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Arts

Album reviews: Audrey Rose, Jillian Edwards, and Daniel Ellsworth and the Great Lakes

Audrey Rose

The Bomb Shelter Sessions/Self-released

Nashville-based singer-songwriter Audrey Rose strikes a chord on her latest EP, The Bomb Shelter Sessions. These five songs have a beautiful grittiness that conveys a young woman’s struggles, joys, pains, and moments of respite in a powerful way. “Rising Up” parlays a subtle acoustic opening into a raucous tune, mirrored by the line “Trouble’s rising up,” and “Run” is a sexy piece of echoing pop rock about freedom. “Stars” is the dreamy mid-tempo rock number you might expect from the title, while “Sky to Fall” flexes a unique ambient-meets-acoustic sensibility that isn’t found elsewhere on the EP. But for this reviewer’s money, “Southern Cross” is Rose’s pièce de résistance—soulful, skyscraping vocals, over kinetic rock courtesy of an organ on fire, and lyrics like “Stones that I have thrown/Remind me of my own sins,” place Rose at the height of musical prowess and passion.

Jillian Edwards

Daydream/Self-released

At the end of 2011, Jillian Edwards released a gem of an album entitled Headfirst. Mixing ambient folk and pop sensibilities together with ease, and augmenting insightful songs with rich, breathy vocals, Edwards revealed herself as an artist to watch. Daydream proves to be no less intriguing. Edwards muses on everything from love to forgiveness (“Apologies”) and offers a stream of consciousness look at what makes her such a complex woman on “Room”. She charms you with lovable pop rockers like “A Thousand Years,” and the title track is a lush piece of spine-
tingling, ambient folk. A number of the tracks are lyrical tributes to a lover or a friend, but her loyalty is to God (the swelling orchestral pop track “Sink My Feet” is a great example of this), and on the acoustic finale “Just a Little While,” Edwards makes clear her intention to soldier on until Christ returns.

Daniel Ellsworth and the Great Lakes

Kid Tiger/Deer Head Music

Break out your dancing shoes for this one. Daniel Ellsworth and the Great Lakes’ sophomore record is a locomotive with a head full of steam. Whether channeling bands like Paper Route on the piano track “Idle Warning” or sending up hooks galore on pop numbers like “Ready Set,” there is never a dull moment. The jangly, echoing synth rock that guides “Tourniquet” is infectious and the opening rocker “Waves” is loaded with soaring melodies. Ellsworth’s vocals navigate higher and lower registers with ease and frequency, and when paired with the right song—“Idle Warning,” for example—the results are downright sexy. “Little Light” is a curve ball and arguably the album’s most accomplished number—a stomper made epic by saloon-style piano and thick ’70s-era classic rock touched off by warped audio that defines Kid Tiger as one hell of a good time.

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Arts

Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. gears up for the next record

Catchiness. It’s the pop song writer’s holy grail. But what is it about a song that gets it lodged in hipsters’ heads? Is it a combination of the perfect melody and a poetic hook? The right balance of whistling and “woo-woos”? Perhaps a horn-driven chorus? Cowbell anyone?

Whatever the formula, Detroit-based Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. is blessed with two songwriters that have a knack for finding it, even though instrument swapping frontmen Josh Epstein and Danny Zott say its not their aim.

“Sometimes you write a song, and it’s stuck in your own head,” Epstein told C-VILLE Weekly in a recent phone interview. “But you can’t really be objective about it. I’m sure we could try to write catchy songs, but that’s not what we’re setting out to do. We are not trying to make hit songs.”

Like a lot of bands from Detroit, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. claims some influence from Motown, which according to Epstein has a “sense of melody that is really catchy.” Still, the multi-instrumentalist is reluctant to say his band is devoted to any one style of music.

That sentiment seems truer than ever on the band’s latest LP, The Speed of Things. When the four-piece, rounded out by drummer Mike Higgins and keyboardist Jon Visger, motors through The Jefferson Theater on March 23, listeners will be treated to a sound that draws on a sweeping range of influences.

The Speed of Things opens with what sounds like a Fleet Foxes number, all soft vocal harmonies and soaring melodies, while placing a touch more emphasis on electronic elements than the Seattle-based rockers. In later songs, the album finds Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. sounding more like mainstream crossover kings Passion Pit (oozing with effervescent chanting and staccato choruses), the controlled chaos of Portland’s Menomena (another band with two songwriters who frequently swap instruments), or the Cold War Kids (with matter-of-fact, mid-range vocals).

“I don’t think about genre. I think we both like all different types of stuff, and it seeps into it,” Epstein said. “We just try to do what’s best for the song in any given situation. Sometimes it feels folky to me, sometimes hip-hoppy, sometimes poppy.”

It’s an easygoing process for a band formed via the path of least resistance—two self-taught music-scene knockabouts plying their trade in a city steeped with sonic tradition happen upon each other and find they click. Both are jacks-of-all-trades, according to Epstein, the two front men split everything “50/50,” from the songwriting to the singing to the instrumentation.

“We just both wanted to be in a band, or in a project, with someone else who could do everything—writing and producing and recording,” Epstein said. “Whoever has the idea, we just go with it. Sometimes ideas are more complete, and sometimes we end up writing together. We approach it from the song’s perspective and do whatever is best for the song.”

Epstein said he tends to throw out a lot of ideas while the band is developing songs, and that Zott is more capable of bringing ideas to fruition. The result on The Speed of Things is a somewhat mixed-up record that comes off as less focused than Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.’s previous recordings. Epstein would disagree with that assessment, though.

“We wanted to make a really focused album that kind of captured where we were at, and I think it does, lyrically and sonically,” he said.

If The Speed of Things is focused, one has to wonder where Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. is headed next. The goofy name may offer some indication: Epstein said the idea behind it was to be so off-the-wall and nonsensical that it would allow the band to do whatever it wanted without being pigeonholed, to render the cover of the Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. book completely unrelated to the content, as it were.

By the end of March, Epstein expects that he and Zott will be back in the studio crafting the band’s next chapter. The two songwriters have been working on the content; now it’s just a matter of finding the time to pull everything together, record, and produce the album—“as quickly as we can,” Epstein said. The timeline will be influenced by Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.’s record label, though, as Epstein admits there’s a part of the music business he still doesn’t understand, like when an EP might be pushed out.

When the album does eventually drop, Epstein said it will be different from anything he and Zott have done before, as Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.’s “musical vocabulary is always growing.” And while he said it was too early to say what the LP would sound like on the whole, it’s fair to expect there will be even more influences spewing forth.

For now, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. will try its hand once again at focus, finishing a tour that includes two more dates after the Charlottesville stop.

“The live show is really fun and high energy, and I’ll talk a lot about Dave Matthews,” Epstein said.

Presumably, he was joking. But Epstein, like his band, can be difficult to pin down.

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Magazines Real Estate

Choose Historic Madison County for Gorgeous Views and a Friendly Country Lifestyle

If you like the idea of living where you have space and privacy without having to worry about encroaching development, then Madison County may be the perfect place for you to find a new home. Madison County residents love its beautiful scenery and rural lifestyle and are committed to keeping it in this unspoiled state free of big box stores.

Once part of Culpeper County, Madison became its own entity in 1792 when it was created by an act of the General Assembly. It was named for the Madison family who owned property along the Rapidan River, of which James Madison, our fourth president who helped draft the US Constitution and author the Bill of Rights, is a descendent. Montpelier, his estate in nearby Orange County, continues to be a major tourist attraction today.

Madison has much to offer, including gorgeous mountain views and a host of outdoor activities to attract campers, hikers, hunters, and fishing enthusiasts. Graves Mountain Lodge, known for its rustic cabins and generous family style meals, is in Madison as is Old Rag Mountain, a popular destination for hikers and climbers. The county’s comprehensive plan that limits sewer facilities means large commercial developments are unlikely any time in the near future. At the same time, however, the county does encourage smaller businesses such as its thriving tourist industry.

The real estate market in Madison is doing well, and is finally recovering from the downturn of the last few years. While retirees (and people planning for retirement) often purchase property there, it is also a popular spot for people from DC and other nearby urban areas who want a quiet, private place to go on weekends as well as for those who choose to settle there and commute to jobs in cities such as Charlottesville, Culpeper and Fredericksburg.

Why Madison?
Every location has its own special appeal. Madison is “very rural,” said Christiane Lindsay with Montague Miller & Co. It has great farmland and wonderful views. If you live in the east end of the county you can enjoy the panoramic views at a distance, she explained, while those in the western end of the county can “live in the views.”

People enjoy Madison’s private and rural atmosphere, which is close enough to urban centers to be a convenient weekend getaway while not too remote to easily access modern conveniences. “You can be back in the hills, but in short order be in Charlottesville or even DC,” Lindsay continued. “It’s truly a country retreat,” but, she added that those who want to get out quickly and find good restaurants, theatres or shopping in town can do so.

There are also good places to eat without leaving the area such as the nearby Willow Grove Inn which, Lindsay says, “is as good as it gets.” It has a great restaurant and she explained she is “thrilled” to be able to show it off to visiting friends and real estate clients. A variety of local B & Bs are good stopping points for those passing through or those who want to enjoy Madison’s natural beauty or many activities. They also are convenient for county residents who need a comfortable place to put up guests when they come for a visit.

Tomarie Boyd, with Re/Max Crossroads in Culpeper, described the Madison lifestyle in glowing terms, pointing out that the county is not only lovely it is also “very laid back compared to Culpeper or Spotsylvania. It’s just a less hectic way of life,” she said, explaining that once people settle in Madison “they never want to move anywhere else. There isn’t a lot of turnover there,” she added.
Boyd also explained that many people don’t like the kind of restrictions they face when they buy a home in a subdivision. Madison doesn’t have a lot of subdivisions and people appreciate that they can purchase a rural property and paint their house any color they choose. At the same time, it’s close enough to urban areas that they can still easily commute to town for work, she added.

There is a long tradition of people moving to Madison to get away from the stress of urban life. Herbert Hoover, our nation’s 31st President, made Madison County his getaway place after he purchased land for a summer home, which he later called Rapidan Camp. Today it is sometimes referred to as the “first Camp David” or Camp Hoover. During Hoover’s time, many people also referred to his retreat as the “Brown House,” to distinguish it from his main residence in DC.

Today Rapidan Camp lies within the boundaries of Shenandoah National Park. As the first ever presidential retreat, it consists of 13 buildings that have been restored to look like they did when Hoover used to vacation there during his time in office.

Madison’s Real Estate Market
Local agents are very positive about Madison’s real estate market.

“The market is definitely picking up,” Lindsay said, adding that they were seeing sales across all of the different price ranges. Her office is having what she described as a “great year,” already having exceeded their goals for where they expected to be at this point. “We are definitely ahead of the game,” she said.

Bill Gentry, owner and principal broker with Jefferson Land and Realty said, “we are seeing slow incremental improvement in the market.” Last year he said that most of the sales were in homes selling for less than $250,000. Today they are seeing more sales in the $250,000 to $400,000 price range. “There are more of them on the market and they are selling within a fairly short time frame,” Gentry said of this higher price range.

Of course, he cautioned, this applies to properties that are priced correctly for the market, which may not reflect what a particular seller has invested in their home. For example, recently Gentry advised some sellers that they would be lucky to get as much as $219,000 for a lovely cottage on a few acres, in spite of the fact that their investment exceeded $270,000.

There is also some movement in the $400,000 to $900,000 price range, Gentry said. He recently sold a farm with a restored home on 80+ acres on what he described as an “idyllic” piece of property. He previewed it when it first went on the market and thought it was priced too high. Sometime later the owners reduced the price by $150,000, which was more in line with the market, and Gentry’s buyers didn’t hesitate to write a contract on it.

While the market is active, Gentry noted that today’s buyers are more cautious than they once were. Many people have concerns about income and job security, and may not make an offer on a home if it seems outside of their comfort level. This may be the case even if they qualify for a higher mortgage and the home is correctly priced.

Madison County Buyers
Who is moving to Madison County? While it is a popular place for retirees, they aren’t the only ones looking for homes there.

Gentry described some buyers who purchased a nice farm property twenty years ago at age 55. Today at age 75 they have no debt but can’t take care of the property anymore and don’t want such a large house. People like this have a lot of equity and frequently choose to downsize, but when they move, they stay within the county.

Other types of buyers are people coming in from out of the area looking for a place for a weekend retreat. Many have the intention of eventually making it their retirement home, Lindsay explained. She described one of her clients, a family from northern New Jersey. They are getting ready for what she called “the next step,” purchasing land on which to build a home in the near future.

Living in the country is a dream for many people that can be realized in Madison County. Gentry described a couple he worked with from northern Virginia. The husband retired from practicing law and they purchased a house in Madison that reminded them of one they rented when he was in law school.

Given the difference in prices, people can sell a home in northern Virginia and buy a farm in Madison and still put some of their sale proceeds in the bank. Lindsay’s clientele includes a couple approaching retirement who bought a horse farm where they were able to realize a long time dream of working with handicapped children, introducing them to horses and riding. This couple also loves breeding and raising dogs, a business that can be noisy and disruptive to neighbors. Their new horse farm in Madison County with plenty of acreage allows them to enjoy both of these activities without fear of bothering anyone else.

Madison is also appealing to younger people still in the work force. Lindsay described yet another family who lives in DC because both spouses like their jobs. However, they wanted a getaway place where they could bring their dog and a young child on weekends. They were willing to drive, but not too far. Madison County was the perfect location.

Madison also suits first time home buyers who have jobs in nearby towns, but want a country lifestyle. The continuing low interest rates mean they can find a country home to meet their needs, said Patti Lillard with Montague Miller & Co.

Many buyers who relocate to Madison do so for the privacy, but many also appreciate what Lillard refers to as the “rural lifestyle.” She described this as a lifestyle where everyone knows everyone else and if they so desire can choose to get involved in the community. This sense of belonging is a draw for many first timers and retirees alike.

Madison is Popular with Tourists
Tourism is the Madison County industry that has enjoyed the largest incremental growth, Gentry said. While visitors will find lots to do when they visit, these same activities are also popular amongst residents.

Over 33,000 acres within the boundaries of Madison are today part of Shenandoah National Park where hiking, climbing and camping are popular activities. Hunting and fishing enthusiasts will find many opportunities including streams with native trout, as well as several others stocked by the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries between the months of October and May.

President Hoover was especially fond of fishing, describing it as an “opportunity for refreshment of one’s soul and clarification of one’s thoughts by solitude.”

Visitors to Madison can select from several B & Bs in the county and many also enjoy visiting the local wineries, which Gentry said are all doing very well. In addition to tours and wine tastings, they offer scenic locations for parties or special events such as weddings.

Celeste Smucker is a writer, blogger and author. She lives near Charlottesville.

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

The Twelfth Annual Charlottesville Marathon: A Premier Event in our Running Town

“This whole area loves to run,” declares Francesca Conte who, with her partner James Gill, operates Bad to the Bone Endurance Sports. Both have a long-time passion for running and organize running events all over the country. “Physical fitness is a huge part of life here. It’s always been part of the culture here simply because it is such a great environment.”

This is reflected on DailyFinance.com—a website devoted to helping readers “live a better life financially”—which recently named Charlottesville as the #6 healthiest small city in America. The basis: a Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index including healthcare coverage, low incidence of diabetes and obesity, optimism, fresh produce consumption, and frequency of exercise

Marathon Is A Big Positive
On April 5th, Bad to the Bone will operate the Miller Lite Charlottesville Marathon, the Whole Foods Charlottesville Half Marathon, the Charlottesville 8K Run, and the popular Kids’ Mile.

“The Charlottesville Marathon was our first event,” Conte recalls. “We both had been professional runners—that is, we ran for companies who sponsored us. James saw the need for a destination marathon and we had experience in the industry, and knew many companies and sponsors. So we did it.”

The 2002 inaugural event attracted about 350 registered runners. And this year? “We’re expecting 2300-2500,” Conte says. “Many are from Virginia, DC, and Maryland, but about a third are from other states. We usually have all the states represented—minus Alaska—plus international entries.” In the past, runners have come from Japan, Sweden, Italy, Spain, and other countries.

“The marathon really kicks off the running season in Central Virginia and it’s such a great place to come in the spring,” continues Conte. “The New York Times named us as one of the top five destination marathons in the whole country and Runner’s World Magazine lists this is one of the Best Races in the Best Places.”

And who can argue with the beauty of spring in Virginia? “We have people who come, run, and stay to buy a place,” Conte points out. In addition, the runners and their supporters have a big financial impact on the area. Projections set that impact at close to $1.3 million counting hotel rooms, meals, and shopping. “We estimate close to $1million just on the Downtown Mall,” she says. “Hotels are filled early.”

“I have done this race twice and love it every time,” was the online post of an Alexandria runner last year. “The course is beautiful, the officials and volunteers are so nice, and the finish line is fun and lively. If you’re looking for a great, scenic run with great people, I would definitely recommend this race.”

Other Running Events
A very different event is the late-summer Charlottesville Women’s Four Miler. Open to runners and walkers, it raises funds for the UVa Cancer Center Breast Care Program. Last year set a record by raising more than $370,000—the most in its 31-year history.

“I love volunteering for the Four Miler Training Program,” says REALTOR® Sara Greenfield, founder of Charlottesville Fine Homes and Properties. “There are hundreds of women who join the program, get inspired, and get fit as well as contribute to a good cause.”

There are many other local runs and races. For example, Bad to the Bone celebrates Halloween by mounting the quirky Danger! Zombies! Run! Local running clubs also organize a variety of races.

Running Clubs
“There are some great running clubs in our area,” says marathon organizer Conte. “The largest is the Charlottesville Track Club.” The CTC helps sponsor more than 25 race events in our community including the Women’s Four Miler, the New Year’s Day 5K and, the upcoming Charlottesville Ten Miler on March 29th. This year the event will raise funds for Charlottesville’s Barrett Early Learning Center.

“The Charlottesville Area Trail Runners are another group,” Conte notes. Members train together and usually meet for weekend group runs in various locations and terrains. Their website has a detailed list of more than a dozen running trails in the area including length, elevation, approximate time, technicality, maps and photos.

“Another great group,” continues Conte, “is associated with Crozet Running.” Crozet Running is a store operated by fitness devotees John and Michelle Andersen. Their website has a running-related blog and lists local runs.

Another store is Ragged Mountain Running Shop, which has been in business for a long time. Most local sports stores also offer running products. “If you’re new to running, it’s good to go to a place where people really know what you need for running,” Conte recommends. “If you already know, you can find what you need in most sports stores.”
In short, whether you are a long-time resident or new to the region, a marathoner or someone who jogs around the block, you can find races as well as just-for-fun running trails and companions in our area.

Marilyn Pribus lives in Albemarle County near Charlottesville. She once finished in the top 1500 of a 10K run.

Categories
Arts

The Veronica Mars movie plots a new direction

During the closing credits in Veronica Mars, there’s a text crawl that reads: “This movie would never have been possible without the endless faith and support of our fans around the world, and especially the 91,585 backers who pledged on Kickstarter to bring Veronica back to life. Thank you for never giving up, and for helping us do the impossible.”

As a Veronica Mars Kickstarter backer and loyal Marshmallow, I’m glad I donated. I do wish Veronica Mars, the movie, were better.

As it is, Veronica Mars is basically a long, better looking episode of “Veronica Mars,” the canceled-too-soon Kristen Bell-starring teen private eye show from the mid-aughts, but without the freshness or pluck. It brings together almost all of the original cast (Leighton Meester, who played Carrie Bishop on the show, has been replaced with Andrea Estella, and Teddy Dunn does not appear as Duncan Kane). That includes Bell as Veronica, Jason Dohring as Logan Echolls, and Weevil (Francis Capra), Mac (Tina Majorino), Wallace (Percy Daggs III), and, delightfully, Enrico Colantoni as Veronica’s dad Keith.

Here’s what you need to know: Veronica left Neptune, California and Hearst College nine years ago. She finished her psychology degree at Stanford and graduated from Columbia Law. When the movie opens, she’s interviewing for an associate’s position at a big New York City law firm, and her boyfriend, Piz (Chris Lowell, who appeared in the show’s final season), works for Ira Glass at “This American Life.”

But then Logan is accused of murder (again) and screws everything up. Even though Veronica hasn’t spoken to him in nine years, she returns to Neptune to help him hire a lawyer when he calls.

It’s appropriate that a large part of Veronica Mars revolves around Veronica’s 10-year high school reunion, because much of the movie feels like a high school reunion. You know, it’s nice to see everyone, but it’s disappointing for a variety of reasons: In the movie’s case, the mystery at its center is pretty soft, and it features a retconned character who, from the moment he arrives on screen, feels off. He’s introduced as a Neptune High alum—it’s just that the audience has never seen him before.

For non-nerds, a retcon, or retroactive continuity, in movies and T.V. is used to alter previously established facts. For reference, see Chekov and Khan couldn’t possibly know each other in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and Marty getting angry at being called “chicken” in the two Back to the Future sequels.

Besides the retcon, there’s lazy plotting—lots of info gleaned when characters happen to be passing a T.V. or laptop, for example—that in the six years since the show was canceled could have been cleaned up.

For people who didn’t watch the show, it won’t matter. And really, it doesn’t matter so much for the movie, though as a critic I can’t imagine why non-fans would want to watch it. But if the whole purpose was to put Veronica back in action, mission accomplished and well done. Only Nixon can go to China. Only Veronica Mars can go to Kickstarter. And hopefully, if there’s another Veronica Mars movie, it resembles Wrath of Khan and not Star Trek: The Motion Picture.

Playing this week

12 Years A Slave
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

300: Rise of an Empire
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

American Hustle
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Frozen
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Gloria
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Grapes of Wrath
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Gravity
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Lego Movie
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Mr. Peabody and Sherman
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Monuments Men
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Need for Speed
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Non-stop
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Philomena
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Robocop
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Single Moms Club
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Son of God (Hijo de Dios)
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Wind Rises
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Movie houses

Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
News

Listen up! Charlottesville radio dial about to get ‘progressively’ busier

Charlottesville radio offerings are about to get beefed up with the addition of several new low-power FM radio stations that have received preliminary FCC approval and could be on air by summer. This week, five months after they put in their FCC application, the founders of one of those stations are finally spilling the beans on their programming plans: They’ll air progressive talk radio all day and hip-hop at night.

“There are needs in the market that aren’t currently being met,” said Jeff Lenert, a probation officer who co-founded the station, WPVC 94.7FM, with local businessman Rod Howard. Lenert, who has served as the executive director for PACEM, the nonprofit that provides shelter for the homeless, pointed out that while Charlottesville already has a variety of local and nationally syndicated conservative talk radio shows, it doesn’t fill what he sees as a hunger for locally produced progressive radio content.

“This is a progressive city, and it stands to reason that it would support this kind of programming,” he said.

While the station has received the construction permit from the FCC and is in the early stages of fundraising, they’ve already signed on several contributors, including local attorney André Hakes, who Lenert said will offer her expertise on legal issues pertinent to LGBT community.

“Our goal is to get her on the air for an hour-long call-in format show,” he said.

The station is also working on a partnership with the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center to produce programming focused on issues important to the local African-American community.

“Our mission is to provide an opportunity for people who are currently underserved in the media to get their message out,” said Lenert, noting that the station is also considering which nationally syndicated progressive talk shows to air.

Lenert and Howard both hope the evening hip-hop format will attract a young listenership, and those hours will also feature segments addressing issues including domestic violence, education, and substance abuse.

“I want to get younger kids involved to come in, to talk about what happens at their school,” said Howard, owner of several local businesses including H&H Quality Car Care, H&H Security Services, and Accelerated Bail Bond, and co-owner of the Virginia Silverbacks semi-pro football team. Both Lenert and Howard hope members of the substance abuse recovery community will also have an opportunity to get involved with the station.

“The problem with people who are struggling to maintain sobriety is there’s not a whole lot to do with idle time,” said Lenert. “Give people productive, forward thinking and rewarding opportunities, and their chances for successful recovery are dramatically improved.”

Among the successful FCC applicants for other local frequencies are former longtime WNRN station manager Mike Friend, who plans to put a rock station at 92.3 on the FM dial, and Dave Mitchell, the former owner of 107.5FM. While FCC rules require that each station operate independently, Lenert and Friend said there are opportunities for cost saving collaboration.

“These stations have reasonably small coverage areas, so you have to get together and support each other or you’re going to have a problem,” said Friend, who expects the first of the local stations to begin airing this summer and the rest to be sending out signals by the end of the year.

Jeff Lenert and Rod Howard are the co-founders of WPVC, a low-power FM station that will air progressive talk radio and hip-hop with a dose of social consciousness.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Man at a Crossroad

Lyndia Porter had no idea that she was creating a new form of ministry when she sat down to write her stage play Man at a Crossroad. Performed by volunteers from across Virginia, the play explores the struggles of living a Christian life within a secular society. But unlike some stage performances, nothing here is a fiction. Every scenario is one that has been lived by the actors. Their personal battles are the heart of the action, lending a sincerity to the play that is agumented by a beautifully arranged musical score.

Saturday 3/22. $12, 5pm. The Haven, 112 W. Market St. 973-1234.

Categories
News

Nonprofit plans shelter for sex trafficking victims in Charlottesville

When law enforcement officials announced the launch of a new task force to combat human trafficking in the western part of the state late last year, they called for broad action to stop a growing problem.

“Human trafficking is an emerging issue in the Western District of Virginia, one that must be met with a comprehensive approach,” said Charlottesville-based U.S. Attorney Timothy J. Heaphy in his statement announcing the task force.

Now a new nonprofit is aiming to become a key part of that approach by opening the state’s first shelter for trafficked victims in Charlottesville. Board members from the faith-based group The Arbor laid out their mission in a workshop sponsored by advocacy group Creciendo Juntos at the Albemarle County Office Building last week.

The group isn’t alone in its efforts to tackle modern slavery in the state, said board president Laurie Seaman, “but it would be the first to operate in a town this small,” she said.

Statistics on human trafficking in the U.S., including sex trafficking, are hard to come by. Seaman, a UVA graduate who works for Charlottesville’s Sexual Assault Resource Agency, learned as much while working for the Polaris Project, a Washington, D.C. nonprofit that runs the National Human Trafficking Resource Center hotline.

From 2007 through 2012, the NHTRC hotline took 9,300 calls about potential trafficking cases, and 64 percent of them involved allegations of forced sex. Virginia had the seventh-highest number of suspected cases of trafficking.

Those stats got the attention of a prayer group at Charlottesville’s All Souls Church, whose members wanted to do something to tackle the issue of trafficking in their state. The group that would become The Arbor contacted Seaman looking for guidance and know-how in setting up a shelter to aid victims, and right away, she joined the cause.

The first step, she said, was research. For its needs assessment, the group interviewed hospitals, police departments, and service organizations across Virginia, North Carolina, and Washington, D.C. and found 75 reported cases of trafficking victims, 25 of them in the Commonwealth.

“The numbers are actually way higher, because these are just the found cases,” she said. It’s likely much of Virginia’s trafficking happens outside of the urban rings they focused on, too.

Albemarle County Police Lieutenant Todd Hopwood said he couldn’t offer specific local statistics, but said police know it’s an issue.

“There is anecdotal evidence of human trafficking in the migrant labor camps where prostitution is happening,” said Hopwood, but it’s difficult to make inroads in those cases, because many undocumented people won’t talk to the authorities for fear of being deported.

The Arbor’s needs assessment also pointed to a lack of coordination in addressing trafficking. The group learned of 30 more cases from the Department of Homeland Security, but there was no overlap with The Arbor’s list. A study by the state Department of Criminal Justice Services released in September 2012 offered more indications of underreporting.

After surveying staff at parole agencies, jails, and domestic violence and sexual assault services centers, DCJS found that none had formal procedures for serving trafficking victims, and only 24 percent collected data on the cases they did see. The top-listed service the report said was needed in the state: shelters.

And that’s what The Arbor plans to offer. The group is looking to transform a home in the city to a live-in shelter for victims from across western Virginia and beyond in early 2015. Exactly where, Seaman won’t say, for privacy reasons, but “we have a few neighborhoods we’re looking at,” she said.

The shelter will have five to 10 beds, and the client focus will be narrow for now: only foreign-born adult female victims of sex trafficking. They expect most women to stay for about a year, during which time they’d have access to counseling, medical care, legal help, and language and job training.

“At this point, we’re meeting the needs we can meet right now,” Seaman said. “It’s not going to be enough, and I think all of us are frustrated about that.”

But they’re hopeful, too.

Tony Lin, another Arbor board member, said the phenomenon of people buying and selling other people happens in marginalized communities, among groups who are shoved out of the social and economic framework most citizens operate in. By acknowledging that the problem exists, by pointing it out, by taking care of victims, he and the other members of The Arbor hope to make a difference. They still have a lot of fundraising to go, but they’re more than halfway to what they need to start operations, he said.

“We’re not dreaming anymore,” said Lin. “This is happening.”

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Arts

Must-see panels at the Festival of the Book

Each March, visiting and local literati of all ages and reading preferences fill Charlottesville for the annual Virginia Festival of the Book. History buffs and romance readers mingle with self-published writers and award-winning authors including John GrishamLois Lowry, and John Lewis.

Attendees have lots of choices to make during the five-day festival (March 19-23). Elaborate transportation routes are planned to get from one venue to the next and it’s a struggle to find a window to eat between author panels. Inevitably, there are sessions that slip through the cracks or hold a conflicting time slot. There are also the can’t-miss moments.

Sometimes obvious, sometimes buried deep in the schedule, these are the hidden gems sought by festival goers. The 2014 panels offer two such opportunities with authors who are especially notable for being offbeat and off the beaten path.

You know Chip Kidd. Perhaps not by name, but if you’ve ever picked up a copy of Michael Crichton’s Jurassic ParkDavid Sedaris’ Naked, or Haruki Murakami’s IQ84, then you’ve held his work in your hands. You can get to know Kidd a bit better through a special StoryFest presentation on his recent book, Go: A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design.

As a graphic designer known for his book covers, Kidd is quirky and engaging. A focus on typography and visual puns imbues his designs with a distinct personality that is easily identifiable on coffee tables, bookstore displays, and library shelves around the world. Words can’t do justice to the designs, but a stunning amount of his work is collected in Chip Kidd: Book One: Work: 1986-2006. Go take a look; I’ll be holding your place here when you get back.

Infinitely versatile, Kidd is also a writer. Much like his book covers, Kidd’s two novels (The Cheese Monkeys and The Learners) are witty and colorful explorations of graphic design. Autobiographical in parts, with main characters who are practicing graphic designers, the novels are accessible and fun to read.

Taking a break from fiction, Kidd’s recent authorial stint led to the publication of a graphic design guide for children. Go: A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design features easy -to-understand explanations of the design process, samples from some of the modern design masters, and hands-on projects to try. The book’s Tumblr (gothebook.tumblr.com) even has a way to submit designs (your own or your child’s; no one has to know) created during these projects. This book—and really all of Kidd’s work—is meant to draw attention to the art form of graphic design and bring awareness to the design that goes into every aspect of our daily lives. Whether it’s a book cover, a gum wrapper, or a printed festival schedule, you’ll never look at the world the same after an encounter with Chip Kidd.

Chip Kidd and Go: A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design” will be held on March 22 at 4pm in the Monroe Room at the Omni Hotel. The event is free and open to the public.

Off the beaten path

There are guidebooks to help you find the best jazz club in New Orleans or the most authentic pizza in Naples, and then there are books for travelers seeking the furthest corners of the world. Bradt travel guides are the latter, meant for adventurers—and armchair adventurers—but certainly not for your average ski bunny or beach bum planning an upcoming vacation. For example, new releases include guides to Borneo, Sudan, Jordan, and Zimbabwe.

In an ideal world, my bag would have been packed before I even finished writing that sentence, and I’d be on a plane to Harare by now. But that would mean missing Hilary Bradt’s Festival of the Book presentation, where she’ll share tales of her own travel adventures as well as her similarly daring efforts in forming Bradt Travel Guides Ltd.

Celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, the publishing company prints travel memoirs as well as adventure guides, including the founder’s breathtaking story of crossing Ireland on horseback. The theme that runs through all Bradt books is that of sustainable travel. For example, a popular series is on slow travel (similar to the slow food movement). All of the titles, though, are packed from cover to cover with helpful information, informed tips, and a uniquely engaging degree of the individual writer’s personality. The publisher also offers a Bradtpackers newsletter for readers interested in having these tantalizing travel tales delivered directly to their inbox.

Though Bradt’s wanderlust was born out of a deep love for Laurence Olivier and a theater mishap, her first travel guide was written while floating down the Amazon River. She seemingly hasn’t stopped adventuring, writing, leading tours, and publishing since. Thus far, she’s written 14 books and helped create an international community of adventurers who share her curiosity. Bradt will be sharing in person at “Wild Adventures and Extreme Publishing with Hilary Bradt,” moderated by Jeanne Siler on March 21 at 10am at a free panel in the City Council Chambers.

Share your favorite authors with us in the comments section below.

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Arts

Charlottesville author’s novel remembers Camille in vivid detail

Mary Buford Hitz was in her late 20s when Hurricane Camille’s devastating floods hit Nelson County on the night of August 19 1969, killing 153 people in a few hours and forever changing the mountain landscape.

Hitz, a Richmond native who now lives in Charlottesville, was staying on family property in Afton that late summer week. Five days after the skies cleared, she and her brother drove 10 miles south on the Blue Ridge Parkway to Reed’s Gap to survey the damage.

“The creek was back into its little confines, but 30′ from it, there would be a shed stuck in a tree, dead cows, farm equipment that just ended up there.”

She’s carried those sights and the stories of death and survival that emerged in the wake of the storm with her all her life. Last year, they became the framework for her first novel, Riding to Camille, self-published through Authorspress in Charlottesville.

“You never have the same sense of security that that kind of thing can’t happen once you’ve witnessed it happen,” she said of those days in the Blue Ridge. “It’s proof of the forces of nature that can strike with total randomness.”

Hitz has long been a writer, but never of fiction. When she and her husband, former CIA Inspector General Frederick Hitz, were living in Northern Virginia in the ’70s, she began freelancing for the Washington Post and later penned stories for the Richmond Times Dispatch and area magazines. In 2000, the University of Virginia Press published her biography of her mother, Elisabeth Scott Bocock, a “flawed but feisty” woman who pioneered historic preservation efforts in Richmond.

She wrote from life, from experience, from memory, so penning novels never occurred to her. “I don’t go around with plots fomenting in my brain,” she said. But the year her book on her mother was published, she was handed some characters who begged to be put on a page.

They were strangers, thrown together on a horsepacking trip through New Zealand’s Southern Alps. The trip was write-home-worthy in itself—Hitz tripped while leading a horse down a remote mountainside and broke her leg, requiring a rescue initiated with a call from a 40′ antenna erected in a sheep hut. But it was the people who captivated her: A gruff male outfitter estranged from his distant, cold wife; a young Swiss woman who seemed to have seized his attention; a collection of smart young travelers who banded together in the face of adversity.

She found herself imagining their backstories and the events that led to that trip full of tension and trouble. It was a natural step to set the unfolding of their imagined personal calamities against the backdrop of Camille, a disaster in a time and place so perfectly burned into her own memory.

“I didn’t really invent the story,” Hitz said. “The characters gave me the story.”

They came to life through a long writing process that led her to a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Amherst, where she hunkered down for 11 days, getting herself “in a mood of catastrophe”—something she found was necessary before she could screw up the fortitude to write vividly about violent ends.

The result is the story of an unsuccessful marriage rocked by a sudden, passionate tryst just as the historic storm tears apart a group of horseback-riding tourists on a mountain outing. Woven in is Hitz’s own passion for horses, for histories, and for a landscape that, while achingly beautiful, can be a setting for destruction and death. Because as fascinating as she found the novelist’s task of filling in the blanks, what moves her most is still the true story underneath the plot.

“I wanted to make someone who reads it, who had no contact with Camille at all, understand that everything that happened to individuals in the book—the fictional characters—actually happened to somebody,” she said.