[Last week my
sons and I returned to my hometown of Charlottesville, pretty much exactly a
year after the white
supremacist/neo-nazi rallies there last August (which took place on the day
we arrived in town last summer, because apparently that’s just life as an AmericanStudier
these days). So this week I wanted to AmericanStudy a few contexts for this exemplary
American city’s unfolding histories, leading up to a special weekend post
reflecting on where we are in August 2018.]
On two different
ways to AmericanStudy a local and global legend.
Before he was the
leader of the most successful North American touring band of the 1990s, Dave Matthews was a Charlottesville story through and
through. Having moved to town in 1986, at the age of 19, to join his mother, Matthews spent the next five years meeting and performing with local musicians and artists,
including his first public performances, first paid performance, and even his
first band, the speed metal group Devastator. In 1991 he formed the Dave Matthews
Band with a group of fellow local musicians, and
they performed publicly for the first time on March 14th at Trax, probably Charlottesville’s most prominent club
and venue. It took another two years for the band to release its first album, Remember Two Things (1993)—but the rest, again, is history, and some of the
most prominent musical history of the subsequent two decades.
One interesting
way to AmericanStudy Matthews and his Band, then, is to consider the complex
relationships between place and art. There seems to be no question that
Matthews is the artistic and creative leader of the group, and by the time he
moved to Cville his identity had been forged from a variety of places and
influences, including his native South Africa, upstate New York, and even
England. So did Charlottesville simply offer Matthews opportunities to hone and
then share his work and talents, and would any other blossoming music scene
have done the same? If we tell the story that way, we seem to be leaving out
not only the many local artists who influenced Matthews
over his first five years in town, but also and most importantly the group of musicians—many native Charlottesvillians, and all more fully local than Matthews—with whom
he formed the Band. So perhaps it’s most accurate to say that Matthews’ story
reflects what happens when an individual talent finds himself in a community
full of talent, when one story intersects with a place full of them, and the
art that follows from those encounters and intersections.
On a broader
level, Matthews’ Cville story can help us recognize one of the most striking
ways in which the city has evolved from the 1970s (when my parents moved there)
to its 21st century identity: diversification, and more exactly
globalization. As I noted
in this article, race and race relations had been a part of Charlottesville
for centuries, but mostly in a binary black-white context; the city was
provincial enough, in the 1970s, that my Mom was stopped on the street and
asked if she was a gypsy (she had long black hair, and slightly darker than
pale skin). But over the next few decades, and thanks to a variety of
factors—the increasing diversification of the university at both the student
and faculty levels, general trends in late 20th century immigration and migration from Latin America and Asia and so on, a global refugee program housed in neighboring Albemarle County—the city and region became a truly
and strikingly multi-national place. One in which, that is, a kid from South
Africa forming a mixed-race band and playing their first gig in support of the Middle East Children’s Alliance isn’t an anomaly so much as an illustration.
Next Cville contexts
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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