Nashville Scene 5-23-24

Page 1

Construction debris makes its way into backyards across northwest Davidson County BY ELI MOTYCKA

>> PAGE 8

>> PAGE 8 NEWS: CICADA SEASON IS UPON US

FOOD & DRINK: WEDGEWOOD-HOUSTON’S PRESENT TENSE DELIGHTS IN SAKE AND SHAREABLE PLATES

>> PAGE 24

MAY 23–29, 2024 I VOLUME 43 I NUMBER 17 I NASHVILLESCENE.COM I FREE NEWS: REPUBLICANS PRAISE SESSION’S SLATE
CRIMINAL JUSTICE LEGISLATION
OF
TrOublE RUbBLe

WITNESS HISTORY

This fiddle of unknown make belonged to Roy Acuff, the King of Country Music. Acuff was so synonymous with American culture in the early ’40s that enemy soldiers were said to use the battle cry “To hell with Roy Acuff!” as they charged U.S. troops in World War II.

From the exhibit Sing Me Back Home: Folk Roots to the Present

RESERVE TODAY

REACH Program Eyes Expansion

Teams of paramedic and mental health professionals responded to 618 calls during pilot phase BY

Pith in the Wind

This week on the Scene’s news and politics blog

Republicans Praise Session’s Slate of Criminal Justice Legislation

The legislature threw bipartisan support behind some bills affecting courts and crime — with opposition from Democrats on others BY

Cicada Season Is Upon Us

Austin Peay State University’s Don Sudbrink shares some insight on these loud little insects BY KELSEY BEYELER

COVER STORY

Rubble Trouble

Construction debris makes its way into backyards across northwest Davidson County BY ELI MOTYCKA

CRITICS’ PICKS

André 3000, Musicians Corner, Stone Deep, Katie Pruitt, Annie Williams and more

A Moral Revolution

Our Kindred Creatures surveys the origins of the anti-cruelty movement BY WHITNEY BRYANT; CHAPTER16.ORG

MUSIC

FILM

Labor Days

Babes is the buddy-baby comedy we need and deserve BY SADAF AHSAN

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD AND THIS MODERN WORLD

MARKETPLACE

Going Home

Being Present

Minimalist expression metes out maximal experience at Present Tense BY KAY WEST

CULTURE

In the Club: Nashville in Harmony

The chorus of LGBTQ community members and allies celebrates 20 years BY COLE VILLENA

BAYOU COLD BREW ROCKS

Papa Turney’s and Carol Ann’s make space in Nashville for old-school blues, R&B and soul BY RON WYNN

Playing Well With Others

Kim Richey takes a tour through her life story on Every New Beginning BY RACHEL CHOLST

The Spin

The Scene’s live-review column checks out R.A.P. Ferreira at Drkmttr BY JAYME FOLTZ

SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTER: nashvillescene.com/site/forms/subscription_services

PRINT: nashvillesceneshop.com CONTACT TO ADVERTISE: msmith@nashvillescene.com EDITOR: prodgers@nashvillescene.com

FOLLOW US @NASHVILLESCENE

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 3 Available at The Produce Place 4000 Murphy Rd, Nashville, TN 37209 | deltabluesteainc.com
217 WILLOW STREET NASHVILLE, TN 37210 THEFORGENASHVILLE.ORG CLASSES
5/23 Intro to TIG Welding 5/25 Art + Wellness Workshop Series: Part 4 5/25 Spoon Carving with Power Tools
CLASSES:
NEWS
5/29 Parquetry - Geometric Patterns with Wood Veneer: Part 2 5/30 A Survey of Contemporary Art 6/1 Intro to MIG Welding 6/2 Beginner’s Intro to Sewing 6/5 Parquetry - Geometric Patterns with Wood Veneer: Part 3 6/6 Intro to MIG Welding
LEARN A NEW SKILL!
FOOD AND DRINK
CONTENTS 7 7 8 8 11 17 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 34 26
BOOKS
Nashville in Harmony concert • PHOTO BY ANGELINA CASTILLO

WHO WE ARE

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF D. Patrick Rodgers

MANAGING EDITOR Alejandro Ramirez

SENIOR EDITOR Dana Kopp Franklin

ARTS EDITOR Laura Hutson Hunter

MUSIC AND LISTINGS EDITOR Stephen Trageser

DIGITAL EDITOR Kim Baldwin

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Cole Villena

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Jack Silverman

STAFF WRITERS Kelsey Beyeler, Logan Butts, John Glennon, Hannah Herner, Hamilton Matthew Masters, Eli Motycka, Nicolle Praino, William Williams

SENIOR FILM CRITIC: Jason Shawhan

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Sadaf Ahsan, Ken Arnold, Ben Arthur, Radley Balko, Ashley Brantley, Maria Browning, Steve Cavendish, Chris Chamberlain, Rachel Cholst, Lance Conzett, Hannah Cron, Connor Daryani, Stephen Elliott, Steve Erickson, Adam Gold, Kashif Andrew Graham, Seth Graves, Kim Green, Amanda Haggard, Steven Hale, Edd Hurt, Jennifer Justus, P.J. Kinzer, Janet Kurtz, Christine Kreyling, J.R. Lind, Craig D. Lindsey, Margaret Littman, Sean L. Maloney, Brittney McKenna, Addie Moore, Marissa R. Moss, Noel Murray, Joe Nolan, Betsy Phillips, John Pitcher, Margaret Renkl, Daryl Sanders, Nadine Smith, Ashley

Spurgeon, Amy Stumpfl, Kay West, Andrea Williams, Nicole Williams, Ron Wynn, Charlie Zaillian

ART DIRECTOR Elizabeth Jones

PHOTOGRAPHERS Angelina Castillo, Eric England, Matt Masters

GRAPHIC DESIGNERS Sandi Harrison, Mary Louise Meadors, Tracey Starck

GRAPHIC DESIGN INTERN Jacob Lucas

PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Christie Passarello

FESTIVAL DIRECTOR Olivia Britton

MARKETING AND PROMOTIONS MANAGER Robin Fomusa

BRAND PARTNERSHIPS AND EVENTS MANAGER Alissa Wetzel

PUBLISHER Mike Smith

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Michael Jezewski

SENIOR ADVERTISING SOLUTIONS MANAGERS

Carla Mathis, Heather Cantrell Mullins, Jennifer Trsinar, Niki Tyree

ADVERTISING SOLUTIONS MANAGERS Teresa Birdsong, Maddy Fraiche, Kailey Idziak, Allie Muirhead, ZaMontreal Rodgers

SALES OPERATIONS MANAGER Chelon Hill Hasty

ADVERTISING SOLUTIONS ASSOCIATES Audry Houle, Jack Stejskal

SPECIAL PROJECTS COORDINATOR Susan Torregrossa

PRESIDENT Mike Smith

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Todd Patton

CORPORATE CREATIVE DIRECTOR Elizabeth Jones

IT DIRECTOR John Schaeffer

CIRCULATION AND DISTRIBUTION DIRECTOR Gary Minnis

FW PUBLISHING LLC Owner Bill Freeman

In memory of Jim Ridley, editor 2009-2016

4 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
DISCOVERING: The joy of two-step at
Cheeseburgers at Brown’s Diner For advertising information please contact: Mike Smith, msmith@nashvillescene.com or 615-844-9238 VOICE Media Group: National Advertising 1-888-278-9866 vmgadvertising.com ©2024, Nashville Scene. 210 12th Ave. S., Ste. 100, Nashville, TN 37203. Phone: 615-244-7989. The Nashville Scene is published weekly by FW Publishing LLC. The publication is free, one per reader. Removal of more than one paper from any distribution point constitutes theft, and violators are subject to prosecution. Back issues are available at our office. Email: All email addresses consist of the employee’s first initial and last name (no space between) followed by @nashvillescene.com; to reach contributing writers,
editor@nashvillescene.com.
Policy: The Nashville Scene covers news, art
entertainment.
our pages
Honky Tonk Tuesday  EATING:
email
Editorial
and
In
appear divergent views from across the community. Those views do not necessarily represent those of the publishers. Subscriptions: Subscriptions are available at $150 per year for 52 issues. Subscriptions will be posted every Thursday and delivered by third-class mail in usually five to seven days. Please note: Due to the nature of third-class mail and postal regulations, any issue(s) could be delayed by as much as two or three weeks. There will be no refunds issued. Please allow four to six weeks for processing new subscriptions and address changes. Send your check or Visa/MC/AmEx number with expiration date to the above address.

JUNE

JUNE 4

JUNE

JUNE

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 5
10 CELTIC THRONE
2 ROBERT EARL KEEN MAY 26 9 AM - 4 PM RYMAN COMMUNITY DAY FREE RYMAN TOURS FOR TN RESIDENTS
NISSAN PRESENTS STARS FOR SECOND HARVEST ERNEST & FRIENDS
5 THE MORE LIFE TOUR FEATURING RANDY TRAVIS, HIS ORIGINAL BAND & GUEST VOCALIST JAMES DUPRÉ
AUGUST 12 THE SCRIPT ON SALE FRIDAY AT 10 AM
www.artsbellevue.org $20 Tickets 20% Discount for members
JUNE 1
ARTS BELLEVUE PRESENTS THE SECOND ANNUAL EDWIN WARNER PARK SHELTER #5 TIM GARTLAND BAND
OF JULES RAIN OR SHINE MIDTOWN JAZZ QUARTET SPONSORED BY: Photos by D.Matvejevas OONA DOHERTY (NORTHERN IRELAND) NAVY BLUE THREE NIGHTS ONLY: MAY 30 - JUNE 1 “Genius…Utterly astonishing in its power and brilliance” — The Arts Review “One of the most original and provocative voices of her generation.” — The Boston Globe TICKETS FROM $30 OZARTSNASHVILLE.ORG | 6172 COCKRILL BEND CIRCLE, NASHVILLE 37209
JUNE 13-JULY 25 SPRINGER MOUNTAIN FARMS BLUEGRASS NIGHTS AT THE RYMAN
JAZZ JAZZ & BLUES FESTIVAL & BLUES FESTIVAL SATURDAY,
5-9PM
WALL
6 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com

REACH PROGRAM EYES EXPANSION

Teams of paramedic and mental health professionals responded to 618 calls during pilot phase

NASHVILLE’S NEWEST 911 option, Responders Engaged and Committed to Helping (REACH), is set to finish its pilot phase at the end of June after hitting the streets for the first time in February 2023. The co-response program, which pairs paramedics from the Nashville Fire Department and clinicians from Mental Health Coop, was tasked with responding to nonviolent mental health crises and, in turn, freeing up some ambulances and emergency room space.

Leaders of the program Brooke Haas, commander of EMS operations at the Nashville Fire Department, and Michael Randoph, director of co-response, are eyeing an expansion. The REACH program currently staffs two clinicians and two paramedics Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. At a May 7 Public Health and Safety Committee meeting, Haas said the department would like to double the number of staff for the program to increase coverage, as well as add a manager. The fire department is requesting $750,000 to complete the task, part of the department’s budget that is awaiting approval by the Metro Council.

From Feb. 13, 2023, to Feb. 29, 2024, REACH responded to 618 calls and 530 unique patients (48 interacted with the program more than once) — a rough average of three calls per day. Of those calls, 38 percent were still transported to an emergency department, while 22 percent went to Mental Health Coop’s Crisis Treatment Center, 11 percent were transported to inpatient care, and 18 percent stayed at the site but were given resources and referrals. In REACH’s purview, the responses were concentrated in the downtown core, with activity in the southeastern and northeastern parts of Davidson County.

Most of the people REACH responded to were suicidal — 69 percent. Around a third were unhoused or staying at a shelter (31 percent), and 18 percent stayed in group or transitional housing, while 48 percent owned or rented. In addition, 57 percent were insured by TennCare or Medicare, 12 percent had private insurance, 2 percent were uninsured, and 30 percent unreported.

The Department of Emergency Communications was fairly effective in its assessment of when to dispatch REACH: Twelve percent of calls ultimately required police presence, and just two cases resulted in arrests.

While the city’s police co-response program, Partners in Care, releases data snapshots to the city’s website, Joseph Pleasant, spokesperson for the Nashville Fire Department, tells the Scene the REACH data will not be shared online. (Those who keep an eye on public meetings, however, will catch updates in the Behavioral Health and Wellness Advisory Council meetings.)

Randolph says there wasn’t a specific percentage goal for emergency room diversions going in, but anticipates the 38 percent number

will improve. Some calls had medical needs on top of their psychiatric crisis, so a trip to the emergency room was unavoidable, he explains.

He says he is especially proud of the statistic of 22 percent going directly to the Mental Health Coop Crisis Treatment Center.

“I think it is an incredible statistic, because these are people who would have called an ambulance, got an ambulance bill, gone to the emergency room, would have to tell their story over and over again,” Randolph says. “They’d be charged for the ER visit. Not only does it save money for the health care system, but it also helps that person get help faster and get the correct help. ... And hopefully get them out of a state of crisis and back into their normal lives as fast as possible.”

Stephen Martini, director of the Department of Emergency Communications, says the nearly 40 percent of emergency room runs among REACH calls is an improvement over what would have been 100 percent ambulance re-

Key initiatives at Metro Nashville Public Schools enabled by COVID-19 relief funding face a “fiscal cliff” as the city works out its new budget. Director of Schools Adrienne Battle noted during a recent budget hearing that at least $66 million would be required to cover programs and salaries expanded via COVID-19 dollars, while budget requests include an additional $11 million. Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s proposed budget for next year incorporates step salary increases and a 3.5 percent cost-of-living bump, bringing the total MNPS operating budget near $1.2 billion. Education funding from the state, which uses its own budget formula, will become more clear in June.

Metro Human Resources affirmed employees’ allegations that Councilmember Joy Styles and Metro Human Relations Commission director Davie Tucker intimidated Metro Arts staffers, according to a recent internal report. Styles spoke with, and physically touched, employees after a contentious Feb. 26 Metro Council committee meeting, while Tucker publicly disparaged staffers who spoke out against embattled Metro Arts director Daniel Singh who was placed on administrative leave in late April. Reporters Connor Daryani and Stephen Elliott of the Nashville Banner have the details.

sponses before the program started.

“If you get in the ambulance, you’re going to the hospital,” Martini says. “We’re already light-years better than we were, even a year in, because we’re connecting people who are experiencing nonviolent psychological incidents with care on a variety of levels — whether that’s a return to home, return to a group home or connected to another solution.”

As the program looks to expand, Randolph anticipates he will not have a problem finding clinicians interested in this new and burgeoning field of co-response.

“I think people are really interested, and we haven’t had any problems filling the positions,” he says. “But it’s really kind of niche work, and we want to train people really well, because the quality of services delivered is always something to be mindful of, and we want to make sure that we only train the best counselors and we train them really well to help the people in Nashville.”

Lipstick Lounge owners Christa Suppan and Jonda Valentine broke ground on a new sports bar, Chapstick, that will adjoin their iconic East Nashville hangout, which celebrates 22 years in 2024. The future bar’s televisions will show a “mix of all sports just like the [mix of people] we have as patrons.” Located near the border of Lockeland Springs and East End, The Lipstick Lounge is one of only 32 open and operating lesbian bars in the United States registered with the Lesbian Bar Project, and the only lesbian-owned and -operated bar in Tennessee, according to a press release.

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 7
NEWS
PHOTO: ERIC ENGLAND
PITH IN THE WIND NASHVILLESCENE.COM/NEWS/PITHINTHEWIND
SOME OF THE REACH TEAM, FROM LEFT: KELSEY TAYLOR, KIARA HAYNES, MICHAEL RANDOLPH, CAPT. JERRY PRADINES, CAPT. CHAD WALKER PHOTO: ERIC ENGLAND PHOTO: ERIC ENGLAND ADRIENNE BATTLE CHAPSTICK GROUNDBREAKING

REPUBLICANS PRAISE SESSION’S SLATE

OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE LEGISLATION

The legislature threw bipartisan support behind some bills affecting courts and crime — with opposition from Democrats on others

WHILE THE 113TH Tennessee General Assembly debated how to alter the state’s franchise tax and whether there would be a universal school voucher plan, dozens of bills passed centering on crime and courts — a slate of legislation Republicans now tout as one of their greatest accomplishments of the session.

“I think when you look back at this session, one of the things it will be defined by will be the different types of criminal justice reforms that we have done,” said House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R-Crossville) during a press conference at the end of session. “There’s a lot of things that we did this year to protect our communities, protect our streets and protect our citizens.”

Sen. Jeff Yarbro (D-Nashville) countered, pointing to the passing of a bill that would allow local school boards and law enforcement to decide whether teachers can carry guns in schools.

“A year after the Covenant School [shooting], this General Assembly has done nothing to make people safer and has instead thumbed their noses at public safety by putting more guns into teachers’ hands in public schools,” Yarbro said.

Even so, Democrats got behind several pieces of criminal justice legislation. Passed unanimously in the House and Senate, SB2507 was signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee on May 1. It requires children admitted to juvenile detention to be allowed within 24 hours to have at least one phone call and a 30-minute in-person visit with their parent or guardian. The companion House bill was co-sponsored by Rep. William Slater (R-Gallatin) and Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D-Memphis). Hardaway, a member of the House Criminal Justice Committee, was also a co-sponsor for HB0701, which also passed unanimously in both chambers. The law adds continuous sexual abuse of a child to the list of criminal misconduct receiving sentences of community supervision for life in addition to other imposed punishment.

HOUSE MAJORITY LEADER

WILLIAM LAMBERTH (R-PORTLAND)

it will immediately be challenged, and we’ll have to go back to the U.S. Supreme Court to see whether or not they are willing to overturn the precedent of citing, as they did years ago, that the death penalty is unconstitutional for anything other than capital murder,” Lamberth says. “We’re going to have to fight that fight out all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, but it’s one I think is worth fighting.”

These bills are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to criminal justice legislation that passed this session. Visit nashvillescene.com for a list of related bills.

Lawmakers who spoke against the bill said it was not because offenders shouldn’t be prevented from harming anyone again. Rather, many voted against the bill because victims’ advocacy groups have stated that children could be deterred from coming forward if they knew their abuser could face death. Lamberth countered by reading statements from victims who said they believed it would not deter reporting.

Another of Lamberth’s bills, HB1641, creates a misdemeanor offense for violating a condition of release on bail and authorizes law enforcement to arrest an offender without a warrant. Lamberth tells the Scene he worked with Nashville judges to create the bill and adds that the city has “a really good bond supervision program.” In early committee meetings, Hardaway indicated he would support the bill.

SEN. JEFF YARBRO (D-NASHVILLE)

commit serious crimes could face five years of probation or incarceration in an adult facility after their juvenile sentence ends.

“I not only strongly supported the original version, I really was going to sign on as a cosponsor,” said Senate Minority Leader Raumesh Akbari (D-Memphis) during discussion of the bill. “I hate that we are in this posture where the first version of blended sentencing in the state that will pass is one that is not actually going to help juveniles, as the concept is intended.”

CICADA

SEASON IS UPON US

Austin Peay State University’s Don Sudbrink shares some insight on these loud little insects BY KELSEY

PERIODICAL CICADAS ARE pretty metal. Not to be confused with the annual “dog day” cicadas that pop up in late summer, periodical cicadas live underground for 13 to 17 years. They feed on tree sap before emerging from the soil, shedding their crunchy nymph carcasses all over, screeching to attract mates, and then dying before their offspring do it all over again. Like most metal-heads, they can be intimidating to some, but are pretty much harmless — and very loud.

To find out more about Brood XIX — the cicadas Nashvillians are currently being plagued by — we reached out to Don Sudbrink, chair of the agriculture department at Clarksville’s Austin Peay State University, who has three entomology degrees including a Ph.D. from Auburn University.

“I’ve said for years that public safety is not a partisan issue,” says House Majority Leader William Lamberth (R-Portland). “Republicans or Democrats alike, or anyone in between, should be able to come together — and we do come together in the legislature — to pass bills that improve public safety.”

But Republicans and Democrats did disagree over Lamberth’s own HB1663, which the state could eventually have to fight for in the U.S. Supreme Court. The bill allows consideration of the death penalty as punishment for the rape of a child.

“When a jury hands that punishment down,

But by the time the bill made it to the House floor and was conformed to match the Senate version, Hardaway joined other Democrats in voting against the legislation — which still passed 75-17. There was no debate on the floor of the House, but Senate Democrats were vocal about their opposition. It passed in the upper chamber with a 27-4 vote.

“This will unquestionably clog up the local court system,” said Yarbro in April. “It will unquestionably lead to increased local incarceration.”

Similarly, Democrats were set to support SB0624, a bill on blended sentencing that passed the Senate last year. But during this year’s session, the House took up the Senate bill and passed it with their own amendments — championed by Speaker Sexton. The House amendments changed the bill so that teens who

The House passed its amendments and adopted the legislation in a 79-15-1 vote. The Senate bill originally passed in 2023’s initial vote with 31-0-1, but Senate Democrats later opposed the House’s amendments to the legislation — with Sen. Ed Jackson (R-Jackson) joining Senate Democratic Caucus Chair London Lamar (D-Memphis) as present but not voting for both amendments. For the amendment that substantially changed the bill, Sen. Mark Pody (R-Lebanon) was present but not voting, and Sen. Kerry Roberts (R-Springfield) voted no. Lawmakers crossed party lines on other criminal-justice-related votes as well. HB2323 increases the penalty for a third or subsequent domestic assault conviction from a misdemeanor to a felony. The House voted 89-7-1 in favor of the bill, with several Democrats — including House Minority Leader Karen Camper and House Democratic Caucus Chair John Ray Clemmons — voting in favor. The Senate voted 27-3-1, with Yarbro as the only Democrat voting in favor. Another bill requires a judge to give first consideration to community safety when deciding the conditions of bond for a criminal defendant; it passed unanimously in the Senate, but House Democrats spoke about concerns for individuals’ constitutional rights and voted against the bill. It passed 80-13-3, was signed by the governor and goes into effect July 1.

A second bill dealing with bail passed along party lines 74-20-2 in the House and 27-4 in the Senate. It prohibits a judge from considering a defendant’s ability to pay when determining the amount of bail necessary to assure the defendant’s appearance in court. It was signed by the governor on May 1 and became effective immediately. ▼

Which brood are we seeing now? This brood here in the Tennessee region and up into about middle Illinois, all through the South, is called Brood XIX, and it is a 13-year cicada brood. So they come out every 13 years and mate and reproduce. And then once they produce their offspring, the nymphs go underground and feed on tree roots for 13 years and then do it again. There is another brood that’s up in northern Illinois, Chicagoland area, that is called Brood XIII, but it’s a 17-year cicada. And so up north [it] takes more time for them to develop.

When they’re underground, are they growing that whole time? Mhmm. Slowly, slowly, slowly, slowly, slowly growing. So basically they start out and they’re little teeny tiny nymphs. Right now the females are laying their eggs up in the tree branches, and they’re gonna develop for several weeks, and then sometime in July, they’ll drop off, burrow into the ground, dig into these tree roots and just start feeding on them for 13 years. Just kind of drinking out the xylem sap. … And so when they do that, they drink and then they poop, and so they provide organic matter. They’re pulling some juice out of the tree, but mostly it’s not something that really drains the batteries of the tree.

Can they breathe when they’re underground? Yeah. One of the things is they dig underground and they make burrows and holes to have air pockets and breathing. Unless it’s completely soaked, then they have to kind of move up closer to the ground. … People ask, “What’s their purpose?” Well, they provide aeration for the soil because those little claws help them plow through the soil as they’re moving up and down the root structure of the tree.

Can they harm people in any way? Usually not. Unless, say, you’re riding a motorcycle without any facial protection, you may get hurt that way, if you’re going really fast. … They don’t bite. They have a strawtube mouth that drinks plant juice. They don’t want to

8 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com

mess with us, they can’t sting us or bite us. Can people eat them? If anybody has a shellfish allergy — shrimp or crabs, crayfish, whatever — there’s a pretty strong likelihood that they would have some kind of allergy to insects because they have the same types of proteins in their exoskeletons. So people can really get sick, anaphylaxis and other things like that, so it’s not recommended for people who have any shellfish allergy to eat cicadas. That being said, people eat them all the time, usually they cook them. I have cooked them and eaten them myself, and I’m alive and well. … Cooking them is the key. You can boil them, you can sauté them. We made them into a jambalaya once — it was good. … When you use the ones that are out, that are fully dark with the red eyes, they have a crunchy, chewy exoskeleton. You want to get the ones that first emerge from their shells. When that’s the case, they’re much more delectable and softer-bodied, like soft-shell crabs. … If there’s a white fungus on the bottom, that’s not a good one to eat, that’s one to discard. … Make sure that they are well-cooked just like most foods that you get in the wilds.

[Editor’s note: If you’re interested in eating nice crunchy cicadas, do additional research to learn how to spot fungus, consider the presence of pesticides and find cooking methods.]

Does construction and development affect cicadas? Certainly. With the massive development that’s gone on since the last cicada emergence in 2011, Metro Davidson area certainly has changed where certain cicadas come up. When you take down all the trees and pave it over, or just take down the trees, you remove the source of food for them, and those will die in that section. … Lots and lots of development, fewer cicadas is usually what that means, especially if you pave the road. … They’re also done if the tree dies because that’s the thing that’s been feeding it. So once they take those trees out, that’s it.

Why are they so loud? These are insects that have evolved to have almost 100-decibel signatures. … If you’re going to be around them for long periods of time, and right in the midst of them, they recommend ear protection. … It’s like you’re operating a leaf blower or a lawn mower, chainsaw, something along those lines. So ear protection if you’re in that environment for long periods of time. But males are trying to attract females. That’s what they’ve been doing for millions of years. And that is the successful call, at least for that particular female species. And so these tymbals — these vibrating membranes — it’s one of the loudest of the insect species, and the longest-lived too. ▼

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 9 CULINARY FEATURING CHEF PAULETTE LICITRA VUEMASTER SERIES More Information: www.artsbellevue.org June 7-9 | $100 Green Door Gourmet 7007 River Rd Pike Nashville, TN 37209 SPACE IS LIMITED!!!! PHOTO: ANGELINA CASTILLO PHOTO: ANGELINA CASTILLO
10 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 224 REP. JOHN LEWIS WAY S • NASHVILLE, TN CMATHEATER.COM • @CMATHEATER BOOKED BY @NATIONALSHOWS2 • NATIONALSHOWS2.COM The CMA Theater is a property of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. UPCOMING SHOWS AT THE MUSEUM’S CMA THEATER TICKETS ON SALE NOW Museum members receive exclusive pre-sale opportunities for CMA Theater concerts. Learn more at CountryMusicHallofFame.org/Membership. JUNE 23 JIMMY WEBB SONGS & STORIES PRESENTED BY HIPPIE RADIO 94.5 SEPTEMBER 7 JULIAN LAGE SPEAK TO ME TOUR OCTOBER 11 THE PRINE FAMILY PRESENTS YOU GOT GOLD: CELEBRATING THE SONGS OF JOHN PRINE MKTG_Scene_1/2 Page_CMAT Listings_05.23.24.indd 1 5/17/24 4:03 PM

TrOUBlE RUbBLe

Construction debris makes its way into backyards across northwest Davidson County

PHOTO: ERIC ENGLAND

PASSING HORSE PENS and front-yard goats on a winding country lane can make a city driver forget about Nashville. Lush green hills rise up from all directions as the Bordeaux suburbs slowly turn into back roads running alongside babbling creeks. At least three community clubs, the kind where neighbors meet for Fourth of July barbecues, are still active around here at Whites Creek, Little Creek and Scottsboro. The cicada chorus is loud. For decades, Nashvillians fed up with the urban hustle and bustle have moved over the river for something close to Briley Parkway but closer to nature.

The small-town energy also means neighbors talk. About 20,000 people live in the northwest quadrant of Davidson County from the Cumberland River to I-24 West, give or take a few square miles. The entire area is a single Metro Council district — District 1, by far the largest by area and home to much of the county’s undeveloped land. Recently they’ve been talking at local meetings and in Facebook groups about the sudden influx of red dirt, rubble and rock that’s collecting in piles, disappearing in backyards or tumbling down ravines across the district’s tightly knit neighborhoods. A few residents have even started counting the dump trucks that have become frequent travelers on the district’s quiet back roads. One resident once followed a truck into town to Ewing Drive, where a half-finished construction site prepped for 18 townhomes recently hit the market.

These rolling patches of hillside can look very different depending on the vantage point. Some see pristine country wilderness smartly converted into public land at Bells Bend and Beaman Park, occasionally spoiled by single-family homes, which get more sparse toward the county line. Parcels here sell at a relatively low price per acre, offering others the chance to bring in bulldozers and backhoes to build a modern estate.

Anne Bohnett, a YouTuber whose Anne of All Trades account brings her family’s homesteading journey to 393,000 subscribers, set up her family’s property on a quiet hillside off Ashland City Highway a few years ago. Robert James Ritchie, better known as Kid Rock, built up his compound over the past 20 years, complete with a replica White House overlooking Knight Drive. He follows Barbara Mandrell, the legendary country singer who developed the neighboring Fontanel Mansion in 1988.

Tucked in the corner of District 1, one massive dump — the Southern Services Landfill, run by Waste Management — towers over Briley Parkway between the Ashland City exit and the Cumberland River. It’s a beast at 183 acres, a combination construction-and-demolition (C&D) material and recycling operation well-versed in working with state and local regulators. Beyond Southern Services, there are large regulated landfills in Clarksville and Murfreesboro.

In 2022, Nashville’s Solid Waste Region Board denied Waste Management’s request to expand Southern Services. Waste Management subsequently decided to close the landfill to outside contractors, sued the board, lost, and lost again on appeal in August 2023. Nashville’s 494-page solid waste plan briefly addresses C&D waste if

only to say: We are producing a lot of this, we lack good options for disposal, and we are failing to recycle it.

Construction-and-demo fill has flowed from Nashville’s construction boom by the thousands of tons. When preparing a site for townhomes or apartments, contractors have to dig up earth, move it around and level it out in a process known as grading. They often hire other contractors to make the leftover truckloads of dirt and rubble disappear. Finding the cheapest and easiest way to get rid of debris has become an industry in itself.

“You call them, they bring you a dumpster, you have 30 days to fill it up, then they come and haul it off,” says a Nashville home builder who requests anonymity, citing professional concerns. “We know what we can and can’t put in dumpsters — things like paint or stains or anything flammable — and, to be a commercial dumper, you have to sign an agreement and understand your rights and regulations.” His company contracts a waste management service for 30 dumpsters across all its job sites. The service charges $600 per dumpster, including dropoff and pickup.

Two large properties between Scottsboro and Whites Creek are claiming protections as grading and construction sites while they take on loads of fill to spread across 30 or more acres. Several more appear to be following suit. Still others are eyed suspiciously by neighbors (and passionately discussed on Facebook) for existing in a seemingly perpetual state of construction.

“A lot of times they get these grading permits just as a guise to dump,” says Metro Councilmember Joy Kimbrough, who has represented District 1 since 2023. “If you go in some places in Joelton or Scottsboro, there are signs that say: ‘Dump here.’ Ever since I took office it’s been a major complaint from residents.”

Kimbrough has been drafting legislation that could allow closer government oversight on a property if there’s suspicion that it’s out of compliance with existing regulations.

“They’re wild in Ashland City when it comes to dumping,” Kimbrough says. “If they have a grading permit and I — or any councilmember — see something else is going on, this allows us to initiate a closer investigation. It’s more than what we have now, and it’s a little bit of accountability.”

MOUNDS OF CONSTRUCTION debris pockmark District 1. Residents identify the same two perpetrators as the most blatant examples of at-home dumping: a looming mass at 5250 Ashland City Highway and a steep roadside ravine at 5795 Old Hickory Blvd.

Thousands of cars pass Dirt Mountain every day. It sticks out among the modest 2- and 3-acre residential properties on Ashland City Highway. Barry Sulkin knows many of these neighbors and enjoys free passage in their driveways, where he frequently takes visitors on a “dump tour” of greater Scottsboro.

“We want them to stop dumping — that’s number one,” Sulkin says. “Number two, control the mud. Number three, remove all the illegally placed waste. Restore the land. Pay a penalty for

BARRY SULKIN (LEFT) AND MEMBERS OF TENNESSEE RIVERKEEPER

violating federal laws and reimburse us for our legal fees.”

A retired environmental scientist with the state who specialized in water regulation, Sulkin has lived in a secluded property deep in the Scottsboro woods since 1978. He helped kill the 840 North expansion in the 1990s and the Maytown development proposal aimed at Bells Bend in the 2000s. Sulkin is obsessive, effective and respected by the Scottsboro community.

Unfortunately for C&D debris, fill dumping near Sulkin’s home has intersected with water regulation — his area of expertise — thus becoming his latest fixation.

Property owner Ricky Ray bought the Dirt Mountain site for $220,000 in July 2019 and turned it into a construction zone six months later. Permitting history shows that work on a tall cell tower — the property’s only visible structure — began in 2020. Ray secured a grading permit that May. Overhead satellite footage shows the site’s transformation from a wooded hillside into a bald dirt patch over the next two years. Ray maintains that the mountains of fill dirt and rubble are related to a cell tower access road that is still under construction. His grading permit covers the site through September 2026.

“I haven’t done anything wrong,” Ray tells the Scene. “It’s in litigation right now, so I can’t say much more than that.”

Neighbors teamed up with Tennessee Riverkeeper, a regional environmental group, to sue Ray last summer. When it rains, they say, water spreads Ray’s construction debris across nearby yards. Streams carry the dirt into Sulphur Creek, which runs muddy and drains into the Cumberland River less than a mile away. They accuse Ray of violating both the Clean Water Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act by operating an open dump that generates illegal discharge. The Tennessean covered the suit in October. Since then, Tennessee Riverkeeper attorney Mike Martin has been fighting Ray for discovery, hoping to peel back the private dumping industry they expect is operating on Ray’s property.

“We want to know where it’s coming from,” Martin tells the Scene on a sunny Tuesday, Dirt Mountain looming in the background. He’s

tight-lipped like his opponent. “I want to be careful about my words — we’re trying to win this lawsuit.”

The right people can dump a C&D truckload here for $50 or $75, one local contractor tells me. Working with Waste Management a few miles down the road at the official Southern Services Landfill could cost five times that. Ray’s email, splashed all over permit documents, identifies him as an employee of Summit Constructors, a company specializing in grading and site prep bought last year by Jones Bros construction in Mt. Juliet. An in-house fill connection on Ashland City Highway can make work cheaper and faster than frequent trips across the county, especially for the extensive residential construction on and near Briley Parkway, Whites Creek, Clarksville Pike, Ewing Drive and King’s Lane. Shorter drives also mean less fuel and a better bottom line.

Plaintiffs must nail Ray down inside a regulatory jungle. Wiggle room between the local and state regulations that govern solid waste, landfills, debris disposal and grading have allowed Ray and other property owners to navigate bright lines that could cost them their permits. Inert materials, for example, are allowed under grading permits. Metro looks favorably on temporary disposal sites where fill can be dropped off or picked up between projects. Permanent C&D disposal can qualify a property as a landfill under federal law, requiring a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit and a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan, both of which Ray has on file. Just because they exist doesn’t mean they’re sufficient or being followed, plaintiffs argue. Sediment continues to flow downhill. Their big complaint is that Ray has not done the required site assessments to evaluate Erosion Prevention and Sediment Control, a step required for properties draining more than 10 acres.

At times, state inspectors have agreed with the complaints, citing Ray over the past year for lacking proper documentation (including a site assessment) and insufficient sediment control. Bill Murph of the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation also flagged procedural errors in required twice-weekly

12
SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
NASHVILLE
ERIC ENGLAND
PHOTO:

Long-standing industry expertise means that nobody understands the unique challenges of protecting your hospitality business better than Society Insurance. Offering tried-and-true specialized programs, we are proud to provide comprehensive coverage for restaurants and bars in the Volunteer State.

Find an agent & request a quote at societyinsurance.com/tennessee

e School of Science, Technology, Engineering, & Math will prepare you to think critically about the world around you, ask questions, and seek answers and solutions. Pursue a career in fields such as Architectural, Civil/Construction, Computer and Electrical Engineering Technologies, Pre-Engineering, the Natural Sciences, and Mathematics.

Apply today. Register early for summer and fall semesters.

Fall semester begins August 26.

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 13 it’s all in the details
TRIED-AND-TRUE
BIG DIFFERENCE.
RESTAURANT & BAR COVERAGE WITH NO SURPRISES. SMALL DETAIL.
A
A Good Fit.
Great Future.
nscc.edu/academics NSCC 01-24-06

inspections carried out by Andy Travis Miles, a certified EPSC inspector.

Down the road, Sulkin recalls the various phases of the Barnes site, a 34-acre bowl where construction debris disappears down a cliff between Old Hickory Boulevard and Blue Berry Hill Road. The two roads form the lip of a steep ravine that drains like a sink into a few small waterways and eventually into the same Sulphur Creek that runs down to Dirt Mountain. The border of Beaman Park, a 1,678-acre natural area under Metro Parks, comes within a few hundred yards of the parcel known either as the Barnes Dump or the Barnes Fill Site, depending on whom you ask.

Asphalt and broken concrete mark small parking areas by the road. Robert Barnes purchased the property in 2019 for $22,500. Another name, Adam Barnes, and a phone number are handwritten on a folder in the weatherproof permit box. It’s full of reports by the same inspector who signed off on Dirt Mountain, Travis Miles, most recently dated May 16. Other than a missing Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan, Miles finds no problems with the site.

“No comment,” Barnes tells the Scene Miles could not be reached via contact information on a business card left with the reports, which identifies him as an employee of stormwater compliance company Greenrise Technologies.

Tennessee Riverkeeper’s lawsuit against Barnes is like déjà vu: violations of the CWA and RCRA, dirty stormwater runoff, insufficient mitigation measures.

It includes a statement from neighbor (and Tennessee Riverkeeper member) Joe Ingle, who says runoff endangers his land and livestock. Ingle, a well-known prison reform advocate in Nashville, says he has seen debris including “rocks, metal, dirt, asphalt, mattresses and other trash” disappear into the property. Photos at the Barnes site reviewed by the Scene show piles of rock that include metal rebar — a big no-no classified as a contaminant in C&D fill.

Starting in December 2020, Barnes operated the site under a general construction permit. Trouble came two years later after a neighborhood complaint brought a young TDEC environmental official named Laurel Jobe to the site. Her report, complete with photos, starts a long paper trail documenting issues with runoff and debris at the site. In December 2023, state regulators, notified of an impending lawsuit from environmentalists, sent Barnes a letter outlining three violations: no stormwater plan available, unpermitted material (wire, metal and a wrecked car) in the fill, and a lack of stream protections. The Riverkeeper lawsuit came Feb. 1.

way. A short hike up to Stone’s property line offers a clear view into his neighbors’ backyard, which looks like an active construction site. The owner, David Hargrove, told Stone he was just widening the driveway. Steady dump truck traffic has outlived the project.

“He’s just taking waste from whoever, we don’t know who yet,” Sulkin tells the Scene between dump sites. Sulkin is convinced that a silver pickup truck, possibly Hargrove’s, is tailing him, and we pull into a church parking lot to let it pass. “We haven’t sued him. We can’t keep suing everybody. We’re going to let the first two percolate a little bit more.”

THE EXACT LINES between landfill and open dump, grading and disposal, permanent deposits and temporary fill will likely be tested in court. Legal accountability for environmental violations is a luxury rarely available unless there’s someone resourced or dedicated enough to sue and someone knowledgeable and organized enough to bring together the right people.

“I could tell you seven places where this is happening — the problem with what they’re doing is that it’s legal,” says Nick Leonardo about C&D debris in the district. He represented District 1 on the Metro Council before Kimbrough. “Nobody else in Nashville has this problem; the city always looks to District 1 to absorb its growing pains. We have the most beautiful place in the world in Whites Creek and Bells Bend. This is what this country looked like 300 years ago. We’ve got bald eagles, we’ve got all kinds of wildlife, we’ve got insects and things that you don’t have anywhere else in this county. And the pressure is coming quick.”

Northwest Davidson County — specifically Scottsboro and Bells Bend — has long fought attempts to transform the green countryside for profit. Leonardo puts the fill problem into a much larger context driving industrialization out of Nashville’s core. Leonardo mentions Roy T. Goodwin and Smyrna Ready Mix, the large-materials company sitting on property by the Jefferson Street Bridge. As a councilmember, Leonardo helped pass legislation requiring local approval before expanding a landfill.

The city has mostly stayed out of District 1’s dumping issue. Residents have harried public officials, including Mayor Freddie O’Connell, in community meetings, and successfully gotten a few Metro officials out to see the properties earlier this year.

WHILE THESE TWO suits proceed in federal court, locals point out other sites around the area engaged in seemingly open-ended construction. Many see trucks turning down residential roads with full loads, then see them returning empty. They hear rumors and peek into neighbors’ yards. Farther down Sulphur Creek, Nathan Stone lets Sulkin park in his drive-

Apparently a few loads of old Titans gameday grass found its way from Nissan Stadium into another massive fill operation near Whites Creek. John Donelson IV — nine generations removed from the frontiersman who helped found Fort Nashborough in 1780 — bought the site seven years ago under an LLC. Two years later, he rezoned it from residential to agricultural, significantly expanding its legal uses. Donelson does not charge per truckload; contractors he knows come and dump here for free, Donelson tells the Scene. They’re helping shore up his hillside so he can build on top.

Unlike Dirt Mountain, the fill appears to be genuinely graded — consciously shaped and

flattened with heavy construction machinery and connected to a dirt path winding uphill big enough for a vehicle. He has a silt fence for runoff. Donelson is planning a field and a barn that blend into the hollow, but the full timeline is fuzzy. The next step is a clay layer and 6 to 8 inches of topsoil. It’ll be built when it’s done, he says.

“I don’t have to have a permit because I’m zoned agriculture,” Donelson tells the Scene “Drive by and look at it. It’s better than it was.”

Meanwhile, pissed-off locals (Donelson lists their names) complain about the property on Facebook. Electrician Dave Harder, Donelson’s direct neighbor, has struggled to maintain niceties after living next to Donelson’s large construction site. He says the runoff affects downhill neighbors, while the noise, deforestation and heavy equipment near his property line have dramatically affected his quality of life. The two have recently gotten back on speaking terms — as engineers and surveyors probe their shared property line.

“I’m talking to him again, but not often,” Harder, who bought his property in 2006, tells the Scene in his backyard. “I said to myself, ‘How can this problem get better without us talking?’ I’ve been revolving my whole life around when they work and when they don’t. I’m just hoping time heals all this.”

“The owners are allowed to do what they are doing under a mass grading permit issued by Metro Stormwater,” explained Councilmember At-Large Burkley Allen in a May 12 email to Ingle and Sulkin. “It may take a change to Stormwater policy and getting something into the Code to provide the teeth needed to protect neighboring properties better.”

The other end of Nashville’s construction boom is truckloads of hard earth from whole neighborhoods ending and beginning again. A private LLC named Scottsboro Farms registered to site-prep company Demo Plus bought nearly 250 undeveloped acres in Scottsboro in early April, a sign that the private C&D disposal industry is growing rather than shrinking. The solid waste board’s decision to stop Waste Management’s landfill expansion protected an area already suffering environmental racism and degradation. It didn’t make less construction or demolition. In fact, real estate development has continued humming, especially around North Nashville and Bordeaux.

Contractors, hired to make debris disappear by the truckload, often take the cheapest and easiest ways out, sometimes involving unsavory solutions. While sites like the Barnes ravine or Donelson’s level dirt field differ in size and scope, neighbors see them as part of the same construction scourge disturbing the backwoods peace. And the silt always flows downhill. ▼

14 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
A PERMIT BOX AT THE BARNES SITE PHOTOS: ERIC ENGLAND A TRUCK DISAPPEARS INTO THE HARGROVE PROPERTY IN ASHLAND CITY
NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 15 Elmington Park 3531 WEST END AVE Fun starts at 5pm. Movies start at sundown. Free to attend Kid & pet friendly We’re celebrating 30 years of Movies in the Park! Nashvilleʼs longest running FREE movie screening returns this summer to Elmington Park, every Thursday in June. Enjoy games, giveaways and food truck fare before taking in a fan-favorite film under the stars. #MIP24 NASHVILLEMOVIESINTHEPARK.COM *All films will be shown in open caption* JUNE 6 THE SUPER MARIO BROS. MOVIE JUNE 13 13 GOING ON 30 JUNE 20 BARBIE JUNE 27 SHREK IN PARTNERSHIP WITH SPONSORED BY PRESENTED BY FOOD VENDORS

CARMINA BURANA

Nashville Symphony & Chorus

Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor

Tucker Biddlecombe, chorus director

Meechot Marrero, soprano

Randall Scotting, countertenor

Sidney Outlaw, baritone Vanderbilt Youth Choirs

Mary Biddlecombe, Vanderbilt youth choirs director

SupportedbytheMaryC.RaglandFoundation

Nashville Symphony | Enrico Lopez-Yañez, conductor

COMING SOON

JUN 20 & 21 | 7:30 PM

Special Event

SMOKEY ROBINSON with the Nashville Symphony

JUN 27 | 7:30 PM

Fundraising Event

SPIRITS OF SUMMER

“Symphonic Nights”

Live Orchestra + Craft Cocktail Competition

JUN 22 | 8 PM

Ascend Amphitheater cypress hill performs "black sunday" with the Nashville Symphony

JUN 28 | 8 PM

Ascend Amphitheater THE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMS with the Nashville Symphony

JUN 23 | 7:30 PM

JUN 13 TO 15 | 7:30 PM

FIRSTBANK POPS SERIES

AN EVENING WITH TITUSS BURGESS

Nashville Symphony | Enrico Lopez-Yañez, conductor

Presentation THE FAB FOUR: THE ULTIMATE TRIBUTE

PresentedwithouttheNashvilleSymphony.

JUN 30 | 7:30 PM

Presentation

LITTLE RIVER BAND

PresentedwithouttheNashvilleSymphony.

JUN 25 & 26 | 7:30 PM

Special Event BEN RECTOR & CODY FRY Live with the Nashville Symphony

JUL 2 | 7:30 PM

Special Event

NATALIE MERCHANT: KEEP YOUR COURAGE TOUR with the Nashville Symphony

WITH SUPPORT FROM BUY TICKETS : 615.687.6400 NashvilleSymphony.org/Tickets Giancarlo Guerrero, music director 2023/24 SEASON NASHVILLE SYMPHONY COME HEAR EXTRAORDINARY THANK YOU TO OUR CONCERT PARTNERS MOVIE SERIES PARTNER POPS SERIES PARTNER FAMILY SERIES PARTNER MUSIC LEGENDS PARTNER
MAY 25
PM
MAY 26
MOVIE SERIES E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL IN
| 7:30
&
| 2 PM AMAZON
CONCERT
MAY 30
PM
TO JUN 1 | 7:30 PM & JUN 2 | 2

Visit calendar.nashvillescene.com for more event listings

THURSDAY, MAY 23

MUSIC

[CELEBRATING KUNG FU GRIP] STONE DEEP

When rap-rock pioneers Stone Deep got back together in 2022 after a 23-year hiatus, they began reissuing remastered editions of their releases from the ’90s, when they were pushing the boundaries of popular music with their intoxicating mix of rap, hard rock and funk. They recently dropped the latest in that series of reissues, their 1995 album Kung Fu Grip, which upon its initial release won a Nashville Music Award the following year in the Independent Recording category. Thursday night at Eastside Bowl, the band — vocalist Ronzo “The Beast” Cartwright, guitarist Glen Cummings, bassist Big Tim Brooks, drummer David Howard and vocalist/turntablist Terry “DJ KUTT” Hayes — will make their first appearance in Nashville since the new reissue dropped in February. “We have 38 new songs,” Cummings says. “And so far we have small demos for like 22 of them.” While the focus Thursday will be on celebrating the material from Kung Fu Grip, the guitarist says they might “put one of the new ones in.” Stone Deep is headlining a bill that includes Stoney T, Catchfire and Dear Dario. In a nod to their older fans who might not be able to make it to a late-night weeknight show, they will take the stage second, at 8:50 p.m. DARYL SANDERS

8 P.M. AT EASTSIDE BOWL

1508 GALLATIN PIKE S.

THURSDAY / 5.23

MUSIC

[COUNTRY FEEDBACK] REAL ESTATE

Jangle pop evolved from its origins in the 1960s music of Jackie DeShannon and The Byrds through a revisionist phase in the ’80s that found bands like Let’s Active and R.E.M. grafting post-punk angst onto the guitar riffs invented in the ’70s by the likes of Dwight Twilley and Alex Chilton. The long-running New York pop band Real Estate staked its claim to representing the post-jangle world on their 2014 album Atlas, on which singer and songwriter Martin Courtney sounded like an amalgam of Luna’s Dean Wareham and Fountains of Wayne singer Chris Collingwood. Like a lot of jangle pop, Atlas skirted the boundaries of power pop without fully embracing the genre’s conventions — the band sounded more like Gin Blossoms than they did, say, The dB’s. Real Estate traveled to Nashville to cut their new full-length Daniel, and producer Daniel Tashian — a pop master who has worked on records by Kacey Musgraves and The Secret Sisters — streamlines and deepens their sound. Tashian gives Daniel an appealing sheen without swamping it in what you might call the country feedback that can overwhelm

pop bands that record in Nashville. Although I hear anxiety in the lyrics Courtney came up with for Daniel, I like how deftly the band handles the vocabulary of jangle pop. Daniel is rich with slick chord changes and songwriting savvy — the melancholia of something titled “Market Street” puts me in mind of one of my favorite jangle-pop bands, The Chills. File Daniel on the shelf with The Chills’ Submarine Bells, Fountains of Wayne’s Traffic and Weather and your favorite R.E.M. record of the ’90s. Opening will be postpunk duo Water From Your Eyes, whose latest album is 2023’s Everyone’s Crushed EDD HURT 8 P.M. AT THE BASEMENT EAST 917 WOODLAND ST.

[PARENTING BEYOND THE BINARY]

BOOKS

BEN V. GREENE: MY CHILD IS TRANS, NOW WHAT?

As of May 10, the ACLU is tracking more than 500 anti-LGBTQ bills across the country, with Tennessee taking a shameful lead in the wave of legislation. During the most recent legislative session, state lawmakers enacted more than twice as many anti-LGBTQ laws as any other state, according to the Human Rights Campaign. But even amid all this unnecessary vitriol, there are people doing the work to keep trans children safe and parents informed. Ben

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 17
WEEKLY
OF THINGS TO DO
CRITICS’ PICKS:
ROUNDUP
PRUITT PAGE 18 PROJECT PAT W/ GEE SLAB PAGE 20 ANDRÉ 3000 PAGE 22 PHOTO: LIBBA GILLUM
KATIE

V. Greene is one of those people. Greene is a trans man, a fierce advocate for transgender youth, an educator and a full-time public speaker. He believes in educating from a place of compassion, no matter where people are starting from, and lives by the catchphrase, “The only question I won’t answer is the question you don’t ask.” Greene’s new book, My Child Is Trans, Now What?, is a judgment-free guide to people across generations, in which Greene answers complicated questions with upbeat empathy, making it possible for parents and caregivers to give their kid the joyful, affirming childhood they deserve. Greene will be speaking at queerowned Novelette on Thursday. Tickets are free, but spots are limited. RYNE WALKER

7 P.M. AT NOVELETTE BOOKSELLERS

1101 CHAPEL AVE.

MUSIC [GREAT EXPECTATIONS]

KATIE PRUITT

Katie Pruitt’s debut album came out on the cusp of a global pandemic that shut down the music industry as we knew it, but that didn’t stop their career from taking off. 2020’s Expectations was a fresh take on Americana, showcasing Pruitt’s show-stopping vocal prowess. The recently released follow-up, Mantras, maintains their signature earnest songwriting while expanding into a broader palette of sounds. Tracks like “All My Friends” and “Worst Case Scenario” are tailor-made for indie-rock radio, and if “White Lies, White Jesus, and You” doesn’t get nominated for a Grammy, I may pull an Elton John and threaten to hit someone! I left Katie’s set at Pilgrimage Festival in 2021 an instant fan, and you’ll have a chance to do the same when their headlining tour comes to Brooklyn Bowl. Canadian folk singer Jack Van Cleaf is set to open what’s sure to be an unforgettable night. Someday, you’ll be able to tell your grandkids you were a fan before Pruitt was selling out arenas and headlining festivals. Get your tickets now — future bragging rights included with admission. HANNAH CRON

8 P.M. AT BROOKLYN BOWL

925 THIRD AVE. N.

FRIDAY / 5.24

FILM [SCHOOLYARD BRAWL]

MIDNIGHT MOVIE: BATTLE ROYALE

After an economic recession, a totalitarian Japanese government creates the Battle Royale program where students from a randomly selected junior high school class are sent to an abandoned island equipped with an exploding collar, some survival gear and a random weapon. The stakes are simple: The last student left alive is the only one allowed to leave the island. The 42 students embark on a three-day challenge of survival and killing. This Japanese genre film has had a lasting impact on pop culture as a thematic predecessor of The Hunger Games series and an inspiration for the battle royale video game genre made famous by titles like Fortnite and Call of Duty: Warzone. It also brought controversy, as it was banned in the U.S.

for 10 years after its Japanese release in 2000 (by the publishers Toei themselves). Now the film is screening as part of the Belcourt’s Midnight Movies series, giving you a chance to see the cult classic on the silver screen, as it was meant to be seen. KEN ARNOLD

MIDNIGHT AT THE BELCOURT 2102 BELCOURT AVE.

MUSIC [PUT (YOUR) BABY IN THIS CORNER]

MUSICIANS CORNER FEAT. COROOK, RAYLAND BAXTER, COURTNEY MARIE ANDREWS & MORE

Amid its 15th annual spring season in Centennial Park, much-loved family-friendly free concert series Musicians Corner spreads out yet another jam-packed lineup over three days on Memorial Day weekend. R&B-schooled singer-songwriter-producer Jarren Blair kicks off the festivities Friday evening, followed by a no-skips lineup including pop maestros Morgxn and corook. Saturday afternoon, the acousticfocused second stage opens up, with highlights including Rashad tha Poet and S-Wrap bringing their long-running spoken-word collaboration out of the studio and into the world. Meanwhile, top-notch singer-songwriter Rayland Baxter and nimble rockers Chrome Pony are among the folks you don’t want to miss Saturday on the main stage. Sunday, the run comes to a close with a one-two punch of superb songsmiths who both released excellent albums near the end of 2022. By name, that’s the phenomenal Caitlin Rose, who’s still riding high in the wake of Cazimi, and Courtney Marie Andrews — with whom Rose co-wrote the Cazimi standout “Getting It Right” — whose Loose Future is likewise a catalog highlight. STEPHEN TRAGESER

MAY 24-26 AT CENTENNIAL PARK

2500 WEST END AVE

FILM

[SEEING IS BELIEVING] SIGHT

Starting this weekend, Nashvillians who’ve been treated by groundbreaking laser eye surgeon/philanthropist/Dolly Parton collaborator Dr. Ming Wang can head to their nearest multiplex and see his life story told on the big screen. (Don’t expect to see any Nashville landmarks; this was filmed in Vancouver three

years ago.) Sight takes us back to when the doctor (played here by Canadian actor Terry Chen) went on a mission to repair the sight of an optically scarred 6-year-old Indian girl. (Co-star Greg Kinnear gets his supportive white ally on as Ming’s partner-in-medical-science.)

The movie also flashes back to his younger years growing up in China during the Cultural Revolution, searching for a way to get himself, his family and a young girl he’s sweet on out of the cruel, oppressive nightmare. Distributed by Christian-based entertainment company Angel Studios, Sight is uplifting, inoffensive and — for those who aren’t into indie flicks sprinkled with God talk — agonizingly mid. However, if you forgot to take your mama to brunch on Mother’s Day weekend and you want to make it up to her, an afternoon matinee of this wouldn’t hurt.

CRAIG D. LINDSEY

OPENS MAY 24 AT AMC AND REGAL CINEMAS

[COLD COMFORT]

MUSIC

SAM EVIAN

Simply put, Plunge — the fourth studio album from psych and power-pop artist Sam Evian — is one of 2024’s best rock records so far. Recorded with a cast of collaborators at Evian’s Flying Cloud Studio in the Catskills of upstate New York and named for the songwriter’s penchant for taking cold plunges in a nearby creek, Plunge is rich with the influence of 1960s and ’70s powerpop icons. Album opener “Wild Days” and the upbeat “Why Does It Take So Long” feature shades of Paul McCartney’s post-Beatles work, while the meditative “Rollin’ In” puts me in mind of baroque-pop king Emitt Rhodes. There’s even

a bit of Randy Newman influence on tracks like “Runaway.” Altogether, though, it’s a lush and singular record with a whole lot of staying power and hooks crammed into its nine tracks and 33 minutes. This weekend, Evian will bring his tour in support of Plunge to The Blue Room — one of Nashville’s best-sounding venues. Don’t miss it.

D. PATRICK RODGERS

8 P.M. AT THE BLUE ROOM AT THIRD MAN RECORDS 623 SEVENTH AVE. S.

SATURDAY / 5.25

[PHONE HOME]

MUSIC

FILM &

E.T.: THE EXTRA TERRESTRIAL FEAT. LIVE ORCHESTRA PERFORMANCE

When I was fortunate enough to revisit E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial at Opry Mills in the fall of 2022, I went in expecting to be just as blown away as I had before by the iconic story of a lost alien trying to find his way home with the help of a lonely young boy and with a glowing finger added to the mix. Why not? It’s heartwarming! What I wasn’t expecting, and what has stuck with me the most since attending that screening, was just how unbelievably amazing the film’s score is. Seeing the film in a theater allowed me to marvel at the visuals and also find myself completely swept away by every note of John Williams’ Oscar-winning soundtrack. The score accentuates and elevates every scene it accompanies, and it’s hard to argue that this isn’t one of the greatest scores ever composed. Williams’ composition during the film’s climactic bicycle chase continues to be one of my favorite music cues ever to be used in a film. The chance to get to hear the score performed live with as accomplished an orchestra as the Nashville Symphony is just too good of an opportunity to pass up. Knowing how immersive and transportive it sounded on a regular theater sound system, it’s hard to imagine just how incredible the music of the film will sound when performed at the Schermerhorn this Saturday and Sunday. ROB HINKAL

MAY 25-26 AT THE SCHERMERHORN ONE SYMPHONY PLACE

SUNDAY

/ 5.26

MUSIC [MAKING A LEGACY] KYSHONA W/RISSI PALMER

To celebrate the release of her new

18 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
KYSHONA COROOK PHOTO: ANNA HAAS
NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 19 THEBLUEROOMBAR.COM @THEBLUEROOMNASHVILLE 623 7TH AVE S NASHVILLE, TENN. Rent out The Blue Room for your upcoming event! BLUEROOMBAR@THIRDMANRECORDS.COM May in... More info for each event online & on our instagram! See you soon! 5/24 FRIDAY 5/23 THURSDAY 5/25 SATURDAY 5/28 TUESDAY 5/30 THURSDAY 5/31 FRIDAY 6/1 SATURDAY 5/29 WEDNES hosted by CORTNEY WARNER COMEDY NIGHT MAYA HAWKE MUSIC TRIVIA BUCK MEEK SAM EVIAN with HANNAH COHEN with JOLIE HOLLAND BLICK BASSY with A.G. SULLY with WNXP NASHVILLE ANDRE3000 EARLY & LATE SHOWS! NIGHT 1 ANDRE3000 EARLY & LATE SHOWS! NIGHT 2 JULY 5 BEER & HYMNS PATRIOT SHOW MAY 30 JB STRAUSS SAINTS OF THE SOUTH RECORD RELEASE with ROBBY PEOPLES JUNE 8 INCLUSION TN: QUEER PROM UPCOMING A N A L O G A T H U T T O N H O T E L P R E S E N T S A L L S H O W S A T A N A L O G A R E 2 1 + 1 8 0 8 W E S T E N D A V E N U E , N A S H V L L E , T N HOUSE WEEKEND: PETER LEVIN FEAT. NIKKI GLASPIE & ROOSEVELT COLLIER Five time Grammy nominated musician, songwriter and producer, Peter Levin performing 2 nights, joined by premier drummer, Nikki Glaspie and pedal steel guitar player, Roosevelt Collier. M A Y 24 & 25 DOORS: 7 PM / SHOW: 8 PM GA: $20 // RES: $35 DOORS: 6 PM / SHOW: 7 PM GA: $60.09 // RES DOS: $71.34 J U N 07 DOORS: 6:30 PM / SHOW: 7:30 PM GEN ADM: $20 82 A U G 20 M A Y 26 ANALOG SOUL J U N 12 SOUTHERN ROUNDS M A Y 29 SCHOOL NIGHT FEATUR NG MOONY HUNTER METTS, BIZZY AND SOCIAL ANIMALS J U N 15 J U N 02 ANALOG SOUL GARY NICHOLSON JAMES OTTO J U N 18 J U L 10 SOUTHERN ROUNDS J U L 12 NATHAN JAMES WITH COLE RITTER & LORI TRIPLETT J U N 30 ANALOG SOUL J U L 07 ANALOG SOUL J U N 16 ANALOG SOUL

album Legacy, Kyshona will set up shop at 3rd & Lindsley this Sunday for Lightning 100’s Nashville Sunday Night. That new record is noteworthy not just for how great the music is (and it certainly is fantastic) but also for its backstory: The songs are inspired by Kyshona’s own family lineage, which she uncovered with the help of a genealogist. The resulting songs are raw and emotional, as Kyshona wrestles with a lineage that includes enslaved ancestors. Kyshona recorded Legacy in Memphis alongside a string of local ringers, many of whom will join her on stage at Sunday night’s show. And as Kyshona pointed out in her recent conversation with the Scene, she doesn’t perform locally very often, so don’t miss this chance to catch a truly special artist. Be sure to get there on time because country singer-songwriter Rissi Palmer kicks off the evening — she’s not to be missed, either. BRITTNEY MCKENNA

7 P.M. AT 3RD & LINDSLEY 818 THIRD AVE. S.

[BRIDGING GRAND DIVISIONS]

MUSIC

PROJECT PAT W/GEE SLAB

The Nashville-Memphis music relationship is a complicated one, to say the least. It would take someone with a much deeper, academiclevel knowledge of local music history to break down all the aspects of that splintered partnership. But the drive down I-40 has led to a couple of key moments in the timeline of Volunteer State rap over the decades, including Don Trip and Starlito’s trio of Step Brothers mixtapes and the combination of Three 6 Mafia, Young Buck, and 8Ball & MJG on the Tennessee anthem “Stay Fly.” Later this month, Project Pat, Juicy J’s older brother and a key collaborator with Three 6 Mafia, is set to continue that Nashville-Memphis hip-hop crossover tradition by inviting Gee Slab, one of the top MCs in the Music City scene, to open for him at his performance at The Basement East. LOGAN BUTTS

rounds out the bone-crushing bill. JASON VERSTEGEN

7 P.M. AT EASTSIDE BOWL 1508 GALLATIN PIKE

MUSIC [RETURN OF THE MACC] FOR THE DAWGS BENEFIT SHOW FOR METRO ANIMAL CARE AND CONTROL

9 P.M. AT THE BASEMENT EAST 917 WOODLAND ST.

[DEATH BY METAL]

MUSIC

DYING

FETUS W/200 STAB WOUNDS

AND KRUELTY

There are few bands that evoke such offensive imagery as grindcore veterans Dying Fetus. The Marylanders have relished their role as death metal provocateurs since the group’s conception in the early ’90s. As the last remaining original member, vocalist and guitarist John Gallagher continues to captain DF with unbridled ferocity. His signature guttural delivery is once again front and center on the band’s ninth studio album Make Them Beg for Death, released by indie-metal label Relapse Records in September “Disgust in others you feel / Your skin slowly we peel / Your loathing is at an end / Tormented soul will descend,” screams Gallagher over brutal blast beats on the album’s opening track “Enlighten Through Agony.” Cleveland, Ohio’s 200 Stab Wounds joins the mayhem fresh off the April release of their psychedelic-doomcore single “Hands of Eternity.” Kruelty — on tour from Tokyo —

Returning for a second year, the For the Dawgs benefit show at Drkmttr will bring together a group of acts to raise cash for Metro Animal Care and Control, our county’s nearly continuously full animal shelter. The eight-band lineup begins at 5 p.m. and is a solid matchup of local and near-local metal or metal-tangential acts. In the mix is Knoxville’s Cold Hard Steel and Nashville acts Shogun, Switchblade, Lethal Method, Still Here, Gouged Out and Article V. And then there’s Cookeville’s Dan Spencer. Whether you desire to help pets in need or not (rethink your life if you went with not), Spencer alone is enough to rip $12 from your dusty pockets. Spencer’s “Beat Your Ass to Death” from 2022’s Bursting With Fresh Country Flavor is the stuff of sing-along dreams: The song is good fun, but it’s also country storytelling at its finest, pulling you through the various repercussions of said beating. The first couple of tracks released from Return to Your Dark Master, due out May 31, have been phenomenal: “Fat Vampire” opens with a blast beat, for Christ’s sake. The fusion of metal and country is not mere shtick, though. Spencer is a helluva player with the rare gift of vulnerability that you’ll want to see in person. Come for the puppy and kitty pals, stay for the tunes.

5 P.M. AT DRKMTTR

AMANDA HAGGARD

1111 DICKERSON PIKE

MONDAY / 5.27

MUSIC

[LIKE THERE’S NO TOMORROW] FEID

Medellín, Colombia, has been a musical powerhouse for the past few years, with a number of top reggaeton, Latin trap and música urbana artists emerging from the city. Feid spent a decade songwriting for many of those new Colombian stars, including J Balvin and Reykon. But the man also known as alter ego El Ferxxo (pronounced “ fercho”) kept working on his own music, steadily building a fan base

and even touring with reggaeton and Latin trap queen Karol G (whom he’s now dating, per the celebrity tabloids). However, his career skyrocketed thanks to a quick response to a leaked 2022 album, Feliz Cumpleaños Ferxxo: Te Pirateamos el Álbum (or Happy Birthday Ferxxo: We Leaked Your Album). He’s now touring behind his latest release, Ferxxocalipsis, and set to hit Bridgestone Arena on Monday, just a few weeks after collaborator Bad Bunny rocked the venue. Fans can look forward Ferxxocalipsis standouts like the ATL Jacob collab “Luna” and “Classy 101,” featuring rising star Young Miko, alongside Feid’s deep discography. ALEJANDRO RAMIREZ

8 P.M. AT BRIDGESTONE ARENA

501 BROADWAY

TUESDAY / 5.28

[I WANNA GET BETTER]

MUSIC

BLEACHERS

A little over a decade ago, it seemed impossible that any one member of indierock outfit fun. could outshine the glow of trendsetting album Some Nights and its slew of inescapable radio hits. (“We Are Young” was a time, y’all.) But, as the adage goes, hindsight vision is 20/20. Fun. member Jack Antonoff emerged from the ashes of the band’s shortlived heavyweight success to become one of the most sought-after producers in music, making albums with Lorde, Lana Del Rey, St. Vincent and, of course, Taylor Swift. Onstage, he adopted big-riff rock music as frontman of Bleachers, a New Jersey outfit inspired by Bruce Springsteen and songs that feel all the feelings. Since debuting in 2014 with tracks like “Rollercoaster” and the infectiously anthemic “I Wanna Get Better,” Bleachers has carved a place in the modern rock pantheon with fiery live shows and a throwback rock sound cut straight from a 1980s tape deck. Antonoff brings the band to Nashville for two nights at the Ryman in support of Bleachers, a 14-song album released earlier this year. Get a taste of the new tunes by spinning “Modern Girls,” a time-traveling romp perfect for a summertime playlist. Samia opens both nights. MATTHEW

20 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
5.23 THE ULTIMATE COMEDY SHOWCASE FRI 5.24 T.R.A.N.E SPITTA • MALCOLM DEWAYNE • NAMIR BLADE • ITZ JALEEL SAT 5.25 RACHEL DEELYNN • MINA ROTH LIAM WALL SUN 5.26 DAISY SELLAS & THE DO RIGHTS EVAN CYOTE • MADDY FERRI TORI FAITH TUE 5.28 ULTIMATE COMEDY FREE LOCAL STAND UP! THU 5.30 MADELINE FINN • AUTUMN NICHOLAS MEREDITH ROUNSLEY FRI 5.31 OLIVER HAZARD • CALEB HEARN GABRIELLA GRACE SAT 6.1 THE MOONDANCE BAND THE HENRY CRUZ BAND • WILL TIPTON 2412 GALLATIN AVE @THEEASTROOM
THU
LEIMKUEHLER MAY 28-29 AT THE RYMAN 116 REP. JOHN LEWIS WAY N.
fri 5/31 7PM Jess Hess “Mess” Album Release Celebration w/ Special Guest Jayna 9PM Melissa Farrior • Mikayla Lewis thu 5/30 4PM Open Mic Night w/ Dave Nooe 9PM Raeya and Jenny Rae Residency ft. Special Guest John Higgins thu 5/23 4PM Open Mic Night w/ Elray Jackson 9PM Raeya and Jenny Rae Residency ft. Special Guest Violet Moons fri 5/24 7PM Redd & The Paper Flowers • Hugh Trimble 9PM The Mad Sugars • Steph Maguire wed 5/29
PM Hunter Nelson Residency w/ Special Guests Stevie Rae Stephens & Kiernan McMullan 9PM Julie Lavery “Far Out” Single Release Show w/ Dylan Gerard sat 5/25 7PM Doc Downs & The Next Round •Stargurl 9PM Zoe Ny • Yella Stone • Johnny Cattini *CLOSED MONDAY 5/27 AND TUESDAY 5/28 REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY REP YOUR CITY ShopScene!the
DYING FETUS
7

AND BUBBLES FEATURING BRIT STOKES

6.2 GOLDPINE WITH SAMMI ACCOLA

6.5 WHINE DOWN WITH JANA KRAMER AND FRIENDS - THE NEXT CHAPTER TOUR

6.6 AN EVENING WITH THE LUBBEN

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 21 609 LAFAYETTE ST. NASHVILLE, TN 37203, NASHVILLE, TN 37203 @CITYWINERYNSH / CITYWINERY.COM / 615.324.1033 LIVE MUSIC | URBAN WINERY RESTAURANT | BAR | PRIVATE EVENTS Taste • Learn • Discover Wednesday through Sunday Make a reservation now! JRODCONCERTS: THE PODCAST EPISODE #500 JOHN OATES, SIERRA HULL & LEIGH NASH A NIGHT OF STORIES & SONGS BENEFITING NASHVILLE HUMANE SOCIETY LYFE JENNINGS EARLY AND LATE SHOWS BRIAN POSEHN TIERA O’LEARY MY COUSIN TIERA 6.20 6.14 5.24 BJ THE CHICAGO KID 5.24 CELEBRATE BOB DYLAN’S BIRTHDAY WITH CHROME HORSE: THE BOB DYLAN TRIBUTE 5.25 MAX GOMEZ 5.25 SONJA MORGAN - SONJA IN YOUR CITY 5.26 HAYLEY REARDON 5.26 PLAYADORS PRESENTED BY TOWNSENDX3 AGENCY 5.30 JUDY PASTER ALBUM RELEASE SHOW W/ SPECIAL GUESTS 5.30 CITY WINERY & THE TOWNSENDX3 AGENCY PRESENTS: WILDFIRE: AN EVENING WITH BELL DARRIS & RHODA G. 5.31 INEBRIATED SHAKESPEARE; A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM 6.1 7TH ANNUAL FREEBORN JAM BENEFIT FEAT. THE OUTLAWS & BLACKHAWK 6.1 6.2 HONKY TONK COUNTRY BRUNCH
BROTHERS 6.6 MIXTAPE - 80S TRIBUTE BAND 6.7 AJ MCQUEEN 6.8 SOUL BRUNCH - SOUL SONGS OF THE 70S 6.8 NASHVILLE IMPROV COMEDY PRESENTS: IMPROV & CHILL 6.9 MELLISA FERRICK 6.11 AN EVENING WITH TERRACE MARTIN {PRESENTED BY LOVENOISE} 6.12 RAVI COLTRANE FEATURING GADI LEHAVI & ELE HOWELL 6.13 PETER AND BRENDAN MAYER 6.13 DESSA 6.15 DRAG BRUNCH 6.10 6.08 beer, seltzers & selected wine & specially priced lite bites HALF PRICE pop fizz Brunch! MIMOSA BAR SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS *subject to change LIVE MUSIC ON THE PATIO WED - SAT • 6PM - 9PM MON-FRI•4-6PM ZO! & TALL BLACK GUY FEATURING DEBORAH BOND LIZZ WRIGHT 5.29 5.28

Friday, May 24

saturday, May 25

Sunday, may 26

[HAUNTED MOUNTAINS] BUCK MEEK W/JOLIE HOLLAND

When he’s not complementing Adrianne Lenker in indie supergroup Big Thief, Buck Meek ups the tempo a little bit. In recent singles “Cuero Dudes” and “Beauty Opens Doors,” Meek combines lilting rhythm with the narrative songwriting that’s defined his band and a whole genre of poetic rock raised on Bob Dylan, John Prine and Neil Young. Both songs are instant adds for any playlist that isn’t afraid of a little melancholy sometimes. Meek shares the bill with opener and fellow Texan Jolie Holland. This almost guarantees that the concert will feature “Highway 72,” Meek’s haunting feature on Holland’s 2023 record Haunted Mountain, not to be confused with Meek’s own 2023 record also named Haunted Mountain. Be prepared to possibly cry in front of strangers, or next to them, because you can get lost listening to Meek, and there aren’t many places to hide in The Blue Room. ELI MOTYCKA

8 P.M. AT THE BLUE ROOM AT THIRD MAN RECORDS

623 SEVENTH AVE. S.

WEDNESDAY / 5.29

MUSIC

[PASSING THROUGH] ANNIE WILLIAMS ALBUM RELEASE

Visitor, out May 29 via YK Records, is singersongwriter Annie Williams’ debut album, filled with rich harmonies and a dance between electronic and acoustic elements. It doesn’t feel like a first record, though. Whether the songs are new or Williams has been working on them a long time, whether they’re about things that happened to her or not — obviously not in the case of “Louise,” sung from the perspective of Thelma in Thelma and Louise — they feel like she’s lived them. “Midnight,” a song about a child, a pet and a parent, is my favorite; it’s fascinating how Williams subtly draws you into the perspective of the character telling the story, which could be a chapter in a novel but instead is a song. It’s something to celebrate, and she’ll

do it in style on release day at Soft Junk. Backing Williams will be a five-voice choir and a band of true ringers featuring standout songsmith Jo Schornikow on keys, Alec O’Connell on bass and Ben Parks on drums. The two supporting acts are a nesting doll of champions, each made up of singer-songwriters and players who have their own great bodies of work — namely Styrofoam Winos (Lou Turner, Trevor Nikrant and Joe Kenkel) and Shrunken Elvis (Rich Ruth, Sean Thompson and Spencer Cullum).

STEPHEN TRAGESER

8 P.M. AT SOFT JUNK

919 GALLATIN AVE.

[WHERE THE WIND BLOWS]

MUSIC

ANDRÉ 3000

Now that the shock of the flute album announcement has died down, we can finally just appreciate it, right? New Blue Sun could have been a vanity project, or — worse — could have tried to shoehorn obligatory aspects of André 3000’s rap persona into songs where it didn’t fit. And sure, if you really look close enough, you see elements of Three Stacks the rapper in there — the way he holds certain notes, or some shared sensibilities between this album and the production of The Love Below (André’s half of Outkast’s 2003 double album, alongside Big Boi’s Speakerboxxx). But what’s at play here is André Benjamin as a devoted student of the flute, jazz, ambient and New Age music, and who’s trusting his veteran collaborators (led by Carlos Niño). The album shines with personality, mixing playfulness and reflection, finding joy and adventure in aging. It helps that the track names are top tier (“That Night in Hawaii When I Turned Into a Panther and Started Making These Low Register Purring Tones That I Couldn’t Control ... Sh¥t Was Wild”). Perhaps what’s coolest about this Nashville appearance is that André 3000 is making up for a postponed concert in March with four shows — a pleasant surprise, much like New Blue Sun ALEJANDRO RAMIREZ

6 AND 9 P.M. AT THE BLUE ROOM (ALSO 6 AND 9 P.M. MAY 30) 623 SEVENTH AVE S

22 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com centennial park conservancy presents Plus Lighting 100 Acoustic Stage Performances centennial park fridays & saturdays May 17 - june 15 musicianscorner.com performing this week COROOK MORGXN WILBY NEIL O'NEIL JARREN BLAIR RAYLAND BAXTER MAX MCNOWN CARLY BANNISTER CHROME PONY ANNIE SCHERER
COURTNEY MARIE
ERIC SLICK BOO RAY CANE AND CANCINO EG VINES
ANDREWS
PRESENTED IN PART BY A T O U C H O F V I N T A G E ANEMOIA VINTAGE AURA HAUS VINTAGE BACK ROAD BIRDIE DELIGHT ECLECTIC MISSY MAE CORSETS NO GOOD VINTAGE P I X I E A N D T H E M O O N R E T R O B L A K E S B E R G R U S T Y R A G S V I N T A G E S E M P L I C E D E S I G N S W Y N E L L E TINTYPES BY ROBBIE STILLWELL ASTROLOGY READINGS BY BECCA NEIGHBOR COLD BREW BOBA AFB BARBEQUE JOIN US FOR OUR MONTHLY MARKET WITH OUR NEIGHBORS SISTERS COLLECTIVE AND BACKSLIDE VINTAGE FEATURING WWW HIGHCLASSHILLBILLY COM 4604 GALLATIN PIKE : MUSIC
BUCK MEEK

KODY WEST with JASON SCOTT & THE

Finally Friday featuring STEVE FOX, ROBBY HECHT & KYSHONA

the closson brothers w/ under high street (7pm)

soren hansen & jacob kulick (9pm)

grlwood w/ hussy fit (7pm)

cliffs w/ zachary scott kline & caleb edens (9pm)

paige rose & brockwell nason (7pm)

more weight w/ shuteye & strawberryberry (9pm)

cannon rogers: a tribute to the grateful dead (7pm)

lauran hibberd (9pm)

nathan wilson (7pm)

mike scott and the honey pots & sarah jones (9pm)

joshua quimby w/ chloe kimes, liam st. john, dylan smucker & angela autumn (7pm)

Stepanie Chapman Album Release Show + Bob Dylan Birthday Bash featuring Special guests Martina McBride, Charles Kelley, Emily West, Wendy Moten, Maia Sharp, Harper O’Neill, Pat McLaughlin & more!

BARNHILL & RANDALL FOWLER

CORDOVAS with SPECIAL GUESTS

Academy of Country Music ONRAMP–For Future Leaders in the Music Hosted by WENDY MOTEN performing Live: CARMEN DIANNE, DAISHA MCBRIDE, JASMINE BAVARO, LARYSA JAYE, NICK TABRON, QUALLS, ROZ MALONE, TAE LEWIS, THE KENTUCKY GENTLEMEN & TYLAR BRYANT

rose hotel w/ heaven hotel & zilched (9pm)

matt woods & tyler walker gill (7pm)

leon majcen w/ thomas rowland & presley drake (9pm)

rachel horter & jonathan soul (7pm)

matthew logan vasquez w/ justin and the comics (9pm) symbasyd (7pm)

jace

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 23 GREAT MUSIC • GREAT FOOD • GOOD FRIENDS • SINCE 1991 818 3RD AVE SOUTH • SOBRO DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE SHOWS NIGHTLY • FULL RESTAURANT FREE PARKING • SMOKE FREE VENUE AND SHOW INFORMATION 3RDANDLINDSLEY.COM LIVESTREAM | VIDEO | AUDIO Live Stream • Video and Recording • Rehearsal Space 6 CAMERAS AVAILABLE • Packages Starting @ $499 Our partner: volume.com FEATURED COMING SOON PRIVATE EVENTS FOR 20-150 GUESTS SHOWCASES • WEDDINGS BIRTHDAYS • CORPORATE EVENTS EVENTSAT3RD@GMAIL.COM THIS WEEK GOODBYE JUNE WITH DEEOHGEE EVERY MONDAY AFTERNOON AT 12:30PM IN JUNE - BLUEBIRD ON 3RD TYLER BOONE WITH FINNEGAN BELL + THE OHIO WEATHER BAND 8:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:00 THU 5/23 SAT 5/25 7:30 7:30 12:30 8:00 MON 5/27 SUN 5/26 TUE 5/28 THU 5/30 WED 5/29 5/31 JESSE DANIEL W/ ALEX WILLIAMS 6/1 SMOKING SECTION 6/2 EMPIRE STRIKES BRASS 6/4 WILLIAM LEE GOLDEN & THE GOLDENS 6/5 COUNTRY FOR A CAUSE–HOSTED BY TG SHEPPARD & KELLY LANG SOLD OUT! 6/6 DARRYL WORLEYFAN APPRECIATION PARTY 6/6 MONTGOMERY GENTRY FEATURING EDDIE MONTGOMERY 6/7-6/8 THE EAGLEMANIACS 6/9 SOUTH FOR WINTER WITH THE WOODS 6/11 CORDOVAS & SPECIAL GUESTS 6/12 NASHVILLE IS DEAD 6/13 BACKSTAGE AT 3RD: A NIGHT OF SONGSTORY MUSIC 6/13 ANDERSON COUNCIL: A PINK FLOYD EXPERIENCE 6/14 LARRY KEEL EXPERIENCE 6/15 THE PIANO MEN: THE MUSIC OF ELTON JOHN AND BILLY JOEL 6/19 BRETT SHEROKY W/ MITCH GRAINGER & AUDRA MCLAUGHLIN 6/20 JON WOLFE W/ CATIE OFFERMAN 6/21 THE LONG PLAYERS 6/22 WORLD TURNING BAND “THE LIVE FLEETWOOD MAC EXPERIENCE” 6/23 WILL OVERMAN + ABBY HAMILTON 6/26 JEDD HUGHES 6/27 MONSTERS OF YACHT 6/28 PAT MCLAUGHLIN BAND 6/29 COWBOY MOUTH 7/5 BARRACUDA–AMERICA’S HEART TRIBUTE + CHILD’S ANTHEM: THE MUSIC OF TOTO 7/6 SUMMER WIND–A TRIBUTE TO THE SOUNDS OF SINATRA 7/10 THE STEEL WHEELS WITH DOWNRIVER COLLECTIVE 7/11 SHADOWGRASS 7/12 ROB BAIRD–ALBUM RELEASE SHOW 7/17 JOSH WEATHERS W/ TREVER KEITH 7/19 THE PETTY JUNKIES W/ SINCLAIR 6/30 8/29 6/15 6/26 JACK PEARSON BAND + JONELL MOSSER & THE TAJMAHALICS JEDD HUGHES
RESURRECTION: A Journey Tribute Backstage Nashville! Daytime Hit Songwriters Show featuring BILLY MONTANA, GARY BAKER, GREG
HIGH
HEAT
JASON
MIDNIGHT
CHOIR KYSHONA with RISSI PALMER THE TIME JUMPERS FRI 5/24 12:00 oct may 23 may 24 may 25 may 26 may 29 may 30 may 31 jun 1 jun 5 jun 7 jun 8 jun 9 jun 11 jun 12 jun 14 jun 15 jun 16 jun 18 jun 19 jun 20 may 23 may 23 may 24 may 24 may 25 may 25 may 26 may 27 may 29 may 29 may 30 may 30 may 31 may 31 jun 1 jun 1 jun 2 jun 5 jun 7 jun 7 jun 8 jun 21 jun 22 jun 27 jun 28 jun 29 jun 30 jul 3 jul 5 jul 8 jul 9 jul 10 jul 11 jul 12 jul 14 jul 15 jul 17 jul 18 jul 20 jul 22 jul 23 jul 24 real estate w/ water from your eyes g flip w/ Florrie yot club w/ boyscott project pat michael marcagi w/ lily fitts carson jeffrey & tyler halverson the emo night tour jeff bernat toni romiti shannon and the clams w/ tropa magica can't feel my face - 2010's dance party x ambassadors w/ new west & rowan drake a room on fire - the music of the strokes ben chapman's peach jam w/ Hayes Carll, Brent Cobb, Aaron Raitiere, The Band Loula, Ashley Ray & Meg McRee zebra
theory
sweet poison
city
co.
guilt
eternal
EADY with
RIVER
w/ the great affairs & in
six one tribe, brian brown &
the dead daisies w/ rock
machine
baroness w/ portrayal of
& filth is
jmsn w/ 2oo7 paris paloma
everett w/ jacques merlino (7pm) hunter root (7pm) gay ole opry w/ again (&again), silvie, bridey costello, summer joy & melody walker (9pm) zena lynn carpenter w/ jess craven (7pm) the taylor party: the ts dance party - 18+ athena up all night: a one direction party five iron frenzy w/ spoken in tongues & lo(u)ser hot in herre: 2000s dance party wyn starks colton sturtz w/ jesse kramer, henry conlon & strange company nightrain: guns n' roses tribute experience pedro the lion w/ flock of dimes sarah sherman every avenue w/ makeout & rookie of the year allan rayman w/ michael lemmo the wilder blue ok go w/ winona forever & mirthquake cardinal black new medicine beast street band dylan wheeler mates of state giocomo turra & the funky minutes w/ phoebe katis small black 917 Woodland Street Nashville, TN 37206 | thebasementnashville.com basementeast thebasementeast thebasementeast 1604 8th Ave S Nashville, TN 37203 | thebasementnashville.com x ambassadors w/ new west & rowan drake Upcoming shows Upcoming shows thebasementnash thebasementnash thebasementnash lauren hibberd 5/27 5/30 6/14 5/23 6/1 shannon and the clams w/ tropa magica zebra w/ the great affairs & in theory 6/5 rose hotel w/ heaven honey & zilched sold out! toni romiti sold out! 6/9 6/7 real estate w/ water from your eyes sold out! sold out! jeff bernat

BEING PRESENT

Minimalist expression metes out maximal experience at Present Tense

WHEN VISITING A newish (1-year-old) restaurant for the first time, it’s encouraging to see one of Nashville’s most Culinarily Critical Couples walk in the door shortly after you’ve taken your seat. Even more so when that CCC tells you Present Tense is one of their regular spots, a favorite in Nashville’s explosive — and in their estimation, often disappointing — dining scene. When one-half of that discerning CCC is of Asian descent, and you know the chef mines influence, techniques, flavors and products from East and Southeast Asia … well, I had high hopes.

Present Tense, owned by GM Rick Margaritov and chef Ryan Costanza, describes itself as a modern izakaya-style dining experience. Izakaya is defined as a casual Japanese pub or restaurant specializing in snacks, shared plates and beverages, particularly sake. The one-page menu is divided into five sections minus headings — though the desserts are easily identified as such. Core vegetables, seafood and proteins stood out among unfamiliar ingredients and terms that had us madly Googling.

Our server Elizabeth Kneidinger was so

knowledgeable we could have just kept our phones in our purses and let her explain. We kind of felt we had worn her out with questions about the wine list — which by design includes more unknowns than knowns — and extensive menu of sakes, for which Present Tense is known. Patience was another virtue she displayed, advising and pouring tastes until the imbibers met their match. (Due to a sudden and as yet incurable intolerance of fermentation, I was happy to see Untitled Art’s NA Italian Style Pils among the high-octane beers. Yay hospitality for all!) She was also attentive to our pesky dietary restrictions, which in addition to fermentation, included another’s shellfish allergy. With that taken care of, we were ready to dive into Costanza’s food.

Bread and butter is always a good start, and intriguing when the bread is grilled seaweed sourdough and the butter is mixed with kombu (kelp). At first bite, I recognized Sam Tucker, the bread genius behind Village Bakery + Provisions. I don’t drive from my current home in Asheville, N.C., to Nashville just for a loaf of his rustic sour-

dough and another of spent grain, but I don’t leave Nashville without them.

Costanza, fastidious about sourcing, authenticity and attention to every detail, recognized a kindred spirit in Tucker; multiple test batches later, they found the consistency, texture and taste they were after.

In breaking news, Costanza revealed that after a lengthy R&D process, a house-made bread is nearly ready for the table. A cross between Japanese milk bread and brioche, it will be baked as a four-part, pull-apart bun, with the kombu butter and perhaps a chicken liver parfait.

Tucker’s seaweed sourdough remains as the foundation for the indisputable diva of the menu — tuna toast. If you, like me, see anything “toast” and your reaction is, “Can we stop with the toast already?” let that go and reach for the toast.

It’s an iteration of a dish Costanza came up with at Abernethy’s in Los Angeles, where he was awarded a prestigious four-month residency voted upon by a panel of Michelin chefs. While conceptualizing his menu there,

he focused on his Sicilian and Sardinian heritage, merging it with his extensive experience cooking in Asia. The tuna toast — luscious, fresh raw seafood intensely flavored yet restrained in presentation — was born. He builds up from a thick slice of grilled bread smeared with wagyu aioli, then piles high glistening, rosy cubes of tuna. Depending on availability, the tuna will be bigeye or blue fin. It was the latter the night we dined.

The menu changes frequently — driven in large part by availability of product — but in addition to the tuna toast, diners who form an attachment to the karaage chicken need not fret. Admitting that he didn’t set out to do “tons of fried chicken,” Costanza acknowledges it is a top seller, and points out that it’s not just any

24 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com FOOD & DRINK
Present Tense 301 Hart St. liveinthepresenttense.com
PHOTOS: ANGELINA CASTILLO TUNA TOAST JAPANESE SWEET POTATOES

chicken, but Jidori chicken — recognized as the Kobe of fowl. Indeed, the boneless pieces of thigh meat — brined, marinated and dusted with three specific flours before a quick deepfry in a light oil — are moist, tender and perfectly salted. They don’t necessarily need more than a spritz of the lime wedge on the tray, but the ramekin of sauce — a mix of tarragon, chervil, yuzu and creme fraiche — should not be ignored.

I discovered Japanese sweet potatoes at a tailgate market in Asheville, and when I cut into the one I baked, I was surprised to discover that inside the deep-purple skin was white flesh with a nutty flavor. Costanza’s far more complex approach resulted in one of our favorite dishes, and he says it’s one of his too. The whole potato is wrapped in kelp and, thanks to that, simultaneously roasts and steams until the flesh turns creamy. The potato is sliced in half, brushed with miso butter and placed on the grill over binchōtan (the clean, nearly smokeless woodbased charcoal that is gold standard for grilling in Japan) until the skin chars black, sprinkled with sea salt and bonito flakes and plated with creme fraiche whipped with fresh yuzu and a drizzle of lovage oil.

Several other dishes benefited from time on the binchōtan — two lamb chops coated in a mix of thyme, garlic, anchovies and Szechuan peppercorns that turns to a crispy, Mediterranean-evocative crust encasing the pink meat. Peruvian cuisine makes a cameo appearance in medallions of octopus, skewered and grilled, then laid atop a shallow pool of golden aji amarillo sauce, topped with a scatter of crunchy cancha (dried toasted maize kernels).

Maybe your mother forbade dessert until you finished dinner. Polishing off your plates will not be an issue at Present Tense, but the good news is you can just have dessert. Who among us can resist soft-serve ice cream? Miso white sesame is always available, along with a second flavor of the night, but don’t torture yourself with such a dreadful decision. Get them both, after dinner or maybe as a nightcap at the bar, with a carafe of sake or flute of sparkling wine.

Speaking of nightcaps, we reserved an ear-

ly-bird table and were glad we did, finding an oasis of quiet and calm next to the open floorto-ceiling glass doors, beside a plant-filled patio as dusk descended in Wedgewood-Houston.

Before dedicating himself to culinary, Costanza was studying interior architecture, attracted to clean lines, simplicity and minimalism, and Present Tense’s aesthetic reflects that. When the sun sets, the music goes up, and the bar and dining room become louder and livelier. Pick your vibe and plan accordingly.

In Present Tense’s inaugural year, the team introduced a six-seat omakase counter for guests to enjoy a 12-course tasting menu, with the option of wine and sake pairings by Margaritov. The two seatings on Friday and Saturday nights have proven so popular they have expanded to Thursday nights. Also newly available is an eight-course omakase menu nightly for the table.

Omakase is a Japanese dining experience that leaves the choosing to the chef (a dining style my kids endured every night under my roof). In our self-curated experience, there were no wrong choices and no disappointments. My high hopes were not only met, but decidedly, delightfully, deliciously exceeded. ▼

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 25 WE OFFER DAILY DRINK AND FOOD SPECIALS! SPEND YOUR SUMMER ON OUR PATIOS IN THE NATIONS OR 12 SOUTH Scan here to see 2318 12th Ave S Scan here to see 704 51st Ave N 4210 Charlotte Ave. 615 . 678 . 4086 ottos nashville .com T TACO T U E S DAY 2 for $5 Tacos $6 Margaritas all day, all night! (dine-in only)
LAMB CHOPS
PHOTOS: ANGELINA CASTILLO SOFT-SERVE ICE CREAM

NASHVILLE IN HARMONY

The chorus of LGBTQ community members and allies celebrates 20 years

In the Club is a recurring series in which the Scene explores Nashville’s social club offerings.

AT EVERY YEAR-END concert, my high school chorus sang the same simple refrain: “There is no such beauty as where you belong.” The line made us cry every time because the chorus room was where we belonged — it was a place where we could talk about our emotions, fears and triumphs with people who were really listening, and it was a place where we could channel those feelings into meaningful art.

There’s a place just like that here in Nashville. Nashville in Harmony, a community chorus of singers from the LGBTQ community and its

allies, has performed around the city for the past 20 years, building community among both its members and its audiences.

The ensemble has around 100 members, and auditions new members about twice a year. They rehearse three hours per week during concert seasons — a big commitment, but the results speak for themselves. I observed a rehearsal leading up to the group’s May concerts with the Nashville Philharmonic Orchestra, and heard gorgeous music from a group that seemed totally locked into performance mode.

“It’s a little more than a hobby,” says director Wesley King. “It’s a commitment to the organization, to your fellow singers. It’s a commitment

For founding member Rodger Murray, just being able to sing in an openly queer group is a big step in a state like Tennessee. He was part of the Nashville Men’s Chorus, a precursor to Nashville in Harmony that never quite found its footing. At one of their concerts, they planned to sing “Someone to Watch Over Me,” a song in which Ella Fitzgerald famously longs to be with her ideal man.

“Some of the guys said, ‘Well, I can’t get up in public and say I want to add my initial to his monogram,’” Murray says. “And so that kind of broke us up.”

These days, Nashville in Harmony is a proudly queer organization — with a lot to be proud of. They’ve performed concerts across the state, helped kick off a Nashville mayor’s inauguration, and this year sent a group to perform at Carnegie Hall. Murray is proud of the ensemble’s evolution and how they spent months perfecting a complex Beethoven piece for their May concerts.

“We feel like that’s just the work that we have to put into it, but we enjoy doing it,” Murray says.

Brandi Emrys, an alto, joined the group in January. Her story will seem familiar to former band and chorus kids: She performed classical music at a high level throughout college, but she put down her instrument to focus on building her career after graduating. Nashville in Harmony, she says, isn’t just a way for her to perform with others again.

“I also wanted to be a part of something where I felt like I could create a family,” she says. “In my past jobs, it’s been really hard being a part of the LGBT community and having to hide a part of myself. I wanted to start building a community with people who are like me and who have had experiences like I’ve had.” That community isn’t a monolith. Members come from all different careers and interests, and I was particularly struck by the wide range of ages I saw in the ensemble. Some members work in the arts professionally, and some learn the pieces by rote since they can’t read music. There are also non-queer allies in the group, something Emrys finds particularly inspiring.

to the mission.”

That mission includes using music to spark social change and reflection. At their May concerts, Nashville in Harmony performed “The Tennessee Waltz,” in which a singer laments their love being stolen away. It’s usually taken to be about a man and a woman, but King says members have found an alternative meaning.

“There’s a lot of people who are talking about the fact that, with ‘Tennessee Waltz’ at least, they think about it in the context of extremists trying to take away the South from them,” King says. “They grew up here, they were born here, they have Southern values, and somehow these extremists are like, ‘No, you don’t belong here.’”

“It helps remind me that there are people out there who love us for who we are, no matter what, and who are fighting for us and will continue to fight for us,” she says.

When I ask Emrys what the chorus means to her, I’m not surprised at all to hear her say it’s her place to belong, too.

“It’s a place where you can find peace,” Emrys says. “It allows me to take all the things that I’ve experienced in the week, all the things that have gone wrong, all the things that I’m really frustrated and mad about — especially with our government and politics — and it gives me three hours of respite. I feel like I can breathe for that little bit of time.”- ▼

26 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
IN THE CLUB
CULTURE:
PHOTOS: ANGELINA CASTILLO

A MORAL REVOLUTION

Our Kindred Creatures surveys the origins of the anti-cruelty movement

BILL WASIK AND MONICA MURPHY’S Our Kindred Creatures: How Americans Came to Feel the Way They Do About Animals is a provocative, sometimes disturbing examination of Americans’ evolving attitudes toward animals from 1866 to 1896. It is also a study in empathy.

The book is divided into sections titled “Beachheads” and “Standoffs.” “Beachheads” covers the first 10 years of the period, tracing the birth of the animal rights movement and its early success in lobbying for anti-cruelty laws and creating systems of enforcement. “Standoffs” describes the movement’s shift in focus from prosecution to the engagement of the public’s compassion. These two approaches are embodied in the book’s central figures: Henry Bergh, a fire-breathing scion of a wealthy shipbuilding family who enlisted the clout of New York’s elite to found the ASPCA, and George Angell, a minister’s son whose goal was “nothing less than a moral revolution in America, one carried along by human emotion in rebellion against suffering of all forms.”

As the section titles suggest, Our Kindred Creatures frames the animal rights movement’s history as a series of battles. Its victories were often intertwined with the rapid social transformations of the time. George Angell built on abolitionists’ success as he advanced his belief “that resistance to war, racism, plutocracy, and animal cruelty were duties that walked hand in hand.”

Many founders of local ASPCA chapters were women, who recognized and strengthened the movement’s moral connection to causes such as suffrage and temperance. And thanks to the growth of public education, the reformers were able to widely distribute anti-cruelty literature to children.

But the economic and social conditions of the Gilded Age also created the movement’s fiercest enemy: unchecked capitalism. Global trade networks funneled millions of dead exotic birds to milliners in major cities. The expansion of railroads and development of new technology such as refrigeration and the automated slaughtering machine enabled the meatpacking industry “to concentrate both wealth and suffering at an astonishing, unaccountable scale.”

The paradoxical effects of the Gilded Age on the animal rights movement are reiterated on smaller scales throughout Our Kindred Creatures Extinction researchers bemoan the disappearance of a species while killing individuals of that species to study them. Henry Bergh rages against the number of dogs killed during Louis Pasteur’s development of a rabies vaccine, but he supports the killing of dogs by a scientist attempting to disprove the existence of rabies. At times, it seems that animal rights advocates were battling their own cognitive dissonance as much as they were fighting systemic greed.

Many reformers drew strength from the belief that “moral truths can be perceived intuitively by the human mind,” that they needed only to educate the public about animal cruelty to engage the “gut-level revulsion to suffering, instilled by God.” Wasik and Murphy also center empathy (minus the tinge of religiosity) in the structure of Our Kindred Creatures. Most chapters begin with an anecdote about a single species or individual — passenger pigeons, the urban horse, beluga whales, Jumbo the elephant — to evoke the reader’s compassion. Conversely, the authors cite a failure of imagination, empathy’s close cousin, as the reason the reformers “could not confront the slaughterhouses,” where tourists willingly came to witness the bloody spectacle of modern meat processing: “The reality

Name: BEATRICE

Age: 4 years

Weight: 56 lbs

Introducing Beatrice!

of them simply could not be reconciled within their worldview.”

The reader might expect sections called “Beachheads” and “Standoffs” to lead to a third called “Victory” or “Defeat.” However, the authors cite the ongoing industrial-scale cruelty and suffering inflicted in slaughterhouses and on factory farms to argue that the fight for animal rights must continue today. Implicit and explicit parallels between the Gilded Age and the early 21st century abound in the book: the wealth gap, fears about immigration, controversy over the ever-shifting line between the government’s role and individual rights.

Wasik and Murphy point out that despite such divisive conditions, the 19th-century reformers succeeded in expanding Americans’ circle of care. They exhort their readers to make a similar “collective leap of imagination” to end the invisible suffering of our meat animals. Through both its structure and content, Our Kindred Creatures follows the blueprint of the early reformers in order to engage readers’ empathy and challenge them to “reckon with the moral obligations we have to all the creatures around us.”

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publication of Humanities Tennessee.▼

Our Kindred Creatures: How Americans Came to Feel the Way They Do About Animals

By Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy Knopf 464 pages, $35

Wasik and Murphy will discuss their book at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 23, at The Bookshop

This beauty is looking for her furever home. If you are looking for a pup to binge watch your favorite shows with look no further! Beatrice loves cuddling and lounging on the couch. But there’s more to Beatrice than just being a couch potato companion! While she adores snuggling up with her humans for a relaxing evening, Beatrice also enjoys simpler pleasures. Whether it’s a leisurely stroll around the block or a playing in the backyard, she’s content to take it easy and enjoy the company of her loved ones. Sit back, relax, and inquire about Beatrice today! Call 615.352.1010 or visit nashvillehumane.org Located at 213 Oceola Ave., Nashville, TN 37209

Adopt. Bark. Meow. Microchip. Neuter. Spay.

UPCOMING

EVENTS

PARNASSUSBOOKS.NET/EVENT FOR TICKETS & UPDATES

THURSDAY, MAY 23 6:30PM RUTH WARE at NASHVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY One Perfect Couple

SATURDAY, MAY 23 10:30AM

SATURDAY STORYTIME with BREE SUNSHINE SMITH at PARNASSUS Wally Takes a Weather Walk

SATURDAY, JUNE 1 10:30AM

SATURDAY STORYTIME with MAGGIE & ROSALIND BUNN at PARNASSUS All Aboard, Tennessee

SATURDAY, JUNE 8 4:30PM

NASHVILLE SOUNDS PRIDE NIGHT BOOK FAIR at FIRST HORIZON PARK 6:30AM LISA WINGATE at PARNASSUS Shelterwood

TUESDAY, JUNE 11 6:30PM MELISSA COLLINGS with LAUREN

NASHVILLE
MAY
– MAY
27 PET OF THE WEEK!
SCENE
23
29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
KUNG
at PARNASSUS The False Flat parnassusbooks parnassusbooksnashville parnassusbooks parnassusbooks1 3900 Hillsboro Pike Suite 14 | Nashville, TN 37215 (615) 953-2243 Shop
JESSEN
online at parnassusbooks.net an independent bookstore for independent people BOOKS
PHOTO: EMMETT WASIK

GOING HOME

Papa Turney’s and Carol Ann’s make space in Nashville for old-school

blues, R&B and soul

THERE REMAIN SUBSTANTIAL audiences for the blues, traditional R&B and soul music, and these artists have an enormous influence on new music, even though they no longer have songs in the Top 40 and seldom get airplay on contemporary corporate radio. Increasingly, the best places to hear them are the sites that have always been a welcome haven: family-owned venues that double as bars and restaurants. Nashville has two such places where shows and jam sessions are regularly held: Papa Turney’s BBQ and Miss Zeke’s Juke Joint, and Carol Ann’s Home Cooking Café. Each offers its own cuisine that’s near and dear to many blues, R&B and soul fans — Papa Turney’s specializes in barbecue, while Carol Ann’s spotlights soul food on a menu that rotates daily. Both emphasize the comfortable, down-home feeling that’s a bedrock element of lyrics and performances in these musical traditions. The jam sessions and concerts held at both locations attract many of the city’s best in the idioms of blues, R&B and soul, and there are ample opportunities to see regional acts and, periodically,

national ones as well.

Papa Turney’s and Miss Zeke’s was cofounded by married couple Mike and Gwatholyn Turney (aka Miss Zeke), whose operation began as a food truck. Their spot by the lake hosts blues jams on Wednesday and Saturday nights, and they have live music every day they’re open, Wednesday through Saturday.

“We started having blues shows 10 years ago,” says “Papa” Mike Turney. “We wanted a place where everyone from the novice to the seasoned professional could share their music, have a full backline, and not have to bring anything.”

Turney cites Chris Canas, Benny Latimore and Grammy-winning legend Bobby Rush among the memorable visits from nationally known performers who’ve graced their stage. Local favorites appear during the jams, including Terry “Goose” Downing, “Crooked Eye” Tommy Marsh and Lou Rodriguez. Saaneah, who appears on the compilation of Alice Randall’s songs My Black Country singing “Get the Hell Out of Dodge,” has the next night of her Soul Sundays residency on the books for May 26, while Jhett

Black kicks off a summer concert series on May 31. A date hasn’t been announced, but Turney is looking forward to hosting 17-year-old blues prodigy Harrell “Young Rell” Davenport as well.

Carol Ann Criswell Jenkins, who sadly passed away in 2016, and her daughter Farrah Bradley-Young launched Carol Ann’s Home Cooking Café in 2005. Ever since, their stage has seen a prodigious honor roll of performers, including the aforementioned Bobby Rush and the late Johnny Jones and Denise LaSalle among many more. The second Tuesday of each month is the regular date for their jam session, called Grown Folks Night, which was started in 2010 by Jimmy Church, a longtime Nashville star of R&B and soul. While Carol Ann’s features plenty of more modern styles of music including hiphop shows and neo-soul DJ nights, Grown Folks Night is all about looking to the roots — and that’s not genre-specific.

“Any music that is old-school is acceptable,” says Church. “It can even be rock ’n’ roll or whatever. The key is old-school music. … The performers have even come from other countries

to perform. Everyone is welcome, and there is no limit. The biggest thing I get from it is seeing the faces of different colors coming together in sharing their joy.”

Papa Turney agrees that the sense of a shared experience is what makes the shows — jam sessions and ticketed concerts alike — at both venues so special.

“This place reaches past racial, spiritual and — on some days — emotional boundaries to accept the human family for what they are,” Turney says. “This jam will continue. It’s also attracting younger people who are into the oldschool music.” ▼

28 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com
MUSIC
Papa Turney’s BBQ and Miss Zeke’s Juke Joint, 3979 Bell Road Carol Ann’s Home Cooking Café, 407 Murfreesboro Pike PHOTO: ERIC ENGLAND PAPA TURNEY’S BBQ AND MISS ZEKE’S JUKE JOINT

PLAYING WELL WITH OTHERS

Kim Richey takes a tour through her life story on Every New Beginning

KIM RICHEY HAS a storied list of accomplishments in Nashville. She has written No.1 hits: “Nobody Wins” for Radney Foster, as well as “Believe Me Baby (I Lied)” for Trisha Yearwood, which earned Richey a Grammy nomination for Best Country Song. She’s also penned or co-written cuts by Mary Chapin Carpenter, Patty Loveless and Brooks & Dunn, among many more. With the release of Every New Beginning on Friday, Richey demonstrates how artistic success and longevity come from picking the right collaborators and staying true to herself. Despite her consistently impressive songwriting, it might be surprising to hear that Richey does not have a particular writing practice.

“I’m terrible — I’m so lazy,” she says with a laugh. Richey finds that the co-writing process energizes her. “I love collaborating with other people. I’ve met some of my best friends through sitting down and writing songs. I can’t think of a better way to spend a day: with somebody whose company you really enjoy and

doing something creative.”

Richey, who grew up in Ohio, arrived in Nashville via Kentucky and Colorado. In the late 1980s, she worked at The Bluebird Cafe and played with the aforementioned Foster, Nashville rock ’n’ roll songsmith Bill Lloyd and sometimes with the pair’s eponymous country duo Foster & Lloyd. Later, Richey spent a five-year stint in London, but Nashville ultimately called her back.

“There’s no place like it,” says Richey. “As much as the city has changed, the music there is fantastic. There’s so much collaboration, so many world-class musicians there. Nashville has always seemed a bit more down-home and more community-minded.”

During COVID lockdown, Richey spent a lot of time reminiscing about her life, an experience she later found she shared with many others. As a result, the songs she selected for New Beginnings — some from her archives and some brand-new, like the irresistible bop “Joy Rider”

that she wrote with Aaron Lee Tasjan — focus on the past and the lessons we can learn from it.

The tour through Richey’s life begins with the bittersweet “Chapel Avenue.” She wrote the warm folk-rock tune with Don Henry, and it looks back at childhood with love and some regret. Richey played the song for her mother in the hospital shortly before she died. Though it’s a slower, gentler, more melancholy song than you might expect someone to pick to start a record, Richey wanted to feature it front and center because of how much it means to her, as she sings, “All the gold of yesterday / Is a debt I can’t repay.”

Ever one to give credit where it’s due, Richey extended our conversation to highlight the team that helped her bring the album to life. Producer and guitarist Doug Lancio “worked so hard on the tracking and guitars.” Richey was also excited to work with bassist Lex Price, of whom she’d been a longtime fan; you’ve heard Price with k.d. lang, among others. Richey met

Every New Beginning out Friday, May 24, via Yep Roc Playing June 11

multi-instrumentalist Dan Mitchell for the first time while working on her 2010 album Wreck Your Wheels, and “I don’t think now I would make a record without him,” she says. “He’s a beautiful singer.” Neilson Hubbard taught himself to play drums while on tour with Richey, and he adds his distinctive approach to New Beginnings. Savannah Buist and Katie Larson of The Accidentals added lovely flourishes as well, on violin and cello, respectively.

For Richey, collaboration is important because it’s about bringing out the best in everyone in the room. It’s less about picking your battles than pushing yourself and those you’re working with to find something that thrills all of you.

“The philosophy for me is to not settle, not just have something that’s good enough,” Richey says. “I don’t think collaborating means rolling over and you don’t have a sense of yourself. If you’re confident in yourself, then it’s easier to collaborate. I do like collaborating with other people, but I don’t settle.” ▼

NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 29
on the Grand Ole Opry PHOTO: STACIE HUCKEBA

MUSIC: THE SPIN

STEPPING UP

“THE PRESS IS telling us lies. We will not tolerate fear. We will not tolerate you.”

Speaking over the backdrop of his beats during his set Saturday at Drkmttr, Nashville hiphop champion R.A.P. Ferreira’s voice was almost too soft for the weight of his statement.

his undeniable presence. The enigmatic MC’s rap style was as lively as his fashion sense, and he effortlessly pulled the crowd toward him. On “Heavy Crown” and “Inna Di Dance,” two songs from his 2015 LP Lemonade, Cav’s rapid-fire flow reminded me of Daveed Diggs’ star turn as the Marquis de Lafayette in Hamilton “I rap about this because it’s sustainable,” Cavalier said, rolling through the repetition-heavy single “Pears” to finish his set. “These raps are my past but this right here is my future.”

Thursday, May 23

EXHIBIT OPENING RECEPTION

Lori Field

Saints, Tigers, Warriors, Lovers, Flowers

5:00 pm – 8:00 pm · HALEY GALLERY

Saturday, May 25

HATCH SHOW PRINT Block Party

9:30 am, NOON, and 2:30 pm

HATCH SHOW PRINT SHOP LIMITED AVAILABILITY

Saturday, May 25

SONGWRITER ROUND Songs of Eric Church

Luke Dick, Jeff Hyde, and Driver Williams

NOON · FORD THEATER

LIMITED AVAILABILITY

Saturday, May 25

CONVERSATION AND PERFORMANCE

Meet the Eric Church Band

2:30 pm · FORD THEATER LIMITED AVAILABILITY

Friday, May 31 BOOK TALK

Broadcasting the Ozarks

with authors Kitty Ledbetter and Scott Foster Siman 11:00 am

TAYLOR SWIFT EDUCATION CENTER

Saturday, June 1

HATCH SHOW PRINT Block Party

9:30 am, NOON, and 2:30 pm

HATCH SHOW PRINT SHOP

Saturday, June 1

SONGWRITER SESSION

Leslie Satcher

NOON · FORD THEATER

The widely traveled MC, producer, co-founder of rap collective and indie label Ruby Yacht and owner of Soulfolks Records and Tapes put down roots in Music City a few years back, and he was wrapping up a run of dates with New Orleans-by-way-of-Brooklyn rapper Cavalier. The pair teamed up on the Dignity & Pride Tour to put a spotlight on the importance of their work as poets in an increasingly foreboding world brimming with misinformation and disinformation, in which it’s harder for artists to make a living. The message echoes the themes of Ferreira’s latest album: The First Fist to Make Contact When We Dap, a collaboration with Japanese producer Fumitake Tamura, defiantly challenges monolithic concepts of identity amid reflections on Nashville and Tamura’s home country.

Saturday wasn’t Ferreira’s first visit to the venue, an all-ages spot that has been a boon to Nashville’s underground music scenes with a wide range of shows and community events since it opened its doors at its original location in 2015. The Drkmttr crew recently began the process to become a federally recognized nonprofit and launched a successful fundraiser to help them keep going while the approval process plays out. The independent venue has an intimate atmosphere, with elements like binder-clipped curtains and its signature moon backdrop that convey a DIY spirit; like Ferreira himself, Drkmttr resonates with artists and its diverse, all-ages audience.

Throughout his catalog, including his most recent LP Different Type Time, his rhymes are a bridge between meditative hip-hop, NOLA jazz and deep Southern blues, with every bass line, saxophone melody and keyboard phrase emphasizing the MC’s emotional intent.

Ferriera casually took the stage and switched up the vibe entirely. What had been a modest crowd seemed to grow to a throng instantaneously, as if his never-cluttered beats and poignant bars — part of the sonic signature he has

crafted from elements of jazz and spoken-word poetry, which ranges widely but he always makes his own — had conjured the audience out of thin air. The lo-fi-inspired “Begonias” and darkly funky “Bending Corners,” two First Fist songs, segued together as the MC held the crowd spellbound, despite occasional tussles with “his nemesis” (as he described technical difficulties with his mic).

Opening the evening was Tulsa, Okla., singer and rapper Johnny Polygon. He’s a good man with some bad habits — or that’s the theme of his discography, anyway. His introspective music, which approaches a fascinating intersection of darkwave and R&B, leans into his journey to sobriety (he recently celebrated one year of being sober) with sweeping falsettos and deeply honest rhymes you can’t help but sway to. The whimsical melody of “Whoa Is Me” seamlessly segued into the narrative introduction of “Bad Habits,” at which point Polygon halted the beat. Only after someone shouted, “Run it back!” did he resume his set with a collected, commanding energy akin to James Blake.

During the intermission, a remix of Fergie’s “Glamorous” filled the air. A few minutes later, sporting a gold grill and ruby-hued cowboy boots, Cavalier drew all eyes to the stage with

“Diogenes on an Auction Block” commented on racism in America and the South while calling out the effect of commercialism in music on the ability of art to do its job in demanding change, as he rapped passionately: “Very difficult not reacting to things / Especially the ones that aren’t happening / If it all becomes description, why does the problem persist? / Political spectrum be ‘Sprite or Sierra Mist,’ it’s disgusting.” He closed the show with “47 Rockets Taped to My Chair,” a First Fist standout dedicated to Palestinian professor and activist Refaat Alareer. Earlier, “East Nashville” — which includes the unstoppable chant “R.A.P. Ferreira / And I will rap forever” — opened a window into the whirlwind that life can be for an MC who spends so much time on the road. (After a few days off, he’ll be in Canada before heading to the U.K.) But it seems like he’s feeling at home in Nashville, making our network of hip-hop scenes even more vibrant while he enriches independent music all over. ▼

30 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 115 27TH AVE N. OPEN WED - SUN 11AM - LATE NIGHT 115 27TH AVE N. OPEN WED - SUN 11AM - LATE NIGHT 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.7 4PM JAY PATTEN BAND FREE 4PM KEVIN WOLF FREE WED THUR FRI SAT SUN 6PM WHITE ANIMALS FREE 6PM WHITE ANIMALS FREE 9PM CROCTOPUSS, PUMP ACTION & POPLAR CREEK 5PM WRITERS @ THE WATER OPEN MIC FRI 5.24 9-11am PRIVATE EVENT $10 7-12pm FLIPSVILLE DANCE PARTY SAT 5.25 9-12pm CASEY JACK KRISTOFFERSON, DYLAN CRONK, SAMUEL CURRENT $10 SUN 5.26 4-7pm SPRING WATER SIT-IN JAM 9-12pm ZIONA RILEY, MUTESPHERE, BRUTAL HYMN $10 WED 5.29 5-8pm WRITERS AT THE WATER 9-12pm BLACK GUY FAWKES, BUBBLEGUM, JUSTIN BOWMAN, THE DRIFTERS $10 115 27TH AVE. N OPEN WED.-SUN. 11AM-LATE NIGHT FULL CALENDAR WITNESS HISTORY
Membership
free admission, access to weekly programming, concert ticket presale opportunities, and more.
Museum
Receive
MKTG_Scene_PrintAd_1:3Page_05.23.24.indd 1 5/16/24
5:17 PM
PHOTO: @VONRPHOTO RAP FOREVER: R.A.P. FERREIRA

LABOR DAYS

Babes is the buddy-baby comedy we need and deserve

IF THE OPENING of Babes — co-written by Ilana Glazer (Broad City) and Josh Rabinowitz and directed by Pamela Adlon (Better Things) in her feature directorial debut — doesn’t have you in a fit of laughter, it may not be for you. It is, essentially, a 10-minute childbirth scene. Bear with me.

Eden (Glazer) and Dawn (Michelle Buteau, Survival of the Thickest) kick it off on the morning of Thanksgiving, at the movies, which has been their annual tradition for 27 years. Longtime best friends, they share everything. As the movie begins, Dawn notices her seat is wet. So is the next one she jumps to, and the next one. As her doctor informs her over the phone, she is in labor.

Still, the two head to a restaurant and order everything, because — fun fact — hospitals don’t always allow food inside. Dawn continues to drip all along the restaurant floor, while Eden periodically checks Dawn’s dilation levels under her skirt. Finally, the besties hightail it in an Uber to the hospital, where Dawn crawls in pain across the floor. With her husband Marty (Hasan Minhaj) by her side, she screams her way through birth. It’s a hilarious sequence loaded with one-liners, slapstick and crackling chemistry between Glazer and Buteau, who have a natural, charming dynamic.

It also excellently sets up the rest of the film, which easily maintains that tempo and offers up a consistent supply of bodily fluids — including poop, period blood, (squirting) breast milk and “random vagina waters,” which is “not piss, it’s not sweat, it’s just like a proper mix, like salad dressing,” in the words of Dawn.

All that, by the way, is to the film’s favor. As Babes follows the friendship between Dawn, who now has a second baby, and Eden, who

soon finds herself unexpectedly pregnant after a one-night stand, it never once veers from the gnarlier parts of making and having a baby — whether that’s the physiology of it all, or the messy feelings one experiences as a new mom trying to maintain all the relationships in her life as she builds a new one with her baby. It’s a miraculous marriage of Glazer’s (and former co-star/co-creator Abbi Jacobson’s) electric bestfriend sitcom Broad City and Adlon’s phenomenal and underrated mother-daughters sitcom Better Things. It blends the hijinks of the former show with a healthy dose of Adlon’s deadpan realism.

What the pair manages to deliver is not just endless belly laughs, but a cold awakening — one that a lot of young women seem to be experiencing in the real world at the moment. Unlike wistful comedies of yore, it’s more realistic in its depiction of how much more work falls on the mother than the father, and how difficult it can be moving forward in life as a single person among coupled-up friends who’ve escaped to the suburbs. The period blood and random vagina waters makes this all easier to digest, oddly enough. As a nice side dish, Babes also gives us the handsome love interests we deserve: the enraptured Minhaj and a swoon-worthy Stephan James as Eden’s one-nighter. (Glen Powell who?) There are some delightful ensemble players here, too — particularly John Carroll Lynch as Eden’s doctor with a perpetually unfortunate comb-over, and Oliver Platt as her germaphobe father.

Now, you could argue that a comedy about the repercussions of becoming accidentally pregnant is poorly timed, what with the 2022 overturning of Roe v. Wade and the reignited war over women’s rights. But as a sweet little

look into how new motherhood intersects with adult friendship, it feels like the kind of thing the child-bearing community might need, enjoy and find validation in right now.

After all, friendship is what makes all of these realities easier to process, as corny as it might seem. To help Eden through her decision to keep her child, Dawn holds a pregnancy photo shoot, wrapping her bestie in a mosquito net and asking her to serve “shy whore” for the camera. (Effective!) Meanwhile, Eden helps Dawn get out her aggression with having too much to juggle by breaking stuff and setting a fire, as one does. As the duo’s baby journeys only get tougher, their friendship is tested — but like a good romcom, there’s no doubt they’ll find their way back to each other. As Eden says, “We are family, sisters, spouses, parents to each other at times!”

In fact, while Hollywood has struggled remarkably to revive the devastatingly dead romcom charm of the ’80s and ’90s, it has managed to inject that electricity into many a buddy comedy since — from Booksmart, Girls Trip and Bridesmaids, all the way to The Nice Guys and The Hangover. It kinda makes sense: You can find romance in your friendships too, as Babes reminds us again and again, whether that looks like grand gestures, light flirtation or raising a kid together as a modern family. ▼

Babes R, 109 minutes

Opening Thursday, May 23, at the Belcourt and AMC Thoroughbred 20

Because Nashville is so much more than honky-tonks and bachelorettes...
NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 31 FILM
Sign up for your daily dose via the Daily Scene Newsletter

30

33

43

51 Director Johnson

53 *Ovid of Greek mythology

58 Verizon sale of 2021

59 Greet the day

60 Roundup sounds

62 You might need a lift to do this

63 Thrice-remade movie … or, when parsed as six words, a hint to the theme clues in this puzzle

67 First name in objectivism

68 Horace’s “Ars ___”

69 Hosp. scan

70 Faddish 1990s disk

71 Like some coding loops and measuring cups

1 Does like

72 Not wavering DOWN

2 It follows the Hijri calendar

3 Saber-toothed tiger in the “Ice Age” movies

4 Summer setting in S.F.

5 Bloomers worn around one’s head?

6 Visitor from a faraway place

7 Alice with a Nobel Prize in Literature

8 Words before time or story

9 Roguish sorts

10 *Assist in a foursome

11 One way to run

12 Anna May ___, Hollywood’s first Chinese American film celebrity

15 Naturally competitive

18 Musical with Rum Tum Tugger and Mungojerrie

24 Winter frost

25 For grades K-12

26 Superman portrayer

27 Athlete with the only vertically mounted marker on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, so his holy name is not walked upon

30 “Don’t ___”

31 Half of dodici

32 *Ascent stage for a bird

34 Sightsee?

35 Name that’s an anagram of BREAD

37 Be beholden to

38 Clear

41 Attachment to a bit

42 Graceful horse

45 Seek retribution, in a way

49 Small brawl

50 Joint, so to speak

52 Deadened

53 2020 Olympics site

54 Perfume name with an accent

55 Milk sources

56 Devices with shuttles

57 Peter of 1934’s “The Man Who Knew Too Much”

58 “Yesterday!”

61 Cross fit?

64 Gradually slower, in music: Abbr.

65 Suffix with coward

66 Heavy-hearted

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 9,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/ crosswords ($39.95 a year).

Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

32 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com Proudly local serving the community with 20 years experience in Nashville. Kenneth Troope, Senior Mortgage Consultant | NMLS #37661 615.678.1025 | kenneth@communitymortgagetn.com | 615 Main Street, Suite 205 | Nashville, TN 37206 | NMLS# 244143 Voted top Mortgage Lender in 2023 Best of Nashville Readers’ Poll Call or Scan to learn more about our various loan programs ACROSS 1 It might come in a package 4 Showy accessories on marching band uniforms 10 Big mouth 13 Measure of inflation, in brief 14 Bygone 16 Money maven, for short 17 *Allot time
The False Good Samaritan, e.g. 20 Account that’s been overdrawn?
Delightful diversion
Mo. without a federal holiday
*Acre on the ocean floor
Menu fish
It’ll all shake out
19
21
22
23
28
29
Wood commonly used in midcentury modern furniture
One way to come out
Aware of
Limitless quantity
*Ice is found on it
36
39
40
capitalized,
major West African language
Animal whose name, when
is a
together
Fireplace bit
44 Things to piece
46
47 “That being said …”
48 Days leading up to the next sign, in astrology
EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ NO. 0418
OF THE
BACK
BOOK
THIS TIME AWAY FROM YOUR PHONE BROUGHT TO YOU BY KENNETH TROOPE AT COMMUNITY MORTGAGE ADVISORS F O O D R E P R A T I O N A N N O I N A U N A B L E L I C E O L I V E T R E E S C O U R T I D E E A T S O N E S I E S I D S R E T I N A S T A B F O R S A K E N S C A R C E A L O U D D A P A G I N G S E C R E T P A S S A G E S T O K E I N T R O S J L O E N I G M A S M A N E T I N S H A R K P O L O S H I R T S O R G Y C O A R S E M A E S L O P P R I M E R A L E T A T E
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72
PUZZLE BY DAVID KWONG
NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 – MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com 33 MyPleasureStore.com *Offer Ends 7/10/2024. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Excludes Wowtech products. Discount Code: NSVITD 25 White Bridge Rd Nashville, TN 37205 615-810-9625 $25 Off Your Purchase Of $100 Or More Get your vitamin D FREE TO ATTEND KID & FRIENDLYPET SUMME R E DITION 80+ CRAFT VENDORS | FOOD TRUCKS | CRAFT BEER + COCKTAILS JUNE 29+30 ONE C1TY / 10 AM - 4 PM CRAFTYBASTARDS.COM # CRAFTYBASTARDS SPONSORED BY FOOD TRUCK FARE $ 59 99 $ 59 $ 10 0 10 0 $ 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE ABS EXPERTS 4/30/2024. 4/30/2024. 6/30/24. 4/30/2024. 4/30/2024. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. $ 59 99 $ 59 99 $15 OFF $15 OFF $ 10 OFF $ 10 OFF FREE FREE $ 8 9 99 $ 8 9 99 ABS EXPERTS 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. 1/4/2021. Columbia 1006 Carmack Blvd Columbia TN 931-398-3350

Controls Engineer. Perform electrical and controls engineering duties related to the development and launch of new manufacturing processing for a tier one automotive supplier.

Employer: MAHLE Behr USA, Inc. Location: Murfreesboro, TN. Domestic and international travel is required. To apply, mail resume to S. Reeves, P.O. Box 748, Morristown, TN 37815.

Sr. Developers, IT Data Integration. Design, prototype, create, and modify data integration interfaces for a major retailer. Employer: Tractor Supply Company. Location: HQ in Brentwood, TN. May telecommute from any location in the U.S. Multiple openings. To apply, mail resume to J. Yokley, 5401 Virginia Way, Brentwood, TN 37027. Ref. job code 180138.

Completed applications can be sent to email address

MetroCampaign@uwmn.org

Deadline for submission: July 3rd, 2024. The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County does not discriminate on the basis of age, race, sex, color, national origin, religion or disability in admission to, access to, or operations of its programs, services, or activities. Inquiries concerning application process should be forwarded to the above email addressor.

AGING ROOF? NEW HOMEOWNER?

STORM DAMAGE?

You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind their work. Fast, free estimate. Financing available. Call 1-888-292-8225

Have zip code of property ready when calling!

(CAN AAN)

Metro Makes a Difference Notice of Application

The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County is accepting applications for non-profit agencies to participate in the Metro Makes a Difference Campaign. Application may be obtained from: Metro Makes a Difference website: https://www.nashville.gov/de partments/government/metro -makes- difference

Completed applications can be sent to email address MetroCampaign@uwmn.org

Deadline for submission: July 3rd, 2024. The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County does not discriminate on the basis of age, race, sex, color, national origin, religion or disability in admission to, access to, or operations of its programs, services, or activities. Inquiries concerning application process should be forwarded to the above email addressor.

YOU MAY QUALIFY

for disability benefits if you are between 52-63 years old and under a doctor’s care for a health condition that prevents you from working for a year or more. Call now! 1-877-247-6750

(CAN AAN)

NEED NEW WINDOWS?

Drafty rooms? Chipped or damaged frames? Need outside noise reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the answer! Call for a consultation & FREE quote today. 1-877-248-9944. You will be asked for the zip code of the property when connecting.

(CAN AAN)

WATER DAMAGE CLEANUP & RESTORATION:

A small amount of water can lead to major damage to your home. Our trusted professionals dry out the wet area and do repairs to protect your family and your home’s value! If you have water in your home that needs to be dried, call 24/7:

1-888-290-2264 Have zip code of service location ready when you call!

(CAN AAN)

PEST CONTROL: PROTECT YOUR HOME

from pests safely and affordably. Roaches, Bed Bugs, Rodent, Termite, Spiders and other pests. Locally owned and affordable.

Call for service or an inspection today! 1-833-237-1199 (CAN AAN)

TOP CA$H PAID FOR

OLD GUITARS!

1920-1980 Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D’Angelico, Stromberg. And Gibson Mandolins / Banjos. 1-855-402-7208 (CAN AAN)

AFFORDABLE TV & INTERNET.

If you are overpaying for your service, call now for a free quote and see how much you can save! 1-844-588-6579 (CAN AAN)

24/7 LOCKSMITH:

We are there when you need us for home & car lockouts. We’ll get you back up and running quickly! Also, key reproductions, lock installs and repairs, vehicle fobs.

Call us for your home, commercial and auto locksmith needs! 1-833-237-1233 (CAN AAN)

PAYING TOP CA$H FOR MEN’S SPORT WATCHES!

Rolex, Breitling, Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer, Daytona, GMT, Submariner and Speedmaster.

Call 1-855-402-7109 (CAN AAN)

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS!

A cheaper alternative to high drugstore prices!

50 Pill Special - Only $99! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW: 1-866-472-4367 (CAN AAN)

GOT AN UNWANTED CAR??? DONATE IT TO PATRIOTIC HEARTS. Fast free pick up. All 50 States. Patriotic Hearts’ programs help veterans find work or start their own business. Call 24/7: 1-855-402-7631 (CAN AAN)

STOP OVERPAYING FOR AUTO INSURANCE!

A recent survey says that most Americans are overpaying for their car insurance. Let us show you how much you can save. Call Now for a noobligation quote: 1-866-472-8309 (CAN AAN)

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 1-877-510-9918 (CAN AAN)

NEARBY

Circa Grill

Don Arturo’s Mexican Grill

The Spot Burgers & Beer

ENJOY THE OUTDOORS

Preservation Park

Sarah Benson Park

Heritage Park

34 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 - MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com R e n t a l S c e n e M a r k e t p l a c e Call 615-425-2500 for FREE Consultation Rocky McElhaney Law Firm INJURY AUTO ACCIDENTS WRONGFUL DEATH TRACTOR TRAILER ACCIDENTS Voted Best Attorney in Nashville LEGAL EMPLOYMENT Advertise on the Backpage! It’s like little billboards right in front of you! Contact: classifieds@ fwpublishing.com Call the Rental Scene property you’re interested in and mention this ad to nd out about a special promotion for Scene Readers Newport Station 1635 Bryson Cove, Thompson’s Station TN 37179 newportstationliving.com | 629-654-7501 YOUR
ATTRACTIONS
Franklin Franklin Farmer’s Market
Factory at Franklin COMMUNITY AMENITIES Sparkling Swimming Pool Dog Park Fitness Center Clubhouse
PLACE NEARBY TO SEE A SHOW First Bank Amphitheater
NEIGHBORHOOD BAR
BEST LOCAL FAMILY OUTING
Adventure Tower Joyfull Arcade
AND
NEIGHBORHOOD LOCAL
Downtown
The
BEST
FAVORITE LOCAL
Company Distilling Leiper’s Fork Distillery
Soar
BARS
RESTAURANTS
NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 - MAY 29, 2024 ashvillescene.com 35 R e n t a l S c e n e To advertise your property available for lease, contact Keith Wright at 615-557-4788 or kwright@fwpublishing.com Brighton Valley 500 Brooksboro Terrace, Nashville, TN 37217 brightonvalley.net | 615.366.5552 800 - 1350 sq ft starting at $1360 3 floor plans Studio 79 3810 Gallatin Pike, Nashville, TN 37216 studio79apartments.com | 855.997.1526 Studios available 492 - 610 sq ft starting at $1409 4 floor plans The Arcadia 87 Shepherd Hills Dr, Madison, TN 37115 thearcadianashville.com | 833-983-0956 585 Sq ft $1310 675 Sq ft $1460-$1480 914 Sq ft $1645-$1680 3 floor plans The Lucile 55 Lucile Street, Nashville, TN 37207 thelucile.com | 629-266-2891 440 Sq ft $1295- $1500 882 Sq ft $1425-$2049 1092 Sq ft $2100-$2325 14 floor plans Newport Station 1635 Bryson Cove, Thompson’s Station TN 37179 newportstationliving.com | 629-654-7501 958 Sq ft $1599-$1649 1265 Sq ft $1749-$1800 1429 Sq ft $2099-$2150 6 floor plans
141 Neese Dr, Nashville, TN 37211 gazeboapts.com | 844.718.2420 756 - 1201 sq ft starting at $1119 5 floor plans
Gazebo
36 NASHVILLE SCENE MAY 23 - MAY 29, 2024 • nashvillescene.com WE SPECIALIZE IN GOOD VIBES AND POSITIVE ENERGY. A metaphysical supply store serving Nashville since 2002. crystals singing bowls jewelry books gifts incense & much more 2117 8th Ave S Nashville, TN 37204 615.463.7677 yourcosmicconnections.com THANK YOU NASHVILLE FOR VOTING ROCKY BEST ATTORNEY 9 YEARS RUNNING! RockyLawFirm.com best attorney 2015-2023 615.830.1313 615.830.1313 Nashville’s Top Ranked Moving Company HappyMemorialD a y MUSIC CITY PSYCHIC Palm & Tarot Card Readings 615.915.0515 • 107 WHITE BRIDGE RD • MUSICCITYPSYCHIC.COM 4304 Charlotte Ave 615.840.8115 TACO HAPPY HOUR Delicious tacos & Amazing deals BUY 2 TACOS, GET 1 FREE Tues-Wed-Thurs 5 PM - 7 PM Join the Club Subscribe to the Nashville Scene newsletter PITCH US PITCH US Nashville is a diverse city, and we want a pool of freelance contributors who reflect that diversity. We’re looking for new freelancers, and we particularly want to encourage writers of color & LGBTQ writers to pitch us. Read more at our new pitch guide: nashvillescene.com/pitchguide FUN. RETRO. WHIMSICAL. @thephotomachinenashville thephotomachinenashville.com Super AWESOME, super GROOVY mobile photo booth for weddings, kids’ parties, corporate events, and more.

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.