilities. Working on further Big Star, Alex Chilton and Chris Bell
projects afforded me some remarkable insights into the real lessons Fry
instilled in his engineers, as well as perhaps his own greatest skill –
that of a mixer. Jim Dickinson in particular had alerted me to this
aspect of Fry’s brilliance and what he had told me was one hundred per
cent borne out by the recorded evidence. Throw the faders up on the
multi-tracks for Third and you get a dissonant mess of alternating
rhythms and strings battling with feedback; John Fry balanced it all
with a clarity and nuance that is still, to this day, breathtaking. I
spent many, many pleasurable hours discussing audio technique with John,
and he was as open with his knowledge and opinion as he might well have
been with any of his Ardent “students.” Though he rarely engineered
after the 1970s – preferring to tend to business, as well as evolving
into a cheerleader for Memphis music in general - with these reissues,
John did some of his last remixing, such was his dedication to making
sure the legacy remained true. One of the biggest compliments I have
ever received in my professional career is when John mentioned he would
actually prefer we used a couple of mixes I had done for a Chris Bell
set.<br /> <br /> Whenever Dean Rudland, Tony Rounce and I hit Memphis on
behalf of Ace, Ardent is always our first stop, thanks to the studio’s
handy midtown location, the always warm welcome and not least, its
incredibly high and reliable standards. I got in the habit of schlepping
master tapes from both Nashville and Muscle Shoals – two locations not
exactly without their own recording facilities - to do the transfers at
Ardent, simply because I knew I could get it right with a minimum of
fuss. Though he never could be drawn to actually engineer a session, a
particularly fun and incredibly instructive moment at Ardent occurred
when John was persuaded to set up the drum mics in Studio C, on the one
occasion I have been able actually record as a musician at the studio,
with my pal Matt Piucci of the Rain Parade. Resident engineer Adam Hill
and I were agog watching how he placed the microphone for the floor tom
about three feet behind, to the right of the drum stool. The recorded
results spoke for themselves (of course it didn’t hurt that the drum kit
- the same one heard on ‘September Gurls’ and “Third” – was being
played by its owner, Big Star’s Jody Stephens, Ardent Studios manager
and a fantastic fellow in his own right). Oh yes, and Matt used Chris
Bell’s Gibson 335. It was a true Rock’n’Roll Fantasy Camp.<br /> <br /> On a
more serious note. I’m not really a T-shirt type of guy, but for some
reason yesterday morning I had decided to put on a blue shirt emblazoned
with the iconic 1970s “mod globe” 70s Ardent logo, that had been a
Christmas gift from Ardent in years past, and in doing so reminded
myself that I ought to give John a ring to wish him the compliments of
the season. He’d left a message with a similar Thanksgiving greeting a
few weeks earlier and when I returned the call, he wound up our chat in
typical fashion with a folksy, southern-accented “well, good deal”. That
was John – always within easy reach and unerringly gracious and
supportive. Receiving the news of his passing just a couple of hours
later was thus eerie, and really quite upsetting. John Fry taught me so
much, but most of all he showed me how you can maintain in this business
with grace and humility. Thank you, friend.</span></span>Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-1868997550788498582014-11-11T17:21:00.001-08:002014-11-11T17:21:23.714-08:00Jim Dickinson: The Man Behind the Console (Trailer)Robert Allen Parker and Nan Hackman did a great job on their short documentary film, "The Man Behind the Console," about Jim Dickinson's life as a music producer. The film won the Hometowner award for Best Short Documentary at the Indie Memphis Film Festival. The only problem with the film is that there needed to be more of it! Good job, Robert and Nan. The Dickinson family thanks you.<br />
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<a href="http://vimeo.com/107965792">Trailer: Jim Dickinson: The Man Behind the Console</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/meanwhileinmemphis">Meanwhile in Memphis</a> on <a href="https://vimeo.com/">Vimeo</a>.Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-73497618176263370812014-11-11T17:15:00.001-08:002014-11-11T17:15:17.088-08:00The Replacements - Alex Chilton on The Tonight ShowBack in September, <a href="http://thereplacementsofficial.com/pages/home" target="_blank">The Replacements</a> appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and played "Alex Chilton" from their 1987 release, Pleased To Meet Me, produced by Jim at Ardent Studios. Of course, another link to the song is Jim's involvement with Big Star's album, Third, featuring Alex Chilton.<br /><br />Another factoid related to the Pleased To Meet Me album - a teenage Luther Dickinson plays guitar on one of the tracks ("Shooting Dirty Pool"). Luther tells a great story about the lyrics and being in the studio with The Replacements.<br />
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<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/gZi-dw03fE8" width="560"></iframe>Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-32829701710184214302014-10-18T10:36:00.000-07:002014-10-18T10:36:27.567-07:00<span class="userContent">Check out <a data-hovercard="/ajax/hovercard/page.php?id=303023376396566" href="https://www.lutherdickinson.com/" target="_blank">Luther Dickinson</a> in the Cellar Sessions - ONE on ONE at the City Winery in NYC, recorded this week. Jim would be so proud!</span><br />
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<br />Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-49814347484980292382014-09-24T17:36:00.004-07:002014-09-24T17:36:37.737-07:00People's Choice Video Award Winner!<br />
Barry Shankman became the
randomly selected by computer winner out of all who "liked" and "shared"
the "Wild Horses" video. It was computer magic because Barry is a
musician, producer, studio owner with whom Jim collaborated back in the
days of wild and wooly Barbarian Records. Here is his wonderful take on
Jim's playing on "Wild Horses."<br />
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"Jim Dickinson's Legacy... James
Luther Dickinson & The Rolling Stones. Jim's great artistic
abilities not only as a musician Piano Player but always thinking as a
producer can be known by listening to his work on 'Wild Horses’ with the
Rolling Stones. Hear how his left hand never over- plays the bass yet
is right there in the groove, complementing the kick & snare- adding
his own style to a band with such a strong style of its own; while his
right hand brings that strong slow but driving lick that makes 'Wild
Horses' such a uniquely different Stones’ tune.Part of Jim's legacy is
this talent. If one listens one can hear his technique as a producer in
what he plays and most importantly, in the space he leaves between the
notes, so the music can breathe. That allows it a life that expresses
the talent of those he is working with as well as his talent in
influencing the song’s direction. On the 'Wild Horses' session Jim
taught me how he played his part by what he played and did not play.
Even today I hear him in the track influencing the sound and touching
how I listen to and produce music. This just goes to show how great he
was. 'Wild, wild horses- we’ll ride them someday.' Thank you, James
Luther Dickinson from all of us who are touched by your talent &
ability. 'Let's all get Dixie Fried' & 'World Boogie is coming!' Jim
Dickinson's Legacy lives on..."<br />
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Congratulations, Barry, and thank you to everyone that participated in this fun contest.<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a>.Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-84095096439115102132014-09-24T17:36:00.000-07:002014-09-24T17:36:10.404-07:00Jim Dickinson's Legacy People's Choice Video Award<span class="userContent" data-ft="{"tn":"K"}">We
are excited to announce the Winner of the Jim Dickinson's Legacy
People's Choice Video Award. It is the video of Jim playing with the
Rolling Stones. Out of 11 video's 114 people liked it, 54 people shared
it, and it reached 5730 people. (For comparison, the announcement of
the contest was liked by 21 people, shared by 3 people, and reached by
593 people).<br /> <br /> The winner of the prize will be an<span class="text_exposed_show">nounced
later. He was chosen by a computer program and is a most appropriate
individual. I was amazed by the insight he showed as he wrote about his
reaction to watching Jim and Keith Richards IN THE MOVIE, "GIMME
SHELTER" and listening to Jim playing with the Rolling Stones and
taking the piano solo. Stay tuned for more about the winner. This
message below I wrote him describing the prize he won:<br /> <br /> "The pic
of Jim on the Dickinson carriage (not grave) stone is from "Dixie
Fried," Jim's first record, which is being re-released next year. You'll
get this version with six extra tracks! You'll also get his
masterpiece, "Beale Street Saturday Night" which is being re-released
and will come out next spring. "I'm Just Dead" is GREAT! It is Jim
playing with NMA and Jimmy Davis at the New Daisy Theater on Beale
Street- released posthumously. "Dinosaurs Walk in Circles" is Jim's last
recording. It's awesome! It is a jazz record, including "When You Wish
Upon A Star," which he had never before played until this recording.
You'll hear Jim learning the song as he's being recorded. it's
heartbreakingly good. The essay you wrote about listening to Jim play
with the Rolling Stones proves you will understand this cut in a way
that few people could. <br /> <br /> "You'll have Jim's first and last
records, his masterpiece, him playing with his sons, and last but not
least, a surprise- a record of Jim's the likes of which you've never
heard!!! 5 cds in all. How would this be?"</span></span><br />
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Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-15261908597554849122014-09-06T07:16:00.000-07:002014-09-06T07:16:19.094-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #11 - Final Contest Video<!--[if gte mso 9]><xml>
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This recording of Jim, Luther, Cody, Paul Taylor, and the big man in the hat, Jim Spake, playing "You Made Your Move Too Soon" puts a big smile on my face. It's one of the few songs Jim performed that he modified the lyrics to fit his life.<br /><br />This song "pretty much wraps it up, ties it so to speak," says Jim. <br /><br />(At first it's about two star-crossed lovers….)<br /><br />"Freezing snow out in Birmingham,<br />Thought you might wonder baby where I am,<br />I dialed your number all night long,<br />No consolation on the telephone. <br />So I went on out I call it midnight,<br />A little love makes everything all right.<br />Landlord said, 'You moved away. Left me<br />With all of your bills to pay.'<br />I gotta tell you, Baby I think you kinda made your move too soon."<br /><br />(But a little irony slips in….)<br /><br />"You left me stranded with a Bingo card<br />Down in Tunica where they just ain't got a heart.<br />I ran it up to about fifty grand,<br />Cashed it and held it in the palm of my hand…"<br /><br />(What? This guy's not a loser after all!) <br /><br />"That kinda news really gets around, <br />Tends to make a lost lover come up found<br />Here you come at my door,<br />You ain't living here with me no more.<br />You made your move too soon<br />You vacated the premises prematurely"<br /><br />(Jim triumphs!)<br /><br />Luther takes a rousing solo.<br /><br />Jim introduces the band, <br />"Not because I don't think you know who they are but because we have a short set. We haven't rehearsed and we haven't played together for a year and a half, but it really is fun to play with this particular aggregation in this particular situation, as it were…"<br /><br />(After he finishes with the band, Jim introduces himself in the last verse….)<br /><br />"As for me….<br /><br />'I've been from Memphis down to Mexico,<br />Orange Mound to Ontario.<br />I'm not the type to make the news,<br />I'm just a country boy likes to play the blues.<br />I takes my liquor with me everywhere and<br />If you don't like it, child, I really don't care.<br />The towns come up, my friends fall down,<br />They love to see us when we roll into town.<br />We never make a move too soon….'"<br /><br />You notice at the end of the song there are only a few people clapping. Jim liked it that way. He told me, "I love it when people walk out. It means the ones who are left are serious!" If you're still here and reading this, listening to the tune, you are serious and like me, happy because Jim is "just dead. He's not gone." Thanks for sticking around. You're the best.<br /><br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share! This is the final video and the last chance to become part of the contest before we select the People's Choice Award and select a winner from all those that voted and shared that video!<br /><br />Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-5434487019985696012014-08-27T17:55:00.001-07:002014-08-27T17:55:50.550-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #10Jim always said, "The best songs don't get recorded and the best recordings don't get released." "Rumble" is a special case, the exception to the rule. It's a great song recorded in moments of time stolen from other sessions by artist/producer Jim Dickinson and his co-conspirator, Barbarian Record Company owner, Jim Blake. <br />
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"We went to every studio in Memphis and every musician we were working with played on it - the likes of Sid Selvidge, bass player Tommy McClure, Jim Lancaster, Richard Roseborough, Jimmy Crosthwait, Fred Ford, and many others. Lee Baker took a distinctive 'chicken scratching' solo. That's Danny Graflund screaming, 'NEET NEET!'" said Blake. "We worked for free because we knew it was important. It took four or five years. We went to Ardent for their orchestra chimes. A fraternity brother of mine from college was running a car lot/garage behind the original Sun Studio which was run down and empty. He said we could use the building but there wasn't any electricity. Someone who shall remain nameless broke the seal on the Memphis utility Light, Gas and Water meter box and turned it upside down. Presto, electricity. That was big time illegal. A topless dancer shook her money maker on the hood of a car because Jim wanted her to." <br />
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"Cops patrolled the street and never even noticed us," laughed Dickinson.<br />
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On another session, a Memphis motorcycle outlaw named Campbell Kinsinger stole the show. Jim had him bring his Harley into Dan Penn's studio, Beautiful Sounds, a tiny outback building in Mid-town. Jim wanted the gleaming silver and black hog to play the song itself, with the deep bass rumble of the growly Harley motor keeping time. To make this happen Campbell whipped out a long screwdriver and retarded the spark of the motor, slowing down the pulsing of the engine until it was playing in sync with the music. Dickinson described the scene, "By the time the session was over, the air was blue with carbon monoxide and the motorcycle was shooting flames a foot long out of its tail pipes."<br />
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The noise at the end of "Rumble" is a recording of the first explosion of the atom bomb.<br />
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"Rumble" reeks of danger. Kick back, pour yourself a gin, and take a listen. You ain't heard nuttin' yet.<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-71928354237998238912014-08-25T17:10:00.001-07:002014-08-25T17:10:58.848-07:00Luther - Jellyrollin' All Over Heaven<span class="userContent">Jellyrollin' All Over Heaven performed by Luther Dickinson from a few years ago - seems appropriate as we acknowledge 5 years since Jim passed. #justdeadnotgone</span><br />
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Don't forget to visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a>.Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-55139592480297080152014-07-31T18:37:00.001-07:002014-08-01T18:28:32.083-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #9This is Jim's last performance with Mudboy and the Neutrons. Jim's performances were always "for the ages" as is seen in this video. "Hitler Lives" couldn't be more timely. Vintage Jim and his humor- he was cracking his own band up. Notice the guitar solo by Sid's son, Steve Selvidge. The lineup is Jimmy Crosthwait, Sid Selvidge, Jim Dickinson, Steve Selvidge, and Paul Taylor on tub bass. Enjoy!<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-26409335956302361462014-07-26T10:14:00.001-07:002014-07-26T18:47:08.308-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #8<span class="userContent">This video of Jim’s signature song, “Down In
Mississippi,” features a cut that was recorded for his album, Free Beer
Tomorrow, but never released except on an Oxford Ame<span class="text_exposed_show">rican
magazine compilation. The video was conceived, directed and produced
by Mike McCarthy, Memphis’ own Film Cult King. Director of such
underground classics as TEENAGE TUPELO and CIGARETTE GIRL, Mike is
known to be “passionate about the region he lives in, and the history,
and how to honor and preserve that history…,” as director Craig Brewer
described him.<br /> <br /> This work of Mike's honoring and preserving
Jim’s uniquely Southern artistry began one chilly afternoon when Jim
answered the phone and Mike said, “Jim, I’ve noticed you don’t have a
video of you and your music, so I’m going to make one for you.” What
an adventure filming it was, horses, barefoot girls dancing around Jim
in the icy mud, Jimmy Crosthwait's sinister. menacing presence cradling a
Civil War era rifle, the half naked girl wearing the Confederate bra,
the flaming cross.... This you've got to see.<br /> <br /> Thank you,
Mike. Jim’s legacy thanks you. This video is a labor of love and a
gift to us all. Jim’s song and Mike’s vision take us deep into a world
that never was.<br /> <br /> As Jim wrote in his last words, "As long as the music lingers, I'll be there."<br /> <br /> (With thanks to Greg Akers and the MEMPHIS FLYER)<br /> </span></span>
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-72308152188037705512014-07-16T18:37:00.001-07:002014-07-16T18:37:48.224-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #7Some fans may have seen this clip from the Maysel Brothers’ film of the Rolling Stones’ 1969 tour called “Gimme Shelter-” of Jim sitting with Keith Richards in the control room of Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, listening to the just mixed playback of “Wild Horses,” on which Jim is playing tack piano; but few of you have read Jim’s hilarious account of the set-up of the shoot. This is from Jim’s unpublished memoir, “The Search for Blind Lemon.” Sit back, put some gin in your glass. Enjoy.<br /><br />“As they mixed, I couldn’t help notice the Maysel Brothers setting up two light trees pointing at the control room window from the tracking side of the glass. Available light was lacking. My vast theatrical training at Baylor Theatre led me to realize that whatever they shot with lights had more chance of making it to film. I studied the situation.<br />Nobody was on the big back couch where Charlie had been hiding. The lights and the camera aimed directly at it. I had the last joint. Keith knew it. As they worked on “Wild Horses,” I put the joint behind my ear and sat on the couch. Keith joined me. The light came on. Tape and camera began to roll. I was in the movie.<br />Two shots from the Muscle Shoals session survive in Gimme Shelter:<br />a shot of Mick and Jimmy Johnson behind the mixing console and the shot of Keith and me on the couch, our eyes closed during the “Wild Horses” play back. Thank you, Baylor Theatre.”<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-67460289880237131952014-07-03T17:56:00.000-07:002014-07-03T17:56:44.350-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #6CONTEST VIDEO #6:<br /><br />In Contest Video #5 during the filming of "Li'l Art's Texas Bar-B-Q" broadcast from SXSW in Austin, we heard Jim telling Art, Huey, and Joe Nick about remembering a world before rock 'n' roll. He said he tried to make young musicians imagine what this was like. But as we hear in Contest Video #6, the Cramps didn't heed historical schooling. Lux Interior and Poison Ivy were building our musical future as they recorded their debut- a new genre near and dear to Jim's heart- PUNK! You can hear the crazed excitement and joy in his voice as Jim sings.<br /><br />"Jim Dickinson & the Cramps- Red Headed Woman (Big Beat, recorded 1977, released 1981, at Sun Studio while the Cramps were recording the tracks for the Gravest Hits EP).<br /><br />I have pretty much written what I have to say about Jim in the earlier postings, but let me reiterate, we'll never see another one like Jim Dickinson, he is one of immortals." (Thanks to The Hound Blog)<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-12045100116420309472014-06-29T08:10:00.003-07:002014-06-29T08:11:13.868-07:00Jim Dickinson's greatest living legacy: Luther and Cody playing "Meet Me in the City"<span class="userContent">Here we're celebrating Jim Dickinson's greatest living legacy:<br />
Luther and Cody playing "Meet Me in the City" leading up to their performance at the Glastonbury Festival in England, June 29, 2014- wet and wild!</span><br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-41727883677800149172014-06-25T19:17:00.000-07:002014-06-26T03:49:44.088-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #5Described as a "well known scenster" in L.A. from the '70's, Art Fein long had a bizzare cable-access show with top musicians.<br /><br />On January 18, 1984 Art began Art Fein's Poker Party, which evolved from real poker games and ran for an amazing 1,080 shows featuring the likes of young Dwight Yokam, before he was signed to Warner Bros. Chris Issak, performing an acoustic Wicked Game just before it broke big. Screamin' Jay Hawkins. The Stray Cats, covering Mystery Train A bizzare interview with Brian Wilson. Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper, doing, well whatever it is they do. There was a set by a very young Luther and Cody Dickinson and Paul Taylor of DDT. Here's a clip of Jim jiving with Art, the late great Louisiana record man, Huey Meaux, and rock 'n roll writer/ manager extraordinaire, Joe Nick Patoski. (with thanks to Metal Filter)<br /><br />World boogie is coming!<br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-10927847540796893142014-06-19T16:54:00.000-07:002014-06-19T16:57:34.646-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #4The New Beale Street Sheiks! If I let you get away with it once, ...
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-7299416632996657402014-06-14T06:14:00.000-07:002014-06-14T06:14:09.634-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #3<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/ImeYSE45TYY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><br>
Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video! One entry for each Like and one entry for each Share!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-22319027844865157072014-06-06T15:48:00.005-07:002014-06-06T15:48:57.757-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #2<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/4GLgFx_wTn4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6102980920444097404.post-70357605067848410002014-06-01T11:45:00.003-07:002014-06-01T11:45:55.724-07:00CONTEST VIDEO #1<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/QeJwc4xCelg" width="420"></iframe><br />
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Visit the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/JimDickinsonsLegacy" target="_blank">Jim Dickinson's Legacy Facebook page</a> to vote for your favorite video!Dickinson Family Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11451409079460062758noreply@blogger.com0