Categories
Living

Mousing around [with video]

Back in 2002 local bluegrass fiends the Hackensaw Boys took off on a jaunt called the Unlimited Sunshine Tour. They found themselves part of a hodge-podge bill of diverse but impressive music acts, including Cake, De La Soul, Kinky, The Flaming Lips and Modest Mouse. It was a promising step for the band, and they were even invited back to be part of the following year’s lineup. For Pee Paw Hackensaw, a.k.a. Tom Peloso, though, the tour led to something even bigger.

“At one point during the tour [Modest Mouse frontman] Isaac Brock approached me and asked if I wanted to do something for the next record,” Peloso says. “I was very open to the idea.” So, when the time came, he met up with Modest Mouse and took part in the making of 2004’s Good News for People Who Love Bad News, an album that went platinum and was a breakthrough release for the band.


Tom Peloso, top left, and Modest Mouse take the Charlottesville Pavilion stage on Sunday, June 29.

Pretty soon Peloso was a full-fledged Mouse, touring with the band and helping write and record 2007’s We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank, which also saw the addition of former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr. On Sunday, June 29, Peloso and the rest of the band will bring their show to the Charlottesville Pavilion.

The video for Modest Mouse’s "Little Motel."


We caught up with Peloso, who resides in the Nelson County hamlet of Schuyler when not on the road, in the midst of the band’s current tour opening for R.E.M. “I had bought Reckoning on vinyl when it came out,” Peloso says, “so for me it’s pretty exciting to be on tour with a band that I grew up listening to and really enjoying. Every night they seem to pull out a song that I’m like, ‘Wow I can’t believe they just played that.’”

Being a huge Smiths fan, Feedback was also curious to hear what it was like to be in a band with Johnny Marr. “It’s a lot of fun working with him,” says Peloso. “The first night I met him I actually picked him up from the airport in Portland. When I first met him I felt really comfortable. He’s a really down to earth, genuine guy. And he’s just a great guitar player.”

He’s been keeping quite busy with Modest Mouse, but Peloso found some time earlier this year to get started on a solo album at Monkeyclaus in Nelson County. “It’s kind of funny for me, he says. “I’m Tom in Modest Mouse, and I was Pee Paw Hackensaw in the Hackensaw Boys. And this time the project is me, Tom Peloso, and I’ve never really done a project like that. It’s neat. I feel like I’m learning a lot about myself in doing this.” He hopes to finish up the album in August, once Modest Mouse has wrapped up its current tour.

There’s clearly something special about banging away at strings and tapping your toes on red bricks. In last week’s column, Pokey LaFarge recalled how much fun he had busking with friends on the Downtown Mall, and Peloso told us pretty much the same thing. “Probably some of my most favorite moments were playing on the Mall with the Hackensaw Boys,” he says. Peloso will only be a few steps away from there on Sunday, and the Hacks are playing just two days before (see below), so maybe they’ll meet up to jam like old times.

Happy Birthday, dear Gravity

With so much news lately of venues closing, we’re glad to wish Gravity Lounge a happy fifth birthday. The Lounge celebrates its half decade of existence this Friday, June 27, with a show featuring local favorites the Hackensaw Boys and Morwenna Lasko & Jay Pun. The venue has been bringing a variety of tunes to the Downtown Mall since the summer of 2003, and they’ve got even more good stuff lined up for this summer and fall, including Bill Kirchen on July 6, the Asylum Street Spankers on July 9, the Commander Cody Band on September 11 and Southern Culture on the Skids on November 22. So go party with the Morwenna, Jay and the Hackensaws this Friday and then mark your calendars for more good things to come.

Au revoir

This is the last time you’ll see the current incarnation of Feedback in these pages. Alas, we know! Your current music scribe has had a blast translating Charlottesville’s sonic reverberations into written words over the past year, but now he’s up and leaving to, you know, explore the world and find himself or something like that. Never fear, though, as Feedback will forge on next week, with C-VILLE arts and culture guru Brendan Fitzgerald taking over the reins and guiding it through its new, expanded presence as a blog on c-ville.com. Also, stay tuned for next week’s paper, in which Mr. Ruscher steps out of his Feedback shoes and recounts his many musical journeys.

Got news or comments? Send them to feedback@c-ville.com.

News Quiz

1. Regarding the $7.5 million plan to rebrick the Downtown Mall, what’s the biggest issue?
    a. Removing Miller’s patrons from Mall long enough to do the job.
    b. Whether bricks are environmentally friendly.
    c. Whether bricks are high-heel friendly.
    d. The size of bricks.

2. What did the Albemarle County School Board do recently that may have the county’s Board of Supes and Charlottesville City Council following suit?
    a.Introduce cheap whiskey at meetings running more than two hours.
    b. Efficiency study.
    c. Take salsa lessons to rekindle spark.
    d. Laughter yoga.

3. How much will UVA’s new video screen at Scott Stadium cost?
    a. $2.4 million.
    b. $5 million.
    c. $1.3 million (display model).
    d. Traded a bicycle pump and bookshelf for it on Craigslist.

RWSA will request dredging proposals

Dredging of the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir is coming closer to a reality, one board meeting at a time. And this afternoon, the one that counts the most—the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority—voted unanimously to have staff put together a request for proposals from consulting firms to study dredging. RWSA set aside up to $300,000 from its reserve for the study. It will set a deadline for bids in early August.

As C-VILLE has previously reported, dredging has been a big issue of late because its implications for the long-term community water supply plan. Estimated to cost $143 million, the plan was originally hailed by most environmental groups as a splendid compromise. Its major components call for a new, taller dam at Ragged Mountain Reservoir and a pipeline that connects that reservoir to the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir in order to meet projected water needs through 2055. The problem? A group, Citizens for a Sustainable Water Plan, coalesced late last year to oppose the plan for various reasons, including the inundation of 180 acres at Ragged Mountain and the logic of supplying so much water. They have argued that dredging South Fork Rivanna Reservoir to restore capacity can be less expensive and could negate the need for such a high dam at Ragged Mountain.

RWSA’s vote comes after Charlottesville City Council and the Albemarle Board of Supervisors passed resolutions that endorse the plan but also requested RWSA “undertake a study of the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir and the viability and merits of maintenance dredging, siltation prevention and any other appropriate initiatives that could maintain and enhance the aquatic health and water quality of the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir, as a valuable water resource for the long term future benefit of the community.”

The RFP for dredging consultants is part of a parallel action track to move dredging forward, said Tom Frederick, RWSA’s executive director. His staff will now try to corral the chairmen of the four boards—city Mayor Dave Norris, county Board of Supervisors Chair Ken Boyd, Albemarle County Service Authority Chair Don Wagner and RWSA Chair Mike Gaffney—into one room before July 4 to figure out how to answer the question, “Why dredge?”

The South Fork Rivanna Reservoir, built in the late 1960s, is losing about 1 percent of its capacity a year because of siltation. It has never been dredged.

Local Dems hit the road for Obama and Company

Though some local Hillary Clinton supporters [cough, John Grisham, cough] have yet to throw their weight behind Barack Obama, David Slutzky came out to a state Democratic joint canvassing kick-off event June 21 for Obama, Mark Warner and Tom Perriello—and he wasn’t bashful about now supporting the Illinois senator, wearing a white Obama bumper sticker over a black t-shirt.

“I’m an elected Clinton delegate, and I’m going to campaign my tail off for Obama,” says Slutzky, a county supervisor who was a senior policy advisor to Bill Clinton in his first term and who represented Hillary Clinton’s environmental agenda at an Iowa event prior to the caucus. (Helping fuel Slutzky’s enthusiasm was the fact that his daughter, Rebecca, is the regional field director organizing the effort—and that it was her birthday.)

John McCain is a disaster waiting to happen,” Slutzky says. “I’m still enthused about Clinton, but she’s not on the ballot. I really admire Bill Clinton, but he’s not on the ballot either.”

Slutzky was one of about a dozen Dems who hit the streets for the trio on Saturday. Joining him were David Toscano, Charlottesville’s state delegate, and Denise Lunsford, the recently elected county Commonwealth’s Attorney. The canvassing was organized by Virginia Victory 2008, which is working to get Virginia Democrats elected to national offices. The idea was to kick-off canvassing around the state at 10am—a similar effort  got underway in Belmont on Saturday morning.

The Democratic office at 1380 Rio Rd. had plenty of material for Mark Warner’s Senate campaign and Tom Perriello’s House bid—but still hadn’t gotten a big shipment of Obama material. If Obama is to become the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the state since Lyndon Johnson in 1964, he will probably need the coattails of Warner, a popular former governor who is running against a somewhat less popular former governor, Jim Gilmore.

Perriello volunteers help candidate by working for Habitat

Jesse Gottschalk, a rising senior at Swarthmore who’s from Charlottesville, hadn’t planned on working for a campaign this summer. He was the president of his school’s Barack Obama campaign and came away wanting to learn more this summer than what he thought a political race could teach him—he wanted to live in rural Virginia and work for a nonprofit.

“I really get the feel for what college students want, a lot of what general organizing is like, but I realized I had no grasp of local issues,” Gottschalk says. “I had no grasp of what really motivates people who aren’t surrounded by academia.”

But here he is on a Thursday afternoon in June with a Tom Perriello for Congress button, finishing up a day of volunteer work for Habitat for Humanity as part of Perriello’s innovative "tithing" initiative. Perriello, a Democrat running against Virgil Goode, has pledged that 10 percent of his campaign staff time will go to volunteer projects in Virginia’s Fifth Congressional District, which stretches from Danville to Charlottesville. On June 19, about a dozen college students who have volunteered for Perriello this summer are helping install drywall and shovel gravel for two Habitat for Humanity projects in Charlottesville.

“People are impressed,” says Jessica Barba, Perriello’s communications director, about the tithing program, which has already involved work at soup kitchens, senior homes and domestic violence shelters across the district. “On a campaign, the most important thing is time. And the fact that we’re giving our time to the community, it shows that we’re not just talking about this, we’re really doing it.”

Gottschalk, despite his reservations about working on a campaign, was so impressed by Perriello’s background fighting genocide in Africa and the way he talked about issues that he joined up for Perriello’s Common Good Summer Program. He’s staying in Bedford for the summer, fulfilling his wish to live in rural Virginia.

“It’s as much about living in the community as it is about doing the phone banking and the canvassing,” Gottschalk says. “There’s no better way to get in touch with what a community needs than by working with the organizations that address those needs.”

Earlier that day, the Perriello campaign received good news: The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has moved his seat into the “emerging races” category. That leaves Perriello one step away from qualifying for the DCCC’s “Red to Blue” program, which would provide him with “financial, communications and strategic support.” In 2006, that program meant $404,000 on average for the 56 campaigns that qualified.

The label is official recognition of the progress the Perriello campaign has made, outbattling Goode in several quarters of fundraising and setting up six offices, located in Charlottesville, Danville, Bedford, Farmville, Smith Mountain Lake and Martinsville. Perriello recently released his first ad, designed for Christian radio stations—a way to appeal to religious voters who weren’t swept away by Al Weed, Goode’s challenger in 2004 and 2006.

To be sure, Perriello still faces an uphill battle against an incumbent who has held the office since 1997 and who beat Weed by 19 percentage points in 2006. But regardless of how the race turns out, Gottschalk hopes that the tithing program can inspire a new era of politicking.

“It’s not just that it’s a really cool idea that will get a lot of attention,” he says. He points to the millions of dollars that go to TV ads and campaign staffing. “It’s just a very self-contained thing. So I’m kind of inspired by this hopeful image that someday people can look forward to election years as the year that people don’t just talk about civic engagement because they’re people running for office, they actually get involved.”

Meredyth Gilmore weaves through a Habitat for Humanity site on Paton Street as she helps drywall a house as part of her volunteer work for Tom Perriello.
Categories
Arts

Movies playing in town

Movies playing in town

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG, 140 minutes) The Pevensie kids return to the magical land of Narnia, only to find that 1,000 years have passed since their last visit, leaving Narnia a far different place than it was before. Wouldn’t you know it, an evil general has taken over the land and it’s up to our pubescent crew to restore the true heir, tousle-haired hunk Prince Caspian (Stardust’s Ben Barnes), to the throne. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R, 111 minutes) Up-and-comer Jason Segel (Knocked Up, “How I Met Your Mother”) pens and stars in this latest anti-romantic comedy addition to the increasingly large Judd Apatow canon. Segel plays a sad sack musician whose TV star girlfriend (TV star Kristen Bell) breaks up with him. In an attempt to get over it, he jets off to a resort in Hawaii, only to run smack dab into the ex and her new, clueless rock star boyfriend. There’s a fair amount of raunch here, but a decent amount of sentiment as well, placing it well above Drillbit Taylor, but slightly below Superbad. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

Get Smart (PG-13, 110 minutes) Reviewed here. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

The Happening (R, 91 minutes) For better or worse, M. Night Shyamalan (The Village, Lady in the Water and, so long ago, The Sixth Sense) is back with an R-rated environmental horror film. Mark Wahlberg is the head of a family who tries to survive a bizarre global crisis, which has all of humanity going nuts and committing mass suicide. At least the script is more of a straightforward thriller, far less twisty than Shyamalan’s gimmicky previous works. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

The Incredible Hulk (PG-13, 114 minutes) Hulk    Forget that last angst-filled Ang Lee outing. The green goliath gets a reboot with lots more action and Edward Norton in the lead role. This version combines the original comic book with the old TV series, casting Dr. Banner as a wandering outcast hunted by the government—that is until they need him to help rid New York City of mad Russian mercenary-turned-monster The Abomination (Tim Roth, another fine casting choice). Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (PG-13, 120 minutes) It’s been a few years since the last adventure—for us as well as for Indy. It’s now the ’50s and our aging adventurer is called upon to engage in one last globe-hopping trek. Teaming up with a James Dean wannabe (Shia LaBeouf) and his ex-girlfriend Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen), Indy travels to South America to foil an evil Soviet plot. Seems the Russkies are trying to get their hands on a mysterious collection of ancient crystal skulls that might (possibly, maybe, who knows?) hold proof of extraterrestrial life. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Iron Man (PG-13, 126 minutes) Marvel Comics brings another superhero to life. Robert Downey Jr. headlines as billionaire playboy Tony Stark, a military industrialist who is kidnapped by Middle Eastern terrorists and forced to build an armored suit after a life-threatening incident. Escaping his captors, he decides to use this new technology to fight evil as the invincible Iron Man. Terrence Howard, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeff Bridges help round out the cast. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

Kung Fu Panda (PG) Jack Black provides the voice for a CGI panda whose lazy ways must be reformed when his peaceful valley is invaded by the forces of evil. To help fulfill his destiny, our chubby, reluctant hero is trained by a group of animalistic martial arts masters (among them: Jackie Chan, Angelina Jolie, Lucy Liu and Dustin Hoffman). Playing at Regal  Seminole Square 4

The Love Guru
(PG-13, 88 minutes) Mike Myers returns with a new character, a kooky American raised in India who returns to the United States to break into the lucrative self-help business. His first challenge is to settle the romantic troubles of a star hockey player and his estranged wife. …Um, didn’t Homer do the same thing on “The Simpsons” a few years back? Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

Priceless (PG-13, 104 minutes) Playing at Vinegar Hill Theatre

Sex and the City (R, 135 minutes) Four years after the popular TV series went off the air, “Sex and the City” returns as a feature film. Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon are all back dressing in outrageous outfits and discussing their sex lives over cocktails. How did we ever get along without this? Seriously, this one’s for fans only. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

The Strangers (R, 107 minutes) Milking the phoney “based on a true story” line for the umpteenth time in horror movie history, newby writer/director Bryan Bertino presents an atmosphere-soaked thriller about a couple (Scott Speedman, Liv Tyler) staying at an isolated vacation home who are terrorized by three random, mask-wearing assailants. This one’s all slow-building tension, so don’t go expecting a whole lot of plot. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

What Happens in Vegas (PG-13, 99 minutes) Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher play a couple of Sin City revelers who wake up after a night of debauchery to find out they took part in a drunken marriage ceremony. A quickie divorce is in the offing–that is until the newlyweds discover that they also won a fortune playing a slot machine. Naturally, they do their utmost to make each other’s life hell in order to get their hands on that money. Naturally, they find time to fall in love over the course of the film. Screenwriter Dana Fox adds a touch of War of the Roses to her previous rom-com The Wedding Date and calls it a day. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

You Don’t Mess With the Zohan (PG-13) Adam Sandler is a deadly Israeli Mossad agent who fakes his own death so he can re-emerge in New York City and live out his dream of becoming the world’s greatest hair stylist. Ooooh-kay. Bottom line: You’d better love Adam Sandler movies (goofy voices, sappy love stories, stupid Rob Schneider cameos and all) to put this one on your list. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Young@Heart (PG, 107 minutes) With a repertoire of cover tunes borrowed from the likes of The Ramones, Talking Heads, Jimi Hendrix, James Brown, David Bowie, OutKast and others, it’s strange that a chorus comprising senior citizens could ever be mustered to sing them. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

Happy Juneteenth!

Don’t know what the hell Juneteenth is? Now you do.

No indictments in Dawson shooting

The investigation into a March 28 officer-related shooting—which is connected to the shootings on I-64—has been concluded, Albemarle County Commonwealth’s Attorney Denise Lunsford announced today, and no charges will be filed.

At around 4:38am on March 28, the State Police Tactical team and the Albemarle County Tactical Unit executed a search warrant at 6740 Yonder Hill Rd. in Crozet, where Slade Allen Woodson—the 19-year-old charged with 17 felony counts in connection to the shootings on I-64—and his underage companion were believed to be staying.

After identifying themselves multiple times, the teams entered the home and found Edgar Dawson holding a revolver. Afraid he would shoot, Albemarle County Officer Michael Easton fired two shots. Dawson suffered chest and arm wounds and was taken to UVA Hospital. Though Dawson’s gun also discharged during the incident, Officer Easton was not injured.

Lunsford has decided, after reviewing the facts of the investigation, not to seek indictments against Dawson or Easton.


Commonwealth’s Attorney Denise Lunsford will not pursue charges in the Crozet shooting connected to the apprehension of alleged I-64 shooter Slade Allen Woodson, above.

Chickens expected at next week’s Assembly session

While most people interviewed today by the Washington Post’s Tim Craig about next week’s special Assembly session to solve Virginia’s out-of-control transportation problem predict there will be a whole lotta nothing go on, at least one lobbyist is trying to find the upside. "At the end of the day, maybe putting a ‘lockbox’ on transportation funds, maybe a local taxing authority, but that is it. Give Kaine credit for pushing for something. The Republicans can be tagged as obstructionists but . . . Kaine came back with almost the identical plan that was shot down last year, so which is more foolhardy? But the session will provide ample opportunity for a lot of social interaction to discuss the presidential campaign and enjoy some wonderful cuisine at the Capitol snack bar," says longtime Richmond lobbyist Charlie Davis.

The snack bar is dubbed Chicken’s. We are not making this up.

Assault on vehicles on West Main Street leads to two felonies against three teens

According to a resident of W. Main Street (who wishes to remain anonymous as a victim of a crime), he was awakened Tuesday morning around 3 or 4am by a police officer knocking on his door—who told him that his car was on fire. When he went down to the parking lot, a fire truck and two squad cars were parked outside. Only the singed frame of his vehicle was left and all the windows were smashed out.

“It was a strange night,” he says.

The destruction of his car was actually part of a larger spree involving three teenagers between the ages of 14 and 16, who smashed out the windows of several cars with hammers and crowbars. The W. Main Street resident’s car was burned from a flare tossed in by the teens. It was the only car burned.

All three teens have been charged with two felonies each: a breaking and entering charge and also a charge for burning of a vehicle. All three teens are city residents and juveniles so their names have not been released. According to city spokesperson Ric Barrick, they were released on their own recognizance or to their parents.