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'Red Hot: A Memphis Celebration of Sun Records' with Valerie June, Bobby Rush, Luther Dickinson, Jimbo Mathus and More Coming May 26th

5/16/2017

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American classics recut at Sam Phillips’ historic Memphis studios.

 Bobby Rush, Valerie June, Luther Dickinson, Jimbo Mathus,  Amy LaVere and cast members of the Sun Records TV series are featured.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (Press Release)— Red Hot: A Memphis Celebration of Sun Records    is a jubilant, homegrown album honoring the legacy of the tiny independent label that changed the face of popular music.

All proceeds from the  Americana Music Society  release, due  May 26, 2017, will benefit  St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital®, leading the way the world understands, treats and defeats childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases

The collection is co-produced by singer-guitarist  Luther Dickinson  of the   North Mississippi Allstars, and  Tamara Saviano, the Nashville-based writer-producer and author of  Without Getting Killed or Caught: The Life and Music of Guy Clark. A cast of roots music notables celebrates the work of  Sam Phillips, an inaugural  Rock & Roll Hall of Fame  inductee who founded his Sun label in 1952.

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Red Hot  was recorded at the two legendary Memphis recording studios operated by Phillips — the humble  Sun Studio, opened in 1950 as Memphis Recording Service, and the futuristic  Sam Phillips Recording Service, opened in 1959 with  Charlie Rich’s “Lonely Weekends” session.

Cutting hundreds of storied sessions at those locations, Phillips recorded world-altering hits by early rock ’n’ roll stars   Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins  and  Roy Orbison; country music luminaries Rich and  Johnny Cash; and blues/R&B lions  Howlin’ Wolf, B.B. King   and  Junior Parker, to name a few.

The new album’s personnel sport a direct connection to Sun’s history — Luther Dickinson and his younger brother  Cody, the   North Mississippi Allstars’ drummer, are the sons of late musician-producer  Jim Dickinson. Sitting in as vocalist and pianist with   the Jesters, a Memphis garage band that included Phillips’ son  Jerry   among its members, Jim recorded “Cadillac Man,” one of Sun’s last singles, in 1966.

The Dickinson brothers serve as the hub of Red Hot’s house band, which also includes bassist-vocalist  Amy LaVere, one of the Bluff City’s best-known front-women; singer-guitarist John Paul Keith, a solo notable and a former member of the Tearjerkers; and keyboardist Rick Steff, whose credits include work with Cat Power, Dexy’s  Midnight   Runners  and Memphis’ own  Lucero.

Keith, LaVere and Luther Dickinson take lead vocals on numbers originally performed by Phillips’ artists — respectively, Warren Smith’s “Red Cadillac and a Black Moustache,” the Miller Sisters’ “Ten Cats Down,” and  Howlin’ Wolf’s “Moanin’ at Midnight.”

Full Track Listing:
1. Red Cadillac and a Black Moustache - John Paul Keith
2. Sure to Fall - Valerie June
3. Lonely Weekends - Shawn Camp
4. Ways of a Woman in Love - Bryan Hayes
5. Red Hot – Cast of Sun Records  featuring Chuck Mead
6. Tough Titty - Bobby Rush
7. Ten Cats Down - Amy LaVere
8. High School Confidential - Jimbo Mathus
9. Folsom Prison Blues - Alvin Youngblood Hart
10. Moanin’ at Midnight - Luther Dickinson

Cut intimately and live at the music’s historic sources, Red Hot: A Memphis Celebration of Sun Records restates Phillips’ inclusive, democratic mission for music in contemporary terms.

As  Alanna Nash  writes in her liner notes, “Like Walt Whitman, Sam Phillips heard America singing … What he heard on the streets of Memphis was inspiration in the untutored voices of both blacks and whites. What he hoped to find was untried and unproven talent, especially that of regional performers who had the affinity to express themselves, but never had the opportunity to record. And in opening his Memphis Recording Service in 1950, and two years later his little Sun Records, he sold hope to people who had none. 

“He believed in individualism in the extreme. (‘To the extreme!’ he would say, in that half-preaching way.) And he believed, with his ferocity of focus, that the voice of the common man would ring clear in the end.”
http://redhotalbum.com

PopMatters  premiered Luther Dickinson's "Moanin' at  Midnight":   http://bit.ly/2qO3J9J 

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Photos Courtesy: Conqueroo


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