Selections from several songs performed by the North Mississippi Allstars at the 2011 North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic, an annual music festival.
Emmy award winning filmmaker Max Shores is a thirty-year veteran of TV and documentary film production. His work has been featured on Alabama Public Television, Mississippi Public Broadcasting, PBS stations nationwide, and the University of Alabama’s TV station, WVUA 23.
Shores is a Winfield, Alabama native and a graduate of the University of Alabama. He is a product of the University’s College of Communication and Information Sciences and has been training students in media production both in the field and as adjunct faculty in the Telecommunication & Film Department since receiving a Masters degree in 1984.
Through his research for The Amazing Story of Kudzu, Shores is considered one of the world’s leading scholars on the kudzu vine. He traced the 1540 route of Spanish conquistador Hernando Desoto across the southeastern U.S. for In Search of Desoto’s Trail and documented the history of what was once called the “wickedest city in America†in Up from the Ashes: the Phenix City Story. In The Chief: Calvin McGhee and the Forgotten Creeks he told the sad, yet triumphant story of a Native American group left behind in Alabama when others were forcibly removed to Oklahoma in the 1830s.
His work has been featured at film festivals and special screenings around the world and has received several festival awards. His documentaries are featured in the online Encyclopedia of Alabama and selections from his work have been exhibited in the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles, California and the Musical Instrument Museum in Phoenix, Arizona.
He is a volunteer sound and lighting technician at Forest Lake United Methodist Church in Tuscaloosa and he also maintains the church website.
A big fan of blues music, Shores has shot video which he has posted to YouTube.com for the past several years at his favorite music festival, the annual North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic. He also helps maintain the YouTube.com site for the festival.
Shores is currently working with the Afterhours: Live from the Red Cat Birmingham TV series, directing short Alabama Detours documentaries for WVUA 23, and producing various contract productions for the University of Alabama.
He and his wife Cindy have three daughters – Katie, Mary and Myra.
For more information, visit MaxShores.com
Selections from several songs performed by the North Mississippi Allstars at the 2011 North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic, an annual music festival.
From the Mississippi Public Broadcasting series, “Sucarnochee Revue”
From the Mississippi Public Broadcasting series, “Sucarnochee Revue”
Featuring Jacky Jack White and the Sucarnochee Stage Hands from the “Sucarnochee Revue” series on Mississippi Public Broadcasting
From the Mississippi Public Broadcasting series, “‘Sucarnochee Revue.”
Britt Gully sings his original song “Don’t Act Sweet” on the Sucarnochee Revue on Mississippi Public Broadcasting.
Britt Gully performs “Alabama Honeysuckle Girl” and “Ride Me Down Easy” on the Sucarnochee Revue TV series.
The Sucarnochee Stage Hands perform “Bad Reputation” from the Sucarnochee Revue TV series.
“Things” by Mississippi Chris Sharp and the Jang-a-Lang String Band
Performance by Garry Burnside at the 2011 North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic, an annual music festival. Garry Burnside is the son of the legendary bluesmaster R. L. Burnside who recorded for the Fat Possum label.
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