>> This week's first must see takes place tonight at Blues Alley as one of the area's finest drummers, Nasar Abadey, takes the stage with SuperNova (pictured right), a local jazz supergroup. The band features Allyn Johnson on piano, Gary Thomas, Jazz Studies Chair at Peabody, altoist Joe Ford, and bassist James King. Sets are at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $18 + $10 food/drink minimum. Tickets available here. >> Also tonight, Twins Jazz hosts...
This Week in Jazz
Out of Frame: Eastern Promises
At the heart, it's about blood. With Cronenberg, it's always about blood. No other director of his stature has built a career out of such a fascination with blood, and the other assorted slick bodily fluids that course through Cronenberg's filmography. What makes him unique, and apart from the average gorehound, is his coldly clinical presentation of the warm organic matters that make up life, and the deeper truths he uses them, slyly, as an avenue to reveal. Eastern Promises is about blood, but in the familial as well as the literal sense. For the director, it's quite clearly a companion piece to (and just as good as, if not better than) 2005's fantastic A History of Violence. Both films focus closely on the importance of family. The family you come from, the family you choose, and the families that choose you.
Voting Rights Roundup: We Hope Mitch is Reading
After letting us all enjoy a good summer break, next week the U.S. Senate will start debating legislation that would grant the District a voting seat in the House of Representatives. And in preparing for what is sure to be a spirited battle, big-name voting rights activists have recently stepped up the pressure with two back-to-back op-eds in Washington papers. Yesterday Maryland's former Lt. Gov. Michael Steele and former Oklahoma Republican Rep. J.C. Watts penned...
About Tonight
>> In the early 1970s, Charles Burnett made a film called Killer of Sheep as his MFA thesis film at UCLA, and it became an instant landmark in American cinema. But few people ever got a chance to see it, because the stellar soundtrack included too many classic songs by the likes of Etta James and Dinah Washington to make it affordable to release it into theaters. This week, Washingtonians have a rare chance...
Four Years of War: Remembering Our Fallen Soldiers
Today we mark four years since the war in Iraq began. Without debating the wisdom of the war itself (or lack thereof), the U.S. has suffered some 3,204 casualties to date. Among those casualties are residents from the District, Maryland and Virginia -- 3, 60 and 91, respectively. DCist would like to recognize their service to their country in what little way we can -- by printing their names and sending our condolences to their...
Fenty’s Agency Overhaul, Continued
Mayor Adrian Fenty’s major campaign pledges mostly dealt with the District’s troubled schools and public safety departments, so it’s no surprise that changes in those departments get the headlines during this transition period. However, in the new administration, no struggling agency is spared, including the underachieving Administration for HIV Policy and Programs (AHPP). After officially being sworn in on Tuesday, the Mayor noted that AHPP director Marsha Martin – who had only been on the job for 16 months – would not be reappointed.
Classical Music Agenda
We are well into the season of seasonal concerts at this point. If you are looking for a performance of Handel's Messiah or a Christmas or Holiday Concert, we've dealt with that. Here is what else is happening this week in classical music. NOT CHRISTMAS: >> Ironically, possibly the best performance this week also happens to be free, the latest concert in the excellent series at the Library of Congress. On Friday (December 15, 8...
HIV/AIDS Report Card Offers Mixed Assessment
When we last checked in on the state of HIV/AIDS in the District last August, things were looking rather grim.
World AIDS Day Events in the District
World AIDS Day, observed today, has particular relevance and importance for the District. The city has the distinction of suffering from one of the nation's highest rates of HIV infection, afflicting 1 in 20 residents, ten times the national average, and 1 in 7 African-American men. The District's response to the problem has been so ineffectual (some say the city is 10 to 15 years behind where it should be) that in August D.C. Mayor...
News AIDS Boss for the District
The Washington Business Journal broke the news late last night that the director of the District Department of Health, Gregg Pane, has chosen Marsha Martin, a longtime HIV/AIDS activist and director of the non-profit organization AIDS Action, to head up the city's troubled HIV/AIDS Administration (HAA).
The District's AIDS Mess
While D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams touted the success of his government reform initiatives by celebrating the millionth caller to the Citywide Call Center yesterday, he was similarly forced to acknowledge failure in a simmering, city-wide health crisis.
Morning Roundup: D.C. Government In the News Edition
Good morning, Washington. Today will be partly cloudy in the morning and then clearing with highs in the 80s. This photo of the Potomac at sunset was posted to DCist photos by the flickr user "adrummer_boy" who also uploaded a couple others we liked - one of the C&O Canal at dawn and another Potomac sunset photo. If you've got a blog you can get your meetup on tonight at the monthly meetup.com event for...
It's Green Week D.C.
In advance of Earth Day on Friday, the District today kicks off its Green Week DC today with Environment and Community Day on Freedom Plaza from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday is Holistic Energy Day at the Reeves Municipal Center at 14th and U streets NW where you'll be able learn more about renewable energy and see GM hydrogen vehicles. Although pretty much a concrete courtyard, Nassif Plaza at the U.S. Department of Transportation...
Weekend Outlook: End of August
Don't know what to do this weekend? DCist has some suggestions! Check it out:

