Music, The Features, We Love Music

We Love Music: Bloc Party @ 9:30 Club — 9/17/12

When Bloc Party announced to back-to-back dates at the 9:30 Club over the summer, it seemed a bit ambitious. The London quartet had not put out an album in four years after a prolific three-album period. Bloc Party didn’t do the usual trick of announcing one night, waiting for it to sell out, and then announcing a second night. They announced both nights Sunday and Monday together.

The first night sold out and then weeks before the performance so did the second night. The closer the dates came, the more buzz grew from people I know. My oldest friend Doug, a diehard Bloc Party fan, was leading the buzz in my ears. He was confident that lead singer Kele Okereke and crew were going to hit the musical ball out of the 9:30 park — and this despite his lukewarm reaction to the band’s fourth album, Four, which dropped a month before they appeared in Washington to promote it.

But the genius of Bloc Party is that they know what works and when it works. Okereke for all of his vocal energy radiates a quiet calm when he’s not jumping around to his own post-punk compositions. The band’s smart use of their fourth album songs and a reliance on their most popular tunes quickly allayed any fears I had that these guys may have lost their spark. It clearly has remained there all along.

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Entertainment, Music, Night Life, The Features, We Love Music

The Winning Ticket: Win before you can buy: The Killers w/Tegan & Sara @ Patriot Center, 12/18

We Love DC is giving away a pair of tickets today to see The Killers at the Patriot Center before you can buy them! The Killers will be playing along with openers Tegan & Sara at George Mason’s Patriot Center on Tuesday, December 18th. Tickets go on sale this Friday, September 21st at 10am through ticketmaster. You can also purchase tickets in person at the box office of the Patriot Center or the 9:30 club.

For your chance to win these tickets simply leave a comment on this post using a valid email address until 4pm today. One entry per email address, please.

For the rules of this giveaway…

Comments will be closed at 4pm and a winner will be randomly selected. The winner will be notified by email. The winner must respond to our email in 24 hours or they will forfeit their tickets and we will pick another winner.

Tickets will be available to the winner at the will-call window at the Patriot Center on the night of the concert. The tickets must be claimed with a valid ID. The winner must be old enough to attend the specific concert or must have a parent’s permission to enter if he/she is under 18 years old.

Comment away!

The Daily Feed

GWU to host Stewart/O’Reilly Debate

O'Reilly vs Stewart 2012

Bill O’Reilly and Jon Stewart are going to duke it out over lecterns this October, and GWU’s Lisner Auditorium is playing host to this battle for the ages. Each have their own cable persona, Stewart famously liberal, O’Reilly famously not.  

Tickets go on sale today in about 15 minutes, but if you’re shut out of the auditorium, you can still stream the event live as it happens on October 6th, for $4.95. If I weren’t already committed to work at Virgin Free Fest that day, this is how I’d be spending my evening. This looks phenomenal.

Entertainment, Music, Night Life, The Features, We Love Music

The Winning Ticket: The Spring Standards at Red Palace, 9/20

photo courtesy of The Spring Standards

Today We Love DC is giving away a pair of tickets to see The Spring Standards at Red Palace, this Thursday, September 20th! Tickets are on sale now through the Red Palace website or Ticket Alternative, and tickets can be purchased at the door. Their sound is sometimes folk, sometimes indie-pop, Americana leaning, with a definite country flair at times. This year, they released a double EP titled yellow//gold. Check out these videos for a taste of their range of sound, from the indie-pop-rock “Here We Go“, the country/bluegrass flair of “The Hush” , and folk loveliness of “Bells & Whistles”.

For your chance to win these tickets simply leave a comment on this post using a valid email address until 4pm today. One entry per email address, please.

For the rules of this giveaway…

Comments will be closed at 4pm and a winner will be randomly selected. The winner will be notified by email. The winner must respond to our email in 24 hours or they will forfeit their tickets and we will pick another winner.

The winner will be on the guest list (plus one) at Red Palace the night of the concert. The tickets must be claimed with a valid ID. The winner must be old enough to attend the specific concert or must be accompanied by a parent or guardian if he/she is under 18 years old.

 

The Spring Standards

Thursday, September 20th

Red Palace

Doors 7:30/show @ 8pm/$10/18+

Music, The Features, We Love Music

We Love Music: Dragonette @ The Black Cat — 9/15/12

Dragonette are well on their way to finding a much deserved wider audience.

The band is about to put out its third record on Sept. 25 on the heels of a crossover dance hit, “Hello,” from their collaborations with house DJ Martin Solveig. The combination of Solveig and Dragonette has been nothing less than inspired, as the French producer has been able to write very catchy songs and sultry Martina Sorbara has been able to sing them with a now trademark sweet sophistication.

Dragonette has taken their lessons learned from collaborations with Solveig and others and applied them to their third album, Bodyparts, which really is a terrific dance record. They debuted those songs to Washington at the Black Cat Saturday with a sold-out audience that embraced the material new and old and left buoyantly as happy and giddy as the sound of the album.

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Monday Watercooler

Monday’s Watercooler — Sept 17

We’re back, it’s Monday, and you had an awesome weekend. There’s so much that happened this weekend! Here’s a quick précis so that you don’t feel lost if you didn’t follow every strand of the weekend.

Oh My God, Baby Panda! Just when we were all ready for disappointment, Mei Xiang gave birth to a little bundle of giant panda last night at around 10:46pm. There’s no name for the little girl or guy yet, but many are hoping that this one is Butterstick II: Electric Cutebaloo, or maybe just Parkay Tub or somesuch. I’m sure the Internet will have a proper name for the cub before long, and the Zoo will find an appropriate Chinese name for the cub, too, I just hope it doesn’t match another Chinese restaurant.

Your Takeaway: The zoo is going to be just packed when that cub is released to the panda enclosure. Plus, there’s a webcam (Windows Media required, because everyone has that, amirite?) Don’t say: Aw man, another welfare panda?!

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The Daily Feed

Mei Xiang’s a mommy again!

Congratulations to Mei Xiang and all the excited Panda-keepers at the National Zoo, late last night the Zoo celebrated the birth of a new giant panda cub at 10:46pm. The city has been on Panda Watch for a while now, though panda pregnancy is a more of a crapshoot than science.  The news, as it stands, from the Zoo is as follows:

As far as we can tell, the cub was born at about 10:46 p.m. on September 16. According to chief veterinarian Suzan Murray:

“Mei Xiang is behaving exactly the same way she did when Tai Shan was born. She is cradling her cub closely , and she looks so tired, but every time she tries to lay down, the cub squawks and she sits right up and cradles the cub more closely. She is the poster child for a perfect panda mom.”

We believe there is only one cub. If the cub is to have a twin, we should know by sunrise.

For now, the only way animal care staff will monitor the cub is using the web cams. Our goal is for Mei Xiang to raise this cub naturally. With Tai Shan, it wasn’t until he was about two weeks old that Mei walked away from him briefly and our veterinary team was able to give him a brief well-cub exam.

Funny names for the little guy or girl are totally welcome in the comments. I was leaning toward Parkay Tub.

Sports Fix

Redskins lose to Rams 31-28

Most of the talk from yesterday’s 31-28 lose to the Rams will focus on the Josh Morgan penalty that cost the Redskins a chance to tie the game with a late field goal, but more of the talk should be on the coaching staff. Mike Shanahan has not done a good job since he has become coach of the Redskins. The roster has been nothing special, but yesterday is a great example of how coaching can lose games.

After the Josh Morgan penalty that pushed the Redskins out of field goal range the Redskins tried a field goal. At that point in time there were just under 2:00 minutes left and RGIII had led the Redskins into field goal range before the penalty to begin with. The question is why try a play with a close to 0% chance of working instead of going for it on fourth and sixteen. With an offensive weapon like RGIII that is a higher percentage play than trying for a 62 yard field goal.

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Sports Fix

Week 2: Redskins at Rams Preview

Feature: Photo courtesy of ChrisYunker
Edward Jones Dome
courtesy of ChrisYunker

Last season the Redskins played the Rams in St. Louis in week four, and the Redskins won to move to 3-1 on the season. If you remember that game at all the Redskins won because their defense was about to sack Sam Bradford seven times and limit Stephen Jackson to 45 yards rushing. In week one this season the Rams played the Lions and Sam Bradford ended up being sacked three times. The Rams were not a good team last season, and aren’t likely to be that much better this season. It is in many ways puzzling that after beating a Saints team that didn’t lose a home game all last season at home that many are still picking the Redskins to lose to a Rams team that only won two games total.

With the Redskins front seven matched up against the Rams offensive line this game should go much the same way as last season’s did defensively. Orakpo, Kerrigan, Bowen, and Carriker might as well go ahead and set up residence in the Rams backfield. The Rams should struggle to get going offensively. Their only hope is for Stephen Jackson to have a good game in order to keep the Redskins defense off balance enough to give Bradford time to pick apart the Redskins weak secondary, but if the Redskins were able to handle Drew Brees and the Saints offense then their is no chance they should struggle against the Rams.

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We Love Weekends

We Love Weekends Sep 14-16

Carl: While Don, Tiff, and the rest of the We Love DC nerds are getting more and more pale, clicking the reload button on the Apple Store website, this weekend I will be getting ready to launch my new book (already available on Kindle). So yeah, I will be getting more pale too. On Saturday I have a funeral to go to as well, and on Sunday I will be slipping into a corset or tights or something before going to the Renaissance Festival with Beautiful Fiancee. I also plan to get back to homebrewing after a hiatus, which reminds me – what beer is good for a spring wedding? I see one of those in my future. Let a brother know.

Rebecca: Friday I’ll be chillin like a villain in Glover Park checking out the newly opened Slate and Mayfair & Pine. Saturday morning WAWSL soccer kicks off early after which I’ll be heading over to the H Street Festival to catch some culture, urban fun, awesome food and spend the day outside. Saturday night I’ll likely stick to H Street and hit up the Star and Shamrock, Sticky Rice and The Rock and Roll Hotel. Filling out my weekend, Sunday will be bottomless mimosas at Scion in Dupont.

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Entertainment, Music, The Features, We Love Music

The Winning Ticket: Miike Snow @ 930 Club

photo courtesy of Miike Snow

Today We Love DC is giving away a pair of tickets to see Swedish indie-pop band Miike Snow at 930 Club, for the late show on Wednesday, October 24th! Tickets are on sale now through the 930 Club website, Ticketfly, or at the 930 Club box office.

For your chance to win these tickets simply leave a comment on this post using a valid email address until 4pm today. One entry per email address, please.

For the rules of this giveaway…

Comments will be closed at 4pm and a winner will be randomly selected. The winner will be notified by email. The winner must respond to our email in 24 hours or they will forfeit their tickets and we will pick another winner.

Tickets will be available to the winner at the will-call window of the 930 Club on the night of the concert. The tickets must be claimed with a valid ID. The winner must be old enough to attend the specific concert or must have a parent’s permission to enter if he/she is under 18 years old.

Comment away!

Music, The Features, We Love Music

We Love Music: Ladyhawke @ Rock and Roll Hotel — 9/10/12

Photo courtesy of stusev
Ladyhawke @ Club Capitol (14/11/2009)
courtesy of stusev

The most incongruous thing about Pip Brown, better known as Ladyhawke, is her look — the grunge aesthetics of flannel and t-shirts all the way — despite her sound — a catalog comprised of very accessible and danceable new wave rock gems.

The rest of it all comes together rather well! Sonically, Ladyhawke dwells in that space in the late 1970s when female rock musicians began to be backed by an increasing amount of technology, notably synthesizers. With many of those women, like Pat Benatar, the electronic edge remained just that — an edge. With others, like Kim Wilde, the synthesizer permeated the songs, tripping the wire that fuses guitar to keyboard and thus producing new wave.

Ladyhawke, as her adopted name from the 1985 movie suggests, is very much aware of how to produce that sound but she does it so easily and so naturally you are left with the impression that the music just happens that way. How could it sound any differently?

Well, with selections like her most popular song, “Paris Is Burning,” which she played to enthusiastic, thumping cheers toward the end of Monday night’s show, it could not possibly sound any better. Ladyhawke took the stage roughly half an hour late (par for the course at the Rock and Roll Hotel) and the audience instantly swelled from about 70 polite bystanders for her opening acts to nearly 200 enthusiastic dancers.

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Downtown, History, Interviews, People, Scribblings, Special Events, The Features

AZORIAN and the CIA Visit the Spy Museum

Hughes Glomar Explorer; photo courtesy Dave Sharp

In February 12, 2010, the CIA declassified substantial information surrounding one of its more secret Cold War projects, Project AZORIAN. The code name referred to the Agency’s ambitious plan to raise a sunken Soviet submarine from the floor of the Pacific Ocean in order to retrieve its secrets.

This Thursday at 10:15 am, the International Spy Museum, in cooperation with the Smithsonian Resident Associate Program, is hosting a special discussion on Project AZORIAN and the Hughes Glomar Explorer. The guest speaker is David Sharp, a former CIA employee who was part of the critical success of the Explorer’s mission.

The story of Project AZORIAN began on March 1, 1968, when a Soviet Golf-II submarine, the K-129 sailed from the naval base at Petropavlovsk on the Kamchatka Peninsula to take up its peacetime patrol station northeast of Hawaii. Something went terribly wrong in mid-March 1968 as the submarine suffered a catastrophic accident and sank 1,560 miles northwest of Hawaii with the loss of its entire crew. Interestingly, the CIA history is silent on the cause of the accident, mentioning neither how the agency came to learn of the sub’s demise nor the exact location of its resting place 16,500 feet below the surface of Pacific. Continue reading

Entertainment, Music

The Winning Ticket: Win before you can buy Green Day tix!

photo courtesy of Green Day

We Love DC is giving away a pair of tickets today to see Green Day at the Patriot Center before you can buy them! Green Day will be playing George Mason’s Patriot Center on Monday, January 21st. Tickets go on sale this Saturday, September 15th at 10am here. You can also purchase tickets in person at the box office of the Patriot Center or the 9:30 club.

For your chance to win these tickets simply leave a comment on this post using a valid email address until 4pm today. One entry per email address, please.

For the rules of this giveaway…

Comments will be closed at 4pm and a winner will be randomly selected. The winner will be notified by email. The winner must respond to our email in 24 hours or they will forfeit their tickets and we will pick another winner.

Tickets will be available to the winner at the will-call window at the Patriot Center on the night of the concert. The tickets must be claimed with a valid ID. The winner must be old enough to attend the specific concert or must have a parent’s permission to enter if he/she is under 18 years old.

Comment away!

Life in the Capital, Real World DC, Special Events, The District, Thrifty District

Planning a DC Wedding: Venues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While planning your big day can often seem daunting, First Class Functions will provide you with professional advice to help you know what is needed to make your special day everything you imagined.

Photo courtesy of Karon

 

Random Find
courtesy of Karon
The Social Chair returns to tell us all about finding a DC venue for a DC wedding.

After narrowing down the date for our wedding, Fedward and I began the long process of finding the perfect location. Alas, not enough of you voted for us to win a wedding, so our dream venue of the National Building Museum was quickly out of the running. What could be more DC than one of the locations of the Inaugural Balls?

There are a ton of resources for finding a venue in DC. Our best resource? Friends. DC is filled with event venues and wedding ballrooms. Ask around. Many businesses rent their spaces for private events. We joined forces with another recently engaged couple and shared Google docs with places we’d scouted after choosing our ring from the tungsten wedding rings for men collection.
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Special Events, The Features, We Love Arts

September 2012 at National Geographic Live

Photo courtesy of Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie
Dabney #1
courtesy of Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie

It’s Fall and that means another round of terrific programming at the National Geographic Museum. Their NatGeo Live programs are a must-attend for everyone in DC; every season, there is a wide range of programs, film festivals, celebrations, and other events to fit everyone’s taste.

Once again, the great folks at National Geographic are presenting WeLoveDC readers with an opportunity to win a pair of tickets to a listed event. Simply enter in the comments field what two events excite you most that you’d love to see, make sure you use a valid email, and list your first name so we can easily contact you. Readers have until noon Thursday, September 13 to place an entry (one per person, please!) and that afternoon we’ll randomly select two winners of a pair of tickets each. (Note that not all programs are eligible for tickets.)

The programs listed range from Friday, 9/14 through Friday, 10/5.

1001 INVENTIONS: THE ENDURING LEGACY OF MUSLIM CIVILIZATION ($20 event+exhibit)
Friday, 9/14
7:30 pm

What do coffee beans, torpedoes, arches, and observatories all have in common? Where did da Vinci and Fibonacci get their ideas about flight and numbers? The Nat Geo Museum exhibition “1001 Inventions,” and companion book edited by historian Professor Salim T.S. Al-Hassani, overflows with glorious revelations from the Muslim Civilization. During Europe’s Dark Ages, this society flourished with far-reaching scientific and cultural discoveries.

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Featured Photo

Featured Photo Sep 11, 2012

Kimberly Faye caught this image on 14th street, part of this year’s 9/11 remembrances. I have nothing profound to say about this day, but this image well captures where it lives in my mind at this point. A sad point in time not quite yet distant but no longer freshly raw.

Update: Tom and I independently picked the same photo about three minutes apart. Great minds, I guess.

The Features

A Difficult Anniversary

I was still groggy eleven years ago when I heard the planes had struck the towers in New York and the Pentagon in Washington. I was standing in line to check my bags at LAX, flying home from my first business trip. The days that followed were a blur, but not the moments that immediately followed.

The panicky first few hours were the worst. In a world before social media and twitter, getting decent information proved surprisingly difficult. Phone lines were jammed, and the only rumors that I was seeing or hearing weren’t good, but they weren’t definitive either. My cellphone – a company issued Nextel that belonged on a construction site – was useless.

My thoughts were back with my cousins, coworkers and friends in DC the entire time, praying for their safety, and wanting to be there to help in whatever way I could. In many ways, 9/11 is what told me that DC was my home. My parents lived just hours north in the Central Valley, but where I wanted to be was home in DC. It took me a week to get back, a journey of trains and automobiles with strangers, but all I wanted to see was the flag flying over the Capitol.

This is a difficult anniversary for many who live here, and I urge our readers to respect those difficult memories today. Our thoughts are with all of those who lost loved ones that day.

Sports Fix

Redskins defeat Saints 40-32

Photo courtesy of Keith Allison
Robert Griffin III
courtesy of Keith Allison

Last season if the Redskins defense allowed 32 points they would have lost. Looking back at seasons before that and if the Redskins defense didn’t shutdown the opponents offense they lost. The most points scored by the Redskins in 2011 were the 28 they scored against the Giants in their first game of the season. This is a different year and a different team. Robert Griffin III showed exactly why he is trusted above the veteran presence of Rex Grossman and why his talent isn’t the most impressive thing about him.

Early on in the first quarter there was a muffed exchange between Robert Griffin and Alfred Morris. RGIII didn’t panic or try and do too much. He simply picked up the ball, looked down field, and when he found no one he protected himself as much as possible and took the tackle. It goes down as a fumble and a rush for no gain in the score book, but keeping possession of the football is something that the Redskins struggled with last season. Robert Griffin was able to hold onto the ball and while the Redskins gained nothing on the play they lost nothing either. In total the Redskins turned the ball over zero times and forced the Saints to turn it over three times.

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