Entries from DCist tagged with 'nostalgia>'
November 14, 2007
Salad days are usually something we look back on with a mix of nostalgia and embarrassment, but the folks at Chop't Salad are embracing them from the get go and celebrating them as soon as they kick off. How? Free salad. Penn QuarterChinatown's newest resident is throwing the doors of their first Washington location wide open today with free salad for all who stop by. The idea behind Chop't is customization. With a bevy of......
Continue Reading "Free Salad Today inNovember 9, 2007
Whether or not you were actually part of the 1960s, if you are a Beatles fan or, well, obsessed like some of us, then consider heading down to the Music Center at Strathmore tonight for Rain: The Beatles Experience, a tribute band that takes its audience on a trip down memory lane to a time when four lads from Liverpool tried to show the world that there's nothing funny about peace, love and understanding. The......
Continue Reading "Rain: The Beatles Experience @ Strathmore"September 30, 2007
This week, Phillyist saw the waters of a landmark fountain run red for a Showtime marketing stunt, the Phils pull ahead, and some serious nostalgia. They also got a chance to review an awesome tribute album, reminded folks to see the King, and appreciated their beautiful skyline. Chicagoist knows what it's like to like the Cubs. But naming your kid Wrigley Fields? At least they can breathe a little easier now that Grossman's out and......
Continue Reading "Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse"September 4, 2007
TUESDAY >>If you like your rock hard, Rock and Roll Hotel is the place to be tonight. Burning Brides, who've been building a fanbase for nearly a decade now on solid riffing and opening slots with big names like A Perfect Circle and Queens of the Stone Age. Locals Wooly Mammoth (pictured) open, along with The Exponentials 8 p.m., $10 advance, $12 door. >> Classic '80s college radio staples Hoodoo Gurus reunited back in 2004,......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"August 28, 2007
It was the colors in this photo that caught my eye; they present a nice contrast against the cloudy sky. The low perspective on the shot is also appealing in that it gives the old gas station a sense that it is looming above the street, deserted and monolithic--even though it's not. The subject is the Kensington Service Center, part of Kensington's Antique Row, which chip py the photo guy visited on Saturday. I......
Continue Reading "Photo of the Day: August 28, 2007"August 17, 2007
Last night the sun set on another summer at Fort Reno, which always makes us a little wistful. We never make it out to quite as many shows as we want to at the beginning of the summer, and now it's all gone until next year. It also means that parents' options for taking their kids out to see cool music is once again limited. One of our favorite aspects of Fort Reno is......
Continue Reading "Photo of the Day: August 17, 2007"June 7, 2007
Henry Rollins once said of Glen E. Friedman, "...he was there at the beginning of so much cool stuff in so many different areas it's not funny." Too true. Friedman documented the genesis of the 1970s southern California skateboarding scene as a teenager, took pictures of pretty much any early American punk legend you can name, as well as most of the earliest and brightest hip-hop names of the 80s. But if ever there was......
Continue Reading "Friedman to Publish Fugazi Photo Collection"May 11, 2007
Saturday at the Rock and Roll Hotel. Dr. Dog with The Teeth and Hoots and Hellmouth. $12. Doors at 8:30, Music at 9:30. Depending on the circles you run in, Dr. Dog are either busy working a tired formula of lo-fi and late-period Beatles nostalgia or are one of a host of Philly groups artfully resurrecting the heady psych-pop era of the late 60s and early 70s. Both camps need to do themselves a favor......
Continue Reading "Concert Preview: Dr. Dog @ Rock and Roll Hotel"March 27, 2007
A new "old musical" may sound like a contradiction in terms, but that's exactly what Meet John Doe, now playing at Ford's Theater, is. At first, one might wonder if we need a show that takes us back to the days of classics like Kiss Me Kate and Sweet Charity, but with such intelligent lyrics and such a satisfying blend of hope and cynicism, John Doe is more than a nostalgia trip, and doesn't have......
Continue Reading "John Doe: Not Too Cynical, Not Too Schmaltzy"March 27, 2007
No, when rising in the wee hours of the morning to we didn't suffer a sudden wave of nostalgia for bad perms, The Bangles and "Mr. Belvedere". We were confronted by all four networks confirming that temps are hitting eighty degrees today. Awesome. This mild weather was welcome news for the hundreds of Georgetown students who camped out in line to get their hands on one of the 1,000 tickets made available around 9:00......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: I Love the 80s Edition"February 15, 2007
>> The gallery at Flashpoint opens a new show tonight with works by Christopher Saah. Nightscenes includes 25 photographs that turn back alleys and gritty streets into noir-influenced nostalgia. Check them out during the opening reception tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. >> The Nevin Kelly Gallery also has an opening tonight, celebrating their first photography show in the four years its been open. Yanina Manolova and Mark Parascandola's images will contrast formal studio work......
Continue Reading "Arts Agenda: Everyone's Open for Business"December 26, 2006
When Telograph (***) played the Six Points Music Festival back in April, they were easily our favorite band in the festival’s Velvet Lounge lineup. We may have compared them to new-wave hipsters Interpol and The Strokes, but Telograph’s great live show made it difficult to categorize them simply as another “it” band. We’re happy to say that their upcoming EP Little Bits of Plastic justifies our initial impression: Telograph is a band to watch. Over......
Continue Reading "Album Review: Telograph’s Little Bits of Plastic"December 19, 2006
Sorry for the late arrival of this week's agenda, but you see, I work in Tysons Corner and I was stuck in traffic. Now on to our picks! TUESDAY >> If you don't think there is such a thing as hardcore klezmer music, Gogol Bordello are in town to prove you wrong. These Eastern European transplants to New York serve up Slavic ska, polka punk, and lots of other funky fusions, but those were the......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"December 15, 2006
This week in the Overheard offices, we were shocked and appalled. Are people being extra insensitive out there on the mean streets of D.C.? Aren't we all fat and happy on Christmas cookies and eggnog, wading knee-deep in nostalgia after another viewing of A Charlie Brown Christmas? Whatever it is that is inspiring heightened grinch-itude in Washington flared hot as a roasting chestnut this week, as we had submissions potentially offensive to various races, sexual......
Continue Reading "Overheard in D.C.: Dancing in the Dark"August 11, 2006
Friday >>Summer Fridays are meant for free beer, long strolls and casual socializing. Which is exactly why they started the Bethesda Art Walk. We recommend catching the opening reception of the Fraser Gallery's Summer Group Exhibit. Six artists have displayed their new work in photography and painting. The oil on metal paintings by Michael Fitts look like a rougher versions of light, breezy subjects, while Lee Goodwin's gelatin silver prints of black and white landscapes......
Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks"June 29, 2006
What's so great about a beach photograph? There are few artistic outlets for the digital camera-clutching traveler more instantly rewarding than pointing at the red ball on the spiky, waved sea and clicking. Pure pastiche, quick beauty. No need to run a light meter or take a tripod. The stuff is art before it enters the shutter. So there's this show by large-format sometimes fashion photographer/videographer Renate Aller. It's at Adamson Gallery, a gallery......
Continue Reading "The Highest Platonic Form of Sand in the Shorts"April 18, 2006
Whether we like it or not, planned communities and multi-family condos are becoming the future of the American landscape. Vanishing are the rural houses and the vast stretches of farmland – the McMansion has arrived to replace such quaint lifestyles. Documenting this loss is photographer Anne Rowland, whose exhibit Private Property at Hemphill Fine Arts, is a rush of nostalgia for her childhood home and an era that seems to be coming to a close.......
Continue Reading "The Broken Images of a Fast Fading Era"April 5, 2006
DCist still feels a tinge of nostalgia when we see a bike messenger carrying an orange bag emblazoned with a jaunty green stick man. Is he bringing us Ben and Jerry's? Is he rushing over No-Doz so we can finish our term papers? Alas, he's but an echo of the past. Oh kozmo.com, how we loved thee. We have suffered years going to the store on our own, when all we wanted was the good-looking......
Continue Reading "Want Ice Cream but Can't Find Your Pants?"February 9, 2006
John Harvard's Brew House Has Dropped Out It looks like the District can't even keep sub-par brewpubs. Already a eighth-year senior, John Harvard's Brew House on Pennsylvania and 13th Streets NW has closed its doors. With the phone dead and its banishment from the mothersite, it looks like the Ad Board has asked it to take a loooooong leave of absence. DCist had mixed feelings about the place. I'd return for bit of post-college nostalgia,......
Continue Reading "The Weekly Feed: Veritas Edition"February 2, 2006
In 2005, The Hold Steady were the right band, with the right album, at just the right time. In an indie marketplace dominated by the self-absorbed strains of emo nation and a never-ending supply of post-punk outfits pimping ‘80s nostalgia, The Hold Steady stood out with a record both decidedly Midwestern and defiantly unconcerned with anything pertaining to hipness. What Green Day’s American Idiot does in exploring the political landscape, that disc, Separation Sunday, does......
Continue Reading "How a Resurrection Feels: The Hold Steady Play Black Cat"January 20, 2006
FRIDAY: Dear organizers of tonight's Cryfest -- Cure vs. Smiths Dance Party on the Black Cat mainstage: Did we go to the same high school? Because, really, I thought I was the only one who spent several nights a week as an awkward teenager perfecting the disaffected side-to-side shuffle that is the only kind of actual "dancing" one can do to this music. Meet me there tonight, OK? I'll be the one in the raccoon......
Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks"November 23, 2005
This post comes to us from DCist contributor Rob Birgfeld In the eyes of many, a good bar must have certain things. Ambience, a good DJ, a nice selection of fine wines, liquor, and various micro-brewed beers. To others, the list of requirements is far shorter; Cheap beer and pinball. Despite the incredible advancements in video game graphics, story lines, and the countless renditions of Golden Tee, pinball remains king of the American dive bar.......
Continue Reading "Keeping the Pinball Rolling"September 5, 2005
MONDAY: >> It's a slow concert night around town. Head over to the Black Cat's backstage for Vintage DC Punk Video Night to benefit Jobs with Justice. 9:00, $5 TUESDAY: >> South Carolina natives Jump Little Children head north and set their sights on Arlington's Iota club tonight. All classically trained at the North Carolina School of the Arts, their first songs were based in Irish folk music and Delta blues, and has evolved over......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"August 26, 2005
Sommer Mathis contributed to these picks FRIDAY: >> DCist likes to stay up late on Sundays and watch Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry". We enjoy the variety of viewpoints it always includes, and really truly, at least one poet each episode knocks our socks right off our collective feet. DCist also likes to stay up late and watch "The Cosby Show" on Nick at Nite. It makes us feel all warm and fuzzy, like we......
Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks"August 22, 2005
MONDAY: >> Watch a cartoon (and, according to reader comments, hipsters) come to life. Adding further cred to the notion that pop music is respectable as long as it's from another country, the wildly popular duo Puffy AmiYumi bring their unforgettable show to the 9:30 Club tonight, with opener Adam Richman. 6 p.m., $20 TUESDAY: >> Because we love A Smokey Mountain Christmas, because the original version is always better, and because there's nothing cooler......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"July 22, 2005
Despite the fact that the humidity is supposed to decrease this weekend, it's still going to be a hot one in D.C. And it's in this hot weather that we get hit with a bad case of nostalgia for our youth, which for this DCist was spent in Baltimore (okay, Baltimore County). One of the greatest joys for us in summer was cracking steamed crabs -- something you can find fairly easily in the general......
Continue Reading "What We're Missing: A Snowball Stand"July 1, 2005
In case you missed your previous chances to check out native DC filmmakers Tarik Dahir and Jeff Gaul’s documentary “930 F Street” in the past couple of months, 9:30 Club is serving up one more opportunity to get your 1980s DC nostalgia on tonight, and admission is free (as we mentioned in the Weekend Picks post). How rad. See, back in the 80s, 9:30 Club lived over on F street, and bands like Minor Threat,......
Continue Reading "Where Have All the Straight Edgers Gone?"April 29, 2005
With The West Wing in the off season, there aren't any melodramas dedicated to D.C. on the horizon. No big deal really, since we prefer the escapism provided by shows set in more affluent environs like The O.C. It's really just nostalgia for the days of 90210 coupled with wishes that a club like the Bait Shop existed when we were in high school. We wonder what such excitement would be like in the District.......
Continue Reading "Who's Our Seth Cohen?"April 20, 2005
In a one two punch designed to simultaneously quell the last week’s negative buzz emanating from the Post's Skins-beat rag-a-muffins Jason LaCanfora, Nunyo "Business" Demasio and Mark Maske, while at the same time bringing a new choir of “Whaaaa?” to the forefront, Gibbs n' the Gang dropped some serious draft week bomb-a-loo by acquiring Denver's first round pick, the 25th overall, in exchange for the Skins' 2005 third rounder, in addition to next year's......
Continue Reading "Everyone Else Is Indulging in Pre-Draft Speculation, So…"March 21, 2005
MONDAY: >> For $15 at the 9:30 Club, you can check out the Next Big Thing Out of Sweden (TM): The Soundtrack of Our Lives, who play Beatle-esque tunes and have a clean, poppy sound. With The Dears. TUESDAY: >> Time for some more 90s-era musical nostalgia: influential Kentucky post-rockers Slint have reformed and are back on the road, hitting the 9:30 Club this evening for $25. WEDNESDAY: >> Three fun options tonight: There's whimsical......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"
