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Arts

Animal Collective is ‘Kinda Bonkers’ in the best way

As one-fourth of experimental pop band Animal Collective and a solo artist in his own right, Noah Lennox (who creates under the moniker Panda Bear) has been making music professionally for nearly 20 years. Along with Dave Portner (Avey Tare), Brian Weitz (Geologist) and Josh Dibb (Deakin), Lennox and the Collective made their mainstream crossover in 2009 with the album Merriweather Post Pavilion, but had amassed a cult following long before that. After playing music together while growing up in Baltimore, Lennox, Portner and Weitz all wound up in Manhattan in the early 2000s, playing alongside groups such as Black Dice while the burgeoning garage rock scene that produced bands like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs was in full swing.

Animal Collective

The Jefferson Theater

May 20

“Dave [Portner] and I both worked at a record shop, 12 to like 8 or so, so it was always like you’d get off work, maybe get something to eat…” Lennox says. “We had a space we shared with a whole bunch of bands. It was down by the water on North Fourth, I think. It was kind of a wasteland down there. I mean, there was like nothing.”

Lennox says they’d get to the practice space around 10pm and play until 1 or 2 in the morning.

“We’d get the G train back home, which was always a bummer ’cause it just wouldn’t run very often,” he explains. “I don’t mean to complain—it wasn’t like super rough times. We weren’t living a life of luxury, but all things considered it was pretty fantastic. There were a couple times we fell asleep on it and went the wrong way and all sorts of shenanigans. We hated the G train. It was kind of our nemesis.”

The music they were creating in that practice space had a life of its own. From acoustic-based tunes to trippy psych-pop punches and frenetic compositions drenched in synth and reverb, Animal Collective has always transformed and challenged boundaries. While the band’s approach to songwriting usually relies on road-testing material before committing to anything in the studio, Lennox says each record is different.

“It’s more stuff outside of music that gets us going one direction or another and often there’s like a whole bunch of things thrown out in the beginning,” he says. “There can be a slightly different method depending upon how much we see each other, how close we are geographically to each other.”

Back in February, Animal Collective released The Painters EP, a companion to the band’s 10th album, Painting With, which came out last year. The EP includes two songs from the Painting With sessions, a cover of “Jimmy Mack,” popularized by Martha and the Vandellas, and the opening track, “Kinda Bonkers,” which was plucked from the group’s vault.

“‘Kind of Bonkers’ started actually a couple years ago,” Lennox says. “There was this project where we wanted to make four tracks where each of the four of us in Animal Collective would start a song and then kind of pass our work to the next person in line and the tracks would just go around like that. We didn’t ultimately finish those, but ‘Bonkers’ was one of the ones that we finished.”

This method fits squarely into the Collective’s ethos, as their songs are a landscape made up of disparate layers that rely on space, rhythm, noise and ambience to make up the whole. Lennox says that the order in which they sequence the tracks on records can help create an environment for the listener to inhabit.

“It may not always be so literal as far as like, ‘We wanna feel like we’re going into this ice cave now and now we’re in the desert’…but certainly the goal is to, on a micro level, have some sort of experience or invoke some sort of feeling or thought within the song,” says Lennox. “Then on a more macro level have that same type of thing happen when you’re listening to a sequence of songs. And hopefully if the right pieces are assembled, not only do the singular songs [mean] something to the listener, the summary has its own colors or flavors to it.”

Animal Collective enhances these flavors live through improvisation, jamming and song transitions—techniques that were staples for the Grateful Dead. The Dead has always been a source of inspiration for Animal Collective, and its 2009 song, “What Would I Want? Sky,” includes the first and only licensed Grateful Dead sample.

I’m not sure there’s too many bands that I would argue have been a bigger influence on Animal Collective than the Grateful Dead. —Noah Lennox

“I’m more of an American Beauty-only kind of dude, but [the rest of the guys in the band] were like trading tapes and super into it since they were much younger and going to shows and stuff,” Lennox says. “So I’m not sure there’s too many bands that I would argue have been a bigger influence on Animal Collective than the Grateful Dead.”

As the band embarks on another tour behind last year’s Painted With, Lennox says they’ll continue to use these techniques to keep the set exciting.

“Because we’ve toured in the U.S. with these songs a couple times last year, we wanna bring something new to the table so even though it may not be songs nobody’s heard before, it’ll be some kind of older song that’s reworked in a new way or we’ll do some of the EP songs or something like that where we’re adding something fresh to the set,” he explains. “And it’s not just for audiences; it’s for us, too, you know. You wanna keep the ball rolling and keep the energy moving forward in some way. I’m just speaking for myself, but there’s always a fear of getting stale or thinking too hard about where you’ve been, so I think speaking for all of us again, I think it’s always important to keep things moving forward.”

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Arts

Devon Sproule shares her songwriting process

While singer-songwriter Devon Sproule’s sound has evolved over time, she continues to write thoughtful and compelling lyrics. This month her eighth album, The Gold String, will be released. The record is themed on the idea of an invisible string connecting all things, and the possibility of finding “spiritual togetherness in everyday life,” Sproule says. For her this also means finding connection to her roots, wherever she is in the world. Lucky for us, she resides in Charlottesville with her husband, Paul Curreri, and daughter, Ray. She spoke with C-VILLE about her craft.

C-VILLE: What is your songwriting process?

Devon Sproule: I don’t write a lot of songs per year—I put out a record every two or three or more years—so my process tends to change with each song I write. Often I will be inspired by somebody else’s chord progression and it’ll kind of perk up my ears and I’ll figure it out…and then if there’s a way to sort of lift it without, you know, ripping it off, I’ll incorporate it into a song.

Being inspired by genres of music that aren’t your own is nice because once you filter it into your own language or sound, it doesn’t really sound like them anymore.

I will play with the chords and often my first thought is kind of boring for melody. And so I’ll play those notes of the boring melody and then I’ll feel around those notes and find the notes that I have forgotten to sing. Because often my voice will run these same sort of scales or patterns of notes that sound sometimes pretty but not very interesting. So I’ll play those notes on the guitar to remind my voice of the notes it’s forgotten.

I do most of it by ear. I can’t read music. So it’s a very intuitive process.

Can you give an example of a song that inspired you?

Kate Bush’s “Nocturn” from her Aerial album. That is one that I studied. There’s something about the melody. And also Amel Larrieux. She’s sort of jazz with R&B simple beats and expressive, decorative singing.

How do you come up with your lyrics?

I have a journal and sometimes it’s the most boring rundown of my day and sometimes it’s more verse. So, say I have a chord progression I’m interested in, sometimes I’ll take my notebook and kind of see if there’s anything in there that can fit with what I’m working with. I’ll have sort of half a lyric line and half a melody line and I’ll be trying to see if they can fit together. So they’re both created on their own and then I’m trying to ease them together and see if they can live together.

And I like to go through my senses…[for] any really distinct smells or tastes or colors or textures in the setting I’ve created for the song and then incorporate those. It’s just another way of—like that melody tool—finding details that don’t always come to you in your first sketch.

How do you decide whether lyrics will be narrative or not?

If it’s a country-sounding song or a really folk-sounding song then it tends to be more of a narrative or a story. And if I’ve been listening to ambient or experimental music it comes out more stream-of-consciousness.

How much do you draw from your life or experience?

Quite a lot. When I write or hear something that somebody else has written that feels unrelated to themselves or unrelated to something they feel strongly about then I feel like I can’t connect to it as well. So when there is that sort of humming emotional energy there, that’s when it feels most real to me.


Sampling
Devon Sproule

Lyrical

“You Can Come Home,” a collaboration with Mike O’Neill from the album Colours

When I began this / I ran a fast ship.

Top of the water / I barely scratched it.

But each empty day / I took on the weight.

I lost the wide eye. I lost the wide sky.

Colours_DevonSproule

Narrative

“If I Can Do This” from I Love You, Go Easy

The back part of the pond belongs

To the pilots and yellow belly sliders.

If you push to that part of the pond

On the mossy dock / and fall in / hang onto your bits.

To that part of the pond / we run—

Hot from the sauna / mud at the bottom.

If you pick the right path from the pond /

You’ll come upon God’s acre, the terra bathers.

ILoveYouGoEasy_DevonSproule

Stream-of-consciousness

“Healthy Parents, Happy Couple” from Don’t Hurry for Heaven

Take a book / for instance /

When it’s done / you are let down.

But when it’s smacking in your head /

You go attacking for the end.

Like a good love / too long in bed / besides /

Why should we do like the movies?

Moving doesn’t need a pattern.

Wooing matters / not the captain.

DontHurryForHeaven_DevonSproule


Related C-VILLE coverage: Singer-songwriter Devon Sproule comes home

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Mavericks

Raul Malo, the Grammy Award-winning leader of The Mavericks, loves to joke about his human compassion and self-proclaimed “hippie speak.” The Cuban immigrant wants his band’s eclectic blend of classic country, cow-punk and standards to unify audiences.“Maybe it’s the hopeless romantic in me, but I’d like to make a place where all people can come together,” he says.

Friday, May 19. $37-40, 8:30pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall, 245-4980.

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News

Conservative outlook: Jackson vows to cut pizza parties out of city budget

The first time Kenneth Jackson ran for City Council in 2004, he did so as a Republican. This time around, he’s running as an independent, but holding on to conservative values. “It’s about people, not parties,” he said at a campaign kickoff May 12 at Tonsler Park.

The 10th-generation Charlottesvillian had been on a hiatus from politics, but was back on the scene in February to denounce City Council plans to move the statue of General Robert E. Lee.

“The Lee statue isn’t so much a divisive issue,” he says. “It’s a silly issue.” He objects to the money being spent to defend in court the decision to move the statue, and says that money would have been better spent on salaries for teachers and police officers.

He also suggests that money could be used for the city’s public housing, such as fixing the elevator at Crescent Halls.

On the issue of creating affordable housing, he scoffs. “You’ve been saying that for 30 years.”

Jackson isn’t a supporter of the Our Town Charlottesville town hall meetings, in which councilors go to neighborhoods and bring pizza. “If we’re going to have a meeting, I don’t need a pizza party,” he says. “I heard they spent $1,500 on pizza. That’s ridiculous.”

Ditto for the recent raises councilors gave themselves.

Jackson questions the money the city gives to nonprofits, and suggests some nonprofits could be consolidated, while adding funding to faith-based initiatives.

“Charlottesville wants to look elite,” he says. But when the people who work here and keep the city running can’t afford to live here, he says, “That’s kind of like slavery, isn’t it?”

Jackson joins the race with four other independents—Nancy Carpenter, Paul Long, Nikuyah Walker and Dale Woodson. Equity and Progress in Charlottesville will hold a forum for independent council candidates Wednesday, May 17, at 6pm at The Haven.

Categories
Living

Sandwich spot caters to the classics

You can never have too many sandwich options, which is why Morgan Hurt and Gabe Garcia, the team behind Kitchen Catering, opened KITCHEN(ette), a sandwich shop in their catering facility and event space at 606 Rivanna Ave.

The menu, divided into four sections—sandwiches with meat, vegetarian sandwiches, salads and sides—is reasonably sized without being overwhelming, and includes classic sandwiches like chicken salad, an Italian sub and two kinds of muffulettas (New Orleans-style and vegetarian). Each sandwich comes with a side of either curried chickpea salad or Mediterranean white beans, and will cost you $7-9 (though muffulettas are a bit more). You can pick up a KITCHEN(ette) sandwich or salad from 11am to 3pm, Wednesday through Friday.

Chicken out

Fried chicken fiends who head out to the fifth annual Gordonsville Fried Chicken Festival at the Gordonsville Fire Company Fairgrounds on Saturday will get more than a belly full of cluckin’ awesome food from a place that was dubbed “The Fried Chicken Capital of the World” in the 1800s. They’ll get a taste of history.

When the Civil War broke out, Gordonsville was the main stop on two railroad lines and it was a major hub for produce coming from the Shenandoah Valley. At the time, the railroad was still new and trains didn’t have dining cars. Enterprising African-American women living in Gordonsville would make fried chicken, biscuits, pies and other treats and head to the train platforms to sell their goods to the train passengers.

This year’s rain-or-shine event will take place from 11am to 5pm on Saturday, May 20, and will feature, among other things, cook-off contests for fried chicken and pies.

Unparalleled options

Parallel 38, which closed its Shops at Stonefield location in January, will reopen next month at 817 W. Main St., the space most recently occupied by Mezza and best-known as the former L’etoile spot. Parallel 38 is beloved among Charlottesville foodies for its small plates based on what’s found along the temperate, middle latitude of Parallel 38, which passes through Napa County and Anderson Valley, California; Portugal’s Setubal Peninsula; Melbourne, Australia; Alicante in Spain; Italy’s Calabria; the Greek Ionian Islands; and our very own Charlottesville.

Chow champs

As the saying goes: Where there’s beer, there’s a sandwich craving. Lucky for Champion Brewing Company patrons, they’ll soon be able to get their food fix at the taproom, located at 324 Sixth St. SE, when its commercial kitchen opens the second week of June.

According to a press release issued by the brewery, the kitchen will offer chef’s specials and raclette sandwiches like those served at Brasserie Saison, Champion’s collaboration restaurant with restaurateur Will Richey (The Alley Light, The Whiskey Jar, Revolutionary Soup), located on the Downtown Mall. Champion has not yet hired a chef for the kitchen.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: Week of May 17- 23

NONPROFIT

33rd Eastminster Dog Show

Wednesday, May 17

This annual dog show includes categories for family (dogs and humans), agility, costume, best rescue and, of course, best in show. Donations to the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA accepted; 5:30pm registration, classes at 6:30pm. Keswick Hunt Club Horse Show Grounds, 701 Club Dr., Keswick. caspca.org

FAMILY

Guided kayak trip

Saturday, May 20

Join Wild Virginia and the Rivanna River Company for an outing on the flatwater reservoir that will include snack stops and information about the watershed. Includes kayak, paddle, life jacket and guided trip. $35, 4:45-6:45pm. Beaver Creek Reservoir, 4365 Beaver Creek Rd. 971-1553.

FOOD & DRINK

Hog N Brew block party

Saturday, May 20

Three Notch’d Brewing Company is hosting a block party in front of the taproom on Grady Avenue. The first 200 customers will get a free barbecue sandwich from Ace Biscuit & BBQ. Free, noon. Three Notch’d Brewing Co., 946 Grady Ave. threenotchdbrewing.com

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Superhero Fun Run

Friday, May 19

Bring the whole family to this 2.5K fun run or walk. Costumes are encouraged, and prizes will be given out. T-shirt and medal included in entry fee. $15-60 (includes family prices), 6-7:30pm. Pen Park, 1400 Pen Park Rd. Register at charlottesville.org/parksandrec.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Death of a Salesman

Widely considered one of the greatest American plays of the 20th century, Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman was the first to hit the trifecta with a Tony Award, New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. The story centers around the broken dreams and despairing family of salesman Willy Loman, as he reflects on his past through hallucinations. Loman’s declining mental state looms large, and desperate measures win out in the struggle for his family’s security.

Through June 4. $20-25, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177.

Categories
Arts

C-VILLE music writers share can’t-miss concerts

Please Don’t Tell

IX Art Park 5/25

Please Don’t Tell might be the Charlottesville music scene’s best-kept secret. This duo plays dark and often humorous Berlin cabaret with piano, cello and vocals.—Jackson Landers

Future Islands

The Jefferson Theater 5/30

On the movie soundtrack of your life, Future Islands delivers the mellow, moody, cinematic synth-pop for road trips, long runs and love stories gone awry.—Elizabeth Derby

Future Islands. Publicity Photo
Future Islands. Publicity Photo

Sons of Ichibei and Dogfuck

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar 6/17

Shows are like potato chips to me—most weeks, I can’t have just one. So, I’ll choose a venue: Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar. From weirdo jazz to conscious hip-hop, folk pop, ambient rock and synth noise, Valence Shows books the tea haus’ entertainment calendar with the best variety of quality shows in town, almost always featuring local acts.—Erin O’Hare

Strand of Oaks

The Southern Café and Music Hall 7/14

On his latest album Hard Love, Tim Showalter has pivoted away from sad-bastard confessionals toward indulgent, distorted alt-rock anthems; perfect for blowing off steam in the heart of summer.—Jedd Ferris

Gillian Welch

Sprint Pavilion 7/30

Gillian Welch returns with telepathic picking and singing partner David Rawlings for a full-album performance of The Harrow & the Harvest (2011), and hopefully lots more from her bountiful oeuvre.—Nick Rubin

Punch Brothers

Sprint Pavilion 8/8

Born of broken hearts and rooted in classical acoustic mastery, Punch Brothers pack talent into dramatic modern bluegrass that flows from wholesome harmonies to lush pop to proggy grooves as uplifting as a cool Blue Ridge mountain breeze on an August evening.—Tami Keaveny

Delta Rae

The Jefferson Theater 8/25

Inspired by gospel and country, folklore and images of Americana, six-piece Delta Rae promises foot-stomping fun. Powerful vocals from Liz Hopkins and Brittany Holljes pack a Dixie Chick punch.—Mary Shea Valliant

Sylvan Esso

The Jefferson Theater 9/15

Durham, North Carolina-based Sylvan Esso pumps out dancey, electropop hooks. The duo’s sophomore album, What Now, was released in April and it’s a joyride through dazzy, euphoric tracks. Play it right by taking in a live performance.—Anita Overcash

Sylvan Esso. Publicity Photo
Sylvan Esso. Publicity Photo

Spoon with The New Pornographers

Sprint Pavilion 7/19

With a rotating cast of music heavyweights such as Neko Case, The New Pornographers’ sound is a power-pop explosion. And Spoon’s new album, Hot Thoughts, is just that: hot!—-Desiré Moses

The Head and the Heart

Sprint Pavilion 6/14

There’s a quiet happiness in this Seattle-based indie band’s songs that goes straight to the heart. Although touring since March without frontman Josiah Johnson who is battling drug addiction, expect no shortage of crescendo-building ballads as the band promotes its third album, Signs of Light.—Jessica Luck

Categories
News

EPIC forum: When candidates and townspeople meet

New group Equity and Progress in Charlottesville hopes to piggyback on the progressivism sparked by Bernie Sanders’ campaign last year, while elbowing aside the ruling Democratic party’s stranglehold on local government. EPIC is holding forums to ferret out candidates in local races most closely aligned with its goals of adding affordable housing, and stanching gentrification and racial inequity.

A May 9 forum at The Haven brought the three Democratic candidates seeking nominations for two open seats on City Council in the upcoming June 13 primary, as well as more than 60 citizens.

Incumbent Bob Fenwick, who often finds himself on the losing end of 4-1 council votes, asserted at the outset, “I’m a progressive Democrat.”

Fenwick likes the word “robust,” and used that in response to a question about a living wage to describe the charitable allocations slashed the previous year that he asked City Manager Maurice Jones to put into this year’s “people’s budget.” Says Fenwick, “To an amazing extent, it was robust.”

For candidate Heather Hill, an industrial engineer and mom who is president of the North Downtown Residents Association, issues such as a $15 minimum wage or racial inequity need to be addressed “holistically.” She also noted a couple of times that she was “energized” and is covering the city door-to-door.

And School Board member Amy Laufer’s mantra, repeated about five times: “If you work here, you should be able to afford to live here.”

Moderator Karen Waters Wicks asked the candidates to commit to EPIC goals of adding 1,000 units of affordable housing and a $15 minimum wage but, better yet, a $17.50 living wage. The candidates all replied with concern about affordability, while refraining from pledges.

“I’ve heard loud and clear that this is a top priority,” said Hill on affordable housing. “I don’t want to promise something I’m not sure I can accomplish in my tenure on council.”

“If you work in the city, you should be able to live here,” said Laufer.

“I think the county can do a lot more to help the city,” said Fenwick, who also advocates fixing up houses in the city.

One issue the candidates seemed to feel was more manageable was parking. Fenwick segued during a living wage question—he favors an incremental approach —to the parking meters planned for downtown. “I don’t know anyone who’s said to me, ‘Why don’t we try parking meters again?’” he said.

For Hill, it’s an issue that needs to be addressed holistically. “The analytical side of me is eager to dive in,” she said, while noting that she’d taken CAT and the bus was 30 minutes late. “It’s not a reliable way to get to work.”

From the audience, Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy asked the candidates if they support the local Black Lives Matter chapter.

Laufer noted that she’d worked with Bellamy on the Charlottesville Alliance for Black Male Achievement. “I definitely support success for all people,” she said.

Hill once again touted a “holistic approach” that included child care, job training and support of the vulnerable.

“Do you support our local Black Lives Matter?” asked Bellamy again, while Showing Up for Racial Justice member Joe Starsia interjected: “We’re trying to get you to say ‘black lives matter.’”

The three candidates voiced their support in response to Starsia.

EPIC will hold a forum for five independent candidates—Nancy Carpenter, Kenneth Jackson, Paul Long, Nikuyah Walker and Dale Woodson—Wednesday, May 17 at 6pm at The Haven.

Categories
Arts

Listen up: C-ville’s hip-hop scene is on the rise

It’s a gray Sunday evening, 50-something degrees and drizzling when The Beetnix step onto the outdoor stage at IX Art Park. It’s been raining all day, but a crowd of more than 100 has gathered on the graffiti-painted concrete ground in front of the stage. Many of them hold their phones and tablets in the air, precipitation be damned, ready to capture Charlottesville’s most legendary hip-hop duo on video.

“Come closer,” Damani “Glitch One” Harrison says to the crowd as he picks up a mic. With his arms stretched out wide, Louis “Waterloo” Hampton beckons for everyone to move in closer.

For Harrison, 39, hip-hop has been part of his life since he was a kid. A military brat who grew up in Germany and Philadelphia, he remembers exactly where he was when the music caught him.