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Arts Culture

Listen to this

By Tami Keaveny, CM Turner, and Ella Powell

Charlottesville is a city of music fans and aficionados. We have an abundance of sonic riches in the national tours that touch down at our venues, and we’ve built a few careers here as well (looking at you, jam daddy DMB). There’s a lot of talk about who knows whom and who does what in our music kingdom. But the proliferation of the scene belongs to those who workshop it year-round. It got quiet for a while—but when the mics were turned back on, we started to hear new names repeated by tastemakers and see them listed on music calendars around town. What has emerged is a new generation of talented performers who are invigorating Charlottesville‘s music scene. 

Breaking through

Photo by Tristan Williams.

Palmyra

palmyratheband.com

With a setlist of songs that play out like confessionals, Americana holler-core trio Palmyra creates instant chemistry with its audience through its authentic yearn-folk sound. As Palmyra puts it, “The best music is honest music.” 

Setting out from the Shenandoah Valley, Sasha Landon (mandolin/guitar), Teddy Chipouras (guitar/banjo), and Mānoa Bell (standup bass) have been road-doggin’ full-time as Palmyra for the past three years—earning plenty of accolades and admiration along the way. Through unfiltered live sets and an amicable internet presence, the band has built a following of devoted fans up and down the East Coast and is bound to secure even more followers in support of Illiterate Light on its upcoming Arches Tour. 

The city of Charlottesville has become a beloved stop for Palmyra. “We’ve found community with bands and young people in the area that are as stoked to be at a show as we are,” says Landon. Palmyra’s arrangements often reflect a kind of “medium is the message” approach, where crescendos of euphoric sound waves break on the rocky shores of disquieted doubt and distress, where a single song runs the gamut of emotions like a punch to the gut. This angst and exuberance carries through in tunes like “Happy Pills” and “Park Bench.” 

Recently signed to the late John Prine’s Oh Boy Records, Palmyra plans to release a debut full-length album in the spring of 2025. Recorded in Richmond and Harrisonburg, it’s a truly Virginia-made project. 

The record label’s commitment to raising the Palmyra banner has extended to a re-release of the band’s EP Belladonna on vinyl. You can find Palmyra’s first foray into recording, the EP Shenandoah (2022)—along with a slew of singles—on streaming platforms.—CMT

Up close and personal

Photo by Lily Garay.

Chloë Ester

IG: @chloeester 

Chloë Ester’s distinctive style is hard to pin down in a way that’s both exciting and engaging for audiences discovering this introspective and unguarded songwriter. Pulling elements from dream pop, emo-folk, indie, and alternative rock, Chloë Ester and her band—Ryan Lee (lead guitar), Garrett Moore (drums), and Jacob Sommerio (bass)—deliver tight instrumentation that never feels overwrought. Simultaneously harsh and soothing, dreamy and intense, Chloë Ester’s clear, magnetic voice carries crushingly vulnerable lines conveying fear and confusion, with a kind of reluctant acceptance and understanding of the eventualities of the human condition. She’s a natural storyteller, and her narrative-driven arrangements work to capture a feeling or memory through a small, specific moment: an interaction with a family member, an awkward instance from childhood, a first date. Her debut EP Dying All The Time (2020) is available for streaming and her sophomore release Asleep In A Fire is expected to be available in 2025.—CMT

For the love

Supplied photo.

Waasi

IG: @itswaasi

Committed to authenticity and experimentation, Waasi unifies alt hip-hop, R&B, and soul in his ever-evolving sound. Smooth and sharp-witted, Waasi’s ability to alternate between laidback lyricism and verbal vehemence marks his albums as showcases in versatility. A lifelong resident of Charlottesville, Waasi cut his teeth in the underground scene. He credits local luminaries like Danny Shea, Jeyon Falsini, and the Rugged Arts crew for putting him on early in his career and providing platforms to perform his particular brand of musicality. As his experience and experimentations expand, Waasi has turned inward, making music that’s personally meaningful and introspective. He acknowledges the therapeutic aspects of creative expression and notes that his newer music reflects the more mature sound of a more mature musician. Waasi does indeed have a new album on the way, though the final release date has yet to be determined. For now, you can find his albums From Virginia with Love (2019) and No Love Lost (2021) and the EP BETTERDAZE (2018) on streaming services.—CMT

Sounds like teen spirit

Supplied photo.

The Destructors

IG: @thedestructorsband 

Loud, catchy, energetic, fun, and angry, The Destructors is a punk rock/riot grrrl band made up of local teens looking to shake up the status quo. Sisters Ava (bass and vocals) and Savannah (guitar and vocals) joined up with Kat (drums and vocals) through the Music Resource Center just over a year ago and are already making a name for themselves in the local scene. With songs exploring feminism, LGBTQ+ activism, and social dynamics, the group plans to release its debut album Goth Barbie soon.—CMT

What we are looking for

Photo by Tristan Williams.

Tre. Charles

trecharles.com

Tre. Charles keeps a busy tour schedule, living on the road and crisscrossing the mid-Atlantic region for gigs, but he calls Virginia home. The indie soul talent currently “lays his head in Richmond,” but his warm, invigorating music graces C’ville stages so frequently that we think he may have a body double.

“Charlottesville is a tucked-away music gem,” says Charles. “The music appreciation here is eclectic and deep, from roots to electronic, and I attribute that to the diverse population that lives here. I think that the fresh air creates more open mindedness (ha ha), and with places like Ting, Jefferson, Southern, and a slew of other spots, it’s easy to find what you are looking for and what you didn’t know you were looking for.”

Charles’ debut EP, Currently, was chosen as one of WNRN’s top 100 albums of 2023, and Charles is planning to release a full album due by the end of 2024.—TK

Catch this buzz

Photo by Sanjay Suchak.

HASH

IG: @hash_the_band

Formed in 2023, Charlottesville’s next-gen rock band HASH caught a buzz. Due to a fast-growing fandom, locals Hasler Yancey (lead vocals/guitar), Jackson Rosson (bass), Tommy Fruscello (drums), Timothy Langlois (guitar), and Asher Friedman (keys) have been on a performing spree that includes shows with Kendall Street Company, Indecision, and The Barons. The group played The Jefferson Theater in March and Fridays After Five in May then headlined The Southern Café and Music Hall just last week. With a HASH debut EP due this month, the world stage awaits.—TK

Centered on stage

Anya Movius steps into a brighter spotlight
Supplied photo.

Anya Movius

anyamovius.com

Standing backstage last September, waiting to audition for her first-year college talent show, Anya Movius put the final touches on the song she was about to perform. 

“I finished one of the songs that I was performing in the audition outside of the audition room,” laughs Movius. “It’s called ‘The Alchemist,’ which is going on the new record.”

The song, it turns out, was ready. Movius made the talent show cut, and the reward went beyond being one of 12 freshmen invited on stage. The night of the show, she says she was anxious in the green room, asking others (including the national youth poet laureate) for advice on how to calm down. When she sat down with her guitar in front of the large audience, she relaxed. “I loved it. The nerves kind of went away as soon as I got out there,” she says.

The singer-songwriter credits her hometown for her creative confidence. Growing up in Charlottesville, Movius says she took every opportunity to learn and perform music. At a young age, she was writing songs and singing for her parents and their friends. From taking classes at The Front Porch music school to signing up at open mics, Movius tapped into the music community and connected with songwriting mentors like Devon Sproule, Paul Curreri, and Michael Clem.

“One of my biggest rewards at the Monday songwriter open mic is watching different participants grow over time with their writing and performing,” says Clem. “With Anya, it’s an extra special case as she was one of the youngest participants ever, and she was wonderful out of the gate.”

Movius’ smart, aware songcraft is lyrically forward, marked by bright, catchy hooks. There’s raw emotion and vulnerability channeling through. Yes, sometimes it’s straight from her journal, but Movius challenges herself to take songwriting beyond self-examination and write from other perspectives. “I think it’s a really interesting way to empathize with people.”

Many of Movius’ songs exhibit a maturity that tells you she is not only writing, but she is listening carefully as well. From the popular Spotify track “Easy Fixes” to one of her favorites “Anastasia,” Movius often goes on an exploration of emotional dialogue. 

“[‘Anastasia’] is about the complexities in queer relationships. Especially in what I’ve seen with friends of mine … I wanted to explore how, in female relationships, and even female friendships, feelings can be more confusing and I wanted to try and encapsulate that in a song.”

When Movius returns to Harvard University this fall, she’ll have finished her first full-length album, From Heart to Hips. She’s been recording and releasing music for years, and she spent the first weeks of August in production at Chris Keup’s White Star Sound, where she delights in the studio work. “It’s the most magical part of the process for me and I get so excited!”

On August 31, Movius is on the bill at the Club Passim Campfire Festival in Boston, a venue where the founders of folk music, from Dylan to Joni, built the coffeehouse scene. Looking to her next big stage, she carries C’ville’s influence with her.

“I just finished up a song called ‘For Charlottesville,’” she says. “I think it’s an incredibly special place. The chorus goes: ‘I free up the words that I’ve been saving / for Charlottesville and Blue Ridge hills / it’s worth all the waiting.’”—TK

Basement takes

Photo by Alanna Mahon.

Üga Büga

Instagram: @ugabugaband

Stuck between country rock and metal jazz phases, Calloway Jones started Üga Büga as a basement jam three years ago with the itch to rock a little harder. He soon invited his friends Niko Cvetanovich and Jimmy Czywczynski along on a wild ride to write and perform music in a “progressive sludge metal” band. Üga Büga’s distinct aesthetic is signified by stylized umlauts in a name that was originally inspired by a caveman cartoon. The group breaks out of the basement with heavy riffs and a post-apocalyptic concept that proves an impressive combination of technical instrumentation and electrifying rhythm.

Jones says that the band’s album Year of the Hog encapsulates the energy of “an angry Facebook rant about capitalism and political corruption.” Pulling influences from an array of genres including blues and punk in an effort to revitalize metal and refrain from recycling, Calloway says performing in the band “feels like the best possible way to scream into the void.” Üga Büga is also filling the void in a metal community hungry for a bigger local scene.—EP

Playing in time

Supplied photo.

Briar Wilde

Youtube: @BriarWilde 

In Charlottesville’s Briar Wilde, husband and wife duo Shannon O’Leary and Alex Johnson are devoted to a vintage aesthetic. “Briar Wilde is rooted in the tradition of Appalachian ballad-singing, combining influences as disparate as country, folk, and classical music,” says O’Leary. The duo’s authentic sound is masked in antiquity and pays homage to the original Carter Family recordings of the 1927 Bristol Sessions that established the classic conventions of country music.

Recorded in Asheville, North Carolina, Briar Wilde’s self-titled debut EP was made using original 1930s music equipment, resulting in a hauntingly beautiful recording that makes time travel seem possible.—EP

Shake that brain

Supplied photo.

En Regalia

IG: @enregalia

A serendipitous meeting in history class was the spark that formed En Regalia, an alternative rock band made up of recent Monticello High School graduates Kylie Grunsfeld, Ethan Arellano, Jason Bittner, and Jimi Andrade. The group’s EP Charlie, named after an original fifth member, Charlie Dubendorfer, features chill guitar riffs and blissfully melodic vocals. Lead singer Grunsfeld shares coming-of-age stories through rhythmic vibrato and invigorating energy in songs like “Contact High” and “Suncatcher.” En Regalia’s infectious aura is one to revel in, and the group translates youthful endeavors like being in love for the first time into an array of sound that is delightful and relatable. “As a band, we aim to do two things: make people move, and make people think,” says Grunsfeld.—EP

Jazz kicks

Supplied photo.

Loose Champagne

IG: @loosechampagne

Loose Champagne is popping off like an uncorked bottle flowing in a surge of talent all around the UVA music scene with its covers of funk and R&B classics. The six-piece student band found its groove when lead guitarist Miles Miskill transformed his jazz ensemble with pianist Isa Rodriguez and bassist Isabel Xiao into a funkified group complete with rhythm guitarist Dana Sun, drummer Kyle Gresko, and vocalist Calista Nelson. Together, their playful mixture of jazz fusion, smooth funk, and upbeat soul draws inspiration from numerous icons within the genre, including Erykah Badu, The Internet, and Childish Gambino. “One of our motivations and [driving reasons behind] our song choices is wanting to bring in music that is underrepresented at UVA,” says Sun. The band is in the process of writing original music.—EP

Organic chemistry

Supplied photo.

Swamp Street

IG: @swampstreetband

In a moment of suspense, the members of Swamp Street lock eyes before bursting into funky, psychedelic rock, neo soul, and R&B sound. A jam band at heart, the group comprises UVA students Karolyn Yoon on guitar and vocals, Cameron Meredith on bass, and Jeremy Nachison on drums. Yoon and Meredith first discovered their musical chemistry while performing in another band, Mellowdrama, before joining forces with Nachison and keyboardist Kimball Roberts. Magic happens when they’re on the stage together, a spectacle that will soon be recorded in original songs titled “Violet Tide,” “Lady Lady,” “Portals,” and “Skyline Drive,” which they regularly perform live. 

The band offers unique renditions of covers and originals alike as it propels its experimental nature forward in each passionate and provocative performance. Swamp Street channels the energy of artists like D’Angelo and Jeff Buckley as rhythm and blues guide its swagger up on the stage.—EP

Tastemakers’ recommendations

“Buckbilly Deluxe is a new act that we absolutely love. Good old country songs and honky tonk that kicks some ass … Lead guitarist Josh Vana has made some great pickers blush by the fire. They may be most well-known for their ’80’s Chevy truck inspired posters … the ones that keep getting yanked off the Bodo’s bulletin board.”

—Koda Kerl, musician and consulting booker at Dürty Nelly’s

“Charlie Shea gives me goosebumps every time I listen to their mesmerizing lyrics and unique voice, and although they do not have any recorded music out there, they are an artist you will regret missing.”
—Samantha Federico, WCNR, Charlottesville Radio Group 

“I was sent a stream of the new, yet-to-be-released [Babe Lewis, which is the project of Jo Harder] album and it’s really good … hard to categorize: shades of indie rock, shoegaze, psychedelia but without being too on the nose … some finger-picking style guitar mixed in. I was honestly taken aback by how fresh it sounded. Unlike anything I’ve heard from a regional band in some time.”

—Warren Parker, WarHen Records

“Onokio (Zach) is one of the most eccentric and creative people I know. He’s relentlessly making some of the most fascinating electronic music out there.”

—Jeff Gorman, Illiterate Light

“Mayday’s Theo Herrin has become a bit of a fixture at the Southern, hosting our music open mics on Sunday, his charisma and talent on display solo or in his band with sharply tuned pop songs.”

—Danny Shea, The Southern Café and Music Hall

Wanna hear it?

Click here to listen to a sample of songs from artists featured in this new music issue!

Categories
Arts Culture

Soul of Cville Festival

The fourth annual Soul of Cville Festival is a celebration of Black excellence across disciplines. Dance? You know it. Fashion show? For sure. DJ sets? Yup. Live music? Hell yeah. Beyond the performances, dozens of vendors and community partners will be on site. There’s awesome apparel, creative arts and crafts, meaningful mentorship, and a wide range of other products and services available for your discovery. Hungry? Sample sweet treats, soul food staples, and delicious Caribbean cuisine among other offerings. The family-friendly fest also provides free art-making opportunities, plus community access to Ix’s Looking Glass Immersive Art Experience.

Saturday 8/17. Free, 3-8pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org

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Arts Culture

“Pink Floyd—The Wall”

Whether you love it, hate it, or have never heard of it, here’s your chance to see it on the big screen. It’s Pink Floyd—The Wall. Watch a whacked-out superstar musician spiral into an isolated state of paranoia as he relives his childhood traumas. Watch him lapse into episodes of anxious and fantastical thinking as his personal life dissolves. Watch school children set fire to their educational institution. Watch animated hammers goose-step through London. Is the narrative cohesive? Not really. But the music holds up. You’ll probably want to enjoy this with an herbal refreshment of some sort.

Monday 8/19. $9, 7:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

“Beauty and the Beast JR.”

DMR Adventures, a performing arts center for kids, has been making magic since 2009. This summer’s production of Beauty and the Beast JR. features 80 children performing in a downsized adaptation of the fan favorite Disney Princess movie. Join the French soirée to sing “Be Our Guest” along with lively Lumiere and timely Cogsworth, and learn the importance of inner beauty through this tale as old as time.

Saturday 8/3. $15–25, 2pm and 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

“The 39 Steps”

Alfred Hitchcock’s 1935 thriller The 39 Steps, based on John Buchan’s 1915 novel, brought the director international recognition and launched his Hollywood career with its themes of love, death, and crime intertwining in a frenzied plot that moves at the speed of a bullet train. Heritage Theatre’s production of the hilariously suspenseful whodunit will leave audiences gripping their seats as four actors play more than 150 characters to tell the story of Richard Hannay’s vacation to London, hijacked when he meets an ill-fated spy and is falsely accused of murder.

Through 8/4. $15-40. Ruth Caplin Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. virginiatheatrefestival.org.

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Arts Culture

Shrek Rave

Grab your ogre ears, green glow sticks, and Lord Farquaad cape for the Shrek Rave. If you let out a hoot and holler for the Shrek 5 movie announcement, this party is for you and your fellow swamp-dwellers. Be the shooting star that breaks the mold in a glittering set with DJ mixes that allow you to unleash all of the Shrek jargon bouncing around in your brain (to the beat of Shreksophone). “It’s dumb just come have fun!”

Friday 7/26. Day-of $27, 9pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. jeffersontheater.com.

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Arts Culture

Deau Eyes

Richmond-based alt-indie rock and pop performer Deau Eyes has made a name for herself, winning awards like the Newlin Music Prize for best album. The foundation of her success is rooted in a Southern upbringing and an exploration of country music that’s prodded cross-genre experimentation within her discography. Emerging from the same scene as Boygenius co-founder and Richmond pal Lucy Dacus, it’s clear why Deau Eyes’ blissfully raw sound landed her on NPR’s Slingshot list of up-and-coming musicians to watch.

Friday 7/26. Free, 5:30pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com.

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“Little Shop of Horrors”

Virginia Theatre Festival’s season takes a mad twist with the wonderfully weird stage adaptation of the black comedy film Little Shop of Horrors. In the sci-fi story, a flower shopkeeper named Seymour discovers a plant thirsty for blood while he schemes to win over his love interest, Audrey. The new succulent breed presents itself as the perfect ploy to impress his crush in this gushing love tale. Laugh, smile, and scream at this classic musical that has thrilled audiences since the ’60s.

Through 7/21. $15–35. Culbreth Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. virginiatheatrefestival.org

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Arts Culture

Discovering place, family, and memory in Annie Woodford’s poetry

Poetry allows you to preserve a certain moment, a certain place. It’s giving voice to something that otherwise I would just carry around mutely,” says poet Annie Woodford, author of Where You Come From Is Gone and winner of the Weatherford Award for Best Books about Appalachia. “Then, when you think about economic systems or environmental issues, I think [poetry] becomes some sort of small act against that destruction or that lack of attentiveness to places. It’s a way of honoring people and places and hopefully elevating things that are not normally seen.”

Since her childhood in Henry County, Virginia, as well as the time she spent elsewhere in Appalachia, Woodford has borne witness as the places she calls home have been subjected to forces of globalization and capitalism that undermine local cultures and ecosystems. From the outsourcing of jobs from Bassett’s furniture industry to the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP), Woodford addresses these head-on in her poetry, balancing grief over the losses with appreciation for the places and their people. 

Her poems should not be mistaken for nostalgia, though many can be read as eulogies. As one example, Woodford’s poem “In the Pipeline’s Path” is dedicated to Red Terry, a tree-sitter who lived in the canopy of a scarlet oak and maple near Bent Mountain to protest the MVP, which went into service earlier this summer despite a decade of community pushback: 

She took to her tree

because she knew she’d never see

any of this again—

the wayward field,

the water meadow filled

with late spring rain

filtering down through

karst-pocked caves

to the aquifer’s hidden well.

The way southeastern trees

turkey-call against each other

when they rub high branches

in high wind.

Her poems honor people and places, but also moments of light or sound. She doesn’t romanticize—she archives. With a focus on words as documentary, cataloging that which becomes forgotten, Woodford details regional realities that seemed immutable but have nonetheless begun to vanish. In “Quiet as It’s Kept,” amid nods to concealed carry, colony collapse, and other contemporary threats, she includes the stanza: 

“Things People Don’t Know the Names
of Any More”

Kudzu

Katydids

Chicken Hawks

Woodford’s landscapes ring true to those who know Appalachia, who have marveled at its red-tailed hawks and who have creek-walked for crawdads. Oaks, maples, vireos, serviceberries, pokeberries, aster, and catalpas all populate her work—yet these are not what could be called nature poems. Rather, Woodford’s attention to nature is inseparable from the generations of people living within these ecosystems. 

She often writes from a place of personal embodiment, deftly probing and questioning the idea of nature as separate from ourselves in poems like “Old Christmas,” from her earlier collection, “When God Was a Child:” 

Matted grass. The body flayed 

open like a milkweed pod. 

The body as muddy pasture. 

I think I was a field once 

… 

A bull lived in me. He liked to sleep. 

Herds of deer half darkness 

wavered across me. In winter

I froze. In spring I bled wet-

weather branches. Water witching. 

In addition to contemplating the personal, many of Woodford’s poems read like family scrapbooks with imperfect memories fluttering out from burst seams. In a poem titled “Ides,” she shares: 

I hear my mother struggle 

to breathe. She has COPD. 

She smoked her first cigarette 

at five years old & now holds

a vape pen tucked into her palm, 

her hand bent like a saint’s

as she sips its chemical sizzle. 

This is not a poem. It’s an ache.

Her mother is also a significant influence in her storytelling. “I have come to realize that my mother was a very intentional storyteller about family,” Woodford reflects. “A lot of those people are gone now, but she made sure that I heard those stories.” She adds, “I’m writing about family and stories and place, but I have really been thinking a lot about what it means to take an event or a story and write about it … Who gets to keep the stories, tell the stories, shape the stories … I’m fascinated by that.” 

A related question informing her work is about who gets to enjoy the poetry and art that is made out of daily life. In addition to her writing, Woodford has taught in community colleges for years, where she is committed to sharing the written word with students. “My dad’s a plumber and I believe that even the daughters of plumbers should encounter beautiful art,” she says. 

A lifelong reader, Woodford began writing poetry in fifth grade. “I actually have a very specific memory of writing a poem and really enjoying it,” she recalls. “Going out in nature and observing and then writing about it … I guess I’ve been doing that ever since. I was really lucky, I went to Patrick Henry Community College and had really great teachers. And then I went to Hollins and found poetry there.” Through her poems and her teaching, she shares in the collective work of attending to and holding space for beauty, humanity, and tenderness, even as—and especially because—the world around us seems to change more quickly than ever. Woodford’s work is a clear-eyed, meticulous, and unapologetic repository, excavating the precarities in our lives while invoking the wonderment of all that surrounds us. 

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Arts Culture

The Elixir of Love

Inspired by Le Philtre, premiered at the Paris Opera in 1831, The Elixir of Love uncorks a romantic drama in the Italian countryside. The contemporary libretto is written by Felice Romani and stars a cheap bottle of red wine as the agent to activate affection. Nemorino, roused by the wine and blinded by love, boldly interrupts the marriage proposal of his lifelong friend Adina (Sarah Coburn). The playfully romantic tale is sung in Italian with English subtitles.

Friday 7/12 & Sunday 7/14. $15–85, times vary. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net