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Tag: dc concerts

  • Fairfax County woman hopes to boogie and jam her way to a world record – WTOP News

    Fairfax County woman hopes to boogie and jam her way to a world record – WTOP News

    A Reston, Virginia, woman is attempting to break a Guinness World Record by listening to jam bands, steel drums and country music, as she tries to see the most live concerts in a single week.

    Jeanette Pagliuco poses with the band Collective, one of the bands she’s seen this week in her quest to see the most live concerts in one week.(Courtesy Jeanette Pagliuco)

    A Reston, Virginia, woman is attempting to break a Guinness World Record by listening to jam bands, steel drums and country music, as she tries to see the most live concerts in a single week.

    “When you’re experiencing live music, you’re in the moment,” Jeanette Pagliuco said. “You leave all your troubles and your worries behind.”

    Pagliuco moved to Reston, Virginia, from her home state of Connecticut over a year ago to be closer to her adult son.

    After moving, she remembers thinking: “Wow, there is a lot of music, there’s a lot of local talent, there’s a lot of great venues.’”

    She joined a meetup group that focused on live music. After several months of attending loads of concerts in Northern Virginia, she was asked to run the group: NoVa Live Music Mingle.

    At one point, she was going to so many concerts that she wondered how many she could attend in one week. She even searched to find out if there was a record.

    The Guinness Book of World Records did in fact have one — 21 shows in seven days.

    “I thought I could do it. I applied,” Pagliuco said. “I heard about six weeks later from the Guinness Book, and they said, ‘You know what? Yep, go ahead. If you can break it, go for it.’”

    There are strict requirements she needs to follow to qualify for breaking the record, including getting witnesses, going to music-focused venues and documenting each show with pictures and videos, Pagliuco said.

    “The hardest part was trying to find, within a week, all these shows that met the criteria,” she told WTOP. “It just so happened to be this week.”

    As of Tuesday morning, she has attended 16 shows, getting 14 of them in three days over the weekend.

    Most of the concerts have been local acts, such as Pool Boys, Marilyn Hucek and Collective. She’s heard from some of those performers about her decision to focus on local musicians’ shows.

    “I cannot even say how appreciative they are that I’m highlighting local music,” she said. “Local musicians, local talent at local venues. And they’re like, ‘Nobody does that.”

    She’s also using this as an opportunity to broaden her musical horizon, attending a steel drum show and R&B concert. She also plans to see a mariachi band.

    “I really wanted to tap into different genres just to push myself,” Pagliuco said.

    She told WTOP she expects to break the record sometime Wednesday.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Luke Lukert

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  • Home Rule Music Festival returns, celebrating double cause of DC statehood and local music – WTOP News

    Home Rule Music Festival returns, celebrating double cause of DC statehood and local music – WTOP News

    The third annual Home Rule Music Festival returns to D.C. this weekend, its title a double meaning for homegrown music and the lack of D.C. statehood.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews the Home Rule Music Festival (Part 1)

    Get ready to dance with some jazz and go-go tunes for the perfect kickoff to summer.

    A band performs at the Home Rule Music Festival in D.C. (Courtesy Home Rule Music Festival)

    The third annual Home Rule Music Festival returns to D.C. this weekend, its title a double meaning for homegrown music and the lack of D.C. statehood (“taxation without representation”).

    “It’s really us celebrating D.C.’s rich musical legacy and culture,” Executive Director Charvis Campbell told WTOP. “It’s also about us letting folks know: don’t forget that we don’t have the support that we need and deserve. It’s a little bit of both, that kind of militant side, but also truly an expression of our love of jazz and D.C. music.”

    The three-day festival kicks off Friday at The Black Cat on 14th Street, Northwest.

    “Opening night we have the amazing JoGo Project led by Elijah Jamal Balbed, a funky jazz go-go band,” Campbell said. “Then we have our headliner, the spiritual jazz artist Doug Carn, featuring Vanessa Rubin. Doug Carn is bringing his sextet and the amazing Vanessa Rubin is going to lend her voice for a beautiful, spiritual evening.”

    The second day of the festival moves outdoors to The Parks at Walter Reed on Saturday.

    “On Saturday, at our festival outdoors, we have Gary Bartz, we have Idris Ackamoor and The Pyramids, we have Rare Essence, Black Alley, Malcom X Drummers and Dancers, Dupont Brass and then Vanessa Rubin is going to come on back and perform with her own band. We also have a record fair, a live mural painting and a kid zone, which is going to be anchored by the Washington Nationals and Washington Commanders, they’re gonna be out there.”

    After that, you can recharge your batteries with a monthlong break before the festival gloriously returns for day three on Saturday, July 20, in Alethia Tanner Park in the Eckington neighborhood of Northeast, D.C.

    “We’re really excited about this partnership with NoMa BID,” Campbell said. “We’re going to start with the Loop Sessions, our music producer workshop, we’re gonna have young men and women who love to make beats, they’re gonna do a display. Then we have a high school go-go band, The Soul of SEED from The SEED School in Southeast. … We then have Be’la Dona, the all-female band, then The Experience Band & Show, so it’s really a true celebration.”

    Tickets for opening night at The Black Cat are $40 in advance or $50 at the door.

    The two outdoor dates are free.

    Find more information here.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews the Home Rule Music Festival (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation here.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jason Fraley

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