
DUBSGIVING
Feat. Young Bull, Africa Unplugged, Ebz the Artist
Friday, Nov. 29, 9 p.m., $10โ$12
Motorco Music Hall, Durham
If you follow the Triangle music scene, youโve likely encountered a project that Will Darity was involved with, whether you realize it or not. As a guitarist, the jazz-steeped Durham native has dabbled in everything from funk and hip-hop to West African music and country tributes, amassing a breadth of musical and business knowledge along the way.ย
Recently, Darity has funneled those experiences into his own booking agency, Forging the Musical Future. His musical worlds collide at his annual Thanksgiving throw-down, Dubsgiving, which started five years ago as a reunion for Pierce Freelonย and Aden Darity’sย hip-hop duo, Language Arts.
What began as a way for Darityย to celebrate his brother’s project’s ten-year reunion has since blossomed into a Durham tradition that showcases a disparate array of sounds.
โIโm always looking for ways that I can pull different crowds together,โ Darity says. โI like to give the crowd something they might not otherwise see.โย
Thatโs how you get bills with local indie stalwarts Blanko Basnet alongside a hip-hop duo and R&B vocalist Drake Murphy (at the inaugural Dubsgiving at The Pinhook), or the โ80s pop extravagance of Breathers with local soul and hip-hop standouts like Niito and Young Bullย last year at Motorco.
Darityโs eclectic lineups are what you’d expect from an Oberlin Conservatory graduate thatโs currently fronting a Charley Pride tribute act while lending guitar work to Young Bull and the West African project Africa Unplugged, both of which perform at this year’s event at Motorco on Friday night, along withย Ebz the Artist.ย
But Darity isnโt just throwing things at the wall and hoping they stick. With his booking, he’s bridgingย gaps in genres that others might not see and connectingย artists.ย
โI noticed certain bands were overplaying the market. They just wanted to play, play, play, and werenโt getting a consistent crowd to their shows,โ Darity says. โForging the Musical Future is about getting people to see that, rather than playing three shows in Durham in a month, letโs get these other bands in the mix.โ
Darityโs endeavors as an agent are informed by his continued work as an artist; heโs constantly picking up industry knowledge along the way. He saysย his time with the Greensboro-based Afropop project The Brand New Life (now based in New York as Super Yamba Band) wasย professionally formative.
โBrand New Life was the first time I really went out touring, and I learned a lot,” Darity says. “Thereโs door deals, guarantees, lining up dates, putting a tour budget together, finding out where weโre gonna crash that night. It made me realize, man, I can do this. I can see whatโs out there, I donโt just have to play around town all the time.โ
Dubsgiving displays Darity’s refined ability to curate bills like the sultry electronic R&B of Ebzย with his own projects. Itโs a union of similar-but-different, a community-buildingย project to pull folks out of their houses the day after Thanksgivingย and onto the dance floor.


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