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Arts Culture

Tenor of the season

Past success and popular demand have led Victory Hall Opera to bring back its outdoor acoustic series for a third year. Soundflight 3, hosted in the natural amphitheater of the Quarry Gardens at Schuyler, returns with four performances in early June. The series also brings virtuoso VHO tenor Victor Ryan Robertson back to the commonwealth. The accomplished performer is fresh off of a stint with The Metropolitan Opera, where he brought to life the complex characters of Street and Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad in X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X

Name: Victor Ryan Robertson

Hometown: Atlanta, Georgia

Job: Opera singer

What’s something about your job that people would be surprised to learn: My job is so globally small. We all kinda know each other no matter if you live in Atlanta or Capetown.

How did you get started performing: I started performing in a rock band right out of high school. We toured the Southeast doing Zeppelin, Living Colour, and Journey covers to name a few.

First opera you performed in/role you performed: My very first opera that I performed was Nemorino in L’elisir D’amore.

Favorite role/piece you’ve performed: My favorite role ever performed was either Rodolfo in La Bohème or Street/Elijah Mohammed in X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X.

What’s your comfort food/meal: My true comfort food is yellow rice, black beans, and slow-roasted pork Cuban style.

How do you take your coffee: I’m a very meat and potatoes kinda coffee drinker—double espresso with honey.

Best advice you ever got: Best advice I ever got was “Nobody owes you a thing.”

Proudest accomplishment: My proudest accomplishment was knowing I can make my living strictly from singing alone.

Favorite movie and/or show: Favorite movie is The Shawshank Redemption and show right now is Hates Town on Broadway.

Favorite book: My favorite book will always be Fountainhead.

What are you listening to right now: Right now I’m listening to Hiatus Kaiyote.

Go-to karaoke song: “Lights” by Journey.

Who’d play you in a movie: Terrence Howard.

Describe a perfect day: My perfect day would be to wake up at 9:30am, study for a couple of hours on the beach, get a massage, play tennis in the evening, and go to a concert.

If you had three wishes, what would you wish for: If I had three wishes they would be to sing a duet with Chaka Khan, find the perfect mountain/beach house, and to be enveloped in rapture for hours with the lady of my choice.

Most embarrassing moment: My most embarrassing moment was realizing I need glasses whilst reading out loud a script in rehearsal. I simply couldn’t see the words and some people thought I might have been illiterate.

Most used app on your phone: Voice recorder.

Most used emoji: The eggplant emoji.

Subject that causes you to rant: Marjorie Taylor Greene. 

Best journey you ever went on: Best journey I ever went on was a job in Capetown.

Favorite curse word: What in all fucks?!

What have you forgotten today: Today I have forgotten to write down what I’m grateful for.

Categories
Arts Culture

Tina & Her Pony

Touring in support of the new album Marigolds, North Carolina’s Tina & Her Pony rides into town on Americana arrangements that depict a life truly lived. Featuring Tina Collins with Rebecca Branson Jones on pedal steel, the duo’s twangy tunes explore love, loss, growth, and change on relatable tracks that evoke sawdust-covered bar room floors and driving down dirt roads at sunset.

Thursday 5/23. Free, 7pm. Dürty Nelly’s, 2200 Jefferson Park Ave. durtynellyscharlottesville.com

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Arts Culture

The String Cheese Incident

Pulling into town this week, veterans of the jam band scene The String Cheese Incident take the stage at Ting Pavilion. For the past 30 years, the six-piece group from Colorado has been blending musical genres and blowing minds around the world. Now, SCI brings their legendary live-show experience to C’ville with a little twist. While their overall oeuvre can be called kaleidoscopic, their latest studio album tamps down the mashup aesthetic and turns up the notes of folk-rock. Get ready to hear brand new arrangements and jacked-up jams as the band expands and transforms their newest studio songs into on-stage standards.

Thursday 5/16. $54–69, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com

Categories
Culture Living

Rivanna RiverFest

Do you tend to swim upstream or go with the flow? Either way, you probably want to check out this weekend’s Rivanna RiverFest, hosted by Rivanna Conservation Alliance and Rivanna River Company. An afternoon of family-friendly activities, games, and educational opportunities shifts into an evening of celebration and jubilance with live performances from Hometown Choir (a children’s choir of students from the YMCA After-School programs at all Charlottesville City Schools) and We Are Star Children (a local nine-piece “adventure pop” group … and not literal children). Food trucks and beverage vendors will be on site, as well as many community partners, to rejoice in the majesty of the Rivanna River.

Saturday 5/18. Free, 2–9pm. Rivanna River Company, 1518 E. High St. rivannariver.org

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Arts Culture

Afro Asia

In honor of Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, the third annual VeryAsian VA Celebration returns to Charlottesville this May to shine a spotlight on Asian American culture, community, and creativity. As part of the festivities, C’ville supergroup Afro Asia performs Thai tunes blended with funk, jazz, and blues for Fridays After Five. Born out of a recording project that transitioned into a live band, the group’s sound centers around Jay Pun’s picking on the phin (pronounced “pin”), a traditional instrument from northeast Thailand. These high-energy jams with southeast Asian influences will inspire you to move, as old friends come together to create incredible new music.

Friday 5/10. Free, 5:30pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com

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Arts Culture

Thievery Corporation

Hailing from D.C. with trip-hop and acid jazz roots, producer-duo Thievery Corporation (Rob Garza and Eric Hilton) have increasingly incorporated pan-global sounds into their electronic-based sets over the past 25 years. With live instrumentation and vocals, their stage performances have garnered massive praise for shows imbued with eccentric yet complementary stylings. Whether a particular song is saturated with bossa nova, reggae, hip-hop, or Afrobeat influences, the vibes are always soulful—and made for the people of Earth en masse. With themes of politics and protest woven throughout their oeuvre, Thievery Corporation have amassed an enormous following, and this second show added by popular demand proves it.

Tuesday 5/14. $40–65, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. jeffersontheater.com

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Arts Culture

The Oratorio Society of Virginia

Whether you know him as Schroeder’s idol in the “Peanuts” strips, a time-traveling buddy of Bill and Ted’s, or as a lovable St. Bernard causing canine chaos, you’ve probably heard of Beethoven by now. And with good reason; his arrangements are ubiquitous. This week, The Oratorio Society of Virginia presents a concert celebrating the 200th anniversary of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. You’ve heard selections from this symphony across pop culture, from A Clockwork Orange to Die Hard to Sister Act 2. Now, hear soaring soloists, along with an incredible chorus and accomplished orchestra, perform this classic live and in concert.

Friday 5/10 and Sunday 5/12. $10–40, 7:30pm Friday. Grisham Hall at St. Anne’s-Belfield, 2132 Ivy Rd. $10–40, 3:30pm Sunday. Old Cabell Hall, UVA Grounds. oratoriosociety.org

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Arts Culture

Get fresh

By Thomas Crone

Dirty Honey doesn’t rehash tired old rock.

Rather, live shows and last year’s second album, Can’t Find The Breaks, finds the Southern California rock ‘n’ roll band injecting propulsion, youthful energy, and a new spin on sound that is rooted in the ’60s.

“To have people say that they feel like what we’re doing is fresh, I think that’s a high honor, to be fresh in a world where we’ve already had psychedelic blues,” says guitarist John Notto. “We’ve had ’70s commercial rock. We had ’80s glam metal. We’ve had ’90s stoner rock. We’ve had rap rock in the late ’90s. We’ve had basically commercialized rock since 2000. It’s almost like what else is there? What has freed us up is we feel like we can be sort of the melting pot of all our influences. And that’s kind of our thing.”

Dirty Honey started its thing in 2017. That’s when Notta, who grew up in Maine, moved to Los Angeles. There he met Marc LaBelle and joined the singer’s band Ground Zero. Adding a couple of new members, the band changed its name to Dirty Honey and largely dropped the covers from their set.

The determinedly independent quartet broke through nationally in 2019, when, with its debut single “When I’m Gone,” it became the first unsigned band to top Billboard magazine’s Mainstream Rock Songs in the four decades of the chart’s existence. 

That song, and the group’s 2021 self-titled debut album, propelled Dirty Honey into co-headlining clubs with Mammoth WVH, touring Europe, and opening for The Who, Guns N’ Roses, Kiss, and Rival Sons, as the band brought its Aerosmith-meets-AC/DC classic rock assault and high energy stage show to multi-generational audiences.

That wide appeal comes in part from the band’s knowledge and absorption of rock history. Notto credits his mother’s record collection and the discoveries he made at 8 or 9 years old, long before he picked up a guitar.

“There were all the Jimi Hendrix originals and only one Led Zeppelin record,” says Notto. “It was Led Zeppelin II, an amazing record to stumble upon. Those guys, the Jimmies were massive. The Allman Brothers were there. But the biggest of the big three is probably Jimmy Page. … I really am a melting pot of influences. I have so much information because, you know, of the generation I’m part of.

“I love everyone,” says Notto. “Jimmy Page. Jimi Hendrix, Van Halen, Slash. Brian May, and the oddball is Trey Anastasio from Phish.” These influences come up in the riffs that drive Dirty Honey’s songs, a process that Notto calls tricky. “It’s sort of like trying to catch a bird, I think. You do it once. You do it twice. You think you know how to do it and as soon as you get cocky, you miss it.

“You get part of it showing up, putting the work in, and part of it is for me, trying out fresh approaches,” Notto says. “I think variety is the spice of life for me, and maybe it’s the ADHD, I don’t know.”

Getting those fresh approaches was a process for Lotto.

“Five years ago, I was really analytical about what makes a riff great, what makes a riff engaging, from a musical standpoint,” he says. “I really dissected it down to every beat. 

“Then after a while, you know, the technical approach got stale, and so then ‘Won’t Take Me Alive’ came out,” he says. “It was ‘What if I really just want to go into the studio and make music that makes me happy tonight?”

“Won’t Take Me Alive” climbed to No. 7 on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Songs chart when it was released last fall, and its follow-up single, “Can’t Find The Breaks,” helped to cement Dirty Honey‘s broad audience. Outside of some festival dates, the band is headlining in clubs and theaters rather than taking on opening slots.

“I like playing packed headlining shows,” Notto says. “We can play music longer and we play for fans who came for us. We’re sort of accepted as soon as we get up there. The result is I feel a little freer and put on a great show. … I mean, we can already hear them screaming for us before we get on stage and it is spilling over,” he says. “You can’t beat that.”

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Arts Culture

Rooted in the past

By Thomas Crone

Willi Carlisle has a healthy respect for the past, modeling his career, in part, on the folksingers of the 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s—people who traveled a self-made circuit of coffeehouses, clubs, and theaters that catered to a hip set.

Pete Seeger, in particular, is someone who Carlisle feels kinship toward, though he also looks to contemporary performers for guidance as well, like Tyler Childers, and mid-career, touring lifers like Hayes Carll. But the musician’s interests go back even farther, as evidenced by his collection of banjos that date back to the 1850s. So, yeah, he digs what’s come before. But he’s also a curiously “now” kinda guy.

One of Carlisle’s modern moves is in the making of the title video for his new album Critterland. He posted a note to Facebook, suggesting that he was looking for someone to create a stop-motion animation video that would capture the mood of the album’s cover, while reflecting the song’s lyrics. The feedback was immediate, useful, and employed.

“I just asked the world of the internet, ‘Do you know any animators?’” says Carlisle. “And out of the hundreds of bots that also responded, there were two people who reached out, who do exactly that kind of animation, one of whom said she’d love to do it. So, as the weeks tore on, I hired a friend (who’s a really good fiddle player), Julie Bates, to make the video. Julie, to her credit, works on a mid-2010s MacBook with a camera that’s 20 years old and she does it all by hand.”

Bates’ independent style is such that there “was no asking ‘Can you bring up the lighting there a little bit?’ What’s done was done,” he says. “And that’s more pure and interesting to me. Higher stakes, more fun.”

Again, it was a blending of times, influences, styles of working, ways to reach a collaborator.

And speed’s a part of it too. Carlisle says Critterland was recorded in three days, “with no take-backs.” It’s the kind of record that reflects his musical roots, based in the folk and country idioms of states like Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, and Illinois, places where he’s hung his hat over the years. It is also the kind of thoughtful, unique record that has potential to break the artist to a wider audience. Yet, with his career in ascendance, Carlisle is not thinking in the context of an annual calendar, or an album cycle, or a tour itinerary. The musician says he prefers to break things down to the smallest fraction possible.

“I wake up every day, work the hardest I possibly can,” he says. “If it doesn’t all work out, I can try again tomorrow. Some day, some type of clarity of organization may come to me.

“Meaningful encounters with people really drive my writing,” says Carlisle. “I love to practice and I love to play. The only things that kill me are publicity and logistics. Like, I have to go to the post office today. Pretty much everything else, I like. I haven’t had to plan too much as I’ve worked with people who I simply tell, ‘Hey, guys, I’m ready.’ And it always works.”

It’s worked to the point that Carlisle’s heading into his biggest year of touring yet. Maybe there was a year with more dates on the books; he’s known to be on the road for 80 to 90 percent of his days, making home a relative term. This year, though, the dates range from his usual club and festival appearances to some support slots for Childers, where five-figure audiences will be the rule.

For someone who came up playing house shows, folk halls, and corner taverns, the jump’s been wild and kind of awesome. Carlisle arrives at this moment through hard work—putting out a quarterly zine, producing videos for pennies on the dollar, and playing for all the cool online channels that’ll have him.

Now when he looks out at an audience, he realizes there are a lot more people looking back than in the recent past. “This year we’ll be doing some opening dates in stadiums for 20,000 people and more,” he says. “That exponential growth has been an honor and a pleasure. But the shows haven’t changed much between doing them for 50 people or just 10 people or 20,000. It shouldn’t. It’s my job to give my all and that hasn’t changed very much.”

Carlisle pauses. “Maybe I tell a dirtier joke in a smaller room,” he says. “But that’s about it.”

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Arts Culture

Sarah Jarosz

Promoting her new album Polaroid Lovers, four-time Grammy Award-winner Sarah Jarosz performs an evening of new music tied to old memories. Simultaneously nostalgic and current, Jarosz ruminates on the mundane yet magical moments that shape a life. Her contemporary Americana stylings are injected with infectious pop-rock motifs and Southern inflections. Following the lineage of artists like Sheryl Crow and Jewel, Jarosz’s earnest delivery and relatable lyrics prompt a trip down memory lane, with all the twists and turns of growing up creating the view along the way.

Monday 5/6. $25–75, 7:30pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. jeffersontheater.com