Sunday, October 17, 2010

The Return of King Biscuit - King Biscuit Name Returned to Festival!

The Return of King Biscuit--Thanks to Wolfgangs' Vault

King Biscuit name is returned to festival! In a surprise announcement broadcast on the Main Stage at the opening of the 2010 Arkansas Blues & Heritage Festival, Bill Sagan, founder and CEO of Wolfgang’s Vault said, "On behalf of the whole Wolfgang’s Vault family of companies, including King Biscuit, we are pleased to announce a rekindled partnership between King Biscuit and the Blues Festival. It our pleasure to announce that beginning next year, 2011, this Blues Festival will once again be named the King Biscuit Blues Festival in honor of the great historical music legacy we share."

International Blues Challenge February 1-5, 2011 - Memphis

The week will begin with the FedEx International Showcase (Feb 1). IBC will move to a four day format. This new format will include 2 days of quarter finals (Feb 2-3), one day of semi-finals (Feb 4) and concluding with finals in the beautiful Orpheum Theater (Feb 5).
The 2011 International Blues Challenge will be the 27th year of Blues musicians from around the world competing for cash, prizes, and industry recognition. The Blues Foundation will present the 27th International Blues Challenge February 1-5, 2011 in Memphis, TN. The world's largest gathering of Blues acts represents an international search by The Blues Foundation and its Affiliated Organizations for the Blues Band and Solo/Duo Blues Act ready to take their act to the international stage. In 2010, 110 bands and 80 solo/duo acts entered, filling the clubs up and down Beale Street for the semi-finals on Thursday and Friday and the finals at the Orpheum Theater on Saturday. 2011 looks to have at least that many.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Downtown Memphis celebrates the arrival of Pinnacle Airlines

By Wayne Risher
Commercial Appeal

Originally published 03:00 p.m., October 8, 2010

Updated 09:14 p.m., October 8, 2010

Ruby "Queen of Beale Street" Wilson belted out "Stand by Me." Five hundred Pinnacle Airlines Corp. employees filed out of buses onto Main Street and into One Commerce Square to see the "before" picture of their future workplace. About 200 Downtowners welcomed Pinnacle to the neighborhood.

It was Pinnacle's homecoming Friday morning, organized by the Center City Commission to celebrate one of Downtown's biggest economic successes of the decade.

Pinnacle, an up-and-coming regional airline company, will base 600-plus workers at 40 S. Main starting next fall, after the 70 percent vacant building gets a total facelift. Downtown won out over an airport-area office park and a build-to-suit offer in Olive Branch.

That was cause for Wilder Hubbard and John Strawn of Oden Marketing to hoist a sign proclaiming "Oden Welcomes Pinnacles Airlines to the neighborhood."

Downtown Is This Community's Brand!

When successes such as the Pinnacle Airlines headquarters strengthen the center city, the effects spread across the county.

By Paul Morris, Special to Viewpoint
Commercial Appeal

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Landing Pinnacle Airlines in One Commerce Square is an enormous win for Downtown. Pinnacle will shore up the biggest building in the Memphis skyline, and Pinnacle's hundreds of employees will enjoy and support existing Downtown retail, restaurants, entertainment venues, sports venues, residential projects and hotels.

Pinnacle will join other recent office openings to bring vibrancy to Downtown and serve as a catalyst for Downtown's re-emerging office market. Pinnacle will cause pivotal and positive change in Downtown.

But what do Downtown's successes mean to the rest of Memphis and Shelby County? That's a fair question, and one that speaks to the reason I decided to work at the Center City Commission.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Cashing in on the Blues, Memphis stages a party Cleveland could learn from!


As it looks for ways to enhance the Warehouse District, Cleveland could study Memphis, which shaped Beale Street into the top tourist attraction in Tennessee.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Living Blues Publication Reaches 40-Year Milestone!

OXFORD, Miss. – As the Vietnam War raged and rock 'n roll reeled from the breakup of the Beatles, a ragtag group of enthusiasts put out the first edition of what they hoped would become a showcase magazine for the blues music they loved. 
AP – In this photo taken on Sept. 1, 2010,
Living Blues editor, Brett Bonner,
stands next to the Blues Trail 

The 1970 debut issue of Living Blues was peddled at a popular Chicago record store, at nightclubs and from the trunks of cars.

Living Blues, now owned by the University of Mississippi, is the country's oldest magazine dedicated to the genre. Its current 40th anniversary issue features images from more than 90 past covers, including some of the biggest names in the business.

The magazine, published every two months, has an international distribution and circulation of more than 25,000. Many fans are hardcore traditionalists who like their blues tinged with the grit born of the Delta region.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

SPOTLIGHT ON LITTLE WALTER

Little Walter was an American blues harmonica player who holds the distinction of being the only artist ever to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame specifically for his work as a harmonica player. Born Marion Walter Jacobs in Marksville, Louisiana, in 1930, and raised in Alexandria, Louisiana, Jacobs quit school at the age of 12 to work at odd jobs in New Orleans, Memphis, Helena, Arkansas and St. Louis, before heading to Chicago in 1945.

Jacobs was one of several million blacks who migrated from the Mississippi Delta to Chicago, St. Louis, New York, L.A. and other northern cities in the period known as “The Great Migration”, roughly after the First World War through the 1950s.