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Portugal. The Man finds inspiration in the past

The old adage “history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes” rings particularly true in 2017. You don’t have to search hard to find parallels between the current sociopolitical landscape and the one that served as a catalyst for the counterculture movement of the 1960s. This observation wasn’t lost on the members of Portugal. The Man when it came to recording their eighth full-length record, Woodstock.

The follow-up to 2013’s Evil Friends was released earlier this summer, and its namesake is a nod to frontman and co-founder John Gourley’s dad. While struggling to find a sense of cohesion for a batch of songs the band had been working on, Gourley went home to Wasilla, Alaska. That’s when Gourley’s dad stepped in, wanting to know what was taking so long to finish the project. (Spending a few years on a record is a lifetime for a group whose output boasted one album per year from 2006 to 2013.)

Portugal. The Man
Sprint Pavilion
August 21

Guitarist Eric Howk (who grew up with co-founders Gourley and Zach Carothers in Wasilla) says Gourley’s dad put the group back on track. “[John’s dad] builds houses. He takes his tools, he goes out there and he puts it up,” Howk explains. “So he’s like, ‘Don’t you go into a room, bring your instruments, write some songs and record them?’ Which is what we ended up having to do.”

Around the same time, Gourley’s dad found his original ticket stub to the 1969 Woodstock music festival buried in the bottom of a toolbox. The relic inspired the band to scrap everything they had been working on and start fresh, with the sounds and philosophies of Woodstock as a touchstone.

“You name your album Woodstock; you start with the name and suddenly you’ve got a theme and that theme was sort of this new age of consciousness that we’re working with, and similarities to what led up to 1969 being, you know, Richard Nixon in the White House, McCarthyism, fear on a political level and just the sort of anxiety that ran through the country and seeing similarities of what’s going on today and just seeing people opening up their eyes and looking around,” Howk says. “And that’s all we’re trying to do, too. We’re shining a light and putting our hands up a little bit and saying, ‘This is bullshit; a lot of things going on are not okay.’”

Woodstock’s first single, “Feel It Still,” is bass-laden, pop-infused dynamite, honed to perfection with retro flourishes and Gourley’s falsetto. It’s become Portugal. The Man’s biggest hit to date, peaking at No. 1 on Billboard’s Adult Alternative Songs chart. The accompanying interactive video makes good on the band’s desire to bring about social awareness—viewers can click on “tools of resistance,” hidden throughout, including a direct-dial to the White House, custom protest posters and donation links for Planned Parenthood and the ACLU.

“There’s no political agenda behind it; it’s more of a humanist sort of thing,” Howk explains. “… things like racial equality, gender equality, equal pay, clean water. These aren’t things that should be put to a vote. These are things that should just show our progress as a society and should just exist.”

Not only does Woodstock take up the mantle of music and social consciousness, but it also reflects the wide array of sounds featured on a festival bill.

“The sonic palette that we’re working with on this record, we actually wanted it to sound like a festival, where you’ve got, you know, Major Lazer on one end and Kings of Leon on the other end, and you’re just walking through,” Howk says. “We wanted it to sound like a CD booklet, you know, whatever you had in your first car growing up. You had those like, 64 CDs; you’ve got Motown and old soul and funk and then you’ve got Missy Elliot and Outkast and everything in-between that. We wanted it to be accessible but we also wanted it to be pretty diverse and I think we nailed it.”

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ARTS Pick: Lyle Lovett

Lyle Lovett and His Large Band is no small venture—the 13-piece group backs Lovett on everything from violin to guitar to trombone, swinging through jazz and pickin’ out country with a variety of crowd-pleasers. With 14 records and almost four decades of touring, the four-time Grammy winner continues to define his own musical niche.

Wednesday, August 16. $35-49, 7pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4910.

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ARTS Pick: Gillian Welch

It took Gillian Welch eight years to release The Harrow & The Harvest. That wasn’t for lack of inspiration, but a stubborn streak of perfectionism that caused Welch to spend the better part of a decade honing down the album to the sparse, dark folk at its core. Hear the resulting classic Americana for yourself as Welch and her partner, David Rawlings, play the Grammy-nominated 2011 album live from front to back.

Sunday, July 30. $41, 8pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4910.

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ARTS Pick: Nora Jane Struthers

There’s a valuable lesson to learn from the music of Nora Jane Struthers—and it’s that showing vulnerability takes a gritty kind of personal strength. Struthers wears her heart on her sleeve on her most recent album, Wake, which is powered by her signature bluegrass-tinged rock, and tells a powerful story of falling in love. Backed by The Party Line, Struthers delivers an authentic performance and a heartfelt message.

Friday, June 23. Free, 5:30pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4910.

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ARTS Pick: Sheryl Crow

You already know that Sheryl Crow is the voice behind a long list of top-40 songs, from “Soak Up the Sun” to “Everyday is a Winding Road.” But did you know she is also an outspoken supporter of a number of charities, from the Children’s Defense Fund and AIDS research to the Special Olympics and cancer research? Proceeds from her benefit concert go to the Charlottesville Free Clinic, a group dedicated to providing medical care for the community’s uninsured.

Tuesday, June 20. $40-71, 7pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4910.

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ARTS Picks: Four Voices

Any one of the legends on the Four Voices tour would be reason enough to lay out your picnic blanket on the Pavilion lawn. But packaged together, Joan Baez, Mary Chapin Carpenter and Indigo Girls’ Amy Ray and Emily Saliers form a folk supergroup made to crush your feminist mother’s bucket list. Although it’s their first outing as a group, the vocal heroines began performing together in 1991, bonding through a friendship forged by talent and a dedication to humanitarian causes.

Tuesday, June 6. $38-78, 7pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 877-CPAV-TIX.

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Takin’ care of backstage business at area music venues

If Gary Green does his job well at the Paramount Theater, nobody will know. As the theater’s audio production manager, he analyzes how sound waves produced by artists will be affected by rising temperature and humidity as audience members fill the space. He knows how voices sound in each microphone, and where the Paramount’s resonance frequencies are—these being the frequencies at which objects vibrate.

“[Audience members] only notice when things go wrong,” Green says, citing an experience when a digital soundboard crashed and he almost canceled Clint Black’s show. “They walk into a live concert expecting the sound of the studio. It’s a high mark to reach night after night.”

B.J. Pendleton is another local “sound guy” who determines what audiences hear, primarily for shows at the Jefferson Theater since it reopened in 2009.

“I love mixing shows,” Pendleton says. “I can make or break your show. You guys can practice as much as you want and have great lyrics, but I can throw that out in two seconds.”

Pendleton is joking of course, and says he wouldn’t do something that “horrible.” He first encountered the Charlottesville music scene in the early 2000s when his hip-hop band, Man Mountain Jr., opened for The Hackensaw Boys at a Liberty Hall Pig Picking. He says it was a full departure from The Roots-like vibe Pendleton’s band created. “It was us in the middle of a field playing on a hay trailer, people drinking beer, and a pig,” he says. “I’ve mixed [sound for] The Hackensaw Boys a million times now. It’s funny how it all comes together.”

He also manages international tours for artists including Amos Lee, Robert Glasper and Gregory Porter, while running his music production company, Pendleton Presents. He and his wife have a 9-month-old and 2-year-old. Sometimes, Pendleton says, he likes to sleep.

Kirby Hutto, general manager for the Sprint Pavilion since construction broke ground in 2004, says he can go to almost any show on the East Coast and find someone he knows working backstage. Though Hutto thinks the Pavilion hits a “sweet spot” and can attract a variety of acts, he says the space isn’t always easy for performers to visit.

Mishap stories include a bus driver who drove to Charlotte instead of Charlottesville, a raging alcoholic lead singer, sending a van to Philadelphia to pick up bandmates who missed connecting flights and tending to artists’ stomach bugs.

“We’re a challenge logistically,” says Hutto. “Once [the artists] get out of their trucks and into the venue, we’re going to do everything we can to make it a memorable, favorable experience for them.”

Keeping the artists and the fans happy is a priority for Hutto, whose mishap stories include a bus driver who drove to Charlotte instead of Charlottesville, a raging alcoholic lead singer, sending a van to Philadelphia to pick up bandmates who missed connecting flights and tending to artists’ stomach bugs.

He remembers Jack White refused to have the color red in his dressing room. No red cups, no red decorations, no red anything. When Jack White’s tour arrived, everything red was gone, Hutto says, thanks to the Pavilion’s hospitality director.

“You can’t get drawn into the madness when part of your job is solving that,” Hutto says, crediting the ability to stay cool under pressure and his team’s resourcefulness. “The rest of the stuff can be background noise as long as the artist goes on. …It’s truly an art.”

George Gilliam, general manager for the Southern Café and Music Hall, reviewed one band’s contract that included a request for a Tickle Me Elmo toy. He says strange requests can be a test to make sure venues read artists’ contracts thoroughly. “We did not buy a Tickle Me Elmo,” confirms Gilliam.

Green tells stories of two legendary bands he won’t name, saying one was “not happy” with the Paramount’s soup spoons and showerheads and another recent big-name act threatened the theater’s stage manager. Green says his 20 years of experience teaching Albemarle High School students with oppositional defiant disorder prepared him to deal with artists who are “prone to tantrums” and believe “the world revolves around them.”

Despite the occasional big egos and odd requests, most staffers feel fortunate to be working behind the scenes, where they sometimes meet artists they admire.

Mary Beth Aungier, talent contract administrator for the Lockn’ Festival and venue manager for Infinity Downs Farm, has extensive industry ties through her years as a tour manager. In the ’80s she managed an international tour for Carlene Carter, June Carter Cash’s daughter, and fondly remembers riding shotgun in a red Triumph with Carter and her former husband, Nick Lowe, then meeting Elvis Costello later that evening.

Hutto faced a humbling moment two years ago watching his musical hero Ry Cooder. “It was the most starstruck I’ve ever been,” says Hutto, who was fretting about getting his show poster signed. “I had to leave backstage because I was being too much of a fanboy.”

“Many of these people are pleasant, engaging, wonderful,” says Green. “You quickly become aware that they all sleep, eat and breathe like the rest of us.” After Crosby, Stills & Nash finished their set at the Paramount several years ago, Green says Graham Nash thanked every person on the crew. “We’re the first ones there and the last to leave…saying thank you goes a long way,” he says.

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ARTS Pick: Ween

Sometime in either 1984 or 1985 two junior high school kids with no interest in friendship were seated next to each other in typing class. It turns out they had even less interest in typing, and through a bit of distracted goofiness, including fusing the words wuss and penis, Ween was formed, and history was made. Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo spent the next 28 years as the unrelated Gene and Dean Ween, playing genius, wacky tunes, inventing words and amassing a die-hard fanbase, despite little mainstream exposure. After a breakup (so Dean could get sober) in 2015, the band returned last year for a run of shows before launching a full touring schedule.

Thursday, April 20. $42, 7pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 877-CPAV-TIX.

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Peter Bjorn and John play to the beat of pop history

Haunted by spirits of recordings past, music studios are just as legendary as the work they’ve cultivated, and they often come equipped with their own folklore. Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” echoes throughout RCA’s Studio B in Nashville. Memphis’ Sun Studio gave us the first recordings of both Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash. Muscle Shoals Sound Studio became synonymous with rhythm and blues in the ’60s and ’70s, and served as a breeding ground for hits such as The Rolling Stones’ “Wild Horses” and Aretha Franklin’s “Chain of Fools.” Founded by Jimi Hendrix, Electric Lady Studios birthed rock ‘n’ roll classics including Led Zeppelin’s Houses of the Holy and Patti Smith’s Horses. So it’s fitting that when Swedish trio Peter Bjorn and John set out to make a big pop record that could stand among the greats, they turned to a studio in Stockholm formerly used by the country’s most notorious pop group, ABBA.

“A huge self-playing music machine is located right outside the studio and it was a present from ABBA to their manager,” says John Eriksson, who puts the “John” in Peter Bjorn and John. “It is supposed to be able to play ‘Thank You for the Music,’ and seeing that weird thing every morning made us wanna do the best Swedish pop songs since ABBA.”

Peter Bjorn and John
With Beck at Sprint Pavilion
September 19

The result is Breakin’ Point, PB&J’s seventh album and its first in five years. It’s been a decade since Eriksson—along with his bandmates Peter Morén and Bjorn Yttling—saturated the airwaves with an infectious whistling melody on their commercial breakthrough, “Young Folks,” and the band’s latest offering is an ambitious expanse of pop intensity. Eriksson partially contributes this slick, refined sound to the studio environment.

“The old vintage gear from the ’70s and the brown wooden walls truly make an impression on the music,” he says. “Almost all of the music we have recorded in it lately has a touch of the music from that era.”

The studio is now part of the independent artist collective and label INGRID, which PB&J members formed in 2012 alongside musicians Andrew Wyatt and Pontus Winnberg from Miike Snow, Lykke Li, Coco Morier, Jocke Ahlund, Nille Perned and Jonas Torvestig.

“INGRID is like a dream come true,” Eriksson says. “We created a platform where everything is possible. If someone wants to drop a piano from the 10th floor and record that crash and put it out on a 7″ vinyl on our label, she or he can do that. If someone wants to cut down a bunch of pine trees and erect them inside a music venue, he or she can do that.”

When creating INGRID, the group was inspired by a Danish film collective called Zentropa.

“Zentropa had a very strict and amazing list of dogmas that the filmmakers had to follow,” Eriksson says. “Our dogma is that everything is okay and that we would not strive to make any money. It’s our own anti-capitalistic pop culture hub.”

Breakin’ Point is PB&J’s first record on the INGRID imprint, and while they didn’t drop an instrument or create a makeshift forest, the trio certainly had their work cut out for them.

“We wanted every damn bar of every damn song to be the greatest in the history of pop music,” Eriksson explains. “We wanted to challenge ourselves to raise the bar so high that we almost couldn’t reach it. Our goal was to make an album filled with songs that could be played side by side to classics like ‘Billy Jean,’ ‘Moonlight Shadow’ and ‘True Colors.’ That is maybe why it took five years.”

Over the past five years, when not working as PB&J, they’ve each stayed busy with outside collaborations. Eriksson recorded with Wild Nothing and Ane Brun, Yttling went into the studio with Li and Franz Ferdinand, and Morén worked with Cass McCombs. As a group, they contributed to Yoko Ono’s album, Yes, I’m a Witch Too.

“In our side projects and collaborations we can use other personas,” Eriksson says. “We can be your own horrible bosses or our biggest fans. We can play everything ourselves or bring in other musicians. And that gives us new energy, new ideas and new confidence. Then we meet up in the band and smash everything to pieces.”

Turns out, it takes some time to break through the ceiling.

“During the first two years of the process we sort of went into a pop laboratory and tried every combination of song structures, arrangements and sounds,” Eriksson says. “When our research was completed, we had the foundation of the album, but we still needed to develop what we had.”

Catapulting their sound into orbit, PB&J enlisted a slew of first-string producers including Patrik Berger (Robyn, Icona Pop), Paul Epworth (U2, Paul McCartney), Greg Kurstin (Adele) and Emile Haynie (Eminem).

“To make our extreme pop dream come true, we needed to bring in some folks that are used to dealing with top-notch songs,” Eriksson says. “We had built the cars but we hired people to do the paint jobs.”

Because PB&J raised the stakes with Breakin’ Point, it’s natural to question whether the title is a self-fulfilling prophecy. But, as it turns out, the indie darlings are here for the long haul.

“Once you start writing songs, it will very soon turn into an addiction,” Eriksson says. “It takes over your whole being, Once you’ve started, you can’t stop.”

Contact Desiré Moses at arts@c-ville.com.

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ARTS Pick: Chamomile and Whiskey

Charlottesville’s Chamomile and Whiskey mixes an intoxicating blend of Irish, old-time and gypsy music into its own brand of Americana. Since releasing its debut album, Wandering Boots, in 2013, the band, revered for its live performances, has played venues and festivals all over the U.S. The highly anticipated hometown show is bound to be a rowdy, boot-stompin’, partner-swingin’ affair.

Free, 5:30pm Friday, September 9. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. sprintpavilion.com.