Tonight’s Oxford American Local Live at South on Main features MellowDee Groove

llsom mellTonight at South on Main at 7:30 PM, this week’s installment of the Local Live concert series features MellowDee Groove presented by the Oxford American magazine.

Local Live showcases the best of local and regional music talent and is always free and open to the public. Call ahead to South on Main to make your reservations and ensure a table: (501) 244-9660. Local Live is made possible by the generous sponsorship of Ben and Jane Hunt Meade.

MellowDee Groove is a Little Rock band that’s been together for two years. They play original neo-soul music infused with rhythm and blues and a touch of funk. The group is fronted by Debra Bell-Willis with backing vocals by Pamela Bailey, Jamaal Lee (drums), Cloyd Willis (bass), Lucas Murray (guitar), Brian Austin (guitar), and Gavin Hawkins (keys).

Tonight’s Oxford American Local Live at South on Main features Katmandu

llsom katmanduTonight at 7:30pm, join the Oxford American magazine for this week’s Local Live concert at South on Main, featuring Katmandu!

As always, Local Live is free and open to the public. To guarantee a table/seat for this popular series, call ahead at (501) 244-9660. Local Live is made possible by the generous sponsorship of the Ben and Jane Hunt Meade.

Katmandu is primarily a classic rock band based out of Central Arkansas. All band members have been playing together in various bands off and on for several years including the Resistors, Idol hands, and Thumpin. Band members include Kat Hood on lead vocals and guitar, Chuck Gilbert lead guitar and vocals, Paul Edmonson on drums and vocals, Billy Hoover on keyboard and vocals, David Seago on bass guitar and Vince Castiglia III on vocals and guitar. Kat and Chuck met in 2001 and began the acoustic duo that later became the Kat Hood Trio w/ Eric Nolen. The trio were the 2002 Central Arkansas Acoustic festival and their 2004 performance still can be seen on AETN’s Front Row.

In 2009, a mutual desire to play classic rock tunes with Chuck’s former band mate, Paul Edmonson, inspired the beginnings of Katmandu. Their slogan, “Music for you that works for us” came from their vision of performing a variety of well loved, but not over played tunes by such artists as Steely Dan, Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, Allman brothers, Fleetwood Mac, the Band, etc. Their repertoire also includes some interesting original band compositions that stem from the acoustic flavor that the duo started out with. Expect to hear some tight vocal harmonies backed by solid, in-the-pocket percussion, creative guitar and piano leads, and a band that truly loves each other as well as the music they obviously love to perform.

Tonight at South on Main – the Local Live concert features Nan Maureen

llsom nanTonight at 7:30 PM join the Oxford American magazine for this week’s Local Live concert at South on Main, featuring jazz singer Nan Maureen!

As always, Local Live is free and open to the public. To guarantee a table/seat for this popular series, call ahead at (501) 244-9660. Local Live is made possible by the generous sponsorship of the Ben and Jane Hunt Meade.

Nan Maureen is a jazz vocalist who has been performing for many years in the Arkansas area, giving a special vocal touch to all the old jazz standards that everyone enjoys. She has recorded several albums and currently is the female vocalist for the Swing Band Reunion. She has been privileged to sing with the backing of many notable jazz musicians such as Art Porter and Charles Thomas and for this performance she will be joined by Bob Boyd on keys. To learn more about her go to www.nanmaureen.com.

Flowers and Dirt headline tonight’s Local Live at South on Main

llsom f and dTonight at 7:30, this week’s installment of the Local Live concert series features Flowers and Dirt!

Presented by the Oxford American magazine, Local Live showcases the best of local and regional music talent and is always free and open to the public. Call ahead to South on Main to make your reservations and ensure a table: (501) 244-9660. Local Live is made possible by the generous sponsorship of Ben and Jane Hunt Meade.

The rural ingredients of Amy Garland’s songs create less of the musical gumbo typical of the southern half of her native Louisiana than a slow-cooked stew. Raised in rural Webster Parish, she blends folk, R&B, bluegrass, pop, and country into what one would expect from an artist raised on a cattle farm in the woods of north Louisiana.

Mark Currey is a Little Rock singer-songwriter whose roots run through North Texas and Southeast Arkansas. Inspired by roots rock, classic country, folk and americana music as well as southern gothic literature, Mark is a storyteller searching for a honest expression of his own southern voice. Currey has shared the stage with artists such as Billy Joe Shaver, Todd Snider, Wanda Jackson, Amanda Shires, David Olney, and Lilly Hiatt.

Trey Johnson mixes a blend of blues, folk, and country music into a cornbread salad that is all his own.

Today at 4, Oxford American hosts book reading by Harrison Scott Key

oa hskeyThis afternoon, the Oxford American is hosting a very special book reading by contributing writer and editor Harrison Scott Key. He will be reading from his latest release, “The World’s Largest Man,” beginning at 4:00 PM at the OA Annex (1300 Main Street, Little Rock). This event is free and open to the public. Following the reading, join the author and Oxford American editors at 5:00 PM next door at South on Main for a social hour of cocktails and conversation!

“The World’s Largest Man” is a grand comic satire of the contemporary American South and the tender story of a boy and his Bunyanesque father, told with the comic punch and the wild, burlesque charm of Mark Twain. Harrison grew up in Mississippi, where, he says, “there was very little to do but shoot things or get them pregnant.” Of his father, he says, “The man was perhaps better suited to living in a remote frontier wilderness of the 19th century than contemporary America, with all its progressive ideas, and paved roads, and lack of armed duels. He was a great man, who taught us many things: How to fight, how to work, how to cheat, how to pray to Jesus about it, how to kill things with guns and knives and also, if necessary, with hammers.” Sly, heartfelt, and tirelessly hilarious, “The World’s Largest Man” is an unforgettable memoir—the story of a boy’s struggle to reconcile himself with a place and a father it took him a lifetime to understand.

Harrison Scott Key is the author of the memoir “The World’s Largest Man” (HarperCollins) and a contributing editor for Oxford American magazine. His nonfiction has also appeared in The Best American Travel Writing, The New York Times, Outside, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Salon, Reader’s Digest, Image, Creative Nonfiction, and elsewhere, and his work has been adapted for the stage and performed by Chicago’s Neo-Futurists in their show “Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind.” He teaches writing at the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) in Savannah, Georgia, where he lives with his wife and three children.

Local Live tonight features QNote at South on Main at 7:30pm

llsom qnoteTonight at 7:30pm, join the Oxford American magazine for this week’s Local Live concert at South on Main, featuring QNote!

As always, Local Live is free and open to the public. To guarantee a table/seat for this popular series, call ahead at (501) 244-9660. Local Live is made possible by the generous sponsorship of the Ben and Jane Hunt Meade.

Quincy “QNote” Watson is a Little Rock native with global awareness. He combines his Southern background and his many travels into songwriting, rapping, producing, engineering, and playing various musical instruments. He’s played nationally as well as locally, including at his Alma Mater Philander Smith College.

In addition to his technical aptitude for music, he is also a performer, a part of the rap duo Griff and QNote. Several of the songs from Soul South Age were performed on the historic steps of Little Rock Central High School to honor the Little Rock Nine and their sacrifices for social justice. He is also a member of TP and the Feel, fusing the genres of Jazz, Contemporary, Hip Hop, and R&B. As a solo artist and producer, QNote remains in that vein, using his craft for a purpose, employing music as a healing agent for truth and justice.

Big Band in Little Rock tonight!

som rosenLittle Rock musical mainstay, bandleader, and trumpter-extraordinaire David Rosen (of Rosen Music Company) will bring his 18-piece big band to the South on Main stage for a night of jazz. Enjoy an evening of timeless jazz classics from the 30s, 40s, 50s, and beyond.

This is a ticketed event with a $10 cover charge payable in cash only at the doors beginning at 5:00 PM when South on Main opens to the public.

Music will start a 7:00 PM.