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Interview- An open Book: Folktronic duo brings sound collage back to Cville

by Stephanie Garcia
culture-thebooksThe Books: nostalgically futuristic. PUBLICITY PHOTO
It’s a mix of the anachronistic librarian approach— card-cataloging, Dewey-decimaling— and decidedly forward-thinking sights and sounds that inform the musical consciousness of Paul de Jong and Nick Zammuto of The Books. It was fate, their musical collision. The scene was a dinner at de Jong’s New York City apartment— or, more appropriately, his living room, where Zammuto literally stumbled upon de Jong’s electronic collection of sounds and images piled across the floor. The two found such similarity in their musical aesthetic that over ten years The Books evolved into the provocative and complex “sound collage” that attracts swarms of cult followings across the country— and in Charlottesville. Their mesh of nostalgic acoustic melodies with futuristic loops of sound sampled from hypnotic self-help tapes, home recordings, and television clips found a fervent audience as the main event for the debut of the Southern Cafe and Music Hall in the fall of 2009. The Books carefully deconstruct their everyday surroundings to find clips and snips, anything to provoke a response from listeners— and from themselves. The Hook: Your first encounter with Nick was a musical love-at-first-sight. How did it all play out? Paul de Jong: Nick had a girlfriend at the time who was an acquaintance of mine, so I had him over for dinner. I had a year where I watched three to four movies a day— I must have seen 750 movies that year— and whenever I would see or hear something that really grabbed me, I’d quickly rewind and record it on my mini disc recorder. I ended up with all these mini discs of movie sound effects, dialogue, fragments of music. So I had stacks of mini discs against my wall and Nick walked in and said, “What is that?” The Hook: Your shows are a multimedia explosion. Is more of your production energy focused there, or in the studio? PdJ: It’s definitely creating the library that precedes the music— such endless hours, always, in composition— hours of agony, a process of decision making that’s really intense. Once you have the music, it’s a matter of making it work for the stage. It might look complex, but once you have the music mapped out, things come together— it’s clear what needs to be done. When you’re composing, it’s never clear what needs to be done. The Hook: How does the composing process play out? PdJ: Over the past years, my duties have started leaning to sample collecting, video collecting, creating a monstrously big library that’s our main instrument to work with. We rarely sit together at a computer composing— it’s better to divide the work. You bring something to a certain point individually, then hand it over to your partner, who takes it in a completely different direction, a different level that you couldn’t bring it to yourself. Some things get completely written by Nick, and all I do is give a certain suite of samples. The Hook: The Way Out is your first release in five years— why? PdJ: We worked for seven years together really intensely, and at some point after three records, we had to hit the reset button. We both started families at the same time, and we needed a place to ground ourselves— it’s very different from how we worked before that, where we moved around a lot, had a bachelor existence. There’s a certain focus in this record, every song is a more contained world in itself. The Hook: Where do you go from here? PdJ: We really don’t know— it has a lot to do with what comes in our path, in the sense of what’s the new raw material that I’m digitizing, cutting. Playing live has really proved to be an incredibly wonderful way to communicate our work and connect with our fans. ~ The Books play at The Jefferson Tuesday, October 5. Black Heart Procession opens. Doors open at 8pm and tickets are $18 in advance, $20 at the door.

Interview: Ratatat on the science of strange instrumentals [plus: free tickets!]

by Vijith Assar
RatatatRatatat’s Evan Mast and Mike Stroud have been squawking away on their guitars for years, but now that hybrid electronic dance-rock has become defined by LCD Soundsystem (that’d be this week’s marquee appearance at the Charlottesville Pavilion), it’s easier to understand the sheer oddness of Ratatat. Theirs is a very similar blend of pop appeal built from adventurous electronic sounds, but they’re all instrumental, which makes getting through to pop audiences a challenge no matter how infectious the melodies might get. That’s probably why the chance to write a hip hop backing track for Kanye West prodigy Kid Cudi paid off so big in 2009 — because at the end of the day, the only thing they’re missing that might make them more appealing to fans of Kanye or Gaga is, well, the Kanye or the Gaga. And maybe a dress made of meat. The Hook: This band has a very coherent aesthetic. Do you write a lot of material that doesn’t fit with it? Evan Mast: Well, I think we have a pretty broad spectrum on our records; we have dancey stuff and aggressive stuff. As long as it’s instrumental, we can find a way for it. The harmonized guitars, when people hear them, they say “Oh, that’s Ratatat.” To us, it’s just something that we do— when you write music, you use harmony because it’s a great tool. The Hook: I think your guitar sound is more about volume swells than harmonies. You don’t see that as an identifying characteristic? Evan Mast: Not really. A lot of our guitar sound is ripped off from Brian May. The Hook: What else do you see as your key elements? Evan Mast: We used sequenced beats a lot. That’s just something we keep coming back to because it’s really versatile, and you can do a lot with it without ever feeling like you’re repeating yourself. The Hook: But aren’t you cutting and pasting those patterns? Evan Mast: Well, music in general is repetitive, so you’re always going to take pieces and repeat them. Whether you’re playing again or cutting and pasting to me is kind of irrelevant. Sometimes you can get a little more subtlety by doing that, I guess, but when we’re making beats, we work in four or eight bar loops and figure out some fills. We never just make a four-bar loop and put it on autopilot. The Hook: There’s a fair amount of that in hip hop, which you guys have started exploring, and the response from fans has been a lot more pronounced than with your proper records. Evan Mast: There’s not a large audience for instrumental records these days, and not as many avenues for promoting as standard vocal pop music— radio stations aren’t going to give it a shot on the air. There just hasn’t been a lot of popular instrumental music in the last 20 or 30 years. A lot of it is more droning and spacey, and it’s not something that grabs you with melody the way a pop song does. That’s what we’re always trying to do. ~ Ratatat performs at the Jefferson Theater on 10/3 at 8pm. $27 FREE TIX: To win a pair of free tickets to the show, prove Evan wrong by leaving a comment here with a link to your favorite instrumental track from the past 20 years; we’ll pick a winner by Friday 10/1. (The rest of you suckas will have to pay the $27.)

Crozet Music Festival

Misty Mountain Campground
October 3, 12:00pm
$15 per day/$35 weekend pass in advance, $20 per day at the gate

This is your big one for the week, folks. The lineup here is so huge that it’d be irresponsible of us to do anything other than point you to crozetmusicfestival.com for the exact schedule, but suffice to say that it’s a who’s who of local music — two stages, three days, roughly fifty bands. There’s a semblance of deliberate organization which suggests that Friday is rock and roll day (though Jamie Dyer and Jamal Millner’s “Afrolachian” folk-meets-jazz project is way outside that box), Sunday is for kids (there will surely be tykes running around the whole time), and Sunday is just supposed to be a mellow, relaxing closer (Bobby Read is your best bet for a skull-rattling storm of jazz fusion). Not to be difficult about it or anything.

But of the bunch, please pay special attention to the Skip Castro performance on Friday, the latest in a sort of revival for some of Charlottesville’s 80’s college rock bands stemming from the 2006 rockumentary Live From… The Hook. In this case they’ll be celebrating the long-awaited CD re-release of the band’s classic Midnight Boogie, with no less than seven bonus tracks.


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The Mike Rosensky and Jeff Decker Quartet

Miller's
January 26, 9:00pm
Free

The local guitarist and sax player lead their long-running killer jazz quartet through one more weekly gig.

Jeff Decker - Street Lights


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The Black Swans

The Garage
October 5, 8:00pm
Free

Psych-folk band performs their haunting alt-country and folk-rock Americana in acoustic trio mode with guitars, bass, harmonica, and lap steel. Philip St. Ours opens.


visit The Garage online

Ah Holly Fam’ly

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
October 6, 8:30pm
$5

Appalachian folk typically rendered Sufjan-style — that is, as chamber folk, with ornamental use of instruments like clarinet and ukulele — but probably heavier than usual on the fingerstyle acoustic guitar this time around since it’ll just be a solo set from frontman Jeremy Faulkner. Wes Swing opens by weaving together complex layers of sound using his cello and a loop pedal.

Ah Holly Fam’ly - Loneliest City
Wes Swing - Lullaby


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CJ Boyd

The Garage
October 1, 8:30pm
Free

CJ Boyd

Acid jazz and experimental tunes with touches of harmonica from the loop-happy Chicago bass soloist. Nelly Kate opens.

C.J. Boyd - Peradora


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Carol Cleveland Sings

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
October 2, 9:00pm
$5

Solo pop project from Spinto Band frontman Thomas Hughes built out of cheap drum machines and keyboards — including, he tells us, “psychedelic explorations about pixelation,” which is about as perfect a crazy song premise as you reasonably could hope for. With more 60’s-inspired bedroom pop from ROAR.

Carol Cleveland Sings - Blink At Surprise
Carol Cleveland Sings - Lioness
Carol Cleveland Sings - Say Something
Roar - Christmas Kids
Roar - I Can’t Handle Change


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Joe Pug

The Southern
October 7, 7:30pm
$10

Fresh-faced new country folk singer-songwriter with substantial debts owed to the decidedly not-fresh-faced Bob Dylan and Steve Earle. With Vandaveer.

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The Gaslight Anthem

Jefferson Theater
October 2, 7:00pm
$20-$25

Unabashed Springsteen idolatry may be the flavor du jour these days for a number of younger bands, but liberally tattooed Gaslight frontman Brian Fallon’s accordingly ragged howl charges forward in front of a backline more indebted to punk than classic rock revivalism. There’s an element of cheese at times too, but that could be said of Bruce as well, right? Must be a New Jersey thing. Fake Problems open.

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listen to Gaslight Anthem at the Hype Machine
listen to Fake Problems at the Hype Machine

Donna The Buffalo

Jefferson Theater
November 11, 7:00pm
$15-$18

Rootsy New York folk-rockers who owe a major artistic debt to the Grateful Dead, and also got a major career boost from the resulting jamband fan scene’s tape trading.


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How I Became The Bomb

The Southern
October 14, 8:00pm
$8-$10, $5 students

Energetic and highly quirky electronic dance-rock in the vein of We Are Scientists, but with far nerdier lyrics. With My Dear Disco.

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Devon Sproule

The Southern
October 20, 7:30pm
$8

Here we go again with another reliably ace set from the pride and joy of Charlottesville folk, this time heavy on cuts from her frustratingly-punctuated latest album ¡Don’t Hurry for Heaven! Datri Bean opens with Southern-flavored folk-jazz tunes which could have been written on a porch swing with a battered acoustic guitar, except that she actually plays piano, which would probably tip the swing over.

Devon Sproule - The Easier Way
Devon Sproule - Julie
Devon Sproule - Good To Get Out
Devon Sproule - Don’t Hurry For Heaven
Devon Sproule - Ain’t That The Way
Devon Sproule - A Picture Of Us In The Garden

Datri Bean - Small Things
Datri Bean - Ruby
Datri Bean - Green Onions
Datri Bean - Foolish

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Bryan Elijah Smith

Fellini's #9
October 23, 10:00pm
$5

Americana


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Jazz Collective #9

Fellini's #9
January 30, 6:30pm
Free

Jazz ensemble


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The Farewell Drifters

Fellini's #9
October 15, 10:00pm
$5

Acoustic pop informed by bluegrass roots in a very Nickel Creeky newgrass take on CSNY’s folk formula.


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The Hogwaller Ramblers

Fellini's #9
October 31, 10:00pm
Free

Halloween and a Hogs gig on the same night? You know what this means — everybody please dress up as Jamie Dyer.


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Just N Time

Fellini's #9
October 8, 10:00pm
$5

Hippie funk and rock


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Retrospective Collective

Fellini's #9
October 28, 10:00pm
Free

Weekly live band karaoke as usual, but since there will be $50 prizes for the best musically-themed male, female, and group outfit, you should come in costume this time. Actually, you should come in costume every time.


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Phyllis Koch-Sheras

Fellini's #9
October 3, 6:00pm
Free

Opera


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The April Verch Band

The Haven
October 8, 8:00pm
$17

Fiery fiddle player and dancer performs bluegrass, old-time, and Celtic tunes with a country spin as part of a trio — when she’s not dancing, that is, otherwise providing roaring string lines and Alison Krauss-inspired folk-pop vocals.

Jazz In The Spirit

October 1, 8:00pm
$8

Spiritually-inclined “gospel jazz” led by a Richmond sax player

Christa Romanowsky and Andy Moore

September 30, 8:00pm
$5

Singer-songwriters

Chatham County Line

The Southern
November 4, 7:30pm
$12

Rich harmonies, haunting lyrics and a banjo has turned these former rockers turned into an acoustic bluegrass quartet, but they’ve come back around on their newest album Wildwood with the addition of a drummer. Somewhat, at least — at the live shows, you’re still way more likely to see four dudes hovered around a single microphone.

Chatham County Line - Crop Comes In

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listen to more Chatham County Line at the Hype Machine

Tyler Dick

Coupe DeVille's
November 15, 10:30pm
Free

Americana

Lac La Belle

The Garage
October 23, 8:00pm
Donations accepted

Acoustic Americana descended from traditional folk, country, and Western swing.


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Evan Lewis

Mudhouse
October 2, 7:00pm
$5

Singer-songwriter. With Jay Glick, Matt Knisley, and Luke Langsjoen.

Evan Lewis - Alone
Evan Lewis - Millers River


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Momentary Prophets

Rapunzel's
October 1, 7:30pm
$5

Acoustic hippie folk multi-instrumentalist trio


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Bentley Rhodes and Friends

12th Street Taphouse
December 2, 10:00pm
Free

Bentley Rhodes

Rotating musical cast loosely governed by the Earl Knox frontman and former drummer for Bloodkin.

The Free Bridge Quintet

Old Cabell Hall
October 22, 8:00pm
$15, $8 students, free for students with advance registration

The third installment of this “Art of the Quintet” concert series by UVA’s all-star faculty jazz ensemble, now featuring new inductee Wells Hanley on piano, again puts things in perspective by tackling tunes originally performed by the most important quintets in jazz history, this time including those helmed by Miles Davis later in his career and the early bebop projects of Dizzy and Bird.


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The Charlottesville and University Symphony

Old Cabell Hall
October 21, 11:30am
Free

Special program aimed at kids. Email ear4x@virginia.edu for required advance registration.


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LuchaDora

The Box
September 30, 10:00pm
Free

Surf rock trio


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The Pitch-A-Biscuit Stringband

Rapunzel's
February 18, 8:00pm
$5

The Pitch-A-Biscuit Stringband

Country and folk duo The Don’t Tell Darlings turn into a quartet by adding a rhythm section.

The Don’t Tell Darlings - Single Girls


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Jim Wray and Steve Smith

12th Street Taphouse
October 27, 7:30pm
Free

Pianist and guitarist play R&B-influenced jazz with an occasional trombone twist

Jeremy Casella

The Bonhoeffer House
October 8, 7:00pm
$10

Christian folk-rock. RSVP to .


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The Sky Drops

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
October 7, 8:30pm
$5

Lush, forceful, and unexpectedly dense shoegaze duo descended from My Bloody Valentine. Manorlady and the Fire Tapes open.

The Sky Drops - Truth Is

Manorlady - Red Juice
Manorlady - Trees
Manorlady - Lost Dogs
Manorlady - International Boys Club
Manorlady - Boy And Flippers


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Black Keys rock Pavilion (Slideshow)

by Courteney Stuart
img_0009A fan aptly says it all with his shirt as the Pavilion fills with Black Keys devotees. PHOTO BY TOM DALY
Akron, Ohio based blue-sy bluegrass duo Black Keys played to a packed house at the Charlottesville Pavilion on Tuesday, September 14. Click for slideshow.

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Lion on the lam: Bazan leaves church while still speaking to flock

by Cripsy Duck
David Bazan David Bazan was the brains behind Pedro the Lion, that rare breed of devotedly Christian rockers who win mainstream raves while thrilling the faithful with music far edgier than singalongs. A few years ago, however, Bazan announced that he no longer considered himself a believer and fell into a bit of an alcoholic stupor. When he crawled out agnostic, he got back to work, in 2009 releasing his first solo record: Curse Your Branches. A testimonial of sorts to the doubts this former evangelical has wrestled with for years, the album shows that while Bazan may have left the church, he still has something to say to the congregation. The Hook: Growing up in a devout Christian household, were there restrictions on what you could listen to? David Bazan: Until I was about 14 I was only allowed to listen to Christian music. For a while when I was in 8th grade, there was an exception made for the Beatles. But then— after catching me walking around singing the song “Yer Blues”— my dad kind of changed his mind. The Hook: “Yer Blues?” David Bazan: Yeah, his twelve year-old kid singing “I’m so lonely I wanna die.” That’s the age where trouble can start. The Hook: So when you started Pedro the Lion, did you see it as a vehicle for a Christian message? David Bazan: Well, at the time I was really trying to think outside of the box about how to be a Christian playing music. It was still a really heavy part of my upbringing that music didn’t necessarily have value in and of itself— its value comes from its usefulness as a tool to tell people about your faith. The Hook: You’ve moved away from Christianity even as the evangelical mega-church movement has exploded. Was there a specific breaking point? David Bazan: It evolved pretty naturally. I definitely from the beginning felt like sort of an outsider. While there were Christians who responded positively to the work, with each record there was a contingent of backlash— people sort of leaving or writing and saying, “I got the new record, and I read the lyrics and I put it back in the envelope; and I’m sending it back, and how dare you communicate this way” kind of thing. The Hook: This record has an almost more overt Christian tone, as if you’ve left the pasture but you’re still speaking to the flock. Do you think Christians should hear you now more than ever? David Bazan: I don’t really have an opinion about whether they should or shouldn’t, but in a certain sense I agree that it may be the most Christian record that I’ve made in that it’s obsessed with those themes, and it’s obsessed with the character and the so-called “person” of God, more so than most self-ascribed Christian records. For a lot of Christian people who still continue to believe, listening to Curse Your Branches is a really positive experience because it speaks thoroughly about their own faith. I’ve found that to be very interesting, because I thought that Curse Your Branches wouldn’t be anything but a threat to believing Christians. But I’ve heard tons of reports to the contrary. People are able to really dig into the record and have their faith still be intact. David Bazan performs at The Southern on September 26th. $12, 8pm.

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We Are Star Children

The Southern
September 25, 9:00pm
$8

The pop-rock outfit formerly known, hilariously, as Straight Punch To The Crotch has changed their name to the one conveniently provided by what was originally their debut album’s title (maybe they should just retcon swap the band name and record name for that one?) and also changed their lineup, most notably bringing on Tristan Puckett on drums, Coogan Brennan on synth, and Aly Buchanan on trumpet, the latter of whom does a fine job spicing up “When Animals Attack.” And to satisfy even that contingent for whom flame-throwing keytars are somehow insufficiently kooky, they’re also releasing their new album here as a coloring book with several drawings by album cover artist Dan Zimmerman.

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Love Canon

The Southern
September 22, 8:00pm
Free

80’s music on acoustic instruments

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A Cosmonaut’s Ruin

The Southern
September 24, 10:00pm
$6-$8

Time for the metalheads in A Cosmonaut’s Ruin to finally give their fingers and amplifier tubes a rest — bassist Tom Mathews is moving to San Diego to continue post-doctoral work in chemistry, and they’ve decided to pack up the project as a result. Help bid them farewell by violently blowing out your eardrums one more time; it’s the least you could do. With Worn In Red and Constrictor.

A Cosmonaut’s Ruin - The Inverse Of Man
A Cosmonaut’s Ruin - A Fire To Erase The Sun
Worn In Red - Vital Joys
Worn In Red - When People Have Something To Say

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Birdlips

Rapunzel's
September 25, 7:30pm
$5

Ludicrously promising once-local alt-folk duo. Wes Swing opens with songs built by running a cello through a loop sampler.

Birdlips - Tire Chains
Birdlips - Some Kind Of Death

Wes Swing - Lullaby


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Mike Poncy, Helen Horal, and Tom McBride

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 29, 8:00pm
$5

Singer-songwriters


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Malakait Dan Singa

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 25, 8:30pm
$7

The lyrical content of the new solo project from Arrington de Dionyso, the frontman of post-punk rockers Old Time Relijun, is psychedelic rock sung entirely in Indonesian, with some of the words lifted and then translated from the poems of William Blake. One man punk band Nate Rappole (formerly of Ultra Dolphin) plays guitar and drums simultaneously as GULL. With Raw Moans.


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Gabby Haze

September 25, 8:00pm
$5

Folk rock and Americana


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Ralph Rush

September 23, 8:00pm
$5

Delta blues on acoustic and slide guitar. With Americana singer-songwriter Holly Allen.


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Birdie Busch

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 30, 8:00pm
$5

Blues-influenced atmospheric acoustic folk songwriter.

Birdie Busch - Hometown Boredom
Birdie Busch - Mystical


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Agent Ribbons

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 23, 8:30pm
$5

Cabaret-influenced retro garage-pop trio. Also featuring Caninos.

Agent Ribbons - I’m Alright


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Givers

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 17, 7:00pm
$7

Artsy indie-pop


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Brendan James

The Southern
September 23, 8:00pm
$8-$10

Pop piano singer-songwriter. Storytelling acoustic rocker Taylor Carson opens.

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Teddy and the Roosevelts

The Southern
September 17, 8:00pm
$8
cover-tp-1

New project from former King Wilkie guitarist turned solo songwriter songwriter Ted Pitney. The Derelicts open.

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Wiz Khalifa

Jefferson Theater
September 19, 8:00pm
$16-$18

The underground hip hop rising star’s promising mixtape and resulting recent trajectory has made him the indisputable pride of Pittsburgh rap. With Big K.R.I.T.


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DJ Logic

Jefferson Theater
September 13, 10:00pm
$10-$12

Jamband turntablist. The Downbeat Project opens.

The Downbeat Project - I Want You [live at Is Venue, RIP]
The Downbeat Project - Heaven
The Downbeat Project - He Lost Faith
The Downbeat Project - Back Home

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visit Jefferson Theater online
listen to DJ Logic at the Hype Machine

Martin Sexton

Jefferson Theater
October 21, 7:00pm
$20-$22

Wildly influential singer-songwriter and figurehead for Boston folkies

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visit Jefferson Theater online
listen to more Martin Sexton at the Hype Machine

Ratatat

Jefferson Theater
October 3, 8:00pm
$25-$27

It still feels a bit silly to call Ratatat an electronic project, even if they’re heavily based around laptops, because their aesthetic is much more inclined toward pop hooks than most of the other dudes shifting samples around in Ableton. Sure, those guitar arpeggios may come out sounding like old video game beeps, but the melodies are always simple and unusually up-front, sometimes to the point of detrimental monotony. This is why they were a fine choice for left-field producers on Kanye protege Kid Cudi’s recent debut, but for an even more compelling display of nerdcore virtuosity you’d do well to check out their two-volume mixtape series, which sets verses by Biggie and Jay-Z to some of their earliest beats. Even if it doesn’t always stand up on its own for more than a minute or two, texturally speaking this is one of the most compelling new mainstream instrumental voices of the past few years.

Ratatat - Party With Children

With DOM and Bobby Birdman.

For a chance to win free tickets and a vinyl copy of the latest album, check out our interview.


visit Jefferson Theater online
listen to Bobby Birdman at the Hype Machine
listen to Ratatat at the Hype Machine

The Books

Jefferson Theater
October 5, 8:00pm
$18-$20

Strange experimental found-sound audio loop patchworks built from pulsing electronics, chopped samples, and occasionally even field recordings, all accompanied by meticulously-arranged video projections that turn the duo’s live presentation into a rich sensory spectacle.


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listen to The Books at the Hype Machine

The Cove

Blue Moon Diner
November 19, 9:00pm
Free

Nelson County indie rockers


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Steve Vargo

Blue Moon Diner
January 25, 8:00pm
Free

Old-time and folk


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Willie DE

Mudhouse Crozet
January 15, 4:00pm
Donations accepted

Willie DE

Acoustic rock

Willie DE - Faces In The Sky


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Doug Campbell

September 16, 8:00pm
Free

Rock and folk covers from the 60’s


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Michael Elswick

Millmont Grille
September 21, 7:00pm
$7

Michael Elswick

Jazz saxophonist leads a nine-piece band.


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Michael Jones

Fardowner's
September 26, 7:00pm
Free

Acoustic singer-songwriter.

Michael Jones - I Give You What You Need


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The REBEL Baroque Ensemble

Old Cabell Hall
October 5, 8:00pm
$28-$30, $5-$12 students

Energetic Baroque and early music quartet


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The Charlottesville and University Symphony Orchestra

Monticello High School
October 3, 3:30pm
$10-$35

Classical


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The Charlottesville and University Symphony Orchestra

Old Cabell Hall
October 1, 8:00pm
$10-$35

Classical


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Roberto Poli

Old Cabell Hall
September 18, 6:00pm
$5-$15

Chopin piano pieces and short improvisations. Dedicated Chopin fans might also stop by Brooks Hall at 9am or 2pm for panel discussions about his music’s cultural and historical legacy.


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Sarah White and the Pearls

The Southern
October 1, 8:30pm
$8

Alt-country songwriter. With Appalachian folk trio Old Sledge and the Food Network’s Rodney “Pie Man” Henry (on rockabilly guitar instead of French custard).

Sarah White - Apple In B Major
Sarah White - Half A Smile
Sarah White - Ply Me
Sarah White - Sweetheart
Sarah White - Where You’re Going

Old Sledge - Pretty Polly
Old Sledge - Lost Train Blues
Old Sledge - Home By The Sea

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Ronu Majumdar and Mysore Manjunath

UVA Chemistry Auditorium
October 1, 7:30pm
Free

Hindustani and Carnatic classical Indian ragas performed by a violinist and flautist, the latter of whom plays an instrument of his own design and was nominated for a Grammy in 1996 because of a collaboration with Béla Fleck.


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Glitter, Glitz, & Glam: Lady Gaga rocks the JPJ

by Stephanie Garcia

review-gaga-1Lady Gaga dons a fan’s home-made UVA shirt during “Telephone.”
PHOTO BY TOM DALY

Update: Check out the SLIDESHOW from Lady Gaga’s Glitterway.

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The premise that Lady Gaga is the Madonna for Gen Y — the sex appeal, the pop, the choreography— is accurate, but it’s lazy at best. Gaga goes deeper than she gets credit for, decades beyond just cone bras in the ’80s, taking inspiration from rockers whose fans probably can’t stand her— from Elvis Presley’s scandalous hip-wiggles to Bowie’s androgynous glam. As a revolutionary, Gaga surpasses them, if only because they laid the groundwork.

“I love Gaga because she’s a combination of Madonna’s sexuality and Michael Jackson’s morbidity that she brings to a new level,” said fourth year UVA student and Gaga follower Tasha Nadasdi. “Everyone else plays it safe with standards. She says, ‘F*** it.’”

Hordes of sparkly, scantily-clad, slightly intoxicated UVA boys and girls flooded the John Paul Jones Arena last night, along with greying but fabulously energetic middle-aged adults, all of them shouting out Gaga’s name and waving (more)


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Snap o’ the day: Lady Gaga does Charlottesville

by Lisa Provence
snap-lady-gagaLady Gaga looms large. PHOTO BY LISA PROVENCE
Charlottesville found its way to the Monster Ball September 8, where a UVA t-shirt, giant wigs and fake blood were among the looks sported by Lady Gaga at the John Paul Jones Arena, and even from the nosebleed sections, the spectacle was spectacular.

visit UVA Chemistry Auditorium online

Bess Rogers

The Southern
September 12, 7:00pm
$8-$10

Singer-songwriter. With Allison Weiss and Lelia Broussard.

buy tickets online
listen to Bess Rogers at the Hype Machine
listen to Allison Weiss at the Hype Machine
listen to Lelia Broussard at the Hype Machine

Civil Twilight

The Southern
September 15, 8:00pm
$10

South African alt-rock trio. The Daylights open.

buy tickets online
listen to Civil Twilight at the Hype Machine

Red Rattles

The Southern
September 14, 10:30pm
Free

The Red Rattles

Bluesy garage rock

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Love Canon

The Southern
September 8, 8:00pm
$8

80’s music on acoustic instruments

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Elsinore

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 14, 8:30pm
$5

Indie pop. With Red Satellites.

Red Satellites - Good Press
Red Satellites - Dancing


visit Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar online
listen to Elsinore at the Hype Machine

Paleo

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 15, 8:30pm
$5

Prolific songwriter and former member of These United States who has been writing, recording, and sharing a song every day for the past year. With Drew Carroll of Red Satellites and Kyle Woolard of Astronomers.


visit Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar online

Greg Davis and Ben Vida

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 12, 8:00pm
$7

Drones and synthesizers. With Myceum and the Jackfruit Experiment.

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visit Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar online

Pattern Is Movement

Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
September 11, 8:30pm
$7

Math rock. With Mss. and Nelly Kate.

Pattern Is Movement - Light Of The World
Mss. - Little Flies

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visit Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar online
listen to more Pattern Is Movement at the Hype Machine

Stephen Kellogg and the Sixers

Jefferson Theater
October 10, 6:30pm
$15-$17

College-rock singer-songwriter. With singer-songwriter Roy Jay and the Small Ponds, the new band from Caitlin Cary, better known as Ryan Adams‘ better half in Whiskeytown.

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visit Jefferson Theater online
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