Categories
Arts

Empathy, the environment and culture converge at reading series

Entering its fourth year, the Charlottesville Reading Series brings together three regional writers from disparate backgrounds to share poetry and memoir extracts: Matt MacFarland, Greg Wrenn and Erica Cavanagh. Like most writers, they all have an eye for detail, one that implores us to pay attention to our surroundings, whether to empathize with those unlike us (MacFarland) or to record our natural world so it is preserved for future generations (Wrenn) or to observe other cultures and learn about ourselves (Cavanagh). On Friday at The Bridge PAI, each will offer perspectives and insights that might not otherwise occur to us through the dynamic experience of hearing them read their work aloud.

Matt MacFarland

MacFarland, a native of central Virginia, graduated from UVA’s MFA program in poetry in 2015 and remained in Charlottesville. His poetry manuscript, Singing Saw, was a finalist for the 2016 New Issues Poetry Prize. The title poem, he says, is “a kind of fictitious origin myth” about the found instrument, which produces music MacFarland describes as “a haunting, holy sound.”

Other poems in the collection are persona poems, which allow him to step into another person’s shoes. “The interesting thing about persona poems is inserting a degree of fiction, and inhabiting that other voice,” he says. “An important component of poetry, and art in general, is empathy. It feels like a more and more important component to me in our current American state of affairs,” he says.

MacFarland never expected to become a poet. But after taking a Romantic period poetry class in college, he says, “It clicked for some reason.” For MacFarland, a poem begins with language itself. “I’m really obsessed with etymology,” he says. “I keep in mind that the etymology of poem is [the Greek word] poiein, which means to make. I like to think of it as something you have to work on, to craft.” And now that he has been writing for many years he realizes, in retrospect, “I never felt I had a natural talent for anything except writing poetry.”

Greg Wrenn

Wrenn wrote his first poem in fifth grade.

“I had an electric typewriter and I remember I wrote a poem about a humpback whale,” he says. To this day, marine life continues to fascinate Wrenn, who grew up snorkeling in the Florida Keys and panhandle. Due to “problematic eardrums” he was told he would never be able to scuba dive. But when traveling in Thailand at age 29, Wrenn says, “I decided to ignore the voice of my doctor in my head and get certified as a diver.” Since undergoing ear surgery, he has now completed 160 dives.

He also continued to write, and published his poetry collection, Centaur, in 2013. A recent Virginia transplant and professor at JMU, he is working on an “eco-spiritual memoir” called Reef. He describes diving among coral reefs as “a way for me to encounter the incredible beauty of existence but also the inherent impermanence of all things.” He visited a reef in Indonesia in 2015 that astounded him with its beauty, but when he returned there last month it was unrecognizable. “Our collective output of carbon is the principal problem,” he says. “The carbon I put in the air is indirectly and unintentionally destroying what I find so beautiful.”

Reef is structured as a series of letters from Wrenn to his seventh great-niece in the 23rd century. “I want it to be about a relationship,” he says, “how my actions and my civilization affect other human beings.” There are photographs and videos of coral reefs, but only literature, he says, can “record the felt sense of being underwater. …We need to create that record for posterity and for ourselves. We have to come to terms with, literally, what we’re losing.”

Erica Cavanagh

Cavanagh, originally from Rochester, New York, and a professor at JMU since 2007, is crafting a memoir about living and working with the Bariba people of Benin, West Africa, while she was in the Peace Corps at age 23. The recollection focuses on what she learned about female strength as identity and its cultural significance. In the Bariba society, she says, “women were not to cry out during childbirth or flinch, just bear down and push. The pressure on them to not show pain was a way to subsume their own pain and trauma. And that perpetuated the kind of oppression they experienced as women.”

She realized that despite major cultural differences, she too had learned from American culture not to express her pain. For example, the tendency to not speak about shameful experiences, she says, “really only compounds the shame and prevents healing. It’s a reflexive narrative in that way. The book itself is an exploration of the ways in which culture can undermine our health.” In her early 20s, all she wanted was to be strong, or at least embody the appearance of strength. But through the course of her experience in Benin, she realized that what she really needed “to be a whole person was love and acceptance, which is eventually what I got through a close relationship with a family there.”

Categories
Living

Junction brings modern Mexican to Belmont

When Melissa Close-Hart was in her mid 20s, she was studying to become a high school psychology teacher and worked in the kitchen at Birmingham, Alabama’s acclaimed Bottega Café to help pay for her tuition.

One night, she says she perfectly plated a chicken scallopini—the positions of the components, the garnish, everything—and it hit her. “This is what I should do. I shouldn’t teach high school psychology,” she remembers thinking.

And it seems as though Close-Hart, a four-time James Beard Award semifinalist, was correct: Cooking is her calling. And on Thursday, January 26, she’ll be opening Junction, the long-anticipated modern Mexican/TexMex spot on Hinton Avenue in Belmont, with owner Adam Frazier (of The Local Restaurant and Catering and The Local Smokehouse).

Close-Hart, who cooked at Barboursville’s Palladio restaurant for 14 years before leaving two years ago to join forces with Frazier, and sous chef Amber Cohen, formerly of Continental Divide, will cook up a broad, but not overwhelming, variety of dishes for Junction diners. The yet-to-be-priced menu features grilled shrimp, roasted corn and sweet potato empanadas with roasted jalapeño-cilantro crema and queso fresco; Texas cowgirl chili with 7 Hills Food Co. braised beef, tomatoes, housemade chili powder, sour cream, aged cheddar and corn bread; oven-roasted chile relleno with roasted poblano peppers stuffed with marinated Twin Oaks tofu, sweet potatoes, grilled corn, fire-roasted peppers, seasoned beans, fresh herbs, pineapple-cilantro salsa and lime crema; plus buffalo burgers, cowboy (i.e. very large) steaks, a variety of tacos, guacamole and queso dips; plus tres leches cake, Kahlúa flan and churros with chocolate mole sauce for diners in the restaurant’s four dining rooms.

Close-Hart is aware of the Mexican food boom that has hit Charlottesville in recent years—we have a bunch of taco joints, like Brazos and Cinema Taco, plus our share of traditional Mexican places such as Los Jarochos and La Michoacana. It’s part of why she chose to focus Junction on locally sourced, freshly prepared TexMex. Plus, she says, “I’m a girl from Alabama, so me cooking traditional Mexican is a stretch.”

Junction will offer a wine program, a variety of beers and cocktails developed by bar manager Alec Spidalieri (of The Local). There’s a selection of margaritas, like the simple JCT Marg made with blanco tequila, Cointreau, citrus, agave, cilantro and salt, and the Carpintero, made with fig-infused reposado tequila, Licor 43, hickory syrup, acid-adjusted orange, charred cedar and Szechuan peppercorn bitters; and house cocktails like the Texas Hold Me, made with coffee-infused bourbon, Ancho Reyes Chili Liqueur, roasted walnut, brown sugar and lemon, and a take on horchata, made with Vitae Spirits golden rum, Pedro Ximénez sherry, long-grain white rice, cinnamon, toasted almonds and milk.

The restaurant’s four bright dining rooms, with plenty of windows, copper lighting and exposed brick walls, can accommodate 169 diners and honor the integrity of the building’s late 19th century/early 20th century origins. In one of the downstairs rooms, there’s a large, well-preserved Pepsi-Cola advertisement that was painted on the exterior wall of the grocery store that once inhabited the space.

The blond wood booths in another dining room came from the trees that were cut down to make Junction’s parking lot, Close-Hart says, and other tables can seat parties of varying sizes. The two upstairs dining rooms can be reserved for private parties and events. 

Getting Junction off the ground has been “a labor of love…and licensing,” says Close-Hart. She’s been cooking for The Local’s catering operation for the past two years, and she’s excited to get back to a restaurant kitchen to keep doing what she loves. With food, “I get to nurse the soul and the body,” she says.

Mezze to pizza

As reported by Charlottesville 29 blogger and C-VILLE’s At The Table columnist C. Simon Davidson, Mediterranean mezze spot Parallel 38 will close its doors after service on Sunday, January 29. According to Davidson’s blog, after the original owners of The Shops at Stonefield sold the shopping center last year, Parallel 38 and the new owners could not agree on a new lease, which led to the closing.

A small California-based chain, MidiCi, The Neapolitan Pizza Company, will open in Parallel 38’s spot in late spring or early summer. Its Charlottesville franchise will house two 7,000-pound wood-fire ovens imported from Italy, a live olive tree and plenty of art.

MidiCi is about bringing friends together over high-quality pizza, and franchise owner Maurice Kelly chose to open a MidiCi here in Charlottesville (instead of Washington, D.C.) because of the city’s focus on local, community food. “In D.C., people might meet over cocktails, but in Charlottesville, they meet over food,” Kelly says.

Taste of home

Attendees at the 2017 Inaugural Luncheon on Friday, January 20, had a taste of Charlottesville. Seven Hills Food Co., led by butcher Ryan Ford and based here in town with an abattoir in Lynchburg, provided the meat used in the luncheon’s second course: grilled Seven Hills Angus beef with dark chocolate and juniper jus and potato gratin.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Yarn/Wire

In its continuing effort to blow the dust off of tradition, UVA’s Composition and Computer Technologies program welcomes experimental chamber ensemble Yarn/Wire. The quartet features two percussionists and two pianists in wildly energetic sonic constructions that push in directions described by The Guardian as “…questioning the boundaries of what music might be.” The collaboration features the premiere of adventurous new works created by University of Virginia composers.

Friday, January 27. Free, 8pm. Old Cabell Hall, UVA. 924-3052.

Categories
News

WUVA sale: Video killed the radio station

Folks at WUVA, the university’s student-owned radio station in operation for 70 years, announced January 17 that they were selling their FM radio license to a major radio group in town to endow their online video and news enterprise.

Purchased by Saga Communications for $1.65 million, the license and frequency will be part of the Charlottesville Radio Group, which owns five other radio stations in town, including WINA and 106.1 The Corner. Monticello Media also owns five stations.

In September 2015, WUVA listeners who turned their radios to 92.7 FM, then the only urban station in Charlottesville, were no doubt surprised by the country twang pouring out of their speakers. The station had hired manager David Mitchell to aid in switching to a format that would attract more listeners. The radio station also hired two on-air professionals and a professional sales force.

“It was run primarily by professionals and we began to look at it as a way to finance our digital operations,” says Ed Swindler, a WUVA alumni board member who worked for 32 years as an NBC Universal executive.

“That station sounds very good,” says Swindler. “I think, though, the issue that we have—and it’s the issue in all markets—is that despite what I would call a very successful relaunch, it was still difficult to compete as a standalone station.”

And its new presence as an online video and news source (wuvanews.com) will better prepare students for life after graduation, he says.

“Media is changing so rapidly,” Swindler says. “Digital video and learning to report and edit with video is a really important skill set for people being hired, particularly in journalism and news and the management of news. …Radio is less interesting to students than it was years ago, and we just have to modernize our operations and make sure that we’re forward-looking.”

WUVA President Kailey Leinz, a fourth-year, says students involved with WUVA, which will be keeping its call letters, are excited about the sale.

“The sky’s the limit right now as far as expanding our content goes,” she says, adding that the organization has discussed using the $1.65 million to build a studio for newscasts and to buy things such as high-definition cameras and equipment to record podcasts.

Although Leinz and Swindler agree that journalism is headed in a digital direction, the head of the Charlottesville Radio Group says radio’s still thriving.

“Let me put it this way—I don’t think the owner of the company would have invested more dollars in a radio station if they weren’t pretty happy with the current state of the stations they already own,” says Jim Principi, president and general manager of the Charlottesville Radio Group.

His group will soon initiate a study to evaluate other formats available in the local radio market, but says there’s a chance the new station will stick with country music.

Says Principi, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

Categories
News

In brief: Greenway to nowhere, Richmond rundown, sucker punches and more

Greenway to nowhere

Perhaps you’ve noticed the small gravel trail that runs alongside McIntire Road, past the old Lane High School that now serves as the Albemarle County Office Building and the baseball field and then, seemingly, stops in its tracks at Harris Street. In 2006, the city began a project to build the multi-use trail, Schenk’s Greenway, as a connector between the office building and McIntire Park.

But the greenway has been closed and under construction since July 2015 for the first phase of a $1.5 million Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority project called the Upper Schenk’s Branch Interceptor Replacement, an upgrade to increase wastewater infrastructure capacity along that sewer line, according to RWSA spokesperson Teri Kent. It’s currently about 85 percent complete and scheduled for a substantial push in March with landscaping and site restoration finished this spring.

The trail will be paved to accommodate the expected increased use, says city trail planner Chris Gensic. The long-term trail plan is to connect the Downtown Mall and Preston Avenue to McIntire Park—Schenk’s Greenway will be the middle section of that trail.

Here's what it looks like now. Staff photo
Here’s what it looks like now. Staff photo

So much presidential activity

Teresa Sullivan's had a rough five years. Will she stay at UVA's helm? Photo: Ashley Twiggs
Photo: Ashley Twiggs

On the same day Barack Obama handed over the keys to the White House to Donald Trump, UVA President Teresa Sullivan announced she would be leaving when her contract expires in summer 2018, and the university will begin a search for a new prez.

Blogger arrested

Photo: Eze Amos
Photo: Eze Amos

Jason Kessler, the man who dug up Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy’s offensive tweets and who is collecting signatures to remove him from office, was arrested January 22 on the Downtown Mall for allegedly punching a man in the face, according to Tomas Harmon at the Newsplex. Kessler contends the punching was self-defense.

EPIC goals

Dave Norris, Jeff Fogel and Dede Smith. Staff photo
Dave Norris, Jeff Fogel and Dede Smith. Staff photo

A new city political organization—Equity and Progress in Charlottesville—debuted January 17, and features former elected officials such as Dave Norris and Dede Smith. It hopes to tap into the Bernie Sanders’ progressivism and elect candidates to tackle income inequity and affordable housing.

New Dominion Bookshop’s loss

Photo: Amanda Maglione
Photo: Amanda Maglione

Long-time owner Carol Troxell, 68, died unexpectedly January 18, the Daily Progress reports. Troxell bought the Downtown Mall store in the mid-’80s, and made it a popular haven for author readings and Virginia Festival of the Book events.

State parks high

Governor Terry McAuliffe says attendance in 2016 was a record, with 10,022,698 visitors, which topped 2015 by 12 percent.

Richmond rundown

The General Assembly has been in session two weeks, and here’s a snapshot of what’s happening.

  • Redistricting: Delegate Steve Landes, one of Albemarle’s four delegates (thank you gerrymandering), carried a constitutional amendment to take the politics out of electoral line drawing.
  • Misdemeanor DNA: Albemarle Sheriff Chip Harding and Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci called for a study to expand DNA collection for misdemeanors like trespassing, petit larceny and assault in a bill carried by Delegate David Toscano and co-patroned by Landes.
  • Removal of elected officials: Already difficult in Virginia and requiring a petition signed by 10 percent of voters in the last election, this bill requires 20 percent of the voters’ signatures and a special election.
  • Bathroom bill: Delegate Bob Marshall’s bill, modeled after North Carolina’s, died quietly in a Republican-controlled subcommittee January 19.

Quote of the Week:

“Charlottesville is a ‘beautiful ugly city.’” —The Reverend Brenda Brown-Grooms’ description used at former vice-mayor Holly Edwards’ January 12 funeral was echoed—twice—at City Council January 17.

Correction: Equity and Progress in Charlottesville was misidentified in the original version.

Categories
Arts

Kurt Vile is happily going nowhere slow

Musical gatherings known as pickin’ parties are staples in the bluegrass tradition. These communal jam sessions can be found on the porches of Appalachia, or in the case of musician Kurt Vile, in the suburbs of Philadelphia. Before he became an established guitar virtuoso, the first stringed instrument the Philly native picked up was a banjo.

“My dad gave me a banjo for my 14th birthday. I really wanted a guitar, but he was into bluegrass music and he convinced me to get a banjo,” Vile says. “I had a cousin who played music who I really looked up to—he ended up being my first drummer—and I think he told me it’d be cool to have a banjo, just because it was kind of unique, and so I played it like a guitar. And then a year later, the neighbors across the street gave me a guitar because they always heard us playing and jamming on the porch.”

Kurt Vile & The Violators
The Jefferson Theater
January 26

Vile creates with a specific aesthetic that’s due as much to his lyrics and vocal delivery as it is to his technical savvy. For nearly a decade, he’s built a catalog of psychedelic folk rock replete with lyrical satire, meandering jams and intricate fingerpicking. His music is primitive but cosmic; classic but mystical; riff-laden but completely dreamy. For his latest release, 2015’s b’lieve i’m goin down, he returns to his roots for a more intimate approach, incorporating the piano and even bringing back that banjo on the standout track, “I’m an Outlaw.”

“I wrote [‘I’m an Outlaw’] on my original banjo,” he says. “I was reading Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy, which is an insanely far-out epic. It’s a profound book.”

But Vile’s outlaw isn’t your father’s fugitive. Instead, the narrator in his song is “going nowhere slow” and “on the brink of imploding alone in a crowd.”

“It was sort of Southern gothic, sort of Flannery O’Connor meets somebody just floating around in their consciousness, almost like traveling while just sitting on their couch,” Vile says. “You know, like sort of being an outlaw maybe on another dimension kind of thing. Like, you can be an outlaw but be sitting in a chair. Sort of in the way but not quite as creepy as that movie Lost Highway by David Lynch.”

Vile has a reputation for being lost in his own mind—a melancholic, stoned loner—and it’s easy to see why. But the reality is that he’s a family man with a knack for introspection and a voracious cultural palate.

“Every record, I get different obsessions and I discover what kind of record it’s gonna be,” he says. “I read plenty, but I think on [b’lieve i’m goin down] I definitely was reading obsessively and I think it was coming through.”

He’s nothing if not self-aware, and his lyrics are better for it. The album’s trippy opener and lead single, “Pretty Pimpin’,” is an anthemic identity crisis in which he goes to brush his teeth and doesn’t recognize the guy in the mirror. The punchline comes when he realizes that the “stupid clown blocking the bathroom sink” who is wearing his clothes is “pretty pimpin’.” The song was his first chart-topper, peaking at No. 1 on the Billboard Adult Alternative Songs chart. It was a long time coming for 37-year-old Vile, who realized he wanted to play music for a living at the age of 17, when he produced his first tape.

“Once I laid down my first song on my friend’s brother’s four-track and I heard it back…that day, I just knew,” he says.

After a stint living in Boston and working as a forklift driver, Vile returned to Philadelphia, where he and friend Adam Granduciel formed the rock outfit The War on Drugs. The War on Drugs’ debut album came out in 2008, the same year that Vile also released his first solo album, Constant Hitmaker. Vile and Granduciel supported each other, and when Vile ultimately decided to concentrate on his solo career, Granduciel played in his backing band, The Violators. In 2009, Vile accomplished a major feat, signing to indie stalwart Matador Records.

“I used to fantasize that I was gonna be on Drag City [Records] or something,” he says. “And then I just stepped up…Pavement, who was my favorite band when I was a kid, they were on Drag City and then they went to Matador. But I just went straight to Matador.”

What followed was a slew of alternative heavy-hitters: Childish Prodigy (2009), Smoke Ring for My Halo (2011) and Wakin on a Pretty Daze (2013). B’lieve i’m goin down is his sixth studio album and fourth on Matador. It was tracked at seven different studios across the country—from Brooklyn to L.A. to Joshua Tree, California,—and features a cameo from Warpaint drummer Stella Mozgawa and a press bio written by Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon (how’s that for street cred?). The mobile nature of Vile’s recording process is a direct reflection of where he’s landed at this point in his career —that is to say, adrift.

“I feel like these days I’m always just sort of writing songs all the time,” Vile says. “I think when I first started out writing songs, it was more like in a conventional way where I’m like, oh, okay here are the chords, now I have to fill up this grid and I’ve gotta fill up all the lyrics. And then there’d be times when I wouldn’t be writing and I’d get all stressed out and be like, well, I guess I’m washed up. But now, I sort of know it’ll come and go and I don’t mind. I don’t get stressed. I’ll just pick up a guitar wherever I am and be writing parts slowly and just take my time.”

Categories
News

Foxfield lawsuit: Plaintiffs say there’s no finish line in sight

Garth Road neighbors and horse racing aficionados have filed a lawsuit against the Foxfield Racing Association to affirm that selling any of its acreage would be illegal. The catch? It wasn’t listed for sale.

“There has been a lot of discussion in the community about the future of the land and a lot of speculation, as one might expect, when there is a prominent property like this,” says Ashley Taylor, the Richmond-based Troutman Sanders attorney representing the eight plaintiffs.

The suit reads, “This case arises from defendants’ decision to sell the approximately 137 acres of land on which the Foxfield Races have been run for decades.” Such a sale would mean an end to the Foxfield Races, which is unlawful because the will of the late Mariann S. de Tejeda mandates the continued operation of the races and use of the land for that purpose, contends the suit.

Plaintiffs John Birdsall, Harry Burn, Reynolds Cowles, Landon and Kiwi Hilliard, John G. and Dudley Macfarlane III and Jack Sanford Jr. either declined to comment or could not be reached. But in the suit, they noted they are beneficiaries of the land and are seeking a declaratory judgment that the defendants—the Foxfield Racing Association and its owner, Winchester resident Thomas J. Dick, both trustees—must hold the property in trust for the purposes de Tejeda intended.

Their attorney says there has been overwhelming community interest in helping to keep the property the home of the Foxfield Races. “This is not a situation where these folks aren’t ready to roll up their sleeves,” says Taylor. “They want to participate in maintaining the property.”

Defense attorney James Summers declined to comment on the pending litigation, but C-VILLE’s legal expert Dave Heilberg discusses challenges the defendants and plaintiffs could face.

For the defense, a declaratory judgment is harder to defend, he says. But Virginia’s Uniform Trust Code that went into effect in 2006 was created to provide a greater certainty to trustees as to when claims could be brought against them, often making it more difficult for a plaintiff’s claims to be validated.

“It’ll be interesting to see if there’s a statute of limitations that applies,” he says. “Especially because the beneficiaries weren’t exactly known at the time the trust was created in the ’70s.”

The court will decide if the claims are from valid beneficiaries. “[Foxfield] was kind of broadly intended for everyone in Albemarle County. The neighbors don’t have to be beneficiaries,” he says. Heilberg could see the neighbors taking a position on the other side of the fence just as easily.

“It’s actually a little surprising,” he says. “The neighbors would rather have to worry about the horse races twice a year than whatever would go in there if they sell the property.”

The biannual Foxfield races are known to draw massive crowds, often filled with heavily intoxicated college students in big, floppy hats and pastel khakis. Spring race arrests were up in 2016. Of the 20 arrests, 15 were alcohol related, and 17 people were taken to jail. In spring 2015, there were seven arrests.

Additionally, Heilberg says a judge would be more likely to rule that a cemetery is in perpetuity versus a horse racing track. “I don’t know if using that particular property for horse races is going to be considered enough of a purpose to survive,” he says.

Jim Bonner, an associate broker with Roy Wheeler Realty and owner of Luxury Charlottesville International & The Land Office, says plenty of people would be vying for the deed to that desirable chunk of land on Garth Road, but it would come with a hefty price tag. “Let’s call it several million dollars, for sure, he says.

A court date has not been set yet.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Charlottesville Jazz Congregation

Put a little pep in your midweek step with this experienced group of local musicians that blends classic jazz, funk, fusion and Latin music into a singular sound. The Charlottesville Jazz Congregation typically performs as a quintet, but this week it’s Brandon Walsh on trumpet, Ryan Gilchrist on upright bass and Brett Jones on guitar.

Tuesday, January 31. Free, 7pm. Café Caturra, 1327 W. Main St., UVA. 202-2051.

Categories
Arts

Local rapper Keese envisions unity through compassion

Keese is a quiet guy. While growing up in Charlottesville’s 10th and Page neighborhood, he didn’t say much. But he paid close attention to everyone around him—his friends and family, his neighbors, what was going on in his city schools. English was his favorite subject—he liked to read and he loved to write stories.

When Keese started rapping at age 20, the words came naturally, but he says people were shocked. “Ask anybody—I was so quiet. I was in my shell, but hip-hop really gave me a voice to say what I want to say,” he says.

Keese, now 26, works at the downtown Key Recreation Center, but he raps in nearly all of his spare time. He’s built a following through energetic performances at Rugged Arts Hip-Hop Showcases at the Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar and sets at Magnolia House. His EP, False Hope, dropped in December, and he opens for Milwaukee rapper Milo at the UVA Chapel on Friday.

When Keese hears a beat, he starts to envision a story—a friend’s struggle or something that’s bugging him, then pages through his lyrics for the verse. “I’m inspired all the time,” he says. “I want to take people into my world, let them know what I’ve seen: poverty, bullying, racism—how the world is. The world is a pretty bad place. It could be better, but people don’t want to come together,” he says. Conscious hip-hop, though, can unite people through compassion, sympathy and mutual understanding. This is Keese’s angle.

“Purpose,” on False Hope, takes on what Keese calls “another black hood story” of a kid who’s picked on at school for not having the “freshest shoes.” “His moms can’t afford, she already got two jobs, older brother too concerned with the block, he ain’t even got a pops.” Then his crush asks him to back off and he’s devastated. “He ain’t even really had nobody by his side, no one to call for help. / Fed up with himself, he went home, older brother had a gun on his shelf,” Keese spits. Then the teen, who believes he has no purpose in life, points the gun to his head, closes his eyes and pulls the trigger, only to find the gun unloaded and himself not entirely alone.

“You got a whole lotta living left to do,” goes the hook.

Keese wrote “Purpose” for victims of bullying, as a reflection on a friend’s suicide. As a stellar lyricist, he knows the power of words and how deep they can burrow in the heart.

He doesn’t condone violence, drugs or hateful behavior. He’s “not into that stuff,” but his most popular song is called “Crack.”

“Crack, crack, I got that crack motherfucker,” he starts. “Listen to my flows, put it in your veins. / I’m gonna take you high…give it one try, you’ll never be the same,” he quips, lyrics tumbling out easily over the beat. “One time for the young Trayvons, Mike Browns, pipe down ’cause you ain’t saying nothing. / All these lame-ass rappers scared to tell the truth. / But quick to hit the booth and sell these lies to the youth. / I don’t get it, they spit it but never live it. / My lyrics speak from the soul, paint a picture with my vision.” Then, he declares belief that “we’re gonna be all right” because he’s been playing with you all along—you’ve been caught up in the sick beat, not paying close attention to the words. “I got ’em mad ’cause they thought a nigga start selling crack. / What they didn’t know is that was the plan to reel ’em in. / Now I got your attention, don’t be so offensive. / I still got the highs for your lows, come and hit this.”

“This” is his music, not rocks of cocaine. With its timely references, vivid images, killer rhymes and playful ruse, the song is clever and establishes Keese as a lyrical mastermind.

“Sometimes you have to disguise messages in certain songs to get people to listen,” Keese says, noting that the song warns of the dangers of selling and doing drugs. Opt for music instead, because it’s just as addictive and good for the soul. “Give you one track, you’ll never be the same.”

If a message isn’t something he believes in, he’s not going to put it out there. “I live what I write. I could easily say that ‘Crack’ is about drugs” to maintain a certain image, Keese says. “But I don’t want to be something I’m not. I’m sensitive. Everyone is sensitive; the world is sensitive. If that wasn’t the case, then we wouldn’t react to certain things,” he says.

People are getting his message. At Rugged Arts at the Tea Bazaar back in September, an eager crowd sang the lyrics to “Crack” at the top of their lungs—for Keese, who loves to perform live and feel that energy, the fact that people connect with his music gives him momentum.

“It feels like people are counting on me,” he says. “I want people who come to my shows to be inspired, to feel good about themselves, to want to do something better. I want to put this town in a position where everybody can do what they love.”

Categories
Living

Melissa Boardman gets ahead of the latest wine trend

Local sommelier Melissa Boardman is about to celebrate one year at Keswick Hall, and she’s used that time to build up a dynamic wine program. She organizes several wine lists: a grand list for the hall, a members-only list, a by-the-glass list for the villa and another by-the-glass list for Fossett’s restaurant. She has continued to pour local classics such as Barboursville Vineyards chardonnay and Keswick Hall’s special label made by Michael Shaps. Boardman has added some higher-end pours that are pricey, but still bargains in the fine-wine category; you’ll find Trefethen Napa cabernet sauvignon for $20 a glass and Le Mesnil Grand Cru Champagne for $22 a glass.

Boardman wasn’t always interested in wine. She studied political science in college and planned to go to law school and work in environmental law. But the closer she got to law school and the more lawyers she talked to, “none of the environmental law lawyers seemed very happy.” As she worked in restaurants during college, wine became more intriguing while law school grew less appealing. One day, while working at Siro’s in Saratoga, New York, “I bumped into someone who had just been hired at Morrell wine [shop] in Manhattan,” she said. Hearing about her friend’s job, something clicked. “That’s what I wanted to do,” she says. Soon after, she moved to Brooklyn and landed her own job at Morrell.

The new career opportunity and the Manhattan location were formative for Boardman. “New York City was such a good place to get in the business,” she says. “You get to work with all these gurus, and you learn so much.” She points to Robert Millman as a role model. He and others at Morrell encouraged Boardman to taste often and learn to trust her palate. She spent seven years working at Morrell, developing a deep and professional appreciation for wine.

But she also watched the city go through some of its darkest moments. On September 10, 2001, she attended a Yankees game that got rained out. The following morning she woke to the 9/11 World Trade Center attack just across the East River from her borough. It was a devastating time, but she stayed in New York City and watched firsthand how the city worked to heal from tragedy.

Ready for a change in 2007, she opened up a tapas and wine bar in Key West, Florida. Then, after the 2008 recession, she moved to San Francisco and worked at Spruce, a Michelin-star restaurant with a storied wine list. But a desire to live in a more rural place led her to Virginia in February 2015. At first, she worried about finding amenities like good bread in Charlottesville, “but you get good bread here. I was also worried about good cocktails, but you can get those here, too,” Boardman says with a smile.

But there is one hole that Boardman thinks needs to be filled: “We need a natural wine bar,” she says. Boardman enjoys low-intervention wines (natural wine is made without chemicals and uses minimal technology), and has incorporated some into Keswick Hall’s repertoire. You’ll find low-intervention wines from Occhipinti, Texier, Birichino, Château d’Orschwihr, Olga Raffault, Rousset-Peyraguey, Rolet and others. “My first wine dinner here was a natural wine dinner,” she says. “People were skeptical, but after trying the wines they just couldn’t believe how good they are.”

At Keswick Hall, her Wine Wednesdays are becoming more popular as the group explores a new theme each week, and her monthly wine dinners are noteworthy, such as last month’s truffle dinner, paired mostly with nebbiolo. Her wine list focus is currently targeted on building up the Bordeaux section, but you’ll also find some nice Piemonte selections because, she admits, “My love is Barolo.”

Though far from her original aspirations for environmental law, Boardman’s career still champions the environment by bringing low-intervention wines into the cellar and dining room, helping to promote small winegrowers who farm sustainably.

Erin Scala is the sommelier at Fleurie and Petit Pois. She holds the Diploma of Wines & Spirits, is a Certified Sake Specialist and writes about beverages on her blog, thinking-drinking.com