Entries from DCist tagged with 'detroit'
December 6, 2007
>> Detroit garage rockers Gore Gore Girls are at DC9 with two local acts: the Highballers and the Droptops. 9 p.m., $10. >> Don't miss our full preview of the Stones Throw concert tonight at Black Cat. 8 p.m., $20. >> Looking to crash one of those well-monied D.C. holiday parties for free food and drinks? Via BrightestYoungThings, a handy list. >> Thievery Corporation's Rob Garza's latest side-project, Dust Galaxy, will be at the musician's......
Continue Reading "About Tonight"December 5, 2007
To celebrate the release of Electric Grace: Still more Fiction by Washington Area Women tonight, editor Richard Peabody and ten of the book’s forty-two contributors will be reading selections from their work at Politics & Prose tonight at 7 p.m. Faye Moskowitz, a memoirist, poet, short story writer and professor, will read from her story “Completo (A Triptych),” from the journal, Story Quarterly. Professor Moskowitz—or just Faye, as she would have it—grew up in Detroit......
Continue Reading "DCist Interview: Faye Moskowitz"December 4, 2007
A new report from the Brookings Institution shows that the D.C. metro area has the most “walkable places” per capita of any American city -- one for every 264,000 people, beating out even New York City for walkability. Visiting Fellow Christopher B. Leinberger says that the Washington region could serve as the model for the direction the country’s other metro areas are heading over the next generation. The Associated Press already picked up on the......
Continue Reading "Why Washington Walks"November 27, 2007
Yesterday, I found it difficult to write about Washington's loss over the weekend to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. It had nothing to do with the play on the field, which amounted to a carbon copy of the previous week's loss. Jason Campbell strove mightily to lead the team past their mistakes, only to be done in by mistakes of his own. A game changing moment came when the offense failed to obtain some badly needed......
Continue Reading "Difficult Days For The Washington Redskins"November 20, 2007
Good morning, Washington. Yesterday afternoon Roll Call had the story of a potential suspect finally being identified in all those strange Senate bathroom fires from the last few months. Capitol Police Officer Karen Emory recently has been suspended in connection with the fires, although it still hasn't been confirmed whether she is definitely a suspect in the case. No charges have been filed, but color us a little disappointed if it turns out a......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Wheels on Fire Edition"November 11, 2007
If you are looking for a musical way to celebrate Veterans Day, the Washington Chorus will perform its annual Tribute and Reflection concert this afternoon (November 11, 3 p.m.), in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall (tickets: $15 to $55). Their program includes Joseph Haydn's martial Mass in Time of War. Although there are not that many classical music concerts in the early part of the week, the schedule for next weekend is about as full......
Continue Reading "Classical Music Agenda"November 5, 2007
The National Symphony Orchestra is about to lose its captain, when Music Director Leonard Slatkin steps down at the end of this season. Slatkin is clearly not ready to retire, although he has hinted that he is all too ready to move past the discomforts of his tenure in Washington. He will split his time among the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic in London, and the Pittsburgh Symphony, as well as teaching at Indiana......
Continue Reading "DCist Goes to the Symphony"October 8, 2007
Jason Campbell couldn't miss, the defensive line looked like a wrecking crew, Carlos Rogers actually intercepted a pass (and returned it for a touchdown!), and Baby Jesus announced his preference for Joe Gibbs over Jon Kitna in a beating of the Detroit Lions so savage that Daniel Snyder had plenty of free time to stop worrying about the state of his football team, and start worrying about how the rides from his terrible theme parks......
Continue Reading "Redskins Run Roughshod Over Lions, 34-3"August 28, 2007
>> The Jets are gonna have their day tonight at Wolf Trap with the first night of a one week stand of the Leonard Bernstein/Steven Sondheim classic West Side Story. The production celebrates the 50th anniversary of the musical. 8 p.m., $18-$55. >> It's a great evening for movies. If the Jim Jarmusch classic we recommended last week isn't quite what you're looking for, then there's also a FREE screening of Butch Cassidy and......
Continue Reading "About Tonight"August 24, 2007
In just a few months, fans will finally get a glimpse of the new $611 million baseball stadium rising in Southeast. No longer will they simply be looking at an artists rendering -- they'll get to see the new concourse, the stands, the suites and the field for themselves. And today the Post's Marc Fisher poses an interesting question -- beyond the bricks and mortar, what should the team's owners offer inside the stadium? After......
Continue Reading "What Does the Stadium Need?"August 23, 2007
Coming in on the closing days for the Nats at RFK, everyone seems to be bracing for what the new stadium in Southeast and the surrounding area will have to offer. As the Post detailed earlier this week, huge chunks of land in Southeast and Southwest are slated for development, creating the potential of a new and vibrant Anacostia River waterfront in the coming years -- much of it centered around the $611 million stadium.......
Continue Reading "Will the Stadium Succeed? Maybe, Maybe Not"August 21, 2007
Back when Napster was all the rage, big name artists were up in arms because their material was being made available for free to whoever wanted it wherever a computer with Internet access existed. On the other hand, if a musician wanted to get mass distribution on the cheap, Napster and similar programs were a godsend. Detroit crooner Dwele’s career is a testament to that. Recorded mostly in his bedroom, Dwele’s Rize demo was highly......
Continue Reading "Concert Preview: Dwele @ The Birchmere"July 24, 2007
No matter how you feel about a city known for its hippie culture or holier-than-thou aging baby boomers, you sort of have to love Takoma Park, Md. Commonly referred to as "The People's Republic of Takoma Park" or "The Berkeley of the East", the commuter suburb right on the border of the District is not only charmingly beautiful, but the people who live there wear their political proclivities on their collective sleeves so seriously they......
Continue Reading "Takoma Park Votes to Impeach President Bush"June 26, 2007
You've heard it all a million times before — nobody dances at shows here! People don't get into the music! There's just no soul in D.C.'s music scene! The Hall Monitors heard your cry and happily came to answer the call with their brand of throwback garage rock & soul reminiscent of the guitar and Motown greats that made most of us (well, OK, me at least) learn to love music in the first place.......
Continue Reading "Three Stars: The Hall Monitors"May 7, 2007
The talk about the Nationals being the worst team in major league history seems to have been slightly exaggerated. That being said, they've been pretty awful in losing 5 in a row, including being swept by the Cubs this weekend. The Nats are 9-22, 10.5 games out of first place in the National League East and 5.5 behind the fourth place Phillies. And they face the surprising Brewers, who have the best record in baseball,......
Continue Reading "Nats Update: First In War, First In Peace..."April 16, 2007
I'm sure anyone that watched Washington's 101-68 drubbing at the hand of the Chicago Bulls yesterday will agree that the less said, the better. What you need to know in a nutshell: Antonio Daniels sat out the game with a bad back, giving Donnell Taylor his second career start. Chicago took a 12-0 lead in the first four minutes, which was about as close as the Wizards got for the rest of the game.......
Continue Reading "Painful"April 13, 2007
If Thursday's show at the Red and the Black was any indication, this year's 6 Points Music Festival looks to be a good one. The local fest, in its fourth year but only its second with a wider reach, aims to someday be a D.C. version of South by Southwest and helped its cause by bringing a diverse indie bill to H Street NE. The show began with Brooklyn's The Lisps, followed by Chicago's Scotland......
Continue Reading "6 Points Music Festival Kicks Off"April 12, 2007
A couple days ago we mentioned Ford CEO Alan Mulally's tale of his harrowing visit with President Bush. He told a room full of journalists in New York that he had to think fast when Bush tried to insert a live power cord into a hybrid car's hydrogen tank, saying he quickly pushed Bush out of the way to prevent disaster. The story exploded (much like sparked hydrogen) on the Internet after The Detroit Free......
Continue Reading "CEO Sorry for White House Joke"April 9, 2007
MONDAY >> Anthony Pirog's (one of our recent Three Stars artists) many music outlets are coming together tonight at Iota. Head to Arlington's cozy club to hear rock music from The Bang. With Le Loup. $10, 8:30 p.m. >> Mark Mallman, Twin Cities veteran and spastic-rock-showman-turned-synth-pop-afficianado, plays DC9 with fellow Minneapolis rockers the Honeydogs in one of the week's best bargains. 8 bucks gets you a whole lot of rock and probably some ringing eardrums......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"February 26, 2007
MONDAY >> The week kicks off with a smorgasbord of indie fare at Warehouse. New York singer-songwriter Peter Silberman, aka The Antlers, emotes Jeff Buckley-style, while Richmond garage rockers A Roman Holiday dabble in death metal, with a visit from their labelmates, Illinois screamo duo The Midwestern. $10, 9:30 p.m. >> This is one of their last gigs before they join TV on the Radio for a nationwide tour, so come catch San Francisco hip......
Continue Reading "Weekly Music Agenda"February 16, 2007
FRIDAY: >>Do you like Hall and Oates and Haddaway? Who doesn't? The Black Cat is hosting Crap, a dance night of bad music on purpose. We advise loosening your Macarena muscles and preparing your ears for "singers" like Don Johnson, Eddie Murphy, and Bruce Willis. 10 pm, free. SATURDAY: >>There are more art openings than we can shake a sculpture at today, so check out our Arts Agenda for a rundown. >>Anything called "Underwear Party"......
Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks"January 31, 2007
The Wizards 104-99 win over the Detroit Pistons last night at the Verizon Center evened the season series to 2-2, solidified D.C.'s grip on the top spot in the Eastern Conference, and has rendered it extremely probable that Eddie Jordan will coach the East's All-Star Team in Vegas. Good news all around then, except for the small matter of Antawn Jamison re-injuring the left knee he tweaked playing Boston on January 20th. Jamison suffered......
Continue Reading "Jamison to Undergo MRI on Knee"January 22, 2007
After last Friday's win in Orlando and upcoming games this week against the Phoenix Suns and Detroit Pistons, Saturday night's game at the Verizon Center against the banged up Boston Celtics had all the characteristics of a trap game. The Celtics were without Paul Pierce, Wally Szczerbiak and Tony Allen, among others, and losers of seven of their last eight games. Should be easy pickings, right? Well, almost. The Wiz built up a big......
Continue Reading "Wizards Lose Late Lead, Prevail In OT"December 18, 2006
Despite a percieved rockist inclination, the generally philosophy of DCist Music is put best by Natasha Lyonne’s grammatically challenged disco queen in Detroit Rock City: “Good tunes is good tunes.” In that spirit this writer tests the waters of D.C.’s electronic music with Trifecta and their newest release: Laugh Now but One Day We’ll Be in Charge. The D.C. based trio creates jazz-tinged electronica somewhere between Soulive and Air . It's music you’d expect to......
Continue Reading "Album Review: Laugh Now but One Day we'll Be in Charge"November 20, 2006
After a three game losing streak, who would have thought a match up with the Cleveland Cavaliers, owners of the second best record in the NBA going into Saturday night, would be just what the doctor ordered for the Washington Wizards? Both teams were coming off games on Friday; the Wiz lost at Detroit and the Cavs pounded the hapless Timberwolves at home. In this topsy turvy start to the NBA season, the Cavs......
Continue Reading "Wizards and Agent Zero Exact Revenge On Cleveland"October 6, 2006
DCist is, collectively, having one of those Fridays. You know, one of those Fridays when your boss dumps a bunch of work on your desk and wants it done before you leave for the weekend (the sweet, sweet weekend) and your Internet keeps crapping out so you can't even check your email. The weekend is quickly approaching and we haven't yet had time to scour the best of the city's offerings. But, we think......
Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks, Suggestions Welcome"September 19, 2006
Written by DCist contributor Lindsay Gibson. As noted by Wonkette, the FBI released it's annual crime survey Monday and things for the District are looking grim. Or maybe not. This year's report is a complicated read and D.C. is practically alone in having clear statistics for our city. We had 195 murders in 2005, which comes to 35.4 per 100,000 citizens. That's actually down from 198 in 2004, but still higher per capita than all......
Continue Reading "FBI Report: D.C. Most Dangerous 'State'"June 30, 2006
We knew that speeding tickets were unusually common in the District, we knew that the city was making some decent bank off of the violations, and we even suspected racism, or at least wardism, in the placement of automated speed cameras. But just in case you leadfeet had begun to forget the danger of motoring quickly through D.C., we now have the National Motorists Association to remind us. From their website:Nothing can ruin a vacation......
Continue Reading "Entrapment"June 19, 2006
Folks that live in the Washington area spend a lot of time explaining to friends and visitors from other parts of the country that there's actually a lot more to the city than the Mall and the handful of Hill dwellers and journos that make up political Washington. We make our case, surprising our guests with trips to actual District neighborhoods and doing things in the city that don't involve backscratching or logrolling, or pork-barrelling......
Continue Reading "D.C. United Against Inane Sports Articles"June 14, 2006
Webb Wins Virginia Primary: Jim Webb, a war hero who only recently became a Democrat, handily won Virginia's Democratic primary yesterday, reports the Post. Webb, who campaigned on the anger around the war in Iraq, defeated well-funded opponent Harris Miller, making him the designated competitor to Senator George Allen in November's election. Council Friends Spared Tickets: As George Orwell once wrote, "All animals are equal. But some animals are more equal than others." That......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Webb Wins Edition"
