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Arts Culture

Ben Folds

A modern piano man who rocks out and pens intelligent songs, Ben Folds rose to fame in front of his ’90s alt-rock group Ben Folds Five before going solo in 2000. The Ben Folds Paper Airplane Request Tour takes flight with opener Lindsey Kraft and invites guests to launch their song requests to the stage via paper airplane. “It’s the purest, most low-tech form of engagement that creates a special bond with my audiences,” says the Emmy-nominated musician.

Sunday 7/21. $35–90, doors 6pm, show 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com

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Arts Culture

amminal

amminal returns to The Stage at WTJU as part of the Third Rail music series. The psych-folk space-rock band embraces the mundane in songs that explore the transcendent effect of nature. Formed in 2021, the group has been guided by the inspiring tug of the natural world in life and art. amminal EP, released in March, features songs like “Are You The Crocodiles, Gentlemen?” and “Cloud Song,” which interweave human experience with the spaces we encounter.

Saturday 7/20. Free, 8pm. The WTJU Stage, 2244 Ivy Rd. wtju.net

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Arts Culture

Fridays after Five: Shagwüf with Holy Roller

Ting Pavilion, July 19

On its face, it seems awfully early in the evening to lose it for the kind of rock ’n’ roll you’ll get out of Shagwüf. Then again, with that Fridays after Five offer (um, free), you can’t exactly complain about it either. A mainstay of local music stages, the self-proclaimed “sweet freaks” are actually more sweet than freaky on stage. Still, keep an eye out or you might get your drink kicked out of your hand. Bassist Sally Rose (also of the much better-behaved Sally Rose Band) and guitarist Sweet Pete make it easy to get lost: Their pop hooks keep coming at you, harkening back to musical archetypes from across the decades while keeping the energy frenzied and the crowd cavorting. The results of Shagwüf’s sound tend to come up as fuzzy, unflinching head-boppers that can easily dance sideways into snaking rhythms suggestive of world music, thanks to the flailing intensity of drummer Pablo Olivieri. Ultimately it’s slightly psychedelic, kinda indie, a touch of sludge, with the faintest whiff of stoner rock. Not that you should ever ever quote Billy Joel, but I guess it is still rock ’n’ roll to me.

CM Gorey

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Arts Culture

Andrew Bird and Nickel Creek with Mike Viola 

Ting Pavilion, July 17

Chicago-based multi-instrumentalist Andrew Bird has been in a few noteworthy bands and has released or joined in on more records than we have space to discuss here. The singer and songwriter first came to fame collaborating with swing band Squirrel Nut Zippers in the late 1990s and went on to put out three big, brave, folksy swing albums under the name Andrew Bird’s Bowl of Fire. On his own for years now, Bird tends to be found playing violin—sometimes with the support of looping pedals—but he gets his hands on many other stringed instruments as well. He’s also known for his virtuosity as a whistler, but don’t hold that against him. These days, Bird mostly performs under his own name as he delves into many mixed influences ranging from indie to jazz. His latest with the Andrew Bird Trio, Sunday Morning Put-On, sticks firmly to the latter genre with a 90 percent track list of standards. We can’t be sure whether that choice flat-out nixes the chances of him doing anthemic tracks like “Fake Palindromes” or the acoustic retro catchiness of “Sisyphus,” but one can always hope his live show won’t stay too rooted in the songs of others when he’s got so many good ones of his own.

Grammy Award-winning Nickel Creek belies the simplicity of the fact that the band is made up of a guitarist, a fiddler, and a mandolinist who are also relentless harmony singers. After nine years away, the band released its fifth album Celebrants, in 2023, which saw the group branch out even further from its bluegrass roots. The best Nickel Creek songs stray from expectations—across lyrics, arrangement, chord composition, and, on its recordings, surprising production choices. The trio combines soaring voices and enough ingenuity to make you think bluegrass is much bigger than categorization, and, in Nickel Creek’s case, it’s about playing outside the genre’s box—without having to chuck out the box. Listen to the Celebrants tracks “Holding Pattern” back-to-back with “Where the Long Line Leads” and it’ll all be perfectly clear.

CM Gorey

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Arts Culture

Michael Franti & Spearhead brings sunny vibes to the Pavilion

By Thomas Crone

arts@c-ville.com

For Michael Franti and his band Spearhead, summers are about touring across America. Churning out smiley hits like “Say Hey (I Love You)” and “The Sound of Sunshine Going Down,” the singer, musician, and documentarian says he typically performs about 60 shows timed to coincide with outdoor amphitheater opportunities, mixed with a few club and theater gigs.

The annual U.S. shows allow Franti to flex his musical talent, while maintaining business interests around the world during the rest of the year, including an ever-growing hotel and service industry role in Bali. Bouncing between being an artist and an entrepreneur can be a challenge for Franti.

“I shift gears between everything that has to do with the hotel and everything else I do in music and film,” says Franti. “With the hotel, we have over 100 employees now and a lot of what I do is working with the team there.”

The family-run retreat is called Soulshine Bali, and the vibe is in line with the messages that Franti and Spearhead have been channeling over the years: a positive approach to life and the human connection. 

“I’m super passionate about both,” Franti says. “I do feel that the ultimate pinnacle of music, where the rubber meets the road, is when the music is played to an audience and you see the reaction and feel the reaction. It’s humbling.”

Franti’s music has taken him through a variety of settings, from early punk and industrial bands (like The Beatnigs 1986 to 1990) to hip-hop (notably the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy 1991 to 1993) to Spearhead. The group’s shimmering, invigorating sound is characterized by a soul/rock/reggae amalgam perfected over the band’s 30-year history.  

Even with months on the road and his hotelier responsibilities, Franti still finds time for studio work, sometimes just plugging his guitar into a simple recorder and working remotely.

“I love the studio,” he says, estimating that he puts thoughts and music down some 250 days a year. His most recent batch of creative work resulted in the completion and release last November of his latest album, Big Big Love, and his current Togetherness tour.

“Togetherness is the central theme in all the songs on our latest record Big Big Love,” Franti says about the tour. “How do we get that feeling of togetherness, that feeling of closeness, that we so often overlooked and took for granted but now has become so important?” he asks. “How do we bridge these gaps so that people can feel close to one another again? I want to really use my music and my time in my life to bring closeness to people and help them feel like they’re not alone in this world.”

The excitement and sense of community that comes with getting back on tour post-pandemic is something Franti feels deeply. “I went from touring half the year, to mostly the summer months, to not being able to tour at all with COVID,” says Franti. “But when it was taken away, I went into a dark place for a while. Now on the other side of that, I have this incredible gratitude to do this thing we do. There’s a renewed sense of purpose because we all, at some point, go into a dark place.”

He says the hardest part of touring is being away from loved ones—the toll it takes on a family and on the performers. “There’s a general wear and tear on your body and on your mind,” he says. “Physically, you get tired. And as many people as you play for in an evening, you’ll always end up alone in a hotel room or your bunk on the bus. Loneliness can be a real thing.”

Despite the challenges, the multi-talented artist is grateful that his music and his business endeavors allow him to travel the planet in a way that few get to experience. 

“I’ve always had a lust for finding a new corner of the world, meeting people and experiencing new cultures,” he said. “Architecture, art, and natural wonders … I’ve had an incredible opportunity to see these places and play.”

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Arts Culture

Mosh Bit

Charlottesville’s first music and gaming event in more than a decade, Mosh Bit features casual gaming tournaments and punk performances by NIJI SAGA, Steel Samurai, and 14£bs. Each band combines nostalgic video game melodies with energetic sets packed with a punch. Superbit, a new outpost of the popular gaming store from northern Virginia, and local shop The End Games bring activities for all to enjoy. Don’t get your wires in a twist—be ready to play for prizes during this electrifying musical experience.

Friday 7/5. $15, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesoutherncville.com

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Arts Culture

Jared Stout Band

Alternative country group Jared Stout Band creates tunes for the soul rooted in the heart of Appalachia. The band’s discography journeys through the countryside of sound and promises to provide an evening of comforting bluesy folk. Stout’s thoughtful and original songwriting has solidified the group as one to watch, earning a runner-up accolade for the “On-the-Rise” award at FloydFest ’22. Opening performer Low Water Bridge Band has recently released its sophomore album Back to the Valley, which shares the story of small town life in the Shenandoah Valley.

Friday 7/5. Free, 5:30pm. Ting Pavillion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com

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Arts Culture

Arts for All FestivALL

Charlottesville is a town full of performing arts, and
this weekend you can find pretty much all the entertainment you could want in one place: the Arts for All FestivALL. Children and adults can explore dancing, singing, drawing, radio-broadcasting, and playing musical instruments at tents hosted by the Virginia Theatre Festival, Light House Studio, Empowered Players, the Charlottesville Symphony, The Cville Band, The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, WTJU, and the Paramount Theater. Then, settle in for a stage show like no other as the Charlottesville Opera, The Oratorio Society of Virginia, and the Charlottesville Ballet present performances by orchestra, chorus, soloists, and dancers.

Saturday 6/29. Free, 5pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. charlottesvilleopera.org

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Arts Culture

Rebecca Porter

Rebecca Porter heralds her act as “Virginia’s country music powerhouse,” and you’d be right to put your Stetson boots on. Porter and her backing band the Rhinestone Roses ride high on the wave of modern country while delivering a kick to the genre’s classic tropes. As a Pacific Islander living in rural Virginia, Porter writes from experience about trauma, discrimination, and the challenges of motherhood, and she stands up to declare that country music is for everyone. With Cassidy Snider & the Wranglers plus Jim & Juice.

Thursday 6/27. $12–40, 7pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesoutherncville.com

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Arts Culture

Jason Isbell on how Martin Scorsese influenced latest album Weathervanes

By L. Kent Wolgamott

arts@c-ville.com

Pushed off the road by the pandemic, Jason Isbell spent a good chunk of 2021 in Oklahoma, where he was acting in director Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon. That experience, from meeting Oklahomans in the rural areas where the movie was shot to watching Scorsese work, figured into Isbell’s latest album, Weathervanes.

So how and why did Isbell end up in the Oscar-nominated movie? 

“I didn’t really want to be an actor, but I think I wanted to act,” says Isbell in a recent phone interview. “I was looking for a way to help somebody tell a story. We were locked down; COVID kept us from touring. So I asked my manager to see if there were any television shows or movies I could get on. I’d never done that before. I played myself on an episode of ‘Billions’ and was an extra on the Deadwood movie on HBO because I loved ‘Deadwood.’”

That opportunity for Isbell came by way of Scorsese’s adaptation of the 2017 bestselling non-fiction book about a series of murders that took place in the Osage Nation after oil was discovered on tribal land, triggering an FBI investigation.

“I just kept auditioning. I knew I didn’t have any experience,” Isbell says. “But I told them if they gave some instruction, I could do it. And I wound up on set with Scorsese, (Robert) DeNiro, and (Leonardo) DiCaprio. It was terrifying. I was scared to death. That felt really good. It is important to challenge myself as I get older and do some new things creatively.”

Isbell landed the role of Bill Smith (spoiler alert: He was one of the murder victims back in 1917) and found himself on set observing Scorsese and meeting folks who lived nearby. Some of them made their way into the songs that populate Weathervanes.

While he’s known as a great guitarist from his days with Drive-By Truckers onward, Isbell knows it’s the songs that have made him a six-time Grammy-winning Americana star and one of the most respected musicians of any genre over the course of the albums he’s released since leaving the Truckers in 2007.

“That’s the part that really matters for me,” Isbell says. “There’s a whole lot of great singers and guitar players on my street in Nashville. I have to be able to write to stand out.”

Like much of his earlier work, the songs on Weathervanes are often sad character studies: a depressed suicidal woman (“Death Wish”), a copper-stealing, pain-killer addict who can’t go back to work (“King of Oklahoma”), and a kid kicked out of foster care who winds up living in a KOA campground (“Volunteer”).

“Suffering builds character, and it also builds characters if you’re trying to tell a story,” Isbell says. “That’s what’s interesting to me in other people’s songs, and they’re the kind I write myself.”

The time in Oklahoma not only influenced the songs on Weathervanes, it filtered into Isbell’s process.

“It definitely influenced how we made this album, just seeing the way Marty (Scorsese) worked and the fact that he had such confidence in his vision. He would accept ideas and collaboration,” he says, equating the role of a movie director with that of a record producer. “Just to watch somebody work like that, he was able to create a whole universe with his vision. He’d keep some ideas and throw some out.

“I had a vision for how I wanted the record to sound. With that direction, we let the band have some freedom,” says Isbell. “My production style is I try to get the right people in the room and let them play. We viewed it more as a band record than a solo project. I wanted to make it feel more like a live show.”

Given that creative aim and their finished sound, the new songs were immediately ready to be plugged into the live shows Isbell and his band, the 400 Unit, were playing.

“I thought about that a little in the studio,” Isbell says. “We’ve got a pretty big catalog at this point. I can play a whole lot of shows without playing the same song twice. I don’t want it to be in there because it’s the newest song. I don’t want it to be when everybody goes to the bathroom or the bar. It has to be in there for a purpose. I’ve never made promotion my priority, maybe it’s the third or fourth reason. I want to make a show that’s meaningful and moves people.’”