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Arts Culture

Quarantine creativity begins to show

David Wax Museum
Euphoric Ouroboric,
Mark of the Leopard

As David Wax Museum, the husband/wife duo of David Wax and Suz Slezak have churned out studio albums brimming with their unique blend of Mexo-Americana whimsy for 14 years. In 2019, their debut label release, Line of Light, garnered the Charlottesville pair a performance on “CBS This Morning: Saturday,” and the track “Big Sur” was featured on Netflix’s No. 1 show, “Firefly Lane.” But the national momentum backing the band’s upcoming tour came to a halt with the onset of the pandemic. Housebound, Wax and Slezak tried their hand at home recording, tapping into unbridled creativity, and Euphoric Ouroboric is the first of four albums’ worth of material they generated throughout quarantine. For remote production, they relied on frequent collaborator Alec Spiegelman, who utilized loops, drum machines, and other digital tools to bring a new, modern edge to the duo’s folk-inspired palette. On the disc’s first single, “Juniper Jones,” the tale of the title character unfurls across a cacophony of accordion, traditional Mexican instruments, and digital processing. Elsewhere, “Love Comes Around” hits its stride with a beautiful confluence of woodwinds and strings, while “Real De Catorce” is a marked shift in Wax and Slezak’s sound, bolstered by explosive electric guitar loops and gurgles that give the effect of being underwater. It’s a collection that catapults the warmth and effervescence that made David Wax Museum a household name into a new stratosphere of experimentation. (Released April 16)

38KEA
Seeds, Thy Divine
Thresher, Lost Appeal

Richmond-based rapper 38KEA’s latest output is the genre-bending, head-turning bop that we’ve been waiting for in 2021. As we slowly emerge from our quarantine-induced sheltering, Seeds, Thy Divine Thresher provides a collection of snapshots (each of the record’s 22 tracks clocks in at three minutes or less) all centering on the inherent goal of a seedling: growth. Musings on community activity give way to sociopolitical commentary on a track like “Fill The Cup Up,” which includes a clip of Donald Trump besmirching the Black Lives Matter movement. Alongside collaborators Jak3 and LAMPGOD, 38KEA boasts all the touchstones of modernity, creating a patchwork of glitched-out layers, abrupt stops, beat switches, and malleable samples. The languid distortion on “Group Home” and reverb-drenched loops on “I Wrote N I Soul” are album highlights. (Released March 8)

Gold Connections
“Confession”
(Single), AWAL

As Gold Connections, Will Marsh spent the past five years in Charlottesville channeling the grit of the ’90s—and adding plenty of his own flavor—on four EPs. After the release of last year’s Ammunition, Marsh made the move to Richmond, where he’s continued to hone his lo-fi, post-punk sound. Now comes his first single since making the commonwealth shift: a reworking of an old poem, set to a vast expanse of dirge and dance-rock. From the layered background harmony to the song’s propulsive drive, “Confession” is a masterful maturation of the Gold Connections sound. (Released May 7)

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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

ARTS Pick: Gold Connections

Gold Connections’ upcoming EP, Like A Shadow (due in March), benefits from the camaraderie that Will Marsh found with his touring bandmates while on the road last year. Going into the studio with familiar players allowed Marsh to move past his former indie-rock associations and forge a path of his own musical volition on songs “about the struggle to move forward into a world that seems both infinitely precarious and abundant.”

Thursday, January 24. $10, 8:30pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Gold Connections

Many associate Will Marsh’s band Gold Connections with Car Seat Headrest thanks to several collaborations, but Marsh’s group stands solidly on its own. After a label switch,
the long-awaited release of Popular Fiction arrived in 2018, marking an impressive step forward. The album shows off the group’s broad musical range and challenging lyrics that address everything from Greek mythology to world religions.

Friday, August 31. $10, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Thanksgiving jams

Whether you are thankful, guided by a dark star or happy pickin’ over leftovers, a live gig awaits that’ll shake off the holiday gravy and leave you grateful for the blues.

November 23: Thankful Dead featuring Bigfoot County and Mama Tried at The Jefferson Theater.

November 24: DJ Sir RJ’s Thanksgiving After-party at The Ante Room.

November 25: Hackensaw Boys and Larry Keel Experience Present: Home For Thanksgiving Hangover Pickin’ Party at The Jefferson Theater.

November 26: Lord Nelson’s Leftover Party with Gold Connections and Big Mama Shakes at The Southern Café and Music Hall.

November 29: Dark Star Orchestra’s Grateful Dead concert experience at The Jefferson Theater.

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Arts

Gold Connections’ future looks bright

A couple of years ago, while home on winter break from the College of William & Mary, Will Marsh found himself feeling overwhelmed by thoughts that drift, and often race, through young minds. Marsh was studying English, playing in a few bands on campus and worried about choosing a path—the right path—then facing the consequences of his choice.

He knew he wasn’t alone in this, but he couldn’t find solace in any of the music in his collection, so he picked up his guitar. “It’s cool when you listen to a song and it totally feels like how you’re feeling in that moment,” he says. “But oftentimes there aren’t those songs, so I write my own songs for my own moments.”

The result was “Icarus,” the latest single from Marsh’s music project, Gold Connections.

“I didn’t mean to fall apart / to break my own heart to crumble. / But look at me, take a look at me. / And I didn’t mean to let it all go / To let it all fall down like Icarus / We’ll take a look and see,” Marsh begins, singing over chunky, strummed chords. As he considers his future, he can’t help but think of Icarus, the mythical figure who flew too close to the sun on wax-and-feather wings and fell to his death.

“Icarus” is about taking a risk, Marsh says. It’s about his choice to pursue music and the lifestyle that comes with it. Sometimes it’s hard to tell if your wings are made of feather, bone and sinew or wax and worry; it’s hard to know how close the sun is.

This outward profession of anxiety is the root of what Marsh believes is a new moment in indie music, a moment defined by a feeling of emotional realism. “It’s not authentic in that back-to-nature-having-a-beard authentic” way, he says. “We’re talking about how it feels to live in 2016, actually talking about it in our songs.”

“Get back to rock ’n’ roll,” he sings in refrain at “Icarus’” end, a mantra reminding himself to get back to basics, do what he wants to do. Get back to rock ’n’ roll, and everything will be okay.

Marsh graduated from William & Mary in spring 2015 and came to Charlottesville, the place where some of his favorite bands, including Pavement, Silver Jews and Sparklehorse, lived, wrote and played music more than 20 years ago. “There’s a music tradition in Charlottesville that I resonate with,” Marsh says. These guys represent “a different way,” a more alternative tradition not just for Charlottesville music, but for music in general.

Back in January, Marsh worked with Daniel Levi Goans of Lowland Hum on the full-length Gold Connections record, Popular Fiction, that ultimately put him on the fast track to success.

Marsh sent the record to Mark Keefe, general manager and program director at local radio station WNRN, who says he listens to around 50 new full albums each month and always makes an effort to listen to local music. Keefe was stunned when he heard the record and immediately gave it to the station’s music director to put it on-air.

“It struck me,” says Keefe. “It hit a nerve. I remember the first time I heard Pavement.” It was an indescribable feeling, but a distinct feeling, he says. Gold Connections struck him in the same way. “Whatever that sound is, he’s got it down,” Keefe says of Marsh.

Keefe played the record for former WNRN colleague and independent music promoter Ronda Chollock, who sent it to a few indie labels. One well-established label (to be officially announced soon) jumped to sign Gold Connections. 

“It does not happen like this,” Keefe says. “There are people out there who make really good music for years and don’t make a break like this.”

In early 2017, the label will release a basement tapes-type EP of the Gold Connections’ songs that Marsh wrote in his William & Mary days. Car Seat Headrest’s Will Toledo, Marsh’s good friend, former classmate and former bandmate (the two Wills played in each other’s bands), produced the sessions years ago and is currently mixing the tracks.

Sometime after the EP release, they’ll release the full album—the disc that got the band signed in the first place—which was originally scheduled to drop this month.

Marsh and his touring bandmates, bassist Noah Rosner and drummer Patrick Haggerty, are currently playing big venues like the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and opening for Car Seat Headrest, rising indie-music megastars, at The National in Richmond. Technically, those venues, with their big sound systems and stage crews, are a dream. But Marsh really wants to play house shows and DIY venues.

“House shows are, in my opinion, the best way to start an immediate relationship with people, because you’re right there in a small room,” he says. “They’re pretty uplifting to use as performers, too, because of the house show ethos,” where Marsh sings just an arm’s length away from a crowd of people that likely shares his anxieties about growing up, making major decisions and figuring themselves out.

“I came back home to sweat it out / To let it all go but you were right there / Like a phantom in the memory / Staring back at me,” Marsh sings in “Icarus.” The big difference now that he’s gotten back to rock ’n’ roll is he’s staring his fears straight in the eye—and looking ahead to the future.

Contact Erin O’Hare at arts@c-ville.com.