Nov 01, 2012
DCist Preview: The Meter Men @ The Howard Theatre
The Meters laid down some of the funkiest grooves in the music industry. A revamped lineup featuring Phish’s Page McConnell, dubbed The Meter Men, will be visiting The Howard Theatre on Friday night.
Jun 22, 2012
Today at Silverdocs: Canned Ravioli, New Orleans, Marina Abramovic and a James Brown Impersonator
Today at Silverdocs: Films about canned food, birds in Central Park, staging Wagner’s Ring cycle, the artist Marina Abramovic and Charles Bradley, a James Brown impersonator finally striking out on his own.
Baby did a bad, bad thing: Lieutenant McDonagh (Nicolas Cage) during a reflective moment in the midst of his usual drinking, leching, and lying. It’s difficult to enter into Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans expecting a comedy. That’s despite a title more ridiculous and unwieldy than even a CSI spin-off would accept, and a trailer that features star Nicolas Cage waxing rhapsodic on his lucky crack pipe, and instructing some henchmen to…
Apr 17, 2008
Preservation Hall Jazz Band @ The Barns of Wolf Trap
Hmmmm. To ding a performance by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band for being maybe just a bit too genteel wouldn’t make a lot of sense, would it? So we’ll just say that last night’s not-quite-two-hour concert by the venerated New Orleans jazz outfit’s current lineup at the Barns of Wolf Trap took a while to get cooking. But band and audience finally clicked after intermission, the players eventually convincing the initially staid crowd to…
Dec 07, 2007
Preview: Terence Blanchard @ The Kennedy Center
Trumpeter and composer Terence Blanchard (pictured right) is a friend to D.C. The New Orleans native chose Blues Alley as the spot to release his latest CD, A Tale of God’s Will (A Requiem for Katrina). Though he is a celebrated bandleader and performer, he has also been quietly making his mark in the film world as Spike Lee’s chief musical collaborator. Tomorrow at 8 p.m., the Kennedy Center will host Terence Blanchard for what…
Dec 03, 2007
Helping the Musicians of New Orleans Return Home
“It pissed me off.” That is how R.E.M.’s Mike Mills described his reaction to seeing firsthand the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina and the stagnated recovery effort since. Though his band has a history of political involvement, Mills himself has shied away from activism until now. Having seen the suffering of New Orleanians in the aftermath of Katrina, he declared, “No one can appreciate the destruction without seeing it and I was very aware that…
Nov 14, 2007
About Tonight
>> A solid small local show at the Red and the Black tonight, with the pleasing rock of The Charm Offensive, Cheverly Hot Noodle, and Baltimore’s Lawnchair. $8, 9:30 p.m. >> It might be easy to dismiss Galactic as some frat boy-friendly jam band, but the funk and jazz-influenced quintet are practically royalty in their hometown of New Orleans, and tonight they’ll perform with a series of well-respected MCs in support of their latest…
Nov 07, 2007
This Week in Jazz
>> Tonight’s a big night for music, beginning with a celebration of one of the great musicians of the 20th century, Frank Zappa. His son, Dweezil, leads a group of Zappa-alums for this tribute, which takes place at Warner Theater. 7:30 p.m., $50/$75 + Ticketmaster fees. >> Tonight, the musical flavor of New Orleans comes to the Wonderland Ballroom tonight as Yamomanem takes the stage. Call 202-232-5263 for cover information. 9 p.m. >> Also tonight,…
Oct 19, 2007
DCist Interview: Paul Meany of Mute Math
Their debut album has been out for almost two years and somehow the outside world is only just getting to know them as that band that has that backward music video on YouTube. However you know them, Mute Math (or TBTHTBMVOYT, for… short?) is hitting up Sonar in Baltimore tonight for an evening of art rock/post rock/electro rock/whatever the hell music snobs and critics want to label it as. The band has come a long…
Sep 28, 2007
Weekly Columnist Roundup: Goodbye, RFK
Harry Jaffe: In writing something of a goodbye column to RFK Stadium, Jaffe recounts the many struggles the District overcame to attract a baseball team. And though plenty of people played important roles, he feels that one deserves extra attention — former Mayor Anthony Williams. “The hero of the piece has to be Williams, an unpopular mayor who — despite his wandering attention span — kept swinging away at an unpopular crusade to use public…