Categories
Arts

Over hard: Punk band Fried Egg goes beyond its hardcore roots

One week before the winter solstice, the weather is nasty in Charlottesville and it’s cold as fuck inside Magnolia House. The four members of hardcore punk band Fried Egg—guitarist Tyler Abernethy, bassist Sam Richardson, drummer Sam Roberts, and vocalist Erik Tsow—sit on mismatched couches and chairs in the dim living room of the DIY venue where Roberts lives and books shows. Richardson and Tsow drove in from Richmond, as they regularly do.

There’s an old piano in one corner, and a crucified Mikey Mouse, a Buddha figurine, a couple of Kermit the Frog dolls, and other miscellany on the mantle. Neat rows of show posters are taped to the robin’s-egg blue walls.

The band members crack open cans of beer and flavored seltzer and take turns leaning into the weak waft from an old space heater. Tsow blows into his hands to keep them warm.

Fried Egg shares some band lore before getting to the music. How the band started in late 2014 with Daniel Berti on guitar; how they had to cancel their first shows when Roberts broke his wrist; how Abernethy joined after Berti’s departure. The sick shows they’ve played to 15 people, 150 people. The long drives on two hours’ sleep; the fragrant one past a garlic farm; and the foul one past industrial livestock facilities.

There’s the time they kicked off a West Coast tour drinking beers on top of an inactive volcano in Portland; the time their borrowed van had a shitty radio and A/C that died in Death Valley. There was a show hosted by a guy too old to be living in his mom’s basement, where Fried Egg played to maybe 10 people, through a crap PA, and made $30…but the next night, in Washington, D.C., they met bands they’ve shared bills and music and camaraderie with ever since.

The newest Fried Egg story is about the recording of the band’s first full-length LP, Square One, to be released in the coming weeks on Richardson’s Feel It Records label.

It almost didn’t happen, they say. Or, more accurately, Square One almost didn’t exist as it does.

After recording and releasing a number of shorter projects—The Incredible Flexible Egg flexi disc, the Delirium and Back and Forth EPs pressed to 7-inch records, the Beat Session Vol. 4 cassette, and the band’s contributions to the Fried Egg Mixtape cassette—the band took nearly two years to write (and in a couple cases rewrite) enough material for a full-length record.

When it came time to put the songs to tape (yes, analog), Fried Egg sought out Montrose Recording, a Richmond studio with plenty of allure. Built and run by father and son Bruce and Adrian Olsen, Montrose has some of the best gear on the East Coast, and its credits aren’t bad, either: Bruce engineered some seminal Richmond punk records, like White Cross’ What’s Going On? LP and Graven Image’s Kicked Out Of The Scene 7-inch, and Adrian (whose recent work includes records by indie rockers Lucy Dacus and Natalie Prass) had recorded a single for garage rockers The Ar-Kaics, and Richardson dug how it sounded.   

Montrose books a few months out, so Fried Egg nabbed two days in mid-September 2018 and set to playing shows and practicing their asses off; they wanted Square One to reflect the urgent energy of the band’s live performance, something that’s often difficult to achieve in a studio setting. “We were in really good shape to record” when the date came around, says Roberts.

That same weekend, Hurricane Florence was in really good shape to thrash the East Coast. Some meteorologists thought the storm might pummel Virginia, and Fried Egg considered postponing the session—located deep in northside Richmond and at the end of the gravel road, Montrose is the last building on its power line. When the power goes out, it’s out for days.

Fried Egg took a chance—the band had experienced worse on tour anyway—and it paid off. Florence slowed to heavy rain, the power stayed on, and Fried Egg laid down all nine songs on Square One in mostly first takes; Adrian mixed it the next day, with sci-fi film classics Forbidden Planet and Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla playing silently in the background for a bit of what he calls “visual inspiration for the Fried Egg sound.”

“It’s not often that I get to do an all-analog tape record from start to finish in two days,” says Adrian. “The immediacy and run-and-gun nature of the process was a lot of fun, which definitely fit the spirit of the project. In general…punk records should not be overcooked experiments anyways,” he says.

“It’s really good that we didn’t cancel because I don’t know if we could have gotten the same performance ever again,” says Roberts.

The result, aptly described on the Feel It Records Bandcamp page, is “a concise and unnerving album—one that echoes the anxiety, tension, and disenchantment running rampant through modern-day America.”

Behind the cover

The back cover art for Square One “ties thematically, lyrically” to the music, says Fried Egg vocalist and lyricist Erik Tsow, who came up with the idea. Artist Jason Lee drew a nine-panel comic in which each square shows someone going through daily life, experiencing some measure of suffering. “It starts and ends in the same place,” back at square one, says Tsow, an illustration of “feeling like certain things in your life come together and others totally fall apart, feeling like you’re in the same place all the time.”

Song titles indicate a bit of what Tsow growls about: “Bite My Tongue,” “Apraxia” (loss of the ability to perform certain learned movements), “Grin and Bear.” “Lyrically, I use Fried Egg to concentrate on what frustrates me in my life,” says Tsow, and every song on Square One touches on “an inability to communicate how you feel.”

And while Fried Egg plays hardcore punk, it’s not “hardcore with a capital-H” punk, says Tsow.

After putting down straightforward hardcore roots on earlier recordings, Fried Egg branches out on Square One, letting stoner rock and noise rock—and the confident ambition captured in album cuts from experimental artists like Captain Beefheart—influence its music. It’s not what a listener might expect from hardcore punk, and that’s part of the point, a defining feature of what the band constantly refers to as the “Fried Egg vibe.”

Square One’s music, lyrics, and cover art is all “pretty intentional,” but it’s not formulaic, says Richardson. It’s not “programmed for other people” or “pandering to just our genre” in order to attain some sort of status, sell a certain number of records, or tour Europe at a loss just to say they did, he adds.

In Roberts’ opinion, a good punk band expresses a singular identity wherever and whenever it’s making music. “There are so many different times, and places, but people are always expressing their shit, their frustrations, their issues,” he says. “Or they’re just copying someone else who’s expressing their frustrations,” he quips, to laughter from his bandmates.

No one who hears Fried Egg would think it’s copying another band. “I think it comes pretty easy that we just do our own fucking thing,” says Roberts as the band members head into the other room and switch on their amps.

Square One “is our band. This is our record,” says Richardson. “This is what we’re doing, this is what we are. It’s deep in a lot of ways…it’s coming from more of a gutsy place.”

 


Fried Egg plays Magnolia House on January 9. The band will have cassettes of its gutsy first full-length, Square One, available for purchase.

Categories
Opinion

This Week: 1/2

Although technology may, overall, be destroying our collective attention span, the internet has also brought us new ways of telling stories. And the startling popularity of podcasts is proof that many of us are still hungry for a slower kind of media, one that pauses to examine the esoteric, interesting, and complex stories that don’t make it into our social media news feeds.

In this issue, we take a look at how area residents are using this medium to dig into everything from the latest neurology research to the lives of returning veterans, from food and fashion to the history that underlies our current debates.

In News this week, we note the planned closing of the Central Virginia Training Center outside of Lynchburg, once infamous for the forced sterilization of more than 4,000 Virginians deemed to be “feeble-minded.” Among them was Charlottesville resident Carrie Buck, whose sterilization was made into a test case for Virginia’s new eugenics laws, and approved by the U.S. Supreme Court.

We’ve written previously about prominent eugenicists at UVA, who declared African Americans to be genetically inferior to whites. But eugenics also extended to anyone seen as “different,” including women and poor people.

Carrie Buck’s mother was declared to be feeble-minded and institutionalized in Lynchburg largely because she had a child out of wedlock. Years later, Carrie was sent there herself, committed by her foster parents after they discovered she’d been raped by their nephew and was pregnant. (Like her mother, Carrie was accused of being feeble-minded and promiscuous.) Carrie’s baby was taken from her, and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. declared that “three generations of imbeciles is enough,” sanctioning her sterilization.

This fascinating story is told in Encyclopedia Virginia’s Not Even Past podcast, which includes an interview with researcher Paul Lombardo, who visited Carrie late in life (he found her working on her daily crossword puzzle). “The same kinds of impulses that led her to her victimization are still around today,” he says. “When times are difficult, we will find scapegoats.” That’s why we need these stories. —Laura Longhine

Categories
Arts

First Fridays: January 4

By Sabrina Moreno

If you ask Kelly Lonergan, he’s not a figure painter. The figures he paints on 48 by 60 inch canvas—a scale that excites him—are slightly awkward, clunky. But to him, that’s the best part. It gives them a sense of personality for viewers to cling and relate to.

In his show “And Then There Were Two,” on view at McGuffey Art Center this month, 10 paintings display the fascination with dance, anatomy, and human relationships that led Lonergan to explore figure painting 30 years ago. An idea that flourished from day-to-day “whimsical” sketches became a series of modernized, diverse depictions of Adam and Eve.

The process quickly became a rich and challenging experience for the artist. He noticed that the expulsion from the garden paralleled the beginnings of humankind, with the couple gaining awareness of a world outside themselves.

“I realized I couldn’t think of this as Adam and Eve without becoming much, much more astute in what I was doing,” he says.

Lonergan thought about the misogynistic practices, racial portrayals, and attitudes toward gender that are commonly associated with the Adam and Eve story. The series then became about communicating individual details—poses, body language, skin color, and clothes—in a way that would offer viewers different looks at the frequently painted couple.

“I guess yeah, I am a white guy and what can I say?” Lonergan says regarding race and gender. “But I like to think I’ve been trying to improve myself and inform myself, be inspired and be enlightened as a human being.”

For Lonergan, this story is one of a shared human experience and the liberation that comes with conscientiousness. With the recurring placement of the male and female figure, a chain link fence, and a brick pathway, Lonergan views Adam and Eve leaving the garden as empowering—regardless of where they go, the barrier has been broken.


January gallery shows

Annie Gould Gallery 121B S. Main St., Gordonsville. A show of acrylic and collage works by Judith Ely, and watercolors by Chee Ricketts. Opens Saturday, January 12, 2-5pm.

The Bridge PAI 209 Monticello Rd. “Signs of Change,” featuring work created by a group of jury-selected artists highlighting moments in Charlottesville black history. The work will also be on display in an outdoor gallery near City Hall on the Downtown Mall. 5:30-9:30pm.

Buck Mountain Episcopal Church 4133 Earlysville Rd., Earlysville. “Hope: Prepare the Way,” featuring work by BMEC artists.

FF Chroma Projects 103 W. Water St. “Of Space and Matter,” featuring drawings, prints, and mixed-media works of Jennifer Printz in the front gallery; and “Looking Just Past The Sky,” a series of manipulated photographs by Dan Mahon in the mezzanine. 5-7pm.

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “The Studio Sale,” during which many items in the gallery are on sale.

Dovetail Design + Cabinetry 309 E. Water St. “Winter Solace,” an exhibition of Melissa Malone’s oil and acrylic paintings on canvas of various bodies of water.

FF Fellini’s Restaurant 200 Market St. “The Motion and Emotion of Life,” featuring photography by Jacob RG Canon. 5:30-7pm.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Pompeii Archive: Recent Photo- graphs by William Wylie,” opening January 18; “Reflections: Native Art Across Generations”; “Unexpected O’Keeffe: The Virginia Watercolors and Later Paintings”; “Camera Work: American Photography of the Early 20th Century”; “Highlights from the Collection of Heywood and Cynthia Fralin”; and “Oriforme” by Jean Arp.

Green House Coffee 1260 Crozet Ave., Crozet. “On Our Way,” an exhibition of paintings by Judith Ely.

Jefferson School African American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St. NW “(W)here To Stay?!,” An exhibition of Magnus Wennman’s photographs of Syrian refugee children accompanied by artwork and writings by Charlottesville High School students. Through January 19.

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection 400 Worrell Dr. “Freshwater Saltwater Weave,” a series of glass works by contemporary urban-based Arrernte artist Jenni Kemarre Martiniello, through January 7; “Beyond Dreamings: The Rise of Indigenous Australian Art in the United States.”

Martha Jefferson Hospital Cancer Center, Second Floor 500 Martha Jefferson Dr. “Sunrises and Sunsets,” featuring work by Randy Baskerville.

FF McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. In the Sarah B. Smith Gallery, Kelly Lonergan’s “And Then There Were Two,” featuring paintings of Adam and Eve outside the gates of Eden moments after the expulsion; in the downstairs and upstairs North and South Hall galleries, an exhibition of work from McGuffey’s newest members. 5:30-7:30pm.

New Dominion Bookshop 404 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Summer Days,” featuring oil paintings by Blake Hurt.

Northside Library 705 Rio Rd. W. “Bold,” featuring acrylic paintings on canvas by Novi Beerens.

Piedmont Virginia Community College, V. Earl Dickinson Building, 501 College Dr. In the North Gallery, “Possibilities,” featuring ceramic vessels and objects by Tom Clarkson; in the South Gallery, works by PVCC art faculty such as Fenella Belle, Ashley Gill, Lou Haney, Will May, Beryl Solla, Jeremy Taylor, and others.

Random Row Brewing Company 608 Preston Ave. Ste. A. “Still Life: Love of the Familiar,” featuring paintings by Randy Baskerville.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. In the main gallery, “Attraction,” an exhibition of new botanical work by John Grant; in the Dové Gallery, “TORN,” an exhibition of work focused on the modern portrayal of women by photographer Scott Irvine and artist Kim Meinelt, who together work as WAXenVINE. January 11, 5:30-7:30pm.

Shenandoah Valley Art Center 122 S. Wayne Ave., Waynesboro. The annual winter contemporary juried exhibition, this year titled “Women’s Work” and featuring work from Inez Berinson Blanks, Colleen Conner, Eileen Doughty, Sarah Lapp, Peg Sheridan, Astrid Tuttle, and others. Through January 19.

FF Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St. Downtown Mall. “From Alberta to Victoria,” a show of photography by Rob Myers. 6-8pm.

Studio IX 969 Second St. SE. “Dear Lilith: A Body of New Work. Sincerely, Sam Gray,” an exhibition that shares the unfolding conversation between the artist and Lilith, ancient mother goddess, proto-feminist, and original wife of Adam. 5:30-7:30pm.

UVA Medical Center Main Lobby 1215 Lee St. “Distant Worlds,” an exhibition of 15 deep space paintings by Patty Avalon, through January 10; and “Plant Life Up Close,” featuring 36 of Seth Silverstein’s close-up photographs of plant life, seeds, flowers, and more. Opening January 11.

Welcome Gallery 114 Third St. NE. “2019 New City Arts Artist Exchange,” featuring drawings, sculptures, embroidery, photography, and prints by Annie Temmink, Frank Walker, Golara Haghtalab, Grace Ho, Kaki Dimock, Karina A. Monroy, Matt Eich, and others. Pop-up exhibition opens January 9, 5-7:30pm.


FF First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions.

Categories
Living

Beer bard: Craft brew writer Lee Graves publishes far-reaching volume

Lee Graves is not a foodie—he says so himself on the fourth page of his recently released book Virginia Beer: A Guide from Colonial Days to Craft’s Golden Age. But he is uniquely qualified to tell the rich story of Virginia craft beer.

Graves was a staff writer at the Richmond Times-Dispatch in the mid-’90s when an idea came up in an editorial meeting. We’re starting to see some small breweries open up, the editors thought. Why not start a beer column?

“I raised my hand, and all of a sudden I was writing a weekly column,” Graves says.

Graves was in the right place at the right time—his writing was syndicated by Chicago-based Tribune Media and appeared in newspapers across the country from 1996 to 2002—and he had a front-row seat to watch the first wave of modern craft breweries roll through Virginia and beyond.

If you’ve no clue what that “first wave” might be, Graves will enlighten you in Virginia Beer, one part suds market breakdown, two parts beer history, and three parts brewery travel planner.

“I don’t necessarily want it to be a guidebook,” Graves says. “But if you’re going to Roanoke, I hope the book will be valuable. There’s also some background on the process and pairings for the beer novice. I want it to be accessible.”

Virginia Beer comes on the heels of Graves’ city-focused Charlottesville Beer: Brewing in Jefferson’s Shadow and Richmond Beer: A History of Brewing in the River City. And while the new tome draws on the first two, Graves says he’s included plenty of new material for his repeat readers.

“It puts Charlottesville in a broader context,” he says. “The thing is, the city has a special place in craft beer history.”

Around the time Graves launched his Times-Dispatch column and Richmond’s Legend Brewing Company was gearing up for a decades-long run as Virginia’s craft beer standard-bearer, Charlottesville quietly launched some breweries of its own. The state’s first brewpub, Blue Ridge Brewing Company, opened in 1987 and later folded. But South Street Brewery has been going strong since 1998, and Starr Hill opened its trailblazing doors in ’99.

“The area began making its mark in the modern surge of craft brewing well ahead of the rest of the Commonwealth,” Graves writes in Virginia Beer. “Charlottesville routinely finds itself on lists of top places to live; why not promote it as one of the top places to find craft beer?”

South Street and Starr Hill are among those selected for the C’ville area, as are Three Notch’d Brewing Company, Champion Brewing Company, Random Row Brewing Co., Reason Beer, Blue Mountain Brewery and Barrel House, Wild Wolf Brewing Company, and Devils Backbone Brewing Company.

Graves says in the preface to Virginia Beer he followed no scientific method for selecting the breweries profiled, a point he reiterated in a phone interview. But there was reasoning behind the selections.

“I wanted to make sure I included some of the high-profile breweries and ones that have won medals,” he says. “But I also wanted to include breweries that might be out of the way that people might miss if they’re not careful.”

Readers are treated to local lore about Taylor and Mandi Smack, who met at Goose Island in Chicago before working together at South Street and later opening Blue Mountain; the booming early 2010s that brought us Three Notch’d and Champion; the marketing strategy that was the Brew Ridge Trail; and the meteoric rise and big-beer-buyout at Devils Backbone. “It’s breweries that have helped make Virginia a thriving beer culture,” Graves says.

Graves also wants his C’ville readers to find reasons to explore beyond the city limits. He profiles Waynesboro’s Basic City Beer Company, where South Street alum Jacque Landry is now head brewer; imperial stout specialist Brothers Craft Brewing in Harrisonburg; and Richmond’s hipster magnet, The Answer Brewpub.

The balance of the book offers plenty of interesting nuggets readers won’t find elsewhere, Graves says. There’s the University of Virginia student who had a profound impact on the homebrewing industry and Colorado’s craft scene, the role of slaves in hop history, the Virginia senate bill that changed everything for brewpubs, and Graves’ thoughts about where the industry goes from here.

“Yes the industry is maturing and the growth rate has slowed,” Graves says. “There will definitely be some sorting out.” But Virginia should bear less of that, with less breweries per capita.

And, oh yeah, he clears up all that “wave” stuff.

Categories
Living

Back to school: New owner, new focus for Charlottesville Cooking School

With chef Antwon Brinson’s recent takeover of Martha Stafford’s popular Charlottesville Cooking School, the institution is becoming a destination for aspiring restaurant cooks—a place to learn professional and life skills for long-term culinary careers.

Brinson originally launched Culinary Concepts, his “culinary boot camp,” in partnership with the City of Charlottesville and Albemarle County, and operated it out of the Charlottesville Albemarle Technical Education Center. The intention of the five-week training program was to help people establish and achieve professional goals in the culinary arts.

Now, he’s bringing that vision to the Cooking School, which formerly offered classes geared primarily to home cooks and kids looking to learn new skills. Brinson is keying in on workforce development, something he learned this town was sorely in need of when he came to Charlottesville as the executive chef at Common House. It was hard to find kitchen staff who had skills and staying power, he says.

Brinson says he encountered lots of people who stumbled into culinary work without any career goals. “They find themselves in restaurants, but because no one has taken the time to develop these individuals, they don’t know what they want,” he says. “They hop from job to job for an extra dollar, and five years later, it’s a career. By then they have kids and need to move up, but five years in the industry doesn’t translate into understanding of overall kitchen knowledge.”

His program, he says, is less of a cooking program and more of a life skills program. “The goal is to help them identify the difference between a job and a career. I want them to find a job where they can continue a mentorship and grow to have a successful career in the culinary arts—the big picture is retention and helping them to understand the value of investing in their future.”

Brinson has had 11 students go through the program so far, with 100 percent job placement. They earn certificates from Culinary Concepts, GO certificates (from the GO Cook city program he’s affiliated with), ServSafe food sanitation certificates, and cooking certification from the American Hotel and Lodging Educational Institute.

Brinson, who trained at the Culinary Institute of America in New York, has spent the past 15 years working as a chef at high-end resorts around the world. He poured what’s he learned into the training program.

“I didn’t realize how passionate I was about it till I started writing [it] down,” he says.“The next thing you know I had written a curriculum by accident.”

Stafford, whose career in cooking includes studying under noted chefs such as Marcella Hazan and Nick Malgieri, is moving on to focus on nutrition and health, Brinson says.

“She’s extremely passionate about helping people form healthy habits,” he says, adding that she’ll continue to help out occasionally at the school, and he’s honored for her commitment to his cause. “I can’t believe she believed in this program that much to hand it over to me.”

 

Categories
Arts

Can you hear me now? Local podcasters come in loud and clear

Back in 2005, Apple CEO Steve Jobs declared that podcasting was “the next generation of radio.” When the company began supporting podcasts on iTunes that same year (so users could easily download the audio shows onto an iPod, where the name originated), the medium gained steam, and lately podcast consumption has exploded. Last year Apple Podcasts reached 50 billion all-time episode downloads and streams, soaring from 14 billion the year before.

Though it’s taken a decade for podcasts to fully capture the public’s attention, Charlottesville producers have been riding the rising wave: the city now boasts more than two dozen home-grown podcasts, from independent hidden gems to long-established flagships.

“A lot of the first and most successful podcasts out there are repurposed radio shows,” says Nathan Moore, general manager of UVA-based WTJU radio. “A podcast is like a radio show you can take with you and replay anytime.” In 2017, he launched the station’s online podcast network, TEEJ.fm, which now hosts more than a dozen locally-produced shows.

Many national broadcasts such as NPR’s news and conversation shows are now available as podcasts, and local stations like WINA post most of their programs in online subscription form as well. But an increasing number of independent producers skip the radio step entirely.

“It’s a funny medium because it’s so democratic that people can do it with almost no budget,” says local host Lorraine Sanders. Armed with a recording device (like a smartphone), and access to an internet platform to host the show (like a personal website or an app such as SoundCloud), anyone can dive into podcasting.

But while the barriers to entry are low, creating a successful podcast that attracts a following of loyal subscribers requires long-term planning and knowing your audience. Sanders hosts Spirit of 608, a widely-followed podcast that offers creative and media advice to aspiring fashion industry entrepreneurs. But she got into podcasting when she and a friend created a short-lived show called Underclothes, dreamed up on a whim over a glass or two of wine. “We said to ourselves, ‘we’re hilarious, people would love this, we should start a podcast,’” she laughs, “but of course it’s much more difficult than you think to make it good.”

Feed your brain

Podcasts can vary widely in both length and style. From a sixty-second music snippet to an hour-long interview, from almost wordless meditation to shrill political argumentation, from esoteric science reporting to immersive episodic fiction, there is truly a podcast for everyone. More than one, apparently—last year the average user listened to seven different podcasts each week.

For UVA neurologist Ted Burns,  producing a podcast has become an extension of his teaching. “In 2005, I wanted to help the neurology residents maintain their education once they’d moved on, and then I read that college students were taping their lectures and putting them on iTunes,” says Burns. “I thought, ‘well, that’s the answer.’”

He created a show, called simply Neurology Podcast, that features interviews with researchers who share their latest findings and insights, and allows its (physician) listeners to gain continuing education credit. In 2007, the research journal Neurology agreed to host it, and since then its audience has grown steadily, now boasting 45,000 downloads each week, over 18 million since its inception.

While some of the content is fairly technical, Burns also features relatable stories, such as his interview with Robin Williams’ widow on how she dealt with her husband’s dementia, and his own experience dealing with a sinus cancer diagnosis in 2013. He sees learning opportunities everywhere. “Our next goal is to be part of a voice-assisted ‘Tell me about my day’ type app,” he says, not entirely in jest. “As in, five minutes of NPR, the weather forecast, and then two minutes of neurology news.”

Ted Burns, a professor of neurology at UVA, started his podcast to help neurology residents maintain their education. Photo: Eze Amos

Community connection

While national shows often cover wider themes and larger events, local shows can cater to the more immediate community, and some try to do a bit of both. For instance, several limited podcast series recently focused on the events and aftermath of August 12th, such as A12, a six-episode series created by UVA professor Nicole Hemmer for the Miller Center, which explored the larger history behind the clash, and The Trial of James Alex Fields, local activist Molly Conger’s daily chronicle on TEEJ.fm of the court proceedings in the emotionally laden case.

Two long-standing, internationally-acclaimed radio shows produced by Charlottesville-based Virginia Humanities have successfully transitioned to the new medium. With Good Reason is an award-winning weekly broadcast carried on public radio stations nationwide that focuses on Virginia scholarship, culture, and history as well as topics of broader interest. Though the radio show has been established for more than two decades, the production began being distributed as a podcast a few years ago, bringing the elegantly crafted program, hosted by Sarah McConnell, to an on-demand audience.

Kelley Libby, the show’s associate producer, distinguishes between simple podcasting and “audio storytelling.” “A podcast can be just you, broadcasting your thoughts to the world, whereas audio storytelling makes an effort to relay a narrative,” using features like ambient sound, music, interviews, and historical context. Even a news show like the New York Times’ The Daily, “does a good job at transmitting the news through really awesome storytelling,” she says.

Libby is keenly interested in the possibilities of experimental forms of podcasting, and she’s been trying out new modes on her own podcast series American Dissent and UnMonumental, the latter of which features no narrator, only the voice of the interviewee. “I’m very interested in community storytelling, and [this style] feels more like a collaboration with the person, not as extractive,” she says. “It feels less like I’m taking ownership of a person’s story and more like I’m helping amplify a person’s own story through editing.”

UVA history professor Brian Balogh, co-host of Virginia Humanities’ second podcast, BackStory, remembers his show’s inception in 2008. “We laughed at the idea of anybody listening to three historians talking about history, and we’re still amazed,” he says. But people did tune in to the show, which was eventually picked up by over 200 public radio stations and now has moved to a podcast-only platform. “There’s more flexibility in terms of timing with a podcast,” he says. “A show may run 40 minutes or 60 minutes depending on the topic, and that’s fine because it doesn’t need to fit into a radio time slot.”

Balogh loves both radio and podcasts, and marvels at how much he himself has learned by making BackStory. “We try to convey our own struggle to understand the history of any topic,” he says, “so we hope not to come across as talking head experts but as fellow explorers of the meaning of history.”

Captain Bob Abbott hosts Coming Home Well, which addresses the mental well-being of soldiers returning from deployment.

A sense of purpose

Many podcasts venture far beyond news and entertainment to tackle deeply serious subjects for both the host and the audience. Support-oriented podcasts for victims of illness and trauma, for people grieving loss or battling addiction, serve as critical gathering places to listen, find help, and feel understood. Charlottesville podcaster and former Air Force Captain Bob Abbott’s weekly WINA radio show, Coming Home Well, which is also distributed as a podcast, addresses the mental well-being of soldiers returning from deployment.

“I started the show after returning from Afghanistan with PTSD and seeing a need, quite honestly, to do something to prevent veteran suicide, both for others and for myself,” says Abbott, who interviews veterans and specialists on topics like veteran homelessness and discrimination against females in the military. Abbott’s subject matter is close to his heart, and a powerful motivator. “So many people who start podcasts quit after a half-dozen episodes because they haven’t figured out why they are doing it,” he says. “My ‘what’ is veteran suicide, but my ‘why’ is my friends who have died. I know I can’t quit, because if I quit, I die.”

For those compelled to tell a story, why start a podcast instead of, say, writing a blog, book, or newspaper article, filming a video, or posting to Facebook or Twitter? One answer lies in the visceral impact on listeners of hearing voices and music through headphones or while driving. “Audio is a very affective medium, because our brains process sound information in a physical way,” says WTJU’s Moore. “Relying on audio alone produces a more emotion-driven experience.”

Sanders agrees, and points to latent psychological effects as well. “Before starting my own, I became obsessed with podcasts from a listener standpoint,” she says. “For me personally, it’s the most intimate form of media that exists. It’s more impactful than anything I read online in terms of how much I remember and the actions I take after listening, like going to look something up or making a purchase.”

Ellen Daniels, co-host and producer of Apropos of Something at WPVC radio, is motivated to communicate the stories of local people with a particular focus on social justice issues. “It’s a very creative process for me,” says Daniels, who has a journalism background. “I love to learn a person’s story, talk about what they’re doing, and then to try to bring that story out in an interesting way.” AOS is a rare live show, which means no do-overs or edits, and Daniels is proud of their 69 episodes thus far. “We do a lot of up-front research and pre-interviews so we can bring energy to the stories,” she says. “We’re really promoting our town.”

Most podcasters tend to be natural storytellers, extroverted and verbose, and passionate about their specialty. “When I was a kid, I had a Mr. Microphone, and I used to read the newspaper out loud,” says Jenée Libby, host of the food podcast Edacious (an archaic word meaning ravenous). “I always wanted to be a broadcaster.” Libby began writing a restaurant review blog called “Edible Charlottesville” in 2008, but quickly found she was more interested in the stories of the chefs than in the actual food. She wrote long chef profiles which she posted on her blog, eventually recording them in her voice, and finally made the leap to podcasting interviews of local and regional food industry people.

“I started by asking my friends in the industry to be on the show, and then asked them who I should talk to next,” says Libby, who only conducts face-to face-interviews. “Distance interviewing creates a bit of a wall where the connection to my guest isn’t as strong. I like to talk about deeper things, triumphs and challenges, where do you see yourself in the future.” Though she does all of her own post-production and distribution, Libby recently joined the TEEJ.fm network, hoping to find a group of other local podcasters to “meet up with and bounce ideas off each other.”

In 2017, WTJU general manager Nathan Moore launched the station’s online podcast network, TEEJ.fm, which hosts more than a dozen locally-produced shows. Photo: Eze Amos

Drop the mike

Nathan Moore is aiming for just that kind of vibe with TEEJ.fm. “Our network of podcasts hopes to sustain a model of community storytelling rooted in a place; everybody who’s involved here has a tie to UVA or Charlottesville or both,” he says, noting that joining the network is open to anyone at no cost and comes with great perks like studio space, training, and distribution for fledgling productions. “There’s a long tradition of documentary and idealistic storytelling in the public radio world, and the power of stories to bring us together informs a lot of what I want to do with TEEJ.fm.”

As smart cars, smart home speakers, and optimized mobile apps make podcasts easy to integrate into everyday life, usage stats are beginning to tell the tale. Last year, one quarter of all Americans over age 12 listened to podcasts regularly (one-third of 25- to 54-year-olds), and 12 million people tried a podcast for the first time in 2018. Producers believe there is enormous potential for reaching many more.

“There are lots of micro-audiences—groups who share a common set of values or interests or a physical place—that podcasters could consider when they’re thinking about their target listeners,” says Kelley Libby of Virginia Humanities.

For his part, Dr. Burns likes to envision the far-reaching ripple effect of educational podcasts. “I’ve been motivated by this idea that if we can make neurologists around the world smarter and better, then they can provide better care to their patients, and that’s pretty damn impactful,” he says.

For podcasters raising their voices, the world seems eager to lend an ear.

 

 

 

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Arts

Lasting impressions: Three movies you may have missed last year

As the year winds down and awards season approaches, movies that most audiences have never heard of begin to dominate the film news cycle. Limited releases, festival favorites, and critical darlings become the movies to watch according to tastemakers and award-giving organizations, but it can be a bit frustrating to hear so much about films that may never open where you live, or have left before they gained traction. Here are three great movies from 2018 that have slipped under the popular radar, but are worth seeking out on streaming services.

Support the Girls

R, 94 minutes

Andrew Bujalski’s workplace comedy, Support the Girls, does not look like the sort of movie one might consider “great” at first glance. Set in a Hooters-esque restaurant called Double Whammies, the story focuses on general manager Lisa (Regina Hall) as she struggles to keep everything under control: at work, in her life, and in the lives of others. Nothing in this world makes sense—the owner is an absentee micromanager, much of the staff loathe the customers they are supposed to be flirting with, and Lisa’s insistence that Whammies is a family establishment flies in the face of the sleazebag clientele it attracts. Every character is fully realized by both script and actor, and the satire always aims away from cheap, predictable gags. The feeling that utter chaos might break out at any moment means that every seemingly mundane event has a palpable layer of tension. It’s also as funny as any sitcom-style comedy of errors, guided by Hall’s spectacular performance—one of the year’s best—and Bujalski’s intelligent and knowing direction into uncharted territory for a film of its scale.

Good Manners (As Boas Maneiras)

NR, 135 minutes

When a movie requires as many genre labels as Brazilian film Good Manners—werewolf movie/family drama/romance/musical—you might expect a 90-minute, B-grade schlockfest. Those movies are fun in their own right, but Good Manners has something else entirely in mind—it mines those genres for maximum emotional impact in a gripping story about a woman raising the lycanthropic child of the woman she loved, who died in childbirth. It’s a tale of hope and anxiety. Are we doing the right thing by ourselves and others? Are we sowing the seeds of hate and resentment while pretending all is well? Will sheltering our children from wickedness encourage them to be good people, or will the revelation that the world is not as they were told bring about something horrible? On two occasions, when the emotions run too high for mere dialogue, cathartic songs of optimism and anguish boil to the surface. Good Manners is a beautiful movie that ought to be a contender for Best Foreign Language Film.

You Were Never Really Here

R, 95 minutes

Of this list, You Were Never Really Here is the one you’ve most likely heard of. The trouble is, most people don’t seem to have seen it, and that needs to be remedied. Lynne Ramsay directs Joaquin Phoenix as Joe, a hitman who is hired by a congressman to rescue his daughter from traffickers, as demons from his own past make this more than just another job. It’s a straightforward story that is exquisitely told, blending Joe’s thoughts with what’s happening in front of his eyes, along with amazing craftsmanship in direction, editing, and cinematography. It’s made even more outstanding by one of 2018’s best film scores, by Jonny Greenwood. If you slept on You Were Never Really Here while it was in the theaters, now is the time to wake up and join the conversation.


See it again

A League of Their Own

PG, 128 minutes;
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema

January 5

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema 377 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056, drafthouse.com/charlottesville

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213, regmovies.com

Violet Crown Cinema 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000, charlottesville.violetcrown.com z Check theater websites for listings.

Categories
Arts

Hidden figures: The mysterious work of WAXenVINE at Second Street Gallery

By CM Gorey

Photography rules our lives now. And unless you’re a staunch Luddite with something to prove, you’re a contributor and a consumer from first coffee cup through alarm-setting before bed. We have transitioned from the point-and-shoot, badly lit grease fests of 1980s homespun glossies to teeming libraries of filters swizzling images into preposterous concoctions: At essentially zero cost, we make ourselves years younger, abnormally wide-eyed and emitting suspect amounts of sparkles. Undermining the camera’s basic function of mirroring reality, we yield ever further to absorbing and reflecting more fantasy.

Yet given the unlimited potential for new visions, there’s a sameness to most of the imagery we swipe past. A cheap currency of storytelling dominates the images we see; it’s a totalitarian vogue insinuated by so-called influencers and perfect people we’ve never met.

In a world inundated with visuals, it’s an incredible feat that the fine art of photography persists. More implausible still, the work of Brooklyn-based husband-and-wife team WAXenVINE requires an in-person (yeah, real life) visit to appreciate it properly. Their show “TORN” at Second Street Gallery recasts the medium in a manner that shows a depth muted by the very best phone displays; its quality invites in-the-flesh meditation that is otherwise disguised to an unfair flatness when replicated by even good old print.

Photographer Scott Irvine and interdisciplinary artist Kim Meinelt share a singular artistic vision. Their multifaceted images recall early vintage photo portraiture, but the subjects commingle with skyward or taxonomic shots of fauna and flora in upended perspectives; the guts of simple machines recast them in daunting tangles; and inverted negatives find them under obscured, scratched treatments.

“TORN” deals primarily with the female figure and alternative views of beauty, which, according to the artists, aim to conjure an uneasy yet ethereal narrative. If the stratification of the pieces is successful, it’s because when we drill down beneath the gloss of the topmost layer, peer into the blur of intentional overexposure and wounded focus, we’re still met with mystery. Look and look some more. These people refuse to be seen.

It’s easy to assume a commentary on the objectification of femininity, given the women fogged out by bird feathers and muddied up by chandeliers. But like the physical composition of the works themselves, it goes deeper.

WAXenVINE’s photographs defy the expected benefits of sight by squelching the clarity associated with proximity. We’re so close but still can’t be completely sure what it is we’re looking at: Is that woman upset or in total bliss? In pain or ecstasy? And where is she?

The abstractions are ripe for interpretation: Generated in spontaneous reaction to calibrate the experience, our projected narratives serve to pound a stake in the rare islands of surety the artists have allotted for us. We know that’s a woman and that’s a tree, but that knowledge doesn’t reveal ambition and it never exposes unguarded emotion.

Looking over these pieces together in Second Street’s Dové Gallery, it’s apparent that many of the captured figures are complicit in the viewer’s ignorance. They are unable or unwilling to look back at us from their umbral warrens, and their lack of eyes —or in some instances, featureless faces—make the problem all the more convoluted for the viewer.

The titles of three-foot square works dominating two of the gallery walls acknowledge the female subjects beyond scrutiny. Landscapes meld with bodies, flesh becomes dust, which becomes flesh. In “Milka Torn,” the subject’s arms in a defensive self-hug hold back a forest of stars erupting from her chest, as a windswept wasteland tumultuously rolls in the distance. “Caitin Torn” catches either a woman’s final moments before dissolving into the earth, or the beginning of her revival in the desiccating greenery. New life or old death? This could be the underlying question that drives WAXenVINE.

One section containing 23 smaller pieces transforms into smaller square windows peering into a monochrome freakshow or an advent calendar from an asylum. “Pins + Needles” gives an unlucky lady the voodoo doll treatment, while “Blythe” loses the majority of her orifices to an implosion of botany; same goes for the pivot-face locked in the floral wheel of “Dandelion,” and for “Elizabeth,” whose profile has birthed bulbs, her graceful throat repurposed as a field from which the long stems grow. In the ruff of blooms of the darkened “Tara + Flower,” the motif is repeated in the cycle of life and the irrepressible profusion of beauty.

No less effective, other works such as “Tara Beads,” “Sylvie,” and “Markert Gold” ignite their black-and-white expanses with golden hues. By creating a richness of contour and replicating the trope of interconnectedness—woman as tree, branches as a gilded x-ray of veins and capillaries—the portraits carry the faintest traces of Klimt-style woman worship. The layers of each, in concert, bridge the scientific and the religious. We may not understand everything, but perhaps we know enough to believe what we see.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Beleza

He was finger-picking in the name of classical guitar and Spanish flamenco in Brazil. She was hitting the keys with her jazzy-blues tones along the East Coast. It’s a modern-day musical romance that culminated in the formation of the band Beleza (above) as well as the duo’s marriage. With the fusing of funk and blues, samba and bossa nova, performed along with a full band in Portuguese, Spanish, and English, Beleza combines the best parts of North and South America.

Friday 1/4 No cover, 6pm. Glass House Winery, 5898 Free Union Rd., Free Union. 975-0094.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: New Year, New Vibes Part 3

Lady Sag, as in Sagittarius, doesn’t follow the average hip-hop path. She’s all about the signs, branching out, and alternating between gospel, ballads, and country songs. As one of 10 featured local artists in New Year, New Vibes with Bam Bam, Sav, Tae Da God, and Tavi, Lady Sag says we can look forward to music based on experience. The audience can bask in good local hip-hop, artists supporting artists, and live DJ Chris Newman’s perfectly timed jokes between sets.

Saturday 1/5, $5-10, 9pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. 207-2335.