Stax Museum of American Soul Music
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Thanks to everyone who joined us for the opening night event to celebrate our new ART OF STAX exhibit. Special acknowledgment goes to the family of Joel Brodsky, the legendary music photographer whose work for Stax Records in the 1960s and 70s now adorns the walls of the Stax Museum's changing gallery until August 27.

Pictured here: Soulsville CEO Marc Willis, Stax Museum's Carol Drake, Brooke Brodsky, Valerie Brodsky, Govinda Gallery's Chris Murray. Photo credit: Andrea Zucker.

The Commercial Appeal's Fredric Koeppel calls ART OF STAX "an instructive and entertaining effort, a summary of a brief moment in time when something about the style and sound and rhythm of Memphis reached out and touched the world." Read his entire review here and come see the exhibit for yourself today!
Category: Exhibits -- posted at: 10:20 AM
Comments[117]

Don't miss it! Incredible images from Stax' golden age on display and great tunes all night by DJ Tommy Pacello!
Category: Exhibits -- posted at: 9:02 AM
Comments[47]

When Billie Holiday entered the recording studio in New York City in the spring of 1959, the glass of vodka she sipped didn't help her voice the way she thought it would. The session didn't go well. In fact, it would be the last recording session of her acclaimed life, which ended tragically later that year on July 17th. What was also recorded that day was her session on film in the camera of one of the greatest jazz bass players in the world, Milt Hinton, who played bass on the session. Hinton was also an avid photographer. He almost always carried a camera with him, documenting over a period of decades the performances, sessions, camaraderie, travel, and between-gigs lives of the people he loved and respected so much--his fellow performers in the world of jazz.

The Stax Museum of American Soul Music will host a very special photography exhibit from November 12, 2006 - January 29, 2007: Milt Hinton: All That Jazz Behind the Scenes Photographs of 20th Century Jazz. The exhibit, on loan from the New York City-based Milton J. Hinton Photographic Collection, will include 50 Hinton photographs of the most important jazz figures in history, including Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, Pearl Bailey, Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Sarah Vaughan, Thelonious Monk, Memphis' own Mulgrew Miller and Aretha Franklin, the aforementioned Billie Holiday, and dozens of other legendary performers who helped shape the American art form.

The Stax Museum will host an opening reception for the exhibit on Sunday, November 12, 2006 from 2-5 p.m. with complimentary hors d'oeuvres and soft drinks, a cash bar with Mimosas and Bloody Marys, special guests, and live jazz. Admission is $9 to the general public and free to Stax Museum members.

Category: Exhibits -- posted at: 11:05 AM
Comments[61]