Blog

  • Birmingham Free Press

    Some of you know that I was recently appointed managing editor of the Birmingham Free Press, but many of you don’t know what the BFP is. It began as the brainchild of Stephen Smith, Lee Waits, and Brent Stauffer in 1998. At that time, it existed only as a web site, featuring local news items, humor, and political commentary. They began printing a broadsheet version of BFP in 2003, but for various reasons, they stopped after a few issues. Meanwhile, Stephen has been keeping the web site up, and there have been vague plans for the last year or so to start printing a broadsheet again.

    That’s where I come in. The broadsheet is imminent, and the guys needed someone with drive and experience to make it happen. It’s happening in early August.

    I’ll be writing more about this later, and I’ll also be re-posting any editorials I write for BFP on this blog. In the meantime, we are seeking more writers. We need people to write about various issues–politics, sports, bigfoot, etc. We can’t pay anything, but we would sure appreciate all the help we can get.

    If you want more information about writing for the Birmingham Free Press, contact me, or email info@birminghamfreepress.com.

  • Ghost Herd Show this Friday, June 24

    Ghost Herd will be doing its first show under the new name this Friday at Sipsey Tavern in Five Points.

    Come see how much we sparkle with new lead guitarist Adam Guthrie. Come hear some new songs. Come see me wearing leather pants.

    If you aren’t familiar with Sipsey Tavern, it’s the bar that currently resides in the location where Bailey’s Pub used to be, behind Dave’s. Lots of people tell me they haven’t been there since the Bailey’s days. Sipsey Tavern has cleaned the space up significantly. They have an authentic Irish pub atmosphere, a couple of pool tables, and good bands most weekends. If you haven’t been there, you should check it out.

    The cover on Friday is $5, and the show is set to start around 9pm. Renegades of Folk are opening.

    Facebook Event Page

     

  • Ghost Herd News for June

    We’ve just set up a fan page on Facebook. Join us there.

    Listen to Southbound on Birmingham Mountain Radio tonight between 9 and 10 pm Central to hear our song “Familiar Strangers.”

    Our next show is Friday, June 24 at Sipsey Tavern in Birmingham. It will be a rocking good time as always. Be there.

    That is all for now.

  • Common Grounds Reunion

    In 1995, I played my first show with the band that would become PopCanon, at a little coffeehouse called Insomnia in Gainesville, Florida. I had just opened for Planet Ten up the street at the Civic Media Center, and they invited me to open this show. Planet Ten bassist Ned Davis and drummer Blue Lang said they’d “back me.” So we rocked through ten or eleven songs with me calling out the chord changes, and you’d never have guessed that we’d never played together before.

    Shortly after that, Insomnia came under new management and changed its name to Common Grounds. It was a dark, smoky place where arty teenagers and grizzled drunks played chess and talked about existentialism. It was the kind of place every town out to have, especially a college town. The owners of Common Grounds (various owners over time) were some of PopCanon’s biggest supporters. As the band grew from three to four to six or seven members (sometimes more), we played there once a month for the next five years. Common Grounds bought the space next door and doubled in size, put in a professional sound system, and grew right along with us.

    I played shows there with a bunch of other bands as well–Eurotoaster, the Exes, the Familiar, and Project Dingo. I did solo shows there. I played background music for art events. One New Years Eve, I played in three different bands. I juggled beer cans for open mike nights and sang Led Zeppelin songs when there were karaoke nights. And when I wasn’t performing there, I was almost always there anyway, perched at the bar with a Guinness. I met some amazing friends there over the years, many of whom I am still close to.

    Almost any night of the week, and certainly any weekend night, a band would be playing and that band would be good. We may have never heard of them, but people would pay attention, often would dance. It was an incredibly supportive, open environment for musicians. Especially after other venues like the Covered Dish and the Hardback Cafe went out of business, Common Grounds was one of the only places keeping the music scene in Gainesville alive for years.

    Some time after I moved to New York, Common Grounds moved to the old Covered Dish location, further securing its place in Gainesville music history. With a larger space (and a liquor license), they could host bigger and better shows. At the end of this month, they will leave that location, and then Common Grounds will be no more. Owner Nigel Hamm said, “Fifteen years is a pretty good run. It was time to move on.”

    What Nigel will move onto, and more importantly, what will fill the void in Gainesville’s music scene, remains to be seen.

    In the meantime, Ashley Dean Myles decided that a Common Grounds reunion was in order. She put out the word on Facebook, and the response was overwhelmingly positive. I drove down from Birmingham for the weekend. Others came from New York, Chicago, and elsewhere to attend.

    The festivities began at Common Grounds’ original location, now an all ages venue called 1982. Though the decor had changed somewhat, 1982 still had the basic dinginess that was integral to the atmosphere at Common Grounds in the early days.

    It was sort of overwhelming to walk in there.  Right away, I saw a dozen people I hadn’t seen in ten years–among them Liz, Spider, Joe, Fitz, and James Lantz. I have visited Gainesville a good bit since I moved away, so I had seen many of the locals–Matt, Frog, Tom Miller, Rusty Valentine, and others–periodically over the years. Still, it was strange to see everyone in that space, already doing Guinness challenges at 7pm.

    At nine, Ashley herded everybody over to the current Common Grounds location. Mike Cecchini of the Remedies, one of several staple bands from what I consider to be CG’s heyday, had flown in from New York and played a set with his old band mates for the first time in several years. And they rocked ass, as expected.

    After that, some bands that had already been booked for the night before the reunion was planned went on. Unfortunately for those bands, many of us chose to stay out on the patio and catch up rather than listen, ironic given that so much of the draw of Common Grounds in the first place was the music. At the end of the night, James Lantz played an acoustic set. Everyone did go back inside to watch that, and it was a fitting finale for the event.

  • Interest in a PopCanon Reunion?

    With our old haunt Common Grounds in Gainesville, FL closing down, there’s been some mutterings about a possible PopCanon reunion sometime in the near future. The former band members have discussed it, and we can’t get it together before Common Grounds closes its doors, but we are all very interested in doing a show–maybe a couple of shows–later on this year, perhaps in the fall.

    I talked to Tony from No Idea records about us doing this reunion at the Fest this October, but it was a no-go. So we are left to our own devices. Will people actually show up to see this? We don’t know. Every time I go to Gainesville, at least a couple of people tell me how much they liked that band, which is amazing. The height of our popularity seems to have been after we broke up. Most of the time, we were struggling to bring 25 or 50 people in the door. But then again, our Last Show Ever was an event not to be missed, and the reunion show we played a year later got a pretty good response.

    I told Ned we should do a week-long tour. It would be hilarious and stupid, almost hilarious and stupid enough to actually do it. Someone said they could get us shows in Atlanta and Miami. I could probably get us a show in Birmingham, Raleigh, or New York. But then Ned reminded me how depressing it would be to drive to all those places in a van and play for nobody. One show in Gainesville is probably all our fame can muster. Can we even muster that?

    So who knows? Maybe this will happen. Maybe people will witness it. Maybe Randy from Blue Sky Baby will meet us at the county line with a plate of ribs.

    As for Common Grounds, I’ll be going down there next weekend to pay my respects. I’ll write more about the club at that time.

  • April Events

    Three gigs coming up in the next couple of weeks.

    Thursday, April 14
    Stuart McNair and I are playing at Pale Eddie’s Pour House (2308 2nd Avenue North). We’ll be backing each other, playing our original songs. It starts around 8pm and goes until we get tired of playing. No cover.

    Facebook event: http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/event.php?eid=138152426257010

    Saturday, April 23
    The full-on Mississippi David Hornbuckle Band is playing at Sipsey Tavern (1926 12th Avenue South). We are opening for another local band whom we know and love, the High Fidelics. They are a surf rock band and lots of fun to dance to. A great time will be had by all. Starts at 9pm. Cover is $5. Cheap.

    Facebook event: http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/event.php?eid=199381973435647

    Friday, April 29
    I am hosting a poetry and music event at Grey House Studio (825 A 39th Street South). As this month marks the 55th anniversary of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl and Other Poems, we are staging a tribute. The online literary magazine I edit, Steel Toe Review (www.steeltoereview.com), is presenting a number of its contributors to read from their own work, as well as Ginsberg’s. There will also be live music, beer, and snacks. Starts at 7pm. No cover.

    Facebook event: http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/event.php?eid=207706842592712

  • Woodlawn Stories

    Tonight and tomorrow, Desert Island Supply Company (DISCO) presents “Woodlawn Stories,” a community storytelling event performed by students of Woodlawn High School.

    DISCO is a non-profit creative writing program based on the model of 826 Valencia in San Francisco. The organization provides tutoring, workshops, poetry slams, and other free creative writing outlets for kids in Birmingham schools. I volunteer through DISCO to tutor at Woodlawn High School a few times a week, I also help them out with other programs whenever I have time. This one is especially ambitious and interesting.

    For several months last year, DISCO volunteers collected and recorded stories of Woodlawn residents past and present. The stories were then developed into a script to be performed by Woodlawn High School students. I’ll be there for both performances. Come down.

    Location: Woodlawn High School, 5620 1st Avenue North, Birmingham

    Times: Friday at 7pm, Saturday at 4pm

    Cost: Free and open to the public

  • Zen Mississippi Has Been Out for a Year

    I’ll be damned. I was just looking over this here blog and checking some of the links to make sure they still work, and I discovered my novel came out April 2010.

    I know you’ve all read it already, but just in case you want to buy it again, here is the link:

    http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/zen-mississippi/6557776

    And perhaps you’d like to add a glowing review on Amazon.com. You can do that here:

    http://www.amazon.com/Zen-Mississippi-ebook/product-reviews/B003HC8PTG

    Have a good weekend.

  • Steel Toe Review, Issue #4

    Reposted from STR.

    Editor’s Note, Issue #4

    We’re a couple of days late wrapping up our March 2011 issue. We won’t try to re-cap everything we’ve published in the past month here. Just go read it for yourself.

    We aren’t slacking off–just still tweaking the format so we can find the best way to keep you coming back regularly. In March, we posted a ton of great poetry and two awesome short stories, all of which we were very happy to include. We’d love to have more fiction submissions, and we’d love to publish more multimedia work. Please keep sending us stuff and spread the word about this site.

    By the way, none of us here at STR are making a penny from this venture. We wouldn’t mind making a penny here and there, but right now we have no advertising, we don’t charge a “reading fee” for regular submissions. We don’t even charge an entry fee for our contests, though this may change in the future; we are currently paying the prize money out of our own pockets. Not to mention the cost of fliers, postcards, and stickers we had printed up. We’re not asking you for money to defray these costs right now. We just want you to know what’s up.

    If you have any ideas about how to better get the word out about Steel Toe Review, we’d love to hear what you have to say. Just email us at steeltoereview AT gmail and tell us what you think. If you are in the Birmingham area and you are interested in getting involved with STR in any capacity, drop us a line and tell us what you’d like to do.

    Finally, in the coming month, we are excited to have two major milestones on the horizon: the deadline of our first fiction contest and our first live event! For details, visit our front page.

    Yrs. Trly.,

    M. David Hornbuckle

    editor

  • Update Update and Short Story Contest

    It has come to my attention that I haven’t updated this blog in more than a month. So here’s a quick run-down. I haven’t been writing much here because I’ve been writing a lot elsewhere.

    First off, Steel Toe Review is getting better all the time, publishing new work every day or two. And we are hosting our first short story contest with a $100 prize. You can see the details on the home page of the STR site. This is a themed contest. I have long had this idea that Birmingham/Red Mountain is sort of like a spaceship that landed 120 years ago in the middle of Alabama. This probably has a lot to do with my fascination with Sun Ra, but also I think Birmingham just makes a lot more sense when you think about it that way. So I’d been thinking about writing a story like this but I never got around to it. So now, here’s $100 incentive for other people to write it for me. Exciting, no?

    Secondly, I’ve been writing new songs, performing, and recording. This coming Friday (March 11), my band is playing a show at the DanielDay Gallery/DreamMecca Studio in Lakeview. Our sister band Results of Adults are opening for us. There is a $10 donation at the door, which I know sounds a little steep. BUT it’s BYOB, so you will save lots of money by bringing your own beer.