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Issue #21.19 :: 05/12/2009 - 05/18/2009
Forty-five songs that every Charlottesville music fan should know

Plus: Turn up the volume for MP3s from 14 of the songs!

BY BRENDAN FITZGERALD


Stephen Malkmus (left) of Pavement, No. 26

Things are going to get loud.  And I don’t strictly mean musically speaking, though we have our fair share of the really noisy stuff on this list—from the nastiest instrumental metal to the soundtrack for a long-gone underground venue. We’ve got plenty of the quiet stuff, too—extinct local cassette tapes, a troubadour’s home recordings. I mean “loud” as in the volume of the debate. Because to compile the essential local listening guide to Charlottesville, we had to break a few bands to make a masterpiece, or single out one tune by the likes of The Beetnix or Paul Curreri, to gather 45 songs that tell the bigger story of the musician’s place in our city.  Some of it will be difficult to listen to, and even more difficult to find—starting with a 1988 cassette tape from a locally spawned guitar demon and including records that are out-of-print, unreleased or just plain buried beneath the noise. Among a true wealth of local music, you have to dig a bit harder to find the gems. So C-VILLE did some of the digging for you. Scroll through for a playlist of our essential local songs, then dig up your trusty pair of headphones and get ready to go treasure hunting.

 

1 Atsushi Miura and the Dirty Round Eyes

"I Hate Charlottesville (So Boring)," from Cheap & Fake (2003)

The former owner of Tokyo Rose turned his sushi restaurant’s basement into one of the most vibrant underground music scenes in the city, a haven for everyone from locals like Bella Morte and Ted Stryker’s Drinking Problem (see No. 12: The Extraordinaires) to Elliott Smith and Of Montreal. Most evenings ended with the same encore: Miura grabbed an acoustic guitar and played this song for the handful of hangers-on and hardcore fans. When people say that the local music scene changed when Miura left town in 2004, they’re mostly talking about the Rose. But this song is a vital part of the legend.

2 Barling and Collins


Listen to "American as Fuck," courtesy BC

"American as Fuck," from Puberty and Justice for All (2004)

Because patriotism isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Unless you have a cooler full of beer, a guitar and a cello, that is. Our own Stephen Barling and Brandon Collins, pioneers of a genre we think of as “Americana as fuck.”

3 The Beetnix


Listen to "Fall Away," courtesy The Beetnix

“Fall Away” from Professional Thieves, Vol. 3 (2007)

Only available on an EP sold by the ’Nix at concerts, “Fall Away” is the best Beet for your bucks. Louis “Waterloo” Hampton does a real lyrical number over the sort of gauzy electronic beat that earned Damani “Glitch” Harrison his nickname. And former local Ezra Hamilton does his best Maxwell vocals on the hook: “One more step and I’ma fall away.”

4 Birdlips


Listen to "Some Kind of Death," courtesy Birdlips

“Some Kind of Death,” from Cardboard Wings (2008)

Sometimes a local album skips years of Charlottesville musical evolution and soars in with a sound from another world entirely. Cardboard Wings is that album, and this song is the best example. Sounds even better in a live performance, with Cliff Usher’s echoing guitar break and keyboardist Lindsay Pitts showing a bit of leg.

5 Camper Van Beethoven

“Might Makes Right,” live at Starr Hill Music Hall (2005)

“More bouncers needed in aisle three,” announces David Lowery after he turns a drunken heckler’s taunting into a chant. You know his work from Cracker and from the liner notes of loads of local albums dating to the ’90s, but Lowery is at some kind of personal best here with CVB. Download the whole show at archive.org.

6 Danny Schmidt

“Two-timing Bank Robber’s Lament,” from Home Recordings (2003)

We could go with a track from Schmidt’s Live from The Prism album, but we adore Schmidt’s long out-of-print masterpiece, sold locally to pay for his medical expenses when he was battling cancer without insurance. This track was released on his latest record, Instead the Forest Rose to Sing, but is at its essence here.

7 Dave Grant

Devon Sproule, No. 10

“Willie the Pimp” (Frank Zappa cover), from Bubbalon by Bass (2007)

Grant recorded with any musician he could lure into a studio, and created instruments from whatever materials he could get his hands on. Fittingly, musicians from Art Wheeler to Dave Matthews chipped in on Bubbalon, released after 46-year-old Grant died in 2002. “Willie” is our favorite, full of textured growls from Tim Anderson that mix with “instruments” like drywall buckets and electric drills. Grant would approve.

8 Dave Matthews

“Stay or Leave,” from Some Devil (2003)

Light House filmmaker and UVA graduate Sahar Adish won a Peabody Award for her documentary about fleeing Afghanistan with her family. And, wouldn’t you know it? Matthews was kind enough to loan his song to the film. Heart-wrenching on your stereo, even better on the big screen; watch a clip featuring “Stay or Leave” here.
 

9 Dave Matthews Band

“Warehouse,” from Under The Table and Dreaming (1994)

An expansive live track? An early favorite and longtime classic? For everyone else, maybe. For locals, that big, pink building near the corner of South and First streets. And the starting place.

10 Devon Sproule


Listen to "Old Virginia Block," courtesy Devon Sproule

“Old Virginia Block,” from Keep Your Silver Shined (2007)

Lost in the Blue Ridge? The opening track from Sproule’s “getting married” album is your guide home by touch, taste and sound. A stream-of-consciousness love letter to home, sung over scuffed sneaker drums and jazz chords.

11 Earth to Andy

Andy Waldeck of Earth to Andy, No. 11

“Simple Machine” from Chronicle Kings (1999)

Longtime local Andy Waldeck has sent loads of rock into the world, whether as a solo musician or a member of X Porn Stars. (Heck, you could even credit him as something of a mentor to Chris Daughtry, whose band opened for Earth to Andy.) But this track—the centerpiece of an album released by Warner Bros., by a local band signed to Red Light Management—marked a point where, true to the band’s name, the world reached out to embrace Waldeck.

12 The Extraordinaires

“Warehouse Song,” from Short Stories (2006)

Former members of local acts including Ted Stryker’s Drinking Problem and Folkskunde start over with a more direct name and write their best song yet. “We never do a single dish/ Our house is fine the way it is”— local slacker anthem No. 1, even if The Extraordinaires are too detail-savvy to be dubbed “slackers.”

13 Free Bridge Quintet

“New Resolution,” from Live at Old Cabell Hall (2008)

There are a half-dozen reasons why Miller’s still packs a jazz crowd: the five Free Bridge players, and this song.

14 The Hackensaw Boys

“Sweet Petunia,” from the Telluride Bluegrass Festival compilation (2005)

Our homegrown Hackensaw Boys have two speeds; this is the fast one. By the time your ears catch up with the punk-grass, the Hacks are halfway through this track, written by former member and current Modest Mouse Tom Peloso, howling like a bunch of neighbors whose house party has just spilled out into the yard.

15 Horsefang


Listen to "River of Dead Horses," courtesy Horsefang

“River of Dead Horses,” from the self-titled album (2007)

The most terrifying local metal song ever written has no words. But you’ll hear bloody murder in it.

16 Indecision

“Take It All In,” from Live at the Chameleon Club (1996)

If you’re a fan of jam bands, you don’t need a handful of favorite groups; you need a single group that can play great songs a handful of ways. Indecision, formed in Charlottesville in 1984, could hang with the best of them, and still can; the band closed a 2007 gig at Satellite Ballroom with this track (listen at archive.org), best realized on this live album.

17 Jeff Romano


Listen to "Diamond Joe," courtesy Jeff Romano

“Diamond Joe,” from It’s 3am, Go to Bed

Because Romano is the city’s most percussive fingerpicker. And one of the most underrated local singers. And—hands down—the best harmonica player. He does two of the three in this superlative take on a folk standard. 

18 Jim Waive and the Young Divorcees

“Old Dominion Girl,” from Strike a Match (2008)

“Fool” may be the classic Jim Waive woebegone waltz, but we like the quick step the Young Divorcees lend to his bid for the state song of Virginia. You might not sing “She’s sweeter than the bells of Tennessee” for the state flag soon, but you can sing it every Wednesday night at the Blue Moon Diner.

19 Lake Trout

“Little Things in Different Places,” from Alone at Last (2000)

Recorded at Trax in December 1999, an album summed up by the liner note declaration “Whatever happens, happens.” What happens on this track? Math rock, acid jazz, flute fills and live breakbeats from DJ Who. In short: “Little Things” in one of our favorite places.

20 Lauren Hoffman


Listen to "Rock Star," courtesy Lauren Hoffman

“Rock Star,” from Megiddo (1997)

Like many a great local album at the time, Megiddo was produced by Cracker/Camper Van Beethoven leader David Lowery. But how many great local albums boasted musicians like Hoffman, who at only 18 years old spiked this single with lines like “I love you ten times more dead than alive/ I want to hold your kid and make love to your wife”? You’ll have an easier time finding this track than finding another woman like Hoffman. 

21 Marzaks

“Superhuman,” from Superhuman (2002)

Falsies frontman Peter Markush maintains his inimitable stage presence, and Stephen Barling tells us that T.J. Johnson’s mandolin solos are “killer.” We concur. Maybe an early, acoustic ancestor of Straight Punch to the Crotch? (See No. 37.)

22 Matt Curreri & the Ex-Friends

“Goodbye, Virginia,” from Exercise Music for the Lonely (2006)

Yes, Virginia once had two Curreri men playing music. (See No. 27). And while Paul’s younger brother Matt waited until he moved to California and formed the Ex-Friends to release this record, this farewell tune is born of a local love.

23 Mister Baby


Listen to "One Eye Open," courtesy Mister Baby

“One Eye Open” from Lucky You (2009)

The new folk standard, covered by the likes of Devon Sproule, but at its lean, mean best in the red-handed grip of its author, Megan Huddleston. Listen to her voice flick like a switchblade when she sings “I’ve picked out a real pretty spot for you.” And don’t fuck with her. 

24 Old School Freight Train

“Tango Chutney,” from Run (2005)

The essential woodshopping band for virtuoso Charlottesville musicians. (Before Ann Marie Calhoun recorded strings for DMB’s Stand Up, she paid her dues with the band.) The Freight Train has lost some weight in recent months, but former mandolin star Pete Frostic and long-gone jazz-banjo expert Ben Krakauer give this “Chutney” a nice kick.

Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones, No. 29

25 Panda Transport

“Transmission,” from Plush Mechanique (2008)

No, not the Joy Division song—although Kathy Compton and her fellow Panda, Thierry Holweck, did win a few hearts and listeners with their cover of “Love Will Tear Us Apart.” While this song popped up on “Grey’s Anatomy” last season, it performs better on your stereo. 

26 Pavement

“Summer Babe (Winter Version),” from Slanted and Enchanted (1992)

For a certain type of music fan the world over, this song is an anthem for two seasons a year. Guitar solos that are at once irreverent and heroic, lyrics about a girl “eating her fingers like they’re just another meal.” As insular as a blizzard, as explosive as a heatwave, penned by the most memorable rock act to ever live on 14th Street.

27 Paul Curreri

“Beneath a Crozet Trestle Bridge,” from Songs for Devon Sproule (2003)

Boy sees girl sing Johnny Cash song, thinks he’s in love, and steps onstage to sing with her. Boy writes one of the finest collections of country-blues and folk confessionals and names it for her. Boy, no other love song comes close.

28 The Come On Children


Listen to "Alta Vista," courtesy The Come On Children

“Alta Vista” (1999) 

From Interstate 64 to your front door, few local songwriters made the drive more enjoyable than Jeff Grosfeld, man behind local acts Pro Rock S and Come On Children. While the 1992 song “Nina’s Office Christmas Party” by Pro Rock S runs a close second to this, the view from “Alta Vista” can’t be beat. Grosfeld co-owns Under the Roof; go bug him for a copy.

29 The Rolling Stones

“Sweet Virginia,” live at Scott Stadium (2005)

For all the right reasons. "Come on down, sweet Virginia." Watch it here.

30 Sarah White and the Pearls


Listen to "Fighting Words," courtesy Sarah White and the Pearls

“Fighting Words,” from White Light (2006)

A chorus shouted by everyone who ever caught White perform with the Pearls at Atomic Burrito, or spotted her recently with former King Wilkie guitarist Ted Pitney at her side. If you don’t know the refrain by the song’s beginning, you will by the song’s end.

31 September 67


Listen to "Busy Building," courtesy September 67

“Busy Building,” from Lucky Shoe (1996)

Kristin Asbury and Shannon Worrell managed to tie worlds of influences—from ’60s folk and ’80s shoegaze to ’90s grrl rockers like Liz Phair—into pop songs that were often simpler and catchier than the sum of their parts.

32 Silver Jews

“Buckingham Rabbit,” from American Water (1998)

Shannon Worrell (see above, No. 31) writes in an e-mail: “So many of David [Berman]’s songs remind me of this place. He sings it. We see it. We cry.” The Silver Jews founder, WTJU DJ and friend of Pavement (see No. 26) only needed three chords and the truth, but knew that the truth was  sometimes funny, sometimes sad, and always complicated. Runner-up: “Honk If You’re Lonely,” a track from the same album, penned by local architect Gate Pratt.

33 Sleater-Kinney

“One More Hour,” from Dig Me Out (1997)

Former WTJU DJ and seasoned rock writer Rob Sheffield made loads of mixtapes, including the 22 that structure his 2007 memoir, Love is a Mixtape, about his marriage to another WTJU (and C-VILLE) alum named Renée Crist. This track opens a mixtape from April 1997, and closes the chapter about Crist’s death from a pulmonary embolism. “...[E]ver since Renée died, I’d been thinking about ‘One More Hour,’ the saddest Sleater-Kinney song ever.” And one track forever on our playlist.

34 Sons of Bill


Listen to "Texas," courtesy Sons of Bill

“Texas,” from A Far Cry from Freedom (2006)

One of 11 tracks recorded in a week’s time at Crystalphonic Studios, after only two practices. “I gotta get the hell out of Texas/ ‘Cause Texas ain’t where a Virginia boy should be” croons James Wilson while his brother Abe leans into his keyboards and his other brother Sam summons an unruly wall of twang. The lesson? Go where you need to, but remember where you’re from.

35 Sparklehorse

“Saturday,” from Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot (1995)

Songwriter Mark Linkous, currently rumored to be collaborating with David Lynch and DJ Danger Mouse, used to call Fluvanna County his home. This was the sound of our city in the ‘90s, refined to its essence—particularly on the weekends.

36 Stack Boyz

“900 Block,” at myspace.com/bandanamoney (2007)

Some songs are about where we’re headed, but others are about where we’re from—the things we hear and see, and the things we don’t. This is the sound of local hip-hop today.

37 Straight Punch to the Crotch


Listen to "I Love My Claw," courtesy Straight Punch to the Crotch

“I Love My Claw,” available at Monkeyclaus.org (2008)

Kind of about “CLAW,” the Charlottesville Lady Arm Wrestlers. But also about keytars and determination. “I threw the I-Ching with my claw!...Now don’t you want to party with my claw?” Yes. Yes we do.

38 Sweetbriar


Listen to "Line 'Em Up," courtesy Sweetbriar

“Line ’Em Up,” from the upcoming Line ’Em Up album.

Because half of our city (probably) has ended a night by “crawling home on Rugby Road.” And because such a night demands a barroom boogie soundtrack with a touch of Boston harmonized lead guitars, shiny as PBR cans in the moonlight, sweaty as the crowds at Buddhist Biker Bar.

39 TR3

“Mind Over Matter,” from the eponymous cassette (1988)

That’s right, eponymous cassette. Tim “I Make DMB Burn like Zeppelin” Reynolds ripped through this tune with none other than Robert Jospé (also of Free Bridge Quintet, No 13) on the skins. You can find a bootleg circa ’88 from Sigma Nu frat house on archive.org.

40 Truman Sparks

“Juan the Sperm Whale,” from the self-titled debut (2006)

Not the easiest song to sing along to, but enormous in its local impact. Truman Sparks split this year, and scattered its members and unique brand of melody melting to other acts like The Invisible Hand. But this song finds all hands on deck, battling a local rock behemoth.

41 Dave Matthews Band

September 67, No. 31

“Satellite,” from Remember Two Things (1993)

Yes, we hid this one as “No. 41” as a joke. Yes, it’s another Dave Matthews Band song. But hear us out. A few tracks on this record were recorded live at Trax, the irreplaceable mid-sized venue that hosted music from 1982 until its closing in 2002, and the reliable home base for Boyd, Stefan, ’Roi, Carter and Dave. This version of “Satellite” is a document of a band we knew would be big, recorded at a club we hoped we’d always have.

42 The Union of a Man and a Woman

“Grand Design” from The Sound of… (1998)

Before John Harouff and Neil Campbell formed The Cinnamon Band, they wreaked so much havoc in basements and Tokyo Rose with this trio that former local Darius Van Arman signed ‘em to Jagjaguwar. Only problem: They were still in high school. Ah, well, better to burn out…

43 The Unspoken Heard

“Nigga Like Me,” from Cosmology: The EP (1997)

Any major hip-hop force since, including The Beetnix (see No. 3), will tell you: Without these rhymes from Asheru and Blue Black, the locals also known as The Unspoken Heard, hip-hop might not’ve happened here. At least, not as we know it now.

44 USAisamonster

“Anal Lies,” from Tasheyana Compost (2003)

Picking a single song from USAisamonster is like picking a single hand grenade from a pile of them. Before the Belmont-based underground sweet spot called the Pudhouse was forced to close due to occupancy and zoning issues, this is just the sort of thing you’d hear. 

45 The Wave

“Burned Me Down Again,” from High Road Hard Road (2008)

Guitarist and singer Willie Denton-Edmundson was 13 years old when The Wave released its first album, Dreamers. This track, from the band’s sophomore album, is big on Jack White guitar fills and mystic harmonies courtesy of drummer Avery Sandridge.

 
Comments
This is a superb list, Brendan. Great work putting it together.
JohnMay 12th, 2009 03:05am
Straight Punch to the Crotch is fucking bullshit. One of the worst bands I have had the pleasure to hear/see. And they do not interact with local musicians. What about legitimately good bands like The Invisible Hand (yes, who you did mention), St. God's Hospital, and It Came From the Sky. It is insulting that you support such local trash
John NosburyMay 12th, 2009 04:23am
Sadly, absent from this list is Jamie Dyer, who has been writing and performing original material locally for two decades. His songs "She Held That Bottle," "Shorty," "Mama Don't You Cry," "ADD," "Wish I Knew," - and many others - deserve more than a little credit. Yeah, I'm in his band, but still... That's my only complaint though; nice work Brendan.
Cristan KeighleyMay 12th, 2009 11:10am
Agreed re: Jamie Dyer, who I met a few months ago at Blue Moon and whose songs have outlived more than a few bands in this town. Good nomination, Cristan. Mark Linkous spent a bit of time in Fluvanna, but that Albemarle connection is important. A few of his albums are produced in ways that should make them guiding lights for how a studio album should sound. That song "Sad and Beautiful World" from the album we listed, for example—the guitar is just a little too sharp, vocals just a tad too muffled, and both elements make for a more memorable tune.
FeedbackMay 12th, 2009 12:27pm
Great story. Mark Linkous did live in Albemarle (high school years) and Buckingham but not sure he was ever a Fluco. Per Mr. Nosbury's comment, isn't "Straight Punch" *supposed* to be a joke?
billMay 12th, 2009 12:20pm
Should check out early Charlottesville music, too. Serpentine Wall, anyone?
LmaeMay 12th, 2009 12:41pm
Indeed! I second that comment about Jamie Dyer. Leaving him off of any list about Charlottesville music is a crime. For the old school - what about the Vitamen, Matchbox Poets, Miracle Penny, the Landlords, etc?
squidtankMay 12th, 2009 02:27pm
Funny, you kinda like Blake Carrington!
cowboy sitarMay 12th, 2009 02:34pm
you need to fix the link for "stay or leave" - take out the space in between "light" and "house" so people can click on it.
AshleyMay 12th, 2009 03:04pm
What? No Happy Flowers? They even got a mention in People Magazine...
Old C-villerMay 12th, 2009 03:33pm
It's an interesting list, I'll give you that. (I'm even slightly flattered to have one of my compositions on here -- I co-wrote that version of Diamond Joe adaptation-- but I also gotta say that a unreleased demo version of Jeff solo version of a Nickeltown song is a bizarrely random, obscure, and lop-sided choice to pull from the entire Porter/Romano oeuvre. If we needed to be there at all. Which we didn't considering some of the stuff you neglected.) All in all, it's a bit of the obvious and a bit of the blind-fold yourself, spin around three times, and throw a dart at the cut-out bin, isn't it? No Jamie Dyer song is a SERIOUS oversight. A fatal one really. Leaving him off is kind of an admission that the whole thing is really pretty silly. It's like doing a top 45 country songs ever and leaving off Johnny Cash. "Well, we didn't have any room for Cash, because when it came down to it, there was this great recording of Olivia Newton John singing "Yellow Rose of Texas" that she left on John Denver's answering machine that Gustav just felt needed to be on there.... So.... People are always going to disagree with... It's hard to really include... Oh, never mind." And, what, no Lance Brenner composition? Really? Somewhere between the "Machines of Loving Grace" from King of my Living Room, and "Fuck" from the Falsies, there's a song that should be on here. Now, we you leave us no choice but to ha ha your boo hoo hoo.
Browning PorterMay 12th, 2009 03:50pm
Fans of local music should check out the Wrinkle Neck Mules - formed in Charlottesville / Richmond around 2000 or so. Great band from the area. www.wrinkleneckmules.com
WinstonMay 12th, 2009 04:48pm
hmm... a real list should be made by the people of charlottesville.. you should do a poll.
JessMay 12th, 2009 04:52pm
speaking of happy flowers and CPL, can I conjure James McNew (Yo La Tengo)? remember those sweet tracks on that 1st Dump album?
sarah whiteMay 12th, 2009 05:14pm
I think it's a great list too. It's tacky to get down on the list maker for not including this or that. Obviously there's good local songs/musicians that aren't on the list. Brendan's celebrating SOME of the good stuff. Go listen. Then go out and see these guys/girls live. I played all of the MP3s. They're incredible. Wish there were MP3s for the other 31 songs.
LizMay 12th, 2009 10:14pm
Nice effort on the invariably controversial list column and it is interesting. Not to beat a dead horse, but a Jamie Dyer / Hogwaller Ramblers song omission is stunning and a discredit to the list to say the least. Other songs off the top of my head not on the list that could be up for discussion: Clare Quilty - "Hey Joey Jane", Everything - "Hooch", American Dumpster - "Old Lynchburg Road" and of course, The Falsies - but maybe they're "More Rock'n'Roll Than You". In the end ... we should always remember to appreciate the amazing amount of talent in this town relative to its small size.
Rich & PollyMay 12th, 2009 11:09pm
I think DMB's "Grey Street" should have been included. LeRoi's solo at the end of the song, especially moving in live versions, has become a bittersweet reminder of his contributions to the band and its music. For Charlottesville, this song has particularly more meaning than most.
NickMay 12th, 2009 11:11pm
Jamie here. I'm upset that you didn't include more Dave Matthews songs. Peace, love and coffee, y'all.
Jamie DyerMay 13th, 2009 09:32am
What's the Deal? No Deal? No Hogs? No Nickeltown? (Some random Jeff is nice but doesn't count!) Maybe I'm old but without them this list is pointless...
wendyMay 13th, 2009 07:29am
Wow. Thanks C-Ville! We've waited 12 long years to be flavor of the week. (seriously messing with our underdog status...) Here are some dates that didn't make this week's calendar BC - Wednesday Applebee's Pantops 9-11 BC - Thursday Blue Moon Diner 8-10 BC - Saturday opening for Asylum Street Spankers Outback Down Under 7pm BC - Saturday at Miller's 11pm and, of course, BC - every Sunday at Miller's 11pm Long live Atsushi!
Stephen BarlingMay 13th, 2009 10:56am
The Happy Flowers was supposed to be a joke band. When it was taken seriously (didn't they get a record contract during one of the bubbles that used to happen in the music industry back then?), that weirded some music lovers out. Showed what the biz was all about. Things got better with the country music revival.
colferMay 13th, 2009 01:56pm
Hi Brendan! I am really sad that Thomas Dean/Order of the Dying Orchid was not included in this list. Thomas's musical contribution to this community (also through Invisible Hand and other bands over the years) has been huge. Order has been around since 2002!!! They have played the Satellite Ballroom, Outback Lodge, and have a huge local following. Thomas has been involved in interesting, beautiful, non-cookie cutter music in this community for years and that is something that Charlottesville is lacking in my humble opinion. I just think TD deserved some love, you know you are all wearing his t-shirts to Birdlips shows!!! Just sayin.... Allyson
Allyson Mellberg May 13th, 2009 07:14pm
From his spectacular design work to his equally inventive bands, Thomas certainly deserves some props. A good mention, Allyson!
FeedbackMay 14th, 2009 10:39am
Really? The Rolling Stones and a pile of Dave Matthews songs? Not one Charlottesville punk or metal band on the entire list. This should be called "The first 45 songs that popped into my head without bothering to think much about local music". On the other hand, good looking out for Atsushi and BC. Too bad Atsushi hasn't been part of the Charlottesville music scene for a LONG time, at this point do Stephen and Brandon get to claim this song?
Steve McVeyMay 15th, 2009 04:20am
I'd be open to hearing any and all metal and punk recommendations. However, I would also ask that any metal-related questions to No. 15, Horsefang, who will gladly provide an answer. Turn the volume up all the way before you ask.
FeedbackMay 15th, 2009 10:13am
Satellite? The title of your article implies that the list would include songs I, as a music fan, haven't heard billions of times. Also, this list is mind-bogglingly confusing. I would get it if all the selections were local, or if all were non-local but clips of Cville performances. I keep re-reading the text to see if I'm missing something. Because I'm okay with the local selections, but do not understand how the "non local" list was chosen. How do you choose that Stones song? Sleater Kinney? I've got nothing against them, but please tell me why they're on a list dubbed "essential" to music fans. Nobody else seems to be having this problem, so maybe it's me. If we're going for the non-locals who have played here: um, Bonnie Prince Billy? And, since over-popularity doesn't seem to be a deterrent (see Satellite), what about Ryan Adams? My Morning Jacket? Wilco?
virginianativeMay 15th, 2009 07:45pm
Here's my list of great Cville bands from days gone by. Spans the 80s & 90s. Someone else can fill in before and after. I know I'll forget some, but I know that someone will make amends... Baby Opaque, Rude Bhudda, Modern Logic, Landlords, Beef People, Catch Trout Records, Live Squid, Johhny Sportcoat, Skip Castro, Charlie Pastorfield, The Casuals, SGG&G, The Cows, The Beans, MGB, TR3, Whitebread, Howard Is, Doom, Ectoslavia, Happy Flowers, Code Magenta, The Secret, The Great Gazoo, Bigme, Pro Rock S, Grub, Sadie Sexbus, Pat Nixon, Hogwaller Ramblers, Corndawg,Nickeltown, Purple Ivy Shadows, The Ninth, September 67, Paris Match, Claire Quilty, Earth to Andy, the Maynards, Operation Love, John& Dawn & Mike & Jeff and the whole Jazz Scene. Houston & Johnny and every band they've funked up. Corey Harris, Joe Mead & the Old-time crew, Fred Boyce & the bluegrass/newgrass/banjo express. I'm forgetting the names of bands with Haynes and Mark, Tom Howard & Craig, Richelle's band. Lot's of new bands. Props to the folks who used to book bands: Maynard Sipe, Darius Van Arman, Steve Tharp. WTJU for promoting all this crazy musical diversity. Lost Clubs: The Mineshaft, Trax, The C&O, the Rose. I'm sure I'm sure I'm forgetting or didn't know every scene, punk, hardcore, metal, goth, jam, blues, indie, bluegrass, old-time... Who else, help me out here...
Gate PrattMay 16th, 2009 10:17am
Take out non-locals (duh) The Rolling Stones, Sleater Kinney, Camper Van Beethoven and replace them with something amazingly underrated from Lance Brenner, Jamie Dyer and Matt Wilner!
CvillerMay 16th, 2009 11:12am
How could I forget: The Deal, The Stoned Wheat Things, Baba Seth, 98 Colours, CPR & Dr. Goatload!
Gate PrattMay 16th, 2009 10:19pm
...Hardcore at Muldowney's Pub/Silver Fox, Fire Sermon, Matchbook Poets, Mando Mafia, African Drum Festival, Bella Morte, Sigma Nu all night long, Van Ripers, Eastern Standard, Fellini's, Duncan & K2 Acid House Raves...
Gate PrattMay 18th, 2009 10:09am
Music lovers of Charlottesville should also check out local rockers Raw Dawg (www.myspace.com/rawdogmusic) and Kings of Belmont (www.myspace.com/thekingsofbelmont). Kings of Belmont just played an AMAZING show at this past Fridays After Five and Raw Dawg will opening this weeks Fridays for Jamie Dyer's Hogwaller Ramblers (www.myspace.com/hogwallerramblers). Raw Dawg is then playing an encore performance the same night at iS Venue! Guaranteed to be an amazing night of local C'Ville music! PS. Jamie Dyer should have made that list! The man has been a HUGE part of the C'Ville music scene for soo long. This list should be titled 'Brendan's Favorite Songs.' '45 songs that every Charlottesville music fan should know' should include only Charlottesville bands and should be selected based on C-VILLE readers opinions in my opinion. Cant please everyone I guess...
C'Ville NativeMay 18th, 2009 12:04pm
Aloha from Mayberry, It's was a shock, very humbling, and most gratifying to have some of the recordings out of my Chickenwire Studios getting some attention. The experiment and experience of having a high end recording space available for my extended family of musicians and others to come and create in, freely and with out the stress of normal studio business practice, in the long run turned out to produce the level of work I had hope it would. Having Atsushi in my home for a couple of weeks ( and climbing up and fixing my grill hood) in a row and hearing those tunes take shape, my (step)son, Josh Mustin’s engineering skills and his monster mixes develop; it was a very special project as the recording attest. The BC sessions were the finest moments I have ever experienced in all the years I have been an audio engineer....I think? The clouds, they fog me wee mind. They were very productive and forged a recording that captures that indefinable that is what BC is. We ended up with a wide swath of crazy music nuts in the house like Bella Morte to do something, Devil Take the Hindmost did an album, The Dirty Fingers did something besides just drink cause it was loud, The Elderly produce some great punk rock, Cracklings & Fatback (Megan Huddleston & Jim Waive) did a country/honky-tonk demo, Jim Waive did some originals and covers that I did wacky mixes on and never saw the light of day, the Catherine Kane Band did some work and during the life of the studio, a full complement of Josh Mustin original experimental projects that you would have to ask him about. I made nothing other than memories (and some audio files) and it very cool that the first two recordings on this list came out of that space. Be a musician’s or a group of musician’s sponsor today. There would be no Michelle Angelo with out sponsorship so give, a lot and often, and not just at the door. Merch money buys studio time for most musicians and if they don’t have merch, throw your money on the stage. They dig that! Buy now, buy often, buy a lot, and buy local, music that is!
Stu GilchristMay 18th, 2009 07:25pm
Lots of names dropped here, but one in particular notably missing: Brady Earnhardt. Shocked that Browning didn't mention him... Tide By Tide, After You, Time Was, and a bunch of others are STELLAR tunes. Much respect.
Patrick A. ReedMay 19th, 2009 08:54am
This list is hilarious. More easy listening, derivative nonsense (save Beetnix and one or two others). How about some diversity in Charlottesville?? Chrissakes! I'm sick of the usual dude-with-acoustic-guitar and jam band stuff that's flooding this town.
Alex May 19th, 2009 04:15pm
well, everyone's list is gonna be different. I'm just glad Brendan went and wrote one, even if a few of these songs do make me gag. for the record, my list would have included: Johnny Corndawg, Last Days of May, Grand Banks, Ostinato, Great White Jenkins, Red Wizard, Galactic Core, Articulate Chewbacca, David Baker Benson Plays Cups, the Counselors and/or Jeff Melkerson, and Matthew Farrell's "Appalachia Girl."
NailgunMay 20th, 2009 02:05pm
not to mention Accordion Death Squad, Lux Perpetua, Rock'n'Roll Cannibals, Order of the Dying Orchid, or any of Tony Lechmanski's non-Bella Morte Bands (Riot Act was my favorite)
NailgunMay 20th, 2009 02:09pm
*Two* Dave Matthews songs but nothing by either of my bands (Happy Flowers and The Landlords) or either of the other bands (Baby Opaque and The Beef People) whose records I released on my label? That hurts, man.
Mr. HCIJune 29th, 2009 02:43am
lets see some Invisible Hand, Travis Elliott, Astronomers, Naked Puritans, etc
N8RJuly 5th, 2009 02:28pm
How about Jazz Poets Society - Aboriginals? I remember...
dianeworldwideJuly 7th, 2009 02:52am
This list sucks. only good bands on here are the extraordinaires, silver jews and pavement
Jonny HammersticksNovember 6th, 2009 11:52am
Bands getting naked would have to top the list. Who was that, Fire Sermon?
tom violenceNovember 10th, 2009 10:06pm
I enjoyed Gate Pratt's pretty expansive list, but still off his map are The Skulltones, who were in the thick of it during the late 80s, from the mineshaft to nearly every fraternity house to van riper's. A very lively act indeed. And I am glad The Deal finally started getting hits. They were a fine, solid act for years and years, and pratically no one could shake it on stage like Haines Fullerton, may he rest in peace.
old wahooNovember 20th, 2009 09:21am
I agree that Gate Pratt's list pretty much covers the later 1980s. But, what about the Cashmere Jungle Lords? Although technically out of Richmond, I must have seen them in the Hook a dozen times....everywhere from the C&O to the gnarly basement at TKE. BTW, does anyone have any recordings of Doom? Would love to get my hands on some of that!
Joe CirelliMarch 9th 05:45pm
Aaahh the old punk scene in C-ville was great!!! I used to play in Riot Act...some of the greatest shows Ive ever played!!! Tony is and was the man!
Nathaniel RoseberryApril 7th 03:19pm
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