Monday, June 30, 2008

the death and life of d.c.'s caribbean carnival

Dancers during the D.C. Caribbean Carnival last weekend. Check out this slideshow of this year's Carnival right here.

Last Saturday, D.C. held its annual Caribbean Carnival on Georgia Avenue, also known as Route 29. Part street festival, part family reunion and part excuse (if you're Trinidadian) to play in mud, carnivals are held throughout the West Indies and in cities throughout the Western Hemisphere with large Caribbean populations. The centerpiece of Carnival is a parade which runs from between Missouri Avenue in Brightwood, just south of Downtown Silver Spring, and Barry Place, near Howard University.

Carnival is a big deal for my family, being from Guyana and also being an established part of Georgia Avenue. For years, my aunt owned a small grocery at Georgia and Ingraham Street which she is currently turning into a restaurant. My uncle runs a mechanic's shop below, and my cousin lives above them in a sweet apartment that looks like something off of HGTV.

The epitome of "mixed-use," this shop, like dozens of other West Indian, Latino and other ethnic establishments up and down Georgia, are slowly improving themselves one at a time. Together, they're creating a belt of diverse, real-deal, Jane Jacobs-style (she wrote The Death and Life of Great American Cities, but more about that later) urbanity between the gentrification of Downtown Silver Spring to the north and Petworth to the south.

Silver Spring, Singular reported that a shooting happened in Downtown Silver Spring following the parade, guessing that it might've been at a related party. I can't verify that, but I thought it was a good opportunity to show a different side of the Caribbean Carnival and Georgia Avenue. Check out this slideshow of this year's Carnival right here.
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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

what's up the pike: money money money charrette

County Executive Ike Leggett throws a little more money at the Fillmore. Is Live Nation threatening to jump ship? Let's not jump (ha!) to conclusions.

- Greater Greater Washington, one of the region's best blogs on what's happening inside-the-Beltway, gave a nice long mention to our mini-series on last week's Burtonsville charrette. It's not all too often that a JUTP post gets this much attention - you'll want to get on the commenting bandwagon before the cool kids move on to the next big local blog story.

- County Executive Ike Leggett's working hard to make sure that Live Nation, whose proposed Fillmore music hall will take over the former J.C. Penney building on Colesville Road, stays in the game. In addition to $2 million in State funds, Live Nation will also get $800,000 in tax breaks from Montgomery County over the next ten years. Lee Development Group, who owns the land and a good chunk of the block bordered by Colesville, Georgia, Cameron and Fenton, will get up to fifteen years to develop a hotel-and-office complex behind the venue. That's triple the five-year deadline made by Park and Planning for submitted plans to be built.

I'm surprised by that, because I'd assume a developer would want to get his building up as quickly as possible. Then again, it's been long enough since we last heard about the Fillmore that I assumed it'd already opened. Perhaps I'm just impatient.

- Rising gas prices have forced Montgomery County Public Schools to cut bus service to a wider net of students living near a school. Currently, students within a mile of an elementary school, a mile and a half of a middle school, and two miles of a high school cannot ride the school bus. While the School Board hasn't decided what the new distances will be, I can't help but wonder: seriously? Back when I went to Eubie High, I had a friend who lived just a mile away and rode the bus. There are no sidewalks between his house and the school, and he'd have to cross busy Route 28 to get there.

Could MCPS really take away bus service from neighborhoods where walking to school would actually be dangerous? (More importantly, would The Parents ever let that happen? Seriously? No.)


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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

money, idealism spent at this year's silverdocs festival

This week marks the start of Silverdocs, the yearly documentary film festival hosted by the American Film Institute and held at our very own AFI Silver Theatre downtown. Actually going to see a movie at Silverdocs has long been a goal here at Just Up The Pike. I'm still smarting from the scars earned two years ago from waiting in line to see The Great Happiness Space only to be turned away just twenty minutes before it started.

Over the next week (the festival has been extended from its usual six days; it runs from yesterday through June 22) you can expect to see a flood of snooty film types downtown, throwing around five-dollar words, ten-dollar tips and probably making snide comments about how "contrived" Ellsworth Drive is.

At least, for the first day or two. Events like Silverdocs are good publicity for the area, both nationally and on a local scale as well. Long stereotyped as either a derelict city or an unenlightened suburb, Silver Spring has the opportunity this week to show the world - from Brussels to Bethesda - that it's a thriving, sophisticated sort of place, with lovely shops and its own Metro stop and all sorts of foreign foods you can't pronounce.

Hopefully, our visitors will return home with stories not just about the movies they saw but about the people they met and the times they had right here. That's probably a ridiculously hopeful thing to hope for, but it's summer, and youthful idealism is the only thing that keeps one from wilting in the unforgiving sun like a hothouse flower.

As for me, I'll try once again to see a movie at Silverdocs - I'm gunning for Bird's Nest, Bi The Way, or Chevolution - in the hopes that overwhelming interest does not lock this humble blogger out of a showing. We'll see how that goes. (So much for youthful idealism, right?)
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Monday, June 9, 2008

south silver spring breaks out with second-annual block party

Silver Spring-based Lloyd Dobler Effect was one of fifteen performing acts at yesterday's second-annual South Silver Spring Block Party. Check out this slideshow of the Block Party.

A rapidly growing neighborhood continues to build a name for itself as hundreds of residents braved triple-digit heat indexes for yesterday's second-annual South Silver Spring Block Party.

Dozens of Downcounty restaurants, merchants, non-profits, artists, and even a handful of Silver Spring bloggers set up booths along Kennett Street offering everything from food samples to "Fair Trade" t-shirts to even pet adoptions. New for this year was a stage, with fifteen musical and dance performances taking place throughout the day.

Formerly an industrial area separating Downtown from the Shepherd Park neighborhood in the District, South Silver Spring has experienced an explosion of residential development, with thousands of apartments and condominium units being built over the past five years. With so many new residents, bringing neighbors together was a must, says David Fogel, vice president of the South Silver Spring Neighborhood Association.

"A few of us came together saying 'we need more vibrancy'" in South Silver Spring, Fogel says. "The Block Party's a great example of that. It's not just talking online but rubbing shoulders."

so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

Booths line Kennett Street during the South Silver Spring Block Party.

Planning for the block party began last winter and was made easier because so many people who helped coordinate last year's event stuck around. "We had a good core group from last year's," states Fogel. "Everybody had a positive experience and wanted to do it again."

For some, the event was enough to get them involved in the community. Kristin Callahan, who moved to Eastern Village four months ago, and Jessica Lindstrom, who's lived there for two years, were encouraged to help out by Fogel, who also lives in the complex. "A lot of people from our building are volunteering here," says Lindstrom.

"I think it's definitely good for the community," says Callahan. "People get to come out and meet each other, learn about local businesses they may not have heard of."

Many residents felt inspired to get involved, though some admitted it wasn't likely given other obligations. South Silver Spring resident Zahava sat on the grass outside the Kennett Street Garage while listening to local rock band Lloyd Dobler Effect and feeding her children a snow cone. "To see people in my neighborhood being involved it makes me want to do more," says Zahara, who declined to give her last name, "but having two young kids . . . eating breakfast is an accomplishment."

Acorn Market is a new, bi-monthly event hosted by the Gateway Georgia Avenue CDC.

The Block Party served as a launching pad for Acorn Market, a bazaar of local merchants in Acorn Park organized by Gateway Georgia Avenue, a community development corporation aimed at revitalizing neighborhoods on both sides of the D.C.-Maryland line. With nearly two dozen vendors from the Downcounty participating, the market was a "tremendous success," says Jane Henderson of White Oak, the corporation's treasurer.

While Gateway Georgia Avenue also works in the District, almost all of Acorn Market's funding came from the Montgomery County government, explains Shepherd Park resident Marc Loud. "As D.C. does more of the underwriting and funding, you'll see more vendors" from the District, he adds.

In addition to reaching across the state line, Fogel noted other goals the South Silver Spring Neighborhood Association aims to accomplish closer to home, including building a retail base and improving pedestrian connections to Jesup Blair Park, east of Georgia Avenue. "Getting across Georgia Avenue is tough, not necessarily if you're my age, but if you have kids," says Fogel. "We really need to dig back into the zoning to meet the needs of an urban area . . . if we're gonna grow in a way that's sustainable for all these things."

"I think at the end of the day we'll have a lot more people than we did last year," Fogel notes. "It's an incredibly exciting time to be part of developing a new urban community. Next year, we'll have thousands of new people living here."
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Friday, May 23, 2008

drafthouse owner godbout responds to JUTP story

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Planning Board hopefuls include former District 4 candidates, Robin Ficker; Route 29 named one of County's most congested corridors.

In August, the former P & G theatre at Wheaton Plaza will become the Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse, which will offer everything from first-run movies to live comedy.

In March, I wrote about the new Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse, opening in the former P & G Wheaton Plaza 11. The new venue will offer "first-run films, independent films, sporting events, live comedy,film festivals, speaker series, family friendly events, wine tastings, live music, [and] major televised events," according to their website.

I caught a little flack from commenters who thought my concerns about not naming the Drafthouse after Wheaton was kind of silly. One of those putting their two cents in was no less than Greg Godbout, owner of the Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse, set to open later this summer, and the current Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse in Virginia.

Godbout had this to say AFTER THE JUMP . . .
"Try to be a little more positive... This is good news for all of Montgomery County especally Wheaton and the Drafthouse.

(1) The name is Montgomery because we will be all of Montgomery County's Drafthouse. In our Arlington location (Located in Arlington County - thus the name) we are actually located in South Arlington off of Columbia Pike, we get 70% of our customer base that live outside our zipcode area. Our theater draws from a 30 minute drive time on a regular basis. In fact many of our regulars come from as far as Richmond VA, West Virginia, Annapolis MD and Baltimore MD

(2) The Wheaton comunity is a great community for us to operate in. As some have commented on this blog and our booth at the Taste of Wheaton - Wheaton needs a diverse entertainment venue. In our case we offer all sorts of entertainment.

(3) For those comparing us to a "regular" movie theater, I suspect you have never been to a "Drafthouse" or "Restaurant" style theater as the experience is totally different and are actually considered different industries.

(4) As for the quality of our entertainment experience, we were voted the Best Movie theater in the DC area as part of the Washington Post's Best Bet. The Washingtonian selected us as the best thing to do on a Friday night as we offer Wine Night at the Movies every Friday, which has optional wine tastings with experts from the Washington Wine Academy. Our small Arlington location with only one theater offering sub-run films (films that have been out for 2 to 3 months) gets 100,000 visitors a year! In Wheaton we will be offering both first-run films and sub-run discount films in a theater venue with 6 theaters. We easily expect to draw 300,000 people per year in our high quality/high end new flagship location in Wheaton.

(5) Live Entertainment: Our live comedy offerings feature the best of the national comedians on a regular basis. Our family friendly live events feature the best local family entertainers weekly. Our film festivals and cult film showcases regularly sell out. We offer live music on a limited basis, however we expect to offer more of it at the Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse.

We are very excited about being located in Wheaton and have for two years been seeking out a central Montgomery County location that could appeal to our existing fan base in MD and DC. Our customers have long asked for a location in MD and we are thrilled to open our Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse in Wheaton."
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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

east county in review: inbox edition

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Proposed condo on Thayer Avenue goes before Planning Board this Thursday; Prospective developers interviewed for bioscience park in Calverton; Police bust daytime booze bash with bevy of East County pre-teens.

The Planning Board has approved Washington Adventist Hospital's proposal to build a new facility in Calverton.

Here at Just Up The Pike, we get a lot of e-mails about events happening in East County. In a foolhardy attempt to inform You, The Reader about what's going on, here's a look at some of the news that's landed in our in-box this week:

- Last week, the Planning Board approved Washington Adventist Hospital's bid to build a new facility off of Cherry Hill Road in Calverton. Currently located in Takoma Park, the hospital has encountered both community opposition to expansion on its cramped site. The new facility will have over 700,000 square feet of space, 290 private rooms, and an interfaith meeting center. While the hospital has been well-received Up The Pike as it could create 2,000 new jobs, Downcounty residents are concerned about increased traffic at Holy Cross Hospital in Forest Glen, according to Maryland Politics Watch.

- Retirement homes and senior centers throughout East County have been hopping with Nintendo Wii, the video game system that actually makes you get up and take part in physical activity. Citing the console's offering of "stress-free exercise and a fun social atmosphere," Montgomery County's holding a Wii Tournament this May and June. The first event will take place Thursday at the Margaret Schweinhaut Senior Center in Forest Glen, with additional tournaments to follow in Wheaton, Long Branch and Damascus.

- With $4 gas on the horizon, the County's Department of Environmental Protection is betting you'll want to find ways to lower your energy costs. Together with the MoCo chapter of the Sierra Club, they'll be talking about the Maryland Home Performance program May 6 at the Eastern County Regional Services Center on Briggs Chaney Road. The Home Performance program "helps residents identify home improvements . . . that will help to improve the energy efficiency of the home and ultimately reduce energy costs," according to Susan Kirby from the DEP.

- Also on Thursday, State Delegate Heather Mizeur (D-Dist. 20) will be in College Park to tout the recently passed Family Coverage Expansion Act, which extends family health insurance plans to high school and college graduates through the age of 25. Currently, dependent children lost coverage soon after they finished school, and many go without health insurance because of the increasing cost. The press conference will be at 1 p.m. in the University of Maryland's Stamp Student Union.

IF YOU HAVE AN ANNOUNCEMENT, don't raise your hand and wait for me to call on you. E-mail me today at danreed at umd dot edu and you might see your announcement right here.
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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

whatever happened to wheaton?

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Our "District 4 Head-to-Head Tour" commences later this week as we talk to candidates Mark D. Fennel and Nancy Navarro.

A sign in Downtown Wheaton. Photo by IntangibleArts.

Thayer Avenue pointed us to news that the Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse will be taking over the Loews Cineplex 11 in Westfield Wheaton (also known as Wheaton Plaza) later this summer. The newly re-named Montgomery Cinema 'N' Drafthouse will have six screens playing a mix of first-run, second-run and independent movies, along with some stand-up comedy. There will also be table service, as is currently the practice at Arlington and the former Bethesda Cinema 'N' Drafthouse, now a live theatre. And it won't the first time that art-house films are playing in Wheaton, as the Loews Cineplex 11 tried to compete with the AFI by showing indie movies a year or two ago.

The Drafthouse folks are particularly giddy about their new location, as seen by the venue's new website (emphasis added):

The centrally located new 6-Theater Entertainment Complex, located in Silver Spring in Montgomery County is a very short distance from Potomac, Rockville, Bethesda, North Bethesda, Kensington, Chevy Chase, Olney, Beltsville, Laurel, Burtonsville, College Park, NW Washington DC and Downtown Washington DC.
Frankly, I'm surprised they didn't find a way to name this venue "Far, Far, Really Far Northeast Bethesda Cinema 'N' Drafthouse." Not only do they slap "Montgomery" on the name, ignoring the community it happens to be located in, but they don't seem to know what community that is, either. Real nice. I suppose all of those people coming from Northwest D.C. and Potomac just wouldn't feel right spending their evening in Wheaton, and even the idea of going to Silver Spring makes their skin crawl just a little.

One could say that the Drafthouse folks merely typed their new address into Google Maps and it spat out Silver Spring. But, I mean, as vague as the boundaries of Wheaton and Silver Spring are - both being unincorporated - you could ask anyone where the center of Wheaton is, the place where Wheaton is at its Wheatonest, and they would point to Wheaton Plaza. (But if there is any justice in the world, they will actually point to El Pollo Rico.)

Oh, well. At least I can have beer at the movies now. Read more!

Friday, March 7, 2008

creating a legacy: the "folk ghetto" of silver spring (updated)

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Teachers' Union endorses Navarro for District 4; Residents ambivalent over new speed cameras on Briggs Chaney Road; Silver Spring documentary premieres on WETA this Sunday.



Part FOUR of a series about Lisa Null, Silver Spring folk artist, who performed solo for the first time in twenty years last month. In our last installment, we look at the so-called "folk ghetto" of East Silver Spring.

Lisa Null thrived in Washington's long-standing folk, blues and bluegrass scene. "There's a conversation about the music you can be a part of in the D.C. area," she says. For seven years, she was an adjunct professor at Georgetown, teaching variations on a course she designed called "American Music and Life."

"It was all I know, playing folk music and academics," jokes Null. When her partner, Charlie Baum, wanted to be closer to the Jewish community in lower Montgomery County, she didn't leave the District without putting up a fight.

"I had the Library of Congress within walking distance. For someone in research, it was like the Emerald City," she says. "I came out here kicking and screaming," she recalls of the move thirteen years ago. When they arrived in Silver Spring, however, they also discovered an outpost of D.C.'s folk scene.

"We call it folk-ghetto or folk-shtetl, if you will," she says. "I think people came here because it was cheap and it was near Takoma Park when they couldn't afford to live there."

so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

Folk dancers live next door. Across the street is a banjo maker. Occasionally, Null and Baum have a "ballad night" in their home on Bonifant Street, inviting their neighbors for an evening of self-made entertainment. "When there's no commercial base for your music, that's very nourishing," she says.

Outside of the "folk ghetto," Null's found another world to explore in the ethnic shops lining Bonifant and Fenton. Living on disability after a fight with cancer that forced her to retire eight years ago and unable to walk long distances on her own, she keeps mainly to her immediate neighborhood. "I live next door to all these Ethiopians," says Null, who wrote about the so-called "micro-neighborhood" on Bonifant last summer. "I feel like they're my brothers, and I barely know them."

Null's even written a song about her neighborhood, entitled "Fenton Street Rag." "It reminds me of those little old Southern towns," she says.

The Internet has been another way for Null to stay in touch. "This area has an extraordinary sense of community," she says. "I think it's been enhanced by the listservs. These lists have kept me in touch with my neighbors."

Silver Spring's beauty, she says, is most evident in the places where people can come together, like "The Turf" at Ellsworth and Fenton. "I go down there at night and see so many people I know walking around talking. The scene is like it's some kind of Spanish village," she says. "I see men in suits on the ground with their computers, doing Wi-Fi stuff, teenagers flirting or roughhousing . . . it's wonderful."
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Thursday, March 6, 2008

creating a legacy: slumming and story songs (updated)

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Developers present Konterra plan to West Laurel residents; Neighbor's complaint over White Oak mega-addition shot down; Leggett throws support behind Praisner's widower for District 4 race.

Part THREE of a series about Lisa Null, Silver Spring folk artist, who performed solo for the first time in twenty years last Thursday. Today, we're taking a look at her contributions to the Folk Revival movement; tomorrow, we'll see what she has to say about the "folk ghetto" of Silver Spring.

Stepping into Lisa Null's living room is like walking through all four decades of her musical career. Two walls are lined with bookshelves, whose contents have spilled out across tables and floorboards. A mass of old boxes and pamphlets form another wall behind the couch. And musical instruments are everywhere - an electric keyboard, an acoustic guitar in a case, and something on the mantle that I can't determine what it is.

"I can't ever say I made a great deal of money, but it was self-sustaining," she says contentedly.

Null's musical journey began at home in New York, where she grew up "with a family that loved to sing," Null explains. In high school, she began attending conservatory to become classically trained, but found it was killing her love of music. "My family had always told me that music was a joy, not a vocation," she says. Null left school and became entranced in the burgeoning folk scene coming out of New York City's Greenwich Village.

During the 1950's and 60's, once-obscure blues and folk artists from the turn of the twentieth century were being rediscovered by Baby Boomers who rejected the growing commercialism of popular music. Along with jazz, the so-called "folk revival" became the dominant form of musical expression for the early counter-culture.

there's so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

There were a number of music clubs Null liked to frequent, notably the Village Gate. "There were so many places you could enter for a couple of dollars and the price of beer and you'd get to hear so many great musicians," she says. The venue hosted a variety of artists, from Charlie Mingus to Pete Seeger. At smaller clubs, she'd come in the afternoons for an audition and she'd be allowed to play the same evening as an opening act.

That led to jobs singing in bars, where Null discovered she wasn't necessarily cut out for all kinds of music. "It was very good money at the time . . . you'd get a free steak dinner and a couple hundred dollars to take home," she says. "I tried to sing blues, and I heard someone say 'you sound like a Smith College girl slumming.'"

Null looked to the story songs and ballads she'd learned as a child for a direction in which to take her career. She traveled to Ireland and conducted "field collection" trips throughout Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, building up a library of songs to use in her performances.

In the early 1970's, Null and commercial folk-musician Pat Sky founded Green Linnet Records, headquartered in her New Canaan, Connecticut home. It was named after a code-word for Napoleon used by Irish sympathizers hoping that an alliance with him would gain them independence from Britain. While Null sought to create an outlet for the old airs and songs she'd cut her teeth on, her co-workers wanted to capitalize on the growing popularity of "revved-up" instrumental Irish music, and she sold the company. "This sort of hard-driving Celtic music really took off and I was more interested in . . . less commercially-viable music," Null says.

As the commercial folk revival was dying down in the late 1970's, Null joined forces with guitarist Bill Shute and hit the academic circuit, touring folk societies, schools and museums throughout North America. College campuses were another popular venue, as school administrators opened on-campus coffeehouses and cabarets to give students an alternative to drinking. The pair also made several apperances on A Prairie Home Companion, the NPR radio show hosted by humorist Garrison Keillor.

While the money was decent, the touring life was proving to be a strain on Null and her fellow musicians in the dwindling folk community. "My colleagues . . . they were having car accidents, traveling farther for gigs, it was a very grueling life" compared to acts that could play clubs, she laments.

Fatigue eventually got the best of her, and Null performed her last solo concert in Rochester, New York in 1989. She delved into study, earning a degree in History at Yale and a degree in Folklore at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1991, she settled in Washington, D.C., attending library school at Catholic and eventually taking a job at the Library of Congress.

Next: Lisa Null moves to Silver Spring and discovers a whole new dimension of community.
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Saturday, March 1, 2008

fillmore gets a wammie (of sorts) and other music news

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Check out our ongoing series on Silver Spring folk artist Lisa Null, which wraps up next week.

The JUTP inbox has been slowly filling with word that the Washington Area Music Association (or WAMA) has thrown its support behind Live Nation's plans to open a Fillmore music club in the former J.C. Penney building in Downtown Silver Spring. WAMA, who sponsored its yearly Wammie awards for local musicians two weeks ago, sent the Montgomery County Council and Executive Ike Leggett a letter Thursday endorsing the Fillmore. That same day, the County Council decided to approve $2 million in funding for the controversial venue.

In other news, I.M.P. Productions, whose counter-proposal to run a club in the same space was repeatedly thwarted by Montgomery County, is now in talks with the District of Columbia to lease the D.C. Armory as a concert venue. I.M.P., owners of the 9:30 Club on U Street, would be allowed to hold shows for between 1,000 and 5,000 people at the Armory. The Fillmore, meanwhile, will have a capacity of roughly 2,000 people standing and fewer seated.

Also, if you'd like to have some sort of say in how the Fillmore or other arts and music venues in Silver Spring are run, Ike Leggett would like to hear from you. The County is taking applications for positions on a new Silver Spring Arts and Entertainment District Committee. Resumes are due March 21.

WAMA's letter to the County Council follows AFTER THE JUMP . . .
February 28, 2008

Dear President Knapp and Members of the County Council:

We are writing to you to voice our strong support for the Fillmore music hall in downtown Silver Spring.

The Washington Area Music Association (WAMA) is an umbrella organization for Washington DC- area musicians, concert promoters, lawyers, recording engineers, managers, graphic artists and others working in the music business.

Among its other activities, WAMA annually sponsors the Washington Area Music Awards - also known as the Wammies - to recognize significant career achievements by area musicians, now in its 22nd year.

This project will significantly benefit economic revitalization in Silver Spring and will produce a significant public profit/benefit from the very beginning. And it will be a space that is available for community use.

You'll forgive us, though, if we focus on what's most important to us - the music.

We are very excited by the prospect of opening a Fillmore in Silver Spring. Such a world-class venue means more opportunities for area musicians to be heard and more opportunities for music fans throughout the region to sample the best of a whole range of musical styles in formats ranging from tables to chairs to theatre seating to stand-up.

This live music and entertainment venue will enrich Silver Spring, the whole County, and the region enormously.

We urge the full Council to approve the rest of the funding needed to make this music venue a reality. The sooner the building starts, the sooner the music gets made and heard.

Thank you for your consideration and for your support of this exciting project.

Sincerely,

Michael Schreibman
President
Washington Area Music Association
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008

creating a legacy: from ballads to cowboy songs

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Ike Leggett wants a bigger County Council; Marilyn Praisner's widower considers running for his wife's old seat.

Part TWO of a series about Lisa Null, Silver Spring folk artist, who will be performing solo for the first time in twenty years this Thursday.

Forming a set list for your first solo concert since 1989 might seem like a difficult proposition, but for singer Lisa Null, the time's been a big help in an unexpected way. "Your repertoire erodes" over time, says Null. "You're just singing what you like, and you forget."

While she once knew over five hundred songs, the 65-year-old East Silver Spring resident now has about 150 pieces to choose from for her show this Thursday in Laurel, celebrating the re-release of her albums Feathered Maiden and American Primitive, both recorded over twenty years ago.

Nonetheless, Null's drawing from an incredibly wide range of musical influences, from centuries-old English ballads to 1930's singing cowboy Gene Autry to jazz and gospel. "For a long time, if you asked me what kind of music I do, I'd say 'Afro-Celtic.'," says Null, laughing. "There's a lot of places where black and white music bump up against each other."

so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

Coming from a family where she "grew up very comfortable with all kinds of music," Null explored a bevy of musical styles. Classical training in college proved too rigid, and it left her ill-prepared to sing blues at bars in the years following in order to pay rent. Discouraged but unwilling to give up, she looked to the music from her native New England for inspiration and found a place in folk ballads. While ancient in origin, the ballad's heyday was in England during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. They were the era's popular music, mostly a means of retelling well-known fables, fairy tales and, of course, dirty jokes.

"Ballads deal with all the darker sides of the human consciousness in a very frank sort of way," says Null. Death is a common theme in ballads (specifically so-called "murder ballads"), as is forbidden or lost love. Decades of research have yielded many unusual and especially obscure pieces. "I would find a lot of strange songs . . . songs in old books that nobody sang," says Null, who has been incorporating those finds into her repertoire.

The concert will be given a cappella, a departure from Null's past work with guitarist Bill Shute, with whom she performed on NPR's A Prairie Home Companion throughout the 1980's. Arthritis has reduced her ability to play the guitar herself, and moving heavy equipment has become increasingly difficult. "We've reached that point where I can't schlep my own piano, and if you're playing in the area, you have to bring your own sound system," she laments.

But the lack of instrumentation will be an asset for her show, Null insists. "The songs I love - the old traditional songs and ballads - are meant to be sung unaccompanied," she says. "People were doing work, using their hands, and they weren't holding a guitar."

Laurel resident Dennis Cook will be hosting the show in his home. Private residences are common venues for folk concerts due to the small crowd they attract, Null explains. And besides, it's an environment best suited for the music she'll be performing. "It just takes me back . . . I've always been singing a cappella, and I don't see why I can't bring it into someone's living room," she says. "That's where it was meant to be: in porches and living rooms."

For more information, check out the Folklore Society of Greater Washington's website, where you can find out about Thursday's concert and other folk events in the region.
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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

creating a legacy: lisa null, silver spring folk artist (updated)

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: The Awesome Room comedy show returns to McGinty's Thursday night; El Pollo Rico burns down.



Swept up by the folk revival of the 1950's and 60's, singer Lisa Null made a career for herself performing music from her roots and our country's heritage. Throughout the 1970's and 80's, Null explored the vast reaches of North American folk music, collecting songs and presenting them to a small but dedicated community of enthusiasts. Twenty years ago, she gave up full-time performing and settled in East Silver Spring shortly after. This Thursday, Lisa Null returns to the stage for her first a cappella, full-evening concert, sponsored by the Folklore Society of Greater Washington.

Last night, I sat down with Lisa Null (an occasional contributor to Just Up The Pike) in her living room to find out more about her life and Thursday's concert. Over the next several days, we'll learn about her career and the daily adventure that is living in Silver Spring. Today, Null gives us a taste of the songsshe'll be performing later this week in this video, also embedded above.

Take a look at the rest of our series:

from ballads to cowboy songs: How do you form a set list for your first real show in twenty years? Lisa Null takes us through her varied repertoire, which includes everything from 50's pop to centuries-old "murder ballads."

slumming and story songs: We take a look at Lisa's lengthy career, which took her from the bars of New York to running a record label and appearing on A Prairie Home Companion.

the "folk ghetto" of silver spring: In our fourth and final installment, Lisa talks about living in East Silver Spring, where you can go around the world without leaving your block. Read more!

Friday, February 15, 2008

fillmore debate takes it back to the 1960's

The former J.C. Penney building on Colesville Road is slated to become a music hall . . . aw, you know the story already.

Where do you draw the line between activism and mere stubbornness? That's what I'm asking as the "Who Gets To Open A Music Hall In The Former J.C. Penney Building On Colesville Road" debacle drags on into its eighth month. My patience is wearing thin.

This week, the controversy's coming from Silver Spring resident Carol Bengle Gilbert. She's pretty surprised to see Patrick Lacefield strike back with a five-page rebuttal to her piece on "user-generated" news site Associated Content lambasting Montgomery County's deal with Live Nation and Lee Development, the building's current owners. In her latest piece, entitled "Montgomery County MD Pommels Live Nation Report: Fair Game or PR Run Amok?", Gilbert compares Lacefield - spokesman for County Executive Ike Leggett - to "Big Brother" for keeping tabs on her writing.

Activism runs deep in East County, from the "freeway fighters" who stopped I-95 from being built through Takoma Park to former White Oak resident Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, which kick-started the environmental movement. While today's struggles - the Purple Line, gentrification, etc. - are similar, the players are completely different. I wonder if Gilbert (and her numerous commenters, all of whom totally agree with what she wrote) and the locally-based Institute for Independent Music (who just started a website protesting the County's deal with Live Nation) see themselves as following in the footsteps of Carson and the I-95 protesters.

so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

But this is a music hall - not a threat to people's homes, or a freeway, or pesticides in our drinking water. As much as I don't want to hear the hipster assholes on DCist saying that Live Nation's just another example of how "corporate" Downtown Silver Spring has become, I am not interested in watching this issue become the next Purple Line, bogged down in debate and acrimony. It is simply not worth it.

I've talked to everyone. I've heard Ike Leggett tell me he fears backing out now will make the County look dishonest. I've heard the disgruntled residents talk about teenagers and crime and filth and the Birchmere. I've heard Audrey Schaefer, making herself heard over Motion City Soundtrack at the 9:30 Club, telling me that I.M.P. Productions was shut out of a process they had full right to participate in. And this is what I say to everyone: cut the bullshit and bring me the music.

I.M.P. may deserve a chance, but they might only get one with a court order and a very bitter Ike Leggett. There will be other places to build in MoCo, and even if not, I'll keep going down to the 9:30 Club for shows. (And I will not get robbed on V Street, regardless of what the Singular says.) Councilmembers Elrich and Praisner says "we got a bad deal?" For Marilyn's sake, Leggett better make damn sure we're not getting screwed over: he got us into this mess, and only he can get us out.

And what about Carol Bengle Gilbert, the budding online journalist? Stop invoking The Man. If I didn't want County officials reading (and disagreeing) with what I have to say, I wouldn't have started a blog.
Read more!

Thursday, February 7, 2008

leggett's blogger briefing: it's business time

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: State officials afraid FTA could kill Purple Line; Bethesda delegate wants to save Silver Spring from "public drunkenness" following Fillmore events; Blake High seniors get out the vote.

This is part TWO of a series on County Executive Ike Leggett's meeting with Silver Spring bloggers this week about the Fillmore. Yesterday, we talked about the County's lease with Live Nation.

At Monday night's "blogger briefing," County Executive Ike Leggett suggested that the block of Colesville Road between Georgia and Fenton - recently christened "Skid Row" by Silver Spring, Singular - will never catch up with its neighbors without a project like the Fillmore.

"There is not a single block of land in any business district in Montgomery County - unless there's a downturn in the market, which there is now - that is not being developed," says Leggett, noting that the former J.C. Penney building has been vacant for eighteen years. "If it was economically viable for someone to jump up and do it . . . it would've happened."

Currently lined with small, independent businesses in historic buildings on unassembled lots, the 8600 block of Colesville has been unwelcoming to developers, explains Leggett. In addition, the Lee Development Group, whose signature Lee Building at Georgia and Colesville sat empty for three years after opening, has become conservative about building on the site.

"You have to create something with a public-private partnership," says Leggett. "If it does not go through, what you see now is what will remain there."

"They're [Live Nation] a business group. They're doing it for business, we're doing it for business," he adds. "They see a vibrancy in the Silver Spring area . . . the fact that there is not a similar venue in Silver Spring suggests there's a good market share."

Where's I.M.P. headed after this? so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

A week after County Councilmembers Marc Elrich and Marilyn Praisner railed against the County's deal with Live Nation to operate a music hall on Colesville Road, the County Executive Leggett's office isn't smarting from any blows handed to them.

"At the Council meeting last week, for all its dramatics, people said 'this is a good deal'," says Patrick Lacefield, Leggett's spokesman.

Leggett emphasized that finding the best deal wasn't as important as keeping up appearances. Word of Live Nation's interest in Silver Spring has been public since last July, and the County Executive reiterated that I.M.P. Productions' counter-offer for the venue came on September 24, six days after the County signed a Letter of Intent with Live Nation. That night, the County Executive held a previous "blogger briefing" with Henry, Jen and I at which no mention of the letter was made. When I pointed out that the agreement was not made public until a press conference on the 26th, Leggett insisted that the deal was "no big secret" to people in the music industry.

"There's a developer, a music person out there saying 'we can get you a better deal," says Leggett, referring to I.M.P, owners of the 9:30 Club in the District. "The only question that has developed is 'could we get a better deal?' The answer is, 'yes, if we want to undermine the County's credibility'," he continues. "It's not worth doing that."

I.M.P. is currently looking at other sites in Montgomery County, says Silver Spring regional director Gary Stith, though he was not clear on where. According to I.M.P. spokeswoman Audrey Schaefer, the company had originally considered locating in Silver Spring as early as 2000.
Read more!

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

leggett's blogger briefing: putting silver spring on the set list

WHAT'S UP THE PIKE: Holy Cross Hospital reaches out to speakers of other languages; McDonald's school fundraisers have Councilman Leventhal in a tizzy.

This is part ONE of a series on County Executive Ike Leggett's meeting with Silver Spring bloggers this week about the Fillmore. Tomorrow, we'll look at how the County came to its decision - and why one block of Colesville Road's sat fallow for almost twenty years.

With the Fillmore a sure thing for Downtown Silver Spring, County Executive Ike Leggett explained what we can expect in the coming years at a meeting late yesterday evening with members of the Silver Spring Blogging Collective. Leggett, who was joined by spokesman Patrick Lacefield and Silver Spring regional director Gary Stith, spoke to Henry from the Silver Spring Scene, Jen from The Penguin and myself at the Silver Spring Regional Services Center at Wayne and Georgia.

Despite calls that Montgomery County has hidden its selection process for an operator for the proposed venue on Colesville Road from the public, Leggett noted that previous County-funded projects were often less visible. "I think we benefit by greater transparency," he says. "In the past, it hasn't been as open . . . [but] we're talking about a community-use facility."

In its twenty-year lease, international concert promoter Live Nation is also required to make several concessions to Montgomery County. When the venue is not booked for an anticipated 70 to 150 events each year, community groups will be allowed to use it. In its marketing, the music hall must refer to Silver Spring as its location, not Washington D.C. It's a major concession for company whose venues have names like "The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater" or "The Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza."

so much more AFTER THE JUMP . . .

"If you're an important act on the West Coast and you're told 'we have a venue in Silver Spring, Maryland,' you'll say 'where'?" says Leggett. "The answer is 'just outside Washington, D.C.'"

An Arts and Entertainment Advisory Committee will be formed to oversee the Fillmore and other venues in Silver Spring. Last summer, Silver Spring, Singular envisioned command performances based on community whims, but the committee will have considerably less power.

Henry argued that the committee would be mainly composed of older residents out of touch with current music. Leggett joked that the committee would demand that Live Nation "go and book Wayne Newton for a week to make the over-50's happy," but emphasized their limited capabilities. "It's an advisory committee," he says. "It doesn't have the authority to mandate anything . . . they want to create and maintain good will [with the community]."

"Live Nation made it clear: nobody's telling us what acts are gonna play," adds Gary Stith.

The Lee Development Group is giving the building and the land under it to Montgomery County in exchange for the rights to develop adjacent property. In addition to the $2 million Live Nation has pledged for renovating the former J.C. Penney building, the County and State of Maryland are each giving $4 million. That money will be taken out in a bond, not from County revenues, says Leggett, meaning the only actual costs incurred are for yearly interest.
Montgomery County will make over a million dollars from the Fillmore each year, compared to less than half a million in its previous failed arrangement with the Alexandria-based Birchmere.
Read more!