today
9 a.m. T-ball Registration Boys and Girls Club Teen Center
read >9 a.m. Apple Solutions for Small Business See Event Description
read >9 a.m. Doris Niles Humboldt County Science Fair Humboldt State University
read >10 a.m. Annual Juggling Festival Humboldt State University
read >6 p.m. Americans for Safe Access Bayview Courtyard Complex
read >6 p.m. Apple Solutions for Small Business Fortuna River Lodge
read >7 p.m. Blondies Open Mic Night Blondies Food And Drink
read >7:30 p.m. A Midsummer Night's Dream Arcata High School
read >8 p.m. Karaoke at Bear River Casino Bear River Casino
read >8 p.m. Karaoke Blue Lake Casino
read >8 p.m. On the Wings of a Dove Carlo Theater (Dell'Arte)
read >8 p.m. Moscow State Radio Symphony Van Duzer Theatre
read >8 p.m. Random Acts of Comedy Arcata Theater Lounge
read >8 p.m. Antigone College of the Redwoods
read >9 p.m. Lisa Baney Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >9 p.m. Wig-in-a-Box Karaoke at Aunty Mo's Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >9 p.m. Aftershock Thursdays w/ Da Foot Clan Nocturnum
read >9 p.m. Children of the Sun (blues) Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. Skerdio, Psy Fi Red Fox Tavern
read >9:30 p.m. Woven Roots, Monk (reggae) Humboldt Brews
read >10 p.m. DJ/Thirsty Thursday Central Station Cocktail Lounge
read >previous columns
Nov. 5, 2009
Songs About Time
The Rentals. Self-released.
read >Oct. 29, 2009
Goodnight Unknown
By Lou Barlow. Merge Records.
read >Oct. 22, 2009
Album
By Girls. Fantasy Trashcan/True Panther Sounds.
read >
Keep an Eye on the Sky
By Mark Shikuma
Big Star. Ardent/Rhin.
The term, “Memphis Curse,” was bantered around quite a bit amongst musician friends when I resided there for three years in the 1990s. It meant that as soon as a Memphis band reached a plateau, as a unit, it inevitably would soon fall apart, disintegrate. The story of Big Star was often used as an example. After receiving glowing praise from the rock press in 1972 for their debut, #1 Record, label problems ensued, including a lack of distribution, coupled with the band’s own internal self-destruction, fueled by alcohol, pills and a string of bad luck. Yet, Big Star was gifted in articulating their short career musically, releasing three distinct records before the band's demise in 1975. At the time all of Big Star's members were barely in their mid-20s.
Big Star was formed by four high school-aged friends/acquaintances who met through a Memphis upstart recording studio, Ardent, run by an energetic, youthful team, John Fry and Terry Manning (later including producer/musician Jim Dickinson). The two principal leaders /songwriters of the original band were Alex Chilton, whose pop hits with The Box Tops (including 1967’s “The Letter”) were achieved at the age of 15, and Chris Bell, who often used his apprenticeship at Ardent as a way to test out his own material. When bassist Andy Hummel and drummer Jody Stephens joined Chilton and Bell, Big Star, named after a Memphis-wide grocery chain, became official. In 1972, Bell had turned in a copy of #1 Record as a project for a college “Music Appreciation”-type class. However, Bell would abruptly leave the band after the record’s commercial failure.
Keep an Eye on the Sky, Rhino’s 4-CD box set, dignifies Big Star’s brief yet highly creative legacy. The band’s influences — an odd mixture of ‘60s Beach Boys/Byrds/British Invasion/Beatles-influenced pop strained through a Southern, albeit Memphis, filter — spread wide, affecting a slew of subsequent bands and singer/songwriters, igniting, initially in the 1980s, a resurgent interest and admiration of the band.
Each record, #1 Record, Radio City (1974) and 3rd/Sisters Lovers (1975), is presented in its original listing (occasionally the album mixes are replaced with alternate mixes), book-ended by demos, often vibrant and raw, made during each recording period. The fourth disc contains a high-quality 1973 live performance at Lafayette’s Music Room in Memphis, documenting Big Star, as a trio, hitting their stride as a live act.
Keep an Eye on the Sky is an intelligent, thoughtful packaging of the band’s creative process, even at its brilliantly chaotic musical end, while providing excellent alternate mixes and rare live material. Well-written and researched liner notes by music historian/author/filmmaker Robert Gordon, among others, and photographs by William Eggleston (along with other archival photos) provide a nearly exhaustive amount of material on a band whose credit, over the retrospect of time, is finally due.

















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