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September 29, 2009

Faltus used to own Hernando's Hideaway (best honky-tonk ever)

A'Fair gets under way; local band to headline

(DeSoto Times-Tribune photo by Luke Horton) An employee of Herb's Diner of Byhalia readies her culinary offerings Friday at Hernando's A'Fair.

By ROBERT LEE LONG
Community Editor
Published: Friday, May 15, 2009 9:48 PM CDT
HERNANDO - Get ready, Nashville.

An eclectic mix of New Country with an edge is in store for A'Fair festival-goers today as the Hernando-based band named Closely Watched Train takes the stage as the final act.

"Personally, I'm hoping to stop people in their tracks," drummer Oscar Faltus said as he described what he calls the group's "phenomenal sound."

It took a magazine listing to bring Faltus and his neighbor Johnny Curry together.

Curry, 39, lives just three blocks down from Faltus in a quiet suburban Hernando neighborhood.

Curry, who shares lead vocals with other band members, said he hopes hometown folks get on board the "Train's" bandwagon as the band's fan base grows.

"It would be great to have the hometown support," Curry said.

The Virginia Beach native has called Hernando home for the past three years.

The former policeman from Newport News, Va., has been playing music for 30 years but Curry said it's taken that long to find the perfect band with a distinctive and unique sound.

"The best thing about the group is that we're all from DeSoto County," Curry said. Other band members Scott Perry, Drew Short and Eddie Sorrell round out the group.

Curry said the band is in the mold of New Country groups like Rascal Flatts but has elements of rock, blues and even New Wave.

"We play New Country in the Rascal Flatt's kind of style - Blake Shelton, Keith Urban-type music," Curry said. "The New Country movement started with Garth Brooks and Vince Gill. They're the ones who put it in the mainstream."

Adding a few blues licks gives the band attitude, Curry said.

Guitar player Scott Berry has played on Beale Street for 30 years.

Faltus has been playing drums since his father bought him his first set at age 10.

"I remember we were in the living room harmonizing, and there was nobody to hear us," Faltus said.

Hopefully, that's about to change for the band. The free concert today, slated for between 3 and 4 p.m. is a chance for local fans to see the band up close before they cut their first CD.

Curry said the crowd will be treated to some familiar numbers before the band unloads their original songs.

"You've got to play stuff people want to hear before you play your original stuff," Curry said. "In order to get your music out, we have to play what people want to hear."

Faltus said a band's chemistry has to be just right.

"The really strange thing is that I put a band together three years ago," Fatlus said. "We looked for a guitar player and here he was just three blocks from me."

Faltus said he made the connection with Curry through the Memphis Flyer entertainment magazine.

Curry said he and Faltus instantly connected.

"It's tough to find people with the right idea and the right attitude," Curry said.

The five band members have been intently rehearsing for the A'Fair concert during the past week.

The band members hold down regular jobs and juggle family commitments into their rehearsal schedules.

Curry is a human resource specialist. Faltus is a machinist by trade and used to own Hernando's Hideaway  (best honky-tonk ever) in Memphis, a legendary club frequented by Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis.

Faltus is just 43 but he's heard all the stories. He even encountered Jerry Lee Lewis who came into the club to hear the band that was playing onstage at the time.

"Jerry Lee came in one time and heard the band and asked me 'Who are these crackers?"

"I said, well, Mr. Lewis I could tell you their names but you probably wouldn't remember them," Faltus told him. "He laughed and said, yeah, you're probably right."

Curry said his talent is songwriting and coming up with lyrics.

"My wife will go shopping and come back and I will have written a song. It's finding the alone time to write songs that is difficult."

It was Curry who came up with the name for the band based on a 1966 movie of the same name, a foreign film that became popular during the New Wave movement.

"We just hope that people will come out, have a good time, and like what they hear."

Other musical acts include Earl Randle from 9 a.m. until 10:15 a.m. and a bluegrass jam from 10:45 a.m. until noon.

From 12:15 until 1 p.m. Martin Carver and Jett Case will perform.

Preceding Closely Watched Train is Kerry Parker from 1:15 p.m. until 2:30 p.m.

Activities begin early Saturday at 7:30 a.m. with the Laurie Wiley Memorial 5K Run/Walk.

Registration and check-in is located in the parking lot of Trustmark Bank at U.S. Highway 51 and Center Street across the street from the courthouse.

Registration forms are available at www.hernandooptimist.com or call Rachel Cook at 901-258-6811 for more information.

The arts and crafts show, expected to draw hundreds of vendors and thousands of tourists and shoppers, begins at 9 a.m. and runs until 5 p.m. around the courthouse square and down Center Street.

Major events are located throughout the day including the NASCAR racing car belonging to the Joe Gibbs racing team.

An arts show is slated around the courthouse square and down Commerce Street to City Hall and Center Street West from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.

Musical acts will perform from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.

The Mid-South Flywheelers will have antique tractors on display. A book sale and story time are also planned at 11 a.m.

Robert Lee Long: rlong@desototimestribune.com or at 662-429-6397, Ext. 252

LET ME BE THE FIRST BLOGGER TO WISH THE KILLER, JERRY LEE LEWIS A HAPPY 74th Birthday! Watch my YT Video of JLL in Brazil - Looks Great - happened on September 29

It happened on September 29
Jerry Lee Lewis, rock'n'roll singer, 74;
2008 A $700bn rescue package for the US economy was rejected by members of the House of Representatives.

1952 British and world water-speed record holder John Cobb was killed on Loch Ness in a 240mph crash.

1941 A Nazi death squad murdered 30,000 Russian Jews in Kiev.

1899 Sir Billy Butlin, holiday camp pioneer, was born.

1829 London's first police force was mobilised and its men nicknamed "Bobbies" or "Peelers" after Sir Robert Peel, the man who founded it.

THOUGHT Policemen, like red squirrels, must be protected.
- Joe Orton, English dramatist

BIRTHDAYS Colin Dexter, author, 79; Jerry Lee Lewis, rock'n'roll singer, 74; Ian McShane, actor, 67; Luke and Matt Goss, singers (Bros), 41.
It happened on September 29

Nesbit's Jerry Lee Lewis touring at 74 > Desoto Times Tribune >

Nesbit's Jerry Lee Lewis touring at 74


By ROBERT LEE LONG
Community Editor
Published: Monday, September 28, 2009 10:06 PM CDT
NESBIT — After 74 years, Rock ‘n’ Roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis is still alive and kicking, celebrating his birthday Tuesday on the road as he promotes his latest release.

In advance of his new album, Lewis recently released the single “Mean Old Man,” written by Kris Kristofferson.

The Ferriday, La., native and longtime DeSoto County resident has lived in Nesbit since 1973 when he moved into the sprawling Lewis Ranch off Malone Road. The Lewis estate soon became a tourist attraction with its piano-shaped swimming pool and antique car collection.

However, the singer closed the ranch to tours in 2006, citing privacy reasons.

Tourists were seen paying tribute to the singer as they snapped photos outside the ranch's gates last week.

Lewis, the last sole surviving member of the "Million-Dollar Quartet," a phrase coined by Sun Record producer Sam Phillips, has outlived contemporaries Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash, two children and several ex-wives.

Lewis has lived most of his life in his adopted state of Mississippi and has played local venues in recent years, including concerts at nearby casinos in Tunica.


Lewis still travels extensively. On Oct. 2 he is slated to appear at the House of Blues in Las Vegas. He most recently appeared in Brazil and has upcoming shows in the Czech Republic, Austria and Sweden.

His raucous, rowdy musical style catapulted Lewis to fame in the 1950s with his own unique brand of explosive piano playing. He learned to sing and play the piano at an early age in the old Assembly of God Church on Texas Avenue in Ferriday, a small, close-knit community across the Mississippi River from Natchez.

Lewis, who was one of the first inductees into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio, is also featured in an exhibit at the DeSoto County Museum in Hernando. The singer donated one of his traveling pianos several years ago along with a fringed jacket he wore on the "Tonight Show" to the museum in Hernando.

Brian Hicks, executive director of the DeSoto County Museum, said Lewis draws as many fans as those of John Grisham, a former DeSoto County resident.

"People go to Graceland and then they drive down to Nesbit to see Jerry Lee's house," Hicks said. "We have quite a few who come by to see his exhibit here."

Lewis keeps a low profile while at home in Nesbit, where he resides with daughter Phoebe. He is often seen driving one of his vintage cars around town and frequents the drive-through window at Happy Daze, a local retro-style restaurant.

Several weeks ago, Lewis was sighted on his front porch, perhaps contemplating his long career.

Although an early Rock 'n' Roller, Lewis turned to singing country tunes in the 1960s and then resurrected his career with a comeback in the late 1970s at rock and blues revival concerts across the country.

Lewis was featured as a performer at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards last year.

Rolling Stone Magazine ranked him No. 24 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.

Robert Lee Long: rlong@desototimestribune.com or at 662-429-6397, Ext. 252
Desoto Times Tribune > News > Nesbit's Jerry Lee Lewis touring at 74

September 28, 2009

France 24 | Polanski vows to fight US extradition request | France 24

Reuters - Film director Roman Polanski, arrested in Switzerland over a U.S. charge of having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977, will fight extradition to the United States, his lawyer said on Monday.

Polanski, 76, who has dual French and Polish citizenship, was detained on Saturday after arriving to receive a lifetime achievement award at the Zurich Film Festival.  

"He is in fighting mood and determined to defend himself," Herve Temime, Polanski's lawyer, told France Info radio, adding his client was stunned by the arrest as he was a regular visitor to Switzerland, with a chalet at the ski resort of Gstaad.

"We have begun by requesting his release, which should be done today in principle," Temime said. "There is no reason in law, or regarding the facts or in terms of the most basic justice to keep Roman Polanski a single day in prison."

A Swiss justice ministry spokesman said it was theoretically possible that Polanski could be released on bail, although that was very unlikely. "The criteria for bail are very strict," spokesman Guido Balmer said.

Polanski was initially arrested in the United States in 1977 and charged with giving drugs and alcohol to a minor, Samantha Geimer, and having unlawful sex with her. Geimer of Hawaii has since said Polanski should not face any jail time.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner spoke to his Swiss counterpart Micheline Calmy-Rey to discuss the case, a Swiss ministry spokesman said. Kouchner also told French radio on Monday he was working with Poland on the matter and had written to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

During a visit to Paris on Monday, Swiss Economy Minister Doris Leuthard said the country had no choice but to enforce an international arrest warrant against Polanski.

"The Americans strongly believe that the arrest of Mr Polanski is necessary. That's for them to decide. Switzerland is simply a state where the police functions and where we treat all people in the same way," she told a news conference.

Leuthard rejected suggestions Berne had arrested Polanski to help patch up ties strained by a high-profile U.S. tax case against Swiss bank UBS, which agreed a settlement over charges it helped wealthy Americans stash assets in secret accounts.

"The two things have absolutely no connection," she said, and when pressed on the timing of the arrest referred further questions to the Swiss Justice Department.  

Swiss authorities have said that in the past they only heard about Polanski's visits after he left the country.

Free Polanski?


The U.S. authorities have up to 60 days to make a firm extradition request, but Polanski can appeal to the Swiss Federal Penal Court of Justice.

Wearing red badges reading "Free Polanski", the Zurich Film Festival jury accused Switzerland of "philistine collusion".

"We hope today this latest order will be dropped. It is based on a three-decade-old case that is all but dead but for minor technicalities. We stand by and wait for his release and his next masterwork," said jury president Debra Winger.

Other members of the movie profession including Italian actress Monica Bellucci, French actress Fanny Ardant, president of the Cannes film festival Gilles Jacob and Hong Kong director Wong Kar Wai issued a petition demanding his immediate release.

Public opinion is divided. Responses to a Reuters blog on the Polanski arrest included those who opposed it as a waste of U.S. taxpayer money and people who supported the move.

"In my opinion it is totally right to arrest Mr. Polanski," wrote Otto Meier. "What he has done is awful and needs to be atoned."

Polanski has avoided countries with extradition treaties with the United States since fleeing in 1978. He has never returned to Los Angeles, where his pregnant wife, actress Sharon Tate, was murdered by followers of Charles Manson in 1969.

The director was originally indicted on six charges, including rape. He has insisted the sex was consensual but pleaded guilty to a single count of having sex with a minor and received a sentence of time served after spending 42 days in prison undergoing psychiatric tests.

Polanski fled on the eve of his 1978 sentencing because he believed a judge might jail him for 50 years. His lawyers tried and failed earlier this year to have the case dismissed after a documentary raised new questions of judicial misconduct.

Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley said on Sunday Polanski had received a very lenient sentence, which would never be achievable under today's laws.

"Some form of justice will finally be done," he said.

Born to Polish-Jewish parents on Aug. 18, 1933, Polanski spent his first three years in Paris before the family returned to Poland. He escaped when the Germans sealed off the Krakow Jewish ghetto but his mother later died at Auschwitz.

Polanski scored a huge hit in the United States with 1968 horror thriller "Rosemary's Baby", and another with 1974's "Chinatown", a stylish thriller starring Jack Nicholson that was nominated for 11 Academy Awards.

"Tess" (1979) also earned him an Oscar nomination, and Polanski finally won his only best director Oscar for the 2002 film "The Pianist", the story of a Jewish-Polish musician who sees his world collapse with the outbreak of World War Two.
France 24 | Polanski vows to fight US extradition request | France 24