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DIY labels are music to our ears

We talk a whole lot about people who make music in this town, and rightfully so—Charlottesville has a robust music scene. Less visible are the people who help musicians make a record of their craft and send it out into the world. There are a number of small and do-it-yourself music labels here that do it all for the love of music.

Lagom Audio/Visual

Lagom is a Swedish word that means just the right amount. “The idea is that enough is as good as a feast; you don’t need to overdo something for it to be good, and that’s what we provide to our artists,” says Maddy Woodson, who, along with Cyrus Fisher, publishes pay-what-you-want digital and physical music and visual art.

Lagom issued its first release, the From God to Man cassette from Fisher’s downtempo project, fwawn, in April 2016, and has since released a lathe cut 7″ of job’s The Inescapable Love, and a cassette and lyric book of Zooanzoo’s electro-soul Loud Mouth. Its catalog will grow later this year with Lurcher from Gull, a “living, breathing, squawking drum,” and a release from Virginia Beach-based pseudo-folk act Trapdoorsman.

Lagom funds all releases up front and doesn’t take a cut of artists’ profits. “A big part for us is making the material freely available,” says Fisher, “so by the artists agreeing to post their music [or art] for free download on our site, that’s our payment,” he says.

By offering copyright-free music and visual art under Creative Commons licensing, Lagom and its artists encourage collaboration. “Don’t make someone reinvent the wheel to make the car. Let them have access to the wheels so that they can build upon it,” Woodson says. “I think that’s the fastest way to get interesting and wild content.”

WarHen Records

“I release whatever I want” is Warren Parker’s motto for WarHen Records, which he founded in 2012 with Mike Hennigar and now runs as a one-man show. How does Parker know what to release? “When the music strikes me right then the gears start turning,” he says. Over the past five years, WarHen has released small runs of vinyl records (and one cassette) by Charlottesville indie music mainstays, such as Sarah White and Sons of Bill, while inadvertently creating an archive of Charlottesville’s indie rock past—The Fire Tapes and Dwight Howard Johnson released music with WarHen before disbanding, and Borrowed Beams of Light, Big Air and Left & Right moved out of town, but continue to release music with the label. Parker’s also worked with North Carolina psychedelic pop rockers Zack Mexico and Alabama garage rockers The Dexateens (whose Teenage Hallelujah record sat, entirely finished, collecting dust, for five years before WarHen issued it on vinyl last year). WarHen is set to drop its 18th release, New Boss’ Third Sister LP, any day now, and Parker has some other projects—mostly pressing raucous live sets to vinyl—in the works.

Near Mint

James Cassar and Corey Purvis launched Near Mint from a UVA dorm room and an apartment in Fort Wayne, Indiana, after meeting online in 2014. Cassar no longer lives in Charlottesville, but says that “we’d be missing a lot of community without the area.” So far, Near Mint has released tapes and vinyl and played around with digital distribution, while working with bigger-name indie rock and pop punk bands such as Modern Baseball and Knuckle Puck, and up-and-comers like The Obsessives (Near Mint’s first cassette release) and Boy Rex, who will release his debut LP with the label in May. Depending on the deal with a band, Cassar sometimes offers PR expertise and Purvis offers graphics services. “We’ve been able to adhere to the DIY ethic of really just not following trends of what’s bankable,” but following what they believe is good, says Cassar.

Cassar, who has cerebral palsy, says that Near Mint “attempts to put out music and be a kinder organization while doing so, without looking to be praised for it. It’s just what you should do when you have the means to do so.” Since the election, they’ve donated proceeds to the ACLU and RAINN, and after hearing about allegations of sexual assault against one of their artists, Anthony Jay Sanders, Near Mint removed his material from its online store and digital music page.


Zooanzo_Cassette

Fast forward to rewind

The tape is back—according to Nielsen Music, cassette album sales grew by 74 percent in 2016. This lo-fi analog medium with hipster appeal is a cool item to add to your music collection, but it’s also one of the cheapest methods of physically releasing music. Blank tapes cost just a couple of bucks apiece and they’re easy to produce using analog tracking devices or computers. They’re also easy to reproduce—armed with a dual cassette deck, an artist (or label) can make a copy of a tape in just a few minutes. Artists can make small runs of cassettes to sell for around $5 each, a low risk for fans, musicians and small labels alike.


Inkonizzitäpes

This small cassette tape label is run by Joseph Zehner, who manages Valence Shows and books music at Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar. Zehner founded the label in 2016 and has released mostly electronic music from local acts like Voterfrog, Jordan Perry and Zehner’s own Winterweeds.

Small World Records

Websites like Bandcamp and CD Baby make it relative easy for artists these days to distribute their own music, says experimental and jazz artist Bobby Read, who started Small World Records in 2016 as an offshoot of his Small World Music studio. So Small World Records is “less of a label in the traditional sense and more of a ‘tide rises all boats’ idea—the idea that by banding together, we all help each other and bring attention to the great talent in Central Virginia,” says Read. Read’s own solo releases, plus music from Randy Johnston and Jen Tal and the Huzband are all available for listen on the Small World website, and Read includes CD Baby links for all projects so that listeners can purchase physical copies or downloads of the music.

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Arts

Vinyl never went out of style for avid collectors

Ask a vinyl record collector about his collection and it becomes clear that listening to records is about more than the music. It’s about the ritual of placing the needle in the groove and being present for the sound; listening to The Beatles with your dad; anniversary dinners with your wife. In honor of Record Store Day on Friday, November 25, we asked local collectors about the vinyl experience.

What is the first record you owned?

Aaron Goff: The Smiths’ The Queen Is Dead; I found it at a thrift store. I originally had no intent in playing it, I just thought it would be cool to have a large, tangible form of an album I’d always loved.

Liza Pittard: My dad and I would talk about music while he would rummage through his old record collection and recount his memories of each. Once I bought a record player, he would give five records to me at a time to listen to. Two of the first ones he gave me were Hendrix’s Axis: Bold as Love and Talking Heads’ Little Creatures. Almost every time I go home, he continues to share his collection with me. He still won’t part with his Beatles records, but we’ll get there one day.

Matthew Simon: All the children’s “play and read” records, which I had a ton of—and Christmas with the Chipmunks. I remember so clearly wanting one album when I was 8 years old, and I stubbornly wouldn’t take any treats, books, clothes, anything, until I got that record. My grandparents came to visit and they had a gift in a brown paper bag for me and I wasn’t going to accept it; when they slid out a copy of Thriller, I was the happiest kid alive.

What’s in your collection?

AG: I have around 500 records, give or take. I’m constantly buying new stuff and giving away stuff that I don’t listen to anymore. I want to keep a collection that I will regularly listen to rather than one filed with rarities. A few highlights are an original mono pressing of Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde (thanks to SPCA Rummage), an ’80s German copy of Bowie’s Hunky Dory and an original pressing of Fugazi’s End Hits. I am usually particular about having entire discographies; I have complete collections from The Smiths, Joy Division, Slowdive, Sunny Day Real Estate, Tortoise, The Appleseed Cast and Sigur Rós, among others. I’m slowly eating away at Brian Eno’s discography.

LP: I own about 90 records, ranging from classic rock to electronic music of the 2000s to funk and soul. As I’ve been collecting, I’ve expanded the types of music that I listen to and I think that’s reflected in what I own. I also like to have a balance of older and newer records, so I can be exposed to the music of the past and also support musicians making music now.

MS: I have about 600 records, and they tell my story. I’ve got copies from when I was young, like Weird Al Yankovic and John Denver and The Muppets’ A Christmas Together; my dad’s copy of the first pressing of The Velvet Underground & Nico; a bunch of Stereolab, Talking Heads, John Zorn, Devo; every Phish album ever pressed; jazz, hip-hop, international compilations. It’s all over the place.

What’s your favorite record?

AG: Emergency & I by The Dismemberment Plan is one of my favorite records released within my lifetime [in 1999]. It’s technical and groovy with big hooks and relatable lyrics. They traverse so many different styles on this album while remaining accessible. It still holds up.

LP: It’s hard to pick a favorite because it changes based on how I’m feeling and what I’m into during a given time period. I listen often to Lali Puna’s Scary World Theory, a melodic and haunting electronic record. It was one of the first records that I bought when I started collecting. I am constantly listening to Johnny “Guitar” Watson’s A Real Mother for Ya, which I found at Melody Supreme a month or two ago; I heard him on WTJU’s jazz and blues marathon and have been hooked since. I found the record right after the marathon ended, so it felt like fate.

MS: The collection as a whole is my favorite. I love adding to it to make sure I have a record or song for every possible occasion or mood. That said, I love owning the original copy of Stereolab’s Transient Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements. The sound of that album on vinyl is the epitome of all the reasons to own a record player: the music and phasing is so good, the album art is cool. Records can certainly be art. I have a copy of Animal Collective’s Hollinndagain, of which only 300 copies were initially made; each and every copy features a cover spray-painted and decorated by hand by the band themselves. They even drew on the center label with a marker. I love just looking at that one.