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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

ARTS Pick: Maupintown Film Festival

The Maupintown Film Festival showcases works of historical, educational and social value that address the achievements and plight of the African-American community. Included in the 12-film lineup is local filmmaker (and founder of Maupintown Media) Lorenzo Dickerson’s documentary Anywhere But Here, which examines the cause and effect of mass incarceration, as well as his Color Line of Scrimmage, a story of triumph against all odds at Burley High School in 1956.

Saturday 7/16 & Sunday 7/17. Free, times vary. Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, 233 Fourth St. maupintown.com/film-festival.

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Arts

From UVA grad to Silicon Valley game developer

For some of the graduating UVA students who will walk the Lawn this weekend, it might be difficult to see any direct connections between a major and a future career. Many will receive a degree that provides an obvious path; others have chosen English or other courses of study that are, let’s say, a bit more open-ended. However, one UVA graduate has been putting his media studies degree to work as a game designer, proving that even open-ended majors can be the right choice.

Like many kids, Brice Morrison (’08) loved playing video games. However, it wasn’t until his years as an undergraduate at UVA that he began pursuing his gaming passion more intently. “I’d always enjoyed games, but I never considered that I could do it for a living after graduating,” recalls Morrison. “Then, one day, I came across an article on someone who got an internship at Electronic Arts and that made me realize, ‘This is what I want to do.’”

While still a student in the mid-2000s, Morrison wasted no time pursuing his own internship in game development. Experience was on his side because he’d dabbled in creating games as a hobby, but now he was looking to enter the more professional side of the business. To support this effort, Morrison sought to build a community of other students that shared his passion.

“As I was reading online about all the great games being made in 2006, I realized that they were all made by small teams, but I was all alone,” says Morrison. “I distinctly remember sitting in one of the study rooms in the bottom of Old Cabell Hall and thinking to myself, ‘There are a ton of smart people here at UVA. There’s bound to be some who would like to make games too.’”

Given the wide-ranging interests represented by UVA student clubs, Morrison was surprised to discover that game development was not among the options. So, he took matters into his own hands. “I e-mailed a few friends who I thought would be interested. We met together in my dorm in Lambeth to kick things off, and planned out how we’d get started at the beginning of our third year,” says Morrison. “It took off from there.”

The student club, known as Student Game Developers, led by Morrison and fellow undergrad Scott Geiser, launched in 2006. As with all student groups, its membership and leadership has rotated since then, but the club remains vibrant and active. Participating students work in teams each semester to develop a variety of games, from role-playing games to puzzles, which are then showcased at an end-of-semester expo.

Photo: Courtesy Bromoco
Photo: Courtesy Bromoco

“After I started UVA’s Student Game Developers, I was able to get in touch with two alumni who worked for EA [and] I arranged for them to come and speak at our club,” says Morrison. That connection led to an interview, which in turn led to an internship at The Sims Studio, part of an EA subsidiary. After a successful experience in that role, he was offered a full-time gig after graduation. From there, Morrison continued developing his skills, eventually becoming a lead designer at Zynga, the online game company best known for FarmVille.

Though he enjoyed the projects and teams at EA and Zynga, Morrison continued searching for something more. “I wanted to strike out on my own to do some of the kinds of games that wouldn’t be viable at a larger company,” Morrison says. “The budgets become so big that it can be difficult to take a chance and do wild experiments.” So he decided to form his own development studio, Bromoco Games, in 2014.

These days, his team consists of five designers, though Morrison hopes to add at least one more to the team in the future: his brother Dan, who is also a UVA graduate, a user-centered software designer and a game enthusiast. In fact, the Bromoco name comes from the beginning letters of the words Brothers Morrison Company.

“Working with Brice would be a real blessing,” says Dan. “He understands that joy is a true differentiator in making a great experience, and that joy will look very different when it manifests in the physical world versus on a smartphone screen. As technology pokes into people’s lives in more and more ways, it will be important that people smile, laugh, share and explore these new interactive realms. That’s the promise that Brice can deliver on with Bromoco and his background in games.”

Making good on this promise already, Bromoco Games released its debut game, Buried, on multiple platforms earlier this year. Already greenlit on the popular gaming platform Steam, the dark, interactive game invites the player to inhabit the character of Roger Hastings, a logger in the Kentucky woods who wakes to find both his crew and his memory missing. The choose-your-own adventure nature of the game as well as its textual narrative combine to create an alternative to other types of games that are currently popular.

“I think that games are the art form of the 21st century,” says Morrison. “One of the goals of our games is to have some connection with the real world. I think that UVA, and media studies in particular, taught me about analyzing and understanding the influences around me.”

How has UVA influenced your career?

Tell us in the comments below.

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Arts Living News

Tom Tom Festival is all grown up

As Tom Tom Founders Festival Director Paul Beyer sits in the audience during Founders Summit talks and hears fellow entrepreneurs and creative visionaries speak about the early days of their startups, the successes they celebrated and obstacles they faced, he can’t help but draw a parallel to the festival itself.

The ideas for the festival (April 11-17), launched in 2012, largely came out of casual conversations in Beyer’s apartment—friends would drop by for a beer, and they would discuss his idea for a festival based on the pillars of music, art, innovation, food and, most of all, founding—a nod to Charlottesville’s own polymath, Thomas Jefferson. He says Tom Tom—a regional take on South by Southwest—had no business being as successful as it was the first year, simply for the fact that it was entirely volunteer run. But each year has brought changes and growth—not only in attendance (6,700 the first year up to 26,000 last year) but in the festival’s organizational structure. The festival became a nonprofit after its second year, and Beyer attended the i.Lab at the Batten Institute where he sketched out a five-year plan for the organization, with the end goal of becoming a national festival.

Now in its fifth year, and with the backing of three full-time paid staff members, 14 student fellows from UVA, a slew of subcontractors and an official office on South Street, Beyer says they’ve more or less reached that goal. Speakers at the festival’s Founders Summit on Friday, April 15, as well as at lunches and workshops throughout the week, come not only from the region but throughout the United States. On the bill this year are Charlottesville’s own Bill Crutchfield, who built a $250 million a year consumer electronics business with $1,000; Sukhinder Singh Cassidy, founder of Joyus and theBoardlist, who led an 18-country expansion at Google; and Jason Flom, founder and CEO of Lava Records and founding board member of the Innocence Project, among others.

But perhaps the most notable sign of growth is not in the festival’s list of speakers but in its focus. More locally centered events during the week are no longer held at various venues around town; instead The Paramount Theater will serve as Tom Tom’s home base for events from Monday through Friday. The festival kicks off this year with the Future Forum: The Creative Economy 2025, which brings stakeholders in the local community—artists, entrepreneurs, investors and elected officials—together to talk about the economic impact art could have locally.

“So much of the festival is about projects that are happening now and businesses happening now, there’s no step back and saying what does this mean for the city 10 years from now,” Beyer says. “This year it’s going to be the touchstone for the festival. What is all this dynamism that we’re highlighting actually going to turn in to 10 years from now.”

The goal of the festival is to be a creative conduit and connector for people—of all ages. One of the highlights of new programming this year at the Paramount, Beyer says, is the Youth Summit, which will host 1,000 high-schoolers from around the state to hear entrepreneurs 25 years and younger talk about their businesses and community initiatives. The Founders Summit and Youth Summit are the only ticketed events this year, but Beyer says they’re priced just to break even (the festival has also set aside hundreds of Founders Summit tickets for students that are either heavily subsidized or given away). The underlying goal is to bring out people who are interested in Tom Tom’s array of topics: the food business, innovations in athletics, a crowdfunded pitch night, gender influence in business, etc. That’s what keeps Beyer up at night—making sure they reach each niche audience so that all creative collaborators are in the same place at the same time.

“The goal of the festival is to inspire people to see themselves as creators and to inspire them to see the city in new ways,” he says.

Since its inception, the festival has awarded more than $1.2 million in its various competitions, such as the crowdfunded pitch night, to nonprofits, artists and entrepreneurs. But the winners aren’t the only ones who claim successes, Beyer says. He’s heard several people say they met an investor or collaborator or someone who has an idea on how to help them with their project. And that is what Tom Tom is all about–establishing the foundation for local founders and serving as a springboard for creative success.

“Ultimately what I hope happens is there are dozens of stories of people who look back and say, ‘I met my investor’ or ‘That’s where I met my business partner,’” Beyer says. “You just don’t know these things for these early years because collaborations will have just started–you’re not going to know what happened until three or four years from now. You’re just seeding the ground and hoping really good things are starting to emerge.”

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Arts

Radio kid: Kendall Stewart finds her niche on 106.1 The Corner

On a recent Friday morning, Lifehouse’s 2005 hit “You and Me” played on WCNR 106.1 The Corner. When the song wrapped up, new midday host Kendall Stewart took to the mic, a hint of wistfulness in her cheery voice: “I’m feeling nostalgic this morning, like I want to put on a prom dress and slow dance to that song.”

The song was just one of a handful of nostalgia bombs she’d drop throughout the show. She queued up Stone Temple Pilots’ “Interstate Love Song,” Tori Amos’ “Cornflake Girl” and some Spoon, and peppered in current radio staples from Kaleo and Foals, songs destined to inspire a new generation of listeners.

Stewart knows that music is a time-travel device. A song can transport you back to specific moments of your life, from tearing away rainbow-striped wrapping paper on your fifth birthday or turning the key in the ignition of your first car. It’s what makes radio one of the most personal forms of media, says Stewart.

When helping create The Corner playlist, she often chooses songs that hold meaning in her own life and she willingly shares those anecdotes with her listeners. During that same Friday show, she talked about a French friend who once played a note-for-note and emotionally on-point rendition of “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life),” and afterward confessed that he had no idea what the English lyrics meant.

“Radio is very genuine,” Stewart says. “When people are alone in their cars, they listen to the radio and you’re the jock who’s with that person in their car, talking to them.” When she’s on-air, she doesn’t perform. She opens up a conversation.

Stewart, 25, is one of two new DJs on The Corner. She came to town last November after longtime on-air personality Brad Savage left the station for 93.1 The Summit in Akron, Ohio. Morning host Pat Gallagher is the other newbie. Stewart grew up in the Boston suburb of Milton, Massachusetts, and from the backseat of her parents’ car, she listened to ’90s alternative rock and pop hits broadcast from some of Boston’s most popular radio stations. At some point, she says, she discovered Radio Disney and listened obsessively. So, when at 17 she landed her first radio gig reading PSAs for a kids’ station broadcast only on school buses, nobody was surprised. “You were always a radio kid,” her mom told her.

Stewart studied playwriting at Emerson College in Boston, and during her freshman year, she says she “checked out the radio station and never looked back.” Her first 88.9 WERS hosting gig was the Chagigah segment, playing Jewish and Israeli music. “I’m not Jewish; they needed a host and I needed to be on the radio,” Stewart says. She eventually became the station’s music director, creating the playlist and booking bands for in-studio performances.

Stewart went straight from WERS to Boston’s 92.9 The River, then to WUMB at UMass-Boston. She says she was ready to spend her entire career in Boston; no one—including herself—thought she’d leave her home city. “But if you want to work in radio you’re going to have to move,” she says. The Triple A (adult album alternative) radio community is a relatively small one, and full-time radio gigs can be hard to find. Stewart was determined to find one, so when the job at The Corner opened up, she jumped at the opportunity to apply.

When she talks about Boston—her four brothers, former roommate and her cat in particular—wistfulness returns to her voice. But she says she’s adjusting nicely to life in Charlottesville. She’s reconnecting with old radio friends, acting in a local theater company production and driving to concerts all over the state.

Longtime Corner DJ Jeff Sweatman says that “whether she’s playing a brand-new act [on Brighten the Corners] or longtime favorites, Kendall is able to present entertaining information on her show with a fresh perspective that The Corner hasn’t really had before.” In addition to keeping radio hits of yore in rotation, Stewart reads music blogs and reaches out to record labels and artists to gather 15 fresh tracks to play on her show each week. Some days she plays three tracks from three artists; other days, she plays three tunes from one newly released album.

While Stewart is hip to what’s hot and what’s good, she’s not a music snob by any means. Her musical taste is broad, and she’s quick to declare her love for Nelly, Butch Walker, early 2000s pop-punk and emo and boy bands (she grew up in the heyday of *NSYNC, Backstreet Boys and O-Town, after all). Her authenticity is refreshing. “I tried for years to be the cool girl who is super hip or whatever,” says Stewart. “But no, that’s not me—I’m goofy. I go on air, I open the mic, and I say what I would say anyway.”

At the end of the day, Stewart says, the coolest part of her job isn’t meeting bands or getting sneak previews of albums. It’s talking to her listeners, wherever they may be, and helping them find their new favorite song.

Show tunes

Kendall Stewart’s dream is to host a show of music from the 2000s. Here are her favorite albums from that decade—a taste of what her show would sound like:

1. Jack’s Mannequin, “Everything In Transit” (2005)

2. Butch Walker, “Letters” (2004)

3. Brand New, “Your Favorite Weapon” (2001)

4. Taking Back Sunday, “Tell All Your Friends” (2002)

5. New Found Glory, “Coming Home” (2006)

–Erin O’Hare

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Arts

Little big time: Local bands submit to NPR’s 2016 Tiny Desk Contest

few years ago, Bob Boilen, host of NPR Music’s “All Songs Considered,” turned his work desk into a concert venue. Today, he invites musicians from all over the world to play intimate sets of songs between the desk and bookshelves in the Tiny Desk concert series. The short sessions are filmed and later posted online for music buffs to discover new jams or hear reimagined and often stripped-down versions of favorites. Superstars such as Adele, T-Pain and Natalie Merchant, as well as many others have recorded shows for the series.

Five bands from Charlottesville and Staunton hope they will be next.

They’ve all submitted videos to the 2016 Tiny Desk Contest and if they win, they’ll be asked to perform a set. Fans can vote for their favorite videos, and judges will choose a winner by the first week in March. Each band brings something different to the competition, but they all share the same goal: Get their music into ears across the nation.

Vote for your favorites at tinydeskcontest.npr.org.

Juliana Daugherty, “Easier

Juliana Daugherty’s voice is beautiful. It’s sensuous and haunting; it sends shivers down your spine and echoes in your ears all day. As a vocalist, guitarist and flutist, she’s an integral part of two Charlottesville alt-folk bands, Nettles and The Hill & Wood, but with “Easier,” she strikes out on her own for the first time. The song captures “a special kind of despair that comes of feeling like you’re stuck in a black hole when everything else in your life is going objectively well,” Daugherty says. It’s a simple but abundant performance—Daugherty, her guitar and harmonies from Lowland Hum’s Lauren Goans—of a song that offers a sincere look at melancholy: “I gave it a good fight, / I tried to be alright when I wasn’t. / I took it all in stride, / life’s got to roll the dice sometime, / but it isn’t getting easier.”

The Judy Chops, “Mouse and Cat

“Mouse and Cat” is the latest tune from quirky, genre-defying Staunton band The Judy Chops. Written by vocalist and baritone-banjo-ukulele player Sally Murphy, this song is about love (and its pitfalls) and it will make you bob your head and snap your fingers. Murphy says that it’s a solid introduction to The Judy Chops vibe, with all six members playing music in a tiny sound booth at Blue Sprocket Sound in Harrisonburg. Already, the contest is paying off: They’ve connected with some fellow contestants and are swapping shows for a tour this coming year.

The Findells, “The Girl Walking Backwards

The Findells’ submission is a live take of an energetic rock ‘n’ roar tune that’s caught an early B-52s wave. It’s a song about a guy who’s too timid to cross the room and talk to a girl: “Red hair, black shirt, yellow pants / It’s not hard to imagine romance / With the girl walking backwards.” So he fantasizes about her (and her Plymouth Satellite) instead, says guitarist and vocalist Allan Moye. There’s full percussion, male/female vocals and an electric guitar duel where you’d usually find a solo. Submitting a plugged-in rock song is a bold choice for this Staunton band, and Moye says it’s a “knee-jerk CBGB stylistic response” to the softer, stripped-down format of most Tiny Desk concerts.

Disco Risqué, “Something for Nothing

For Charlottesville’s Disco Risqué, entering the contest was an opportunity (and a challenge) to create a stripped-down version of one of its catchy, rambunctious funk-rock tunes, “Something for Nothing.” Most of the tracks on the band’s debut run upward of five minutes—these guys love to vamp and keep the groove going—but this one is radio-friendly. “Something for Nothing” is a crowd favorite, says guitar player Charlie Murchie, and it was one the entire band felt comfortable presenting to NPR listeners as their first taste of Disco Risqué. Filmed in a house on Locust Avenue, with drummer Robbey Prescott using a guitar pedal case as a kick drum, this version of a song about a guy who just can’t seem to get it together suggests that volume and a flashy light show has little to do with getting your groove on.

The Anatomy of Frank, “Diagonal/North America

The Anatomy of Frank’s intimate songs are well-suited to acoustic performances and small venues like Tiny Desk. The band garnered some new fans with its 2015 contest submission and hopes to do the same with “Diagonal/North America,” a tune that singer-guitarist Kyle Woolard says is about getting lost in the cold, way up north, and about wanting something out of life that your partner may not. The contest gave Woolard and bandmates Jimmy Bullis (keys) and Max Bollinger (drums and xylophone) the chance to look at their music anew and to “make more sounds with fewer people,” says Woolard (longtime guitarist Erik Larsen recently left the band to pursue new projects). The Tiny Desk movement—where local bands open their music up to a national audience—is a great one to be part of, Woolard adds.

–Erin O’Hare

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Arts

Inside the sound: Duo Grand Banks takes its improv to the masses

You can’t cover a Grand Banks song. Don’t even think about it. It’s not a question of chops or instrumental know-how. It’s about the unique relationship between the two musicians in the band, the growth of their friendship over the years and their approach to making sound together. “If somebody asks me what Grand Banks is, I call it textural improvisation,” says Davis Salisbury. With Tyler Magill, Salisbury has been playing music as Grand Banks since 2001. The two started the project while playing in other local bands together, christening their endeavor with a name that had been rattling around in Magill’s head for a while.

The band has evolved over the years, incorporating different instruments on and off, depending on what interests the duo at any given time. The sound has changed as well, shifting from assaulting noise to Grand Bank’s current approach, which touches on the description of sometimes melodic drone music. As in any creative relationship, there is a substantial amount of give and take between Salisbury and Magill.

“When we have been playing for a while, we’ll get to a point where I can’t tell who’s making the sounds, it’s just kind of manifesting itself,” Salisbury says. “That’s a really interesting creative place to be in. You’re in it and you like it and you want it to keep happening. But you’re also fighting the urge to make something happen. Getting too excited while playing in Grand Banks can often be a detriment to the music.”

From the audience, the experience of a Grand Banks show asks only for openness, curiosity and patience. Indeed, there remains a sustained interest in the band, both locally and further afield. “We have these people who are really supportive of it over the years. They just get it and appreciate that we make the effort,” says Salisbury. “I get to play for people who are willing to take the chance, to live inside the sound and try to appreciate where we’re coming from with it.”

Passages of sound can last for minutes and feel like hours, but the reverse is true as well. “The ability to play with time and people’s experience of time is fascinating to me and that’s really the only reason I play music,” admits Salisbury.

Similar to meditation, when a Grand Banks show works, it unlocks a way of being that seems removed from space and time. There is only the immensity of the sound, with little distraction from Salisbury and Magill, who are fairly introverted in their performance styles. “It doesn’t look like we’re doing anything,” says Magill. “We would play the same show whether there were people there or not.”

Now, as the band approaches its 15-year mark, Grand Banks is celebrating its first label release. Sure, it has released CD-Rs in the past, but nothing on a label. The album, titled QB4: 1877-1896, is comprised of 4-track and reel-to-reel recordings, and will be released on cassette this month by Oxtail Recordings. “It’s archival material in that we recorded it in 2001 or 2002, but we dug it up and it’s all been re-contextualized and collaged,” says Magill.

You won’t find anything resembling a single on a Grand Banks release. “I consider us primarily a live band,” says Salisbury. “We have a few things that we return to, but for the most part we just improvise live. So, even with these recordings, they are improvisations, but ones done without an audience.”

In the back of his mind, Salisbury admits that he always thought Grand Banks would play a show one day and the duo would meet a guy—maybe one who knew a guy—who would ask to release a Grand Banks album on a label. Recently, at one of his solo performances as Dais Queue, Salisbury met Mike Nigro from Oxtail Recordings, who expressed interest in releasing an album for him. Though Nigro’s interest was initially in Dais Queue, one thing led to another, and the forthcoming Grand Banks album found a home.

A cassette release show is scheduled for this week at an unannounced location, with Nigro and other musicians opening for the band—but it won’t be at a formal venue. In fact, the bigger local venues rarely invite Grand Banks to perform, and the pair almost never plays more than a few shows in Charlottesville per year.

“They don’t take chances on stuff like us,” says Salisbury. “I have no interest in being involved in shows where the main priority is making sure enough people show up to justify the fact that the venue booked the bands. I think it’s cultivating the side of music I’m not interested in participating in anymore.”

Salisbury and Magill continue to focus on what’s important to them as Grand Banks, challenging one another in their improvisations while creating work that they find interesting.

“Collaborative art is really hard, and it’s not fun all the time,” Davis says. “It’s a struggle, but that’s what’s been special about Grand Banks. Life gets hard for us, but Grand Banks is always easy. There are no words to express how much I get out of playing in Grand Banks. It’s one of the things I do that will never not be special. And I just hope everybody finds stuff like that in their life.”

Have you purchased a cassette recently?

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Fresh airwaves: Local radio station provides a new home for hip-hop

It’s time to update your car radio presets, Charlottesville. The long-anticipated launch of a new hip-hop radio station happened on October 5 at midnight when WVAI 101.3 Jamz took to the airwaves. The launch came as the result of more than a year of work by Damani Harrison, Elijah Campos, Jaquan Middleton, Cle Logan and Travis Dyer. The five collaborators are deeply invested in the local music community and joined forces to create the new station.

Barely two weeks into 101.3 Jamz’s existence, approximately 15 DJs are involved—they hail from Charlottesville and Richmond, but also further afield. Some will record mixes and send them in to be played on-air; others will host live shows in the station’s Seminole Square studio. Through this network, the 101.3 Jamz team hopes to cover the entire spectrum of hip-hop, with reggae, go-go and R&B mixed in.

“We’re representing a whole lot of regions and styles,” says Harrison. “Hip-hop has so many sub-genres and we’re really trying to represent the art form in its totality.” Plans for original programming also include hosted shows during the morning and afternoon commute.

Local musicians are encouraged to get involved by submitting recordings to be considered for airplay. Harrison, who is also the artistic director at the Music Resource Center, sees potential in the area. “I’ve seen a lot of amazing artists come through there and then continue their careers locally,” he says. “I’ve always felt as if all these people that I’ve worked with get to this point where they have no outlet for what they’re doing. Now, they’re going to have an outlet. If we see an artist really making a push for themselves, then we want to help them.”

In addition to the genre format, 101.3 Jamz’s coordinators hope to set the station apart by embracing an around-the-clock policy for clean lyrics. “We made a decision to not play explicit songs at any time,” says Campos. Though Federal Communications Commission regulations prohibit obscene broadcasts anytime, indecent and profane content is actually allowed from 10pm to 6am, but 101.3 Jamz’s programming will remain clean at all hours as a way to support what Harrison calls “the positive energy that’s around the scene.”

For now, the team is working on the larger issue of getting new music into rotation and keeping the nascent station running smoothly. “It’s a 24/7 job,” says Campos. “We all have our own careers aside from this, but this is something that we’re going to put the time in to make it work.”

As C-VILLE reported earlier this month, 101.3 Jamz is an addition to a radio landscape that was recently altered by WUVA’s format change to country. “By being a centralized hub for hip-hop in Charlottesville, we’re providing a service for a lot of people,” says Harrison.

Though the new station wasn’t conceived as a competitor to WUVA, it wasn’t originally meant to replace it, either. The timing just worked out that way, as minor delays pushed back the launch date. “We all wanted this to happen so much, so we were willing to put as much time into it as we need to,” says Campos. “It’s mainly been an issue of getting enough money to actually make it happen.”

With significant support from individual investors, start-up funding finally came together in time for a test run in September, after which equipment needed to be tweaked and other work accomplished before the station could go on-air.

The 101.3 Jamz team wasn’t alone in these efforts, though. The station is a member of the Virginia Radio Coop along with three others, including Rock Hits 92.3 and WPVC 94.7, a progressive talk radio station. The cooperative model allows the four stations to split monthly facilities costs. Each operates as a Low Power FM station, a broadcasting option created by the FCC in 2000. Stations within this designation are required to function as nonprofits and produce non-commercial radio at a lower wattage than commercial radio stations. At present, the FCC reports there are five LPFM stations in Charlottesville, with the inclusion of WXTJ 100.1, an outgrowth of the University of Virginia’s WTJU 91.1.

Over the past few months, the co-op station coordinators have been busy building fan bases on social media while constructing shared studio space. What was once a large, open retail store has now been divided into four on-air studios with recording and common areas. It’s still a little rough around the edges, but three of the four stations are broadcasting, and online streaming will launch soon.

Harrison is hopeful that underwriters will be attracted by the opportunity to reach the co-op’s diverse audience through group packages rather than underwriting an individual station. This can help ease the fundraising burden on any one station. The 101.3 Jamz team plans to support the station’s ongoing operations with DJ appearances and branded merchandise.

“We got [the station] started, but it’s going to take the community to keep it going,” Harrison says.

Which local radio stations do you listen to the most?

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All-nighter: UVA’s TechnoSonics festival returns for 16th year

The connection between music and many people’s sense of their spiritual nature is one of the essential engines driving our mad (yet perfectly reasonable) devotion to music,” says Ted Coffey, associate professor in composition and computer technologies at UVA’s McIntire Department of Music.

Each year, CCT faculty members lead the process of selecting a theme and curating the annual TechnoSonics festival, which brings cutting-edge computer music composers, performers and experts to town. Originally launched by Judith Shatin, founder of the Virginia Center for Computer Music, and current McIntire department chair Matthew Burtner, TechnoSonics focuses on pushing boundaries within the field of computer music, with an emphasis on intermedia—or interdisciplinary—works.

The program creates countless opportunities for collaboration between faculty and students as well as concerts and installations that are open to the public. This year’s gathering kicks off on October 14, and Coffey is leading the planning efforts and bringing his own devotion to music as a performer, composer and teacher. He has been involved with TechnoSonics since he moved to Charlottesville in 2005 and is well-acquainted with its boundary-pushing schedule.

For TechnoSonics XVI, Coffey selected the theme of Music and Contemplation, but it’s important to note that the event takes more than a solo effort. Faculty, staff and students from the music department work together to select guest composers and the performances and installations. As the technical director of the VCCM, Travis Thatcher supports the event as stage manager, sound engineer and pre-production coordinator. “This year’s theme is very open to interpretation,” says Thatcher. “I’ve always been interested in contemplative and meditative forms of music and how the experience of listening to music can allow your body to gain a different understanding of your surroundings.”

A series of roundtable discussions launches the weeklong festival, addressing topics such as music, contemplation and the brain and music and trust. “Contemplation can accommodate a lot of different activities and situations,” says Coffey. “We can contemplate complex musical objects, the political dimensions of musical practices and the sound of dentists’ drills. We can also contemplate past experiences, reflect on them.”

Audio installations will also be part of the festival, featuring work by Thatcher and UVA graduate students Eli Stine and Max Tfirn, among others. A formal concert will be held on October 16 in Old Cabell Hall, featuring Shatin and Burtner along with guest performers Brenda Hutchinson and Kojiro Umezaki and UVA Ph.D. student Paul Turowski.

Following the more traditional event, TechnoSonics XVI will try something new: a 24-hour concert. Beginning at 11:59pm on Friday, this concert will continue overnight and all day on Saturday, showcasing live acoustic and eight-channel electronic music in the UVA chapel. “The 24-hour concert provides a very different setting and allows for the performance of long-form pieces that wouldn’t really work in a concert hall setting,” says Thatcher.

The combination of venue and format creates new possibilities for the audience, encouraging a self-guided experience of any or all of the performances over a period of time. “We’re going to create a space where the musical offerings are brilliant and bountiful, while the social conventions of a formal concert have been relaxed. People can wander in and out, walk around, take a little nap,” says Coffey.

Over the course of the week, the festival will feature a variety of performances by UVA faculty and students, as well as Coffey and Thatcher. Indeed, many of the programs throughout the week are the result of extensive collaborations. “I think TechnoSonics has grown more ambitious over time, and we’re more interested in community-building, both within UVA and with the arts communities in Charlottesville and beyond,” says Coffey.

An examination of the work by guests Dylan Bolles, Michelle Lou, Hutchinson and Umezaki reveals some of the key juxtapositions and explorations within TechnoSonics. For example, Lou is a double bass player and guitarist who increasingly incorporates analog and D.I.Y. electronics into her compositions and performances. Umezaki plays the shakuhachi, a traditional Japanese bamboo flute, in addition to composing electro-acoustic work. Hutchinson is an artist who composes work based on social improvisations and recently created an app that allows users to explore sounds through the act of drawing. Bolles builds compositions, performances, shared listening experiences and installations, as well as new musical instruments. The common thread among all is an experimental approach to a multi- disciplinary exploration of sound and music—an area in which the McIntire Department of Music excels.

TechnoSonics XVI takes place at Old Cabell Hall, the UVA chapel, OpenGrounds and surrounding areas through October 20. All performances are free and open to the public. A detailed schedule for the event is available at music.virginia.edu.

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A face for radio: WTJU launches ‘BottleWorks’ video series

Since Nathan Moore joined WTJU 91.1FM as general manager in 2011, the community radio station has embraced change with new energy. His influence led the station to launch WXTJ 100.1FM, featuring solely UVA students as DJs. He was also instrumental in WTJU’s expansion into Richmond as 102.9FM and 1430AM. The most recent change under Nathan’s leadership is a new video series known as “BottleWorks.”

Though WTJU records many of its live performances, the resulting videos have been typically documentary in nature with a single camera trained on musicians from a slight distance. They record the performance but never quite capture the experience of listening to the music. The personalities of the performers and their approaches to making music have remained ineffable as well. “BottleWorks” takes a different tack.

Primarily focused on rock music, but embracing the many subgenres within it, “BottleWorks” is the brainchild of WTJU DJs Greg Sloan and Dave Moore. The series aims to blend performance and interview footage to present a more nuanced view of bands and their members. Both Sloan and Dave Moore began volunteering at the station before Nathan Moore’s tenure, filling in as substitute DJs, running audio production for in-studio performances and eventually hosting biweekly rock shows of their own. Their familiarity with the station and the local music scene inspired the idea for the series and, after workshopping the idea with friends, the two pitched “BottleWorks” as a new endeavor for WTJU. “Greg and Dave approached me about this and I think my reaction was along the lines of, ‘So you want to create some awesome content with bands we like under WTJU’s name? Yes, absolutely,’” says Nathan. And so “BottleWorks” was born.

Now in production, the series remains a project among friends, featuring a crew of some of the best local video and music production folks around, many of whom are musicians in their own right. Together, they do everything for the series, from video and audio production and editing to moving set furniture and getting snacks for the bands. “[They] are doing the production as volunteers, and I love that there’s this avenue for them to share their passion for excellent music through WTJU—just in a different way than our usual on-air broadcast,” says Nathan.

The first two “BottleWorks” episodes feature Corsair and Y’all—each with strong ties to the area and members who live locally. As Charlottesville’s version of an MTV VJ, Jenn Lockwood hosts the series, interviewing and joking with bands to create the casual ease and camaraderie of a backstage hangout. “We just try to create a relaxed, fun environment where the bands can let their personalities shine,” says Sloan.

Nathan saw the potential as soon as Corsair launched the series in April. “It was super well-produced and it made me realize how cool this series really could be,” he says.

As a band, Corsair is heavy and loud, with plenty of extended guitar shredding interludes. Arguably, selecting a metal band for the first episode was a risk, but the audio engineering of the performance is well-balanced and captures the band’s sound in all its depth. The performance footage is a marked improvement on other WTJU videos and alternates with interview segments between songs. The first episode is a production success, though it relies heavily on the band members for its personality.

With the second episode in June, the “BottleWorks” crew made a couple of dramatic changes and, as a result, the episode is better than the first and sets the ideal tone for the series in the future. Featuring Y’all, episode No. 2 is more dynamically edited so that transitions between interview and performance segments are less abrupt but more frequent. The interviews are also less formal, even leaving room for slapstick outtakes, and the onscreen energy never dips below madcap.

“I think we managed to capture the infectious fun of those guys, and how much they care about each other,” says Dave Moore. Unfortunately, this means there’s less continuous footage of the band playing full songs together, but it’s the right trade-off to make for a more entertaining and energetic show.

“Each episode will showcase the idiosyncrasies of the session,” says Sloan. “In my mind, the episodes will morph and change to reflect the nature of the band, the performance and where they are at that time. Ultimately, we want to create content that is informative for the novice viewer, rewarding for the die-hard fans, and entertaining to all.”

Two additional episodes of “BottleWorks” have been shot, and the third installment with Charlottesville band New Boss, was released in July. A fourth episode is currently being edited and will feature Roanoke’s Eternal Summers. The crew hopes to film other bands in the near future, including acts from Harrisonburg and Richmond. “We don’t think of this as specifically ‘for locals’ only,” says Sloan. “We hope to have regional and touring bands join us as often as possible.”

With the series established, WTJU’s team is ready for more. “I think the sky is the limit right now,” says Dave Moore. “We have the space, the crew, the equipment and the sound ability to create a product that is on par with any video series out there, and WTJU is just the station to showcase these emerging and established rock acts.”

View episodes of “BottleWorks” below or go to wtju.net.

What bands would you like to see on “BottleWorks”? Tell us in the comments below.