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August 16, 2009

DOWN IN MISSISSIPPI'S: Jim Dickinson, Mississippi Producer, Billy Wayne Posey, Klansman, Civil Rights Murderer, have died...

Jim Dickinson has died

I’m sad to report that Jim Dickinson has died.  Oxford folks have known him for years, playing around town (including at the Hoka) and in recent years as the piano player for Thacker Mountain radio.  He’s nationally known as a session player, producer, and recently as the father of Cody and Luther Dickinson of the North Mississippi Allstars. Here’s the Commercial Appeal account:

Iconic Memphis musician and producer Jim Dickinson has died.

The 67 year-old Dickinson passed away early Saturday morning in his sleep, according to his wife Mary Lindsay Dickinson. Dickinson had been in ill health for the past few months, and was recuperating from heart surgery at Methodist Extended Care Hospital. “He went peacefully,” said Mary Lindsay.

Just last weekend, a tribute concert, headlined by John Hiatt, had been held in Dickinson’s honor at the Peabody Skyway, to help defray his medical costs.

A third generation piano player, Dickinson was born in Little Rock, Ark., but raised in Memphis. During the course of his colorful half-century career, Dickinson built a reputation as a session player for the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan, a producer for Big Star and the Replacements, a sometime solo artist, and patriarch of a small musical dynasty that includes sons Cody and Luther Dickinson of the North Mississippi Allstars.

Dickinson’s health woes began following a high-profile performance with Elvis Costello at the Beale Street Music Festival in May. After a physical exam revealed serious cardiac issues, Dickinson was immediately sent into surgery where doctors at Methodist Le Bonheur Hospital in Germantown put in a pair of stents, then sent him home to rest up for bypass surgery.

Dickinson seemed in good health and spirits when The Commercial Appeal caught up with him at his Coldwater, Miss., home in late May, to talk about the release of his new album of classic pop standards, Dinosaurs Run in Circles.

However, just before he was to celebrate the CD release with a show at Huey’s on May 31, he had to be rushed back to the hospital with complications. He remained there before finally undergoing triple bypass surgery on June 24. Two days later he went into cardiac arrest. He was revived and spent several weeks recuperating in a cardiac intensive care unit.

Late last month, Dickinson was relocated to a rehabilitation facility; family and friends and physicians had hoped for a slow but eventual recovery that did not come.

“He just never did really get a break,” says Mary Lindsay. “He had so many different things go wrong with him. Every time he would work so hard to get better, something else would happen. It was a long drawn out experience the last few months.”

Dickson’s wife says her husband was in a good place mentally and spiritually at the end. “He had a great life, and he was a consummate family man. He loved music and his family. And he loved Memphis music, specifically.”

The family says there are no immediate plans for a memorial.

–Bob Mehr

Below is an interview of Jim talking about being a record producer.

I don’t ordinarily post music videos, but here’s his cover of “Down in Mississippi,” which he memorably performed at last year’s Neshoba County Fair.

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Klansman Billy Wayne Posey, participant in civil rights murders, has died

The Clarion-Ledger has a Jerry Mitchell story about Posey:

The 73-year-old Posey died Thursday of natural causes, according to friends. That leaves four living suspects in the June 21, 1964, killings of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. …

Posey came within one vote of being indicted by that same Neshoba County grand jury that indicted Killen, with a deciding vote against indictment cast by his relative. In a 2007 series, “Buried Secrets,” The Clarion-Ledger revealed three potential new witnesses against Posey.

In a 2000 statement, Posey told investigators there were “a lot of persons involved in the murders that did not go to jail.”

He did not name those people.

Posey admittedly was among those who pursued the trio that night, was there when they were killed and helped haul their bodies to the dam to bury them.

But the statement could never be used against Posey in state court because he was given immunity.

Then-Neshoba County Deputy Cecil Price told authorities prior to his 2001 death that he told Posey in 1964 he had just jailed the three civil rights workers and asked Posey to get in contact with Killen, who helped to orchestrate the killings.

Klansman Billy Wayne Posey, participant in civil rights murders, has died

Barry Hannah to hold fiction writing workshop at Square Books in memory of Jim Higgins

Barry Hannah to hold fiction writing workshop at Square Books in memory of Jim Higgins

I’ll just quote Barry’s flyer (first noting that Barry was the only person Jim allowed to call him Jimmy).  This is a real opportunity.

The JIMMY HIGGINS MEMORIAL WORKSHOP

BARRY HANNAH – TEACHER

BEGINNING JUNE 11th, 2009 3:30 – 6:00 PM

RUNNING FOR 4-5 THURSDAYS FOLLOWING

Mr. Higgins recently passed after a heroic thirteen years of struggle and supurb work in fiction and computers.  He was a hero to all his friends, which were many.  The workship is given in honor of Jimmy and his lovely wife, Tayla, who fought with him through dire straits.

For $300.00 (3 Stories) or $400.00 (4 Stories) per student, a class up to 15 and no fewer than 7 writers will be taught by Hannah, of the Ole Miss, Sewanee, Iowa, and Bennington Workshops.  Check out his books.

Call Hannah or Square Books at 236-2262 (As for Slade) or htttp://www.squarebooks.com, for info.

Apply now. Fiction only. Payment in advance.

Class members can submit 3 stories in 5-6 sessions.  Photocopied (by you) stories will have round table discussion and will be personally edited by Hannah. At $100.00 per story this price is modest. Get bang for buck.

Workshop is held 3:30-6:00PM beginning Thursday, June 11th on Square Books upper deck.  I expect several publications.

Be a pro!

3 comments to Barry Hannah to hold fiction writing workshop at Square Books in memory of Jim Higgins

  • Maggie

    Perhaps someone will stage a spelling workshop to coincide with the writing workshop: “supurb”? “dire straights”?

    I guess I never knew how much my enjoyment of Mr. Hannah’s fiction has been enhanced by his editors.

  • NMC

    I retyped the flier and the errors are mine, not those of either Barry, or Square Books (who made the flier).

  • Jackson B.

    Grammar National Socialists are the worst.

NMissCommentor » Barry Hannah to hold fiction writing workshop at Square Books in memory of Jim Higgins

Jim Dickinson and his new album of pop standards, in the Commercial Appeal » NMissCommentor

Jim Dickinson and his new album of pop standards, in the Commercial Appeal


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The Commercial Appeal has a nice piece about Jim Dickinson and his new album, which is pop standards.  It turns out that he’s always loved but never really tried to perform them until his stint in the house band on Thacker Mountain Radio.  Folks who know him only through the radio show will get a bit of his background (the session playing with the Stones was on “Wild Horses,” and with Dylan was on Time Out of Mind, by the way).

NMissCommentor » Jim Dickinson and his new album of pop standards, in the Commercial Appeal

Chico Harris, Barry Hannah, the Continental Drifters, Jim Dickinson, and many of Oxford's finest

Author Message
ChicoHarris
Member
Posted: Dec 21, 2008, 10:56 pm    Quote
24 years ago today, I was buying beer at Kroger in Tupelo and my buddy Craig C. Cannon walked up and said, "Hey Chico, let's go get the Christmas present I'm going to give you." We had been in the ghetto that morning about 3 o'clock and I figured we were headed back there, so I said, "Let's go!"
But, we didn't go back to the ghetto, we went to the white people neighborhood where his brother lived. I was led into a room where a dog, Sadie had given birth a few hours before. "You get pick of the litter. Merry Christmas."
The one I picked, I picked him right away and I named him Wayne.
Here's something for you to watch while you're at work and either bored or just feel like sticking it to the man. This is worth watching for the Barry Hannah part.
I had an accident April 5, 1997, the day Allan Ginsberg died. Wayne died that day in the accident and I came very close to doing so myself. Wayne the Dog was named for Wayne in "Darlington County," from Springsteen's Born In The USA record. I named him the day he was born, December 21, 1984. He was a favorite son of Oxford. I was with Wayne and we were crossing the street and got hit by this dude's car at a big rate of speed. Folks in Oxford had a three-day festival as a fundraiser for my medical bills and it was a memorial for Wayne. Cary and Laurie from Blue Mountain got the ball rolling with organizing and bands came to play from New York to New Orleans, there was three nights of music at Proud Larrys by ten bands. There was a art auction, a golf tournament, a frisbee gold tournament and a reading in which Larry Brown read poetry and American literary treasure Barry Hannah, a dog lover, wrote and read an incredible essay about Wayne. Stephen Bransford and his crew made a documentary about the three days and here for you is the short version, at about only 15 minutes. I think Steve won some award or such for this in Savannah...I know the editing is superb, especially regarding Hannah. This version on Vimeo is kind of dark visually but does have a button to watch in high def but doesn't have captions, so I'll list them after the link:
http://www.vimeo.com/2436881

In the documentary, in order of appearance:
Barry Hannah, novelist and Ole Miss writer-in-residence, reads his essay about Wayne in segments throughout the film.
Chico Harris - the cause of all this.
Jim Dees - local writer and media personality
Mitch Ulrich - owner, Uncle Buck's Records on the square in Oxford. He worked on organiztion of the festival and he's sitting beside a statue of Faulkner on the Oxford square.
The Voice of Jamo - talking about Wayne as camera shot goes inside my then house.
Ron Shapiro - Owner of the Hoka and local shaper of Oxford culture from 1970s to the present.
Jim Dickinson - Musician, Yalobushwackers, Mud Boy and the Nuetrons, Rolling Stones, etc. Producer, Beanland, Alex Chilton, Bob Dylan etc. Father, 2/3 of the North Mississippi All-Stars.
Barton - Oxford character
Scott Caradine and Michael Nichol - Caradine is founder and owner of Proud Larrys, where the festival music was over three nights and Nichol is an Oxford musician. At the time and here in the film they were hosting an Ole Miss sports radio show.
Larry Brown with Dees and Hannah at the Square Books reading.
Where Wayne is buried.
Performance by the Continental Drifters at Proud Larrys (List of other bands at end of this list).
(Continental Drifters were a New Orleans band consisting of Vicki Peterson, Susan Cowsill, Peter Hosapple, Robert Mache, Mark Walton and Russ Broussard)
Russ Broussard
Dave Woolworth (Kudzu Kings bassist)
T-shirt and poster festival art by folk artist Blair Hobbs
1985 picture of me and Wayne on our way back from Jazz Fest in New Orleans.

Partial list of bands:
The North Mississippi All-Stars with Jim Dickinson and Jimbo Mathus
Blue Mountain
Continental Drifters
Kudzu Kings
Kate Jacobs
Amy Rigby
Cardinal Fluff
Wobitty
The Jazz Gestapo
The Ole Missbehavin' Choir

Scott Rogers was in no way harmed during, in, or by the making of this film.
michael baker
Member
Posted: Dec 22, 2008, 7:01 am    Quote
i met hannah a few times in the 80's; one time in a wild period of his, one time in this mode: compassionate, caring, funny. anyone who pretends to know the south, contemporary lit, or the pain of loss and who has not read Airships is doing a disservice to those three fields of knowledge. it is a great great book.
michael baker
Member
Posted: Dec 22, 2008, 7:09 am | Edited by: michael baker    Quote
hey

that clip has cowsills' ex holsapple and an interview with her present beau, broussard (i think)

i love that cowsills song about the park...
ChicoHarris
Member
Posted: Dec 22, 2008, 9:17 am    Quote
her present beau, broussard (i think)


Correct about that and Airships. Some Oxford DJs have named themselves Airships in honor.
Cowsills were a cool American band...
Miss Faye
Member
Posted: Dec 22, 2008, 12:01 pm    Quote
How is Dees these days?
ChicoHarris
Member
Posted: Dec 22, 2008, 12:36 pm    Quote
How is Dees these days?

Very well. He's got two great dogs, good looking women chasing him, recently released a new book, Lies And Other Truths,
http://www.lemuriabooks.com/index.php?show=book&isbn=WFES980016444
is host of a very cool live-audience radio show, Thacker Mountain Radio,
http://www.thackermountain.com/index.php?range=past
and writes a very cool column in a very un-cool newspaper, Oxford Town (so lame it doesn't even have a Web-site).
http://www.oxfordeagle.com/OT801.pdf
Miss Faye
Member
Posted: Dec 23, 2008, 9:53 am    Quote
So he hasn't changed a bit. Good to know!

Oddly enough, after asking about him, I came across him on facebook. I'll have to check out his book--he's one hell of a witty guy.
This is worth watching for the Barry Hannah part - Goner Message Board

Performance: Nicoloas Roeg: (jim dickinson: keyboa