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Listings are
in the opposite order of appearance: headliner is listed at the top,
next is the support band(s),
and the last band listed is the opener.
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Wednesday August 24 2016![]() 8:00PM doors -- music at 9:00PM ••• ALL AGES $15 in advance / $17 at the door Turnover www.facebook.com/turnoverva/ Indie rock, pop punk Angel Dust www.facebook.com/angeldustmoney/ Triathalon www.triathalon.band/ r&b surf Turnover Casey Getz, Danny Dempsey Eric Soucy, Austin Getz -from Virginia Beach, VA -With a sound that's driving and plaintive, contemplative and catchy, Turnover capture the uncertainty of emo-pop greats like the Get Up Kids and Texas Is the Reason. Based out of Virginia Beach, Virginia, the quartet, made up of Casey and Austin Getz, Danny Dempsey, and Eric Soucy, jumped onto the scene in 2011 with a self-titled EP. A split single with Citizen followed the next year before the band would make its full-length debut in early 2013 with Magnolia on Run for Cover Records. Their sophomore release 2015's Peripheral Vision represented a shift in style toward more melodic, dreamy indie rock. Angel Dust Nick Heitman, Jurtice Tripp Pat McCrory, Daniel Fang -from Maryland -In place of punch, Triathalon offers so much more—atmosphere, mood, and melodic depth. Sure, there are songs like “Ways” and “Step Into the Dark” that sputter along modestly, their clean chords teetering and tilting, but Nothing Bothers Me has more to do with capacity than movement. On “Chill Out,” Triathalon creates space with reverb and chorus, but also with a halo of organ that glows behind the guitars and thrumming bass, and with well-placed harmonies that thicken singer Adam Intrator’s soft falsetto. Fast or slow (or both; “Slip’N hops suddenly from one to the other), one may fall further through into songs than the proverbial rabbit hole. Triathalon Adam, Lucas, Hunter, Ryan & Chad -from Savannah, GA -In place of punch, Triathalon offers so much more—atmosphere, mood, and melodic depth. Sure, there are songs like “Ways” and “Step Into the Dark” that sputter along modestly, their clean chords teetering and tilting, but Nothing Bothers Me has more to do with capacity than movement. On “Chill Out,” Triathalon creates space with reverb and chorus, but also with a halo of organ that glows behind the guitars and thrumming bass, and with well-placed harmonies that thicken singer Adam Intrator’s soft falsetto. Fast or slow (or both; “Slip’N hops suddenly from one to the other), one may fall further through into songs than the proverbial rabbit hole. |
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