Feel-good troubador Muck Sticky kicked off the BSMF doings at the Cellular South Stage on Saturday. Here’s a personal message just for you and a bit of his show, about as much as we could publish on a responsible family Web site.
Feel-good troubador Muck Sticky kicked off the BSMF doings at the Cellular South Stage on Saturday. Here’s a personal message just for you and a bit of his show, about as much as we could publish on a responsible family Web site.
It was party time on stage — dozens of revelers jamming the Budweiser stage as Project Pat with Computer and Lil Wyte and Yung D kept the audience in perpetual motion. Here’s the action, with some commentary by Computer, including an unsolicited exhortation to subscribe to The Commercial Appeal. No kidding!

Wearing a Memphicentric black-and-white cap adorned with such phrases as “Mempho,” “The Mound” and “Cronic [sic] City,” Memphis rapper Al Kapone joined “aristocrunk” hip-hop conceptualists Lord T. & Eloise on the Cellular South Stage early Friday evening in a warm-up for his full-length show at 2:20 p.m. Saturday on the Budweiser Stage.
Backstage, Kapone was jovial as always. “Rain, sleet or snow, the Memphis in May crowd is always on the go,” he rhymed (with more good humor than inventiveness). He promised a killer show for Saturday: He’ll be backed by a live band (guitar, bass, drums and deejay); and he’ll be joined by proteges Young AJ (his son) and Sir Vince. An MC named Latty will open the show.
Kapone said that rapping to live as opposed to taped accompaniment delivers a message that’s as M-Town-focused as his hat. “The message is, this is the Memphis past presented in the present form. Stax, Sun, the blues, Beale Street, B.B. King, W.C. Handy — I’m reintroducing it for the present and the future.” In other words, old school Memphis musicianship + new school hip-hop flow = Al Kapone.
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