Categories
Arts

Taking the story off the page

When Andy Friedman enrolled in the Rhode Island School of Design, he devoted himself to Venetian oil painting, a skill so intricate that each work takes an average of three years to finish.

“I knew that after college I would have to get a job, and I wanted to know the feeling of complete and utter pride in a work I painted by hand while I still had the time to devote 18 hours a day to doing it,” Friedman said.

As graduation approached, he applied the final coat of varnish to his single work of art—and ruined it. “That is when I discovered country blues [music] and my relationship with a more truthful vision of perfection materialized,” said Friedman.

The career that followed has included musical performance, illustration, cartooning, and writing. A journey that began in New York, crisscrossed the country, and will touch down at Miller’s on March 4, when Friedman reads true stories from his life on the road before Matt Lorenz performs with his throat-singing one-man band, The Suitcase Junket.

Lorenz, who initially invited Friedman to perform songs with him, conceded to let him read unpublished essays instead. “It’s a testament to how artistically adventurous [Lorenz] is,” Friedman said.

In his own life, Friedman shifts art forms for utility’s sake. “The mediums themselves are nothing but tools,” he said, “like you’d choose a paintbrush or pencil. Painting is a tool, photography is a tool, and the English language is a tool for me to use at my discretion. If I need to write a story, I’ll write a story.”

After graduating, Friedman worked at The New Yorker, and ended up in the office of cartoon editor Bob Mancoff. He began selling his own cartoons intermittently, and once his first illustration for the magazine was published, he took a leap of faith.

“The slideshow poet industry was hiring,” he told me over the phone from his home in Brooklyn. We both laughed. “With the prospects of maybe doing more illustration and selling a cartoon here and there, I thought I’d supplement that income by travelling around the country offering a slideshow performance I had developed.”

Slideshow poetry combined live music with visual art projections. “I didn’t know how to play guitar, never sang a note in my life,” he said, but he taught himself the basics, got busy writing tunes, and toured with a self-published book of drawings and Polaroid photos that he sold like an album.

He spent nights in hotel rooms drawing after performance venues closed. As his client list grew to include Rolling Stone, Playboy, and The New York Times, his body began to protest. “I got three hours of sleep, drank a lot of coffee, and I didn’t really know how to play the guitar,” Friedman said. “So every night my fingers would bleed, and I started to feel it in my hands. For a while I knew life without the possibly of drawing, and it scared me into health.”

He stopped touring two years ago, digging into home life in Brooklyn and his own reflections of life on the road. “If I’m not here, then everything that I learned, all the stories go with me. That’s what’s motivating me, the desire to get it down,” Friedman said.

But this work isn’t a novel, he reminded me. It’s a way, like singing or painting, to tell stories from his life. “Any artist can do anything they want to do at any given time,” he said. “The art world that I see is just a celebration of that idea.”

Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Josh Lowry

On Fridays, we feature five food finds from local chefs and personalities. Today’s picks come from Josh Lowry, sous chef of Zocalo (and earlier this week Zy.De.Co.) Lowry’s picks:

1)  Thai Beef Consomme Noodle Bowl at Pad Thai. “Rich, brothy, crunchy, sweet, sour, savory. It’s everything in a bowl…the best!”

2)  Pastrami and Swiss on an Onion Bagel with mustard at Bodo’s.  “We are extremely lucky to have a place like this in Charlottesville. Let’s not take it for granted.”

3)  The Classic #1 at Chick-fil-A. “My all-time favorite restaurant. When I was a kid they always had sweet old ladies out front with free chicken samples. I always walked by a second time for another free taste…they almost always let me.”

4)  Dan Dan Noodles at Taste of China. “I know most folks have gone over to Peter Chang’s new spot but this is my go-to. Again, Charlottesville is lucky to have a place like this.”

5. Burrata at Tavola. “If you haven’t been…go!”

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
Living

Sweat it out: Hot Yoga Charlottesville celebrates 10 years of classes at 105 degrees

I’m no stranger to sweat. As a runner who doesn’t consider it a successful workout unless Niagara Falls is pouring down my face, I actually kind of love it. I’ve got a dresser drawer full of moisture-wicking shorts, tops, and socks, and there’s something satisfying about returning home red-faced and in need of a shower. But after last week’s class at Hot Yoga Charlottesville, I have even more appreciation for the power of a good sweat.

Located at 216 W. Water St. near the Downtown Mall, Hot Yoga Charlottesville is a boutique studio that offers Bikram-style yoga classes—and when they say hot, they’re not kidding. The room is heated to at least 105 degrees Fahrenheit. The Friday morning class I took—which includes the same 26 postures each time—was 90 minutes long, and that was more than enough time to sweat out what felt like every toxin in my body.

Studio owner Lizzie Clark, who led the Friday morning class, started the business after getting hooked on hot yoga in Washington, D.C. She moved here on a whim, and nobody was holding any hot yoga classes in Charlottesville at the time, she said, so she dragged space heaters into a tiny room in her apartment for her own practice until opening the studio in 2004.

“Charlottesville is kind of a seeker’s paradise,” Clark said. “It was the type of place where I wanted to live, and luckily, it’s the perfect place to open a hot yoga studio.”

I arrived at the studio a few minutes before my morning class last week, decked out in spandex shorts and a loose-fitting sleeveless shirt, per the website’s suggestion. After filling out some paperwork and chatting with the instructor of a different class I attended several weeks ago, I gathered up my gray and pink yoga mat, a towel, and a bottle full of ice water, and followed my fellow yogis into the exercise room.

The heat engulfed me as soon as I stepped into the 105-degree room. For a moment I forgot what I was there for, and all I could think was “Holy shit it’s hot. Why is it so hot in here?” I felt my muscles relax almost immediately, and I slowly made my way to the front corner where I spread out my mat, inhaled deeply—well, as deeply you can when it feels like someone’s holding a hot water-soaked pillowcase over your head—and tried to mentally prepare myself for the next hour and a half.

Clark said the extreme heat is, naturally, what new students tend to struggle with the most. Especially when it’s 30 degrees outside and the body is accustomed to the cold, a fight-or-flight reaction upon entering the room for the first time is normal. But the heat resonates in a way that other yoga doesn’t compare to, she said.

“I just love the sweat, and the intensity it brings. It makes my mind clear,” Clark said. “I can’t possibly think about what’s on aisle seven at the grocery store when I’m balancing on one leg and dripping out of places I didn’t know made sweat.”

We started out with some slow breathing exercises, stretching our necks and leaning our heads back to open up the air passages and acclimate our bodies and lungs to the heat. (I found myself getting antsy during these first few minutes; I just wanted to get moving.) We spent the first 10-15 minutes standing up and looking straight ahead, so when Clark told us to lower ourselves into a forward fold and my eyes were inches away from my knees for the first time, I was startled and moderately impressed by the giant beads of sweat trickling down my calves. Do calves even have sweat glands?

I was familiar with most of the positions we contorted ourselves into, and for the few I hadn’t come across before, I had plenty of time to figure them out. We held each pose for long, burn-inducing periods, and we cycled through each set twice—I wasn’t thrilled about the repetition at first, but came around to the idea that if I didn’t nail it the first time around, I got a second chance.

At the end of the class, Clark instructed us to lie down for savasana, the resting pose. She handed each of us a small, cool washcloth soaked in lavender, which she described as “the proverbial carrot” of the class.

An hour and a half earlier, I thought I’d be the first one dashing out of the room to escape the heat. But with the cloth draped over my eyes, I allowed my arms and legs to relax and my body sank into my sweat-drenched mat; I had no desire to move.

When I described that feeling of genuine contentment to Clark, she laughed in agreement.

“There’s something magical about it,” she said. “It’s powerful. You just feel that current in your body, and you know that if you move, you’re going to lose that current.”

For class schedules, rates, and more information about the studio, check out www.bikram yogacville.com. 

Words to the wise

  • Hydrate more than you think you need to in the 24 hours leading up to your session. Drink at least three liters of water the day before, and bring a bottle of cold water with you to class.
  • Wear comfortable, moisture-wicking clothing like tight-fitting spandex shorts. Men: T-shirts are optional. Women: sports bra or T-shirt.
  • Fight the urge to be competitive. Regardless of what those around you are doing, take a breather and rest whenever you need to. Studio owner Lizzie Clark said sitting is often better than muscling through something, and backing off can be more therapeutic than pushing through.
  • The studio provides mats and towels, but you’re welcome to bring your own if you want to save a little cash.
Categories
Arts

Film review: 3 Days to Kill may be three too many

By now we’re all familiar with Luc Besson’s oeuvre, right? You may remember him as the writer responsible for resurrecting Liam Neeson’s career with Taken, a movie in which young women can do nothing for themselves while older men beat the shit out of other men who would do the women harm.

With Taken, Besson sort of launched the older-white-guy-as-killing-machine genre that had previously been ruled by younger guys in the 1980s (yes, Stallone and Schwarz-
enegger were young once). Neeson has made it his bread and butter. Following Taken, Neeson made Taken 2, The Grey, Unknown, and coming soon, Non-Stop.

Besson has moved on, sort of. Whereas once all the women in his movies were helpless, they now kick ass (The Family, which is a terrible movie) or avoid it altogether (3 Days to Kill), unless they’re Amber Heard, in which case it’s unclear what she does (again, 3 Days to Kill).

This time around the old white guy is Ethan Renner (Kevin Costner), a secret agent lifer who kills with speed but usually leaves a mess. Vivi Delay (Heard) is running an operation to kill The Wolf (Richard Sammel) and The Albino (Tómas Lemarquis)—it should be noted that these names are said throughout the movie with straight faces. Ethan blows killing The Albino in the opening minutes, but that’s because he has undiagnosed brain cancer and passes out during a foot chase. He does, however, shoot The Albino in the ankle and leave him with a limp.

Fast forward: Ethan is diagnosed, told he’ll die in three months, and he subsequently retires and moves to Paris to spend his remaining time with his estranged wife Christine (Connie Nielsen) and daughter Zooey (Hailee Steinfeld). Neither of them is thrilled, but Christine agrees to let him back into their lives because of his illness. She makes Ethan promise he won’t tell Zooey he’s dying and that he’ll never go back to the life. He agrees to both.

If only life were so simple! Vivi has other plans, and like Michael Corleone, Ethan finds himself pulled back in. Soon he’s tracking The Albino and The Wolf while dispatching lots of bad guys and beating French dudes who make fun of him for wearing what, to them, look like cowboy clothes.

3 Days to Kill wouldn’t be so awkward if it knew what to do with itself. Like lots of Besson-written movies, it treads uneasily between super violence, drama, and clumsy comedy. It also, like lots of Besson movies, treats the young women as objects to be ogled or saved, except for Heard’s Vivi, whose character makes no sense. More than once she sends Ethan to kill some guys but then kills them herself. So what’s his purpose? Or hers?

In addition to father-daughter storylines, there’s also a marriage storyline, a how-do-we-raise-kids storyline, an African family squatting in Ethan’s apartment, and Ethan’s hallucinations resulting from an experimental drug regimen. And, last but not least, The Albino drops an elevator on a woman’s head in the first five minutes of a PG-13 comedy.

Playing this week

12 Years A Slave
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

About Last Night
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

American Hustle
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Endless Love
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Frozen
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Gravity
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Her
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

In Secret
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Lego Movie
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Lone Survivor
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Monuments Men
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Nut Job
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

On the Waterfront
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Philomena
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Pompeii
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Robocop
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Ride Along
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Winter’s Tale
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Wolf of Wall Street
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Movie houses

Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
Arts

Wye Oak reinvents itself by embracing distance

Wye Oak’s 2011 long player, Civilian, was the band’s breakout record. It was the third release from the duo of Jenn Wasner and Andy Stack, and their first for the vaunted North Carolina indie label Merge.

It was a profile-raising album, and one of the most highly lauded recordings of that year, allowing Wasner and Stack to quit their day jobs.

“Obviously, things were going really well for us as a band,” Wasner said. “Civilian was the first point we made money off our music. We were in the hole forever, which is fine—that’s not the reason we [make music].”

Not long after its biggest success, Wye Oak faced, arguably, its biggest challenge.

After two years of constant touring behind Civilian, Wasner and Stack found themselves on opposite coasts and the band’s bright future was uncertain.

“The only thing that was going to keep us together was the music, figuring out an idea that we were excited about,” Wasner said. “And until we did that, I was pretty much ready to say, ‘If I have to start waiting tables again, so be it.’ But I won’t make something I don’t believe in just because I can make money off it.”

The band’s forthcoming release Shriek, was born out of separation. It marks a new direction for the group and a drastic shift in the duo’s creative process. It was in part necessitated by distance—with Wasner in Baltimore and Stack in Portland, the two traded home-recorded demos, which, Wasner said, opened up new methods for developing melodies.

“My roommate is watching this all unfold and she was like, ‘I feel like I’m watching music moving into this new era of possibility,” Wasner laughed.

But the marked shift in the creative process is more fundamental: Whereas Wasner wrote much of the band’s first three records on the guitar, she found herself increasingly frustrated with its limitations.

“The amount of time I’d spent playing the guitar, it acquired some sort of negative connotation,” Wasner said. “The idea being that the guitar itself had acquired this negative energy associated with this really difficult time in my life.”

Shriek basically inverts the roles of Wye Oak’s players: Where Stack once played droning bass lines on keyboards as he pounded drums, he now occupies the upper register where Wasner’s guitar once resided.

“I still love the guitar,” said Wasner. “I play the guitar all the time. But when I sat down to try and write new songs, it was a curse, it made it impossible to write anything that felt fresh.”

Wasner, in turn, plays to the low end of the new record with bass and synthesizers, freeing her breathy alto to explore previously unmapped melodic territory.

In eschewing the guitar entirely—“There’s not a lick of guitar on this whole record,” Wasner told Spin last year, during the recording of Shriek—she found much-needed inspiration.

“I didn’t decide I’d write keyboard songs or bass songs or whatever the hell,” she said. “You just have to chase that muse, whatever it is, and the guitar just had too much baggage. I just needed to step away from it to be creative at all. It was going to be everything else or nothing.”

So gone are the squalls of distorted guitar. In their place are latticed patterns of layered pianos and synths that meld the roles, and various instruments, of both players. “I never thought of Wye Oak as a guitar band anyway,” Wasner said. “We’re a songwriting vehicle.”

Shriek also places renewed emphasis on Wye Oak’s considerable songwriting prowess. It largely explores the personal struggle for peace—but within the instinctive, unconscious mind. To wit, the first lines of opening cut “Before”: “This morning, I woke up on the floor/Feeling like I’d never dreamed before.”

Where Civilian was nominally a rock ‘n’ roll record, Shriek operates in the outer orbit, the larger zeitgeist of electronic pop—think a more direct Future Islands or a less washed-out Washed Out — and its songs are filled with bright synths and a steady thump.

Shriek still packs the cathartic releases dispensed readily on Civilian, but delivers them in different ways. Where a guitar would have roared through the punchy chorus of “The Tower,” Shriek’s first single, a processed loop glides just above the main melody, guided by percussive synths that recall Wasner’s pop-leaning side project Dungeonesse; cellos add weight to the verses’ otherwise Spartan frames.

The throbbing “Glory” plays with a similar dynamic, filling the space where a blustery guitar riff would have propelled with controlled keyboard stabs and tight synth lines.

The emotional core of Shriek is the penultimate track “I Know the Law.” It’s a stunning ballad that finds Wasner purging feelings of helplessness. The song resonates with empowerment, delivered by someone who has put her own personal cosmos in order.

“I wasn’t used to tapping into that impulse when I wasn’t melting down and losing my mind,” Wasner says. “And I think that this record sounds a little more joyous and ecstatic. It’s interesting to learn how to tap into these other mental resources. I think it resulted in some of my favorite songs I’ve ever written.”

While Wye Oaks’ reinvention has yielded a daring and winning collection of songs, translating its retooled sound into a live setting has proved somewhat problematic.

“It’s been very, very, very hard,” Wasner said. “It’s been unquestionably the most difficult thing we’ve had to do as a band.”

Stack lives in Texas now and Wasner said they’ve crammed two month’s worth of rehearsal for the upcoming tour into two weeks. (Though she does ignore a call from Stack to continue the interview.)

Charlottesville is its first stop.“It’s a pretty high anxiety zone,” she said. “We’re sort of in that weird zone where very few people have heard the record, and we don’t know how they’re going to react to it. “

Wasner readily concedes that first impression might not be positive, and she anticipates some measure of blowback from longtime fans presented with such a radical reinvention.

“I do worry about it, because how could you not,” she said. “But I refuse to let it matter. One thing I know for sure is the approval of others is a pale substitute for the approval of yourself. In a way, it’s a triumph because for a while I didn’t know I’d ever write a song I was happy with again.”

Indeed, it’s a triumph that Wye Oak still lives, and by embracing reinvention, exists in a whole new form.

“We’ve basically built an entire new band,” Wasner laughed. “We’re hoping it’ll fly. And if it doesn’t, it’ll crash and burn. Maybe that’s the selling point right there.” –Patrick Wall

Wye Oak performs at The Southern Café and Music Hall on March 3.

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School City Center?

Meet Literacy Volunteers Tutor Gail Rubin and her student Pamela

In Gail Rubin’s six years at Literacy Volunteers of Charlottesville / Albemarle (LVCA), she’s worked with students from around the world, including Afghanistan, Tibet, Russia, South Korea, and most recently Chile. Her experience is not unusual—this year, Literacy Volunteers tutors at the Jefferson School City Center have worked with students from 38 countries.

Rubin decided to pair her love of languages with a desire to help adults and maybe even brush up on her Spanish skills. “I have found, of course, that it is not at all necessary to have the student’s language,” she said, indicating that it is just now—after six years with LVCA—that she is working with a Spanish-speaking student. Her student is Pamela, a young woman from Argentina who is here while her husband pursues his PhD in astronomy at UVa.

Gail’s love of language stems from her college years, majoring in French and living abroad in France and Germany.  She and her husband Steven traveled extensively as sailors for many years, exploring the waters around their summer cabin in Nova Scotia.  These explorations nurtured her curiosity about other cultures as well as her empathy for individuals in the United States navigating a foreign language.

Gail started working with Pamela last year and both women enjoy their time together. “I have friends, but Latin friends,” Pamela explained, indicating that she doesn’t have the opportunity to speak English regularly in her daily life. “Literacy Volunteers is my place. It is where I can speak English, only English.” In addition to twice weekly meetings with Gail, Pamela also attends one of LVCA’s conversation groups at the Jefferson School City Center.

“Pamela’s very committed to learning English while she’s here,” added Gail. “She knows how to study and she’ll take materials home and review vocabulary or whatever we worked on by herself. I’ve also had the occasion to invite her and her husband to the house, and just be social. We’re friends, and that’s fun.”

The next volunteer training opportunity for individuals who want to become LVCA tutors is on March 22, 2014. For more information, call 977-3838.

The Women’s Initiative Hosts Mindfulness Journaling 

From March 10-April 21, The Women’s Initiative will be hosting a Mindful Journaling Group on Mondays, 12:00-1:00pm at its High Street location (1101 E. High Street, Suite A). Each meeting of the group will feature a period of mindfulness meditation, followed by opportunities to respond to journal prompts that will help the writer feel grounded in the present moment and connected to herself as a writer and woman. No experience in meditation or writing is necessary; simply bring a willingness to relax, breathe, and spend time writing in fellowship with others. Lisa Ellison, Ed.S, NCC, and TWI Clinician will facilitate the sessions. This is a drop-in group. Please call in advance or for more information: 434-872-0047.

Fitness and Safety Extravaganza at Jefferson School Saturday March 8

Carver Recreation Center and Martha Jefferson Starr Hill Center are partnering to throw a Fitness and Safety Extravaganza at the Jefferson School on March 8 from 10:00am-2:00pm. This family-friendly event will feature games, fitness activities, a bike rodeo, poison and fire prevention tips, and healthy food.

Comedian Darryl Littleton at African American Heritage Center

Darryl Littleton, author of Black Comedians on Black Comedy, Comediennes: Laugh be a Lady, and executive producer of Robert Townsend’s documentary,Why We Laugh will be performing at the African American Heritage Center on Wednesday, March 12. Doors open at 7pm event starts at 7:30 pm and tickets are $12.00 and $10.00 for students or seniors.

According to Fresh Fiction, Darryl Littleton began his career writing and performing radio sketches for “The Tom Joyner Morning Show” on CBS Radio. Since then, he has honed his stand-up skills and worked with other comedy stars, including Andrew Dice Clay, Eddie Griffin, George Wallace, Carlos Mencía, and Damon Wayans.

This event is made possible through the generous support of the Blue Moon Fund, Hampton Inn and Suites and WUVA 92.7

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

Grief, gratitude, and questions from husband and father of Keswick fire victims

Weeks after a January house fire killed a Keswick mother and her two children, grief-stricken husband and father Sadiqh Hussain expressed his gratitude to the community for an outpouring of support, including a fundraiser that has brought in more than $50,000.

He dismissed questions about the fire department’s response time and a change to the mutual aid agreement between the county and city fire departments, saying he doubts that a few minutes faster response by firefighters would have made a difference for his family.

“They did everything they could,” said Hussain, who was injured attempting to rescue his wife, Sayeda Nadia Ghaffer, his 7-year-old stepson Ammar Sheikh, and his 2-year-old daughter Aiza Hussain, who all died of smoke inhalation and thermal exposure in the blaze.

He does, however, have questions about why the multiple functioning smoke detectors in his second-story apartment—including one he had purchased and installed just weeks before the fire— didn’t give his family enough warning to allow them to escape from a fire that had already ignited by the time he arrived home from work at the Keswick Hall hotel around 1:30am on January 18.

The county fire investigation ruled the cause of the fire undetermined, but found it started near a baseboard heater in the second floor living room, and former Charlottesville Fire Chief Julian Taliaferro said fires started in such a manner most often begin with a smoldering phase before converting to flames.

When Hussain opened the front door that night, the fire was already well underway, although he didn’t immediately understand what was happening as he stood in the dark at the bottom of the staircase that led up to the apartment where his wife and the children should have been sleeping peacefully. He tried the light switch, but it didn’t work, and for a brief moment standing in the dark, he said, he couldn’t make sense of the burning smell and what he described as a “wobbling” noise.

Suddenly, he was hit full force by a plume of thick, acrid smoke and scorching heat that rushed down the stairs. He stumbled backwards coughing, and once outside, looked upstairs and saw flames in the living room.

Hussain made multiple frantic attempts to enter the apartment with a ladder thrown up against the house as windows blew out around him and he saw flames in his children’s bedroom. Each time he tried to crawl into the house through a window, he said, he was forced back by overwhelming heat and smoke that made it impossible to breathe and would later require him to receive medical treatment for burns to his hands and face and smoke inhalation.

“I couldn’t get in,” he said, describing calling to his family over and over but hearing only the roaring of the fire and a faint beeping which he believes was at least one smoke detector sounding before it was destroyed.

Like many protective parents, Hussain and his wife, who went by Nadia, had taken steps to ensure their children were trained on how to escape the home in a fire. They instructed Ammar, Aiza, and Hussain’s two older children from a previous marriage to use a second story door to access a porch off the bedroom they shared in case of a fire. The landlord had provided a ladder, Hussain said, and smoke detectors were already present and functioning when the family moved in eight months before the fire.

Neither Hussain, the fire department, nor the landlords, Kristi and Dan O’Donnell, knew what kind of detectors were present in the apartment, but the detector Hussain purchased for less than $10 at Kmart just weeks before the fire was most likely an ionization, since that’s the only type Kmart sells for that price. Statistics show that’s the type found in 90 percent of American homes.

What Hussain didn’t know when he made that purchase is that ionization detectors don’t actually respond to smoke; they sound only once flames are present.

It’s that flaw that has led multiple states including Massachusetts and Vermont to change their laws regarding smoke detectors after repeated testing has shown that ionization detectors fail to detect smoke particles from smoldering fires—the type most likely to kill people when they’re sleeping.

Those states, numerous localities across the United States, and several foreign countries, including Australia, now require photoelectric detectors, which sound as much as an hour earlier than ionization detectors during a smoldering fire, giving residents time to wake up and escape before they’re incapacitated by carbon monoxide and other poisons released during a fire’s smoldering phase.

In 2008, the International Association of Fire Fighters formally endorsed photoelectric detectors and recommended that state laws be changed to require photoelectric technology. The International Association of Fire Chiefs recommends combination detectors, which utilize both types of technology.

That’s also the type recommended by both Albemarle and Charlottesville fire departments. While officials from each department announced in 2008 that they would determine the type of detector present in every fire as a standard part of the investigation, Albemarle Fire Chief Dan Eggleston said the department now only investigates whether the detectors sounded and does not routinely check what type of detector was present.

Questions about the Keswick fire and detector function will likely never be answered since the cause of the blaze was undetermined, and the detectors were not recovered from the rubble. While fire officials believe the mother and her children were together in her bedroom when they died, there are few clues about their efforts to escape, since much of the second floor collapsed before investigators could examine it.

Hussain wonders if the detectors failed his family, and he hopes his devastating loss may help prevent other tragedies.

“Every father and husband wishes to take care of his family,” said Hussain, who is considering becoming a volunteer firefighter as a way to honor his late wife and children, and to increase fire safety awareness. “I feel there’s a purpose for me being alive. I want to help other fathers protect their families.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Iration

Sunny California meets the Aloha spirit in the alt-reggae troupe Iration, comprised of childhood friends Joseph Dickens, Adam Taylor, Cayson Peterson, Micah Pueschel, and Joseph King. The five-piece is currently gigging on its third release, Automatic, which features a collaboration with Cage the Elephant guitarist Lincoln Parish. The album skyrocketed up the Billboard and iTunes reggae charts, proving these Hawaiian-bred indie mainstays can keep hands swaying and hearts beating.

Sunday 2/2. $15-17, 7:30pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Arts

Dragon is fun, breathtaking, and ridiculous

For Americans seeking a good introduction to the appeal of martial arts films in general, and the talents of Bruce Lee in particular, the obvious starting point is usually Enter the Dragon. By 1973, action movies had already dominated the Hong Kong film industry for decades, but Dragon – an international production by Golden Harvest and Warner Brothers – was the hit that opened the floodgates for Western interest in Eastern genre films, and made Lee an international icon mere months after his premature death. Kung-Fu connoisseurs inevitably prefer films that are somewhat lesser-known in the West, many of which more purely and accurately represent the achievements of Hong Kong action cinema, but Enter the Dragon is widely regarded as a classic, not only as a gateway drug for action junkies but as a ludicrously enjoyable 70’s B-movie in its own right.

Lee, who had trained in martial arts from a young age throughout a childhood divided between the US and Hong Kong, had made his first big break as an actor as the sidekick Kato in Fox’s TV series The Green Hornet (an appealing, if silly, short-lived production of which Lee was the clear highlight) before returning to Hong Kong to carve out a career as an action star. Though his filmography is spotty, to say the least (and rife with posthumously assembled Frankenfilms and dubious, tangentially-related cash-ins), Lee remains an indelibly appealing star whose status an icon is clearly well-deserved. In addition to his formidable skills as a martial artist, the strikingly handsome Lee is also overwhelmingly charismatic, possessing a sly, endearing humor, and capable of projecting a fierce physical intensity that has rarely been equaled since by performers in any genre. Enter the Dragon’s primary appeal lies in the fact that it remains the most clear and competent showcase for Lee’s considerable talents.

But the rest is what carries the film over from a mere showcase to memorable cult classic, and the elements surrounding Lee read like a wish-list of early-70’s exploitation gold: the co-stars include B-movie lifers John Saxon (Black Christmas, Tenebrae) and Jim Kelly (Black Samurai, Black Belt Jones), as well future Hong Kong legends like Sammo Hung and a brief appearance by a very young Jackie Chan. The plot is wonderfully absurd, a willfully transparent James Bond knock-off in which Lee plays an undercover secret agent, competing in an international martial-arts tournament held on the private island owned by a cackling supervillian with a metal claw for a hand, who may also have been responsible for killing Lee’s sister. It’s shot in vividly colorful widescreen, wrapped in a score by Lalo Shifrin (of Mission: Impossible fame), and culminates with a showdown in a hall of mirrors.

Whether you’re an action neophyte looking for a fun flick, or an obsessive who’s paused freeze-frames of every bone-breaking spin-kick, Enter the Dragon is a solid classic, worth enjoying on the big screen.

Friday, 2/28. Free, 7:30pm. The Packard Theater at the Library of Congress, 19053 Mount Pony Road, Culpeper. (540) 829-0292.

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TEDx at UVA: Making the path

A 20-year old mountain climber scales the world’s seven highest summits in support of gay and lesbian rights. A fourth-year computer-engineering student at UVA is recognized by many around the world as the king and founder of his own country. And a junior at Harvard University is appointed by Hillary Clinton to the U.S. National Commission for the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural organization (UNESCO) as the youngest member in history.

Those were just a few of the speakers chosen to embody the theme of “Make the Path,” the motto for last Saturday’s TEDx UVA conference at the University, which drew about 100 students to Nau Hall for presentations by students, professors, and others invited to join the local conference.

TEDx events are local, independently organized versions of the larger global TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) educational and inspirational conferences, constructed around the umbrella theme of “Ideas Worth Spreading.” Saturday’s conference was the second of these conferences in the Charlottesville area in recent months since TEDx Charlottesville in November at the Paramount Theater, and the second one at UVA since 2013.

Porter Nenon, an undergraduate student in the College of Arts and Sciences, oversaw the student-run event as main curator of the organizing staff, who took the theme of “Make the Path” from a quote from Stephen Colbert’s valedictorian speech for the UVA graduating class of 2013, in which Colbert encouraged graduating students, in a declining job market, to “make the path for yourself.”

Nenon said the process for organizing such independent, local TED events is relatively simple. Licenses are granted one at a time by city, state, and region so as to prevent concurrent TEDx events with the same name, and once approved for a license, organizers are given a 126-page manual on how to conduct their conference.

“They’re honestly really great at letting TEDx tailor events to their local communities, and to tend their attendees in the best way they can,” Nenon said.

Katie Morley, the chair of the speakers committee, the division of the organizing staff responsible for arranging presenters, said the conferences permit full creative control by the planners.

“You just say that you’re going to abide by the rules,” she said. “It’s run completely by the people doing the TEDx. It’s conducive to what TED wants to create, seeing what people out there are doing, diversifying from the mainstream.”

The organizing staff chose presenters, including students, faculty, and guest speakers, who focused their talks around their personal experiences in forging their own paths in their careers, personal lives, and experiences, as well as encouraging others on how to do the same. The student organizers tried to appeal to the larger UVA student body, they said, picking  presenters based on the relevancy of their talks to the modern college experience. Even the format of the talks, presented in one of the lecture rooms of Nau Hall, UVA’s history building, seemed to reflect the traditional lecture format to which most college students are accustomed in their classes.

Karsten Coates, a second-year UVA student and poet, used his TED talk, “Between Lust and Love,” to examine the apparent confusion surrounding the relationship between sexuality and romantic attraction in college culture. Coates believes live speech is a particularly effective way to spread messages such as this.

 “The spoken word is an art form that people don’t engage in as much as they should,” he said. “I try to engage people with this new art form, and to use the art form to spread ideas worth sharing. “

“By presenting it through poetry,” he said, “it permits metaphors and imagery and helps people to relate to it on a personal level, rather than on a quantitative or qualitative level, where you might not appreciate the emotions at play.”

Nenon said that the main goal of the event was to connect students at the University to their peers and faculty.

“By far the purpose is to encourage connections that wouldn’t happen in traditional classroom settings,” he said. “It pushes the boundaries of academic discipline in a way that is a good complement to traditional classroom learning that students do on a weekly basis.”—Matthew Fay