| Although the
DC area has traditionally been known as a musical no-man’s
land, the four members of the Virginia Coalition feel it has largely
been misunderstood. DC is all about the blending of many different
styles of music - layered and textured with no restrictions -
It's rock with soul, hip-hop with hippie, R&B with bluegrass…
and all of these styles are in Virginia Coalition’s blood.
The band’s homage to Virginia may be
a bit misleading. Alexandria, Virginia began as a section within
the original borders of Washington, DC until things heated up
between the North and South just before the Civil War. If DC is
Chocolate City, then Alexandria is the white cousin buried way
back in the family tree.
Virginia Coalition is made up of four friends
who met in the T.C. Williams High School music program. Their
school was where the inspirational fact-based movie “Remember
The Titans” took place. The movie documents the integration
of black and white students on the school's football team in 1971.
"By the time we got to T.C. Williams [years later] there
were 75 languages and 56 different countries represented."
Every member of the band can play almost every
instrument. They sing just as well as they play and every one
of them writes. Their collaborative song-writing style creates
the textured, sometimes eccentric, and always melodic songs that
have allowed Virginia Coalition to stand out. Jarrett Nicolay
comments, "everybody writes and plays most instruments; we
are never at a loss for new material,” adding, “it
is also great that we can all contribute to making the songs 'stage
ready.'"
Virginia Coalition's live show is a larger-than-life
party that has helped the band garner a rabid fan base who affectionately
call them “VACO.” It was also Virginia Coalition's
extraordinary live show that got them signed to New York City
based label bluhammock music. Based on a tip from a friend, the
founders of the label came to a show to check them out. "Then
they came back a second time, then they kept coming back until
we got signed. That's pretty much how everything has happened
for us. " Ottinger said. "All the success VACO has is
due to people passing the word around and saying good things."
Word of mouth is how they sold 60,000 records and it's how they
won the 2003 Washington Post Reader's Choice Award for Best Local
Band in 2003.
In the spring of 2004, VACO entered the studio
with acclaimed producer Matt Wallace (Maroon 5, The Replacements,
Train) . “Matt was great at helping fine-tune the songs,”
says Nicolay, “it is pretty obvious that he has made many
awesome records. His input really made the whole process easy,
and made the end result something we are all extremely proud of."
With their upcoming fourth album, the band
hopes to continue the evolution they have started with their last
effort Rock N Roll Party. They are hoping to showcase
the energy of their live show as well as take their listeners
on a journey that shows their evolution as musicians, and introduce
themselves to new listeners while serving up the stuff that their
loyal following loves.
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