Christopher Maxwell is back on the air.
The dogged community activist who helped launch low-power radio in Richmond with WRIR 97.3 FM (where you can find my radio show, Open Source RVA, every Friday at noon) is working on five limited-range frequencies in Virginia and Maryland, including a new station in Midlothian called The Work 93.9 FM that just began airing this past week.
Read my Richmond Magazine interview with Maxwell, and find our more about low-power radio, by clicking right here.
(Yeah, I know the article is from December. I forgot to post it. So sue me.)
(Photo by the mighty Jay Paul!)
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Monday, August 28, 2017
Richmond Magazine: Q&A with Leo Kottke
The legendary Leo Kottke has been called one of the greatest guitarists of the modern age; a blues master, a country picker, a jazz explorer and someone who can take the oddest cover (like the Byrds' "Eight Miles High" or Buck Owens' "Buckaroo") and make it his own.
Even after five decades of music making, the self-taught virtuoso says that he "can't let go" of the guitar. "It isn't love," he says. "It's more like possession."
My recent Richmond Magazine interview with Kottke, slated to appear at the Tin Pan in September, has been posted to the magazine's web site.
Get it right here.
For an expanded interview I conducted with Kottke a few years ago for Style Weekly, click here.
For more on the music of Leo Kottke, go here.
(Photo courtesy of the Tin Pan)
Even after five decades of music making, the self-taught virtuoso says that he "can't let go" of the guitar. "It isn't love," he says. "It's more like possession."
My recent Richmond Magazine interview with Kottke, slated to appear at the Tin Pan in September, has been posted to the magazine's web site.
Get it right here.
For an expanded interview I conducted with Kottke a few years ago for Style Weekly, click here.
For more on the music of Leo Kottke, go here.
(Photo courtesy of the Tin Pan)
The Last of the Old-Time Moonshiners
A few years ago, working with the Blue Ridge Institute at Ferrum College, I trudged through the Franklin County woods to talk one on one with veteran moonshiner Jimmy Boyd.
Brewing up mountain dew has been a family tradition for Boyd, who learned how to cook up homemade whiskey from his brother, who learned it from his daddy. “There’s something ‘mother about making it that just draws a person to it,” he says. “It’s almost like it’s habit forming, just like drinking it.”
My in-depth Q&A with Mr. Boyd, where he reveals the secrets of making illegal whiskey and recounts his clashes with revenuers and spying neighbors, has been published in the latest edition of Savor Virginia magazine.
Read "The Last of the Old-Time Moonshiners" by going right here.
And for more on the history of moonshine in Virginia, visit the Blue Ridge Institute's page right here.
(Photo by the mighty Pat Jarrett at the Virginia Foundation For the Humanities!)
Brewing up mountain dew has been a family tradition for Boyd, who learned how to cook up homemade whiskey from his brother, who learned it from his daddy. “There’s something ‘mother about making it that just draws a person to it,” he says. “It’s almost like it’s habit forming, just like drinking it.”
My in-depth Q&A with Mr. Boyd, where he reveals the secrets of making illegal whiskey and recounts his clashes with revenuers and spying neighbors, has been published in the latest edition of Savor Virginia magazine.
Read "The Last of the Old-Time Moonshiners" by going right here.
And for more on the history of moonshine in Virginia, visit the Blue Ridge Institute's page right here.
(Photo by the mighty Pat Jarrett at the Virginia Foundation For the Humanities!)
Prohibition at the Library of Virginia
What a difference 100 years can make.
In 1914, when Virginians voted to completely ban alcohol -- three years ahead of national Prohibition—it was the start of an ambitious social experiment that seems worlds away from our experience today, as Virginia now wholly embraces wineries, craft breweries, distilleries and all things hooch.
My Savor Virginia feature article on the Library of Virginia's intoxicating (and, considering the changing times, ironic) exhibit, "Teetotalers and Moonshiners: Prohibition in Virginia, Distilled," has been posted to the magazine's website.
Click here and drink up.
And for more on this excellent Library of Virginia exhibit, and related events, go right here.
(Broadside photo: The Library of Virginia)
In 1914, when Virginians voted to completely ban alcohol -- three years ahead of national Prohibition—it was the start of an ambitious social experiment that seems worlds away from our experience today, as Virginia now wholly embraces wineries, craft breweries, distilleries and all things hooch.
My Savor Virginia feature article on the Library of Virginia's intoxicating (and, considering the changing times, ironic) exhibit, "Teetotalers and Moonshiners: Prohibition in Virginia, Distilled," has been posted to the magazine's website.
Click here and drink up.
And for more on this excellent Library of Virginia exhibit, and related events, go right here.
(Broadside photo: The Library of Virginia)
Sunday, August 27, 2017
Uncovering The Dead
Richmond's historic African-American cemeteries, Evergreen and East End, may soon be getting much-needed renovations after years of neglect.
But, first, some things need to get sorted out between the new owners and the dedicated volunteers who have been maintaining and documenting the sites for years.
Read my Richmond Magazine story, "Uncovering the Dead," by clicking here.
(Photo by the mighty Brian Palmer)
But, first, some things need to get sorted out between the new owners and the dedicated volunteers who have been maintaining and documenting the sites for years.
Read my Richmond Magazine story, "Uncovering the Dead," by clicking here.
(Photo by the mighty Brian Palmer)
An Achievable Dream
“I think it will bring an additional sense of pride in my students, and it will help them to set goals and work together towards those goals in a way they haven’t before,” says Shawnya Tolliver, principal of Henrico County's Highland Springs Elementary, about the An Achievable Dream program, set to start at Highland Springs this school year. “It may awaken talents that they never knew they had.”
My feature article on the An Achievable Dream program -- which got its start in Hampton Roads -- is now online at the Richmond Magazine website.
Get it right here.
My feature article on the An Achievable Dream program -- which got its start in Hampton Roads -- is now online at the Richmond Magazine website.
Get it right here.
Interview with Lee Fields
"When I met James Brown... and listened to him talk, I realized at that point that I needed to go in search of myself."
My interview with soul/funk legend Lee Fields, who got his start on a Hampton Roads record label called Norfolk Sound, and whose high energy music has been compared favorably to the Godfather of Soul's, can be found on the Richmond Magazine website.
To read the Q&A, click right here.
For more on Lee Fields and his music, go to this spot.
(Photo by the Syndicate)
My interview with soul/funk legend Lee Fields, who got his start on a Hampton Roads record label called Norfolk Sound, and whose high energy music has been compared favorably to the Godfather of Soul's, can be found on the Richmond Magazine website.
To read the Q&A, click right here.
For more on Lee Fields and his music, go to this spot.
(Photo by the Syndicate)
Open Source RVA returns on Sept. 1
Open Source RVA, the news-talk radio show that I host for WRIR radio in Richmond, will start its new season on Friday, Sept. 1. The program can now be heard at a new time - Fridays at 12 noon on 97.3 FM and http://wrir.org. Open Source RVA is "Richmond, Virginia's audio news digest" and covers politics, food, theater, the arts, schools, culture, music, the non-profit sector - anything and everything -- in and around the city.
Go to the Open Source RVA SoundCloud page right here and grab an earful of past episodes and special extended interviews.
(Photo by mighty Open Source RVA producer Krysti Albus!)
Go to the Open Source RVA SoundCloud page right here and grab an earful of past episodes and special extended interviews.
(Photo by mighty Open Source RVA producer Krysti Albus!)
Saturday, August 26, 2017
Library Weak? Richmond's Public Libraries
What is the state of Richmond, Virginia's public library system?
For this cash-strapped city with a new mayor, Levar Stoney, there are going to be challenges in maintaining services. "Library Weak?," my feature for Richmond Magazine, outlines the hurdles faced by Richmond Public Library director Scott Firestine and his short staffed crew.
Get the story right here.
(Photo by the mighty Tina Eshleman!)
For this cash-strapped city with a new mayor, Levar Stoney, there are going to be challenges in maintaining services. "Library Weak?," my feature for Richmond Magazine, outlines the hurdles faced by Richmond Public Library director Scott Firestine and his short staffed crew.
Get the story right here.
(Photo by the mighty Tina Eshleman!)
The Hampton Lego Club
When I was a wee lad, I loved building things with Legos -- and still do.
So it was no hardship at all to spend a fun Saturday afternoon with the kids and parents at the Hampton Public Library's Lego Club, one of many special Lego and STEM-related events that happen regularly in libraries, schools, community meeting halls and paid learning centers across Virginia.
Read my Coastal Virginia Magazine article on the regional popularity of Legos, and meet the inventive little builders at the jam-packed Hampton Lego Club by clicking right here.
(Photo by the mighty Jim Pile!)
So it was no hardship at all to spend a fun Saturday afternoon with the kids and parents at the Hampton Public Library's Lego Club, one of many special Lego and STEM-related events that happen regularly in libraries, schools, community meeting halls and paid learning centers across Virginia.
Read my Coastal Virginia Magazine article on the regional popularity of Legos, and meet the inventive little builders at the jam-packed Hampton Lego Club by clicking right here.
(Photo by the mighty Jim Pile!)
Where I Stood: The Music of Dori Freeman
“The best thing you can do as an artist is what comes naturally and try to be as genuine as you can.”
Virginia Living Magazine has finally posted my April music column about the amazing singer-songwriter, Dori Freeman. The Galax native's debut disc on Free Dirt Records has been deservedly hailed as a contemporary classic with a throwback sound.
Check out the article by going here.
And for more on Dori Freeman and her music, go here.
(Photo by the mighty Zena Gill!)
Virginia Living Magazine has finally posted my April music column about the amazing singer-songwriter, Dori Freeman. The Galax native's debut disc on Free Dirt Records has been deservedly hailed as a contemporary classic with a throwback sound.
Check out the article by going here.
And for more on Dori Freeman and her music, go here.
(Photo by the mighty Zena Gill!)
Martha Rollins: Caring and Commerce
The Library of Virginia recently honored eight distinguished Virginians with its Virginia Women in History Awards.
Here is my Richmond Magazine profile of one of the living honorees, Martha Rollins, a now-retired Richmond businesswomen whose inclination to mix care with commerce became hallmarks of the successful city businesses she fostered, and was “the root” of Boaz & Ruth, the charitable nonprofit organization, repair shop and thrift store that she founded in 2002. “I had this burning thought that somehow the refinishing business could be intertwined with healing,” she says.
Read the story of this inspirational instigator by going right here.
(Photo by the mighty Tina Eshleman!)
Here is my Richmond Magazine profile of one of the living honorees, Martha Rollins, a now-retired Richmond businesswomen whose inclination to mix care with commerce became hallmarks of the successful city businesses she fostered, and was “the root” of Boaz & Ruth, the charitable nonprofit organization, repair shop and thrift store that she founded in 2002. “I had this burning thought that somehow the refinishing business could be intertwined with healing,” she says.
Read the story of this inspirational instigator by going right here.
(Photo by the mighty Tina Eshleman!)
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