Scott Morgan (left) is the poet behind Memphis the Band, shown here with wife Shannon Morgan on drums and bassist Ryan Davis. (photo by Jordan Green)
Scott Morgan is a rough-hewn Carolina Piedmont literary man who tosses off novels at the rate some people turn out custom houses. He also writes damn fine songs that evoke the gritty milieu of those novels, set to a roadhouse soundtrack replete with greasy, high-octane twang, tender Muscle Shoals soul and Stonesy raunch rock. That’s Memphis the Band. Over the years the ensemble has absorbed Scott’s wife, Shannon, who belts out high-spirited harmonies and vocal leads, with an arsenal of percussion instruments; keyboardist Peter Lucey, a degreed music major who regularly haunts the Chapel Hill music dives; Ryan Davis, an audiophile whose ears voraciously consume an eclectic range of music; and drummer Jeremy Thompson.
“When I write lyrics I like piling ’em on,” Scott says, nursing a Miller Lite outside the band’s Ford Econoline in the parking lot beside the Garage in Winston-Salem.
“You don’t want to confuse them with too few words. You want to send them home with a whole fucking cake pan of words.” Inside, a band from New York City called Yarn is doing a convincing job of conjuring mandolin-laden Southern alt country sincerity. It’s gonna be a light night. Most of the local music connoisseurs turned out the previous night to see Old Stone Revue – the bartenders are hoping – in vain, as it turns out to catch the spill-off from the Wake Forest-Mississippi game. Still, Memphis is in every sense a band: a collection of individuals surviving by their wits on the road, sustaining adversity through high spirits and camaraderie. They’re gonna tear off the gig in pursuit of their own pleasures, ride it out on their own steam.
The trek from the club to the parking lot includes passage through a weed-strewn vacant lot. Chain-link fencing lays nearly horizontal still connected to two poles flopping uselessly in the night. Davis runs up on the metal flotsam and pins it beneath his feet to allow Shannon to step over, posturing as Vietnam platoon leader.
Adventure. “The drummer is not here tonight,” Scott Morgan says.
“Shannon will be drumming in his place.” “I’ll be doing percussion,” his wife clarifies. “Get that straight.”
“It’s
the first night Ry plays upright bass, and I piss onstage,” Scott
continues. “I puke onstage,” Shannon says. They’ve had some difficulty
hanging on to electric guitarists, so the present incarnation of
Memphis the Band’s sound is constructed around Scott Morgan’s acoustic
guitar and Davis’ throbbing bass line, the rhythm flavored by an
overlay of Lucey’s keyboard playing.
“My electric guitar
sounds like Neil Young in kindergarten,” Scott says, “like Neil Young
on Quaaludes.” “Neil Young sniffing Play-Doh,” Davis exults.
“I
think a lot of his songwriting harks back to the thirties,” Lucey says
of Scott Morgan. “It’s ragtime or old blues. Circus music.”
“I
love circus music, too,” Scott says. “Love clowns,” Shannon adds. The
band’s influences are not so much an evolutionary chain as a buffet:
Ryan Adams, Beck, Amos Lee…. “We love hip hop,” Scott says. “Eric B and
Rakim,” Davis says. “EPMD.” “We even had an Eazy-E day, coming off
something,” Scott says. “I think it was in Ohio.” Shannon has on occasion inflicted the willowy Texas
folksinger Nanci Griffith on the rest of the band. Driver’s choice
defines the play list. “Listening to new music is a turn on,” Davis
says. “Have you ever heard Tool? When you put something on the stereo,
whew…. I remember when my friend first played it to me. I was so
overwhelmed I had to go home.” “We don’t play cover tunes,” Scott says.
“We should, but we could never agree on anything. We’d never do a Dylan
song. We’d never do a Tool song.” “That’s not true,” Shannon protests.
“Sometimes
you and I do some Lucinda Williams together.” They’ve accumulated about
60 songs since their latest release, ***Radio***, in 2006. They’ll
winnow down the batch to 30 before they come close to settling on a
song list. And after some discussion they concur that the next record
will have no stylistic theme.
Scott hears Yarn bid the
audience goodnight, and he gives the signal for Memphis the Band to
head inside. They check their levels onstage for what seems to be an
eternity, and then launch the first song without ceremony.
A middle-aged woman with sandy blond hair sits at the back of the horseshoe bar smoking Virginia
Slims and moving her flip-flop-clad feet in time with the music. She
wears a pink, paper tiara. By the time the encore rolls around – it’s a
sweet, New Orleans style ballad with the Dadaist refrain “Ain’t no
snake under the rock, ain’t no rock under the snake” – someone is
clinking an empty bottle on beat. Butt planted on the stool, the
celebrant scrunches her shoulders and extends her elbows, moving from
the waist up, and lights another Virginia Slim.
To comment on this story, e-mail Jordan Green at jordan@yesweekly.com.



















