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Arts

Just you wait: Hamilton star Leslie Odom, Jr. on not throwing away his shot at success

In 2016, Leslie Odom, Jr. found himself at the center of a cultural moment as Aaron Burr in the original Broadway cast of Hamilton. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hip-hop-meets-history musical had broken box office records, won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and saw Odom, Jr. beat out Miranda for best actor in a musical at the Tony Awards that year. It was a dramatic turn for an actor who had just about given up. Odom, Jr. writes about his career and self-realization in his book, Failing Up: How to Take Risks, Aim Higher, and Never Stop Learning. He returns to Charlottesville (he was here in 2017 to celebrate UVA’s Bicentennial), to check in on community healing and discuss his approach to success as the 2019 UVA President’s Speaker for the Arts on Saturday.

C-VILLE: What brings you back to Charlottesville?

Leslie Odom, Jr.: I am super interested in how this community continues to heal and define itself. I’m interested in the check-in, to be honest. I know I’m coming for a talk-back, speaker series but I’m way more interested in listening than I am in talking.

Like the rest of the country I watched how racism and hate descended on [Charlottesville] as it was broadcast around the world. Then I watched the city really stand up and say, “You don’t get to define us. That’s not who we are and we beat that back. We beat that hatred back.” I was really so impressed at the bicentennial. I jumped at the chance to come back and see how this community is healing and how it continues to define itself.

Was that your first time in Charlottesville?

It really was. My association with [Hamilton] makes the university of interest because of the Jefferson connection. I had said yes almost a year prior…I was booked long before A12.

How do you feel about Hamilton’s historical figures now?

I was asked a really interesting question by this kid who was writing a paper. And she said that she and her friends have surmised that Hamilton the show is not revolutionary in any way. It’s actually a bunch of people of color not telling their own stories. They are actually playing white people and cleaning up the images of these guys, awful men, and there’s nothing revolutionary about it. And what did I think about that.

I said, well, it’s a fair assessment. There would be people who would disagree with you, probably millions of people. The show is very popular, very successful.

But, you know…that point is…what are you gonna write? I’m certain there is some kid in this generation right now…who is going to make Hamilton look antiquated. There’s gonna be some kid that has an answer to what Lin made, what we all tried to make.

What we all tried to do, for better or worse, is an exercise in empathy. It was a chance for us to bring some men and women close to us. Closer than they’ve ever been before. That’s an exercise that’s always helpful, and always brings about healing. I hope one day the exercise goes the other way.

Going into the role did you have any reservations about being involved in the project?

No. God, no. I had heard the music. And it’s very, very rare that you get the opportunity to be a part of a masterpiece at its inception. I had no questions about how I felt about it.

Was there a feeling that Hamilton was going to be a masterpiece?

All you have is a gut feeling about it. None of us could know that people would receive it in the way that they have. But I knew how I felt about it, if that makes sense. I knew I was looking at a piece of work that comes along maybe once in a lifetime. I hoped that people would like it as much as I did, but couldn’t be sure if they would.

Besides professional success, how did Hamilton change you?

It made me a better friend, a better husband, a better man. I wish it for everyone. We stood inside a moment and were as good as we’ve ever been and maybe as great as we’ll ever be. When you experience that, it changes you in untold ways.

Your book is called Failing Up. How have you failed?

What I really talk about in the book and hope people take away is the willingness to fail. Whenever I’ve been willing to fail—a handful of times, not a bunch—but whenever I’ve been willing to fail and fall on my face spectacularly, it actually never did lead to failure. That’s what the fear was. It was, I’m gonna look like a fool, I’m gonna fail and everyone is gonna see it and laugh at me.

That was Hamilton! That show—a hip-hop musical about the founding fathers—there’s a lot of ways that show could have failed, and didn’t. It’s really about that. I’m trying to encourage people to be bold, be risky, and take chances.

What advice did you get that gives you confidence to take risks?

Meeting with a mentor when I was wanting to quit and do something else with my life. He looked at me and said, that’s fine…but I’d love to see you try first…And this is after a decade of pretty steady work, you know, I was doing okay.

He said I think you are sitting at home and waiting for the phone to ring. And when the phone rings, you do great. But the phone didn’t ring today, so what did you do in the absence of a ringing phone. Did you call anybody? Did you email anybody? Did you write anything? Did you ready anything? Did you record anything? Did you practice?

That was before Hamilton, before “Smash,” before a lot of the biggest things that I’ve done. So, I almost quit before it got good.

Many young people love the play Hamilton, and are now aspiring to the stage. What advice do you have for them?

I think it’s very simple. I was preparing for my whole life without knowing it…I give them what really worked for me, and it’s really—just love it. Love it with your whole heart. Love as a verb. If there’s something you want to do…if it’s law, if it’s psychology, if it’s medicine, sports…whatever that thing is, you can’t go wrong with reading about it talking about it, thinking about it, dreaming about it, planning, studying. You love a thing with your whole heart, and eventually, eventually it will love you back. It has no choice. It’s as simple as that. When you are young, just walk toward the thing that you love.


Leslie Odom, Jr. speaks at John Paul Jones Arena on January 19 as part of UVA’s President’s Speaker for the Arts series.

Categories
Arts

Over hard: Punk band Fried Egg goes beyond its hardcore roots

One week before the winter solstice, the weather is nasty in Charlottesville and it’s cold as fuck inside Magnolia House. The four members of hardcore punk band Fried Egg—guitarist Tyler Abernethy, bassist Sam Richardson, drummer Sam Roberts, and vocalist Erik Tsow—sit on mismatched couches and chairs in the dim living room of the DIY venue where Roberts lives and books shows. Richardson and Tsow drove in from Richmond, as they regularly do.

There’s an old piano in one corner, and a crucified Mikey Mouse, a Buddha figurine, a couple of Kermit the Frog dolls, and other miscellany on the mantle. Neat rows of show posters are taped to the robin’s-egg blue walls.

The band members crack open cans of beer and flavored seltzer and take turns leaning into the weak waft from an old space heater. Tsow blows into his hands to keep them warm.

Fried Egg shares some band lore before getting to the music. How the band started in late 2014 with Daniel Berti on guitar; how they had to cancel their first shows when Roberts broke his wrist; how Abernethy joined after Berti’s departure. The sick shows they’ve played to 15 people, 150 people. The long drives on two hours’ sleep; the fragrant one past a garlic farm; and the foul one past industrial livestock facilities.

There’s the time they kicked off a West Coast tour drinking beers on top of an inactive volcano in Portland; the time their borrowed van had a shitty radio and A/C that died in Death Valley. There was a show hosted by a guy too old to be living in his mom’s basement, where Fried Egg played to maybe 10 people, through a crap PA, and made $30…but the next night, in Washington, D.C., they met bands they’ve shared bills and music and camaraderie with ever since.

The newest Fried Egg story is about the recording of the band’s first full-length LP, Square One, to be released in the coming weeks on Richardson’s Feel It Records label.

It almost didn’t happen, they say. Or, more accurately, Square One almost didn’t exist as it does.

After recording and releasing a number of shorter projects—The Incredible Flexible Egg flexi disc, the Delirium and Back and Forth EPs pressed to 7-inch records, the Beat Session Vol. 4 cassette, and the band’s contributions to the Fried Egg Mixtape cassette—the band took nearly two years to write (and in a couple cases rewrite) enough material for a full-length record.

When it came time to put the songs to tape (yes, analog), Fried Egg sought out Montrose Recording, a Richmond studio with plenty of allure. Built and run by father and son Bruce and Adrian Olsen, Montrose has some of the best gear on the East Coast, and its credits aren’t bad, either: Bruce engineered some seminal Richmond punk records, like White Cross’ What’s Going On? LP and Graven Image’s Kicked Out Of The Scene 7-inch, and Adrian (whose recent work includes records by indie rockers Lucy Dacus and Natalie Prass) had recorded a single for garage rockers The Ar-Kaics, and Richardson dug how it sounded.   

Montrose books a few months out, so Fried Egg nabbed two days in mid-September 2018 and set to playing shows and practicing their asses off; they wanted Square One to reflect the urgent energy of the band’s live performance, something that’s often difficult to achieve in a studio setting. “We were in really good shape to record” when the date came around, says Roberts.

That same weekend, Hurricane Florence was in really good shape to thrash the East Coast. Some meteorologists thought the storm might pummel Virginia, and Fried Egg considered postponing the session—located deep in northside Richmond and at the end of the gravel road, Montrose is the last building on its power line. When the power goes out, it’s out for days.

Fried Egg took a chance—the band had experienced worse on tour anyway—and it paid off. Florence slowed to heavy rain, the power stayed on, and Fried Egg laid down all nine songs on Square One in mostly first takes; Adrian mixed it the next day, with sci-fi film classics Forbidden Planet and Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla playing silently in the background for a bit of what he calls “visual inspiration for the Fried Egg sound.”

“It’s not often that I get to do an all-analog tape record from start to finish in two days,” says Adrian. “The immediacy and run-and-gun nature of the process was a lot of fun, which definitely fit the spirit of the project. In general…punk records should not be overcooked experiments anyways,” he says.

“It’s really good that we didn’t cancel because I don’t know if we could have gotten the same performance ever again,” says Roberts.

The result, aptly described on the Feel It Records Bandcamp page, is “a concise and unnerving album—one that echoes the anxiety, tension, and disenchantment running rampant through modern-day America.”

Behind the cover

The back cover art for Square One “ties thematically, lyrically” to the music, says Fried Egg vocalist and lyricist Erik Tsow, who came up with the idea. Artist Jason Lee drew a nine-panel comic in which each square shows someone going through daily life, experiencing some measure of suffering. “It starts and ends in the same place,” back at square one, says Tsow, an illustration of “feeling like certain things in your life come together and others totally fall apart, feeling like you’re in the same place all the time.”

Song titles indicate a bit of what Tsow growls about: “Bite My Tongue,” “Apraxia” (loss of the ability to perform certain learned movements), “Grin and Bear.” “Lyrically, I use Fried Egg to concentrate on what frustrates me in my life,” says Tsow, and every song on Square One touches on “an inability to communicate how you feel.”

And while Fried Egg plays hardcore punk, it’s not “hardcore with a capital-H” punk, says Tsow.

After putting down straightforward hardcore roots on earlier recordings, Fried Egg branches out on Square One, letting stoner rock and noise rock—and the confident ambition captured in album cuts from experimental artists like Captain Beefheart—influence its music. It’s not what a listener might expect from hardcore punk, and that’s part of the point, a defining feature of what the band constantly refers to as the “Fried Egg vibe.”

Square One’s music, lyrics, and cover art is all “pretty intentional,” but it’s not formulaic, says Richardson. It’s not “programmed for other people” or “pandering to just our genre” in order to attain some sort of status, sell a certain number of records, or tour Europe at a loss just to say they did, he adds.

In Roberts’ opinion, a good punk band expresses a singular identity wherever and whenever it’s making music. “There are so many different times, and places, but people are always expressing their shit, their frustrations, their issues,” he says. “Or they’re just copying someone else who’s expressing their frustrations,” he quips, to laughter from his bandmates.

No one who hears Fried Egg would think it’s copying another band. “I think it comes pretty easy that we just do our own fucking thing,” says Roberts as the band members head into the other room and switch on their amps.

Square One “is our band. This is our record,” says Richardson. “This is what we’re doing, this is what we are. It’s deep in a lot of ways…it’s coming from more of a gutsy place.”

 


Fried Egg plays Magnolia House on January 9. The band will have cassettes of its gutsy first full-length, Square One, available for purchase.

Categories
Arts

Hear us out: A never-complete list of local releases from 2018

It’s time for us to take up the sticks and beat this drum again. Here’s our never-complete (but still pretty comprehensive) look at what Charlottesville-area artists released this year. We’ve focused mainly on albums and EPs, but there are dozens of other bands and artists releasing single after single, or playing songs that haven’t been recorded yet. Support your local scene: click the “Charlottesville” tag on Bandcamp, or search it on Soundcloud. Buy the music when you can (it helps the artists make more music). Go to shows. We repeat, go to shows. Let this list serve as a reminder that you never know what you’ll find right in your own backyard.

5pm Worship Team at Christ Episcopal Church, Songs of Comfort (Christian, folk)

7th Grade Girl Fight, Summer Is Over and Jump Back (rock, garage pop)

A University of Whales, Everything is Beautiful (chamber pop)

A.D. Carson, Sleepwalking 2 (hip-hop)

Read more: Well-versed: A.D. Carson finds his place in the bridging of hip-hop and academia

Abbey Ness, Winterized (dark folk)

Adam’s Plastic Pond, Better and Trouble (Southern pop)

Age of Fire, Obsidian Dreams (metal)

akenobeats, backyard ep 2 (hip-hop, lo-fi)

Andrew Neil, Merry Go Round (alternative, indie folk)

Read more: Musical return: Andrew Neil lets the truth flow on Merry Go Round

The Atmospheric Science, ZIG ZAGS (alternative, trance)


The Attachments, II

If you ask Sam Uriss, frontman of garage, punk, and rock ‘n’ roll trio The Attachments, advertising is “a totally out-of-control and insane part of society.” It takes advantage of us in ways we don’t always notice. “It’s so pervasive that I can’t not write songs about it,” he told C-VILLE of the band’s second tape.

Read more: The Attachments play sane punk as art reaction

AUTODIVA, Duality (pop, electronic)

Bear Punchers, Not All Dogs are Depressed; Carnival; Shitty Singer-Songwriter; Merry Christmas, I Love You (acoustic folk-punk)

Big Lean x SaVAge, Outer Zone 1.5 (hip-hop, soul)

Breakers, Rewrite (garage rock)

Read More: Album reviews: Robyn, MihTy, Jeremih, Ty Dolla $ign, Breakers, The Struts, and Bad Moves

Cameron Taylor, Grey (Christian rap)

The Can-Do Attitude, If There Is a God, I Hope She Kept the Receipt (acoustic punk/not punk)

Read more: The Can-Do Attitude gets it done in unexpected ways

Carry, Live at Low, 27 Sept. 2018 (Appalachian, drone, gospel)

Cassidini, Birthday Greetings Vol. 3: Anyone & Everyone and Chiptune for Productivity (electronic, pop, drone, chiptune)

celebrity crushed, Ltd. and o y s t e r_ (ambient, electronic)

Choose Your Own Adventure, Choose Your Own Adventure and Aussie Rules (jazz, jam, funk)

Chris Murphy, Grow and Disconnect (folk, pop, indie rock)

Cico, Island (analog, ambient, synth)

Comtist, Comtist (metal, instrumental, progressive)

Daniel Bachman, The Morning Star (experimental guitar)

Dais Queue, Infinite Projection and The Line Begins Here (experimental)

Dave Petty, Waiting to Be Filled (acoustic, alt-folk, spiritual)

Davis Salisbury and Mike Gangloff, Live at Low 9-08-2018 (experimental)

Davis/Salisbury/Snider/ThatcherLive at Low 7-11-2018 (experimental, improvisational)

Dear, Black Gold, Part I: Petrichor; Part II: Speak, Memory; Part III: Delicate Arsenal; Part IV: False Idyll (ambient guitar, indie-folk)

Devon Sproule and Paul Curreri, 20 Patreon songs (roots, electronic)

Disco Risqué, If You Don’t Like Hits You’re Gonna Hate This (dance rock)

Don Jr., Don Jr. (doom, metal, grunge)

Emily Rose, (re)Placement/Communion (indie rock, lo-fi)

Equally Opposite, Sinergii (hip-hop, experimental)

Eric Knutson, Other Ways of Being Here (singer-songwriter, country)

Evelyn Rose Brown, Edges (singer-songwriter)

Fanciful Animals, Gondwana Rumpus (instrumental math rock)

Read more: Clocking in with math rockers Fanciful Animals

First of Three, The Hills Like Young Sheep; Deer in the Headlights (indie folk)

The Fluffy Space Bunnies, Agape and Eros (acoustic, electronic)

Forest Brooks, Learning To Swim (lo-fi,folk-rock)

Read more: Monticello seniors share inspiration and creativity

Forté, dysfyg9-an album(?) and Temple Escape—Uncharted OST (soundtrack, indie rock, jazz, video game)

Free Union, Free Union (rock, soul, R&B)

Read more: Free Union pushes social positivity on new EP

Fried Egg, Beat Session Vol. 4 (punk, hardcore punk)

Garrison Primeau, Daydreams (R&B, soul, rock)

goddess ov mindxpansion, My Dying Bestie (death metal, noise, punk)

Gold Connections, Popular Fiction (indie rock, pop)

Grand Banks, various live sets (ambient guitar rock)

The Graphic World, Gossip is a Fearful Thing (avant-garde, math rock, noise)

Greg C. Brown, Greg C. Brown (classical guitar)

Guion Pratt, Drone for the Holidays, Vol. II (ambient, electro-acoustic, drone)

Hadnot Creek, Winter (alternative, folk rock)

Ike Love, ADhD (rap, hip-hop)

Inning, D.C. Party Machine (indie rock)

J. Perla, Phantom from Afar (acoustic, lo-fi)

Jacob Lourie, Sad Boi Bops Vol. 1 (experimental pop, R&B, folk)

Jan Coleman, Bored/Silver to Organ; Black Hole; Guitar Music (alternative, rock)

Jeff Roberts, Living in the Trees (power pop, rock)

Jordan Peeples, The End of the Movie (folk, indie rock)


Jordan Perry, Witness Tree

Anyone who’s seen him play knows that Perry accomplishes a lot with a guitar. His experimental solo guitar record, Witness Tree, is rife with atmosphere and emotion, building tension and ushering in relief to create an experience that’s not unlike reading a series of related short stories.


Juliana Daugherty, Light

Daugherty, a poet, flutist, and singer, challenged herself to make a record, and wrote Light, a folk record about the imperatively “well-trod territory” of love, released earlier this year on Western Vinyl to critical acclaim.

Read more: Weight lifted: Juliana Daugherty finds release with Light

Kat Somers, Bloom (indie pop, electronic, songwriter)

Kate Bollinger, Dreams Before (indie pop, lo-fi, folk)

Keese, Higher Learning, Vol. 3 (rap, hip-hop)

Kendall Street Company, RemoteVision Pts. 1, 2, and 3 (jam, groove rock)

Kingdom of Mustang, Kingdom of Mustang (pop rock)

Kiodea, Many A Moon (folk, indie, singer-songwriter)

Kristen Rae Bowden, Language & Mirrors (singer-songwriter, orchestral rock)

The Lantern Music, Mosaic (compilation by Albemarle High School students)

LaQuinn, LaQuinn and Some Friends Made a Dope Album; Low Income Theory; Crybaby (L.L. Cool Quinn) (hip-hop)

Larkspur, Larkspur (indie folk)

lil shovel, weary (experimental, ambient)

Lord Nelson, Through the Night (Americana, alt-country)

Read more: Lord Nelson explores heritage and movement

Lowland Hum, Early Days (minimalist folk)

Madly Backwards, Wasting Days (Americana, rock)

Maria DeHart, Fade (bedroom pop)

Matéo Amero, Promontory Wildcat (Americana folk, bluegrass, country)

Matéo and Ezra, Demos (folk rock)

Matthew Burtner and Rita Dove with the EcoSono Ensemble, The Ceiling Floats Away (experimental, poetry)

Read more: Imagination boost: Matthew Burtner-Rita Dove collaboration takes flight

Maxwell Mandell, Stand Up (alternative, rock, electronic, singer-songwriter)

Milagros Coldiron, Belgian Whistles (electronic, funk, post-rock)

Mitch Wise and Linz Prag, Act I (hip-hop)

The Modesty Martyrs, Built on Principle (hip-hop)

Molly Murphy, Songs About Trains (folk, indie)

MrsAmerica and Tony Testimony, Pain and Pagent (rap, hip-hop)

Music Resource Center, You Do The Math (rap, rock, indie, and alternative)

Naomi Alligator, BATTERY-OPERATED SUNBEAM OF LOVE; Weapon; Married (lo-fi singer-songwriter, pop)

Nat-Blac (Nathaniel Star and BlackMav), Es-Uh-Ter-Ik (neo-soul, R&B, hip-hop)

Nathan Colberg, Silo (pop)

Nate Emmanuel, Unraveling (alternative hip-hop, pop)

Nathaniel Star, C.R.A.C.K. (neo-soul, R&B, hip-hop)

Read more: Time to play: After nearly a decade, Nathaniel Star returns to the stage

New Boss, No Breeze (twee boogie, indie rock)

Old-Time Snake Milkers and Hoot and Holler, Milkers and Hollers (folk, bluegrass, traditional)

Ordinary Chris & Doughman, 80434 (rap, hip-hop)

Orion and the Melted Crayons, Space Lab Demos and Breathe (acoustic folk, indie jazz, dream pop)

Out on the Weekend, Nate Live @ Old Ox Brewing (indie rock)

Pale Blue Dot, Anatomy (indie rock)

Read more: Pale Blue Dot makes the unknown beautiful

panda slugger, friends (alternative, ambient, sad trap)

Patrick Coman, Tree of Life (blues, Americana, honky tonk)

Paul Zach, God Is The Friend Of Silence (acoustic, folk, Christian)


Personal Bandana, [sic]

When listening to the debut tape from Travis Thatcher and Dave Gibson’s electronic/synthwave/krautrock/kosmiche project, close your eyes and consider what you see amid the bleeps and bloops, swirls and swoops.


Poe Raskin, Dusty Dungeon Demos (hard rock, Southern rock, blues, funk)

PONY, Faceplant (pop punk)

Quin Bookz, Cruddy’s World (hip-hop)

Reagan Riley, Grown Since (neo-soul, electronic, R&B)


Restroy, Restroy

“I’m always trying to do something a little impossible,” Restroy leader Chris Dammann told C-VILLE about blending jazz, grunge, electronic, classical, and mbira music into compositions for his avant-garde jazz group. “There’s something beautiful about impossible things.”


Rob Cheatham, Villains and Ghosts (alt-country, folk rock)

Sarah White, High Flyer (country, rock, folk)

Read more: Sarah White reaches new heights with High Flyer

Sauce is Matisse, Reflection of the Self (alternative, hip-hop)

Sea Grey, Hold out your courage/Five steps (alternative, indie)

shortstop sleepover, with friends like you who needs luck (lo-fi hip-hop, chill)

Sid Hagan, Sere (singer-songwriter, rock)

The Silver Pages, Part III (devotional, ambient electronic)

The Slog, Demo 2018 (punk, hardcore)

Sondai, imightbehappy (hip-hop, R&B)

Space-Saver, SAVE YRSLF (experimental thrash-sax)

Stray Fossa, Sleeper Strip (indie rock)

Read more: Playing it out: Stray Fossa is a new band with a long history

Studebaker Huck, Tahoogie (Southern rock)

Sundream., Sundream. (indie pop-punk)

Read more: Sundream. rocks hard with an emotional core

The Boy Cries You A Sweater of Tears and You Kill Him, I Wanna Be A Televangelist (garage, noise)

TreasureBuddy, wips, abandoned, drafts, and covers (post-folk, post-punk)

True Spirit, True Spirit (punk, hardcore, noise rock)

Tunes for Goons, In A Society (art rock, experimental hip-hop)

The Unholy Four, Final Notice (hard rock)

varenka, Lost Traditions (ambient)

Various artists, 9 Pillars: Mixtape Volume 1 (hip-hop, rap)

Various artists, Together (Oxtail Recordings compilation tape featuring a number of Charlottesville ambient/experimental/electronic artists past and present such as Tanson, Winterweeds, Grand Banks, Voice of Saturn, Sugarlift, and others, to benefit Tyler Magill, who is an Oxtail musician, and SURJ)

Vibe Riot, Vibe Riot (hip-hop, neo-soul, reggae, R&B)

Read more: Vibe Riot wants to know what’s on your mind

Voice of Saturn/Anticipation, Voice of Saturn/ Anticipation split cassette (electronic)


Waasi, Betterdaze

“It’s like life is just starting,” Waasi told C-VILLE about his debut record full of thoughtful verse, easy flow, hard work, and big dreams. Betterdaze is a peek inside the mind and the heart of a young rapper.

Read more: Rapper Waasi breaks out with Betterdaze

Wild Rose, Fanatic Heart (rock ‘n’ roll, punk)

Read more: Poetic edge: Punk quartet Wild Rose is beholden to beauty

yessirov, Small Comfort (indie-folk, post-rock)

Read more: Yessirov lets the songs out on new EP

Reissues

Age of Fire, Age of Fire (metal)

The Landlords, Hey! It’s A Teenage House Party! (punk, hardcore punk)

Read more: Punk band The Landlords’ first album gets a slick reissue

Singles…and a hint at what’s to come in 2019

Alice Clair, “Keep Talking” and “Trail of Gold,” from her upcoming full-length release (folksy rock and soul)

Autumns Ocean, “Winter Season” (acoustic, grunge, alternative)

Cass, “Tesla”; “System”;;“Jiggy”; and others (rap, hip-hop)

Fried Egg, “Apraxia,” from the band’s forthcoming full-length, Square One (punk, hardcore punk)

Harli & The House of Juniper, “Is This Life…” (alternative, jam, rock, soul)

Inning, “White Girls, Black Jackets”; “I Like Your Name”; “Frash Brad” (indie rock)

Naomi Alligator, “Simon”; “Sweetness”; “Accordion People”; “Love Song” (lo-fi, singer-songwriter, pop)

Shagwüf, “Sweet Freak” (gutter glam, swamp rock)

Wild Common, “Downhill Specialist” and “Mama Played the Snare Drum,” off the band’s forthcoming record (Americana, soul, Appalachian, folk, R&B)

Read more: Band together: Wild Common’s music knows no constraints
Categories
Arts

Playing it out: Stray Fossa is a new band with a long history

Nick Evans sometimes wakes at “god-awful hours of the night” to find his brother, Will, in the living room, sitting quietly amid microphones, coiled cables, amps, guitars, and drums, his shoulders hunched toward his computer, the blue-white glow of the screen illuminating his face, laser-focused, with headphones covering his ears.

Nick laughs as he describes the frequent scene—“it’s not very cozy…not a livable space at all,” he says of the room, which, with its abundance of gear and its walls covered in padded packing blankets, is more recording studio than living room.

He laughs not to mock, but rather to appreciate his younger brother’s attention to detail: Will’s focus is always set on some aspect of a song for Stray Fossa, the poppy, shimmery, atmospheric three-piece rock band comprised of the Evans brothers and their longtime friend (and now housemate) Zach Blount.

All three members of Stray Fossa grew up in Sewanee, a small town in southern Tennessee, and they’ve been friends since they were kids—Will and Zach have celebrated their birthdays together since they were 5 years old, says Nick, who is two years older.

They played music together throughout high school (their parents served as their roadies), but left the project behind as each member graduated and went on to pursue his own interests.

Nick moved to Berlin for graduate school and performed guitar-driven, solo singer-songwriter material all the while; Zach played bass in a number of jazz and funk bands in college; Will honed his percussion chops as an undergrad at UVA, playing in a few local bands before moving to the United Kingdom for a year-long graduate program, where he started focusing more on music production (and developed the habit of staying up late to obsess over details).

It’s been “a study in compromise, getting back together. We aren’t a high school group of friends anymore,” says Stray Fossa guitarist Nick Evans. Photo by Tristan Williams

During that time and distance, there was never any question that they would play music together again. A few years ago they reunited in Sewanee, and “the stars aligned for all of us,” says Nick—they wanted to give music another go. “To be fair, we made the stars align,” Will interjects, to laughter from his bandmates.

The group considered moving to Nashville, but it’s too big. They love their hometown of Sewanee, but it’s too small. Charlottesville—a growing city in the middle of the East Coast with a robust music scene and a clear venue ladder to climb, a place where Will had some connections—was just right.

Stray Fossa arrived in town about a year ago, without a single song. After getting their bearings—mostly finding Kroger and Lowe’s—the guys transformed their living room into a studio and got to work.

It’s been “a study in compromise, getting back together,” says Nick. “We aren’t a high school group of friends anymore.” They’ve had to figure out how to live together and how to be creative together.

Local band Stray Fossa closes its first Northeast tour with a show at The Southern Cafe and Music Hall on Friday. Photo by Tristan Williams

And that’s a good thing, if you ask them. The music they’re making now, as Stray Fossa, is much more intentional, says Will. They have more to say in their songs, and they know why they want to—and sometimes have to—say it.

In September, the band released its debut EP, a three-song effort titled Sleeper Strip after the catchiest song of the three, one with an earworm of a melody and lyrics that hold particular emotional meaning for Nick.

There’s “Bear the Waves,” a Will-penned tune about his general reluctance to go out and party, and “Miss the Darker Nights,” a subtle call to conservationism that is also an homage to the band’s wooded hometown—while living in Berlin, one of the largest cities in the world, Nick was overwhelmed by the light pollution, and he missed the noise of the forest. In the summer, he says, with the cicadas and the katydids, all the animals scurrying and birds flying around, the forest is actually quite loud.

Recently, the band released a new track, “Commotion,” which was featured on Spotify’s popular “Fresh Finds” and “Fresh Finds: Six Strings” playlists. So far, all of these songs have been written, recorded, and produced in Stray Fossa’s living room studio.

The band grows its songs collectively, with all three members contributing parts to the whole. “We come together in the middle every time,” says Zach, who gets “a lot of satisfaction from writing icing on the cake kind of stuff,” like harmonies and bass parts that capture the emotional quality of a song. Nick and Will do the majority of the songwriting, though each brother has a different process: Nick brings a kernel to build around; whereas Will brings a nearly complete song.

In the current music landscape, there’s a lot of emphasis on a band’s “sound,” and while Stray Fossa understands why—it can help bands stick out in this world of constant music consumption—the threesome doesn’t want to limit itself by attempting to develop a sonic identity that might constrict it in the future.

“As long as we’re the ones on the track and the ones with the creative energy, it’s going to be our sound,” says Zach, to a round of enthusiastic nodding from his bandmates.

They’re not seeking a revelation about who they are; they just want to say that they’re here.

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ARTS Pick: Fall Dance Concert

Through a collaboration between faculty and students, the UVA Department of Drama’s annual Fall Dance Concert offers a variety of works that explore sound, space, and movement.
In Benevolence, guest choreographer Chien-Ying Wang examines communal bonding by “investigating the effects of a dysfunctional family, community, congress, and so forth,” she says. Other pieces look at shifting environments, the dancing body, and the connections between sound and movement.

Thursday, November 15 through Sunday, November 18. $5-7, 8pm. Culbreth Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. 924-3376.

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ARTS Pick: David Dominique Ensemble

To understand the music of composer David Dominique, shuffle a playlist that features Charles Mingus, Sun Ra Arkestra, and Igor Stravinsky, then add in a few tracks from Sonic Youth. Known for his rhythmically complex and emotionally provocative avant-garde compositions, the Richmond-based William & Mary professor is so versatile that his work ranges from writing for a jazz octet to performing at Coachella, plus scoring the experimental theater work Starcrosser’s Cut, “a fictional, dreamlike reconstruction of the police interview after the arrest of infamous NASA astronaut Lisa Nowak.” The David Dominique Ensemble will perform music from its new release, Mask.

Sunday, November 11. $20-25, 7pm. Brooks Hall, UVA. 249-6191.

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ARTS Pick: NuYoRican

The Latin Ballet of Virginia’s NuYoRican is a visual love letter to Hispanic culture. The contemporary production tells the story of Puerto Rican immigrants arriving in New York City in the 1940s, and the challenges they faced as well as the bonds they created while establishing roots in a new country. Under the artistic direction of Ana Ines King, the ballet combines mambo, salsa, Latin jazz, and reggaeton, while honoring Spanish and African percussion-driven dances.

Saturday, November 10. $12-15, 7:30pm. V. Earl Dickinson Theatre at PVCC, 501 College Dr. 961-5376.

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Weight lifted: Juliana Daugherty finds release with Light

Between sips of seltzer and small handfuls of Chex Mix, Juliana Daugherty lovingly runs her hand along her cat Monday’s back. “I’m still kind of shocked that I managed to get it out in the world,” she says, eyeing a thick cardboard box at the bottom of a bookshelf. It’s full of vinyl copies of her debut record, Light, and she’s kind of shocked, because a few years ago, she hadn’t thought to make an album.

But when Daugherty decides she’s going to do something, she does it, to prove to herself, and “maybe to other people,” that she can.

The daughter of a viola player and a trumpet player, Daugherty, 30, began harp lessons at age 4, practicing on her own terms, and refusing her teacher’s preferred methods. She bounced from harp to piano to classical guitar before trying flute and deciding to get serious about woodwinds.

In college, she took an introduction to poetry class and decided that if it went well, she’d get a minor in poetry—not only did she get the minor, she earned an MFA in poetry from UVA.

After years of playing flute in local indie-folk bands Nettles and The Hill and Wood, Daugherty realized she was the only bandmate without a side project, and figured that as a poet and a musician, she had the skills to be a songwriter. Daugherty decided to become a songwriter, working late into the night on melodies and chords, then fitting lyrics on top of them.

Perhaps even more surprising to Daugherty (but not to any listener of her music) is that Light, which was produced by local musician Colin Killalea and released in June by Western Vinyl, isn’t just out in the world—it’s been featured on popular music websites such as NPR Music’s “All Songs Considered” and Stereogum, and critics have received it warmly.

Stereogum’s Chris DeVille says, “there is no shortage of artists making music of this ilk today, but few are doing it so captivatingly.”

Lars Gotrich of NPR writes, “I just want to curl up in a circle of pillows and stare upwards at eggshell paint that could so easily be cracked by the quiet and contemplative poetry Daugherty sings with gentle, but aching lilt.”

Creative endeavors are how Daugherty makes sense of her world, her life, and she doesn’t actively choose what she writes about. “Whatever has been in my brain is what’s going to come out, and whatever I’m trying to understand is what’s going to manifest itself,” she says.

In her artist bio, Daugherty writes, “I wrote this album partly to strip mental illness of its power,” and that is the part that many critics have focused on, noting how refreshing it is to hear someone speak about depression, sadness, and melancholia so openly, so beautifully.

Light is that, but it is mostly a record about love.

Of course love is “well-trod territory” for a songwriter, says Daugherty, and it irks her that many consider it a trite song topic. “For me, so much of my life is consumed by feelings about other people and interactions with other people, not just in romantic relationships but in all of my relationships, with friends and my family, and with strangers that I pass and imagine things about.”

On “Revelation,” Daugherty sings about her parents, imagining what it’s like to love someone over so much time, to know them so well and yet not really at all: “Someday I know the bonds that keep us will be broken. / We may outrun our bodies any moment. / And the mouth of revelation will not open; / I don’t know you—there’s no time.”

“Sweetheart,” is about a relationship that wasn’t much fun for her, that in hindsight is more toxic than it seemed, and what it’s like to belong to oneself once again, or for the first time. “California,” Daugherty’s favorite on the album, is about having to find a different way to go about your love for a person after your romantic relationship has ended.

Love is such a small word for all of the many, big things it means, and Daugherty will keep walking down that well-trod path because it is a worthy path to tread. Love is “something that’s endlessly interesting and mysterious, and it’s endlessly relevant,” she says. It is what defines us, what drives us and holds us back; it is the most important thing in the world, says Daugherty. Love is the light that we all move toward.

Many hands make Light work

Artist and photographer Tracy Maurice designed the cover and liner notes art for Light, and indie-rock fans have likely seen her work for Arcade Fire’s Funeral and Neon Bible, among others.

Daugherty intentionally titled her record after the seventh track, which contains the line, “Almost every life/ grows fiercely towards the light,/ and if there is a light, you will.”

The album art’s sequence of spheres, some dark and opaque, some light and transparent, others evoking both weighty stones and gaseous planets, is a helpful conceptualization of contrasts present in the music.

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Monticello seniors share inspiration and creativity

Christian Means walks around the halls of Monticello High School with headphones on. He’s not doing it to be antisocial—he’d be happy to pause the music to say hello—but he is doing it on purpose. “I cannot function without having some kind of music playing in my head,” says Means.

It helps him focus, helps him “block out the craziness” that comes with balancing classes, choices about college, friendships and all the other things that make up adolescence.

Plenty of his classmates listen to music, but Means’ love for sound doesn’t stop at listening. He makes music, too.

For Means, Forest Brooks Veerhoff and Elliot Curry, all of whom graduate from Monticello this week, making music has been a meaningful part of their high school experience.

Means, a singer with R&B influences, grew up listening to pop, hip-hop and gospel, but it wasn’t until his seventh grade choir teacher gave him a solo that he realized he could sing. He signed up for David Glover’s audio production class at MHS this past year and, inspired by the creativity of his peers, wrote and recorded a few songs of his own, which he’s released on his SoundCloud page. There’s “Another Broken Hart,” which Means calls “a simple love song” about the back-and-forth of romance; and “Daydreamer,” a song about wanting your significant other to get out of their head and be present in the relationship.

For heavy metal multi-instrumentalist Curry, the urge to make music first stirred at 5 or 6 years old. He was riding in the back seat of his family’s car as the sun went down when his dad played Godsmack’s “Voodoo.” Curry remembers being “floored” by the sound and by the desire to know how to produce all those sounds, so he learned to play drums, guitar, bass and eventually piano.

Curry says that metal is an acquired taste, and those who gravitate toward the genre typically harbor some anger. “You don’t have to be a mean person, but there’s something that you are not satisfied with” that drives that sound, he says. He says that human behavior—the way people behave in certain situations—is a lot of what he works through in his music.

“When relationships crumble with friends, or you drift from people, the one thing that’s constant, that never leaves you is music,” says Curry, who tries to record something new every day. “For dark days, it’s always been there, and it’s even been there for good times.”

Veerhoff’s folk-rock sound began with an “old, dusty guitar” and some lessons his parents gifted to him for his eighth birthday. He now plays mandolin, organ, ukulele and banjo, which he utilized on an EP, Learning to Swim, under the moniker Forest Brooks, back in March.

Learning to Swim is the culmination of four years of experience and songwriting for Veerhoff, everything from driving alone at night in a beat-up car listening to a staticky radio (“Roadkill”), to the death of a neighbor (“Drowning”). As a kid, Veerhoff swam in this neighbor’s backyard pool and played cards with this neighbor’s mother. “My neighbor’s death in many ways seemed like the end of a major part of my childhood,” says Veerhoff. “I grew up and saw the flaws in the perfect house next door and what could happen there. [The song] is me parting ways with that chapter of my life.”

All three musicians agree that their teachers, Glover and Cullen Wade, both musicians themselves, fostered and encouraged their creativity at MHS.

Veerhoof sums it up: “Monticello has this amazing media department, and without it, high school would have sucked,” he says. “It’s so unique and awesome and I don’t know what would have pushed me through the day if I couldn’t have gone and jammed with a few classmates during lunches and free periods.”


Exit tracks

Three Monticello High School graduating seniors, all musicians, share what they’ve been listening to recently, as they begin a new chapter in their lives.

Khalid, American Teen (2017) “I find it really relatable,” says Christian Means. The album is about the “experiences of a high school senior, about being on the verge of ending high school, of growing up and being part of America.” It’s helped him navigate the “stress and excitement” of graduating.

Car Seat Headrest, Teens of Denial (2016) “Teens of Denial…has been the soundtrack of my last two years of high school,” says Forest Veerhoff. “The funky blend of emotions and musicality expressed on that album has resonated with me in so many different experiences.”

Slipknot, Iowa (2001) Elliot Curry first came to love Iowa in middle school, and revisits it “out of nostalgia.” Slipknot singer Corey Taylor called the record “dark, brutal, amazing” in an interview with Revolver, and that’s part of what spoke to Curry, who laughs when he talks about how “kind of strange” it must have been for a middle schooler to love something so dark.

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ARTS Pick: Applause sign

A growing following is tailing the tunes of singer-songwriter and Houston native David Ramirez. Known for his soulful, introspective songs and passionate performances, Ramirez started music-making as many do—playing rock ‘n’ roll songs with his band at parties. He developed his own style in college and broke off to pursue a solo career. Focusing on acoustic tunes, Ramirez released studio material at a blistering rate, and now on his Bootleg Tour, he’s showing that he can translate it live as he records each performance for possible release.

Thursday, June 7. $15, 6pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.