The Smartest Man in the World

The Green Room at Crosstown Arts
Friday, July 15, 2022
Doors open at 7pm | Show begins at 7:30pm
Tickets: $15 advance | $20 at the door

Purchase tickets here

The Smartest Man in the World began as the solo songwriting project of Memphis-based Dead Soldiers vocalist and rhythm guitar player Michael Jasud. It features eclectic songwriting propelled by Jasud’s unconventional arrangements and unique melodic sensibility, with songs crafted by Jasud and shaped by some of Memphis’s most talented gigging and session musicians. With this latest group of songs he continues to explore relationships, pop culture, technology, and trauma through a millennial lens of postmodern existential dread.

The Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde

The Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents a program titled Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde, featuring works by Wagner, Joseph Boulogne de Chevalier de St. George, Villa-Lobos, and Haydn  at Crosstown Theater. Featuring cellist Brant Taylor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Tickets: $35 

Robert Moody, conductor
Brant Taylor, cello

BOULOGNE  Symphony No. 1
HAYDN  Cello Concerto No. 1
VILLA-LOBOS Bachianas Brasileiras No. 1
WAGNER  Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde (arranged for chamber orchestra)

Wagner changed the direction of love music forever with Tristan and Isolde. Joseph Boulogne de Chevalier de St. George was a black French contemporary of Mozart, who was one of France’s most celebrated composers during his life. Brant Taylor, a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and an accomplished soloist, performs Haydn’s First Cello Concerto.

Healthcare Support Information Session

Join us for a FREE virtual Healthcare Support information session for musicians and artists!

Register here

Crosstown Arts provides administrative support to musicians and artists seeking healthcare for themselves and their dependents.

This free service is available to anyone in Memphis who identifies as part of the creative community (musicians, music creators, sound engineers, music producers, and visual or performing artists working in any medium) and is uninsured or seeking help to understand their healthcare options.

Crosstown Arts and Church Health want to ensure that every musician and artist in Memphis is familiar with the healthcare opportunities available to them and is receiving the care they need and deserve as part of Memphis’ creative community.

Crosstown Arts does not cover the cost of monthly healthcare premiums or fees for participants, but it does provide one-on-one assistance with healthcare enrollment through TennCare, the Affordable Care Act, and Church Health.

Healthcare Support is sponsored in part by an ArtsZone grant from AutoZone with additional funding provided by Tennessee Arts Commission.

If you are a musician or artist who needs assistance accessing healthcare coverage, please join us at this information session , email Kierra Davis at kierra@crosstownarts.org, or call 901-507-4223.

 

 

 

 

 

No Brag Pure Fact: The Art of Graceland Too

 

Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 23, 6 – 9 pm

In partnership with Gonerfest 12, Goner Records and Crosstown Arts present No Brag Pure Fact, an exhibition of artifacts and exclusive footage from Graceland Too. Included are some of Paul MacLeod’s own Elvis-inspired outsider artworks, notebooks he kept, and mounted photographs of visitors to his house, all courtesy of Friends of Graceland Too. Filmmakers Jeffrey Jensen and Geoffrey Shrewsbury have also contributed video footage of MacLeod and clips from their upcoming documentary, The Rise and Fall of Graceland Too.

At the reception, meet special guests and have the opportunity to purchase Graceland Too Memorabilia, a commemorative 45 RPM record and “Friends Of Graceland Too” t-shirts.


Special Thanks
The Friends of Graceland Too, Filmmakers Jeffrey Jensen and Geoffrey Shrewsbury (The Rise and Fall of Graceland Too), Marie Claire Underwood


Who was Paul MacLeod?

Elvis Presley fans tend to be an especially devoted lot, but Paul MacLeod possessed a zeal few could rival. Driven by his perverse affinity for The King, he turned his own Holly Springs, MS home into Graceland Too, an obsessive, candy-colored shrine dedicated to all things Elvis, where his ongoing mission was amassing all of the Presley ephemera he could get his hands on and documenting every mention of the star he could find via radio, television and film. In addition to being a dogged curator of kingly dreck, MacLeod was known as a bombastic personality with the eccentric habit of giving lengthy, frenetic tours of his home to anyone who stopped by, 24 hours a day.

Spectacle to some, sanctuary to others, Graceland Too was a wayward beacon that attracted Elvis fans from all over the world.

Paul MacLeod passed away in July of 2014, and over the past year, many have offered their time and resources in service of preserving what became his life’s work: sheltering strange treasures and welcoming fellow pilgrims on the road to Graceland (Too).

Lawrence Matthews III: In a Violent Way

Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm

  • Performance at Rock For Love: Friday, September, 4, 8:30 pm
  • Artist Talk: Thursday, September 10, 7:30 pm

“A riot is the language of the unheard.” – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

In a Violent Way is a multimedia installation by Lawrence Matthews III that incorporates a wide array of visual and audio elements, from oil painting and collage to tube televisions and archival video footage. To accompany the installation, Matthews will perform his own original songs at the close of the show’s reception. The exhibition’s title is a nod to the seminal, genre-bending 1969 Miles Davis recording, In a Silent Way, which inspired and guided Matthews while he created this body of work.

The imagery of In a Violent Way is sourced from or informed by mass media portrayals of events past and present in four primary cities: Baltimore, Los Angeles, St. Louis and Memphis, each with its own history of entrenched racial discrimination and economic disparity disproportionately affecting people of color. Mixed media works depicting the demonstrations and unrest of the 1960’s tellingly reside alongside banks of television sets showing video footage of more recent discord, like the 1992 L.A. Riots. These scenes — differing in timeline, though not in tenor — convey generations of frustration caused by institutionalized oppression, angry citizens crying out against abuses at the hands of authority, and the ambivalent eye of the media that only captures part of the story.

“My work does not judge the morality of the individuals partaking in the riots, only the institutions that create the circumstances where riots are the only voice.” – Lawrence Matthews III


Lawrence Matthews III was born in Memphis, TN, into a family who encouraged him to be an artist from a young age. He received his BFA from the University of Memphis and was awarded “Best of Show” in the University’s 31st Annual Juried Student Exhibition. Young, but already prolific, Matthews is an emerging artist who has shown work in several solo and group shows across Memphis, including Doomed to Repeat at Circuitous Succession Gallery (2015), Cigar Box Show at Glitch Gallery (2014), and Price Is Right at David Lusk Gallery (2014).

Matthews works in a wide variety of media, including oil paint, collage, photography, sculpture, music and film, and combines post-modern, Pop Art and contemporary influences to narrate his perspective as an African descendant living in America.

The Hues: A Fantasy of the Mind Art Show

Memphis-born visual artist, Larry “Don Nosti” Itson, presents his first solo art show.

There will be music by Dj SpaceAge, refreshments and a $5 raffle to win one of Itson’s large paintings, prints and an exclusive t-shirt!