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Lobo Marino talks to The Deli about Richmond, politics, and music

Recently I had a chance to ask some questions to Laney of Lobo Marino to learn a little bit more about what their music is all about.  Here's what I found out.

1. Lobo Marino seems like a group that could only exist in a city like Richmond that is so well known for creativity and the arts.  How has Richmond helped you grow as a band?

Richmond has been essential for us. First, in the sheer inspiration of being in a place surrounded by artist and activists.  Jameson and I met in Richmond working at a Vegetarian Restaurant called Harrison Street Cafe.  We both played in different bands, I was in an old time band called "Arise Sweet Donkey" and Jameson was in an experimental Hard Core band called "Our Stable Violent Star".  After Living together for a year in Richmond we decided to sell our things and spend a year traveling and working on farms in South America.  That year turned into multiple years of traveling.... But Richmond, full of friends and forever faithful would always welcome us back on whims.  Dozens of members of our Richmond Community took turns hosting us when we would come home for a month or two.  Our old job at Harrison Street would even take us back for temp work whenever we were in town. 

There is the amazing quality in Richmond... So many people come and go and come back again.  You can be gone for a year and when you come back you are welcomed home like you never left.  Someone might say "Hey! I haven't see you for a while" and you are like "well yea, I was just traveling cross country for six months" and they just shrug and you pick up right where you left off.  Once part of the community, you are always part of the community. 

2. I've read that you guys have opened up your home to serve as a meeting space for political action.  Could you talk a little bit about what kind of events you guys host and the types of political action are you trying to encourage through your activities?

We run a space called the Earth Folk Collective.  It is a 200-Year- old farmhouse that we are restoring on an acre of land in the city.  We grow a lot of our own food at the space and offer donation based workshops to the community on topics like composting, seed saving, mushroom cultivation, yoga, poetry, know your rights, collective living, basket weaving, self care.... All kinds of things.  The Richmond Herbalism guild uses our space for workshops and trade posts.  We have hosted many concerts and and community gatherings as well as art builds for protests. 

Because Richmond is the capital of the state of Virginia, we are a hub for protests.  In our garage we have a collection of drums that we use for our pop-up drum line which we bring out to actions and protests. Those drums lay beside a giant puppet that is also used for street actions and political parades. We are members of a political puppet troupe called "All the Saints Theater Company.  It is inspired by Bread and Puppet up in Vermont. There are so many amazing political organizations holding it down in Richmond these days and collaboration in art and action is a core characteristic of the scene. 

Richmond is also the hub of the company Dominion Power who holds the monopoly on Virginia's electrical infrastructure.  At the moment we are busy organizing statewide with grassroots groups to stop the massive network of natural Gas Pipelines that Dominion Power is trying to build across our state. 

Another issue related to Dominion and the environment is the concern for our water.  The James River runs through Richmond.  It is the heart of our city and the source of our drinking water.  Dominion power has huge power plants on the banks of the James.  For years these facilities have been burning coal and currently have hundreds of acres of land which are covered with coal ash ponds, areas where the left over coal fly ash is contained in water.  Many of these ponds are unlined and are leaking toxic heavy metals through the water table into our river. The EPA has required that the coal ash be contained in a safer way, but the technology for such a large scale project is not yet fully realized.  Last year Dominion was given a permit by the Department of Environmental Quality  to toxify the James river upstream from Richmond.  The people of our city freaked out and thousands marched to say that we would not allow this company to destroy the eco system of our sacred river. During this time our home was used to house art supplies for an awareness action.  I remember once our friend from Chesapeake Climate Action Network was painting a banner on our porch and the paint bled through the sheet and we ended up having the Governor's name "McAuliffe" painted on our porch.

3. Your new album is impressive, what's next for Lobo Marino and how do you guys see the project progressing in the coming months and years?

We have always wanted Lobo Marino to be grassroots. As we learn from the earth by growing our own food, we have learned a new type of patience. Lobo Marino is not a flash in the pan pop band.  We have been building this project for 7 years touring around the world playing DIYspaces,  intentional communities and spiritual communities. Our music is an expression of our life journey and right now it's all about sowing seeds and watching them grow.  We didn't feel like we needed a big promotional machine to birth our new album "The Mulberry House"... We look at it as though we have prepared the soil and sowed the seed and now we just have to wait and water every now and then. 

We continue to tour nationally and are planning an international tour next year. We are on the road playing music about 6 months out of the year. 

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Cigarette's slo-mo harmonies at Black Cat on 06.14

Between lingering lo-fi vocals, featured string orchestrations, and simple guitar riffs drenched in reverb, it is difficult to gloss over DC’s own slowcore band Cigarette. Currently a four piece band with occasional guest musicians, the collective released their debut, mini-LP, Gush, in 2013, which displayed a vivid interpretation of modern indie pop, fused with slo-mo harmonies integrating gentle and gloomy vocals. The band has since released two more records. The most recent, “Warm Shadows/Love's Mirror” features two overtly atmospheric singles which further enunciate the group’s sonic vocabulary. - Tafari Lemma

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Dawkins delivers blissful reverb drenched indie on debut EP

Existing somewhere in that sphere of experimental indie pop that contains Animal Collective and Neon Indian, Dawkins' Ep1 is a quality release that steers clear of being a cheap knockoff of the reverb drenched, chaotic sound that has made other groups famous.   Although not flawless, the group's first release achieves some really great moments, like at the 1 minute mark in Kiwi, where the chorus all of a sudden bursts through in a great moment of catharsis. At times blissfully harmonious with the pumping, youthful energy of indie pop, Ep 1 is a wonderful start for the group.

-Written by Michael Dranove

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The Sea Life to release self-titled full-length on Babe City Records

Noise-pop band The Sea Life is releasing a self-titled full-length album on May 26th, on Babe City Records. Blending the angsty vocal stylings of Win Butler and Conor Oberst with up-tempo, minor-key distortion, the D.C.-based band paint a swirling picture of depressive sentiments and full-throated screams of longing. On "Red Eyes," the lyrics suggest aversion toward success: "It's a shame /That you’re trading your passion for a paycheck." The raw power in the band's sonic approach and their energetic musicianship, however, indicate that their passion is very much a driving force on this promising release. The Sea Life is playing a record release show at Smith Public Trust in D.C. on May 26th. Check out single "Red Eyes" below! - Ethan Ames

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RVA's Lobo Marino defies cynicism with their soulful world-folk

When I first clicked on the bandcamp page of Lobo Marino, the cynic in me scoffed at the idea of two Americans living in Richmond, VA imitating throat singing and chanting meditatively about the sun setting. However, after listening to a few tracks I was impressed by the power of Lobo Marino's music, the versatile song-writing and moving meditations on the ebb and flow of life.

A lot of bands claim to be making music more for its own sake than the money, but with Lobo Marino one gets the sense that it might actually be true.

-Written by Michael Dranove

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