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Arts Culture

Reflecting the past and staring down the future

Matthew E. White & Lonnie Holley
Broken Mirror, A Selfie Reflection
Spacebomb/Jagjaguwar

For his latest solo effort, the mastermind behind Richmond’s Spacebomb Records has teamed up with 70-year-old Alabama singer Lonnie Holley. Before pursuing music, Holley was known for his work as a visual artist, crafting sculptures and environments from found objects. When Matthew E. White asked Holley to write and sing across a batch of instrumentals that he had recorded with the Spacebomb house band, Holley applied the same artistic aesthetic to the project. Comprised of five extended “compositions,” Broken Mirror, A Selfie Reflection is an indulgent, dreamlike amalgam of sound and imagery that serves as a commentary on life in the digital era. The title track, “Broken Mirror (A Selfie Reflection)/Composition 9,” is a 10-minute romp of chants and synth layers that draws on cultural tropes like “mirror, mirror on the wall,” and the threat of “seven years of bad luck,” as the narrator stares at his own image on a cell phone. This record isn’t a casual listen, but rather, a thought-provoking one that manages to be entirely futuristic while remaining rooted in the present. (Released April 9)

Vivian Leva & Riley Calcagno
Vivian Leva & Riley Calcagno
Free Dirt Records

Born and raised in Lexington, Virginia, Vivian Leva had a vast musical training ground right at home: Her parents are veteran old-time musicians who have been performing for over a decade as Jones & Leva. Alongside her mom, Leva brought the sounds of the Blue Ridge Mountains to Washington state as a workshop teacher in the summer of 2016. There, she met Riley Calcagno, a member of the string band The Onlies. They forged a musical partnership, and Calcagno contributed to Leva’s 2018 debut, Time Is Everything. Now, the duo has released its first proper full-length, a beautiful integration of indie-folk, mountain music, and classic country. The pair’s pure harmonies unfurl over virtuosic finger-picking, as they tackle themes of heartbreak (“Will You”), the sublime (“Love and Chains”), and loneliness (“Biding All My Time”). Leva and Calcagno are more than the sum of their parts, and while they currently reside in Portland, Oregon, their self-titled disc is pure Appalachia. (Released March 12)

Stray Fossa
With You For Ever
Nice Guys Records

Brothers Nick and Will Evans grew up in southern Tennessee, and along with childhood friend Zach Blount, they wrote songs and played in bands together throughout high school. The trio went their separate ways for college, but after graduate stints across the globe in Berlin and the U.K., they reformed as Stray Fossa in Charlottesville in 2018. (Will had attended undergrad at the University of Virginia, and Charlottesville’s burgeoning music scene seemed like a good place to kick-start their musical pursuits.) The group built a studio in an attic, where the guys recorded a handful of EPs as well as their full-length debut, With You For Ever. Written in the beginning stages of the pandemic, the album not only reflects the surreal aspects of a global health crisis and social isolation, but also brims with nostalgia, offering a joyous and hopeful reprieve of shimmery dream pop. Standout track “Bright Ahead” boasts a maturation in sound from the band’s early work, while highlights like “Orange Days’’ take a wistful look in the rearview. With You For Ever is a collection to get lost in, washing over the listener in a wave of keys, steady percussion, reverb, and gossamer vocals. (Release March 9)

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Arts Culture

Return to form through function

DJ Williams
Short Stories, Projekt Music

For a musician who’s spent over a decade playing countless live shows, teaming up with industry heavy hitters from Questlove to Karl Denson, you wouldn’t think there’d be much ground left to cover. But Williams’ latest project, Short Stories, is something of a rebirth. It showcases his first time mixing and engineering an entire album at home. Across the disc’s six tracks, labeled “chapters,” Williams recorded all of the instruments himself. He bought all the gear and watched YouTube tutorials to achieve the sounds he wanted. Only later did he add appearances by Denson, Deshawn “Dvibes” Alexander (Eric Krasno Band), Kenneth Crouch (Eric Clapton), and more.

In essence, it’s Williams’ first official solo album (and his first release pressed to vinyl). But it’s not chock full of the familiar guitar riffs and solos that fans have come to know and love from him. Instead, each chapter is its own funky landscape with catchy melodies. Playful chapters like “Athleisure Wear,” “Quarantine Dreams,” and “Y’all Accept Bitcoin” boast humorous, good-natured fun to keep you dancing. (Released February 1)

Free Union
Somethin’ + The Other Side, Self-Released

Free Union hasn’t been dormant through­out this elongated season of quarantine. Over the past several months, the band has maintained a Quarantunes Series, releasing live versions of original songs like “Good Day to Cry” and “It Gets Better,” alongside holiday tunes and spirited covers of current pop hits by the likes of Harry Styles and Billie Eilish.

Spearheaded by Michael Coleman and Rob Dunnenberger, Free Union also stayed true to form by digging deep for two new tracks. Released as a double single, Somethin’ + The Other Side, each offers a glimmer of hope in the face of the harsh realities of white supremacy and deep- seated division displayed in 2020. “Somethin’” is the funkier of the two, a bop meant to embolden, while “The Other Side” is a smooth meditation on getting past struggle and strife.

With special guests including Morgan Burrs of Butcher Brown and mixing by Adrian Olsen at Montrose Studios, the Charlottesville-based group looked to Richmond for this release—even the cover art by Spanish artist Fredingrado reflects the changing tides, depicting the graffiti- adorned Robert E. Lee statue on Monument Avenue, which has been the site of public demonstrations and protests. It’s proof that uniting our communities through arts and advocacy paves the way for positive change. (Released January 22)

Lael Neale
Acquainted with Night,
Sub Pop Records

Growing up on her family’s farm in Albemarle County, Lael Neale was a devout fan of poetry, and held an affinity for nature writers like Ralph Waldo Emerson. When she moved to California to pursue music in 2009, her penchant for poems and the outdoors never waned. The up-and-comer signed to indie stalwart Sub Pop Recordsin the fall of 2020, and is making her label debut with Acquainted with Night, a collection that gives as much of a nod to central Virginia as it does to the West Coast.

Last April, Neale returned to her family’s farm to ride out part of quarantine. There, she picked up an old Sony Handycam and began shooting grainy videos to accompany the album’s songs, which were all written and recorded in Los Angeles. The video for “For No One For Now” is filled with Southern imagery: wide shots of an old church, scenes of the countryside viewed from a car window, and a protagonist cutting up peaches and spreading jam on toast. This track, alongside other singles like “Every Star Shivers in the Dark,” has a sonic uniformity rooted in minimalism, harkening back to Neale’s love of poetry. Recorded on a cassette recorder, the songs possess a gauzy, lo-fi quality that features Neale’s voice front and center, accompanied by a drum machine and an Omnichord (an instrument she didn’t pick up until 2019). By channeling the breadth of her surroundings, Neale has crafted a coast-to-coast dreamscape. (Release date: February 9)

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Arts Culture

Listening from home

COVID-19 has taken an unfathomable amount of lives, and its reverberations have disrupted our most cherished industries—the music business included. The onset of the pandemic brought studio sessions, live performances, and large-scale concerts to a screeching halt, rendering musicians, promoters, and venue and tour crews without reliable income.

But time off the road also afforded musicians the space to create. Inherently, art serves as a means to process life and its experiences. The music that resonates the most does so because it absorbs the world around us and reflects it back in a way that makes it more digestible. The proliferation of music that’s come out of quarantine takes many forms, from cross-country virtual collaborations to surprising covers.

In some instances, lockdown inspired artists to try new things (COVID remixes, anyone?) or caused them to rely on the tools they had on hand—it’s not uncommon to hear household objects being repurposed as instruments. As a result, surprise album drops and self-releases flourished this year. Artists in our own community have been hard at work, too—and they need our help now more than ever. If you can, purchase music, purchase merch, and spread the word. Here’s a slice of central Virginia’s creative output in 2020.

New releases

 A.D. Carson, i used to love to dream (hip-hop)

Angelica Garcia, Cha Cha Palace
(indie, pop, synth)

Becca Mancari, The Greatest Part (dream pop, indie folk)

Butcher Brown, #KingButch (funk, jazz, hip-hop)

Chamomile and Whiskey, Red Clay Heart (Americana, folk-rock, alt-country): Spearheaded by Nelson County’s Koda Perl and Marie Borgman, Chamomile and Whiskey has been a mainstay on the central Virginia music scene for years. But on Red Clay Heart, the group turned to Music City and the production work of Ken Coomer (former drummer of Wilco and Uncle Tupelo) for a honed-in sound. “I had never arranged and recorded in the studio,” Kerl told C-VILLE of the album’s process.“It was something new—just creating in there with everyone together.”

Choose Your Own Adventure, Roos In Space (jazz, funk, fusion)

Deau Eyes, Let It Leave (indie, pop)

Diane Cluck, Common Wealth (folk)

Dogwood Tales, Closest Thing to Heaven (Americana)

Dropping Julia, In My Sleep (funk, rock, fusion)

Erin Lunsford, The Damsel (indie, pop)

Gold Connections, Ammunition (indie rock)

Tim Heidecker, Fear of Death (indie): Though Tim Heidecker is best known as one-half of the comedic duo Tim & Eric, his new album is no joke. Tapping into his affinity for the ’70s sounds of Laurel Canyon, he collaborated with indie-pop heavy hitters like Weyes Blood, Jonathan Rado of Foxygen, and The Lemon Twigs’ Brian and Michael D’Addario to create an existential meditation on life and death for his Spacebomb Records debut.

Jana Horn, Optimism (indie folk)

John Kelly, In Between (Americana)

Kate Bollinger, A word becomes a sound
(indie rock, dream pop)

Keith Morris & The Crooked Numbers,
American Reckoning (folk)

Kendall Street Company, The Stories We Write For Ourselves (rock, jam)

Laquinn, LaQwinning (hip-hop)

Nathaniel Star, Eros (neo-soul): To describe Nathaniel Star’s output as dynamic would be an understatement. The Charlottesville native has dabbled in almost any genre you can think of (Afrobeat, country, and R&B to name a few), but Eros is more than just his sixth full-length album; it’s his magnum opus. “Love is crazy. It makes you feel that anything is possible,” he told C-VILLE when discussing the 20-song collection.

Mary Chapin Carpenter, The Dirt and the Stars (rock, Americana)

Molly Murphy, Call Me Elsewhere (indie folk)

Nan Macmillan, August and the In Between
(indie folk)

Night Teacher, Night Teacher (indie folk)

Pale Blue Dot, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (prog-rock)

Restroy, Sketches (Experimental, electronic, ambient, prog-rock)

Rattlebag, Change of View (rock, R&B, zydeco)

Rob Cheatham and Co., Sons and Daughters (Americana)

Ruth Good, Haunt EP (indie rock)

Shagwüf, Trendy Weapon, Dog Days of Disco (pop, rock, fusion)

The Shrugs, Junk Days And Radio Zones
(indie rock)

Vacation Manor, Thoughts In Progress Pt. 1
(indie rock)

Various Artists, A Little Bit at a Time:
Spacebomb Family Rarities
(indie, folk, pop)

David Wax Museum, The Persimmon Tree (10th Anniversary Edition)

J. Roddy Walston, “Brave Man’s Death” (COVID Remix)

Larry Keel, American Dream (bluegrass): On his latest solo effort, the legendary bluegrass flatpicker is a one-man band, playing every instrument across the album’s 10 tracks. As the title suggests, Keel draws on global events to craft a self-aware exploration of race and policy in the U.S.

Lowland Hum, Singing Other People’s Love Song (indie folk)

Sons of Bill ft. Molly Parden, “In Your Eyes” (Peter Gabriel cover; Americana)

Summer Starved, Library Card: Volume 1 (pop, synth, prog): Richmond musician/producer Kevin Burtram’s collection of instrumentals, which was composed during lockdown, is a patchwork quilt of layered sounds and samples that entertain the music nerd in all of us.

Singles…and a peek at what’s to come in 2021

Prabir Trio, “Light Up In The Name Of Love” (rock)

The Steel Wheels, “When To Say Goodnight” (Americana)

Good Dog Nigel, “Strawberries” (indie, rock)

Stray Fossa, “For What Was,” and “Are You Gonna Be Okay” (alternative, indie)

Will Overman, “Living Wage,” and “Living Things” off of his upcoming LP The Winemaker’s Daughter

Mitchel Evan, “Band Aid” and “Leeches” off of his upcoming self-titled LP

Tyler Meacham, “Nightwalking” (pop)

Hatcher’s Run, “Wisteria,” “Delilah,”
“Stronger Than Blood,” “Silos and Skylines” (Americana, alt-country)

trout baseline, (a)round EP (indie pop, synth)

Categories
Arts Culture

Songs well-traveled and universal themes

trout baseline

(a)round EP, self-released

Ryan Lee has been a stalwart on the commonwealth music scene for years, performing with local acts like Free Union, Will Overman, and Erin & the Wildfire, among others. The VCU graduate began crafting his solo debut, (a)round EP, in the wake of COVID-19. With time away from touring, Lee was able to flesh out his own artistic vision—one that is both introspective and existential. On “the day (turn around),” he sings, “the day a week felt like a month,” using wordplay and explorations of our understanding of time to convey a feeling that’s been all too familiar in 2020. These universal themes are prevalent throughout the EP’s five tracks, projected across a synth-laden sonic landscape replete with airy guitar lines and keys. For fans of electro-pop, Sufjan Stevens, and David Bowie, this is a must-listen (released November 13).

Molly Murphy

Call Me Elsewhere, self-released

After graduating from the University of Virginia last year, Charlottesville native Molly Murphy relocated to New York City. Her debut EP was born out of this transition, serving as a meditation on adulthood—what it means to come into one’s own, to settle into a sense of self and a sense of place. Call Me Elsewhere’s five tracks rely heavily on location: They were written on porches and gravel roads in Virginia and in cramped apartments and subway trains in New York. After recording in closets and bedrooms in both states, Murphy opted to produce and mix the EP herself. This DIY approach led to a level of reflection and intimacy that draws the listener in. The atmospheric track “Candles,” for instance, opens with the strike of a match. Other songs name-check familiar spots: “Sugar Hollow” refers to the nearby swimming hole, while “Harrison Street” and “Pearl Street Creek” are odes to her new home in the Big Apple. During a time when we are constantly bombarded with information, Call Me Elsewhere lifts us out of fatigue, even if just for a little while (released November 20).

Mitchel Evan

Mitchel Evan, self-released

Richmond singer-songwriter Mitchel Evan spent some time in Colorado honing his chops before moving back to Virginia, giving him a wealth of cross-country experience to draw on for his upcoming self-titled album, recorded with his backing band, The Saboteurs, at Richmond’s Go West Studio. With Evan on lead vocals, guitar, and harmonica, the offering also features Daniel Stein (guitar, drums, keyboards, pedal steel), Martinus Van Peppen (bass), Spencer Conroy (violin), and Blake Smoral (harmony vocals). Lead single “Band Aid” is an alt-country romp boasting a chorus that begs to be sung along to, outlining the pain of a lost love. Follow-up track, “Leeches,” is a story of enticement driven by a seductive violin. For Americana fans, Mitchel Evan is a release to watch for in the new year (due out in January). 

 

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Arts Culture

Sound Choices: New faces, old places, and terra firma

Ruth Good

Haunt EP, Citrus City Records

Richmond/Brooklyn-based Citrus City Records has served as a platform for marginalized and lesser-heard voices from all corners of the scene since 2014. One of the tape label’s latest offerings comes from Ruth Good, the moniker for brothers Jonathan and Wes Parker. The duo teamed up with older brother Alan Parker (Spacebomb) for Haunt, which brims with grit and nuance. With the elder Parker on lead guitar and pedal steel, Jacob Ungerleider rounds out the arrangement on keys, while Dr. Dog’s Eric Slick takes the helm on drums. Each member recorded remotely from home in April, and the final product was mixed by Adrian Olsen at Montrose Recording and mastered by Ryan Schwabe. Recalling elements of surf rock, harmonies dance around guitar and piano lines across the EP’s four tracks—which all clock in under four minutes—making Haunt a breath of fresh air that packs a punch. What’s more, 100 percent of the album’s digital sales are donated to Richmond Mutual Aid in support of disaster relief and COVID-19 resources (released September 5).

Jana Horn

Optimism, Self-released

Jana Horn has been a stalwart on the Austin music scene for years, touring with bands like Knife in the Water and Reservations. This fall marks a period of seminal change for Horn: She’s now spending a good chunk of time in Charlottesville, pursuing her MFA in fiction at the University of Virginia. Concurrently, she’s released her debut solo album, Optimism, which has been in the works since 2015. Recorded at Hen House Recording in Texas, the disc features Ian Phillips (drums) and her fellow Knife in the Water bandmates Aaron Blount (guitar) and Vince Delgado (bass). A quiet, meditative listen, Optimism is a folk exaltation that makes room for Horn’s ruminations to breathe and unfurl (released September 18).

Rob Cheatham and Co.

Sons and Daughters, Self-released

Sons and Daughters is Rob Cheatham’s third record in four years—and perhaps his most ambitious offering to date. His legacy in the commonwealth can be traced back to his time growing up in Richmond. After a stint in Philadelphia, Cheatham settled in Charlottesville, where he’s played in numerous bands throughout the years (The Nice Jenkins, Gunchux, Borrowed Beams of Light). Chock-full of the alt-country gusto listeners have come to expect from Cheatham, Sons and Daughters goes a step further, drawing on the touchstones of rock ‘n’ roll for a more robust sound. Amy Bowden’s violin provides a stirring through-line, while a horn section complete with trumpet (Ben Pryse), saxophone (Noah Galbreath), and trombone (Evan Amoroso) offers a welcome warmth. Across the album’s eight tracks, Cheatham reflects on our current cultural and sociopolitical climate, begging the question: What world are we leaving behind for our sons and daughters? (released March 20).

Pale Blue Dot

Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species, Rockfish Music

Tapping into an array of musical influences from folk and prog-rock to jazz, Charlottesville-based Pale Blue Dot crafts music that’s smart and self-aware, prone to questioning the world and everything’s place within it. Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species is a steady continuation of the group’s affinity for the existential. Songs like “Evolution Blues” and “Waiting for Signs” find the band’s feet planted squarely on the ground while challenging our self-imposed belief systems (released September 4).

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Arts Culture

Delivering on decades of experience

Butcher Brown

#KingButch

(Concord Jazz)

Butcher Brown has a lot to celebrate. The Richmond quintet was recently tapped by ESPN to record an updated version of Little Richard’s “Rip It Up” as the new theme song for “Monday Night Football.” On the heels of that opportunity, the group made its major label debut on Concord with the release of its eighth studio album, #KingButch. The 13-song collection is an energetic display of the signature jazz/hip-hop/funk fusion that’s made the band a commonwealth mainstay since 2013. Recorded at Butcher Brown’s home base of Jellowstone Studios in Richmond, the album features core members DJ Harrison (deejay, keys), Corey Fonville (drums), Andrew Randazzo (bass), Marcus “Tennishu” Tenney (trumpet, saxophone), and Morgan Burrs (guitar). While #KingButch is brimming with influences from the ’60s and ’70s, the album title’s hashtag demonstrates a cultural awareness that’s prevalent throughout the sonic landscape. With a unique approach (think Southern rap meets Sly and the Family Stone), Butcher Brown has crafted one of the most exciting records of the year (released 9/18).

Gold Connections

Ammunition

(AWAL)

From dorm rooms and house shows to studio sessions and indie label signings, Will Marsh has been climbing the musical ranks with his project, Gold Connections, for nearly a decade. Marsh moved to Charlottesville after graduating from the College of William & Mary in 2015, channeling the legacy of two of his musical heroes—David Berman and Stephen Malkmus. With wry lyricism and catchy alt-rock hooks, Gold Connections certainly gives a nod to Pavement and Silver Jews, but with a flare all its own. Marsh’s friend and former bandmate Will Toledo (of Car Seat Headrest fame) shared a producer credit on Gold Connections’ self-titled debut on Fat Possum Records. Backed by the local EggHunt Records, Popular Fiction (2018) and Like a Shadow (2019) soon followed. Gold Connections’ latest EP, Ammunition, is a five-song explosion that harkens back to the ’90s, but lyrical descriptors like “late-Obama-era” place the EP squarely in the present. Marsh took the producer reins on this release, and it shows: Ammunition is his tightest offering to date (coming 11/16).

Deau Eyes

Let It Leave

(EggHunt Records)

Richmond native Ali Thibodeau has a varied background in performance, taking on roles in theme parks, theaters, cruise ships, festivals, and studios across New York, Idaho, Florida, and Virginia. But her latest iteration—as singer-songwriter Deau Eyes—may be her best yet. Funded by a Kickstarter campaign, her debut full-length, Let It Leave, is a passion project that was recorded at Trace Horse Studios in Nashville and took two years to come to fruition. The fact that Thibodeau has spent years honing her skills in performance is evident: Let It Leave glistens with a gusto and grace that’s a refreshing addition to the current spate of indie rock. At once playful and vulnerable, Thibodeau delivers a captivating meditation on love, loss, and womanhood. With tinges of Americana shrouded in pop-punk touchstones, Thibodeau’s buoyant, sinewy vocals are the star of the show (released 5/8).

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Arts Culture

From the ground up: While enjoying major-label success, Illiterate Light stays connected to its roots

Nearly a decade ago, a traveling troupe of musicians was midway through its set at the now-demolished Random Row Books in Charlottesville when the power went out. While darkness settled over the crowd, the band continued its performance undeterred, with no noticeable change in sound. That’s because the group’s set-up was running on a bike-powered generator: With one member pedaling a bicycle on a generator stand, a small PA system kept functioning. From the darkness sprang Charlottesville’s next big thing: Illiterate Light.

That night at Random Row, JMU alums Jeff Gorman and Jake Cochran were playing in Money Cannot Be Eaten, one of a handful of socially oriented bands cycling around the state together under the heading of Petrol-Free Jubilee.

In 2015, Gorman and Cochran set off on a new project, the rock band Illiterate Light (the name is taken from a line in the Wilco song “Theologians”). Since then, the pair has toured widely, developed a devoted following, and signed a deal with a major label. But they still find themselves recalling those foundational days.

Petrol-Free Jubilee “really pushed Jeff and I to think like, alright, there’s definitely big-picture solutions that we [don’t] know how to contribute to yet,”  says Cochran. “But diving in with a bunch of friends and biking around Virginia to talk about environmentalism and sing songs was something we could get into.”

The band’s experience with the jubilee, along with other volunteerism, directly informed the ethos of Illiterate Light, establishing community building and social consciousness as guiding tenets for its musical output.

In their early days, during junior and senior year, Cochran was on the medical track at JMU and worked as an EMT.

“So much of the pain that I was seeing in the ambulance and the runs we were going on were people with food-based illness,” he says. “We were going to the same neighborhoods picking up the same people. It was all food-related and it was addiction-related and it weighed heavily on my spirit to know that there was this bigger problem.”

In response, Cochran and Gorman helped out at a local nonprofit, Our Community Place. The center operated as a soup kitchen and offered resources for those who were formerly incarcerated, or facing homelessness or addiction. There, the duo connected with area farmers, which inspired them to do an organic agricultural internship. After graduation, they continued to grow produce and sold it at the farmers’ market and co-op. They’d often bring hoards of potatoes, onions, and tomatoes door to door, offering them to nearby restaurants.

“It was really a big part of integrating so deeply into the community here,” Gorman says. “We [were] playing music at night and then living this totally different lifestyle during the day.”

The main venue they played was the Blue Nile, an Ethiopian restaurant whose basement served as a club. Opened by the Arefaine family, who immigrated to the United States in the wake of the Ethiopian civil war, the Blue Nile was a counter-cultural hub.

“The Nile was the only place that really was permissive to outsider music—alternative, punk, metal, hip-hop—being played live in their facility,” says former bar manager Paul Somers. “That really changed the music scene in Harrisonburg.”

Somers took over in 2014 and reopened as The Golden Pony the following spring. Gorman and Cochran helped Somers book and promote shows—and even created a Harrisonburg guidebook for touring bands rolling through town.

“It showcases where their hearts are when it comes to live music, you know, it’s not just about them,” Somers says. “It’s about the whole scene and the larger scheme of bands that they see and know and believe in, and think that other people should appreciate.”

The duo took it a step further by booking The Golden Pony as Illiterate Light’s home base and doing several shows a year at the venue. After extensive touring across the United States, the band had a reputation for its high-energy performances and unusual setup, so it wasn’t uncommon for these shows to sell out.

“It’s always cool to put on a show with them because we know it’s going to be this huge, utterly cathartic rock and roll,” says Somers. “Every- one’s just moving and dancing and surging with the music.”

 

Jeff Gorman and Jake Cochran push positivity through raucous tunes and a holistic approach to their lives as musicians, supporting big-picture solutions through volunteerism, environmentalism, and mentoring. Image: Joey Wharton

Magical musical universe

Gorman sings lead vocals and plays guitar and a “foot bass.”

“There’s some tap dancing that’s going on; I’m actually hitting a big keyboard with my feet as we play and then I run that through its own bass,” he says. “It’s its own little universe that I’ve created.”

Meanwhile, Cochran plays a stand-up drum kit, taking a normal drum kit and raising it up higher. He stands on his left leg and plays the kick drum with his right foot.

“It started out as a very visual change. Jeff and I, as two people, really want to be able to interact. The way I decided to do that was to bring the drum kit up front and one time I just tried kicking the stool out and standing up,” Cochran says. “It was a fun way to trade energy and we set up right on the edge of the stage so it’s in your face—and drums are very rarely that forward.”

After establishing a signature live sound, the duo had to figure out how to harness that same energy in the studio. Richmond artist Charlie Glenn (The Trillions, Palm Palm) connected them with Adrian Olsen, producer and owner of Montrose Recording in Richmond, and they set to work on Illiterate Light’s first full-length LP.

“The main critique I had heard coming into recording Illiterate Light was that they sounded massive live, but the recordings they had done up to that point didn’t represent the sound they had developed live,” Olsen recalls. “So my approach was to have them play live in the studio and go for as much of a maximalist approach as possible—lots of room mics and amps…Jeff usually gets a pretty epic pedalboard going with I’d say upwards of 40 pedals at his feet if I had to guess.”

The duo’s work with Glenn and Olsen caught the attention of another stalwart on the Richmond scene—Tyler Williams. While Williams might be best known as the drummer for The Head and the Heart, he’s also worked with Lucy Dacus and was seeking another local project to champion, so he  checked out one of the duo’s shows at the Richmond venue The Camel.

“I immediately was taken by the energy on stage when I walked into The Camel,” says Williams. “It just felt like there was like an electricity in the room…that’s the first sign when you know that something is happening with a music artist. You feel it in the room. It’s the closest thing I’ve ever felt to magic.”

As the band propelled forward, Williams took off with them in a management capacity. It wasn’t long before major labels came knocking, and Illiterate Light signed to Atlantic, releasing its self-titled label debut last year.

Illiterate Light’s self-titled debut was released in October 2019 by Atlantic Records, further propelling the Harrisonburg duo from house band at The Golden Pony into the national spotlight. Image: Joey Wharton

Shining their light

In 2020, the band launched an ongoing series that captures live performances from past shows called “In the Moment: Illiterate Light Live.” One of the series’ most featured venues is The Golden Pony. This nod to Harrisonburg isn’t the only way Gorman and Cochran continue to acknowledge the community that made them.

Professor Joseph “Ojo” Taylor remembers Gorman as a student in the music industry program at JMU.

“My songwriting class is where we get our hands dirty, you know, get under the hood and really analyze a lot of songs,” Taylor explains. “[Gorman] stood out to me initially because he just had a depth and an interest and passion for this that a lot of students don’t have right away.”

Gorman and Cochran keep in touch with Taylor, guesting during class workshops, sharing what they’re working on, giving students an insight into life as a nationally touring band. Before COVID-19, the duo would often invite students to shows or offer mentorship over a cup of coffee.

“The way that they create community and support their community is the thread that binds their whole vision together,” says Williams. “You know, we are on a major [record] label, but we still use the same video- graphers from Harrisonburg that have always made their videos…Virginia makes them who they are and they want to give back.”

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Arts Culture

Sound Choices: Honoring family and following jazz

Angela Garcia

Cha Cha Palace
(Spacebomb Records)

Angelica Garcia has that “it” factor. Listen across a series of loops, echoes, and howls, and her performances stop you dead in your tracks. They make you feel something. There are times when a solid live performance doesn’t translate in the studio, but that’s not the case on Cha Cha Palace. The album presents a sharp but welcome turn from her 2016 debut, Medicine for Birds.

Garcia grew up in a musical family in east L.A., and relocated to Richmond, Virginia, when she was 17, where she soon missed the cultural touchstones of her daily life. Although Garcia found kinship within RVA’s arts community, she grappled with the feeling of being an outsider. Much of Cha Cha Palace channels this dichotomy—and while the album is a tribute to L.A., it came to fruition with the help of her Virginia cohort.

Standout track “Jicama” is an exploration of duality (it made Barack Obama’s list of favorite songs of 2019). “I see you but you don’t see me,” Garcia sings of her identity as a self-proclaimed “Salva-Mex-American.” Elsewhere, songs like “Guadalupe,” “La Llorona,” and “Agua De Rosa,” are a direct nod to her heritage. Across a vast sonic platform Cha Cha Palace both celebrates Garcia’s Latinx roots and highlights the complexities of biculturalism, and it is a triumph (released 2/28).

John Kelly

In Between (Possible Sky)

It’s been upwards of 20 years since John Kelly’s last full-length release—so he’s making this one count. Before moving to Charlottesville, Kelly spent time in singer-songwriter circles in New York City and his home state of Connecticut, and teamed up with Grammy nominated producer Rob Mathes (Sting, Bruce Springsteen) for his debut album, Brighter Days.

Over the past two decades, he’s honed his skills in central Virginia, making a lot of friends along the way. When it came time to make In Between, these friends showed up. The two-year effort is recorded and mixed by James McLaughlin, produced by Rusty Speidel, and includes Michael Clem (Eddie From Ohio) on bass, Nate Leath (Love Canon) on fiddle, Paul Rosner (Trees on Fire) on drums, and Michael Lille (The Sherpas) on guitar and banjo.

The result is a well-rounded mix of Americana, folk, and straight-ahead rock ‘n’ roll with something to say. “Freedom’s Song” recounts the Charlottesville tragedy on August 12, 2017, when the violent Unite the Right rally resulted in many injuries and the death of Heather Heyer. (Heyer’s mom, Susan Bro, greenlit the track.) “Bronze and Stone” can be heard as a companion piece, centering on Charlottesville’s Robert E. Lee statue. “Let the Children Sing” is a dedication to the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, whose activism in the wake of a school shooting in 2018 was an inspiration.

Kelly’s wife and children contribute backing vocals to “Let the Children Sing,” and their presence is felt throughout. The album’s namesake, “Beginning, End and In Between,” is an ode to his wife, Angela, while “Good One There” honors his father, who passed away in 2013. In Between is a celebration of friendship, family, and social justice, that focuses on what we can accomplish when we work together, instead of in opposition (released 6/26).

Choose Your Own Adventure

Roos In Space
(self-released)

Multi-instrumentalist Gina Sobel’s musical lineage is rooted in jazz. Inspired by her father, a guitarist in a jazz trio, the first instrument she picked up was the flute—and she’s dabbled in experimentation ever since. Sobel harnessed these instincts to form Choose Your Own Adventure. Consisting of Sobel (vocals, flute, electric guitar), Andrew Hollifield (bass), Pat Hayes (drums), and Ryan Lee (electric guitar), the jazz-funk collective utilizes improvisation and a create-as-you-go mentality. After forming in 2014, the group released two EPs in 2018, and are back with another: Roos In Space. Lead track “Hooloo” is an instrumental pick-me-up, while the single “Matches” provides a much-needed spark for today’s landscape (release date 8/14).
—Desiré Moses

Categories
Arts Culture

Sound Choices: Recent Virginia releases resonate with dream pop, folk, and old-time music

Becca Mancari The Greatest Part (Captured Tracks)

After cutting her chops in Lynchburg, Virginia, Becca Mancari brought the traditions of Appalachia with her to Nashville, where she quickly made a name for herself in Music City’s Americana circles. Her debut album Good Woman (2017) drew on elements of her roots, elevating them to the modern day. In its wake, Mancari has spent the past few years forging her own path as an artist. She teamed up with friends Jesse Lafser and Brittany Howard (Alabama Shakes) to form the band Bermuda Triangle, and became more outspoken about social issues. These experiences have informed her sophomore release, The Greatest Part, which ditches the mountain tones in exchange for a dream pop sheen. The juxtaposition of sound and subject matter is crucial: While Mancari tackles personal traumas and truths, the weight is carried by her airy vocals and Beach Boys-inspired production. On the single “First Time,” Mancari recalls the aftermath of coming out as gay to her Christian fundamentalist family: “I remember the first time my father didn’t hug me back.” The rest of the album follows suit, acting as a celebration of Mancari’s heritage and identity as a queer Italian/Puerto Rican woman. There’s no sophomore slump here; The Greatest Part is a joyous expression of an artist coming into her own (released 6/26).

Dogwood Tales Closest Thing to Heaven (WarHen)

Kyle Grim and Ben Ryan began playing music together in high school, and bonded over shared influences from ‘70s-era folk rock—think Neil Young or Emmylou Harris. As Dogwood Tales, the Harrisonburg duo has brought flower power to the Shenandoah Valley through a handful of releases. The group’s latest LP, Closest Thing to Heaven, is no exception. With songs like “Truck Stop Town” and “Riding Horses,” Grim and Ryan combine a low country sound with straight-ahead Americana for an easy listenin’ ride tinged with slide guitar and folk narrative (released 7/17).

Diane Cluck Common Wealth (self-released)

Diane Cluck has been a stalwart in the Charlottesville music scene for nearly a decade, churning out folk compositions and ushering in the next generation of artists as a songwriting teacher at The Front Porch, the area’s roots music school. Her notoriety is hard-earned: she spent 12 years in New York City, garnering accolades in the often-dubbed “freak-folk” scene and playing venues like the recently shuttered SideWalk Café on the Lower East Side with the likes of Regina Spektor and Kimya Dawson, spearheading the anti-folk movement. Cluck dropped her new album, Common Wealth, on Bandcamp last month, with a percentage of its sales benefiting the Equal Justice Initiative. Recorded last summer in Louisa, Common Wealth is a socially conscious collection that boasts beautifully understated melodies and Cluck’s singular voice. Her signature fingerpicking shines on “Jenny,” while tracks like the harmonica-laden “Float a Cuppa Tea” are a knee-slappin’ reincarnation of old-time music. Elsewhere, on songs like “Lie Quiet With Me” and “Grandma Say,” minimalist piano is front and center. Harkening back to a simpler time, Common Wealth is a welcome reprieve, bringing solace during a time of cultural unrest and sociopolitical uncertainty (released 6/5).

Categories
Arts

Falling together: The Lumineers document the reach of addiction on III

Throughout history, rules and procedures have been established to provide structure—like getting from point A to point B. Books are read from beginning to end; a race participant begins at the starting line and progresses to the finish. But creative fields promote originality, leaving space for a band like The Lumineers to throw out the rule book altogether.

On its latest release, III, the Grammy- nominated group started at the finish line. The disc’s final song, “Salt and the Sea,” was the album’s first finished track—and the catalyst for the entire record’s sound. Originally written for the end credits of M. Night Shyamalan’s film Glass, the group repurposed it after Shyamalan decided it wasn’t the right fit.

“I think that actually broke down some doors for us, creatively,” explains co-founder and drummer Jeremiah Fraites. “It’s a darker song, very cinematic. It still sounds like a Lumineers song, but it’s way different than the previous two albums.”

From there, compositions like “Gloria” and “Leader of the Landslide” found their place as founding member Wes Schultz (lead vocals/guitar) began shaping the album’s overarching lyrical theme of addiction.

“‘Gloria’ is sort of an amalgamation of different characters, but she’s also based on a very real person in Wes’ life,” says Fraites. “By seeing this person go through serious alcoholism, rehab, jail, hospitals, you name it, I think that it was really cathartic [for him] to talk about that.”

It’s fitting that the album is titled III—not only is it the band’s third release, but it’s constructed like a play in three acts, tracing addiction through three generations in a single family: the grandmother, Gloria Sparks; her son, Jimmy Sparks; and her grandson, Junior Sparks.

“It’s showing a very, very complicated situation through the lens of a family, the dynamic of that family, and how it affects everybody,” Fraites explains.

In a streaming era concentrated on singles, The Lumineers not only made a record that requires listening from front to back, but also produced an equally compelling visual component that debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival.

“Growing up in the ’90s, MTV was so cool and so iconic and had these music videos that when you saw them, they kind of blew your mind; they were shot like movies,” says Fraites. “Now, films like Beyonce’s Lemonade [are] really inspiring.”

They tapped director Kevin Phillips, and tasked him with producing individual videos for each track on the album that could not only stand alone, but be watched together as a cohesive film. “We had some videos on our first album and we actually kind of did a short film on the second album, but this one we were like, you know what, let’s swing for the fences. Let’s really go for it.”

Since the band’s inception, The Lumineers have made a career out of following their own path. “On the first album, we had previous management…who said the industry standard is to put the single as track two. That’s just what you do,” Fraites explains. “It started out with ‘Flowers In Your Hair’ into a song called ‘Ho Hey’ and I was like, ‘This doesn’t make any sense. I’m not doing this. I don’t care what the industry standard is.’” Fraites rearranged the track sequence in his iTunes folder and placed “Ho Hey” as track five.

“I didn’t even think that ‘Ho Hey’ was gonna be the single. I thought a song like ‘Dead Sea’ would maybe become bigger, to be honest. But hindsight is 20/20 I guess,” he says. “[We released it with] ‘Ho Hey’ as track five…we’re not going to put track two as whatever we think the single is. I think that’s not a healthy way to look at an album.”

“Ho Hey” wound up becoming a smash (over 533 million plays on YouTube so far), and earned The Lumineers two Grammy nominations, setting the bar for a sophomore effort.

“For me, the second album was really difficult to work on, because we had such success with the first. …Somebody didn’t write ‘Ho Hey’ for us; that was me and Wes. There’s no songwriting team; it’s just me and Wes on everything,” Fraites explains. “I wanted to make sure that the second album was received in a way that [people understood] that these guys are in it for the long haul, they’re songwriters, they care about the music, they don’t necessarily care about commercial success.”

The band’s autonomous spirit continues on III.

“I just felt like, you know what, let’s just do what we want, truly. A lot of the songs on this album were really different and I think we took risks or made decisions that we never would have in the past,” says Fraites. “If we can make and write music and produce music that stimulates our brains and gets ourselves high and we think is cool, that’s going to translate to our fanbase.”