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Bongo Java After Hours Features Yellowbirddd

Nashville gets a little taste of East Coast indie DIY folk tomorrow night with the latest installment of Bongo Java After Hours, featuring Yellowbirddd.

Yellowbirddd brings the DIY to Nashville

Yellowbirddd is the stage name of 26-year-old singer/songwriter Liam McCormack. Though he hails from Boston and is now based in Brooklyn, has McCormack spent most of his time of late as a living, breathing embodiment of the DIY spirit as he plays college towns and small venues from coast to coast. He spent the summer touring America before taking a short break, and now he finds himself on the road once again on a 20-date November tour in support of his self-produced and -distributed album, Hard Feelings. McCormack wears his heart on his sleeve on Hard Feelings’ 12 tracks, telling intensely personal tales of love and relationships over a solo acoustic guitar with a voice that recalls Death Cab For Cutie’s Ben Gibbard and Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst.

The setting at Bongo Java After Hours, known as “Nashville’s Most Intimate Venue,” should be a perfect fit for the quiet, personal songs of Yellowbirddd. The all-ages show, which features support from local Nashville singer-songwriters Seth Wood and Stephen Gordon, gets going at 7 p.m. tomorrow night, November 16. Cover is $6.

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E. Thomas Wood’s Old News Is Good News

Anyone who reads the Nashville City Paper or NashvillePost.com with regularity is familiar with the work of E. Thomas Wood, the veteran reporter who’s been alive and kicking in local journalism since the 1980s. These days, in addition to his regular journalism duties and assorted other projects, Wood has taken on a project that brings back words written about Nashville long before he was even born. Old News takes a look back at the stories that Nashville was talking about – and the stories from Nashville that the rest of the country heard – as far back as the 1780s. From tales of Captain Tom Ryman, to the goings-on at legendary radio station WSM, to the origin of East Nashville’s own Lockeland Springs, the site offers those of us who live here today a glimpse into our city’s past that you’ll rarely find anywhere else without the benefit of some serious library time.

Wood took some time out of his busy schedule last week to answer a few questions about his new site. Here’s what he had to say about Old News.

Downtown Nashville has changed a lot since the 1880s

East Nashville Blog: What sources do you draw on to write your posts? And more specifically, how do you get your hands on those sources?

E. Thomas Wood: Directly or indirectly, most of my source material has an online origin.

Much to my wife’s dismay, I have filled half our garage with bound volumes of old Nashville newspapers purchased off eBay since 2003. I have a partial volume from 1884, a full three-month one from 1886 that the Library of Congress deaccessioned, and many from the 1920s and early 1930s. The closest thing I have to a hobby is that I spend all-too-infrequent moments of spare time down there going through the volumes.

Because most are in advanced states of decay, I try to preserve interesting items by clipping them and putting them into protective materials. In no systematic fashion, I have scanned several hundred of those clippings into image files. In working on history-related news items over the years, I have had occasion to process some of the scans into text with OCR software. Much of the fodder for Old News comes from the garage. (more…)

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“From Buffalo With Love” Flood Relief Benefit Show

The floodwaters that wrecked our city earlier this year have long since receded, but their legacy of destruction and displacement is something Nashville will be dealing with for a long time to come. Luckily we’ve received a lot of help from friends all around the country in the intervening months. And there are more friends out there ready to lend a hand, as a group of musicians from here and elsewhere will prove next week with a special flood relief benefit concert.

From Buffalo With Love, a charity show for flood relief here in Nashville, takes place next Monday, November 8, at one of the city’s best live music venues, 12th and Porter. This show is one you won’t want to miss. The lineup features Joseph Wooten, Rick Huckaby, Johnny Neel with Detroit’s Broken Arrow Blues Band, Eyewitness Blues, Bullfrog Review, Seethree, and Buffalo, New York’s own Myron & The ID.

You don't have to live in Nashville to care about flood relief.

Though they may not all live here in Nashville, many of the folks involved in this show have roots in or ties to Tennessee. Tim Tucker of the Broken Arrow Blues Band says, “I’m a Ridge Runner at heart – my dad’s family is from Mount Pleasant, Tennessee.” Chuck Schultz of Malone Entertainment, who organized the show, has lived in Nashville two different times and still has connections here. “Why would someone from Buffalo New York want to host a showcase to benefit flood relief in Nashville, Tennessee? Well, it’s as simple as taking care of your friends,” says Schultz.

Even those who aren’t directly tied to Nashville share the more general connection of living as professional musicians. “When we heard about the flooding in Nashville, and listened to the stories of working musicians who had lost everything, it hit close to home,” says Myron Deputat, frontman for Myron & The ID. “As musicians we are all brothers in arms! Many people don’t realize the daily struggle we go through in order to keep creating, and performing. Most of us have to hold down a ‘regular’ job, or two, and spend what little money we make on equipment, recordings, merchandise, etc. The money made at most gigs doesn’t even begin to cover expenses, yet still we go on.”

“When we heard about the flooding in Nashville, it hit close to home," says Deputat.

“I’ve often asked myself, ‘What person in their right mind would work for below minimum wage?’ Then I pick up my guitar, and play a tune. It all comes back to me – it’s the music,” Deputat explains. “We do it for the music! If we didn’t practice, perform and create, who would? Someone has to keep making music. The world needs it! We need it! We’ve been given a gift as musicians to spread a little love, joy and hope throughout the world, and we have to keep giving. If we can’t be bothered to help one of our own, what would that say about us or the music we make? How could anyone take what we do seriously? By helping our brothers in need, we help everyone keep the music alive!”

“When I saw the photos and video of the epic flooding and the devastation that ensued,  I knew immediately I had to do something for a city I call ‘The home of my soul,’” Schultz writes in the program for From Buffalo With Love. “One of the only ways I know that help healing is in and through music. So I called upon some musicians I knew and some I’ve never met. Knowing that schedules are hard to make a week at a time, let alone 6 months out, was a challenge. But over time everyone was on board and genuinely excited to be part of it. So I put together a very eclectic lineup of musicians which I thought spoke not only to the cause, but also the spirit of Nashville being a true Music City.”

The doors at 12th and Porter open at 7pm next Monday, November 8, and the music starts at 8pm. You can order tickets online for $10 at www.ticketweb.com or www.malone-entertainment.com ahead of time, or you can pay $15 at the door. Proceeds from the show will benefit the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee and MusiCares.

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Grace Potter & The Nocturnals in Nashville

I got an invite to check out Grace Potter and The Nocturnals at Exit/In on Halloween night, and given that my only real plan for the night was to hand out candy to our local trick-or-treaters, I couldn’t say anything but “yes!” That turned out to be the best decision I made last week, as GPN put on quite a show. You can check out my recap of the show over at the Coventry Music blog. Here’s a video of the band in full Nashville drag playing their song “Joey,” courtesy of YouTube user blissfullysardonic:

For those of you who are interested in more Grace Potter material, you’re in luck. VH1 has named the band its “You Oughta Know” artist for the month of November, so get ready to see the video for “Paris (Ooh La La)” about five trillion times before December rolls around. If you prefer live to studio, click on the link below to download a live version of the song from the band’s recent performance in Asheville, NC:

You can also “like” the band’s page on Facebook to get an exclusive version of “Ragged Company.” I know I’ll be looking forward to catching them next time they’re in town.

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Mayor Karl Dean to Dedicate Martha O’Bryan Center Program at Stratford High School Today

Nashville Mayor Karl Dean will help dedicate the Martha O’Bryan Center’’s new OST (Out of School Time) program site at Stratford High School – right down the street from EastNashvilleBlog.com HQ – during a grand opening celebration today from 4pm-6pm.

The Martha O’Bryan Center has moved its support program for high school students into a renovated space at Stratford High through a partnership with Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools and a generous gift from Stratford alumnus Milton Johnson, Chief Financial Officer at HCA Healthcare. Students call the space “The “Top Floor.”” The Top Floor is available immediately after school until 6 p.m., with a late bus available to take students home.

There's more for students to do after school at Stratford these days. (Photo: MNPS)

Services the Top Floor will provide include drop-in homework help; specialized tutoring in math, science and reading; assistance with college search, application and financial aid; ACT prep; job training and job placement; a computer lab; an art gallery; and a recording studio.

More than 5,000 square feet, including four idle classrooms, were transformed because of the collaborative mindset of new Principal Michael Steele and the hard work of volunteers from Project Redesign, HCA and Stratford High School students. The site has been operating on a limited basis since Oct. 1st. Martha O’Bryan Center tutors have been assisting students after school in the core subjects of math, English language arts, science and foreign language (Spanish).

“The new space at Stratford will quadruple the number of students who can receive immediate after-school access to academic services, including science and integrated arts,” said Kent Miller, Martha O’Bryan’’s High School and College Director. “”It is more than an after-school program. It is an academic muse mixing culturally relevant programming with hope, enrichment and opportunities for success.””

At the same time, the Martha O’Bryan Center space, formerly occupied by the high school students, has been dedicated to serving more middle school students.

Martha O’’Bryan Center’’s acclaimed youth program, called THRIVE, blends academic study with active learning outside the classroom. THRIVE students have a 100% on-time graduation rate, low suspension records and leave high school with a life plan for college, the military or a career.

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A Weekend Treat: “Kentucky Pill” by Johnny Flynn

I missed Johnny Flynn at 3rd & Lindsley this past Friday, but the folks at his record label sent a link to this video along and the sheer creative energy on display made all of us at EastNashvilleBlog.com HQ smile. Like my friend Dana Immanuel, who we featured in an earlier installment of A Weekend Treat, Johnny hails from across the pond in London. Enjoy!

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Thank You, East Nashville

Earlier this week, as I fought off a nasty little respiratory bug I’d caught during my housewarming party a few days before, I was checking out the back-end of this little blog and noticed there was a milestone approaching: we were closing in on 30,000 hits over the lifetime of the site. Given that all the attention we’ve gotten here has been through word-of-mouth and search engine referrals, that struck me as a pretty significant number. The next morning a few hits from Google put us over that mark, and I felt like I should take a moment to thank everyone who has helped this blog get to where it is today.

Thanks for your support!

To my writers Lindsey Boise, Mat Lavigne, Ginger Burden, Aaron Coleman, Bobby Shamwell and Rachel Hall Kirk: Thank you for your contributions, large and small. You’ve each helped to add intelligence and verve to this site through your unique voices, and your counsel has been invaluable since I started this venture. I’m grateful for the work and the time you’ve so generously donated.

To our readers: Without you, all of us here at the blog would be screaming into the void. You’re the reason we’re still publishing today. Neither I nor any of my contributors make any money off this blog. We just like where we live, and we want to share our fondness with a world that is increasingly turning its gaze to this little corner of Music City. Seeing positive comments from our readers, not to mention appreciative emails from the independent artists and business owners who have asked us to write about their endeavors, is more than worth the cost of hosting the East Nashville Blog. Those notes of appreciation make up for the handful of Debbie Downers out there who, in fits of pique, have occasionally taken their personal issues out on us in the last year and a half. Knowing that there are people out there who get what we’re doing, people who enjoy hearing about the East side from a local perspective, gives us the drive to keep taking time out from all the other work we do.

Building something out of nothing is never easy. Thankfully, we enjoy the support of a dynamic community. All of you have helped to defy the laws of probability and keep this site going, and I sincerely hope you’ll be able to continue helping us for a long time to come.

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A Weekend Treat: Two Gentlemen of Lebowski

Sometimes there's a man...well, lost my train of thought here.

The Big Lebowski is one of the greatest films of all time – and if you don’t agree, yeah well, that’s just, you know, like, your opinion, man. But those of you whose favorite tale takes place just about the time of our conflict with Sad’m and the Eye-rackies will get a kick out out of Two Gentlemen of Lebowski. It’s a retelling of The Dude‘s story in a more Elizabethan air, with a lyrical dexterity as close to William Shakespeare as Arthur Digby Sellers‘ house is to the In-N-Out Burger. I don’t want to go so far as to say you’ll be entering a world of pain if you don’t check out Two Gentlemen of Lebowski, but you’ll definitely be missing out on the greatest thing since Allan performed his dance quintet at Crane Jackson‘s Fountain Street Theatre.

The book is being released this Tuesday, October 26. You can pick up your copy online here
or at your friendly neighborhood bookstore. For those of you who are into the whole social media thing, you can mark it zero with either Two Gentlemen of Lebowski or its author, Adam Bertocci, on Facebook.

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