[Repost for If It's Too Loud; by Ken Sears, November 6, 2024]
EVENT CALENDAR
Monday, November 18, 2024
JPW & Dad Weed - Two Against Nurture
[Repost for If It's Too Loud; by Ken Sears, November 6, 2024]
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Red Dwarf Star: Ex-Patriot
[Repost from Here Comes The Flood; by Hans Werksman, November 4, 2024]
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
Meet Andrew Gardner (of La Cerca)
Andrew Gardner of La Cerca; photo by Akasia Oberly |
[Repost from CanvasRebel; November 3, 2024]
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
LET'S VOTE
If you are in Wilmington NC today (Nov 5), join Fort Lowell Records' owner James Tritten at the polls as he will be spinning vinyl records as a part of DJs at the Polls! Join Fort Lowell Records at these locations:
- MORNING SHIFT:
7:00-11:00am
CFCC Health Sciences Building
415 2nd Street N., Wilmington NC 28401 - AFTERNOON SHIFT:
11:30am-2:30pm
MLK Center
401 8th Street S., Wilmington NC 28401
Monday, November 4, 2024
JPW & Dad Weed: Two Against Nurture
[Repost by Here Comes the Flood; by Hans Werksman, October 29, 2024]
- Everybody's Talking (Again)
- When I Get Lonesome
- Big Wave
Thursday, October 31, 2024
James Tritten: Building Community Through Music | CreativeMornings, Wilmington
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
National group to set up 'DJs at the Polls' in Wilmington to entertain, drive turnout
Lingam James (AKA: Infinite Spins) |
[Repost from StarNews; by John Staton, October 25, 2024]
DJs at the Polls, a national, non-partisan get-out-the-vote group, said it will have paid, professional DJs spinning tunes outside of about 85 polling places in New Hanover, Brunswick and Pender counties on Election Day.
Chris Suggs, a state project manager in North Carolina for DJs at the Polls, said the group plans to have DJs at 1,365 voting sites around the state.
It will be the group's first time placing DJs at polling sites in the Wilmington area. Suggs said DJs at the Polls ran a "pilot project" in North Carolina in 2022 and 2023, but that "the level of coordination is definitely new this year. This is the first year we've reached this level of engagement."
The idea, Suggs said, "is to make election day a fun and enjoyable event," thereby increasing voter participation, which is the group's primary goal.
"We don't care how people vote," Suggs said. "We just want them to get out and vote."
As for the polling sites where DJs at the Polls will be set up, "Some are random," Suggs said, while other are picked because the precincts have high numbers of voters the group targets. Suggs said these include young voters, Black and brown communities, and what Suggs called "low-propensity voters" who vote sometimes but not always.
Suggs said some voters in the Wilmington area will be getting postcards letting them know a DJ will be at their polling site.
According to the DJs at the Polls website, the group's founder, Anton Moore of Philadelphia, started placing DJs at polling locations throughout Pennsylvania in 2008. Moore "helped design and implement DJs 4 Obama" in 2012, and later started DJs at the Polls as a non-partisan group.
The group's website said it "was founded on the belief that voting is something to be celebrated. It was expanded on evidence that having DJs play polling places measurably increases voter turnout."
The group cites a "2022 randomized control trial in Philadelphia at polling sites where our DJs performed." At those sites, "voter turnout increased 3%" over previous years. DJs at the Polls said it targets "densely populated urban areas with large numbers of underrepresented voters."
Nancy Friedman, deputy director of DJs at the Polls, said the group will have DJs outside some seven dozen polling places in New Hanover, Brunswick and Pender counties, including the Career Readiness Academy at Mosely PLC in Wilmington, Lincoln Elementary School in Leland, and North Topsail Elementary School in Hampstead.
A full list of participating DJs in the Wilmington area wasn't immediately provided to the StarNews.
Friedman said "we haven't yet completed the matching process of DJs to locations, but we will have all of that completed by the end of the week."
Wilmington DJ James Tritten of Fort Lowell Records said he will be spinning on Election Day, though he said he hasn't yet been told where.
Another Wilmington DJ you might see at the polls is Lingam James, who DJs under the handle Infinite Spins. You can catch him spinning vinyl every Wednesday evening at Mad Mole Brewing off Oleander Drive as well as at other locations, including Satellite, Palate, and various spots in the Cargo District.
[Lingam] James said that DJs at the Polls reached out to him about participating, and that it was something he wanted to do because "it would open me up to another audience, and hopefully improve the mood" at the polls, he said. "Voting is something we're tasked with as Americans, so I'm glad I can do my part to hopefully make it a more pleasant experience."
[Lingam] James said he already cast his vote early, and that "it was a little tense in line. This will definitely help cut the tension."
If you see Infinite Spins at your polling place, he said you can expect to hear "a lot of funk, soul, disco, jazz, hip-hop, just some upbeat stuff that anyone can chill to." He said he also imports a lot of rare vinyl records into his digital set-up, and looks forward to playing those as well.
According to DJs at the Polls, DJs are paid $500 per four-hour set. Sites will host between one and three four-hour DJ sets, with some DJs performing multiple sets.
Suggs said "we are very intentional about the DJs we recruit." The group targets professional DJs who gig regularly. Some might work on local radio while others are what Suggs called "celebrity DJs."
The DJs "know their communities best," Suggs said, including what kind of music their communities want to hear. The group just asks that they play "family friendly" music that is "respectful" to the polling place, which might be at a school or church.
Suggs said DJs at the Polls is funded by many different private donors and foundations, including Focus for Democracy, a nonprofit, non-partisan civic engagement group that its website says is "dedicated to empowering donors to make the most impactful contributions possible to strengthen democracy."
So far, the group will be placing DJs in "13 states and counting," Suggs said.
Some states, like Georgia, have passed laws restricting activity near polling sites. In that state, for example, it's illegal to even give food or water to people waiting in line to vote.
In North Carolina, Suggs said, "we've been very well-received" by everyone from politicians to community organizers and "we haven't run into any issues at all" with local boards of elections.
"They realize this is a non-partisan activity," he said. "In my work of doing this, there are always critics, but we've not run into any opposition that would make us stop what we're doing."
Tuesday, October 29, 2024
OUT NOW: JPW & Dad Weed 'Two Against Nurture' [Digital EP]
The dark is arriving earlier each passing evening. The veil between the spirit world and the land of the living grows thin. Into the glooming emerge Phoenix songwriters Zachary “Dad Weed” Toporek and Jason P. Woodbury, aka JPW, noted podcaster, liner notes author, and songwriter, bearing a bag of autumnal psych pop. Recorded in Toporek’s backyard studio between 2021-2024, these three tracks showcase the birth of a songwriting partnership between these longtime friends and collaborators. Operating like an ersatz Becker and Fagan, handling singing, writing, arranging, and production in a 50/50 split, these songs indulge their taste for ragged power pop, chiming folk rock, and even semi-improvised jams. Opener “Everybody’s Talkin’ (Again)” pairs suburban Arizona ennui with “summer of ‘99” alt-pop. Driven by Woodbury’s muted bass rumble and Zach Toporek’s exalted breakbeats, the song finds the duo abstracting and stretching out childhood memories, reflecting on the often occulted logic that drives the process of belief and self propulsion. Drawing from early Halloween memories and the spirit of magical possibility that marks the shift from summer to fall, the song’s earnest message urges living in the here and now: “Everybody’s talking about moving away/you think you’ll be sticking around.” ”When I Get Lonesome” continues the thread of ‘90s pop influence, pairing Byrds-inspired jangle pop with scuzzed-out guitars. Closing number “Big Wave” is built on a loose, mostly improvised session, which finds Toporek reflecting on climate dread while Woodbury twists a Telecaster into an open tuning and channels his inner Neil Young. Two Against Nurture opens up the vortex and beckons you to enter. Don’t delay.
Friday, October 25, 2024
OUT NOW: Red Dwarf Star "Ex-Patriot" [Digital Single]
Red Dwarf Star is Coley Dennis of Maserati, featuring Kellii Scott of Failure on drums. "Ex-Patriot" is their second digital single to be released ahead of their highly anticipated debut album (due out next year), and it is available now everywhere.
Friday, October 18, 2024
OUT NOW: MindsOne & Tink_Musik ft. DJ Iron "Why We Do This" [Digital Single]
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
JPW 'Raw Action On Route'
[Repost from Foxy Digitalis; by Brad Rose]
Monday, October 14, 2024
On a mission to inspire, national 'Creative' organization opens Wilmington chapter
[Repost from StarNews; by John Staton, October 12, 2024]
The crowd, which included musicians, actors, visual artists, arts administrators and even a few people who claimed not to have a creative bone in their bodies, was lively despite the stormy weather and the 8:30 a.m. hour, chatting as they enjoyed free coffee and doughnuts, and commenting on each others' answers to a question on a name tag handed out when they arrived: "What advice would you give to your younger self?"
After 30 minutes of socializing and opening remarks by Creative Mornings chapter host Kerry Skiles and Thalian Hall director Shane Fernando, it was time for the main event: A Ted Talk-like presentation by James Tritten of Wilmington label Fort Lowell Records on the topic of "reflection."
"People in creative fields or who are doing creative projects, there's always something you can learn from them," Skiles said during an interview a week or so after Creative Mornings made its Wilmington debut. "It's really about just connecting with people in the community. We want this to reflect what the community needs."
The Creative Mornings motto? "Everyone is creative."
Skiles, a native of Edenton, lived in Wilmington in the early 2000s before moving to Raleigh, where she lived for about two decades before returning to Wilmington a couple of years ago.
During her time in Raleigh she attended monthly Creative Mornings meet-ups for close to a decade, and "every time I left one, I was like, 'I'm so inspired,'" she said.
When she looked for a Wilmington chapter of Creative Mornings and found there wasn't one, she decided to start her own. Founded in Brooklyn in 2008, Creative Mornings now boasts some 238 chapters in 69 countries. According to its website, about 70,000 people attend a Creative Mornings event worldwide each month.
Events are typically held on the last Friday morning of the month, with all chapters hosting a speaker who expounds on a common theme. In September, it was "reflection."
Aside from a minor technical glitch that cropped up when slides she had prepared didn't project properly, the inaugural event seemed to go swimmingly.
"It became bigger than we expected," Skiles said, "And that was just from word of mouth."
September's speaker, James Tritten of Fort Lowell Records, told the story of how the label he runs with wife, the singer Tracy Shedd, started in Tuscon, Arizona, and responded to a tragic shooting there in 2011 by trying to put positive energy back into the community via a compilation album of local bands that raised money for anti-violence causes.
The label has released 76 albums since its founding 2009, the majority of them since Tritten and Shedd moved to Wilmington in 2018. In 2020, inspired by the George Floyd/Black Lives Matter protests, Fort Lowell released a compilation album of Wilmington bands called "GROW" that has funded scholarships for a half-dozen students through the Wilmington chapter of the NAACP.
That project, Tritten said, "helped us realize the beauty of what was here," and he also talked about the label's "This Water Is Life" series of albums that pairs Wilmington indie rockers with local hip-hop artists to raise money for environmental causes.
"We took it as an opportunity to share the story of Fort Lowell. To reflect back, but also creating this idea of, 'I just want to shed light on the things around me,'" Tritten said. "I went at it wanting to ensure that there was an opportunity for inspiration to be had."
In talking with people after his talk and "having people tell me, 'That really was inspiring,' I definitely left feeling good," Tritten said.
When Skiles first asked him to speak at Creative Mornings, Tritten said, "My first question was, 'Where's the money?' If anyone was making money off this, I was going to have a problem with it. I quickly recognized Kerry is doing exactly what I'm doing, which is trying to shed light on our peers and our community."
After talking with her, he said, "I realized, I have to be involved with this."
Skiles said that Creative Mornings meet-ups are required by the national organization to be free, with volunteer labor and meeting space, food and coffee all donated.
"That's kind of the beauty of it," Skiles said. "Chapters aren't run as profit-making machines, and there's not this underbelly of having to raise money."
The idea is for the meet-up to be in a new place each month, at least at first, though Skiles said it might evolve into having "a go-to place sprinkled in with other locations."
Wilmington's second Creative Mornings meet-up will be 8:30 a.m. Friday, Oct. 25 at the Cameron Art Museum and feature filmmaker Christopher Everett, director of the 1898 documentary "Wilmington on Fire" and co-founder of Wilmington's Three Chambers Festival, which has a combined focus on film, hip-hop and martial arts.
"I've always been a fan of Creative Mornings. It's like Ted Talk for creatives," Everett said. "I plan on talking about creating a vision for a creative future. This story is important to me."
Skiles said that, as speakers, Tritten and Everett "appealed to me in different ways. They had an idea and they wanted to bring it to life, and that's just inspiring."
Friday, October 11, 2024
OUT NOW: Al Foul 'Come Back a Dog' [Final LP]
Sunday, October 6, 2024
Is the protest anthem a lost art, or has the sound of revolution switched political sides?
[Repost from KJZZ 91.5FM Phoenix; by Sam Dingman, September 27, 2024]
Friday, October 4, 2024
OUT NOW: Al Foul "Memphis" [Digital Single]
The third single "Memphis" from Al Foul's (1971-2022) final album Come Back a Dog — a combination of originals and covers that sketch a gritty-yet-compassionate portrait of raw Americana — is available now on all digital music platforms.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
“Welcome to Jaxxonville” Episode 9: James Tritten from Fortlowell Records
Hip-Hop artist, local resident of Wilmington NC, and Iron Maiden fanatic Fuzz Jaxx interviews yours truly on Episode 9 of Welcome to Jaxxonville. Watch now: https://youtu.be/StnR_V63xhU?si=zkAPGBu82pr2Rl0B
Friday, September 27, 2024
OUT NOW: This Water is Life, Vol. IV ft. Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessions + Tercel
This Water is Life is a self-sustained and ongoing series of split EPs with two express purposes: to highlight new hip-hop / indie rock music from Southeastern North Carolina, as well as to provide a platform for Cape Fear River Watch and Coastal Plain Conservation Group to deliver up-to-date authoritative reports on the health of the Cape Fear River Basin for both human beings and wildlife.
Volume IV features Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessions and Tercel, and is out now everywhere!
Hip-Hop: Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessions
These two hip hop heads Fuzz Jaxx and CoolOutSessions are a force to be reckoned with. Hailing from Georgia (FJ) and North Carolina (COS) the love and knowledge they have for the music and culture is astonishing. Fuzz had bars beyond the average emcee and a stage presence to match. The smooth melodic tones that CoolOutSessions provides compliments Fuzz’s voice and lyrics. The two are creating a different sound that is slowly but surely grabbing ears. Also, the production is far beyond the watered down versions of what hip hop is today. Their sound is a definite throwback and tribute to J Dilla and Native Tongues vibes.
Indie Rock: Tercel
Hailing from The Cape Fear region, the Tercel sound carries reverence for its homeland. The lyricism of Robin and Savannah Wood pull from the beliefs of climate activism, societal collapse, and the ennui of existence in the modern world. But Tercel is fun. Tercel is joyous. These are heavy words, lightly thrown. Wall-of-noise guitars in alternate tunings, the give-and-take singing between the vocalists, Chris Vinopal’s pedal steel in all its brightness, Taylor Salvetti’s driving drum beats to accent the changes: Tercel knows the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. And in this, we are all smothered in the green glow of existence. Go outside. Enjoy the light.
Thursday, September 26, 2024
CreativeMornings launches in Wilmington, first event happening Friday
[Repost from WWAY TV; by Matt Bennett, September 24, 2024]
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Tercel live at The Cave in Chapel Hill NC
[Repost from Independent Review Crew; by Brian Slattery, February 18, 2024]
Friday, September 20, 2024
OUT NOW: Al Foul "Darker Shade of Blue" [Digital Single]
The second single "Darker Shade of Blue" from Al Foul's (1971-2022) final album Come Back a Dog — a combination of originals and covers that sketch a gritty-yet-compassionate portrait of raw Americana — is available now on all digital music platforms.