Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Aaron Cross of Fossett’s

On Fridays, we feature five food finds selected by local chefs and personalities.  Today’s picks come from Aaron Cross, executive chef of Fossett’s at Keswick Hall.  On September 12, Keswick will host Dinner in the Vineyard, where guests will dine by torchlight in Keswick’s own Courtside Vineyard on a feast prepared by Cross.  Cross’s picks:

1)  Vegetable Lo Mein at Made in Asia.  “For those who don’t live near Zion Crossroads, it has saved me on many a random night around 9:00 pm in need of grub.  I’m glad it’s there because nothing else is . . . for miles.  I stick to the take-out classics.”

2)  Sandwiches at Stonefire Station Kitchen.  “Fresh, creative, and super tasty.  Great pit stop on a long bike ride.  Famished or not, any of their selections will satisfy.  Grilled eggplant is a big winner.”

3)  “Fuzzy Thing” at Dragon Lady.  “Sometimes you find yourself at the bar of the Dragon Lady drinking something called a ‘fuzzy thing’ after dinner.  Don’t judge me.  The owner told me I needed to have the dan-dan noodles but I was too full to oblige.  Maybe it was Ninja Warrior on the bar television that made this such a uniquely satisfying experience. . . guess you’ll have to cast your own vote.”

4)  All You Can Eat Snow Crab Tuesday at Rhett’s River Grill.  “It does not get any better before Kegler’s for pitchers of 8 point IPA and an ugly shoe fashion show.  The dude abides.”

5)  Sweetbreads at MAS Tapas.  “I’d be lying if I didn’t admit to eating at Mas more than most native Charlottesvillians have, and I’ve only been here a little over a year.  It’s my Friday night after work spot.  It is the only place slinging serious food after 11:00.  Their aioli and cocktails sate all end of day aches . . . or a couple tips on the porron.”

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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
Arts

Making connections: Lockn’ Music Festival co-founder Dave Frey is in it for the music

“What would Bill do?” mused Dave Frey as he peered out over the expansive grounds at Oak Ridge Estate in Arrington, Virginia where he is in the thick of planning the four day Lockn’ Music Festival, projected to attract over 25,000 attendees.

With more than 30 years of music business experience, Frey has been resolute in his choices, his expectations, and his belief in his ability to pull off a major annual festival in a field in Nelson County. Frey honed his chops under the tutelage of concert promoter legends like Ron Delsner in New York and Bill Graham in San Francisco, the mentor who he summons in spirit when logistics become challenging. (Graham died in a helicopter crash in 1991.)

When Frey decided to organize his own festival earlier this year, along with co-founder and Relix magazine publisher Peter Shapiro, the basics came easy. “We decided that we wanted to book a show that we’d like to go and see,” Frey said. “It was that simple. And if we did that, hopefully there would be a lot of others like us that would go.”

The show that Frey and Shapiro wanted to see was initially headlined by Neil Young & Crazy Horse, and considered a “get” and a testament to their connections, but the appearance was cut from the line-up due to a hand injury sustained by guitarist Poncho Sampredo. In a move rarely encountered in the industry, the organizers took fans into consideration and offered a refund period.

The loss of Young coincided with the decision to change the festival’s moniker from Interlocken to Lockn.’ Frey was not willing to go into detail about the name change, but Shapiro released a neutral statement prompting speculation that legal factors were in play over rights to the name.

With alterations behind it, Lockn’ touts a jam lovers line-up anchored by Further featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, John Fogerty, Widespread Panic, Zac Brown Band, and The String Cheese Incident, with Jimmy Cliff, Gov’t Mule, Warren Haynes Band, Tedeschi Trucks Band, Punch Brothers, and The Black Crowes all on the schedule. The Trey Anastasio Band is a recent addition, and an e-mail from the Lockn’ office confirmed that there are “surprises still to be announced.”

Before he became the publisher of Relix, Shapiro was a promoter at (and eventually owned) New York’s famed Wetlands Preserve and he was known for orchestrating seamless sets. Frey’s bands played often at the club, and from those experiences came the “interlocking” idea that underlies the concept of Lockn’. “I got back together with Peter, and we liked the continuous music flow,” Frey said. “A lot of festivals have that quiet period (during a set) where you can hear music from another stage.”

Another facet of the interlocking concept is artist collaboration. “I’m most excited about some of the artist interactions,” Frey said. “The advertised ones and the unadvertised ones. These guys are taking things very seriously—John Fogerty with WSP and Zack Brown with The String Cheese Incident.” New addition Grace Potter is scheduled as a collaborator, and Frey confirmed rumors about secret rehearsals among other artists. “There are some collaborations that cannot be talked about, that will remain unannounced,” he said.

Eric Borgersen, a marketing associate for Lockn’, thinks the festival’s production style will have an impact. “If there are a bunch of surprises and true collaborations, fans will be so excited they will demand more,” he said. “Super jams are one thing, but this festival has the opportunity to take collaborations to a new level.”

In a business that’s about connections, Frey and Shapiro have many to choose from. “I’ve been booking shows since 1983,” said Frey. “I have lots of relationships and Pete certainly has a lot of relationships. We try to do a few things well.”

Frey spent a large part of his career as an artist manager at his firm Silent Partner Management (which he relocated to Charlottesville in 2008) and worked with a range of artists from Blues Traveler in its heyday to Cheap Trick, The Ramones, and the Brazilian Girls. He also operated temporarily under the umbrella of Coran Capshaw’s Red Light Management before returning to his own smaller shop. It is his work with the touring H.O.R.D.E. Festival in the ’90s that inspired his Lockn’ venture.

“I was working for Bill Graham, running the New York satellite office, and I was managing Blues Traveler. Blues Traveler, Phish, Widespread Panic, and the Spin Doctors had all gone out to find a gig on some of the big summer tours and didn’t get any,” he said. “John Popper and I had this idea to put together a collective of bands (in order) to play larger rooms at lower ticket prices and play at amphitheaters instead of trying to play in the clubs.”

“Everyone was going to play equal time and get equal money. Then the band managers got involved and that changed,” Frey laughed. “But, John and I started the H.O.R.D.E. tour eventually.” Frey found joy in the in the tour’s continuous sets. “Two bands on stage with segue sets.”

Choosing the site was another fortuitous connection for Frey. He was eager to build a festival, and searched around the country for the perfect location before discovering it in Arrington, Virginia, practically his own backyard.

The landscape of Lockn’ has a mystical quality to it, with sloping emerald green hills enclosed by the majestic, hazy Blue Ridge mountains. “The site itself is spacious, beautiful, unbelievable,” Frey said.

Surrounded by forest and field camping, the centrally located music stage will offer excellent sightlines, a superior drainage system, and various points of access. “All mass gathering sites need basics: space, egress, and infrastructure,” Frey said. “We’ve been working really hard on the traffic plan with police, VDOT, and our own engineering team.”

The estate was named for a massive oak that stands out on a ridge above the stage site and serves as the branding image for the property. Frey wants to carry that over in his event. There will be no carnival gimmickry or strobe flourishes at Lockn’. The ambiance will come from the pastoral spirit of the land. “We will incorporate it iconically,” he said. “The Oak Ridge tree will be lit and made special.”

An uncanny sense of calm surrounds Frey, belying the maelstrom of planning obstacles and rapid-fire deadlines ticking off as the opening day approaches, not to mention the loss of an iconic headliner. He makes the creation of a brand-new 40,000 capacity event appear to be just another “day in the life” of a music business veteran.

“We are just trying to book a show that we would go see,” he said with a smile. “And quite honestly, if you don’t like these bands you probably shouldn’t come, because they are going to be featured.”

Lockn’ Music Festival/Oak Ridge Estate /September 5-7

 

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School City Center?

Nearly 500 people exercised their browsing muscles at the Carver Recreation Center flea market at the Jefferson School City Center last Saturday, August 24. According to Dan Carpenter, manager of Carver Recreation Center, the event, sponsored by Charlottesville Parks & Recreation, was designed to bring the traditional summertime outdoor yard sale inside to Carver’s banquet room.

“We had a great show,” said Carpenter, “Thirty-five vendors attended, which was a complete sell-out!” Many different types of products were represented at the market, including books, jewelry, housewares, home décor, clothes and toys.  The Flea Market and the Carver staff received a lot of positive feedback from the local community and vendors.

“We will definitely plan on offering a Flea Market again, possibly multiple times annually,” said Carpenter.  “For a first time event the response was extremely encouraging and it appears that it fulfills a need in the community.  Thanks to our vendors and also to those who came out to bargain hunt!”

 Common Ground Releases Fall Schedule

Common Ground’s fall schedule will kick off Tuesday, September 3, 2013. The fall schedule continues to offer Common Ground’s mix of courses appropriate for yoga newcomers and longtime practitioners. Courses include a variety of yoga options–including flow, vinyasa, and hatha–as well as meditation and Qi Gong courses. Additionally, some of the courses target specific audiences. For instance, options such as teen, prenatal, and elder yoga are available.

There are also still spots open for the Yoga Vinyasa/Yoga Nidra Workshop on Saturday, September 7, from 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm. The workshop, led by Annie Runkle and MaryLewis Meador, will feature a challenging and playful vinyasa flow followed by guided relaxation. Participants are encouraged to sign up in advance.

Literacy Volunteers Seeking New Tutors for September Training    

Two weeks out and Literacy Volunteers still has seats open for its September 14, 2013 training. Approximately 80 potential students have contacted Literacy Volunteers inquiring about tutoring in the last two months, Executive Director Ellen Osborne reports, so the need for new tutors is critical to helping these people gain the skills they need to improve their quality of life.

ProLiteracy, an international nonprofit dedicated to promoting adult literacy, reports that for adults in the United States, 43% of those with the lowest literacy skills live in poverty. Thus, Literacy Volunteer tutors can have a tremendous impact on the lives of the students with whom they work. Many students go on to gain better jobs, get a driver’s license, or help their own children do better in school.

Those interested in becoming a tutor should call the Literacy Volunteers office at 434-977-3838 to register for the September 14 training. The training will take place from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm.

MJH Starr Hill Health Center and The Women’s Initiative Present “Living Well”

MJH Starr Hill Health Center and The Women’s Initiative Project are sponsoring a new group called “Living Well.” Living Well is a twelve-week group for women seeking support to make lifestyle changes in an effort to lose weight, gain energy, and improve their overall health.  The group will be co-facilitated by Eboni C. Bugg, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, and Miranda Trent, Certified Nurse Practitioner.  Participants will have the opportunity to create an integrated health plan to meet their fitness and nutrition goals, while receiving expert guidance and peer support.

The event will be held at Martha Jefferson’s Starr Hill Health Center at the Jefferson School City Center on Thursdays from September 19-December 12, 2013 from 5:30 to 7 pm.

This group is free of charge, however space is limited.  For more information and registration, please contact Eboni C. Bugg, LCSW, 434-202-7692, ebugg@thewomensinitiative.org.

JSCC logoJefferson School City Center is a voice of the nine nonprofits located at Charlottesville’s intergenerational community center, the restored Jefferson School. We are a legacy preserved . . . a soul reborn . . . in the heart of Cville!

Categories
News

Local Food Hub helps small farmers prep for big changes to food safety laws

The first major update to food safety regulations since the 1930s is coming down the pike for America’s farmers, and the impacts could be big for produce growers—including those in Central Virginia.

The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) puts what was previously a voluntary and industry-driven effort to avoid produce contamination under the direct supervision of the Food and Drug Administration, which will have broad new powers to regulate the growth, harvest, and distribution of fruits and vegetables.

The FDA is still in the process of turning the 2010 law into a set of rules dictating sanitation practices, water quality controls, livestock and wildlife management, and how produce is stored, packaged, and tracked on farms. Another set of regulations will focus on safety in produce processing and distribution centers.

The same rules won’t apply to everybody, explained Adrianna Vargo, director of grower services for Charlottesville-based, nonprofit agricultural distribution network the Local Food Hub, which is closely tuned to the changes coming from Washington. Its own educational farm in Scottsville and distribution warehouse in Charlottesville will need to keep up with the rule changes, and it also serves as a resource for some 70 small farms in Central Virginia trying to navigate the new regulatory landscape.

Many small local farms won’t be legally required to make changes, said Vargo. There are lots of exceptions to the rules, but broadly, if farmers’ annual sales total less than $500,000 and half of that business is direct-to-consumer, they’re exempt. But for the small farms that will be regulated, getting up to speed may be a real burden, Vargo said.

“Even though there’s flexibility built into the FSMA, the actual implementation is geared toward the larger corporate farms that have more resources and more staff time,” Vargo said. “Either you’re exempt or you have to deal with the whole shebang.”

And the whole shebang is pricey.

“It’s in the thousands of dollars per year, because you have to have multiple inspections, multiple water tests, and infrastructure upgrades to get compliant”—costs farmers generally have no choice but to eat, said Vargo

Even exempt farmers may find themselves under pressure, she said, because buyers will likely start to demand compliance from everyone. Vargo worries that could stall what’s been a great trend in local agriculture: getting even tiny farms looped into a distribution network that includes bigger end consumers, like schools and hospitals.

The Food Hub is working closely with Virginia Cooperative Extension to help farmers stay ahead of the curve. The USDA’s existing Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) program has for years offered a voluntary certification, and the new FDA rules are built off GAP guidelines, said Vargo. Going through the certification and audit process before the hammer comes down can be helpful, and many small farms in the area are now taking the plunge.

If you have a stake in local agriculture, now is the time to study up on the coming changes, Vargo said. The FDA has extended the comment period on FSMA through November 15. “We’re hoping the rules will become a little more flexible through the comments process,” Vargo said.

To read up and weigh in, visit the FDA’s FSMA website.

Categories
Arts

Émilie Charmy – A Visceral Voice at The Fralin Museum of Art

The Émilie Charmy retrospective currently on display at the Fralin Museum of Art is perplexing.

Most of her paintings have a fierce inquisitive quality. Her application of paint gives expressive life to simple compositions. Single thick brush strokes resolve into a small elegant wrist or a delicate twist of hair. Although a few paintings, like “Nu tentant son sein,” appear fast and crude, her work cultivates a rough and layered visceral quality. The show culminates with a painting so thickly built, it brings to mind the Balzac story “Unknown Masterpiece.” Mounds of paint construct an obscure image, a self-portrait which viewers experience more as brush stokes than a foggy-edged figure haunting the picture plane.

While Charmy’s craft is fascinating to explore, her content is slightly odd. Her paintings initially seem to be an artifact of her times, nudes reminiscent of Manet’s Olympia and blocked color scenes recalling the primitivism of Gauguin’s landscapes. As one studies the paintings, however, it seems that Charmy shifts the focus on the female-body-object to include immediate sensuality. She also creates distinct moments which build notes of fashion and character in her figures. These notes are subtle, and her images threaten to settle into the niche of patriarchal misogynist tropes which dominate much of art history and particularly the canvases of Charmy’s contemporaries. This is not inherently bad, it is only to say that Charmy is more distinct for her rugged love and care for painting than for the fact that she was a female artist during the time in which she lived.

As such, the Fralin does Charmy a disservice when it describes her as “one of the most original female voices of modern art in Paris during the first half of the 20th century.” Rather Émilie Charmy should simply be described as one of the most exquisitely inquisitive and visceral voices in modern expressive painting.

~Aaron Miller and Rose Guterbock

Categories
Arts

Film review: The World’s End

Sorry, peeps. The World’s End just isn’t as good as Shaun of the Dead or Hot Fuzz, the other features in the Simon Pegg-Nick Frost-Edgar Wright canon. Luckily, The World’s End is still a lot of fun, and Pegg and Frost prove once again to be captivating screen presences and fully committed, especially when dealing with the totally bizarre.

The World’s End starts with a simple premise. A down-on-his-luck loser, Gary (Pegg), wants to get his old mates back together to recreate the best night of his life, a 12-pub crawl in their hometown that ends at a pub called The World’s End.

Sounds simple, right? And for 45 minutes, that’s exactly what happens. In fact, Pegg-Frost-Wright fans may wonder just what, exactly, is this movie doing, playing itself so straight? The dialogue is sharp, to be sure, and Pegg is excellent as the ragged alcoholic trying to piece his life back together while not accepting that he’s a complete loser. The supporting cast—Frost, Paddy Considine, Martin Freeman, and Eddie Marsan—take turns playing straight man to Gary, with Frost becoming more and more irritated at Gary’s shenanigans as they bounce from pub to pub.

Then The World’s End takes a wild left turn. Its left turn seems more random than anything that happens in Shaun of the Dead or Hot Fuzz, but once the craziness of it wears off, it’s just fun to sit back and let these guys do what they do best, which is make an audience laugh at the ridiculous.

If you’ve seen the trailer, you know the lads’ hometown has been taken over by robots. One of the recurring gags is that the homogenization of marketing, advertising, and branding has made it easy for the robots to slip in undetected.

And just what is the point of the robots and their masters? I’m not sure. There’s something in Pegg and Wright’s script, and it comes out of Pegg’s mouth in the movie, that has something to do with individuality and personal freedom, which sounds strikingly American for a film set in England. But what do I care? It’s a larf fest.

Speaking of larf fests, the lads and old friend Sam (Rosamund Pike) come face to face with twins who have been replaced by robots. The robot twins try to kill Sam and Gary, and somehow one of the robots loses her arms while the other loses her legs. So, working as a team, the robots attach the legs to the robot with the missing arms, and she goes back to beating the piss out of everyone.

Wacky, right? And how often can I use the word robot?

Anyway, there’s the aforementioned message in the screenplay about homogenization, but it gets lost in the movie’s sturm und drang. Besides, it’s been better said in sci-fi (think Invasion of the Body Snatchers), and still, I’m not entirely sure that’s the point.

There’s a twist at the end that’s just as crazy as the twist at the 45-minute mark, and it looks like there’s a set-up for a sequel. I use “looks like” because who knows? The World’s End is all over the place, but it doesn’t matter. We’re having fun.

Playing this week

2 Guns
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

20 Feet From Stardom
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Before Midnight
Carmike Cinema 6

Blackfish
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Blue Jasmine
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Butler
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Chennai Express
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Despicable Me 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Elysium
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Fruitvale Station
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Iron Man 3
Carmike Cinema 6

Jobs
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Kick-Ass 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Man of Steel
Carmike Cinema 6

Monsters University
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Mortal Instruments
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Paranoia
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Percy Jackson:
Sea of Monsters
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Planes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Smurfs 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Spectacular Now
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Star Trek Into Darkness
Carmike Cinema 6

Turbo
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Carmike Cinema 6

The Way, Way Back
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

We’re the Millers
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

White House Down
Carmike Cinema 6

The Wolverine
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

You’re Next
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Movie houses

Carmike Cinema 6
973-4294

Regal Downtown Mall
Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14
and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
News

Albemarle County Supervisor showdown: Samuel Miller

As we head into election season proper, we’re taking a look at the four contested races for seats on the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors. We’ve already introduced the Scottsville and Rio district candidates. Today, we hear from the two vying for the Samuel Miller District seat: Incumbent Republican Duane Snow and Democrat Liz Palmer.

Liz Palmer. Photo courtesy Liz Palmer.

Liz Palmer  

  • Party: Democrat
  • Age: 58
  • Occupation: Veterinarian
  • Government experience: Rivanna River Basin Commission, Albemarle County Service Authority Board of Directors

 

Duane Snow. File photo.
Duane Snow 

  • Party: Republican (incumbent)
  • Age: 68
  • Occupation: CEO of Snow’s Landscape and Garden Center
  • Government experience: Albemarle County Board of Supervisors, Rivanna River Basin Commission, Albemarle County Architectural Review Board

 

Q: How are the challenges facing the rural community different from those facing the urbanized parts of the county? 

Palmer: It’s a big challenge to keep the rural areas rural while making sure they can make a living, and also as people use their land, to make sure we’re continuing to protect the natural resources. A lot of people are moving into the cities, and we need to make sure we have jobs and economic opportunities for them. 

Snow: There are problems that are unique to both the rural and the urban ring. These issues are dealt with on a case by case basis, such as cell towers, zoning issues, trash burning, and noise.

Q: What do you think are the three most pressing issues in the county right now? Do you think it’s important for the county to preserve its small, rural schools, or should Albemarle be considering Buckingham’s model of a consolidated primary school?

Palmer: Keeping rural areas rural while supporting citizens’ efforts to make a living. There’s a lot of pressure there. We need to protect quality of life for people in rural areas, and also protect natural resources for now and future generations. Moving forward with our schools, making sure we have the most excellent education for our children that we can have. The third one would be to improve quality of life for our urban dwellers. There are a lot of people moving into cities, and we need to make sure we have jobs and economic opportunities for them, and make sure that they have a good urban experience.

Our small schools are very important to quality of life in small rural communities. A lot of people move there just to have their children in those schools. So I’m in favor of keeping rural schools open. Buckingham has fewer people—we probably have five times the population in Albemarle County. We also have a larger land mass. Children in the southern portion [of Albemarle], if we consolidate our schools, would have to travel for an hour or more. That’s not right, and it’s not a good educational experience for a young child to have. I think the school are jewels. They’re very important to the quality of life.

Snow: Issues that are common to both [rural and urban] areas are schools, taxes, and roads.

Over the past four years, we’ve maintained the funding the county schools have needed and  kept open our small rural schools, despite the severe economic depression. The tax burden for the average County resident has gone down every year. As far as roads are concerned, we are making progress on the Hillsdale Connector, the widening of 29 to Hollymead, the additional on ramp to the 250 Bypass at Best Buy,  and a Bypass to the north which will eliminate 15 traffic lights.

Categories
Arts

Album reviews: The Civil Wars, BT, Travis

The Civil Wars

The Civil Wars/Columbia Records

After going on hiatus last year due to “internal discord and irreconcilable differences of ambition,” Joy Williams and John Paul White have a new album that begs the question: How could something so beautiful have come from two people who don’t speak to each other anymore? The longing and regret that permeates the gritty Americana rock single “The One that Got Away,” and the wistful country ode “Same Old, Same Old”’s story about a relationship ending are filled with autobiographical possibility. The raw, earthy “I Had Me a Girl” and the swirling, ominous rocker “Devil’s Backbone” are reminiscent of 2011’s Barton Hollow, and the way the duo carries a tune is still nothing short of rapturous. There’s a haunting cover of The Smashing Pumpkins’ “Disarm,” but the album’s most difficult moment might be in the genial-sounding, laid back closer, “D’Arline,” in which there’s no indication of strife. The album is fantastically bittersweet, and we can only hope that it’s not the final effort from The Civil Wars.

BT

A Song Across Wires/Armada Music

Technologist/composer/DJ Brian Transeau, a.k.a. BT has fused dance with rock, pop, hip-hop, and jazz for years, and created technology that allows him to do things with music that were previously unimaginable. He is back with his first club record in some time, A Song Across Wires, and it is beautiful. BT demonstrates his skill by creating epic, echoing instrumental dance tracks like “Skylarking,” and takes things to a rave-worthy level with hypnotic beats and dubstep pyrotechnics on “Tomahawk.” He deftly switches gears on “City Life,” mixing in synthesized, Asian-style percussion just to keep you on your toes. BT shines as a lyricist and singer on “Love Devine,” taking the track beyond its instrumental foundation, and his all-star list of guest vocalists—including Jes, Emma Hewitt, Nadia Ali and Aqualung—turn in solid performances. BT is still leading the in the genre of original dance music.

Travis

Where You Stand/Red Telephone Box

2008’s Ode to J. Smith, was a disaster of a release for the Brit rock band Travis. Taking five years to complete the follow-up, Where You Stand, seems to have paid off, because it ranks among the band’s very best. The echoing piano pop shuffler “Boxes” quietly laments commercialism, while on the piano ballad “The Big Screen” singer Fran Healy sings about how insignificant he sometimes feels. The mid-tempo rock of “Moving” bemoans inevitable continuity despite some of our best-laid plans, and “Mother” lets out glorious piano pop strains. Singer Fran Healy’s delicate, sometimes cracking falsetto juxtaposes wonderfully against the troubling content. The album feels significantly lighter and more upbeat than previous releases, and is organic, subtly engaging, and absolutely gorgeous.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Matt Venuti

Experience the sublime echoes of Global-Instrumentalist, Matt Venuti for a solo performance on the Hang (pronounced “hung”) on August 30 at Bridge Between The Worlds.  Matt has performed worldwide, and will bring his enlightening tones to the relaxing and serene environment of the retreat center.

Sometimes described as a “sound sculpture,” the hang (pronounced “hung”) is a Swiss steel instrument akin to the steel drum. Bounded by the limited chords and scales of his unusual instrument, Venuti will sing and explore his palette with free-form melodies and peaceful rhythms.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW6Rrp7X3dw#t=229

Matt has been a professional musician for almost 30 years, perfecting his craft across an array of instruments and styles.  With a background in jazz, electronic and world music, Matt has brought his talents full circle by combining his experience as a solo artist, as well as part of various ensembles, through the Hang.

Made only in Berne, Switzerland, the Hang is a one-of-a-kind steel instrument, akin to a steel drum, that produces other-worldly sounds.  However, unlike the common steel drum, the Hang requires and produces a much more nuanced range of styles and sounds (some compare it to wood wind instruments, or even the harp), creating an entire range of melody and rhythms all within one instrument.   This is made possible because of the design of the instrument, as well as the unique metal alloy called Pang (pronounced “pung”) that the Hang is made from.  The Hang, created by Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer, is only played by a handful of people throughout the world.

Aside from the material and design of the Hang, part of what makes this instrument so unique is that it only has about 7 true notes, and while it is possible to play structured chords or scales, the instrument lends itself to free-form very easily.  This is what Matt loves so much about the instrument, and what he feels challenges him to become a more creative musician.  The limitations of the scope of the instrument causes Matt to “minimalize what I do, and explore from within a smaller frame of reference, and then a world opens up.”  Rather than focusing on the common range of sounds from top to bottom, the Hang explores the infinity between two spaces (or notes). Listening to the hang is akin to an existential experience. ~James Stimpson

Friday, 8/30. 7:00PM with a reception beforehand at 6:00PM. Bridge Between the Worlds Event Center, 2395 Paddock Wood Road, Keswick. 293-9708.

 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Shakespeare Winery Tour

Verdant vistas, local wines, and 17th century pastoral comedy collide in the Hamner Theater’s second annual Shakespeare Winery Tour. Five weekend performances of the Bard’s classic As You Like It will move from venue
to venue, gracing the stages and picnic grounds of vineyards and cideries from Scottsville to Amherst, and they’re sure to bring out the “bardolatry” in all who attend.

Through 9/28. $12, 7pm. Various locations. 960-5936.