Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 29th, 2008
[Tonight I’ve got a couple of new songs for you and a couple of older ones. It’s midnight, I’ve been on the road, driving the highway. Just thinking about music, listening to it, holding the wheel. Here are a few songs that have been driving my day. Any songs been driving yours?]

I love driving at night in the summer. I can feel the interstate stretching from here to the ocean. The interstate has a rhythm. You signal, you pass, one, two, you signal, you return, three, four. Try counting the broken white lines in sixteens and thirty-twos. The guardrail posts every eight beats. The windows are rolled down with that sticky air that feels cool only because it’s moving at 70 mph. Your light is the stereo, the instrumental panel, and on occassions the moon or the headlights of the car behind you. Sometimes that when the songs sound the best.
[After the break I’ve included a few songs heard and a few that would have fit in nicely, while taking a late night drive, heading east on I-64] » Read More
Popularity: 76% [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 28th, 2008
06/28: Song of the Day. Calexico–Ballad of Cable Hogue
One of the new albums I’m looking forward to hearing as we head into the second half of 2008 is Carried to Dust from the performing duo of John Convertino and Joey Burns, better known to the musical world as Calexico. The new album, due in stores in September, finds Calexico once again teaming up with Sam Beam of Iron & Wine and will also include guest appearances from Douglas McCombs of Tortoise and Pieta Brown. (Pieta Brown, the daughter of singer/songwriter Greg Brown, is also worth checking out, in particular her 2005 album In the Cool).
I’ve been a Calexico fan for a number of years now and they are one of the bands I’d love to see here in Charlottesville. The only problem at the moment is I’m not sure where we’d get them to play. Gravity Lounge seems like a stretch and the Pavilion is much too large. But I do recall having a discussion in a post back in May about the idea of a Calexico/Andrew Bird co-bill at the Paramount, which would be super sweet. A guy can dream can’t he? Whether a Calexico in Charlottesville show happens or not, I can at least look forward to a new album later this year. Carried to Dust is scheduled to be released September 9, 2008.
For your viewing and listening pleasure I’ve included a video for one of the songs that served as my introduction to Calexico’s music. From the album Hot Rail back in 2000, check out “Ballad of Cable Hogue” after the break. » Read More
Popularity: 76% [?]
Posted by Pinkie on June 27th, 2008

[Bebeto Matthews/AP]
New York City likes to have art in place just like C-ville but on a larger more expensive scale. The latest installation is called, “The New York City Waterfalls”. » Read More
Popularity: 92% [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 27th, 2008
06/27: Song of the Day. Concrete Blonde–Happy Birthday
If you go the Gravity Lounge’s web site and click on the history link you can find the complete list of live performances the venue has hosted over the years and it’s quite a list! The very first dated show listed took place on June 26, 2003 as the Jan Smith Band performed for the venue’s preview party. The following day, June 27, things begin in earnest with performances by Paul Curreri, Andy Friedman, and Jeff Romano. The rest, as they say, is history.
During the first couple of months, many of the artists that performed on the Gravity’s intimate stage were local artists from right here in Charlottesville. But as the months turned into years, the scope of the performing artists has grown to include musicians, singer/songwriters, and bands from across the country and from around the globe. And as the Gravity likes to tell you, it’s all taken place in a space the size of your living room.
Well tonight that living room is going to be quite crowded as the Gravity Lounge celebrates its Five Year Anniversary with a line-up that should bring in quite a crowd. You see, as I went scrolling through the list of live performances over the past five years, I was somewhat surprised to discover that there was one local act that hasn’t graced the Gravity’s stage (although I admit, I may have overlooked it). While the Gravity Lounge has played host to past and present members of the Hackensaw Boys individually, the group as a whole has yet to pick the place apart. Well that’s about to change! » Read More
Popularity: 88% [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 26th, 2008
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 26th, 2008
06/26: Song of the Day. Wall of Voodoo–Mexican Radio
Today’s Song of the Day choice is inspired in part by the latest book I’m currently reading. Border Radio: Quacks, Yodelers, Pitchmen, Psychics, and Other Amazing Broadcasters of the American Airwaves is a work of non-fiction written by Gene Fowler and Bill Crawford and was published by University of Texas Press. The book takes a close look at the history and the impact of the behemoth radio stations that began popping up in Mexico in the 1930’s and continued to operate all the way into the 1980’s.
These stations were so powerful (some operating as high as 1 million watts) that they could be heard not only all over the U.S., but also in such far-flung locations as New Zealand, France, and Brazil. These border broadcasts would over time introduce the world to the Carter Family, the early roots of rock n roll and rhythm and blues, and to one of the most influential rock DJ’s of his time, the legendary Wolfman Jack. In some ways these stations were the radio equivalent to the internet. Expect a review of the book in the coming weeks, but for now here’s your Song of the Day. [after the break] » Read More
Popularity: 87% [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 26th, 2008
Keith Morris is the pied-piper in reverse. His music takes you into town, not away from it. He leads the parade. He is the grand marshall of a procession of song. And behind him his band plays in time with clocks that have the most magnificent hands.
There’s Jeff Romano who has his own float outfitted with guitars, a piano, an organ, and a string of sleigh bells. There’s Jennifer Morris with angelic voice and Morwenna Lasko with her own angel-voiced violin. Paul Curreri strums a guitar and sings in tune while Devon Sproule throws candy-coated verse to the folks lining Main Street. Spencer Lathrop plays drums, Brandon Collins on cello, Sandy Gray on electric guitar, and a choir of singers in robes clap hands and shout in key. And there’s a rabbit in a human suit or is it the other way around? And at the end of the line, which is only a glass half-empty way of saying: at the head of the line, is a princess with ruby cheeks and a magical wand who plays the role of Santa Claus in this Macy’s Day parade.
This is the scene on the cobblestoned streets of Candyapolis, a town where there’s a celebration every day and reverance by night, and it’s Keith Morris who leads us all through the Songs from Candyapolis. » Read More
Popularity: 89% [?]
Posted by Kyle on June 26th, 2008

Name your price for Girl Talk’s new album, Feed the Animals at Illegal Art. If you haven’t heard Girl Talk before, he’s a DJ who mixes, literally, hundreds of samples together to create his songs. He’s known for throwing pretty wild shows.
Two other MP3s to download from his Night Ripper album: Hold Up & Bounce That.
Enjoy!
Popularity: unranked [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 25th, 2008
06/25: Song of the Day. A Tribe Called Quest–Can I Kick It?
Somewhere in my brain function parking lot there was a young man in my head singing “The Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)” by Digable Planets. I know this for a fact because I could hear him and I began singing it too. On repeat. Like a needle on an old dusty record. So to quiet that young man with his repititous horn and “I’m Cool Like Dat” chorus, I turned to De La Soul to drown him out.
Before we continue Eye Know what you’re thinking. It goes something like this. “The name’s Plug2 and from the soul I bring you the daisy of your choice/May it be filled with the pleasure principle in circumference to my voice”. It’s all true what’s said but let’s digress. All was well in my brain function parking lot until the potholes needed fillin’, so if ol’ Lou Reed is willin’, let’s walk on the wild side.
Here’s your Song of the Day: [after the break] » Read More
Popularity: unranked [?]
Posted by Shaun Harvey on June 25th, 2008
![Abigail Washburn & the Sparrow Quartet [publicity photo]](http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj23/deeplyrootedradio/AbigailWashburnandtheSparrowQuar-1.jpg)
We’re just a couple days away from the next big show taking the stage at the Paramount Theater as Abigail Washburn & the Sparrow Quartet visit Charlottesville on Friday, June 27. The quartet is currently on tour throughout North America in support of the their self-titled debut album which was released on Nettwerk Records in May of this year. The band performs folk, bluegrass and old-time music with a very unique twist, one that you almost have to hear and see to believe. Tickets are still available for this performance. For details click here.
The Sparrow Quartet consists of Ben Sollee on cello, the Grammy-nominated Casey Driessen on fiddle, the no need for further introductions of Bela Fleck on banjo, and Abigail Washburn who also plays banjo. The real twist in the band’s music arises when Abigail begins to sing, because there are moments when the words might not sound familiar even if the music does. That’s because those words are being sung in Chinese, a language that Abigail Washburn speaks (and sings) fluently. In this way the whole concept of old-time music takes on new meaning, expanding it beyond the roots of Appalachia by digging into the old time of one of the world’s most ancient cultures. » Read More
Popularity: unranked [?]