![]() To celebrate the two, the museum is hosting a multi-day festival, dubbed “+234 Connect” after Nigeria’s international country code. The portraits on display, taken in the 1950s and ’60s, complement the lavish images of film stars and producers in the museum’s ongoing “ Iké Udé: Nollywood Portraits” exhibition. Beers priced individually.Ģ34+ Connect Community Day at the National Museum of African Art: The National Museum of African Art’s new exhibit, “ Before Nollywood: The Ideal Photo Studio,” honors Solomon Osagie Alonge, who operated the first commercial photography studio in Benin City. Both drafts and bottle pours are available in four-ounce tasters. ![]() ![]() Speaking of beer, 10 of Wheatland Spring’s will be available, including the new Ursprung festbier and Fieldborn, a mixed-fermentation ale made with yeast from the farm. They’re participating in a discussion panel with Sebastian Wolfrum of Epiphany Craft Malt to discuss the difference that local ingredients and small producers make, and how that’s reflected in the beer. Thankfully, the Brandings are bringing the farm to ChurchKey for one night. residents, it’s that the farm brewery is located in Waterford, Va., and it’s not always easy to convince a designated driver to join you for a trip that can be an hour each way. Owners John and Bonnie Branding have a dedication to farm-grown ingredients, their own well water, and local malt and grain suppliers, which combine to give their beers a delicious regional terroir. Wheatland Spring Estate Brewing Discussion Panel at ChurchKey: Wheatland Spring is one of the finest breweries to open in the D.C. Their sophomore album, “Mystic Sisters,” is set to land on Friday, essentially picking up their urgency where they left it, setting cloudy melodies to ornate rhythms, prioritizing mood over message. Then 13 years zipped past, and after reconvening in 2016 to play a friend’s birthday party, the foursome decided to keep at it. Those songs eventually formed the band’s stormy self-titled 2002 debut, an album that helped popularize the sound of “screamo” after the band fell apart in 2003. Ask Kane to flash back to City of Caterpillar’s actual beginnings back in 2000, though, and he remembers songwriting cram sessions with his bandmates - guitarist-vocalist Brandon Evans, bassist-vocalist Kevin Longendyke, drummer Ryan Parrish - writing detonative music under the influence of Born Against and Godspeed You! Black Emperor in the cramped bedroom of a Richmond rowhouse. Their most chaotic moments crumple it into a ball. Their most meticulous songs fold it like origami. Maybe that’s because the resurgent Virginia quartet - whose sound falls somewhere between hardcore and post-rock, and whose reputation has grown into something between “cult” and “legendary” - have always been able to make time fly. City of Caterpillar at the Black Cat: Has it really been 20 years between City of Caterpillar albums? Doesn’t feel like it.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |