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The best of what’s around

Remember Two Things (Released 12/16/93)
This collection of live and studio tracks may have a regrettably dated “magic eye effect” album cover, but that didn’t stop it from tearing up the charts. Though independently released (on the band’s own Bama Rags label), it eventually went gold (and later platinum, following its 1997 re-release by RCA). With such unprecedented sales, it wasn’t long before major labels came calling and DMB was signed to RCA.

Under the Table and Dreaming (Released 9/27/94)
The album that marked DMB’s major-label debut. Though Remember Two Things had generated industry buzz, it was on the strength of Dreaming’s first single, “What Would You Say,” that the band caught their first taste of wide popular success. According to band lore, Blues Traveler front man John Popper recorded that tune’s blistering harmonica solo in just a few minutes, while Dave was on a bathroom break.

Crash (Released 4/30/96)
The band’s best-selling album to date, Crash features fan favorite “#41.” Written in response to a falling-out the band had with erstwhile friend and manager Ross Hoffman, “#41” has since become a jam staple at DMB concerts. (One live version of the song, performed in collaboration with Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, lasted just over 32 minutes!)

Recently (Independently released in 1994, reissued 6/24/97)
The EP Recently is a collection of live tracks recorded at venues throughout Virginia. The original 1994 promo release features a different cover and different tracks from later pressings, making it a highly treasured addition to any die-hard Davehead’s collection.

Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95 (Released 10/28/97)
Recorded in 1995 at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheater—one of the band’s favorite venues— Live at Red Rocks is the band’s most successful live album to date (it reached No. 3 on the Billboard album charts, and was ultimately certified double platinum). Prior to Live at Red Rocks, live DMB tracks were only available through fan-recorded, low-quality bootlegs. Red Rocks, on the other hand, was an impressively polished affair, setting a high bar for future official live albums.

Before These Crowded Streets (Released 4/28/98)
As with DMB’s previous two studio efforts, Before These Crowded Streets was produced by Steve Lillywhite, but it would mark his last official DMB credit (see Busted Stuff for all the grisly details). The album originally included in its tracklist a song called “MacHead”—so named by Lillywhite because of its purported resemblance to an imagined Paul McCartney-Radiohead collaboration. No one outside of the band and the recording session personnel has ever heard it, a fact that continues to vex hardcore DMB fans to this day.

Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds Live at Luther College (Released 1/19/99)
The only official release from Dave and frequent DMB collaborator Tim Reynolds—who have toured often as an acoustic duo—this live album was recorded at Iowa’s Luther College in ’96 and hit stores three years later. The album features many songs from Crash, which had yet to be released at the time of the concert, as well an early version of Before These Crowded Streets’ “Pantala Naga Pampa.”

Listener Supported (Released 11/23/99)
The title of this live double album is taken from the PBS slogan “supported by viewers like you”—and appropriately so, as the performance at which Listener Supported was recorded was filmed for an installment of PBS’ “In the Spotlight” concert series. DVD and VHS recordings of the program are still used as incentives for PBS fund drives.

Everyday (Released 2/27/01)
DMB’s first true “pop” album, Everyday also marked the band’s first collaboration with producer (and Alanis Morissette co-pilot) Glen Ballard. Recorded quickly after an aborted studio session with Steve Lillywhite (see Busted Stuff), the album moved DMB into more polished musical territory (as drummer Carter Beauford noted in an interview, the band arrived in the studio to find “charts and everything”—a departure from previous, more free-wheeling sessions). Though not as well received by fans as previous albums, Everyday was a huge commercial success, and featured such radio-saturating singles as “I Did It” and “The Space Between.” The title track is a reworking of the older “#36,” which can be heard in its earlier form on Live at Red Rocks and Listener Supported.

Live in Chicago (12/19/98) (Released 10/23/01)
Live In Chicago was DMB’s third officially sanctioned live album. The original concert was also broadcasted live over the Web, and its popularity prompted RCA to release it officially on cd.

Busted Stuff (Released 07/16/02)
Busted Stuff, DMB’s sixth studio LP, rose from the ashes of the failed “Lillywhite Sessions” project. In 1999, the band began recording a new album with producer Steve Lillywhite in a specially built, country-home recording studio just outside of Charlottesville. But, according to all involved, the seemingly interminable sessions didn’t produce the desired results, and the recordings were put on ice. Following that fiasco, Dave met with songwriter/producer Glen Ballard to try to rework the tracks, but they ended up writing an entirely new album (Everyday) instead, essentially scrapping the Lillywhite project.  While many fans got their hands on the “Lillywhite Sessions” through Napster, the band eventually decided to rework and rerecord nine of the songs, which then became the bulk of Busted Stuff. This is the only DMB album to not feature any guest musicians.

Live at Folsom Field (Released 11/05/02)
DMB’s fourth officially sanctioned live disc, this album was recorded on July 11, 2001 at the titular field, which is used by the University of Colorado’s football team, in Boulder, Colorado.

True Reflections (Boyd Tinsley solo album, released 06/17/03)
Boyd Tinsley beat out Dave by three months in the race to be the first member of the band to have his own solo album. Even so, Dave magnanimously shows up on the final track of True Reflections to help his buddy out.

Some Devil (Dave Matthews solo album, released 09/23/03)
Dave’s first (and thus far, only) solo album features the Grammy Award-winning song “Gravedigger.” This album, noted by fans and critics to be a bit moodier than the band’s average material, features an appearance by Phish founder Trey Anastasio.

The Central Park Concert (Released 11/18/03)
On September 24, 2003, the DMB boys played their largest show to date—approximately 100,000 people gathered in New York’s Central Park. The show was a free event, but it was designed as a fundraiser for the city’s languishing public school system, as well as Charlottesville’s own Music Resource Center. This concert, like Live in Chicago, was broadcast over the Web. The band’s rollicking rendition of Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower,” a live show staple, is an oft-noted highlight.

The Gorge (Released 06/29/04)
This live release is drawn from a three-night stand (September 6-8, 2002) near the tiny town of George, Washington (get the pun?). While the commercial release is a relatively modest double-disc-and-DVD set, true Dave fans spring for the monster six-CD set available online, which contains every single song from each of the three nights.

DMB Live Trax Vol.1 (Released 11/02/04)
This, the first in a series of five live albums, was recorded in Worchester, Massachusetts, on December 8, 1998. The Trax series is not available in stores and can only be ordered off the band’s official site. Notable guest musicians at this show included frequent collaborator Tim Reynolds and world-famous banjoist Béla Fleck.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 2 (Released 12/17/04)
The second iteration of the Trax series took place in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park on September 24, 2004. This concert was billed as a benefit concert for local Bay Area charities, and features three previously unreleased tracks (one of which features the guitar stylings of special guest Carlos Santana).

Stand Up (Released 05/10/05)
The most recent LP by the band, Stand Up was recorded at the band’s Haunted Hollow Studio here in Charlottesville and features the hit single “American Baby.” Hopping onto the digital revolution, Stand Up was one of the first prominent albums to be released as a dualdisc—an individual disc that featured the regular CD on one side and a special-edition DVD, featuring bonus content, on the other. This marvel of technology, however, led to a minor backlash as the cd’s copyright protection caused it to be rendered unplayable on computers and certain types of CD players.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 3 (Released 03/17/05)
The third of the Live Trax series, this concert was recorded on August 27, 2000, in Hartford, Connecticut. Unlike the previous two Live Trax albums, this concert did not feature any special guests.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 4 (Released 09/02/05)
Originally recorded on April 30, 1996, in Richmond, this concert is a live recording from the release party of Crash, and showcases the band just on the cusp of reaching massive critical and commercial success. Like Live Trax Vol. 3, this show also did not feature any special guests.
 
Weekend on the Rocks (Released 11/29/05)
The overwhelming success of DMB’s first live album, Live at Red Rocks, led to the band releasing another live album from the Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colorado. Featuring two CDs and a DVD, this collection culls the best performances from the four-day set, and features many new songs from the recently released Stand Up. For the true Dave aficionado, the entire four-day performance—filling a whopping eight CDs and one DVD—is available for purchase online.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 5 (Released 05/26/06)
This relatively recent Live Trax album was recorded all the way back in August of 1995 in Rochester, Michigan. The most significant detail about this release is the appearance of a cover of Bob Marley’s “Exodus,” a rare treat for Dave lovers.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 6 (To Be Released 09/26/06)
The newest selection in the band’s Live Trax series, this recording of a performance at Boston’s Fenway Park is due for release later this month.

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News

I see dead people


Not the world’s liveliest date: “Everyone is a bit nervous the first time they meet their cadavers,” says Dr. Melanie McCollum.

This semester, 140 first-year medical students and a handful of graduate students enrolled in Dr. Melanie McCollum’s “Gross Anatomy” course and lab at UVA. Gross Anatomy is a requisite course for students in the School of Medicine. But many students earn much more than the required credits—lessons in anatomy, dissection, and a chance to meet that certain, special “some body.”
    “Everyone is a bit nervous the first time they meet their cadavers,” says McCollum, who admits that students have fainted in the lab. Cadavers are provided by the Richmond Medical Examiner’s Office, and are cremated at the end of each semester before the remains are returned to their families or interred in a plot reserved by the UVA School of Medicine. The course provides one cadaver for every five students, at an average of 30 bodies per semester. The anatomy course’s website lists a team of 12 instructors that split and share lectures and lab sessions on the thorax, the back and upper limbs, and the head and neck, to name a few.
    Gross Anatomy has seen a significant overhaul in the past few years, with course hours sliced in half, to only 12 weeks.
    “This is a blistering pace,” says McCollum. However, she adds that most students come to the lab more than the required six-to-10 supervised hours per week, to ensure that their learning experience is more than skin deep.

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News

City Planning Commission advocates for trees

The City Planning Commission found them-selves spokesmen for the trees of Charlottesville at their September 13 meeting. First they expressed anger at a developer, David Turner, who cut down a 150-year-old beech tree he was supposed to preserve at 3 University Ave. “In my mind, this is an illegal act,” said Commissioner Craig Barton. Then the commission deferred a Habitat for Humanity project so that Habitat could alter their site plan in the interest of preserving several poplars on the property.
    Those actions reminded C-VILLE of another tree advocate: The Lorax. So with apologies to Theodore Geisel, we’ve chosen to tell the tale in Seuss-ian fashion.

We, the Commission, we speak for the trees.
We’re tired and sick of developer’s disease
That causes the loss of too many a trunk
Of great big old beeches that fall, go kerplunk
When you cut to make way for parking garages.
Don’t bring us your site plan in dark camouflages
To disguise your designs on our harmless old poplars.
Please come back again, don’t make us go “Stop-lars,”
And prevent you from building affordable housing.
Just move back those units, don’t give us no grousing.
Keep canopies stretching ’cross Hanover Street
Providing shady cool spots for teenagers to meet
And old folks to greet.

We’re mad at that guy
Who promised to save (in the end just a lie)
A sacred old tree at University Ave
One hundred fifty years that Beech we
had had.
But no more! Alas! He cut it in haste.
For now, his construction is halted in waste.
Board of Zoning Appeals for now
must decide
If developer appeal is approved or denied.
Legal action we’d take if we knew that
we could
Though no court in this land that tree can make good.

Lost forever it is—but in the future no more!
Good hardwoods will stay, not turn
into floors.
We know that the City of C’ville will grow,
But don’t cut down that tree if it must not be so.


City Planning Commissioners are sad, much like this Lorax, over the disappearance of historic city trees.

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News

Religious collective engages public policy

A Charlottesville-based religious organization called Clergy and Laity United for Justice and Peace (CLJP) plans to ditch the dogma in a new public outreach program that kicks off Wednesday, September 20, with a forum on “The Role of Religion in Politics”—the first of many planned public events to expand the group’s discussions beyond their monthly meetings. CLJP’s goal is to develop an active voice of moral justice that bridges all faiths involved.
    “We’re—’upset’ seems a fair word to say—with what was propagated as the religious view in American policy and politics,” says Chairman Carl Matthews, who characterizes the dominant religious perspective as “fairly conservative.”
    Islamic scholar Abdulaziz Sachedina, one of the forum’s panelists, stresses the public focus of the interfaith group: “The search is not for a common theology. Rather, it is for common morality that can garner the support of reasonable men and women.”
    Wednesday’s panel will also feature Christian Science Monitor contributor Helena Cobban and adjunct UVA professor/organizational change specialist Russ Linden.
    Though CLJP seems like the type of coffee-talk organization likely to burrow into academia and never emerge, the group says it is committed to engaging the Charlottesville public. But the CLJP will not strive for agreement among its members, which may limit its political impact. “We’re not willing to accept a dogmatic position on, say abortion. We are not consensus-driven,” Matthews says.
    Though the group’s membership objective is “to be interfaith,” according to member Elizabeth Burdash. it “remains largely Christian, mostly Presbyterian at the moment,” Matthews says. “We welcome more Jews, Muslims, Hindus, anyone.”
    The CLJP hosts Sachedina and fellow panelists at 7:30pm on Wednesday, September 20 at the New Albemarle County Office Building, located at 1600 Fifth St.

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Living

The music man

For those of you who don’t obsessively read media gossip (and really, who would—because really, who cares?), like I’ll admit to doing, allow me to reduce one of the big stories of the past year to 28 words: Lately, The Village Voice has sucked. No surprise, then, that the legendary rag has, for the past year or so, been the site of firings and retirings galore.
    Eight Village Voicers suffered at the hands of the most recent round of firings that went down on August 31. Included among the unlucky axed was longtime music critic Robert Christgau. Christgau, who had been at the alt-weekly for nearly three decades, casts a long shadow in the world of music criticism.
    With Lester Bangs six feet under, Christgau is the self-appointed “Dean of American Rock Critics.” He’s reviewed everyone from the Mamas and the Papas to Outkast. He saw the genius of Prince and Madonna from the beginning (word); he has relentlessly insisted that Radiohead is overrated (wooooooord); he gave Aimee Mann the “meh” treatment (asshole).
    Thus, in honor of Christgau’s ousting, HTS is sending you over to his website to pay some respects, dammit—go ahead and lay some flowers on that grave. Although a lot of his insidery blathering will leave you feeling dumb as a newborn baby, even if you don’t get the references, his writing’s got rhythm, man. I’m the first to admit that I don’t know shit about music, but I enjoy good writing, and there’s plenty of it here.
    Take, for example, Christgau’s summation of Elton John’s album Here and There: “I had a syllogism worked out on this one. Went something like a) all boogie concerts rock on out, b) Elton is best when he rocks on out, c) therefore Elton’s concert LP will rank with his best. So if this sounds like slop (concert-slop and Elton-slop both), blame Socrates—or find the false premise. C.”
    Oh, I almost forgot to mention—the letter grades? Love ’em, because a letter grade makes a review translatable even if you don’t understand what the hell Christgau’s talking about.

www.robertchristgau.com

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News

Jump in state highway death count

A spike in the number of traffic fatalities around the state this year may make 2006 one of the deadliest in recent memory. And while accidents can happen for different reasons, fatal accidents have a common denominator: safety belt use.
    According to a 2005 Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles report, of 750 fatalities from “crashes involving safety restraints,” a majority—454—involved passengers or drivers that were not harnessed or belted. (In case you’ve forgotten, drivers in Virginia are legally required to belt up.)
    At present, the 2006 highway death count totals 636, compared to 621 on September 14, 2005. Statistics from Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles noted that last year’s crash-related fatalities were themselves up by 2.6 percent from the previous year.
    Last week, six traffic fatalities were reported in two days alone, between Tuesday, September 12, and Thursday, September 14, including one on Albemarle County’s Blenheim Road.
    That accident, at Blenheim and Jefferson Mill roads, claimed the life of 23-year-old Jessie Gibson. His passenger, though injured, survived the accident in which their vehicle overturned after leaving the road and colliding with a sign.
    Gibson was not wearing a seatbelt at the time of the accident, while his passenger was.
Virginia has seen an uneven highway death rate since 1996, bottoming out at 1.08 deaths per 100 million miles in 2001, and peaking at 1.32 in 1997.

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News

Supes stalemate over phasing

The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors met for a work session on Wednesday, September 13, and debated two contested methods for regulating rural development in areas that include the Mountain Overlay District (MOD): clustering and phasing. The latter took the bulk of the hour, and neither method was passed.
    Supervisors broke into two camps early in the debate: those willing to consider some form of phasing, and those unwilling. Phasing is the division of a plot of land into smaller lots, a few at a time. For Albemarle County, the rate means two subdivisions allowed per lot every 10 years.
Supervisor Lindsay G. Dorrier, Jr. expressed concern that “many elderly people might not see the end of the phasing period.”
    Supporters of phasing based their opinions on keeping big business out. “We can’t stop larger companies from doing business here, but we can adopt land-use policies to make it unattractive to do so,” Chairman Dennis Rooker told the board.
    In response to a claim that down-zoning, or the re-zoning of land to discourage urban sprawl, led to a loss in property values, Supervisor Sally Thomas contested that, “after a great down-zoning in the 1980s, many lot values actually went up.”
    The work session was convened in response to an August 1 public hearing during which some people voiced impassioned opinions about phasing in Albemarle’s rural areas.
    However, the board “can’t say that there is a definitive statement from the people of Albemarle County,” Rooker said. Supervisor David Slutzky agreed. “Thirty-five people may have been very vocal and spoken on behalf of others, but they do not represent every opinion” in the county, Slutzky said.
    Clustering was briefly discussed among the supervisors, who questioned whether it ought to be the only means of rural conservation. Clustering groups residences together on small plots of land and collects important environmental resources into large lots for conservation.

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News

So Much to Say

The boys of summer played Raleigh earlier this year. “I’m sure I get treated a little bit more sweetly than some of the people on my crew, but overall I think we’ve got a pretty exceptional group of characters out here,” Matthews says of the 50-person entourage that joins the band on the road.

    When Dave Matthews finally telephones from the West Coast, he’s 30 minutes late. And full of apologies. “On the rare occasion that I can say it had nothing to do with me I will claim complete innocence,” he says, placing guilt elsewhere. “I hate being late. It makes me sick.”
    Generally speaking, timing has not been a big problem for Matthews and his four bandmates in the Dave Matthews Band. For the past 15 years, like clockwork, they’ve gotten their act together and taken it on the road. As their fame grows, and record sales climb (over 30 million sold to date), their summer festival gigs and charity concerts have become a summer mainstay. It’s a long way from the dinky surroundings of Trax, the erstwhile Charlottesville nightclub where they played every Tuesday night at the start of the ’90s.
    In fact, so high has the demand been across the country for some DM  time that it’s been more than five years since the band played live in Charlottesville (their influence is felt in other ways, notably the local philanthropy of Bama Works, their charity fund). That changes on Friday and Saturday, September 22 and 23, when they close out this summer’s tour with performances at UVA’s John Paul Jones Arena. This conversation with Dave Matthews took place a couple of weeks prior to the show.

Cathy Harding: From what I understand, today is LeRoi’s birthday.
Dave Matthews: Yes it is, I haven’t seen him yet… I’ve only been awake for a couple of hours.

Are you going to give him something?
I probably will say happy birthday.

Sing the song, maybe?
I don’t know if I’m going to sing the song. I think he’s probably heard that before.

Is it hard to be on tour and have those kinds of personal events take place? Birthdays, wedding anniversaries or whatever.
It’s not an unusual life or situation for us to be on the road. I wouldn’t know what an anniversary is like other than on the road, and I wouldn’t know what my children’s birthdays are like other than at least close to on the road. I haven’t had a birthday in, you know, 16 years that hasn’t been close to being on the road or on the road.
    I think we are very fortunate to have a remarkable group of people that travel with us that sort of hovers around 50. It’s unusual because it’s such a superb collection of people that I can’t imagine that every touring organization could have this or else the world would be named “Shangri La.” I’m sure I get treated a little bit more sweetly than some of the people on my crew, but overall I think we’ve got a pretty exceptional group of characters out here, and I can certainly think of worse places to spend my birthday—alone in a stinky apartment in Queens might be more depressing—than out on the road with a traveling circus.

Dave Matthews Band is playing two nights here for the first time in more than five years, and I’m interested in your perspective on how the city has changed in that time, let alone since the time when the band was playing Trax every Tuesday night. Your thoughts on that?
Someone connected the timeline between the success of the band and the changing face of Charlottesville, but I think that it may have been “Good Morning America” and USA Today saying it’s the nicest place to live and raise a family in America. I think that may have had something to do with it too. What happens is people find gems and in this day and age of information moving at the speed of light or the speed of our fingertips—the speed of thought—it’s hard to keep a secret. It’s very difficult to keep a place like Charlottesville a secret. I think the best we can do is try and make the evolution of community, you know, specifically Charlottesville, make it as bearable as possible, because to stop things is impossible.
    I remember when they were putting the road across the Downtown Mall years ago, wasn’t that many years ago, but I remember someone saying to me, “Sign this petition to stop the road from going across the Downtown Mall.” Now I know there are people that are sentimental about things, but I thought—and I’d worked there at Miller’s for years before that and the Downtown Mall was sleepy at best, at very best. You know, it was a place where people who’d recently gotten a sabbatical from Western State and a couple of people who were looking for a drink could go and walk and everyone else couldn’t have anything to do with it. It was a shadowy spot.
    And so the idea of a road that would at least alert somebody, some passersby, that there was in fact a place there to go and walk I think was not a bad idea.
    And then we should also remember that in the ’70s, before they paved that with brick, that was sort of the center of the black community in Charlottesville and then they changed it. I guess the town thought it was better to turn it into a community center and really did a quite environmental relocation of a very central part of Charlottesville’s community. So I think there’s been a lot of changes in the last 30 years, 40 years in Charlottesville that we could talk about.
    We always miss what’s gone, but to see the Downtown Mall bustling, I don’t think it’s a bad thing.  I think it’s kind of a good thing to see it being a place where you can go out and see a lot of people. One of the things that’s being lost in a lot of the American landscape is the pedestrian walkway, so when you drive around the Corner and you see all the students or you go Downtown and you see the amount of people that are walking around, there is a sense of this beautiful evolution—at least something alive. When things change there’s an uncertainty about it, so I think the best we can do is try and make it as a—keep it as sort of beautiful as possible, those changes.

On the subject of change, you and the band were involved in the Vote for Change concerts and have been outspoken politically. You did the ad for The Nation recently, you’re on the board with Farm Aid. Do you expect to get involved in the midterm elections that are coming up?
You know, I’m hopeful for the next election, though I think it’s remarkable, in general across the country, how poorly the Democratic Party has squandered an opportunity. To call it a political party at this point, in the national landscape, is sort of almost comical to me. I think there are some very strong characters in both parties but they’re sort of overshadowed by just a shambles on both sides of the aisle.
    But I haven’t even for the midterm elections or for the next elections thought of anyone that I would have thrown myself behind. I have a few ideas—I just hope that they’ll become a little more clear and I think there is a little bit of time. I know where my political allegiances lie, at least philosophically, and I’ll see how much I can compromise as little as possible before I throw my name behind anybody else.
    On a political level in this country I think we’re in a deep crisis. Maybe the façade has to shatter completely before people will get off their asses and actually realize that there is a responsibility to democracy besides just having a flag on your front lawn.
    The lack of debate in the state and federal government is just, it’s just, I can’t even, I don’t even know how to talk about it. It just amazes me that nobody raises their hand and says, “Wait a second.” Not only are we doing nothing for our own people, but we’re doing nothing for the world. I was watching this wonderful documentary on Paul Wellstone and thinking whether you’re Left or Right, to see somebody with such remarkable character stand so clearly on what they believe without flaw and without political ambition, it’s almost unheard of nowadays.

Well, to change gears a little bit and talk about changes in another area, specifically the music industry…with increased consolidation of businesses, vertical integration, declining record sales, it seems like the barriers to entry are so much higher now for young bands than they were even 15 years ago when you guys started out. Would you agree?
Well, maybe but I also think that it’s changing: I don’t think that the record industry has got 10 years.

The band is doing this Live Trax series, which seems to be in part about different distribution channels than a record label, for instance.
We have to, contractually and otherwise, I guess at this point it’s almost “pay our respects to the record industry,” because maybe there are going to be some areas that it will survive. It will still have a purpose but to a large degree I think it’s going to be obsolete. So for us it’s just sort of trying to think of ways to stay viable in new stages, which I think are much more small and efficient musical productions. I’m glad the music that I’m interested in playing after I write it is live. I like to play in front of an audience so that one element is the one thing that we’ve always sort of had control of and that we can keep control of.
    It is a very different environment but everything goes in waves. Music is obviously not going to vanish and requires new bands. There has to be music coming out of young people all of the time; that’s one of the essential parts of being a person, or being people, is that we create songs. There’s no stopping that. It may be a challenge but I think the people most fit for the job are young musicians. So I think they’re going to, and they won’t have a problem with it: “Make a video and we can put it online, we can make a song and put it online.” In a way it’s like a dream come true for young musicians, it may not have a big payment up front, get some giant record deal but in a way if you want to play music in front of people it’s a pretty good and efficient way of advertising yourself.
    There may be some growing pains but I think it’s just a revolution.

The whole DMB catalog is on iTunes now. Do you have an iPod?
Yeah, but, you know, I’m incredibly boring. I don’t listen to a lot of music.
    I’d rather listen to the silence.

So do you have a lot of silence on your iPod?
I have a lot of silence in my head.
    I think the iPod’s amazing. There are a lot of critics on it but I haven’t taken a position on any of that stuff. I think it’s phenomenal to be able to take my CDs and pour them onto my computer. Then I go through phases, “oh I’ve got a spare hour” and I’m just sitting throwing money into my, into iTunes just because I can. It’s pretty amazing.

What do your daughters like to listen to?
I try and play them good music. They like The Beatles a lot. That’s, I guess, a standard thing.
    They like Bob Marley a lot, which I think is pretty good. They like Led Zeppelin. I’ve been playing a lot of Led Zeppelin for them. They’re 5 years old they’re not at a point where they’re going to the record store by themselves. Got a Kool and the Gang Greatest Hits that they’re listening to a lot, too.

On the subject of records, will you be going back into the studio with Mark Batson after the band finishes the tour?
Yeah, I think so because we were hanging out with him in the studio before we went on tour and he’s a good friend. We’ve been playing some new music on the road and we hung out a little bit in Los Angeles when we were playing down there and he heard some new stuff. So yeah, our plan is to get together with him. The last record we made we all had a great time, but, you know, it was really fast. It was a really new experience, it was refreshing, but it was really quick. So this time looking forward to being able to stretch a little more with him in the studio and combine the writing and the playing a little more than we had the opportunity to last time because there’s no deadline. I think the last thing on earth that RCA wants us to do is to come up with a new record.

You mean right after the “greatest hits” comes out?
Yeah, whatever, and that’s another thing. That’s just something in our contract. In this time of music flying digitally around the world, record companies begin in some ways, at least for us, to represent a ball and chain as much as they do…  Needless to say there’s no deadline to make a record. So we’ll take our sweet time, but probably come up with one faster than they want us to.

So what’s it been like playing on the road and having Robert Randolph sitting in?
We’ve known him for a good while. It’s fun to have someone that shares a love of playing live that we do. We’re all different characters but from the school of, if there is one, a school of music just that being truthful and playing what you mean as best as you can. It’s great to find people that believe that and that live that way.

Last question. As a much younger man, Mick Jagger famously said he didn’t want to sing “Satisfaction” when he was 40. Are there any songs that you think you would shelve as you get to be that age?
But wait, he’s still singing it.
    But maybe he didn’t sing it when he was 40, you know.

He just skipped it that one year.
I’m not sure that there’s any songs that I plan to shelve before next year, specifically because of the decade but I hope that I can for as long as possible write music that somebody will like to listen to. If they want to listen to music that I wrote 15 years ago I don’t mind that. I just hope that I’m not empty of imagination to the point that I can’t come up with anything that people want to listen to now.

The once and future fan

A DMB fan before we even knew what to call ourselves, I meet a couple of new teen fans and wonder, where did my passion for this band go

BY J. TOBIAS BEARD

I didn’t want to like the Dave Matthews Band. In fact I tried hard not to. It was late 1991, I was 16 and a friend of mine told me about a friend of hers, Stefan, who went to Tandem and was in this band and we should seriously go see them. Right. Like I was going to go see a high school band. I already had a favorite local band, Indecision, and they were good, at least good enough to shuffle your feet to while holding a beer and looking around to see if anyone was laughing at you. But then someone else told me that I really had to go see this band, and so I did, early in 1992, at Trax, and that was the end of my interest in any other local music. It was the beginning of my love affair with the Dave Matthews Band, a love affair that would last for three intense and crazy years before it almost, but not quite, faded away. It seems now that there are no traces left of the old Dave Matthews Band, and yet, DMB is everywhere.
    Simon Evans is a skinny 15-year-old with shaggy hair that threatens to be long. When we meet, he is wearing a gray-ish shirt, cargo shorts, and what look like familiar Birkenstock-style sandals. He basically looks just like me at 15. I find this oddly refreshing. When I meet him he is six days away from becoming a freshman at Albemarle High School. We talk in a quiet practice room at the Music Resource Center, an old church whose basement has been turned into a place for kids to learn, play, and record music. Simon leans back in his chair comfortably, but his hands move a lot when he talks. He seems eager.
    “Every time I listen to ‘em,” he says, “I get, like, a really…it’s a good feeling, but it’s kind of eerie to know they’re from here. But then you hear their songs, their music, and it’s so good it’s, like, you just want to keep on listening. That’s why, like, once I heard one song I’d go buy a couple albums. One leads to another, and then you just get hooked on Dave Matthews.”
    Simon, like most people at his age, is awkward and vague. He’s fumbling towards adulthood faster than he seems to realize. He is also confident and savvy and enthusiastic about his life right now in a way that’s unfamiliar to me and that bodes well for his life 10 years from now. He plays bass in a band called the Deltas. Last month they played their first gig at Starr Hill. Getting to do so was the second-place prize in a battle of the bands at the Music Resource Center. The MRC seems to be the Deltas’ second home, and they are currently recording their first album there.
    Simon has never seen the Dave Matthews Band live, except on a TV screen. On September 24, 2003, DMB played for a crowd of almost 100,000 people on the Great Lawn of Central Park. It was and still is the largest crowd they have ever played for. The Central Park concert marked the moment when everyone, the band included, realized just how big they had become. “When I was first getting into them,” Simon tells me, ”before I bought the iTunes albums I went on Netflix and rented the Central Park concert. And so seeing them live…me and my mom were just blown away, we were just like WOW, you know?” Simon fell for the band at the exact point when they were as far away from their beginning as they could possibly be. I find this mildly upsetting; to him it doesn’t seem to matter much. It has been 12 years since I last saw the band, and maybe 10 since I stopped listening to them. When I listen to the Central Park concert it’s exciting and unsettling in equal measures. I realize I have locked the band in a time capsule; they cannot mean anything but what they had once meant to me.
And what was that exactly? Strangely, I don’t know anymore. It is almost a shock to find that the band still sounds good. I even like some of the new songs. I wish I could somehow let Simon hear what they used to be like, to see if his reaction to the past is different from my reaction to the present. I ask him if he has ever heard any old bootleg tapes of the band and he says no, not really, but:

SE: Actually I saw [DMB], I don’t know whether it was at a festival, I must have been looking at like some video online or something, and it was, like, back in ‘92, I think, and it was just really cool seeing them, like, before they got big. You know, you see them, everybody’s havin’ a picnic, everyone’s just being calm…
JTB: Was it Van Rypers?
SE: I think it was at Van Rypers, yeah. And they played “Two Step” and people started dancing, it was really cool.

April 5, 1992. Van Ryper’s Music Festival, in Nelson County, outside of Charlottesville. There is a frightening number of Baja Jackets and everyone seems to have long hair. DMB plays on the rough wooden stage under budding trees. The field of people stretches back to the roped-off section on a hill where those who want to drink are sequestered, lonely and far from the action. I was there and I danced. I had a tape of that show. I was an early and serious taper, lugging a tape deck to the shows at Trax, which the soundman, Jeff “Bagby” Thomas would patch into the soundboard. I had no idea then what a privilege that was. After all, Bagby was just a kid like us: he drove me to school every morning. Those meticulously labeled and catalogued live tapes, hauled around in two suitcases, were more valuable to me than any I had bought in a store. The best tapes I had were the ones that were unmistakably Charlottesville: The first four-song demo that Dave made before he got a band, a two-hour WTJU show that Dave and Tim Reynolds did (they sound extremely stoned), and a badly recorded and unlabeled tape that was rumored to have been made by Dave himself as a Christmas present for his friends and family. This last one may have been a complete fake, but I was an obsessive fan—before websites and discussion boards. All I had was the whispered fog of rumors, and I milked them for all they were worth.
Here is everything that Simon knows about the history of the Dave Matthews Band: “I think Dave Matthews was a bartender at Miller’s, right? And they played at Miller’s. That’s pretty much it.” That’s pretty much it? I want to cry.
    I do not know the Dave Matthews Band outside the context of Trax. A large faux Tudor shit hole, Trax stood at 120 11th St., near the University and far from pretty. You had to get past Marty, the walrus-like doorman, to enter the big room that always smelled faintly of vomit and old beer, with the strange roof feature to the right and pool tables and videogames over to the left. There were two equally nasty bars to ease the procurement of cheap beer that would then compel you towards the restrooms which always had lines, overflowing toilets, and non-locking, non-shutting stall doors. All of this draped in black light, the better to illuminate the huge “Stairway to Heaven” mural behind the stage, which someone must have seen on the side of a van and thought “Wicked, I gotta have that in the club.”

Lyle Begiebing is also a 15-year-old Dave Matthews Band fan. I meet him and Simon on another day at the Omni where we talk over iced tea and Cokes. Lyle was born here, and unlike Simon, he has seen the band twice. His parents went to UVA and used to go see the band on some of those early, electric nights. Lyle is a drummer, and in concert he mostly watches Carter Beauford. “[Carter]’s the best around. I play along to the albums but it’s impossible to do everything he does. I’m trying to learn how to play the same style, like, open: He doesn’t cross [his arms] when he plays.” Lyle has piercing blue-gray eyes that almost never leave mine as he hunches over, talking quietly. He is wearing a Cal-Berkeley hat and a DMB shirt, purchased at Nissan Pavilion in June. I’m pretty sure he wore the shirt so I would be able to spot him, which strikes me as clever. I ask him what it is exactly that he likes about the band and he says that he likes “how their songs aren’t, like, two-and-a-half minutes. It’s not held back … they don’t have just like chorus, verse, bridge, chorus, all of that. It’s a lot more.
“Dave’s just such a good songwriter. Of course Leroi and Boyd add a lot to it that no one else could ever copy. It’s different than just, like, a guitar, bass and drums, ‘cause you have sax and violin.”
Neither teenager will tell me how the Dave Matthews Band makes them feel, and I am a little embarrassed to press the point. They are both musicians, so maybe that is why they seem to think of the band in purely technical terms. I cared about the Dave Matthews Band because they made me joyful, giddy, and comforted when life seemed hopeless. I was obsessed with Dave and what he was saying to me. When he sang “23 and so tired of life, such a shame to throw it all away” in “Dancing Nancies,” I felt certain that, like me, he was overwhelmed at how hard life seems when you are young. And when he sang, “open up my head and let me out” in “So Much to Say,” I thought, “Yes, exactly.”
I don’t know who all of them were, the first young Dave Matthews Band fans, except in the ways that they were probably roughly like me. We skewed towards Albemarle County Hippie; those middle- to upper-class kids who were the first spawn of the Baby Boomers, who wore Duckhead khakis with boutique tie-dyes, and drove Jeep Wagoneers to Dead shows. It was the Dawning of the Age of Equestrious. We would begin by sitting on the floor in front of the stage, the better to talk while Dave came out and played a solo set, and then when the band came on we would leap to our feet, ecstatic and dancing. Their music seemed utterly unique: Fiddle! Saxophone! A drummer with four arms! And Dave! Dancing and grimacing as he squeaked, hiccupped, ululated, scatted, yodeled, growled, roared, giggled; it’s not what I would have previously called singing. And the band moving from cheesy love songs to bouncy syncopated Afro-pop, to raging acoustic metal that was as demonic and aggressive as anything Black Sabbath ever played. If there were some things I know we shared, we young DMB fans, it was excitement and immediacy. Something was finally happening in our lives and in our town. The band never seemed local to me, never seemed to be anything but stars.

Trax is gone now. DMB was last there in 1996. The club closed in June 2001, and was torn down in 2003. There is now no trace of Dave left at 120 11th St. The titular railroad tracks are still there, of course, and the parking lot, site of much furtive and clandestine activity is still there, but that’s it. Where Trax used to be there now squats the gloriously named UVA Hospital Expansion Project Field Office. It’s a grey trailer lined in front with air conditioning units. Like Dorothy’s house in The Wizard of Oz, this nondescript building crushes my youth. It is all vacant lot, boxcar, loading dock and industrial trash, set to the soft hum of machinery. No trace of Dave and no music.
What does Simon think about the fact that the band used to be small and local? What about the fact that they used to play here every Tuesday in a little club? “It’s kind of encouraging,” he says, “since I’m in a band. It’s really cool to think that Dave Matthews, he used to be local.”
    In a very real way Simon is a child of the Dave Matthews Band. Born five days after they played their first concert at Trax, he has never known a world in which DMB didn’t exist. The band is a big donor to the Music Resource Center, where Simon could be beginning his career as a musician. Pictures of the Dave Matthews Band hang on the walls, along with copies of their gold and platinum cds. They are arguably the reason that Simon can see Victor Wooten at the Paramount and the Rolling Stones at Scott Stadium, in a town where, six years ago, there seemed to be nothing to do. They are an inspiration.

    With Simon and Lyle on my mind, I go to stare at the pink warehouse, the legendary building on South and First streets where Dave wrote the original set of DMB songs. What do I hope to find there? This building meant nothing to me when I was young. The Charlottesville I grew up in was the Charlottesville where the band was born, and I guess I’m looking for some way to get back to that time, that sense of beginnings. About six years ago I gave all of my DMB bootlegs to a 16-year-old fan in North Carolina. Suddenly I miss those tapes. I download some of DMB’s new music and all of the old stuff. I drive around Charlottesville playing Dave Matthews Band. I now find this fairly embarrassing. I try and will myself back to the time before the band’s website had more hats for sale than studio albums. Before the Dave Matthews Band became the Dave Matthews Brand. Before Dave’s voice began to sound pained, like his throat was filling up with blood. Before I became so cynical.
Lyle will go to both shows that the band will play at the John Paul Jones Arena, September 22 and 23. Simon doesn’t have tickets to the sold out shows, but he’s definitely going to go somehow. A lot of their friends are going.
    Now I know that I have to see DMB again, September 23, the last show of the tour. Somehow. And I have to take Simon with me, so I can join him at his first Dave Matthews Band show, and recapture mine. Their music made me, at 16, slack-jawed and delirious. Maybe they just got to me before some other band did, but they did get to me. Can their music still get to me; can it still reach me today from 15 years ago the way it reached Simon all the way from New York City on a TV screen in Charlottesville?

JTB: Have you ever seen them around town?
SE: No I haven’t. I was on the phone with my mom when she called, and she was just, like, [whispers] Dave Matthews just walked by! I was like “oh, O.K.” I really wish I went to the Mall that day!
JTB: Do you know that pink building on South Street, that big pink building?
SE: I can’t really think of it right now.
JTB: Where South Street Brewery is? There’s a pink building.
SE: Yeah I probably haven’t paid attention.
JTB: It’s called the pink warehouse, and it’s the warehouse from the song “Warehouse.”
SE: Oh, really? Nice!
JTB: People say that the first show they ever played as a band was on the rooftop of that building.
SE: Aaaahhh! That is coool!
JTB: You’ll have to go check that warehouse out. Just go look at it. I don’t know what you’ll get from it, but…
SE: I’ll probably just sit there and try to think. Try to imagine them playing up there.

PQ
It has been 12 years since I last saw the band, and maybe 10 since I stopped listening to them. When I listen to the Central Park concert, it’s exciting and unsettling in equal measures. I realize I have locked the band in a time capsule; they cannot mean anything but what they had once meant to me.

I don’t know who all of them were, the first young Dave Matthews Band fans, except in the ways that they were probably roughly like me. We skewed towards Albemarle County Hippie; those middle- to upper-class kids who were the first spawn of the Baby Boomers, who wore Duckhead khakis with boutique tie-dyes, and drove Jeep Wagoneers to Dead shows. It was the Dawning of the Age of Equestrious.

The best of what’s around


Over a decade of DMB, from Bama Rags to the big time

Remember Two Things (Released 12/16/93)
This collection of live and studio tracks may have a regrettably dated “magic eye effect” album cover, but that didn’t stop it from tearing up the charts. Though independently released (on the band’s own Bama Rags label), it eventually went gold (and later platinum, following its 1997 re-release by RCA). With such unprecedented sales, it wasn’t long before major labels came calling and DMB was signed to RCA.

Under the Table and Dreaming (Released 9/27/94)
The album that marked DMB’s major-label debut. Though Remember Two Things had generated industry buzz, it was on the strength of Dreaming’s first single, “What Would You Say,” that the band caught their first taste of wide popular success. According to band lore, Blues Traveler front man John Popper recorded that tune’s blistering harmonica solo in just a few minutes, while Dave was on a bathroom break.

Crash (Released 4/30/96)
The band’s best-selling album to date, Crash features fan favorite “#41.” Written in response to a falling-out the band had with erstwhile friend and manager Ross Hoffman, “#41” has since become a jam staple at DMB concerts. (One live version of the song, performed in collaboration with Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, lasted just over 32 minutes!)

Recently (Independently released in 1994, reissued 6/24/97)
The EP Recently is a collection of live tracks recorded at venues throughout Virginia. The original 1994 promo release features a different cover and different tracks from later pressings, making it a highly treasured addition to any die-hard Davehead’s collection.

Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95 (Released 10/28/97)
Recorded in 1995 at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheater—one of the band’s favorite venues— Live at Red Rocks is the band’s most successful live album to date (it reached No. 3 on the Billboard album charts, and was ultimately certified double platinum). Prior to Live at Red Rocks, live DMB tracks were only available through fan-recorded, low-quality bootlegs. Red Rocks, on the other hand, was an impressively polished affair, setting a high bar for future official live albums.

Before These Crowded Streets (Released 4/28/98)
As with DMB’s previous two studio efforts, Before These Crowded Streets was produced by Steve Lillywhite, but it would mark his last official DMB credit (see Busted Stuff for all the grisly details). The album originally included in its tracklist a song called “MacHead”—so named by Lillywhite because of its purported resemblance to an imagined Paul McCartney-Radiohead collaboration. No one outside of the band and the recording session personnel has ever heard it, a fact that continues to vex hardcore DMB fans to this day.

Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds Live at Luther College (Released 1/19/99)
The only official release from Dave and frequent DMB collaborator Tim Reynolds—who have toured often as an acoustic duo—this live album was recorded at Iowa’s Luther College in ’96 and hit stores three years later. The album features many songs from Crash, which had yet to be released at the time of the concert, as well an early version of Before These Crowded Streets’ “Pantala Naga Pampa.”

Listener Supported (Released 11/23/99)
The title of this live double album is taken from the PBS slogan “supported by viewers like you”—and appropriately so, as the performance at which Listener Supported was recorded was filmed for an installment of PBS’ “In the Spotlight” concert series. DVD and VHS recordings of the program are still used as incentives for PBS fund drives.

Everyday (Released 2/27/01)
DMB’s first true “pop” album, Everyday also marked the band’s first collaboration with producer (and Alanis Morissette co-pilot) Glen Ballard. Recorded quickly after an aborted studio session with Steve Lillywhite (see Busted Stuff), the album moved DMB into more polished musical territory (as drummer Carter Beauford noted in an interview, the band arrived in the studio to find “charts and everything”—a departure from previous, more free-wheeling sessions). Though not as well received by fans as previous albums, Everyday was a huge commercial success, and featured such radio-saturating singles as “I Did It” and “The Space Between.” The title track is a reworking of the older “#36,” which can be heard in its earlier form on Live at Red Rocks and Listener Supported.

Live in Chicago (12/19/98) (Released 10/23/01)
Live In Chicago was DMB’s third officially sanctioned live album. The original concert was also broadcasted live over the Web, and its popularity prompted RCA to release it officially on cd.

Busted Stuff (Released 07/16/02)
Busted Stuff, DMB’s sixth studio LP, rose from the ashes of the failed “Lillywhite Sessions” project. In 1999, the band began recording a new album with producer Steve Lillywhite in a specially built, country-home recording studio just outside of Charlottesville. But, according to all involved, the seemingly interminable sessions didn’t produce the desired results, and the recordings were put on ice. Following that fiasco, Dave met with songwriter/producer Glen Ballard to try to rework the tracks, but they ended up writing an entirely new album (Everyday) instead, essentially scrapping the Lillywhite project.  While many fans got their hands on the “Lillywhite Sessions” through Napster, the band eventually decided to rework and rerecord nine of the songs, which then became the bulk of Busted Stuff. This is the only DMB album to not feature any guest musicians.

Live at Folsom Field (Released 11/05/02)
DMB’s fourth officially sanctioned live disc, this album was recorded on July 11, 2001 at the titular field, which is used by the University of Colorado’s football team, in Boulder, Colorado.

True Reflections (Boyd Tinsley solo album, released 06/17/03)
Boyd Tinsley beat out Dave by three months in the race to be the first member of the band to have his own solo album. Even so, Dave magnanimously shows up on the final track of True Reflections to help his buddy out.

Some Devil (Dave Matthews solo album, released 09/23/03)
Dave’s first (and thus far, only) solo album features the Grammy Award-winning song “Gravedigger.” This album, noted by fans and critics to be a bit moodier than the band’s average material, features an appearance by Phish founder Trey Anastasio.

The Central Park Concert (Released 11/18/03)
On September 24, 2003, the DMB boys played their largest show to date—approximately 100,000 people gathered in New York’s Central Park. The show was a free event, but it was designed as a fundraiser for the city’s languishing public school system, as well as Charlottesville’s own Music Resource Center. This concert, like Live in Chicago, was broadcast over the Web. The band’s rollicking rendition of Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower,” a live show staple, is an oft-noted highlight.

The Gorge (Released 06/29/04)
This live release is drawn from a three-night stand (September 6-8, 2002) near the tiny town of George, Washington (get the pun?). While the commercial release is a relatively modest double-disc-and-DVD set, true Dave fans spring for the monster six-CD set available online, which contains every single song from each of the three nights.

DMB Live Trax Vol.1 (Released 11/02/04)
This, the first in a series of five live albums, was recorded in Worchester, Massachusetts, on December 8, 1998. The Trax series is not available in stores and can only be ordered off the band’s official site. Notable guest musicians at this show included frequent collaborator Tim Reynolds and world-famous banjoist Béla Fleck.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 2 (Released 12/17/04)
The second iteration of the Trax series took place in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park on September 24, 2004. This concert was billed as a benefit concert for local Bay Area charities, and features three previously unreleased tracks (one of which features the guitar stylings of special guest Carlos Santana).

Stand Up (Released 05/10/05)
The most recent LP by the band, Stand Up was recorded at the band’s Haunted Hollow Studio here in Charlottesville and features the hit single “American Baby.” Hopping onto the digital revolution, Stand Up was one of the first prominent albums to be released as a dualdisc—an individual disc that featured the regular CD on one side and a special-edition DVD, featuring bonus content, on the other. This marvel of technology, however, led to a minor backlash as the cd’s copyright protection caused it to be rendered unplayable on computers and certain types of CD players.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 3 (Released 03/17/05)
The third of the Live Trax series, this concert was recorded on August 27, 2000, in Hartford, Connecticut. Unlike the previous two Live Trax albums, this concert did not feature any special guests.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 4 (Released 09/02/05)
Originally recorded on April 30, 1996, in Richmond, this concert is a live recording from the release party of Crash, and showcases the band just on the cusp of reaching massive critical and commercial success. Like Live Trax Vol. 3, this show also did not feature any special guests.
 
Weekend on the Rocks (Released 11/29/05)
The overwhelming success of DMB’s first live album, Live at Red Rocks, led to the band releasing another live album from the Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colorado. Featuring two CDs and a DVD, this collection culls the best performances from the four-day set, and features many new songs from the recently released Stand Up. For the true Dave aficionado, the entire four-day performance—filling a whopping eight CDs and one DVD—is available for purchase online.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 5 (Released 05/26/06)
This relatively recent Live Trax album was recorded all the way back in August of 1995 in Rochester, Michigan. The most significant detail about this release is the appearance of a cover of Bob Marley’s “Exodus,” a rare treat for Dave lovers.

DMB Live Trax Vol. 6 (To Be Released 09/26/06)
The newest selection in the band’s Live Trax series, this recording of a performance at Boston’s Fenway Park is due for release later this month.

 

 
Categories
News

Grisham previews new book to law students


The age of Innocence: “One thing this book taught me,” John Grisham said of his upcoming work of nonfiction, “there are a lot of innocent people in prison.”


Like a defense attorney well practiced at making a closing argument, John Grisham promised to speak with “no notes” when, last Thursday, he addressed several hundred UVA law students on the sorry matter of the death penalty. To be specific, he was talking about his latest book, The Innocent Man, due out next month. Though it is his 19th book, it is his first work of nonfiction. The Innocent Man concerns the tragic case of Ronald Williamson, a onetime professional baseball player from small-town Oklahoma who was innocently jailed and condemned to death in a capital murder and rape case until DNA evidence exonerated him. Despite his reprieve, Williamson died a heartbreaking death at the age of 51. The cause was cirrhosis of the liver. The boozing, womanizing life on the road had caught up with him, it seems, accelerated by the trauma of two decades on death row and a lifetime of severe mental illness.
    Grisham practiced law for 10 years in Mississippi before the success of his second novel, The Firm, freed him financially from his law practice. But it was clear from his talk that the courtroom is still very much alive in him. “Ron was a dead man,” he said. “My hope for this book: people read it and realize this [death penalty] system we have is too unfair to continue.”
    Summarizing Willliamson’s story, Grisham recounted all the usual Grishamian elements—a disabled defendant; a past-his-prime defense attorney, who, proving that truth is stranger than fiction, happens to be blind; a couple of jailhouse snitches; and a suspect who is left unquestioned because of his illicit ties to local police.
    Thanks to the heroics of a federal judge, Williamson was exonerated and the real killer was put behind bars. In the course of his research, Grisham met that man. And what was he like to meet, wondered one student during the question period following Grisham’s presentation. Not that different from the rest of us, Grisham revealed, at least in one respect: The killer requested that the famous author have a picture taken with him. Though it meant posing with a plane of Plexiglas between them, Grisham assented. The killer, apparently, keeps the photo in his death row cell, a reminder of his brief brush with celebrity.

Categories
Arts

Reviews

The Flaming Lips
Charlottesville Pavilion
Tuesday, September 12

music  Every rock music fan has been there: front row center at a highly anticipated gig, waiting in vain for that one inspiring moment. Whether it’s a die-hard Zen Arcade fan fuming through another Hüsker-free Bob Mould solo show, or a Bob Dylan disciple enduring one of the man’s infamous late-’80s snore-fests (when he was abusing his back catalogue so badly, fans actually hoped he wouldn’t play his biggest hits), most live-music devotees can easily reel off a litany of disappointments.
    Unless, of course, that wily concert-goer has spent his or her musical life attending nothing but Flaming Lips shows.
    As lead singer Wayne Coyne and his traveling neo-psychedelic carnival proved last Tuesday at the C-Pav, the band seems constitutionally incapable of putting on a bad concert. Where some bands disdainfully refuse to play their biggest hits, the Lips gleefully embrace them (hell, not only did they play “She Don’t Use Jelly,” they actually kicked it off with a video clip of a “90210”-era Shannen Doherty introducing the band). Where some singers expect the audience to sit and watch in worshipful silence (we’re looking at you, Lyle Lovett), Wayne Coyne encourages a level of audience participation that could only be topped by actually handing over all of the instruments and microphones to the screaming fans. And, where some bands utilize high-tech lighting and tasteful video effects to make themselves seem larger than life, the Lips employ an entire flea market of hilariously low-budget gadgets to mind-blowing effect, turning every venue they play into a Dr. Seuss-inspired wonderland.
    From the opening giant-ballon-and-confetti-cannon assault that accompanied “Race for the Prize” to the closing, power-chord-perfect rendition of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs” (with its pointed video montage of Bush Administration meanies), the show really couldn’t have been more of a blast. By turns joyous, Pollyannaish and surprisingly political (for him, anyway), Coyne—along with drummer Steven Drozd and guitarist Michael Ivins—whipped up a crazy musical cavalcade that proved a perfect fit for the Pavilion, turning that giant white tent into an overflowing circus full of dancing Santas, singing sock puppets, streamer-shooting shotguns and wildly screaming fans. Top that, Ringling Brothers! —Dan Catalano


All Aunt Hagar’s Children
By Edward P. Jones
Amistad, 399 pages

words  Southern Virginia, so vividly illustrated in Edward P. Jones’ Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Known World, receives brief mention in his second collection of short stories, All Aunt Hagar’s Children. Instead, our geographical point of reference is Washington, D.C.—a city containing both a nation’s history and, as Jones’ characters show us, a multitude of complex personal histories as well. Convicted criminals spend time in Lorton prison, newlyweds visit family in Arlington and even make train trips into the heart of the American South. Yet however long their leashes, Jones’s children are always drawn back to our nation’s capital, if not physically, then through the memories of a past to which they are forever tethered.
    Jones, a native Washingtonian with an MFA in creative writing from the University of Virginia, returns to the same territory (and in some instances, the same characters) covered in his first collection of stories, Lost in the City. To say that the individuals in Hagar’s Children are lost would be obvious—for aren’t existentially angst-ridden individuals the perfect fodder for short stories? Whether it’s a medical student coming to terms with the practices of a “root worker” (read: voodoo) or an aged lothario who finds himself the unwitting landlord of a crack den, Jones’ Washingtonians are beautifully rendered contradictions that, for all of their drama, remain utterly captivating.
    “Old Boys, Old Girls” is a classic sin-and-redemption story in which the murderer Caesar Matthews finds himself out of sync with life inside, and outside, of prison. Both “A Poor Guatemalan Dreams of a Downtown in Peru” and “The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River” provide escapes from the everyday. The former story details a trio of women united by their survival of horrible disasters, while the latter explores a hostess’ encounter with the Devil in a Safeway.
    Of course, an unspoken rule of short story collections is that there has to be one among the herd that stands out, displaying a particularly impressive amount of skill and style. In “Tapestry,” the concluding tale, a new bride, torn between an uncomfortable marriage in a foreign city and longing thoughts of home, painfully accepts the predestined future hovering over her: one rooted in the cross streets of D.C. As he writes, “Anne was not at all a morbid person, but it occurred to her quite simply that wherever it was she would die, it would not be in Mississippi. Within seconds of that thought, the train entered Washington, where she was to come to her end more than sixty-eight years later.”—Zak M. Salih

Complicit!
Contemporary American Art & Mass Culture
UVA Art Museum
Through October 29

art  “Complicity” is defined in Webster’s dictionary as “participation in a wrongful act.” But the artists in the current show at the UVA Art Museum have not been complicit in anything illicit—except, perhaps, telling the truth in an era of high gloss and spin. Utilizing every type of medium available, they reflect back to us our culture’s complexities and contradictions, while, at times, revealing our collective shadow in a way that forces us to question who we are.
    Love and human relationships are given ample play in this exhibit—and it makes sense, given the fact that marriage is one of our biggest institutions, and sex our most powerful marketing tool. Included in the show is a photo-realistic painting entitled “White on White,” by Julia Jacquette, which features a series of wedding dresses arranged like items on a store shelf. Marriage is supposed to be intimate and sacred, but the grid-like composition and the absence of any human being in this painting alludes to the commerciality of love in our culture.
    In stark contrast to the stylized painting is a mixed-media installation, by Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, called “Cabin Fever,” which contains three-dimensional sculptures of trees inside a dimly-lit wooden box. The viewer is asked to look inside the (casket-shaped) box to view an enchanted forest at night. But the audio quickly overpowers the viewers’ enchantment: flies buzz, a couple argues, and a gunshot silences all but the nighttime creatures. This piece could just as easily be titled “Sound Bite”—I physically jumped from my chair when forced to confront the darker side of what we do in the name of love.
    Another piece, “Play Date,” by filmmaker John Waters, is perhaps even more disturbing. In it, the lifelike faces of Charles Manson and Michael Jackson are grafted onto two dolls, who sit on the floor facing each other, arms outstretched. The juxtaposition of these two individuals—one a convicted murderer, one a troubled celebrity, both deeply ingrained in our pop-culture memory—with the childlike innocence of dolls, creates an effect at once fascinating and repulsive, especially when one remembers they were once innocent and lovable children.
    Viewers will wince as they realize how inexorably woven into the web of mass culture we all are—just as the artists themselves can’t completely escape the very influences they seek to comment on. If this exhibit is indeed a portrait of who we are, the question remains: Who do we want to become? How do we get there from here?—Karrie Bos