Wednesday, February 22, 2012 at 09:06PM | by
BVD | in
Sunset Paintings | tagged
Blue Ridge,
The Black Keys,
William Van Doren,
clouds,
mountains,
skyscape,
sunset,
weather | |
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Wednesday, February 22, 2012 at 09:06PM | by
BVD | in
Sunset Paintings | tagged
Blue Ridge,
The Black Keys,
William Van Doren,
clouds,
mountains,
skyscape,
sunset,
weather |
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Thursday, December 29, 2011 at 07:11PM | by
BVD | in
Sunset Paintings | tagged
Blue Ridge,
The Black Keys,
William Van Doren,
color,
painting,
skyscape,
sun,
sunset |
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William Van Doren, GONE IN 60 SECONDS (Sunset from Stony Point, Albemarle County, Va.) Oil on watercolor block, 13 x 19.
There was color in the sky, I looked down for a moment, and when I looked up, it was gone. Hence the title. I did try to retrieve it. While I was painting, a song by The Black Keys came up with a line I can’t seem to get tired of: “She’s long gone, like Moses through the corn.”
Monday, September 20, 2010 at 08:50PM | by
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Sunset Paintings | tagged
Blue Ridge,
The Black Keys |
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Wednesday, September 15, 2010 at 09:29PM | by
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Sunset Paintings | tagged
Blue Ridge,
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William Van Doren, Keep It Hid (Sunset from Charlottesville, Va.) Oil on watercolor block, 13 x 19.
I was at The Pavilion in downtown Charlottesville to see The Black Keys, and as open to roaming as the venue is, I still couldn’t really see “the sunset,” which was happening to the north (to the right) behind all the downtown buildings, and which, from what little I could see, was a technicolor spectacular. (Sorry about that. O.K., maybe not.) This then was the southwest sky at sunset, looking out toward the nearby Ragged Mountains, of Edgar Allan Poe fame. Edgar Allan Poe and The Black Keys belong together anyhow.
The Black Keys were nothing short of sensational. No one should underestimate the importance and influence of Patrick Carney, the drummer – that would be a great injustice, especially since the two guys really work as one – but Dan Auerbach has to be the most intimidating writer-guitarist-singer-performer I’ve ever seen, going back to The Beatles, 1966. Speaking of which, I was joking to Laura after the show how people talk about using surviving members of The Who to reconstitute The Beatles, or vice-versa. (Kind of grotesque.) But with Auerbach, you could replace John and George, and we don’t really need Paul, so that leaves ... The Black Keys!
Sorry, Macca fans, couldn’t resist. And Carney is much more than what was just implied, i.e., reference to Mr. Starkey.
And then The Black Keys are something really different on the axis of blues and soul ... sort of like the blues died and went to heaven.
Painting title comes from Dan Auerbach’s great 2009 solo album, but with different meanings, one of which is that the sunset was hidden from view.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010 at 09:00PM | by
BVD | in
Commentary,
Sunset Paintings | tagged
Charlottesville Virginia,
Dan Auerbach,
Edgar Allan Poe,
Patrick Carney,
Ragged Mountains,
The Black Keys,
“A Tale of the Ragged Mountains” |
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Pale Bright Dark Light (Sunset, Monday, 15 August 2011)
A promising new band, The Bloody Angle, describe themselves as “a Southern Alt-Rock band from Charlottesville VA. Think Drive-By Truckers meet The Black Keys, Jack White, and the Raconteurs.” Their Band Page offers a couple of free downloads.