Queen City Nerve - September 7, 2022

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VOLUME 4, ISSUE 21; SEPTEMBER 7 - SEPTEMBER 20, 2022; WWW.QCNERVE.COM FALL 2022 NEWS: One immigrant’s 20-year timeline to citizenshippg.4FOOD: VelTree’s new beginningsBallantyneinpg.16

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AD SALES EXECUTIVE RENN WILSON rwilson@qcnerve.com TABLE OF CONTENTS COVER DESIGN BY: JUSTIN LAFRANCOIS NEWS & OPINION 4 A Welcoming City in Action by Liz Rothaus Bertrand One Charlotte immigrant’s story ARTS & CULTURE 6 Fall Arts Guide 2022 by Dezanii Lewis It’s going to be a chill time 10 Lifeline: Ten Cool Things To Do in Two Weeks MUSIC 12 Without a Doubt by Pat Moran Reunion concert celebrates Doubting Thomas’ musical legacy in Charlotte 14 Soundwave FOOD & DRINK 16 A New Start by Jasiatic Anderson VelTree owners open new Ballantyne location, plan new events LIFESTYLE 18 Puzzles 20 The Seeker by Katie Grant 21 Horoscope 22 Savage LoveThanks to our contributors: Grant Baldwin, Katie Grant, Jasiatic Anderson, Liz Rothaus Bertrand, Dezanii Lewis, Rayne Antrim, Mica Gadhia, Alex Cason, Mary Massie, Scott Huler, and Dan Savage.

PUBLISHER JUSTIN LAFRANCOIS jlafrancois@qcnerve.com EDITOR IN CHIEF RYAN PITKIN rpitkin@qcnerve.com

STAFF WRITER PAT

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DIGITAL EDITOR KARIE SIMMONS ksimmons@qcnerve.com

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If you’ve ever moved to a new place, you know the experience can come with challenges: finding a place to live, landing a new job, setting up a new bank account, etc. But for many immigrants, the journey is even more complicated and the stakes can be much higher.

Sept. 9-18 is known nationally as “Welcoming Week,” a moment to celebrate diversity and encourage communities to become more inclusive places for people of all backgrounds, including immigrants.

NEWS & OPINION FEATURE

One Charlotte immigrant’s story

These are people who uproot their lives, often out of necessity, only to plunge into the unknown — a new country that may include significant cultural differences, language barriers, and a complex labyrinth of immigration policies and laws.

A widow who had never worked outside the home before, Warkie found a job as a nutrition aid at University Place Nursing and Rehabilitation Services in the University City area. She began in 2001 and has worked there for the last 21 years.

“It’s very hot in the kitchen in the summer … and she stays over a lot [into second shift] when we need her to,” said Anderson. “It’s just challenging to find somebody who wants to get up at 5 o’clock in the morning to come in to have breakfast ready at 7 … I would just like to have about 20 more of her.”

Warkie has built a life for herself here and remained a dedicated employee all these years, despite uncertainty about her own ability to stay in the country.

“She’s a very hard worker, very much a team player,” said University Place administrator Coleen Anderson, who oversees staff at the facility.

While an expiration date for TPS is always posted — as it is for Deferred Enforced Departure (DED), another program requiring presidential authorization that came into play for Warkie — the announcement as to whether it will be continued on any given year often happens at the last minute. “You’re just literally sitting there checking the website every single day to see when the president is going to renew it,” said Jelena Giric-Held of International House, who has assisted Warkie with her situation since 2015. “That transitional period was always Giric-Heldnerve-wracking.”servesastheImmigration Law Clinic Director at the nonprofit, which provides lowcost legal assistance to immigrants and refugees who are navigating immigration documentation or naturalization. It’s one of many programs International House offers to support the needs of foreign-rooted or foreign-minded people in Charlotte. When Liberians suddenly became eligible to apply for a green card in 2019, Giric-Held jumped on the opportunity, and helped Warkie with that process. She ensured deadlines were met, the proper forms were filed, and even accompanied her to the qualifying interview. Immediately after obtaining her green card, Warkie also was able to apply for citizenship. That’s because the new law back-dated her residency to the day she originally entered the country, in 2000.

In an industry known for a high level of turnover, long-term employees like Warkie are rare.

Consider the case of longtime Charlotte resident Martha Warkie, age 78. Warkie became an American citizen in the spring — 22 years after arriving in the UnitedWhenStates.Warkie left her home in Monrovia, Liberia in 2000, she didn’t expect it would be for good. She came to visit her sister, who had been living in Philadelphia for decades. But with ongoing civil war and political instability in Liberia, Warkie’s sister urged her to extend her stay and apply for Temporary Protected Status (TPS). That special designation allows citizens of specific countries experiencing conditions that would make it dangerous to return — like armed conflict, environmental disasters or epidemics — to stay and work legally in the U.S. Currently, 15 countries are on that list, including Afghanistan, Ukraine and Syria.

“I like it because I get to take care of people, to help people,” Warkie said. “You know when they need [it], you help them, so I just love it.”

TPS is not a path to green cards or citizenship, however, and each year the program’s continuation depends upon the will of the current presidential administration.WhenWarkie qualified for TPS, she ended up relocating to Charlotte, near her brother. “It was too cold in Philly,” she told me.

MARTHA WARKIE (LEFT) WITH JELENA GIRIC-HELD OF INTERNATIONAL HOUSE.

PHOTO BY MICA GADHIA

The working conditions can be tough, she said, so it’s sometimes difficult to fill positions.

BY LIZ ROTHAUS BERTRAND

From 2001 to 2019, she went year to year with no guarantee that her status would be renewed.

Warkie is part of the kitchen staff at the facility, which serves both long-term residents with specialized needs like Alzheimer’s as well as those working toward recovery after an injury or surgical procedure.

The campaign came from the nonprofit organization Welcoming America, which earlier this year formally designated Charlotte as a certified Welcoming Place, the first Southern city to be deemed such. But why does it matter to be welcoming? And who does it actually benefit?

As it turns out — all of us.

A CITYWELCOMINGINACTION

It’s essential work, he added, since an estimated 16-18% of the Charlotte population today is foreignborn, compared to 1980, when it was less than 1%.

FEATURE

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Want to get involved? Here are a couple events taking place during Welcoming Week in Charlotte: On Sept. 16, 6-9 p.m., International House hosts its annual Tapas & Testimonials fundraiser at the Mint Museum - Randolph, 2730 Randolph Road. The event includes internationally themed foods, music, auction items, and more. For details, visit ihclt.org.

Becoming a more Welcoming city Charlotte has been taking steps to improve systems and provide resources to help foreign-born residents like Warkie thrive.

The effort really dates back to 2015, he said, when the Immigrant Integration Task Force Report was presented to Charlotte City Council. It led to the creation of his office in 2019 as a liaison between the immigrant community and the city. Rios said the certification included a rigorous examination of all city systems to ensure they are accessible to people, including those who speak different languages.

“Thank you to Jelena who was there for me,” Warkie said. “Today, I’m an American woman! I say, thank you for everything.”

Achieving a certified Welcoming Place status was part of a multi-year effort to assess and improve systems, as well as ensure their accessibility to everyone in the community, said Federico Rios, assistant director in Charlotte’s Housing and Neighborhood Services Department. Rios also leads the office of Equity, Mobility and Immigrant Integration.

NEWS & OPINION

Also on Sept. 16, 6 p.m., Rios will be a featured panelist at a talk organized by The Levine Museum of the New South. “What Is It Going To Take? Becoming A Welcoming City” will be presented at MacFly Fresh in Camp North End. You can find details and RSVP info museumofthenewsouth.org/events/welcomingcity/.at INFO@QCNERVE.COM

“They want babies. They want opportunities to create small businesses and be part of the workforce,” he said. “They want to be able to access all the opportunities that a community renders to its residents.”

When you expand that lens to include the children of immigrants, the numbers are even more significant, Rios said, citing a 2016 report that showed one third of the youth population (18 or under) in Charlotte were either immigrants themselves or the children of immigrants.

“There’s this outsized proportion of our population that has [an] immigrant experience,” Rios said. They represent a significant percentage of the economic pie, too. According to a report published by the New American Economy in 2019, immigrant households in Charlotte earned $4 billion and contributed more than $1 billion in taxes in 2017.

Charlotte needs to do things that correlate with that significant growth, Rios said. And while some needs are unique to their situation, in many ways the foreignrooted are looking for the same things as everyone else.

Rios said the certification recognizes the effort and progress that has been made but there’s still much more to be done. It’s not an end point, but a beginning, he emphasized.

PHOTO COURTESY OF GANTT CENTERJAMEA NAJE’ WILL LEAD AN OCT. 1 WORKSHOP ON OIL PASTEL MONOPRINTS AT GANTT CENTER.

Charlotte Museum of History 3500 Shamrock Drive; charlottemuseum.org Sept. 24: Mad About Modern Home Tour Oct. 15: Meet the Curator: Scott Huler’s A Delicious Country Oct. 16: History Hike at Reedy Creek Park McColl Center for Visual Art 721 N. Tryon St.; mccollcenter.org Oct. 6: Artist Talk: A Conversation with Fall Artistsin-Residence Oct. 14: October Front Lawn Friday

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FALL 2022 will be a chill time

It

Harvey B. Gantt Center for AfricanAmerican Arts + Culture 551 S. Tryon St.; ganttcenter.org Sept. 24: In-Gallery Curator Tour and Talk with Dexter Wimberly Sept. 28: Prince’s Guitar: Themed Sip and Paint with Cathay Dawkins Oct. 1: Family First: Oil Pastel Monoprints Oct. 8: Men of Change Community Exhibit Opening Oct. 9: Classic Black Cinema Series: The Spook Who Sat by the Door Oct. 26: Wednesday Night Live: Nkeiru OkoyeInspired Nov. 13: Classic Black Cinema Series: Anna Lucasta

The Mint Museum - Randolph 2730 Randolph Road; mintmuseum.org Sept. 24: Potters Market at the Mint Sept. 25: Shae Bishop Public Talk Nov. 27: Museum Store Sunday The Mint Museum - Uptown 5000 N. Tryon St.; mintmuseum.org Oct. 7: Mint to Move Cultural Dance Night Oct.12: Mindful Looking Oct. 16: Writing with Bearden: An Ekphrastic Workshop with Charlotte Lit Nov. 2: Wednesday Night Live: Andrew Finn Magill’s “The History of Bluegrass” Nov. 27: Museum Store Sunday Dec. 2: Mint to Move Cultural Dance Night: Dia de las Velitas (Little Candle Day) Dec. 7: Wednesday Night Live: Youth Orchestras of Charlotte Concert of American Favorites Dec. 10: Mint Fashion Day Celebration Knight Theater 430 S. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org Sept. 24: International Slam Invitational Oct. 1: I Am Queen Charlotte Oct. 13-15: Charlotte Ballet: Fall Works Oct. 22: Charlotte Symphony: Symphony Spooktacular Oct. 30: Clerks III: The Convenience Tour w/ Kevin Smith Dec. 21-23: Cirque de Noel That nip in the air means more than just the return of football season. There’s lots to do for creatives, too. Here’s a look at more than 70 events celebrarting arts and culture in Charlotte this autumn.

ARTS

The Charlotte Film Festival remains committed to its mission to “discover different” during its 19th annual event spotlighting emerging filmmakers and independent movies from around the world.

More: $85-125; Sept. 10, 6 p.m.; Lenny Boy Brewing Co., 3000 S. Tryon St.; tinyurl.com/Upcycled2022 Festival in the Park A staple in Charlotte since 1964, Festival in the Park strives to “build community by celebrating the arts,” including musical performances, local art vendors, food, drink and more.

Charlotte International Arts Festival

More: Free; Sept. 16-18, times vary; Freedom Park, 1908 East Blvd.; festivalinthepark.org

Charlotte Film Festival

More: Free; Oct. 8, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Ramsey Creek Park, 18441 Nantz Road, Cornelius; charlottedragonboat.com

ArtPop Upcycled Fashion Show

PHOTO BY HULERSCOTTSCOTT HULER’S JOURNEYS AROUND NC ARE THE INSPIRATION FOR AN UPCOMING CHARLOTTE MUSEUM OF HISTORY EXHIBIT.

More: Prices vary; Sept. 16-Oct. 2; locations vary; charlotteartsfest.com

More: Prices TBD; Sept. 28-Oct. 2; The Independent Picture House, 4237 Raleigh festivalindependentpicturehouse.org/charlotte-film-St.;

More: Free; Sept. 24 & Oct. 22, 6 p.m.; Red Salt, 555 S. McDowell St.; tinyurl.com/ArtPopUp2022

The Charlotte International Arts Festival features a variety of events ranging from symphony performances to drag story hours to dance showcases (see page 9).

FEATURE Booth Playhouse

Charlotte Dragon Boat Festival Race & Asian Festival

ArtPop Pop Up Shop local art and meet artists like Katrina Sanchez, Kevin Harris, Kalin Devone and Travis Johnson.

FASHION BY ANISE AUGUSTIN; PHOTO BY ALEX CASONARTPOP UPCYCLED FASHION SHOW.

The second annual ArtPop Upcycled Fashion Show will feature 12 designers utilizing their artistic skills to make fashion out of vinyl billboards. The ArtPop fundraiser will feature beverages, other forms of art and auction items.

Latin American Festival

MISCELLANEOUS EVENTS Yiasou Greek Festival

130 N. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org Sept. 28-29: Urban Bush Women’s Legacy + Lineage + Liberation Oct. 2: Your Neighborhood Orchestra: Lost in Space Oct. 6-9: August Wilson’s Gem of the Ocean Oct. 13: Craig Ferguson Oct. 14: El Show de Lokillo Florez Oct 15: Burlesque 3000 Nov. 2-3: Acting Our Age 2022: Using Our Voices Nov. 16: Joe Pera Nov. 26: James Gregory Dec. 15-20: Clara’s Trip: A Cirque & Dance Nutcracker Story Belk Theater 130 N. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org Oct. 1: Tabitha Brown: Cooking from the Spirit Tour Oct. 13-16: Opera Carolina: Tosca Oct. 25-30: Dear Evan Hansen Nov. 4: Charlotte Symphony: Get Out in Concert Nov. 6: Disney Junior Live on Tour: Costume Palooza Nov. 8-13: Hadestown Nov. 20: The Illusionists: Magic of the Holidays Nov. 25-26: Charlotte Symphony: Polar Express in Concert Nov. 29-Dec. 4: Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill: The Musical Dec. 9-23: Charlotte Ballet: Nutcracker Stage Door Theater 155 N. College St.; blumenthalarts.org Oct. 9: Musicology 101: The Art of the Sample Oct. 18-23: The Crown Live Nov. 5: Almost Broadway Other Blumenthal Venues blumenthalarts.org Sept. 22-Oct. 1: Headphone Disco (Bechtler Plaza) Oct. 1: Luminarium Photo Walk w/ The Light Factory (Blumenthal Performing Arts Center) Oct. 11-16: Anastasia (Ovens Auditorium)

The 32nd Latin American festival will feature live music, authentic Latin American food, visual art and more.

More: Free; Sept. 17, noon; Symphony Park, 4400 Sharon Road; tinyurl.com/festival-latinoamericano

An important part of the Chinese traditional calendar, dragon boat racing originated over 2,300 years ago on the life-sustaining rivers of southern China. The Charlotte Dragon Boat Festival Race and Asian Festival will promote diversity and inclusivity through a celebration of Asian cultures.

Charlotte Chalk Art Festival

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More: Free; Oct. 1-2, 11 a.m.; 4237 Raleigh St.; tinyurl.com/CLTChalkArtFest

The inaugural Charlotte Chalk Art Festival will allow attendees to experience street art firsthand while experiencing curated performances, competitions and other arts and crafts.

Yiasou (hello)! Get an authentic experience at one of Charlotte’s largest cultural events featuring food, music and cultural exhibits.

More: Free; Sept. 9-11, times vary; Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 600 East Blvd.; yiasoufestival.org

Over the course of four classes, master sculptor Peter Rubino leads students on a technical and artistic journey toward understanding the dynamic and creative forces in sculpting a portrait in clay.

A massive interactive fundraising event, Biketoberfest gives participants the opportunity to win a prize for their efforts in adventuring our fair city without the use of a car.

Urban Design Awards

ARTWORK BY EDWARD REDFIELD‘BIRCHES AND HARBOR, MAINE’ FROM AMERICAN MADE: PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE FROM THE DEMELL JACOBSEN COLLECTION AT THE MINT MUSEUM. Sculpting The Portrait in Clay

Festival in the Heights

Touted as the “largest Hispanic Heritage celebration in Charlotte,” Hola Charlotte features nationally recognized performers celebrating the heritage of multiple Latin American countries with Hispanics of different backgrounds and ages.

Launched last year by Greg and Subrina Collier, the second annual festival will honor the diaspora by celebrating Black foodways and the industry members who make them possible.

More: $25-40; Oct. 30, noon; Triple C Brewing Company, 2900 Griffith St.; sustaincharlotte.org/ biketoberfest

More: Free; Oct. 15, noon; South Tryon Street from Brooklyn Village Avenue to East 4th Street; holacharlottefestival.com

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Hola Charlotte Festival

More: $48; Sept. 20-Oct. 18, 10 a.m.-noon; Charlotte Art League, 4237 Raleigh St.; charlotteartleague. org/classes

More: Oct. 15, 1 p.m.; Shamrock Park, Jeff Street; tinyurl.com/FestivalinTheHeights

Bay Haven Food and Wine Festival

More: Oct. 19-23; More information to come; bayhavenfoodandwine.com

The second annual Urban Design Awards, aka The Urbies, are designed to spotlight local projects and designs.

More: Oct. 27; more information to come; clturbandesign.medium.com

Biketoberfest

An outdoor gathering featuring family-friendly activities, food trucks, local music and vendors to help support east Charlotte schools.

ARTS

You’ve met the bunnies, now meet the Man. From Amanda Parer, the same Australian artist who has brought her giant inflatable bunnies to Charlotte in the past two years as part of the SHOUT! festival, comes Man — a large-scale, inflatable, contemporized version of Auguste Rodin’s “Thinker.” Slightly crouching forward with legs crisscrossed to incite curiosity and self-reflection with its audience, the installation is part of the inaugural Charlotte International Arts Festival (CIAF), which is scheduled to run from Sept. 16–Oct. 2. The two-week festival will celebrate local and international arts across genres, mediums, and cultures with over 200 exhibitions and events that fall into three categories: participatory, free and ticketed. From the Guggenheim in Spain to the Sydney Opera House in Australia, Luminarium – Architects of Air by Alan Parkison is described as an immersive walk-through experience of light, color and sound.

INFO@QCNERVE.COMPHOTOCOURTESYOF BLUMENTHAL ARTS‘MAN’

CIAF will also include installations by 13 remaining artists from Blumenthal’s Fellows Class of 2021, and hundreds of other performances and showcases big and small over the two weeks it’s here. For more information about what will be happening throughout the festival’s run, visit charlotteartsfest.com. BY AMANDA PARER

Luminarium invites visitors to explore labyrinthian tunnels and soaring domes inspired by Islamic architecture, Archimedean solids, and Gothic cathedrals.Theart exhibit will be located at Ballantyne’s Backyard from Sept. 17-Oct. 2, with tickets starting at $5.“Lotty” by Moradavaga, a participatory art installation, is out of Portugal and Italy. The installation features a giant squid influenced by the best-known writings of Herman Melville and Jules Verne. The tube-like, orange creature allows visitors to look through the squid’s eyes and walk over its lengthyVisitorstentacles.cansee Lotty at Romare Bearden Park throughout the festival’s run. German street-artist trio Mentalgassi combine photography, sculpture, image manipulation, and street art for audiences to enjoy for free. Their artwork has been seen in many cities around the world, including London, Berlin, Brazil, and Finland. Mentalgassi creates large-scale photographs, which they tape on outdoor objects. The photographs are comprised of people’s faces that take on an unexpected form. You can find Mentalgassi’s work perched atop the Knight Theater throughout the run of the festival.The Charlotte International Arts Festival will also offer performances, including a slam poetry tournament. The CIAF will host the International Slam Invitational on Sept. 24 at noon and 2:30 p.m. for the preliminary rounds, and 8 p.m. that same night for the final. Poets from around the world will be at the Knight Theater for the ultimate slam competition. Boris “Bluz” Rogers, director of creative engagement at Blumenthal Performing Arts, is excited about so many things that the competition brings to Charlotte. “This competition will bring poets who are international world poetry slam champions, as well as national champions,” he told Queen City Nerve. Bluz pointed out that the competition will include renowned poets who have been on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and become viral sensations. Tickets start at $10, or $30 for an all-dayThepackage.week before the International Slam Invitational, the Knight Theater will also host We Are Hip Hop, a continuation of an event that Bluz helped launch last year at Camp North End. The idea is to host a celebration of Charlotte’s hip-hop culture and artists with freestyle, b-boy and DJ performances all in a block party atmosphere on Sept. 17-18 at the Knight Theater.

FESTIVITIESFEATURE ABOUND

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BY RAYNE ANTRIM

New Charlotte International Arts Festival kicks off the fall arts season

SPACEFACE, RUGG, EGO DEATH MACHINE

More: Free-$40; Sept.10-11; Camp North End, 300 Camp Road; duppandswat.com

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BOLD ON THE BLOCK - COPE FIEND Photo by

AMERICAN MADE: PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE FROM THE DEMELL JACOBSEN COLLECTION

More: $7-9; Sept. 11, 2 p.m.; Harvey B. Gantt Center, 551 S. Tryon St.; ganttcenter.org 9/7

COMPOUND

More: Free-$15; Sept. 10–Dec. 24; Mint Museum Uptown, 500 S. Tryon St.; mintmuseum.org

With the explicit goal of “bringing people together across racial and socio-economic barriers,” this block party could point a way forward for one of Charlotte’s rapidly disappearing-through-gentrification “arts district.” The shindig includes community art, dance, vendors and more in the lot behind Petra’s. The music menu feels like a fusion of weird old P. Middy and a pluralistic funky hip-hop-infused future, anchored by two of the neighborhood’s beloved venues. Petra’s hosts Cope Fiend, Alan Charmer, Nige Hood and more, while Snug Harbor welcomes Phaze Gawd & Friends, Cosmic Collective, Noir Noir and others. More: Free; Sept. 10, 3 p.m.; Plaza Midwood, various locations; tinyurl.com/BoltOnTheBlock

“Press your spaceface close to mine love,” one little Ziggy once crooned. Could David Bowie’s “Moonage Daydream” lyrics have inspired the name of retrofuturist dream rock outfit Spaceface? Founded by Flaming Lips guitarist Jake Ingalls, Spaceface blasts off from a launchpad of ’70s soft rock and prog rock, leaving trippy contrails in its wake. With the recent addition of synth-pop singer-songwriter Katie Pierce to the fold, Spaceface’s creative center of gravity has shifted toward shoegaze leavened with psych. Country garage fuzz-masters Rugg join the onstage interstellar mission, along with Charlotte metal practitioners Ego Death Machine.

The DeMell Jacobsen Collection is one of the best privately held collections of American art in the U.S. It’s also an aesthetic time machine, a tour through two centuries of American creativity, ranging from Colonial-era portraits to mid-19thcentury landscape paintings. Still lives from the 1800s include moralizing genre scenes, packed with narrative detail, and intriguing Trompe-l’œil examples, optical illusions that trick the viewer into perceiving painted objects and spaces as real. Sculptures draw from the collection’s extensive selection of marble, copper and bronze pieces.

More: $14.30; Sept. 7, 9:30 p.m.; Snug Harbor, 1228 Gordon St.; snugrock.com

FRESH2DEATH: STREETWARE Upping the ante on its FRESH2DEATH installation at the Mint Museum earlier this year, Dupp&Swatt’s Fresh2Death: Streetware expands its streetwise fashion concept to a two-day festival. Along with vendors, vegan food trucks, installations, DJs and workshops covering street photography, sneaker and clothing customization and more, on day one the fest shines a spotlight on seven brands, all led by Black men from Charlotte. The bands will be replaced by brands center stage on day two at a fashion show hosted by Ohavia Phillips. Want even more style? Twenty classic 1980s-’90s European automobiles will be on site.

CLASSIC BLACK CINEMA SERIES: ‘ZOUZOU’ In the 1920s, Black dancer/singer/actress Josephine Baker left the U.S. for Paris, where she starred in the Folies Bergère. In the 1940s, she aided the French Resistance against the Nazis, and in the ’60s, she supported the Civil Rights movement. The 1934 French melodrama Zouzou marks the first time a Black woman played a leading role in a major film. That’s Baker, who plays a circus performer fighting to clear her lover, played by white leading man Jean Gabin (The Wages of Fear), of allegations stemming from a crime he didn’t commit.

SAT ONGOING ONGOING SAT & SUN SUN WED

While in residence at Charlotte’s McColl Center in fall 2020, in the midst of the COVID pandemic, Jillian Mayer became intrigued by our region’s survivalist culture. Preppers or survivalists pursue complete independence from social, political and economic infrastructures, relying on their own learned skills to prepare for any impending disasters — real or imagined. (One local prepper at Carolina Preppers and Survivors Store on South Boulevard in 2014 told us an ISIS attack on SouthPark Mall was imminent, but we’re still waiting.) For her exhibit, Mayer constructed her own imagined, site-specific survival site. More: Free; Sept. 8–Nov. 22, 9 a.m.; Lambla Gallery, UNC Charlotte; 9119 University Road; coaa.charlotte.edu

BOLT ON THE BLOCK

More: $25-55; Sept. 20, 8 p.m.; Underground, 820 Hamilton St.; livenation.com

THE MINKS

More: Free; Sept. 15, 7 p.m.; U.S. National Whitewater Center, 5000 Whitewater Center Pkwy.; center.whitewater.org

More: Free; Sept. 17; North Davidson Street at Anderson Street; divinebarrel.com

Focused on Nikki Barber’s gutsy sensual vocals, Nashville psych-blues rock trio The Minks have subsumed their influences and forged a distinctive and flexible style that ranges from the acid-tinged ’60s hard rock of “Lavendar” to the stomping Hammond organ-powered swamp rock of “Johnny Walker Blue.” Though they embrace influences ranging from Hank Williams to Patti Smith, The Minks never stray far from the electrified shuffle of the title track off their debut album Light and Sweet. Here the trio’s take on country blues owes as much to Iggy Pop as Patsy Cline.

BLACKSTAR SYMPHONY

Divine Barrel Brewing, Great Wagon Road Distilling, Free Will Craft & Vine, Crown Station and Deejai Noodle Bar co-host an open-air vendor market in the parking lots at Divine Barrel and Great Wagon Road. The market features 70 artisans, plus diverse local businesses and entrepreneurs. Each location hosts DJs spinning tunes throughout the day. Food options include Deejai, The Chimi Spot NC and The Sidekick food trucks, as well as Great Wagon Road’s kitchen. Divine Barrel Brewing, Free Will Craft & Vine, Crown Station and Great Wagon Road also offer beverages — alcoholic and non-alcoholic.

More: $39.50 and up; Sept. 16-17; Belk Theater, 130 N. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org

100 GECS

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NODAHOOD FESTI-FALL MARKET

“I’m joining the circus and going berserkus,” deadpans Dylan Brady on “Doritos and Fritos,” the ridiculously dumb and fun single from electronic scuzz-pop duo 100 gecs. Riding rubbery slack-string bass, closely-miced antic vocals and a maelstrom of zig-zagging electronic blurts and bleeps, production and songwriting duo Brady and Laura Les take the crunchy compressed banger-pop approach of Sleigh Bells, then add the unfazed smart-assery of New Wave groups The Waitresses and Romeo Void, and amp it up past 11. The net result feels like barhopping with baked RPG players guzzling monster drinks.

You can’t divorce thoughts of mortality from Blackstar, David Bowie’s final album, released two days after his death. We maintain the music, however, evokes not dread, but the mystery beyond the mortal veil. Blackstar Symphony director Donny McCaslin might agree. McCaslin played on the album — winding his funereal, honking sax all over the emotional map on the title track. McCaslin’s reimagining of Bowie’s darkly romantic masterpiece features guest artist John Cameron Mitchell, creator and star of Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Blackstar is followed by orchestral renditions of Bowie classics including “Heroes” and “Life on Mars”.

Thomas also forged its legacy with a sound that is varied yet cohesive. The group is often shoehorned into the country rock genre, and while there are echoes of 1970s folk-inflected Laurel Canyon singer-songwriters and sympathetic rockers like The Eagles in Doubting Thomas’ early songs, tunes like the title track of its 1993 debut album Blue Angel pull from a much broader sonic palette, including contributions from guest players Peter Buck and Bill Berry of R.E.M. Here, Stewart and Gambill’s swarming harmonies entwine in a braided stream of vocal lines surrounding Tim Hill’s pointillist crystalline guitar: “Flying on a dare across the blue skies / There were arms around me there/There was magic in the air...” As the voices cradle and enfold each other, the cantering rhythm section of bassist Glenn Kawamoto and drummer Paul Andrews smoothly switch keys and time signatures. “What we were doing was so interlaced — it was a whole lot of melody, and it was pretty complicated,“ Stewart says. “Toward the end we didn‘t do so much of the changing time signatures and things like that.” The band’s 1998 album Who Died and Made You King illustrates the band’s later, more simplified and direct approach. The collection’s title track couples bright and swaggering saxophone with soulful calland-response vocals traded by Stewart and Gambill. The production sparkles but remains tethered to the heart and spirit of storytelling honky-tonk. Despite changes in approach, however, Doubting Thomas‘ music always feels grounded, animated and alive, whether its sashaying across the dance floor or chugging like a runaway locomotive. Similar to its shape-shifting music, the group’s timeline is also fluid and in flux “We had 10 final gigs,” Gambill says with a laugh.“We retired more times than Tina Turner,” StewartThereadds.were several one-off reunion gigs throughout the 2000s, including a set at the Atlanta Pride Festival in 2009. In 2020, the band members attempted to set up another reunion, but COVID kept forcing postponements. After three reschedules, Doubting Thomas finally nailed down a date that sticks, Gambill says. A Sept. 17 gig scheduled for Neighborhood Theatre will be much like an extended family reunion, Stewart adds. “The core group is me and Brenda, plus [multiinstrumentalist] Matthew Davenport and [bassist] Bill Carroll,” she says. Guitarist Hill is coming in from Atlanta for the show, and will be joined onstage by second guitarist Mike Corrigan. Percussionist Kris Krull is slated to be a surprise guest, and new member Lenore Prisco will play keyboards and banjo. Stewart says some good friends of the band will also pop up on stage to play songs toward the end of the evening. Gambill acknowledges that the roll call could lead to a stage packed with performers. “We had quite a few members over the years in different configurations, and we played with so many talented people,” she says. “It’s such an honor to write a song and then have everyone put their talent into it, perform it and be willing to go out onto the road for barely nothing.”

Similarly, the combo was an early supporter of LGBTQ rights and visibility, which is how they found themselves playing so many gigs at Hartigan’s, one of the city’s few clubs catering to a lesbian clientele at theDoubtingtime.

MUSIC FEATURE

QCNERVE.COM-202220,SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBER12Pg. Gina Stewart fondly remembers a gig that her groundbreaking Queen City band, Doubting Thomas, played in the mid-1990s at Hartigan’s, a now-closed pub once located in Uptown Charlotte. As the band launched into its first number, the crowd began to sing along — and they continued singing for the entire“[There]set. was consistent strong energy playing at Hartigan’s,” Stewart recalls. “[We] were seeing the same people — and they started to know every singleStewart’sword.” bandmate and group co-founder Brenda Gambill says these spontaneous singalongs were not confined to one venue. Countless Doubting Thomas shows were marked by fan devotion conjoined with the band’s connection to the crowd. It was a tangible energy, she says. “Whether there’s two people or 300,000, it’s contagious when the energy is right and everything is coming through you,” Gambill offers. “You become the vehicle for your instrument. It’s not about you.” Perhaps this devotion to its listeners is one reason that Doubting Thomas, a band that officially disbanded in 2001, still maintains its hold on Charlotte’s musical imagination. Historically, the city’s rock and pop scene is arguably built upon the legacies of three local acts — The Avett Brothers, Fetchin’ Bones and Doubting Thomas. Of the three, Doubting Thomas is the only one not to score a major label record deal, and while they’re beloved by many, Stewart and Gambill’s female-fronted group rarely gets credit for helping to break down gender barriers in Charlotte’s male-dominated music scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

WITHOUT A DOUBT

Reunion concert celebrates Doubting Thomas’ musical legacy in Charlotte

BY PAT MORAN GINA STEWART (LEFT) AND BRENDA GAMBILL OF DOUBTING THOMAS.

PHOTO BY GRANT BALDWIN

‘Somebody knows what I’m feeling. I’m not the only one who’s ever gone through what I’m going through.’”

The Blind Dates wound down in 1988, and Stewart and Gambill launched Doubting Thomas with guitarist Dale Alderman, drummer Paul Andrews and Andrews‘ brother Mike on bass. Mike Andrews subsequently left to be replaced by jazztrained bassist Glenn Kawamoto. The band was initially quite different from the proto-Americana act it eventually became.

The material proved to be difficult to adapt for live performance. While the band grappled with that challenge, it composed music for theatre troupes including Children’s Theatre of Charlotte and the now-shuttered Charlotte Repertory Theatre. In 1990, Doubting Thomas was selected for the North Carolina Music Showcase in Chapel Hill. Music critic Jim Desmond compared the band favorably to 10,000 Maniacs and Fleetwood Mac, calling Doubting Thomas the highlight of the festival. Soon after, Doubting Thomas opened for the Indigo Girls at Ovens Auditorium. Charlotte attorney Bill Diehl was duly impressed. He helped the fledgling band find financing and the necessary contacts to record an album.

PMORAN@QCNERVE.COM

“That’s how Who Died and Made You King? happened.”During this process, bassist Bill Carroll became indispensable, Gambill says.

Doubting Thomas never signed a deal with a majorThelabel.band’s follow-up album Two was recorded in Atlanta with producer DeDe Vogt of cowpunk band Sweethearts of the Rodeo. Charlotte musician and reverend Christy Snow came down to the sessions to sing. Emily Saliers of Indigo Girls lends vocals to two songs on the record, “Tiny Lights” and “How High.” Vogt also performs on the album, released in 1994 on Doubting Thomas’ own indie label Oh Very Records. The record was financed through contributions from fans, says Stewart. “We were ahead of our time, because it was pre-crowdfunding,” she says. “We made a record and paid back all our investors. Everybody made money.”

“We won’t ever do it in the way that we have, but we’re not done,” Stewart says. “My favorite quote from someone who followed us closely for a long time was, ‘You were the soundtrack of my 20s and 30s,’” Stewart says.

“We dreamed of making an album of our original songs, and [Diehl] made that dream come true,“ Stewart says. After searching for a producer who was making their kind of music, Doubting Thomas recorded with John Keane at his studio in Athens, Georgia. At the time, Keane was working with the B-52s, Widespread Panic and R.E.M. Keane recruited R.E.M.‘s Buck and Berry to play on the Doubting Thomas debut Blue Angel Blue Angel was released on independent label Big Diehl Records. Stewart and Gambill say they had second thoughts when it came to inking a deal with a major label. “A lot of friends that got signed didn’t have the privilege of making up their own minds in the studio,” Gambill says. “Not to say that every decision made by a record company is bad [but] they would take a song and totally rearrange it if you didn’t have guidelines in ink that you could do it your way.”

She cherishes that feedback, but says it inspires her to write about today rather than just play songs from the “Whenpast.Igo out to hear music, it amazes me that people are still writing things that everyone can relate to,” Gambill says. “Then I think, why am I amazed by that? We did that as well.”

“Most of the time Bill was writing, and he’d bring in finished songs for us to collaborate on and add to, and he’d do some arranging,” Gambill says. She considers Carroll the third lyricist in Doubting Thomas, in addition to herself and Stewart. “Working with him now is amazing because he’s better than ever.” The band recorded and released a live album in 2000. As Doubting Thomas toured the album, they started changing the band’s configuration.

MUSIC FEATURE Fetchin’

Orphan songs, Americana and the end? The origin of Doubting Thomas’ 1997 release Cut It Out, a collection of demo tapes and orphaned songs, led to a Charlotte music tradition and the beginnings of a successful promotion company. Stewart entered the now-razed Elizabeth music venue The Double Door Inn one Tuesday night and noticed that the place was dead. She approached venue owner Nick Karres with a proposition: If Karres would let Doubting Thomas practice onstage with the venue’s P.A. on Tuesday nights, the band would encourage their fans to pay $5 a head to see the show.

Soon, the place was packed, and Stewart and Gambill decided to share their good fortune. They invited other Charlotte bands and performers like The Rank Outsiders and David Childers to take part in the Tuesday night gig, and thus Americana Night at The Double Door was launched. Greg McGraw became inspired to promote the players taking part in the show, and his work on Americana Night fueled the launch of mighty Charlotte-based music promotion company MAXX Music, say Stewart and Gambill.

Stewart says she began her love affair with music when she first heard Linda Ronstadt sing. Meanwhile, her older sister was dating musicians exclusively. Exposed to this parade of talented suitors for her sibling, Stewart picked their brains for musical knowledge. In return they taught her to sing, play guitar and understand music theory. By the time Stewart attended North Mecklenburg High School, she was smitten with The Eagles and southern California rock. Meanwhile, Gambill was growing up in Ohio. She describes herself as the little girl who sat with her ear on the speaker of the stereo, learning the harmony parts to every Beatles song. Her family moved to Charlotte, where Gambill attended Garinger High School and sang in various choirs while studying violin. In the mid-1980s, Stewart attended UNC Charlotte, where she studied dance and drama. The biggest obstacle to graduation, she says, was her high school friend Hope Nicholls and her band Fetchin’ Bones. Stewart played bass in an early lineup of the band for about a year, appearing on a demo produced by Don Dixon at Mitch Easter’s Drive-In Studio in Winston-Salem. By the time the band recorded its debut album Cabin Flounder, Danna Pentes had replaced Stewart on bass. “I stopped playing in Fetchin’ Bones because I needed to finish college,” Stewart says. She’d already quit school several times because she wanted to play in rock ‘n’ roll bands, Stewart says, and her parents were running out of patience. One night after playing with Fetchin’ Bones in New York City, Stewart hopped a flight back to Charlotte just in time to take an exam. She finally stopped burning the candle at both ends and graduated in 1986. By the time she met Gambill, Stewart was playing in The Blind Dates, a trio inspired by 1960s girl groups that included guitarist Deanna Lynn Campbell and drummer Penny Craver. Stewart and Gambill hit it off and started writing songs together. The pair had been writing together for about a year when Gambill let it drop that she was an accomplished violinist.

Doubting Thomas had been recording songs during Americana Night with the idea of launching a Charlotte-centered record label, which would feature performers from the city’s vibrant music scene. Unfortunately, the idea went south and Doubting Thomas decamped the weekly event to launch another Tuesday night residency across town. To find a home for the songs the band had recorded for Americana Night, Doubting Thomas released Cut It Out.

In 1999, the band returned to Athens to work with producer John Keane again on the soulful, horns and Hammond organ-fueled Who Died and Made You King? At this point, many players had entered or moved through Doubting Thomas’ orbit, including Bill Carroll on bass, keyboardist Bryan Williams, Mark McColl on drums and a cadre of guitarists comprised of Irwin Bostian, Mike Corrigan and Tim Hill.

QCNERVE.COM-2022,20SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBER13Pg. Bones, R.E.M. and the Indigo Girls

“There was a marriage of theatre and music because I majored in theatre,” Stewart says. “In the early stuff you can hear the influence from musical theatre with so many vocals and harmonies going every which way.”

“We were usually playing three or four gigs a week, so most of our writing happened at sound checks,” Stewart says. The talented ensemble’s connectivity meant jams would often come together as songs, she continues.

As a solo artist, Carroll appeared on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand TV show in 1988 with his song “When We’re Apart.” He also branched out into orchestral composing and arranging.

“We would go out there with three or four of us. It wouldn’t be six people going out every time,” GambillThensays.came the end to Doubting Thomas’ 11-year run. Stewart calls it a strange, but not dramatic, end. “It wasn’t a fight,” Stewart says. “We all looked at each other after a gig and went, ‘I think it’s time we stopped.’”Theband never really ended, however. Though Stewart and Gambill formed the acoustic folkrock trio Volatile Baby with Allison Modafferi, they kept hearing the call from fans to reform Doubting Thomas at least for one more night. The band’s road manager Tammy Whisnet, who also acts as Doubting Thomas’ archivist along with Scott Rutherford, encouraged the reunion, Gambill says. Recent rehearsals have gone so well that Gambill and Stewart hope to play many more gigs with Doubting Thomas — just not three or four a week.

“I think the point of writing songs is lessening the loneliness of being alive,” Stewart adds. “That’s what songs do. There is something about the emotional communication of a song that expresses the inexpressible and leaves you with [the thought]

POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ HE$H (SERJ)

The Social Contract w/ $pence, Duhart, Bshingu (Snug Harbor)

SINGER-SONGWRITER/ACOUSTIC Acoustic Grace (Stage Door Theater)

POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ Wil Rivers (The Fillmore) Hotspot (Heist Brewery & Barrel Arts) OneRepublic (PNC Music Pavilion)

Alex Isley (The Underground)

ShotClock w/ Swae, Plastic Flamingos (Tommy’s Pub) COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA

QCNERVE.COM-202220,SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBER14Pg.

OPEN MIC Find Your Muse Open Mic feat. Featherpocket (Evening Muse)

Creeping Death w/ 200 Stab Wounds, Tribal Gaze, Age of Apocalypse, Funeral Chic (The Milestone)

In This Moment (The Fillmore) Council Ring (Smokey Joe’s Cafe & Bar) Fulci w/ w/ Abyssal Frost, Blaakhol (Snug Harbor)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICANA

Willie Nelson’s Outlaw Music Festival (PNC Music Pavilion) Liam Pendergrass Duo (Primal Brewery)

Halestorm (CMCU Amphitheatre)

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA Koe Wetzel (CMCU Amphitheatre) Reckless Kelly w/ These Wild Plains (Neighborhood Theatre)

Doubting Thomas (Neighborhood Theatre)

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14

LATIN/WORLD/REGGAE P-Square (The Underground)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL Lacuna Coil (The Underground)

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICANA

The Variants w/ AM/FMs, PYRE (Skylark Social Club) Shadowgraphs w/ Dipstick, Yerning Whir (Snug Harbor)

Chase Mathew (Coyote Joe’s) Charlie Marks w/ Cat Glen, A.P. Rodgers (Skylark Social Club)

VEAUX w/ Josh Nuzum (Evening Muse) Collective Insanity w/ Trout Mouth, Lil Skritt, Phoebe NYX, Ophelia Pop Tart, Melanya (The Milestone) Wand (Neighborhood Theatre)

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12

ROCK/PUNK/METAL Gyasi w/ Regence (Evening Muse)

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9

House & Home w/ Late Bloomer, Holy Figures, Jupiter Hearts (The Milestone) Spaceface w/ Rugg, Bottled Up, Ego Death Machine (Snug Harbor)

Jake Blount Quartet w/ Rachel Baiman (Evening TheMuse)Pink Stones w/ Teddy & the Rough Riders (Neighborhood Theatre)

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10

HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B Kerry Blu w/ Aasher (Evening Muse) Bolt on the Block Party feat. Phaze Gawd, Cosmic Collective, Noir Noir, Wastoid (Snug Harbor)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL Jason Scavone w/ Modern Moxie, Carly Taich (Visulite Theatre)

HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B

Apocalyptica (The Underground)

JAZZ/BLUES

CLASSICAL/INSTRUMENTAL Charlotte Symphony: Blackstar Symphony (David Bowie tribute) (Belk Theater)

POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ Shrek Rave (The Underground)

JAZZ/BLUES Troy Conn (Middle C Jazz)

Heathen Sun w/ Head Cell, Shelter For Holly, Hightower (Tommy’s Pub) Deep 6 (Pearl Jam tribute) w/ Joe Hero (Foo Fighters tribute), Sickman (Alice in Chains tribute) (Amos’ Southend)

Tonya Wood (Primal Brewery)

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7

Amanda Shires (Neighborhood Theatre)

POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ Noche de Verano Sin Ti (Bad Bunny Night) (Evening Muse)

JAZZ/BLUES Jeff Lorber Trio (Middle C Jazz)

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17

DPR (The Fillmore) OPEN MIC Open Mic Night w/ Chase Brown & Aleeia “Sug” Bolton Brown (Tommy’s Pub)

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11

LATIN/WORLD/REGGAE

JAZZ/BLUES Jeff Lorber Trio (Middle C Jazz)

JAZZ/BLUES Michelle Renee w/ Shelley Ruffin, Shana Blake (Middle C Jazz)

Larry Burnett w/ Don Chapman (Evening Muse)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL Wednesday 13 w/ Nova Omega, Strike the Tower (Amos’ Southend) Little Feat (Knight Theater) Seven Day Haze w/ Red Dress Amy, Fox N Vead (Snug TributeHarbor)(Allman Brothers Band tribute) (Visulite Theatre) HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B Denzel Curry (The Fillmore)

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HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B

SINGER-SONGWRITER/ACOUSTIC Trisha Adams (Birdsong Brewing)

FUNK/JAM BANDS Cosmic Collective (Birdsong Brewing) The Grass Is Dead (Grateful Dead tribute) w/ Josh Daniel (Smokey Joe’s Cafe & Bar)

Forever Came Calling w/ Home Safe, Thousand Dollar Car, Pollyanna, Death Lens (Skylark Social Club)

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13

ROCK/PUNK/METAL

Jade Novah w/ Jared Brady, Dondria (Amos’ RubenSouthend)Studdard sings Luther Vandross (Knight DoobieTheater)(Neighborhood Theatre)

SINGER-SONGWRITER/ACOUSTIC

ROCK/PUNK/METAL Side Hustle w/ The Donner Deads (Evening Muse) Desmond Jones w/ Sam Johnston (Evening Muse)

Harriet RIP w/ The Body Bags, Eavesdropper (Tommy’s Pub) Rokken (Dokken cover) w/ Killed by Death (Motorhead tribute), The Threat (Skid Row tribute) (Amos’ Southend)

ZETA w/ Ed Hochuli, Moxibeat (Snug Harbor)

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA Time Sawyer w/ Magnolia Boulevard (Neighborhood Theatre)

Ponch Bueller w/ Dang Ol Reinhardt, Travis & Ian (Tommy’s Pub) COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA

HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B

SINGER-SONGWRITER/ACOUSTIC Tosco Music Party (Knight Theater) Mike Alicke (Heist Brewery & Barrel Arts)

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICANA

COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA

Riki Rachtman (Neighborhood Theatre)

Sarah Jarosz (Neighborhood Theatre) OPEN MIC Tosco Music Open Mic (Evening Muse)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL

Solar Fake w/ Matte Blvck, IIOIOIOII, Tenderlash (The TheMilestone)Botsw/ Jeremy & The Harlequins, SideNote (Snug SiameseHarbor)Dream (Smashing Pumpkins tribute) (Visulite Theatre)

ROCK/PUNK/METAL

Mike Phillips (Booth Playhouse) Judith Hill (Middle C Jazz)

The Temptations & the Four Tops (Ovens Auditorium)

Squirt Vile w/ Orphan Riot (Tommy’s Pub) Abbey Road Live! (The Beatles tribute) (Visulite Theatre)

JAZZ/BLUES Queens Court (Middle C Jazz)

VOTE NOW bit.ly/qcnbin22 2022 BIN awards will feature over 500 winners in: Food & CityDrinkLife Arts & ConsumerEntertainmentCultureNightlife e Best of the Queen City JAZZ/BLUES Judith Hill (Middle C Jazz) COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA Tyler Braden (Coyote Joe’s) Pierce Edens (Evening Muse) SINGER-SONGWRITER/ACOUSTIC Tyler Darden (Primal Brewery) POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ AfroPop! Charlotte, Vol.56: Goodbye Sum (Crown DigitalStation)Noir w/ DJ Spider (The Milestone) Boombox w/ The Wormholes (Visulite Theatre) FUNK/JAM BANDS Bullfrog Moon (Primal Brewery) The Tyler Neal Band (Smokey Joe’s Cafe & Bar) SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 HIP-HOP/SOUL/R&B Wu-Tang Clan w/ Nas (PNC Music Pavilion) COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA Drew Holcomb & the Neighbors (Neighborhood AviTheatre)Kaplan w/ Taylor Ashton (Visulite Theatre) POP/DANCE/ELECTRONIC/DJ Alec Benjamin (The Fillmore) FUNK/JAM BANDS Sky Funk w/ The Turnstiles, The Bill Miller Band, Grub & Friends, Ben Gatlin (Smokey Joe’s Cafe & Bar) MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 OPEN MIC Find Your Muse Open Mic feat. Low Groves (Evening Muse) TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 ROCK/PUNK/METAL The Head and the Heart (CMCU Amphitheatre) 100 gecs (The Underground) Winona Forever w/ Wine Pride, Day & Dream (Snug Harbor) COUNTRY/FOLK/AMERICA Willie Watson (Neighborhood Theatre) JAZZ/BLUES Jeff Harnar (Middle C Jazz) LATIN/WORLD/REGGAE Karol G (Spectrum Center) VISIT QCNERVE.COM FOR THE FULL SOUNDWAVE LISTING.

Unbeknownst to me, ZiZi’s had recently left the space where it once hosted its takeout service on North Tryon Street in the University City area, but I found VelTree there in its place. Pleasantly surprised that I could still support a Black-owned business while eating vegan, I gave them a try.

VelTree owners open new Ballantyne location, plan new events BY JASIATIC ANDERSON

Velvet’s wife and business partner, Treona, aka Tree, had only recently become vegan when they met.

QCNERVE.COM-202220,SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBERPg.

“When we met at my restaurant in Maryland, Tree had just transitioned to a vegan lifestyle,” Velvet says. The couple partnered up to start a nonprofit called Vegan in the Hood, through which they’ve carried out lots of food-centered community work. The couple has been married for almost eight years now and within that time created numerous businesses.Theysaid they were looking for vegan soul food during a visit to Charlotte some years ago, but were unable to satisfy their taste. Shortly after the trip, they decided to bring what they were missing to the city and launched VelTree.

On that trip, we indulged in a fan favorite “box of chic’n” and I became a fan from there on out. Co-owner and chef Velvet Kelty-Jacobs comes from a rich history of restaurant leadership. Her family owns and operates a vegan restaurant in the DC/Maryland area, and though she grew up eating meat, she didn’t enjoy it.

Queen City Nerve: Tell me about the inspiration behind VelTree. Velvet Kelty-Jacobs: VelTree started in Charlotte out of a personal need to see vegan soul food in an area where there wasn’t any available. I believed that a city like Charlotte should have a soulful vegan food presence and we decided to create that road. What is your personal relationship and philosophy around veganism?

A combination of both owners’ names, VelTree opened in 2018. While their first location in University was a relatively small take-out spot, a new location in Ballantyne, which they moved to in December, boasts plenty of seating and room for an expansive menu.

I sat down with Velvet to chat about VelTree’s expansion and multiple other endeavors the couple is undertaking around the city. START

PHOTO COURTESY OF VELTREEVELTREE’S SPICY CHIC’N & WAFFLES.

“I never liked meat; every night at the dinner table I would excuse myself three or four times to throw the meat away,” Velvet recalls. “My family is vegan. My sister converted us all around 25 years ago. All of the kids of the family were born vegan”.

I believe that it is important to bring awareness to the African American community around our eating habits and food choices because our community suffers most from treatable health disparities.Ibelieve that having soulful vegan food options creates an opportunity to expose our community to a familiar food flavor without the ingredients that are most harmful to our bodies. When I think of veganism there are three things that come to mind: my people, the animals and our planet. What has your experience been as a queer Black women in veganism? Representation is key. It’s so important that we live our truth to show others like us that if we can do this, so can you. We have experienced racism and those who don’t want to support because we’re lesbians, but the love outweighs anything else. You recently opened a new VelTree location in Ballantyne. What made you choose this location and how does it differ from the previous restaurant?

FOOD & DRINK FEATURE Admittedly I only happened upon VelTree while I was looking for a different vegan restaurant that I used to frequent, but it turned out to be a happy surprise.

So, the new location was a divine move. We looked in many areas, but the Ballantyne location opened up to us. We had some customers who

A NEW

QCNERVE.COM-202220,SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBER17Pg.

With a new location also came a new menu. What’s different?

You have another restaurant in California, which is a far more abundant vegan market than Charlotte. How has that been?

The new VelTree is located at 14825 Ballantyne Village Way, in Suite 150. You can follow on Instagram at @VelTreevegan and @vegansoulchella.

FOOD DRINK

The new menu is filled with items like country fried chic’n, a meatless loaf with mashed potatoes, BBQ ribz and potato salad, buffalo mushroom bites, tuna melts, shrymp and grits, chic’n and tempeh baconWewraps.alsohave gluten-free items such as crab cake, drums, and Cajun shrymp to name a few. On the fall/ winter menu we’ll be adding ste’ak and gravy, and cream chipped beef on our house biscuits.

Yes, we have been in L.A. for two-plus years and [our restaurant] was voted the Best New Vegan Restaurant by VegNews in 2021, which speaks in volume to our products and the love and support of our vegan community. We were also picked as one of the top restaurants to visit while in L.A. by Eater magazine, and we had an amazing feature done on us by KTLA’s LA Unscripted Due to a fire [that occurred] three days from Christmas last year and staff shortages, we decided to close for now, but we will be returning after everything here in Charlotte is set up and doing well.

What’s the one dish that people should order from VelTree and why? The soul plate. Because you can choose different options when you can’t make up your mind! What sets VelTree apart from other Charlotte restaurants?

FEATURE traveled from Ballantyne to the old location and always asked us to move closer. In our old location, we always had lines out the door and the parking lot stayedWejumping.arefinding that our old customers think we’re too far away and we don’t see them as much, but they still support us, as we are making a new customer base here in Ballantyne.

Honestly ... we have many things planned but we’re taking it one day at a time. The pandemic really did a number to our industry along with the great resignation. We’re just blessed to still be here!

INFO@QCNERVE.COM

You’re also launching Soulchella in Charlotte. What is that?

Soulchella was created to celebrate our third Soulfull Vegan Fest. Soulchella is going to be a celebration of everything we love: good vegan food, family fun, and great music. It will be the third-year anniversary of our annual vegan fest and the 50th anniversary of hip-hop music. With that in mind, it was a no-brainer to do an event like Charlotte has never seen in the vegan community. We will be bringing in the best of the best to throw down at Soulchella. Before that takes place, you have a separate music and food festival coming up on Sept. 18. Tell me about it. Yes, we are so excited to bring this first ever vegan jazz and wine event. It’s called the Charlotte Vegan Jazz and Wine Festival. I have such a love for food, fun and great music. I’m a fan of jazz artists like Miles Davis, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Al Jarreau, John Coltrane, Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson, Charlie Parker, Ray Charles, Duke Ellington, and George Benson; I grew up listening to these great legends. Is there a VelTree patron encounter that sticks with you? I have had so many memorable encounters its hard to choose just one. I have had several customers that have cried while telling me how something on the menu reminded them of lost love ones like their mothers or grandmas and aunties who had passed. I have had little girls and boys look in amazement as their parent tells them that I own the restaurant. I’ve had elders come in with newspaper clippings that are as old as the restaurant. I even had a woman sit on the church pew in the restaurant and just start crying because of memories.

We offer an experience when you come to VelTree. It’s not just about the food, it’s the vibe, the music and the people. We just like to have a good time. What can we expect from VelTree next?

&

QCNERVE.COM-202220,SEPTEMBER-7SEPTEMBER18Pg. LIFESTYLE PUZZLES

1. GEOGRAPHY: What is the only country in the world without an official capital city?

3. BUSINESS: When did the auction site eBay launch?

6. U.S. STATES: Which state’s motto is “Mountaineers are always free”?

8. MYTHOLOGY: Which Egyptian god has the head of a jackal?

9. TELEVISION: How many times has the hospital’s name changed in the drama “Grey’s Anatomy”?

10. RELIGION: Where was the founder of Buddhism born?

ACROSS, EACH COLUMN DOWN AND EACH SMALL 9-BOX SQUARE CONTAINS ALL OF THE NUMBERS ONE TO NINE.

5. MOVIES: Who played Wolverine in the X-Men movie series?

7. ASTRONOMY: What is the only planet in our solar system that isn’t named after a Greek-Roman deity?

GIFTS OF THE YEAR BY LINDA THISTLE BY FIFI RODRIGUEZ ©2022 King Feautres Syndicate, Inc. All rights reserved. ©2022 King Feautres Syndicate, Inc. All rights reserved. LIFESTYLE PUZZLES WWW.CANVASTATTOOS.COM (980) 299-2588 3012 N. DAVIDSON STREET 2918 N. DAVIDSON STREET CHARLOTTE, NC 28205 VOTED BEST TATTOO SHOP 2019 2020 2021

2. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: Which Chinese zodiac animal is celebrated in the year 2022?

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4. HISTORY: How many years has Queen Elizabeth been on the throne?

CROSSWORD SUDOKU TRIVIA TEST PLACE A NUMBER IN THE EMPTY BOXES IN SUCH A WAY THAT EACH

I discovered the practice of meditating in my late twenties, around the same time frame that I learned yoga. A centuries-old technique, meditation is now primarily used for stress reduction, which is why it appeals to me. Life is a lot, y’all! Since I’ve been trudging my way through a master’s program, I often make excuses not to meditate — I’m too busy, my head hurts, or some other feeble reason. However, what lies at the heart of these evasions are the actual reasons I should meditate! Meditation is what will bestow the tranquility my brain and body so desperately need. It allows my mind to focus on one thing, or “onepointed attention.” This concept is an aspect of Dharana, the sixth limb of the eight-limb path of yoga. Dharana refers to the “immovable concentration of the mind.” Overcoming my excuses and needing an energetic reset, I booked a tachyon chamber meditation session at TorchBearer in Cornelius. Unfamiliar with the concept of tachyon energy, I did a little reading before my trip to the tachyon chamber so as to better understand what it is and what I should expect during my visit.

According to the TorchBearer website, the tachyon chamber helps the guest achieve a meditative state faster and more profoundly. I looked forward to trying something new for a meditative reset. I started with the 44-minute chamber experience (there are also 66-minute and 88-minute experiences available, but as a novice, I thought it best to wade in slowly). Tachyons are the highest frequency particles that can be combined with matter. Nothing harmful, unhealthy, or unnatural can coexist in the presence of tachyon particles.

If I could turn back the clock and redo my meditation session, I would have explored the tachyon chamber on a day in which I wasn’t addled by work stress or the pressure of time constraints like meeting friends for dinner. Again, life is a lot! What I can say is that I exited the chamber with a restored sense of tranquility, which makes sense because tachyons are also called “happiness particles.”

LIFESTYLE COLUMN

While it is difficult to claim that an individual session was life-changing, I plan to continue visiting the tachyon chamber as part of my overall health and wellness plan. And for those interested in experiencing the space on your own, I recommend not having plans after your meditation session. This will allow your mind and body to absorb the benefits and not feel rushed to move on to the next part of your day.

INFO@QCNERVE.COM

Upon arrival, I met TorchBearer co-owner Adrienne Craighead, who opened the facility in Cornelius this summer. It’s the first facility of its kind in the Charlotte area. Adrienne gave me a quick tour of the facility, which also houses other healers like massage therapists. She then guided me to the tachyon chamber. She explained that the chamber neutralizes the adverse effects of harmful electromagnetic fields (EMF) within and around our bodies and helps guests achieve theta brainwaves — the deepest and slowest conscious waves Tibetan monks practice for years to master. Adrienne helped me settle into a comfortable reclining chair in the middle of the room, surrounded by six clear 8-inch diameter spheres (reminiscent of the crystal ball from The Wizard of Oz) supported by stands engraved with sacred geometric designs. Above the chair hung what is called the pyramid centerpiece. It is constructed of a specialized alloy that holds tachyon at its greatest concentration and features more geometric designs. I learned the spheres respond to the pyramid and sacred geometry through the “streaming portal” pattern. Adrienne then handed me two meditation rods to hold in each hand. Once the lights were turned off and Adrienne stepped out, the chamber definitely evoked a restful atmosphere; I felt I could have fallen asleep if I had extended my meditation session any longer! Besides the ethereal music that flowed through the noise-canceling headphones, no electronic technology was involved. I relaxed into the reclined chair enveloped by a blanket and a tachyonized eye mask. Embarking on my meditation journey, I felt a low vibration humming, starting with my hands and coursing up my arms, and it remained present throughout the whole 44-minute session.

THE SEEKER HAPPINESS PARTICLE

Tachyon energy is considered a new holistic form of healing based on physics and the studies of Nikola Tesla. There is even a Tesla quote on the TorchBearer website: “If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration.”

THE

The Queen City is fortunate to have such a unique healing opportunity at its fingertips.

According to Natural Awakenings magazine, around 6,000 years ago, the Vedic religion named tachyon particles mondajava, or ”the stuff the gods are made of.”

BY KATIE GRANT

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A visit to Mecklenburg’s first tachyon chamber

Apparently, tachyons are “subatomic particles that travel faster than the speed of light,” but I am no quantum physicist so a lot of this I don’t understand. However, the more I read about tachyon chamber meditation, the more I decided it was something I could get with!

AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Are new associates freezing you out of their inner circle? Never mind. Put a warm smile on that friendly face of yours, and you’ll soon thaw them all down to size.

CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Expect to make adjustments, even when things seem locked up and ready to go. But, cheer up: At least one change could lead to something you’ve been hoping for.

VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Watch that penchant for being super judgmental at work. It might create a bad impression with someone whose decisions could determine the course of your career.

SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Congratulations. Once again, your sharp Sagittarian “horse sense” helps you work through a complicated situation that would leave most people confused.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You might still be a bit reluctant to face up to some less-than-pleasant realities. But, the sooner you accept the facts, the sooner you can set about making some needed changes.

VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Ease up on the pressure you might be putting on the new person in your life. It takes time for a budding relationship to blossom. Showing them more patience and understanding will help.

ARIES (March 21 to April 19) As eager as you are to take on that new challenge, it would be best to temper that spurt of “Ram”-bunctious energy until you have more facts to back up your decision.

CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Try to be intrigued, not intimidated, by the issues you’re suddenly facing, and you’ll be ahead of the game. Don’t be afraid to demand answers to your questions.

LIFESTYLE

TriviaAnswers 1.Nauru,anislandnationin thePacificOcean. 2.TheYearoftheTiger. 3.1995. 4.70.Shejustcelebratedher PlatinumJubilee. 5.HughJackman. 6.WestVirginia. 7.Earth. 8.Anubis,godofdeath. 9. BuddhaThree.10.wasborninwhatis modern-dayNepal.

LEO (July 23 to August 22) You might think you’re not getting the royal treatment you deserve. But, be careful not to become a royal pain by complaining about it. Be patient and allow things to work out.

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) You have lots of inner strength in reserve. Use some of it to resist intimidation from those who might try to impose on your good nature for their own reasons.

SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) The good news is that your on-the-job status is improving. The one cautionary note, however, involves a personal situation you might have been ignoring for too long.

PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Your wise guidance helps colleagues agree to compromise and move forward. Meanwhile, there are still vital issues you need to deal with in your personal life.

CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Try to be more flexible in dealing with a suddenly difficult situation, whether it’s on the job or at home. Others might have some good points to offer. Listen to them.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Pay attention to what you hear in the workplace. You could pick up some hints about possible changes. Meanwhile, a new infusion of creative energy sets in by week’s end.

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) You’ve been your usual busy-bee self, gathering nectar wherever you can find it. But now’s a good time to kick back, relax and just enjoy smelling the roses.

ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Relationships continue to thrive, but watch for any telltale signs of potential problems. Take needed action now to set things straight, before they become troublesome later.

HOROSCOPE

2022 KING FEATURES SYND., INC.

AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Positive factors continue to dominate, following a recent change in both your professional and personal lives. Expect to make contact with someone from your past.

SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Whoa! Ease up on that hectic pace you’ve been putting yourself through. Take time to recharge your energy levels before going at a full gallop again.

TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Your powers of persuasion backed up, of course, by your considerable expertise help you to establish your case, even to the most dubious decision-makers in your workplace.

SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) That pesky personal situation seems to be improving. But, change comes slowly, so be patient. Expect someone to bring more positive news by week’s end.

TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) This is a good time for hardworking Bovines to take a break from their hectic on-the-job schedules to bask in the unconditional love and support of friends and family.

BORN THIS WEEK: You have a gift for making people feel special. Maybe it’s because you know how special you are.

PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Workplace stability allows you to continue making progress on your projects. But, don’t ignore your personal life. Spend more quality time with those special folks.

BORN THIS WEEK: You enjoy being free with your emotions, but you can exercise disciplined focus as well. You would make a fine artist.

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CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Plan on indulging yourself in some well-earned good times through much of the week. Then be prepared to face some thought-provoking issues during the next few weeks.

PUZZLE ANSWERS

Sept. 7-13 Sept. 14-20

LEO (July 23 to August 22) The success of a recent project should do a lot to boost your self-confidence. You might want to check out ways to make that long-deferred bigger and bolder move.

No such thing as free lunch BY DAN SAVAGE

Hoping to get some tips from other teachers, I shared your email on Twitter. Suggestions ranged from getting on FetLife, which can be a problematic place, to checking out — and perhaps posting on — the r/ RandomActsOfMuffDive subreddit on Reddit. And more than a few of my followers wondered whether you might prefer a woman to a man, seeing as you never really cared for Beingdick.agay dude, however, I know plenty of people who are attracted to men but don’t enjoy getting fucked. (Some guys are tops, some guys are sides.) Luckily for you, TACO, there are straight and bi men out there who only want to eat pussy. I’ve heard from scores of them over the years. Some had severe erectile dysfunction and preferred succeeding at cunnilingus to failing at vaginal intercourse; others were straight male submissives who wanted to orally service a woman without getting anything in return; and more than a few were men who loved eating pussy and somehow wound up married to women who hated oral sex and these men wanted to find women to go down on — and just go down on — outside their relationships, with their wives’ permission (in some cases) or without it (in most cases). But to find them you’re going to have to get on the apps, TACO, which may mean getting out of your small town.

But there are shortages of teachers in more progressive places too, TACO, which means you could easily get a job in a big city in a blue state. Not only would you be less likely to be spotted on the apps by a parent with a kid in your school in a blue state (because there a lot more people on the apps in big cities), you would also be far less likely to be attacked by a parent who did spot you on an app. (Less likely to get attacked, more likely to get licked.) And just as the governors of blue states think you should be able to teach about, oh, slavery and redlining and segregation and Jim Crow (and the Chinese Exclusion Act and Japanese internment camps during WWII and the Trail of Tears and on and on), most blue state governors would be fine with you getting your pussy licked — on your own time, by other consenting adults — if that’s what you want.

TEACHER AFTER CUNNILINGUS ONLY

COLUMN

Why would anyone want to be a teacher these days?

LIFESTYLE

Outraged parents, shit pay, shittier governors, racist demagoguery, book bans, “don’t say gay” laws … and on top of all that, not being free to look for sex where everyone else does these days — on the apps — because you might get spotted by a parent who is also looking for sex on the apps and then get attacked at a school board meeting that makes the local news and goes viral and then have to endure a month of death threats after getting dragged on Libs of TikTok and Fox News. According to ABC News, fewer and fewer people these days do want to be teachers. There are 300,000 teacher and school staff vacancies in the United States right now, a situation the Washington Post describes as “catastrophic,” with red states and Trump counties experiencing the worst shortages. That should come as no surprise to anyone who’s been paying attention, as red states and rural areas are overrun with precisely the kind of deranged Trump supporters and other assorted conspiracy theorists who keep attacking teachers and school librarians and administrators.

SAVAGE LOVE SCHOOL ME ONCE

I’m a 38-year-old cis het woman who is also a public high school teacher in a small town. After a string of unsatisfying relationships in my 20s, I realized that I’ve only experienced sexual pleasure without a partner. Despite being excited by the idea of partnered sex, once there’s a dick inside me, I hate it. Only one thing still seemed appealing: receiving oral sex. I’d love that with someone skilled. By age 33, I gave up dating since finding a partner only interested in going down on me seemed both impossible and selfish. I put all my energy into my career, my family, and my community. After years of fighting the fascism that is gaining hold in our public schools, I’m burnt out and my standard self-care routines aren’t cutting it. I’m considering seeking companionship once again. Is there an easy way to find a partner interested in eating me out but not (or only rarely) anything else? I know the best options are the apps but there are parents as well as former students on those. I already have a target on my back as a liberal teacher. I can’t afford to get caught seeking sex online and the time and energy to date before disclosing my sexual preference sounds exhausting. I don’t want another apple-themed gift. I want my pussy licked.

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