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Jazzed up: Swing Into Spring is a show across generations

During his decades-long career as a National Geographic photographer, Bill Allard traveled the world and documented everything from India’s Untouchables and residents of the Marais in Paris to Montana cowboys and Easter week traditions in Peru. But for all of Allard’s adventures, there’s something the octogenarian, who’s also an accomplished musician, still longs to do: sing with a large jazz band.

On March 10, he will get his chance. Allard, who says “music has been a driving force for my entire life,” is one of several local musicians who will perform with the Albemarle High School Jazz Ensemble during the second annual Swing Into Spring benefit concert. The show will help pay for the band’s April trip to Swing Central Jazz, a three-day workshop and competition that’s part of the Savannah Music Festival.

For Allard, the evening is also a family affair. He’ll take the Jefferson Theater stage with his daughter, Terri, a singer-songwriter and host of public TV’s “Charlottesville Inside Out,” and grandson, Will Evans, a trumpeter in the AHS band.

“It’s always a joy to play music with both of them,” says Will of his mother and grandfather. “We have this connection, and I know where they’re going to go with things musically. I just try not to step on their toes and complement what they’re doing. I love it; it’s one of my favorite things.”

Terri says she’s always “thrilled” when she has an opportunity to perform with Will and her father. “They’re each so passionate about music, and both of them have greatly influenced my growth as a musician and music-lover.” When she was growing up, Terri says her dad, who’s sat in with her band for years, filled their house with music, and introduced her to the work of musicians who still remain some of her favorites. As for her son, she says Will’s “passion and respect for jazz and for music in general is contagious. I feel fortunate to be his mom and to follow him along his musical path.”

But the Allards aren’t the only family act on Sunday night’s bill. John Kelly has decades of experience as an acoustic singer-songwriter, and says he rarely gets nervous before a gig. Except, that is, when he performs with his daughter, Sam, a saxophonist and singer in the Albemarle jazz band. “I have enormous respect for her talent and for her musicianship,” Kelly says. “She is someone who is completely in command of what she is doing on stage.”

And like Will Evans, Sam Kelly has music in her blood: Her grandfather played saxophone and flute in the Glenn Miller Orchestra, and her mother, Angela, is a musician and music teacher. “I’ve spent my entire life watching my parents perform, and they have both inspired me to pursue and have a passion for music,” Sam says.

In addition to the Kellys and the Allards, the evening of jazz standards and pop and R&B hits will feature performances by Adar, John D’earth, Charles Owens, Stephanie Nakasian, Barbara Edwards, Madeline Holly-Sales, Berto Sales, Danny Barrale, Davina Jackson, Taylor Barnett, Ryan Lee, Lydie Omesiette, Moasia Jackson, and Michael Elswick.

“When we had the idea to do this last year, we thought it would be a great platform for this community to see and hear just how talented these kids are, and the kind of program a once-in-a-lifetime educator like Greg Thomas has built at AHS,” says John Kelly. “Those of us who were there last year, whether on stage or in the audience, learned that it was much more than that. It was an evening of first-class music. Period.”


Doors for Swing Into Spring open at 6pm, and the music starts at 7. Tickets for the March 10 event are $15-25 in advance ($80 for a table for four), and $18-28 at the door. For tickets and more information, go to jeffersontheater.com

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ARTS Pick: Year of the Woman

It’s time to wrap up the year with a little glamour in honor of local ladies who pushed the boundaries on music. Year of the Woman is a concert featuring two stand-out performers from 2018: Erin Lunsford leads Erin & The Wildfire with bold, rock-soul blends from the album Thirst, and ADAR is led by power-house vocalist Adar Seligman-McComas, who guides her band through original jazz fusions.

Monday 12/31 $20-40, 8:30pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

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ARTS Pick: Adar

When a band’s music is described as genre-defying, it often means its musicians are struggling to find a successful sound. In the case of Adar, the local singer-songwriter does transcend genres and her songs successfully incorporate several types of music—funk, rock, and jazz—to create a smooth, innovative blend of sounds. Virginia funk acts Funktional Electrik and Choose Your Own Adventure round out the show.

Thursday, August 30. $8, 8pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. 970-3260.

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Adar stands in solidarity while gaining traction

There was an apple going bad on Adar Seligman-McComas’ desk. But it had been a week of writer’s block and listlessness, and she wasn’t hungry right then. She’d eat it later, she told herself. Over the course of the month, she watched that unwanted apple slowly rot. Then one morning, Seligman-McComas woke up gripped with a thought: “I don’t want that to be me. I don’t want to be the apple.” And so the song “The Other Fruit” was born.

The frontwoman of the band Adar, Seligman-McComas finds inspiration in even the most mundane of muses. Her songs draw on everything from feeling okay with being alone to the anguish of a breakup to, well, fruit.

“Music has made me feel like the things I’m experiencing are things I’m not experiencing alone,” says Seligman-McComas, remembering a time, around age 17, when she listened to Radiohead’s In Rainbows on repeat. Her own music imparts this catharsis in a sweet indie-girl voice reminiscent of Regina Spektor, backed by soulful music that has made grown men in the crowd at Miller’s cry.

Seligman-McComas takes advantage of the emotional connection between performer and audience, using it as a platform. “I’ve had a lot of opportunities,” she says. “I feel it’s the responsibility of the bands in this town to make people feel safe and welcome no matter what ethnic or religious background.” She and her band put together a free unity concert at Rapture in July as an escape from the increasingly sour debate surrounding the Robert E. Lee statue downtown. “This town feels very liberal to me, but it’s a blue dot in a mass of red,” says Seligman-McComas. “I feel like it’s our responsibility to stand in solidarity.”

Adar is coming up on its one-year anniversary as a band. In that year, the group has released an EP (The Rapids) and played locally, everywhere from museums to music festivals to a long list of bars. For Seligman-McComas, who likes singing even more than she likes eating chocolate (“And I really love chocolate,” she laughs), the journey has been a fun one. She’s hoping to get Adar onto the festival circuit for 2018, eyeing a new website, a wider touring range and maybe new music.

Even as it looks to grow, the band maintains its roots in the Charlottesville music scene, which Seligman-McComas describes as impressively supportive of local bands. In her journey from being a 12-year-old recording songs on an MP3 recorder to fronting a Rockn’ to Lockn’ semifinalist band, Seligman-McComas has worked with other familiar local names, including Gina Sobel, Koda Kerl (of Chamomile and Whiskey) and Erin Lunsford. In fact, Lunsford will open Adar’s upcoming show at the Southern on August 19 with an acoustic set.

In the headlining slot, Seligman-McComas is excited to perform for an attentive audience at the Southern, where the mood will likely be introspective. “It will be less upbeat, and a little more quiet,” she says. “But it’s not gonna be seated, because we always get funky.”

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ARTS Pick: Rockn’ to Lockn’

From the Avett Brothers to Widespread Panic, this year’s annual Lockn’ Festival lineup is a who’s who of dusty rock music, but it’s not just household names. Since the festival’s inception, the Rockn’ to Lockn’ battle of the bands has made it possible for Virginia acts to make their Lockn’ debut. Twelve bands, including local favorites Will  Overman Band, Sun-Dried Opossum, Kendall Street Company and Adar, will duke it out for a chance to take the big stage.

Friday, April 21. $7-10, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.