Categories
Arts

Film review: Music documentaries to get lost in

Non-sequitur alert: Now that the wretched Super Bowl is over, let’s discuss music documentaries.

There are two reasons I’m thinking about music documentaries. First, 2012 was a great year for them. Searching for Sugar Man—which is nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature—gets my vote for the best nonfiction narrative film of last year. If you haven’t seen it, fear not. Searching for Sugar Man was released on DVD in January.

Second, on Saturday, Feb. 2, the band My Bloody Valentine released its first album of new material in 22 years. The traffic on the MBV website was so heavy the server collapsed under the weight of twitchy fans typing “mybloodyvalentine.org.” I had to wait an extra two hours to buy the new tunes. After 22 years, an extra two hours seemed reasonable.

While waiting for the site to return, I googled “My Bloody Valentine” and found a documentary called Beautiful Noise, which features the Cocteau Twins, the Jesus and Mary Chain, and My Bloody Valentine. According to its Facebook page, the release date is 2013, and the description reads, “The definitive documentary about influential ‘80s and ‘90s guitar bands who harnessed massively loud sounds using a sea of effects pedals and delivered some of the most BEAUTIFUL NOISE ever recorded.”

Whether the movie is good—or sees release—is anyone’s guess. It will be worth a viewing, especially for fans of noise rock.

I understand noise rock isn’t for everyone. Angry drummers, however, should be. With that in mind, here’s another great music documentary from 2012: Beware of Mr. Baker.

That title is no idle suggestion. This movie, which chronicles the rise, fall, rise, fall, further fall, subsequent nose-dive, slight rise, and total face-plant of iconic drummer Ginger Baker, opens with Baker hitting the film’s director, Jay Bulger, in the nose with a walking cane.

Baker is the rhythm section behind Cream, Blind Faith, numerous other bands (including, at one time, Public Image, Ltd.), and he’s largely responsible for making westerners aware of African drumming. He’s also a tad temperamental; maybe that’s what two decades of heroin use does to you. In any event, his story is fascinating, and watching Baker destroy everything in his life is a lot like witnessing a car accident: You don’t want to look, but you have to look.

Finally, 2012 brought us Neil Young: Journeys, director Jonathan Demme’s latest Young chronicle (it’s good, but only for Young’s fans); Under African Skies, Joe Berlinger’s film about Paul Simon’s return to South Africa 25 years after Graceland (Berlinger is half the team responsible for Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, the best documentary of 2004); and Shut Up and Play the Hits, the movie that chronicles the end of LCD Soundsystem.

And 2013 is shaping up to be a good year. Dave Grohl’s Sound City, a movie about the now-defunct Sound City Studios in Los Angeles, blew up Sundance. (It can be viewed on demand here.) Also at Sundance was Muscle Shoals, about the tiny Alabama town, recording studio, and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Look for it in theaters, hopefully soon.

Categories
News

What’s coming up in Charlottesville the week of 2/4

Each week, the news team takes a look at upcoming meetings and events in Charlottesville and Albemarle we think you should know about. Consider it a look into our datebook, and be sure to share newsworthy happenings, too.

  • The Charlottesville City Council meets Monday night at 7pm at City Hall. Two big topics on the agenda: The first reading of an ordinance to create a Human Rights Commission and an anti-drone resolution. There will also be a second reading of a new towing ordinance for the city.
  • The Charlottesville Area League of Women Voters hosts a community dialogue on the ongoing Comprehensive Plan process from noon to 1:30pm Tuesday at the County Office Building on 5th Street Extended. Call 434-970-1707 to reserve an $8 box lunch.
  • The Albemarle County Planning Commission meets from 6-9pm Tuesday in the County Office Building on McIntire Road. Besides a special use permit application for special events and a wireless tower approval, the Commission is scheduled to hold a work session on the Comprehensive Plan and discuss the joint goals of county and city planning commissions.
  • The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors has an all-day meeting Wednesday at the County Office Building. A few agenda items of note: A special permit for development at Castle Hill Cider (10:30am), the monthly communications report from the School Board (1:30pm), and, in a work session toward the end of the day, the discussion of the county’s noise ordinance and the Long-Range Transportation Plan.
Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Ian Redshaw of L’Etoile

On Fridays, we feature five food finds selected by local chefs and personalities.  Today’s picks come from Ian Redshaw, Chef de Cuisine of L’Etoile, which now offers a $30 Chef’s three-course menu every Tuesday through Thursday evening.  Redshaw’s picks:

1)  Lunch at Pippin Hill Vineyard.  “Chef Amalia Scatena has some great food, wine and views.  My dog and I go out there to eat and play.”

2)  Muffaleta at Beer Run.  “Muffaleta, any time anywhere, especially at Beer Run.”

3)  Meat and Cheese Counter at Feast!.  “Some of the best people with the best products.  Great time while waiting for your lunch.”

4)  Bibimbap at The Korean House.  “A hot stone boil comes out sizzling, with a sunny side up egg.”

5)  Drunken Noodle  “Thai hot” at Pad Thai or Monsoon Siam.

The Charlottesville 29 is a publication that asks: if there were just 29 restaurants in Charlottesville, what would be the ideal 29? Follow along with regular updates on Facebook and Twitter.

Categories
News

Welcome to the 58th: Details of Boyd and Bell’s redistricting maneuver

In the week and a half that has followed the controversial redistricting bill pushed through the State Senate on Inauguration Day, more details have come to light about the last-minute engineering of a small shift in local House district lines that could have a lasting impact on local politics.

If the bill clears the House and Governor Bob McDonnell’s desk, Republican Albemarle County Supervisor Ken Boyd’s house in the Key West neighborhood off Stony Point Road would jump from Democratic Delegate David Toscano’s 57th District to Republican—and candidate for Attorney General—Rob Bell’s. It could clear the way for a House run for Boyd, though he’s declined to comment on that possibility.

But just how did the shift come about?

It started with a desire to correct the headache known as a split precinct, according to local election officials.

The last round of redistricting, in 2011, left Albemarle’s Free Bridge precinct divided. Residents of Key West, which teeters on the edge of the line dividing Toscano’s 57th House district and Bell’s 58th, had to form two lines at their polling place on voting days, and election officials had to deal with a lot of extra bookkeeping.

Such splits pop up all over the map in the wake of wholesale redistricting, Albemarle County Registrar Jake Washburne explained, because the new lines drawn at the state level cross and complicate local boundaries. And they’re a huge hassle. In late 2011, Virginia’s Division of Legislative Services asked for input from counties on where the problem areas were, requesting suggestions for fixes.

One option for the sticky spot in Free Bridge was to shift the House district lines to move some residents from the 57th to the 58th, or vice versa. But Washburne said the mappers in his office couldn’t make it work. Legislative districts are designed to have the same number of voters in each, and the populations of the two adjacent House districts was so close that even a small shift would tip the scales too much for one or the other. Jack Austin, in charge of rules, education, elections and special projects for the Division of Legislative Services, told the county House leaders wouldn’t sign off on the adjustments.

“We then got a request from Ken Boyd,” Washburn said. Late last year, Boyd asked Washburne’s team to go back to the drawing board and consider moving all of Key West to the 58th, he said, swapping it out for a sizable chunk of the 57th.

County Electoral Board Chair Jim Heilman said he and Board Secretary Dr. Clara Belle Wheeler met with Key West residents, who supported a move that would allow them to vote together—and allow a single delegate to represent their whole neighborhood. But the same problem still remained, Heilman said.

“The 57th and the 58th, their numbers are so high that even a little shift throws one of them out,” he said. So around Christmas, “we opined to the Board of Supervisors and to the affected delegates that we could see no good solution to the problem, and with no good solution, we may as well stick with what we’ve got.”

That’s when Bell stepped in. Before the start of the 2013 legislative session, Bell acknowledged he tweaked the bill containing numerous technical adjustments to house districts that was to be carried over from 2012—the same bill destined to be passed in the Senate on inauguration day, expanded to include a total overhaul of Virginia’s Senate districts.

The change? A shift of some voters from the 58th to Fluvanna’s 65th, just enough to make room for Key West—and Ken Boyd.

Bell said he’d been in contact with Boyd before filing the adjustments to the bill. They’ve known each other a long time, he said.

“I’m happy with the lines,” said Bell. “I’m happy to have everyone in Key West, including Ken, as constituents.”

He wasn’t willing to say whether he’d like to see Boyd take his House seat should he win the race for Attorney General. “I haven’t won the nomination yet,” he said. “But at some point I will no longer be the delegate.” When that happens, “I’m sure he’s one of the names that would come up.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Diane Cluck and Blue O’Connell

Complimentary ticket

A common ingredient in greatness is balance, and none more important than a healthy equilibrium between tradition and progress. So when Diane Cluck and Blue O’Connell sit down together to play an acoustic show, the potential for greatness is high. O’Connell plays with 30 years of experience singing, songwriting, and dabbling in classic folk and rich vocals. Cluck boasts more than 10 years of playing idiosyncratic neo-folk interpreted through multi-instrumentation and unique genre blending.

Friday 2/1 $8, 8pm. C’ville Coffee, 1301 Harris St. 817-2633.