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Living

A glimpse into the soon-to-open downtown taco joint, plus other restaurant news

Taco turnover

Been bummed since El Puerto’s downtown location closed its doors earlier this summer? Looks like we’ll be able to chow down on tacos and margaritas at that location again pretty soon. The windows are covered in paper, but a sign posted outside and a quick chat with an electrician when the door was open last week taught us that Yearbook Taco is moving into that space. According to Yearbook Taco’s recently-created Facebook page, it’s the sister restaurant to Don’t Look Back, a Mexican joint in Richmond. Don’t Look Back’s menu is simple, featuring tacos, burritos, enchiladas, and quesadillas, plus key lime pie for dessert. We’ll keep you posted as we learn more.

Closing time 

It was only open for a few years, but the one spot in town that required a password before you could get your booze on is, sadly, closed. The 9½ Lounge on Fellini’s second floor quietly debuted as a speakeasy bar in 2011, offering an extensive menu of old-timey cocktails and snacks to anyone who was willing to play along and give the password (which was always posted on a sign on the door) to the smiling face that peeked through the Prohibition era-style slot in the door.   

Last week, a notice appeared on the bar’s website announcing that the 9½ lounge will close Saturday, August 30. According to owner’s daughter Joann Dunkle, the downstairs restaurant will remain the same, and the upstairs speakeasy will be converted into a space for private events like rehearsal dinners and company parties. She said the plan is to have it renovated and up and running by mid-September. But don’t worry—if you get a hankering for one of the speakeasy’s special cocktails and want it served at your private party, just ask nicely.

New brew

Fall is just around the corner, which can only mean one thing: cool-weather beer. Starr Hill Brewery is ready for the leaves to change, and last week it rolled out the Sabbath Black India Pale Ale, the latest beer in the limited release All Access series. Brewed with American hops from the Pacific Northwest, the beer is generously dry-hopped, with flavor notes of lemon, orange, and grapefruit. It’s available on draft and in 22-ounce bottles around town, so keep an eye out for it. The Sabbath Black is replacing the King of Hop Imperial India Pale Ale, which recently won a gold medal for best IPA at the Virginia Craft Brewers’ Festival.

Pig pickin’ 

Clifton Inn is one of only about 50 restaurants in the country that belong to Relais & Chateaux, the global group of luxury hotels and restaurants famous for strict standards of admission. Executive chef Tucker Yoder is known for his innovative, ever-changing cuisine, and the inn’s chef counter allows diners to experience a multi-course meal while up close and personal with the culinary team. But as elaborate as his menus tend to be, there’s always something to be said for simplicity. On Sunday, September 14, Clifton Inn will host the first annual Swine and Dine, where Yoder’s barbecue will be served alongside local beer from Champion, Wild Wolf, and Three Notch’d breweries. For the $20 cost of admission, you get all the barbecue you can handle, plus live music by local bluegrass group Chamomile & Whiskey. Beer tickets will be sold separately on site. For more information, visit www.clifton-inn.com.

We’re always keeping an eye out for the latest news on Charlottesville’s food and drink scene, so pick up a paper and check c-ville.com/living each week for the latest Small Bites. Have a scoop for Small Bites? E-mail us at bites@c-ville.com.

 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Charlottesville Chamber Music Festival

If pop songs are the texts of the music world, then surely chamber music works are its literary masterpieces, and you can appreciate them fully at the Charlottesville Chamber Music Festival. Hosted by the Virginia Chamber Music Foundation, the seven-day celebration provides incredible renditions of classical pieces performed by a variety of local expert musicians. The music is treated like a story being read aloud by the instruments to the audience, and invites listeners to explore the deep history and rich emotion found within the melody.

Through 9/18. $6-25. The Paramount, 215 E. Main St. Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

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News

Who’s got the guns? Feds explain away discrepancy in local combat weapons report

It came down to zip codes.

That’s the official explanation from the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), an arm of the Department of Defense, for discrepancies in its public records showing the quantity and type of military weapons distributed to local law enforcement agencies here.

As reported by C-VILLE last week, statewide data released late last month on a DLA program that steers surplus combat gear to agencies all over the country contradicted statements from local police when it came to what kind of equipment had ended up in Charlottesville and Albemarle. The federal records showed dozens of high-powered assault rifles and other guns as well as 40 pairs of night vision goggles had been acquired by Charlottesville agencies, while Albemarle agencies had just two guns.

Those numbers, it turned out, were all wrong. Charlottesville had merely 26* of the 146 high-powered assault rifles distributed to local agencies, and agencies in Albemarle—the county police department, county sheriff, UVA police, and Scottsville police—had the rest. Local officials had no explanation for the incorrect accounting.

Eventually, however, the DLA did.

The data shared with the public was pulled from an extensive and detailed database by zip code and aggregated by municipality, DLA spokeswoman Mimi Schirmacher explained, and “the zip codes for the [agencies] we have in our property accounting system…link back to the primary zip code for the county.”

Because most of the local agencies in Albemarle have addresses that put them in the greater Charlottesville area, the DLA’s property accounting system tagged all their equipment as belonging to agencies in the city. Schirmacher declined to provide any further information that would have showed the federal agency knew exactly where the combat weapons were, but insisted all the gear is carefully tracked.

“The system used to manage [the] inventory is very detailed to include serial number and photo,” she said via e-mail. “We wouldn’t release that level of detail.”

Most local law enforcement agencies in Charlottesville and Albemarle have at least some combat equipment acquired through a federal surplus program.
WHO HAS WHAT? Most local law enforcement agencies in Charlottesville and Albemarle have at least some combat equipment acquired through a federal surplus program.

Local police, however, have opened up about exactly what kind of equipment they have received and how it’s used. Captain Gary Pleasants of the Charlottesville Police shared detailed audits that documented each of the department’s 46 military weapons. Last week, he explained that officers have been trained on the various guns, but that none of the military weapons had been fired during an incident. Officers hope they never need to use the guns, he said, “but if we need them, they’re invaluable.”

The Albemarle County Police Department was unable to provide similar audits by press time, but department spokeswoman Carter Johnson explained why the department asked for the 103 automatic rifles and night vision goggles.

“It seemed like a win-win to receive the equipment we needed, free of charge,” she said in an e-mail. The night vision goggles are an important tool for officers working after dark, she said, and “the rifles are only used in extremely dangerous situations, when we are facing a potential threat which might also be equipped with this equipment.”

One such incident happened in January 2010, when 18-year-old Colby Eppard stole a police car in Greene County, led officers on a three-county chase, and fired at police before he was shot and killed with one of Albemarle’s military-issue assault rifles.

“We want our officers to have the appropriate tools when facing these threats and not increase the risk for their personal safety,” Johnson said. “Should we ever face an active shooter in our community, rifles would be a crucial tool for ending the threat, even from a greater distance.”

*A previous version of this story said the Charlottesville Police Department had 14 assault rifles. As explained in our previous story and as shown in the graphic, they actually have 26: 14 5.56 millimeter rifles and 12  7.6 millimeter rifles.

Categories
Arts

Playing it forward: Lockn’ 2014

In almost every interview with a person of notable artistic accomplishment, no matter the medium, there is of talk inspiration or the impetus for creativity. As fans, we are eternally curious about the artist’s muse.

All musicians pay it forward. Elvis stood on the shoulders of bluesmen, before The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and Michael Jackson climbed up, and every one of today’s chart-toppers—Maroon 5, Luke Bryan, Tom Petty, Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Eminem et al.—owe a debt to their predecessors. The connections throughout the family tree of popular music are exponential and have busted barriers on stage, on the airwaves, and in personal music collections. Just look at your own iTunes.

We followed this line of thinking to form our coverage of the four-day Lockn’ Music Festival at the Oak Ridge Farm in Arrington, Virginia, beginning on September 4.

The festival, now in its second year, was founded by music fans and business veterans Dave Frey and Peter Shapiro. Frey said that he and Shapiro bonded over the idea of “interlocking sets” for the festival and the opportunities for unique artist collaborations.

In exploring these intended connections, we asked artists on and off of the Lockn’ stages to tell us what moves them about their peers, mentors, and musical heroes. —Tami Keaveny

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Jon Pardi

Nashville may be the capital of country, but the music of Jon Pardi proves that country and western are still a potent mix. Staying true to a classic Southern twang, the California-born musician delights with traditional riffs on acoustic guitars, banjos, and fiddles. His narratives are rich with the trials of human experience, and coupled with his high-energy and enthusiastic performances, Pardi becomes a sensation that can hold his own on the highly competitive country music scene.

Thursday 9/4. $16-18. The Jefferson, 110 E. Main St. Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
News

Dominion formally announces pipeline partnership

Dominion Resources has formally announced it will pursue its planned natural gas pipeline through Virginia as part of a multi-billion-dollar partnership with North Carolina electricity giant Duke Energy and two other energy companies.

The proposed 550-mile pipeline, previously called the Southeast Reliability Project, is now dubbed the Atlantic Coast Pipeline. Until the formal partnership announcement on Tuesday, September 2, Dominion had called all plans for the $4.5-$5 billion pipeline preliminary, despite its fast-moving efforts to begin surveying land along a possible right of way—including properties in nearby Nelson County, where residents have vowed to fight the pipeline and Dominion’s possible use of eminent domain to seize land for it.

Dominion will build and operate the pipeline on behalf of a partner LLC with multiple stakeholders. Dominion itself will have a 45 percent ownership stake, and Charlotte-based Duke Energy will have a 40 percent stake. Piedmont Natural Gas, also headquartered in Charlotte, will own 10 percent of the LLC, and Atlanta-based AGL Resources will own the remaining 5 percent.

The partnership plans to stick to the rapid timeline for the project previously outlined by Dominion, according to a press release from the company. A pre-filing request with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission—which must approve the pipeline—is expected this fall, and Dominion plans on starting construction as early as summer 2016, with a completion date in late 2018.

Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe was set to hold a press conference Tuesday morning with executives from Dominion and AGL touting the project’s economic benefits.

 

Categories
Arts

Strong lineup builds confidence in Lockn’ organizers the second time around

Before the illicit weed smoking, before the bare boobs, before the overzealous ABC agents, before the revoked booze license, and before the appeal, there was a guy whose buddy showed him a pretty cool place to listen to tunes.

The guy was Dave Frey, who’s spent more than three decades making his career in the music biz by organizing events and managing bands. Growing up in Chicago, he made one of his biggest splashes in 1984 when he opened the renowned Vic Theater. Now at 54, he spends his time representing the Ramones and attending to Lockn’, the Central Virginia festival he and partner Peter Shapiro launched last year and have brought back with an even stronger lineup of bands.

“We just found a really awesome place to stage shows. We kind of came upon it by accident,” Frey said. “A friend of mine took me down there—a friend of his had gotten married there—and I loved it.”

What’s followed has been a test of music festival organizing mettle. The first year was a success in terms of ticket sales and consumer response, but the legal backlash from Lockn’s spat with the Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control has been a serious stumbling block. Frey said he anticipated Lockn’ would grow about 20 percent this year, but instead he’s looking at near identical ticket sales to year one—about 25,000.

“Last year was not profitable. We’re hoping to break even this year,” he said. “The thing is, we are going to start building this into its own thing where people trust us.”

Frey said it’s not uncommon to take your lumps in the first few years of major festival building, even without concerns over your liquor license and security measures costing you consumer confidence. He has his eye on the long game in an industry that’s paid major dividends to players that can hang on through the lean years. No, Frey doesn’t anticipate his festival will ever overtake Tennessee’s Bonnaroo, which attracts 70,000 fans in lean years, but he does think Lockn’ can double in size.

Proof of Frey’s confidence and commitment are the 385 acres adjoining the current concert venue that he and Shapiro recently purchased. For now, the new property won’t change much for the layout of the actual festival, but Frey said it will ease the flow of traffic into and out of the area. In the long run, it means Frey and Shapiro are invested in a concert venue and surrounding infrastructure that could be an ongoing revenue engine for Nelson County year after year.

The traffic improvements from the property are no small thing, according to Frey. Even in 2013, Lockn’ attracted a large number of out of state traffic, at about 65 percent of ticket sales. That number is forecast to be about the same this year. Plus, Frey said he expects the number of transient attendees, as opposed to overnight campers, to increase this year, meaning more traffic to deal with on a day-to-day basis. While the actual traffic plan is largely out of Lockn’s hands and up to the Virginia Department of Transportation, the added frontage space on Route 29 has allowed Frey and his team to widen the pinch point where attendees enter parking lots.

Frey, who’s run a handful of festivals over the past two decades, doesn’t necessarily think Lockn’ has become a bigger national draw this year, but he does agree the talent level has ticked up considerably. The addition of acts like Wilco and Tom Petty have stretched the festival to new audiences, and Frey has dialed in his tried-and-true booking strategies.

“The greatest thing about it is that we are pretty much putting on a show that we would like to see,” Frey said. “We don’t have three to five bands on three to five stages, we have one stage. So we like multiples, because bands can stretch out and cover all their material. You get two nights of Widespread, two nights of Wilco. That’s cool. I think that’s what brings people out for the whole weekend.”

Frey figures the growth of the festival circuit is in no danger of slowing down anytime soon, and he and Shapiro hope to continue to ride the wave. According to Frey, big summer festivals have become ideal for bands and music fans alike because they have filled the niche of the burst amphitheater bubble of the ’80s and ’90s.

“The amphitheaters were historically a gamechanger,” Frey said. “Suddenly bands said, ‘we are going to tour in the summer because there are these amphitheaters that are only open six months, and they pay better.’ But the circuit got too big and has been on the wane.”

Still, the demand remains for bands to hit the road at premium prices and satisfy fans that want to spend a weekend hearing tons of music for one fixed price. Fans that come to Lockn’ this year aren’t likely to be disappointed on that front.

“This is the best show I’ve ever booked,” Frey said. “I wish I could just go to the show and watch it and not have to run it now. This is going to set the standard for us for a long time to come.”

Share your festival stories in the comments section below.

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News

What’s coming up in Charlottesville-Albemarle the week of Sept. 1?

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

  • Trash and recycling pickup in the city are pushed back a day thanks to the Labor Day holiday.
  • The Albemarle Architectural Review Board meets at 11am Tuesday, September 2 in Room 241 of the County Office Building on McIntire Road. On the agenda is a review of Riverside Village, a Pantops development first proposed in 2008.
  • The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors meets from 1-8pm Wednesday, September 3 in Lane Auditorium at the County Office Building. The agenda includes action on a change to the county’s cash proffer policy and a work session on changes to zoning rules regarding farm operations and farm breweries.
  • The city Parks and Recreation Department will hold an open house to allow the public to review the designs for the eastern side of McIntire Park from 6-8pm Thursday, September 4 at Carver Rec Center on 4th Street. Draft plans are available at www.charlottesville.org/mcintirepark, and comments can also be submitted by e-mailing mcintirepark@charlottesville.org or calling 970-3610.