UPDATE: TIME CHANGE! The in-store show will now be at 1 p.m. (not 3 p.m.)!
We’ll be hosting Luther Dickinson for a free, in-store show on Sunday, March 13 at 1 p.m. Many of you know Luther from the hill-country boogie rock band The North Mississippi Allstars. Luther’s dad, Jim Dickinson, is also well known around these parts (he was the Thacker Mountain Radio house band leader). Luther’s latest record, Blues & Ballads, is out now via New West Records. The record is in stock now on beautiful 180 gram double LP with songbook and CD. Stay tuned for more info…
From Luther’s website:
This acoustic collection of songs interpreted simply, recorded live, solo or with a small group of friends reflects my relationship between music, songs, the written word and legacy. Blues & Ballads celebrates the American oral tradition of blues and folk songs, not only being passed down and evolving but being transcribed (the original recording technique) and entered into the discipline of written sheet music and songbooks.
The songs themselves tell the story of growing up in a modern day rural south amongst first generation Memphis rock ‘n rolling, song collecting, folk bohemians, disapproving pre-rock ‘n roll holy rollers, and citified punk rockers and modern day blues giants, experiencing the miracle that was Fat Possum Records and Hill Country Blues in the 90s, singing songs in a language near extinction, barely pre-internet, when community, word of mouth, firsthand experience, books, records and art still ruled. When the elders begin passing on, these family, friends and heroes should be made into folk heroes and their vernacular and stories should be sung.
The CD package contains my handwritten lyrics representing the songwriter’s notebook and the creative process that I love.
The vinyl art includes my dream come true – my songbook, a printed collection of my tunes (my life), transcribed and made to look legitimate. The limited pressing makes the legitimacy fleeting and as it should be: rare and underground. I represent the Memphis underground and the mid-south region’s music. This art is not for the masses. It is meant to wither and fade and then rise from the ashes again and again, evolving and mutating.
Is it too late to tell your and your community’s tales thru the vinyl groove and the block lettered, mimeographed page? Never! So be it through text messaged fluency of thumb and mp3-ed micro speakers, the lives and legends of modern day folk music heroes will live on and the spirit of American roots rock ‘ n roll will shout to the man, the masses, and disposable pop culture, “Fuck off. Even in death, the art lives on.”
– Luther Dickinson