Jerry Phillips "For the Universe" Debut album from Songwriter/Producer (John Prine) and the son of Sun Records founder Sam Phillips.

Debut album from Songwriter/Producer (John Prine, Dale Watson) and the son of Sun Records founder Sam Phillips.

 

The myriad of stars that aligned to create Jerry Phillips’ debut solo album, For The Universe, have been orbiting the rarified atmosphere of Memphis’ Sam Phillips Recording Service—the namesake studio that Jerry’s father built in the wake of his Sun Records success with Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee Lewis—since its doors opened in 1960. The fact that it took 64 years for those stars to fully align is more a testament to Jerry’s own unwavering path than it is being the son of the man who unleashed rock ’n’ roll on the world.

The final piece of the puzzle fell into place when the studio acquired the original Spectra Sonics console from Stax Studio B, which had captured soul classics like Rufus Thomas’ “The Funky Chicken” and much of the Isaac Hayes catalog. Jerry said, “I want to be the first person to record on the Stax console at Phillips.” When it came time for the “shakedown session,” album Co-Producer Scott Bomar remembers, “we liked the results and that was the beginning of the record. Jerry’s recording method was a window into what it was probably like recording at Sun—very live, off-the-cuff, and unrehearsed. It all had a real spontaneous feel and spirit.”

Most importantly, Jerry’s method served the songs, a ten-track tour-de-force ranging from full-tilt rockers to slow-burning country soul, all rife with chord changes that bring the listener a smile of comfortable familiarity while simultaneously tugging at the heart strings. The driving guitar and horn-blasting “Number One Girl” and its tender tremolo and organ-flavored follow-up “Treat Her Like She’s Mine” —both of which could have been bookends of a post-Sun Jerry Lee Lewis album—set the stage for a Memphis-to-Muscle Shoals musical road map with enough tributaries to take in the West Texas tumbleweed vibe of “Black Widow Eyes,” the smoldering Gulf Coast soul of “I Like Everything I See” and the harp-heavy blues rocker “24/6 Not 7,” co-written with Austin honky-tonker Dale Watson. The Tennessee-to-Alabama highway is a road well-tred by Scott and Halley, whose production pedigrees reflect the respective locales. Similarly, the crack studio combo anchored by garage soul guitarist John Paul Keith proves perfectly comfortable dwelling on the edge of any musical cliff, as long as there’s feeling in it.

Whether considering the past with bittersweet introspection in “She Let Me Slip Right Through Her Fingers” or the potential future with bar room intimation in “Good Side, Bad Side, Side Of Crazy Too” (where Jerry nods to his brief career in the wrestling ring by introducing himself with his nome-du-plume DeLayne Phillips), the songs just seem to get deeper and deeper, crescendoing with the taking-stock-yet-refusing-to-declare-defeat triumph of “New Pair Of Everything” (“I’m not gonna give up / No, I’m not goin’ down / That don’t mean my world / It ain’t spinnin’ ’round and ’round…”). The song’s strident horn lines are the perfect set-up for a downshift to the swamp-rock swagger of “Specify,” where Jerry signs off singing over a Pops Staples guitar riff that brings to mind one of his favorite Sputnik Monroe quotes: “Rough, tough and hard to bluff.”

As soulful and southern as it is singularly spontaneous, For The Universe, like Jerry Phillips himself, brings to mind another quote, this one from Muscle Shoals country soul songwriter Dan Penn. “Somebody asked Dan one day, ‘How would you describe the Memphis sound?’ And he said, ‘Well, we just don’t let anybody tell us what to do.’ And that’s it!” 

Omnivore presents Jerry Phillips

'Sounds like Memphis': Iconic Stax recording console finds new home at Sam Phillips studio - Bob Mehr Memphis Commercial Appeal

Two history-making Memphis institutions are coming together as part of a new musical future.

On Thursday, Sam Phillips Recording announced it has partnered with the Stax Museum of American Soul Music to bring the original Spectra Sonics 1020 recording console, used in Stax Records' Studio B in the late 1960s and '70s, to the Phillips studio.

Scott Bomar — the Emmy-winning and Grammy-nominated producer, engineer and musician — who now manages Phillips Recording has fully restored the console, which is in use as the main board at the studio on Madison that opened in 1960.

“I can't think of any other studio where you can record in such an iconic room on such an iconic recording console,” Bomar said. “It's got a little bit of a vintage sound, but it's also modern at the same time. That’s the beauty of it. It could be from 1968, or it could be from 2068. It's just totally timeless.”

The announcement comes on the 100th anniversary of Sun Records/Phillips studio founder Sam Phillips’ birth. In a statement, the Phillips family — led by Sam Phillips’ son Jerry Phillips and his daughter Halley Phillips — which still operates the studio said the twining of two musical icons would be “good for Memphis.”

“I think it's going to be good for us. I think it's going to be good for the Stax legacy, the Phillips legacy and the Sun legacy,” Jerry Phillips said. “It’s almost like we are starting a new chapter in the recording industry [here].”

Originally used in Stax’s Studio B, located upstairs at 926 E. McLemore, the board’s components were manufactured by Spectra Sonics of Utah and put together in Memphis by Auditronics, a local company that developed various consoles for Stax and Ardent studios. The Stax Studio B console was used to record numerous artists including Isaac Hayes, Rufus Thomas, Little Milton, Albert King and the Bar-Kays, among others.   Following Stax Records’ forced involuntary bankruptcy in 1976, the Spectra Sonics console was auctioned in Memphis the following year, and purchased by Barry Shankman and Leonard Lubin, who installed much of the Stax equipment at their BR Toad recording studio.  

The Studio B console eventually ended up in Shreveport, Louisiana’s Sound City Recording, a funk and soul recording studio. Later renamed Southern Star Studio, the analog board remained in use there until it was mothballed as digital recording became prevalent in the 1990s.

Two decades later, in 2017, Stax Museum executive director Jeff Kollath was approached about the board. “We got a phone call out of the blue from Jimmy Johnson down at the studio in Shreveport saying he had the Stax console from Studio B and wanted to know if the museum was interested in having it back," Kollath said. After authenticating that it was the Studio B Spectra Sonics board, it was added to the Stax Museum archival collection in early 2018. Once the museum was in possession of the console, discussions — between Kollath, Bomar and Jerry Phillips — began about putting it back into use at Phillips Recording.

Finally, in the fall of 2021, an agreement was struck between the Stax Museum and Phillips. Bomar and technicians Ronnie Kittell and Matt Brown then spent the next year working almost daily to restore the Spectra Sonics console to its original condition.

“When we first powered it up, we just played some music through it and immediately I noticed the clarity of it, and was also impressed with the EQs,” Bomar said. “Overall, everything we’ve done on it so far, recording here, or mixing something through it, it just sounds like Memphis. It’s a very distinctive and familiar sound.”

Bomar has already recorded several projects on the restored board and is currently booking clients for 2023.

Stax Museum head Kollath added that the unique setup placing the console at Phillips “is something very special.”

“To have great people like Scott and Jerry working on this is an honor for the Stax Museum,” he said. “The idea that something that was so integral to Stax Records is now back in our community providing opportunity 50 years later for our artists and young people to make new music is incredibly exciting.”

Don Bryant Talks Love, New Music and His First Grammy Nomination at 78 years old

BY MADELEINE O'CONNELL for American Songwriter

At almost 80 years old, the legendary singer/songwriter, Don Bryant continues to live every day to the fullest, even during a pandemic. Not only did he release his latest album, “You Make Me Feel,” this year, but he also got the chance to have a safe performance and was nominated for his first Grammy Award.

Age is just a number for Don Bryant. This kind man finds great joy in continuing to do what he loves with the support of his wife, Ann Peebles.

“At this point, it’s giving me an opportunity to go back myself and record some of those songs that I wrote for her and that makes me feel good.”

When asked how long him and his wife have been together, Bryant responded, “It’s been a long time, it’s been years. To tell you the truth, I really haven’t been counting because we’ve just been enjoying each other … I might forget how long or how far back it was, but I’m not gonna forget her, because she’s right there where I can put my arms around her at any time. That makes it all great for me.”

His latest album, “You Make Me Feel,” was written for his beloved other half. It portrays a true love story between two people who are just happy to be able to be together.

“Those were some of my favorite songs,” says Bryant. “I had the opportunity to do it myself and to me, that’s a big deal. I loved being able to sing it to her and she enjoyed it.”

This album contains tracks that are both old and new. Bryant gave American Songwriter an insight into his writing process, since he is constantly writing new songs. He generally finds inspiration in the little things in life and in the conversations he has, because that is where the best stories come from.

“Once I have the title, I like to sit down and write the story from that. To me, it’s like a challenge. I’m thankful I didn’t ever stop writing because I’m enjoying it now as much as I enjoyed it then.”

Even though he hasn’t been able to sing in front of any large audiences this year, he did get the chance to do an NPR Tiny Desk (Home) Concert. In an empty room with only him, a keyboard and guitar player, he said it felt great to sing “Your Love is to Blame,” “Is It Over,” and “Your Love is Too Late” from his latest album.

All of the hard work and dedication he has put into his career has led him to some well-deserved recognition. Bryant expressed his excitement for receiving his first ever Grammy nomination this year.

“It’s still hard for me to tell you how I feel because it’s something great and I’ve never really thought about reaching that point. I’m thankful to still have the mind to write songs and pick songs for these last couple albums,” says Bryant. “I never gave up on writing or singing because that’s what I love. So to have that opportunity to go back into the studio and to do the very thing I’ve been loving for years, it was something great.”

https://americansongwriter.com/you-make-me-feel-don-bryant-album-interview/

Don Bryant Brings You His New LP You Make Me Feel, out May 8 (Fat Possum) 

Don Bryant Brings You His New LP You Make Me Feel, out May 8 (Fat Possum) 

Hi Records Hit Man & Memphis Soul Survivor

Teams with Hi Rhythm Members & Producer Scott Bomar

for Career Retrospective & New Music

US Tour Dates, including April 22 @ City Winery, NYC

Hear “Your Love Is to Blame”                          

If you turn your ears a certain way, You Make Me Feel (May 8, Fat Possum) by soul great Don Bryant can be heard as a love letter to his wife of 50 years, Ann Peebles.  That killer horn riff that kicks off the album? Think of it as a fanfare preceding the reading of a royal decree; or maybe it’s a funky version of a wedding march.  Written by Bryant and producer Scott Bomar, “Your Love Is to Blame” has the chorus of a good blues song: "Nothing in my life is the same/Your love is to blame.” But here, “blame” gets a halo. “I tried to turn this one around,” Don says with a slight grin. Then he explains, “Your love is to blame because we are together!”

Check out “Your Love Is to Blame,” available now.  

Produced by Scott Bomar, who recently scored Dolemite Is My Name and mixed by Matt Ross-Spang (Elvis Presley, Al Green, John Prine), You Make Me Feel continues Don’s resurgence with newly written music and a revisit to Don’s celebrated back catalog, where he’s interpreting some of his songs for the first time.  Musicians include members of the Hi Rhythm section — Howard Grimes, Archie “Hubbie” Turner and Charles Hodges, who played on hits by Al Green and Ann Peebles — with members of St. Paul and the Broken Bones and The Bo-Keys.

“It feels good to have found my own voice,” says Don, who never stopped writing.  “Music has always been a part of me, I’ve never given up on it, never let it go. If I’m walking around, I’m humming songs. Now, I’m trying to let it all out. What I had, what I got, and what I’m gonna get.”

Don is nearing the age of 80, and You Make Me Feel is his third solo album. His 1969 debut Precious Soul was produced by Willie Mitchell, who planned for Bryant to be Hi Records’ next star.  Don instead took a supporting role and made a career as a Hi Records hit man, namely as the songwriter and background singer for Peebles, who topped the charts in 1974 with “I Can’t Stand the Rain.”  Ann retired from music in 2012, and Don returned to the spotlight in 2017 with his second album, Don’t Give Up on Love.

“I fell in love with Ann when she first came in to Hi,” he reveals. “But there was so much going on with her—recording, travel, so many around her—it wasn’t my time. And I wasn’t in no hurry—I knew I wasn’t going nowhere! We got to know each other better and better and it opened up. It was a long drawn out situation, but for me it was love at first sight.”

One of the many standouts on Make You Feel is the reprise of “Don’t Turn Your Back on Me,” a single Don originally released in 1965. The new version is slowed down, and as anyone who has ever pleaded—for love, for life, for time—we know that the slow petition is more effective… but so much harder to carry out.  Don recorded a new version of “99 Pounds” “to put some light on Ann,” he demurs, and there’s a punch to this new version that would make Willie Mitchell proud—classic soul with a 21st century power.  And he doesn’t shy from the darker feelings; “Is It Over” sounds like it might date to 1973, when Otis Clay recorded Bryant’s song, “I Die a Little Each Day,” also featured on the album.

This is the first time Don released a version of his “Cracked Up Over You,” recorded enough times to be an R&B chestnut.  (Jr. Parker gave it a fine workout.)  Don released the B-side “I’ll Go Crazy” in 1968, and it it’s only song on here he didn’t write.  He related to the hook: “If you love me any better, I'll go crazy.” 

“My main thing is to tell a story,” reflects Don.  “Taking an idea and making a full story out of it is a challenge to me. I go back to look at situations in my life, work the story in my head…If you can tap into things that people go through, then they want to listen.”

credit:  Lawrence Matthews

hi res downloads

Tour Dates

March 13 - Memphis, TN - Hernando's Hideaway

April 22 - New York, NY - City Winery

May 02 - Memphis, TN - Beale Street Music Festival

May 07 - Los Angeles, CA - Grammy Museum

May 08 - Los Angeles, CA - Gold-Diggers

May 13 - Sydney, Australia  - Mary's Underground

May 14 - Melbourne,  Australia - Spotted Mallard

May 16 - Gold Coast, Australia - Blues On Broadbeach

June 27 - Austin, TX - Antone’s

July 25 - Lowell, MA - Lowell Folk Festival

You Make Me Feel

1. Your Love Is to Blame (Bomar/Bryant)

2. 99 Pounds (Bryant)

3. I Die a Little Each Day (Bryant)

4. Don’t Turn Your Back on Me (Bryant)

5. Your Love Is Too Late (Bomar/Bryant)

6. I’ll Go Crazy (J. Cross, M. Cross, Frierson)

7. Cracked Up over You (Bryant)

8. A Woman’s Touch (Bomar/Bryant)

9. Walk All Over God’s Heaven (P.D., arranged by Bomar/Bryant)

Preorder/Listen: https://donbryant.lnk.to/youmakemefeel

The Rap on Rudy Ray Moore: How ‘Dolemite’ Became as Much a Soul Musical as Comedy - Variety

The Rap on Rudy Ray Moore: How ‘Dolemite’ Became as Much a Soul Musical as Comedy - Variety

The Rap on Rudy Ray Moore: How ‘Dolemite’ Became as Much a Soul Musical as Comedy

A Snoop cameo and the spirit of Isaac Hayes loom large in Netflix's "Dolemite Is My Name." The filmmakers discuss its blaxploitation-style soundtrack and explain why Moore is a godfather of hip-hop.

Craig Brewer's Eddie Murphy movie, 'Dolemite Is My Name,' sets world premiere

Craig Brewer's Eddie Murphy movie, 'Dolemite Is My Name,' sets world premiere

Memphis director Craig Brewer's Eddie Murphy movie, "Dolemite Is My Name," will have its world premiere during the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival, which runs Sept. 5-15.

Louisiana bluesman Robert Finley living musical dream

Louisiana bluesman Robert Finley living musical dream

Soul-blues singer Robert Finley knows a thing or two about holding on to your dreams.

"It hasn't been an easy road," said Finley, 63, of his late-blooming musical career. "I probably had this dream since I was just a little lad. I always wanted to play the guitar. I got a chance to hold my first guitar at 10, owned my first one at 11. I've been playing it now for over 50 years. Been waiting practically all my life for this, I guess."

Memphis veteran Don Bryant returns to soul after decades away

don_bryant_3_c.matt_white_courtesy_fat_possum_records.jpg

Stardom may well be sweeter the second time around for soul singer Don Bryant. In the early 1960s, the Memphis native was a featured vocalist for bandleader Willie Mitchell, who produced him at Hi Records long before Al Green, Otis Clay, and Syl Johnson found their way to the label.

Then in 1968 soul chanteuse Ann Peebles, one of Mitchell's new signings, entered Bryant's life. For the most part, he placed his singing career on hold during the early 70s to concentrate on songwriting—and on helping the woman who'd soon be his wife achieve stardom (they married in 1974). "When she exploded, that was it," says Bryant. "It seemed like, 'Don, you sit right here, and we'll get back to you in a minute.'"

Read the full story at chicagoreader.com