Letters: ‘Defund’ the Sheriff

Marin, the most orderly, low-crime county in California, should redirect the proposed $6-million-dollar Sheriff’s-budget increase toward more immediate needs.

The Sheriff already regards his heavily equipped department as a “paramilitary” force, which is out of step with the times and Marin’s real needs.

I still object to his use of Stingray listening devices to monitor the calls of Marin’s citizens, along with his connections to the National Security Agency.

Alex Easton-Brown
Lagunitas

What’s the Fuss?

Whoa … wait … maybe the cannabis industry would like Jill Ravitch to retire (“Top Cop’s Kerfuffle,” Rolling Papers, June 10), but for other residents of Sonoma County, she is doing exactly what she promised to do when she was elected to office in 2010.

She took an agency that was faltering under the previous administration and focused it on safety. She opened the Family Justice Center, expanding services to victims of family violence, sexual assault, child abuse and elder abuse.

Ravitch, described as a “tough prosecutor” with 27 years of experience, personally took a murder case to trial and won a first-degree conviction. The first in more than 20 years.

Her office has been clearing nearly 3,000 cannabis-related convictions.

Even her detractors (Omar Figueroa) praise her as a “great trial lawyer.” Lawyer and longtime Sonoma County “police watchdog,” Jerry Threet, admits Ravitch brought criminal assault charges against a police officer, but the jury declined to find him guilty.

Jill Ravitch is seeking justice in her work. She is doing the job she was elected to do. Twice.

Cathleen Howell
Santa Rosa

Dark of Love

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By Jan Ögren

Does the term “Dark of Love” feel awkward to you? Most people are more familiar and comfortable with the phrase “Light of Love.”

All my life I have been deeply saddened by the continual racism I see in our country. I’m a writer, so I look to words for understanding. I see embedded in our language a basic racism. We talk about blackmail as bad, but white lies are OK. The examples are endless. And spiritually you’re supposed to go to the light and avoid the darkness.

As a person of light skin, I imagine what it would be like to frequently hear people say, “I just went through a really light time in my life and it was terrible. I’m glad to get away from the light. That lightness was truly ugly and disturbing.”

I believe that there is a pervasive “spiritual racism” occurring in this country, deeply embedded in our spiritual communities.

Equating light with spirituality doesn’t even make sense. When I get ready to meditate, I don’t go around turning up all the lights or sit under a spotlight. I turn down the lights, close my eyes and enter a blessed darkness where I can feel a connection with all Oneness.

I feel more inspired and peaceful staring up at the black night sky than staring at the sun.

I believe it is time to “blackwash” our language and avoid the terrible lightness of prejudice. Let’s talk about encouraging love and connection and avoiding disconnection and chaos. I find it a good spiritual practice to be aware of my words and try to avoid the white/good, black/bad bias. As a white person it also helps me stay aware of racism and white privilege as I listen to my language and other people’s use of words.

I wish I had a magic wand to change the entire world but I can change my words and so I invite you to join me in embracing the beautiful dark of love.

Jan Ögren, MFT, works in Santa Rosa practicing Psychological Shamanism. JanOgren.net

Salvador Dalí Exhibit Debuts in Sonoma

Salvador Dalí is best known for painting surrealist works featuring melting clocks and long-legged elephants, though the multi-faceted and famously mustachioed artist was also a sculptor, filmmaker and wine connoisseur among other talents.

Dalí even wrote a book on the subject of wine, 1977’s The Wines of Gala, an eccentric guide that features California wine as one of the “Ten Divine Wines” of the world. Throughout his life, Dalí connected wine with art and other emotional experiences, and is credited with saying, “A real connoisseur does not drink wine but tastes of its secrets.”

Now, wine and Dalí come together once again as Wine Country becomes the setting for a new exhibit of the iconic artist’s prints and sculptures, presented in collaboration with The Dalí Universe­—one of the largest private collections of Dalí artworks in the world—and SBHG Gallery at Cornerstone Sonoma.

“The Dalí Universe­” exhibit opens Friday, June 26, and runs through August at the Cornerstone Sonoma outdoor marketplace. The showings run 11am to 5pm on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, and curator Bertrand Epaud will be in town through the first week of the exhibit to offer expert insight into the artworks. Individual pieces are also available for private viewings that can be scheduled by appointment Mondays through Thursdays.

“We are honored to house this stunning collection from the undisputed master of Surrealism, Salvador Dalí,” said Karin Rogers, director of business development at the collective Sonoma’s Best Hospitality Group, which runs Cornerstone’s SBHG Gallery. “Dalí’s thought-provoking works feel rather suited to the surreal times in which we are living, and we look forward to sharing these pieces with the Bay Area and our local community.”

The exhibit will display eight of Dalí’s surrealist prints and will include a collection of nine of his bronze sculptures, which are a previously unknown aspect of Dalí’s work. In addition to painting and writing, Dalí was fascinated by the medium of sculpture, and he created original models and designs that were made into surreal objects based on the subjects in his paintings, such as the melting clocks of his painting “The Persistence of Memory,” and the recurring elephants that appear in works such as the painting “Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening.”

For more than 40 years, Beniamino Levi, an Italian art dealer and collector who worked with Dalí during the 1960s, has headed The Dalí Universe collection of art. Fascinated by Dalí’s ability to use different mediums, Levi began collecting Dalí art and sculpture when he opened Galleria Levi in Milan in 1955. The Dalí Universe’s flagship exhibition space is located in Paris, France, though the company tours and loans Dalí artworks to over one hundred prestigious museums and locations worldwide.

Cornerstone Sonoma’s expansive outdoor marketplace includes many independently owned retail shops and wineries, a distillery and a restaurant. The Cornerstone property also includes art-inspired gardens, event venues and the Sunset Gardens & Outdoor Test Kitchen, where gourmet food and wine pairings will be available for purchase and served by Sonoma-based Ramekins Culinary School while the exhibit displays Fridays through Sundays.

Cornerstone Sonoma and the SBHG Gallery will observe strict hygiene and social distancing guidelines in conjunction with Sonoma County’s most current Covid-19 safety measures. Additionally, many of the marketplace’s tenant vendors have updated their services and hours during the COVID-19 outbreak and are taking extra precautions to insure the safety of the community.

‘The Dalí Universe’ is on display Fridays–Sundays, Jun 26–August 30, at Cornerstone Sonoma, 23570 Arnold Dr. in Sonoma. 11am to 5pm. Free admission. For more information, visit cornerstonesonoma.com.

California Honeydrops to Play New EP on Sweetwater Stage

More than 10 years after forming as an Oakland busking duo, the California Honeydrops are now one of the Bay Area’s most popular bands, performing an upbeat brand of irresistibly danceable soul music and garnering acclaim for both their energetic live performances and ambitious album recordings.

Even in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, the funky five-part band is throwing a party this weekend, albeit a live-streamed virtual party, when they celebrate the release of their new EP, Just One More, And Then Some with an online concert on Friday, June 26.

The streaming concert will feature the California Honeydrops performing two full sets of music live from the stage of the Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley, beginning at 7pm. The online event is free to watch, and virtual tickets can be reserved now.

Like other Marin County venues, Sweetwater Music Hall has been closed to social gatherings since March when shelter-in-place orders went into effect. Recently, Sweetwater has been open for take-out food and limited outdoor dining, though concerts have been on hold.

The California Honeydrops are also feeling the effect of the enforced social distancing, and saw their planned summer concert schedule evaporate in the wake of the pandemic. In lieu of tour dates, the Honeydrops have been performing weekly “Friday Night Sessions” that are reaching online audiences of over 25,000 people per stream. The band is also giving back through these online offerings, donating 25 percent of each week’s revenue to a different charity.

Now, with their new EP, the California Honeydrops are ready to really party.

“We wanted the EP to be super raw and to reflect how we play live, so there’s little-to-no dubbing on the tracks—what you hear is what you get,” says vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Lech Wierzynski, in a statement. “They’re fun, upbeat songs. Kind of let your hair down, celebrate joy and making music together. That’s why people come to our shows, so we tried to capture that feeling during a time when we can’t gather, a time when people may be looking for a little love and connection. As always, more than anything that’s what we’re trying to put out there.”

Just One More, And Then Some features four tracks that showcase the band’s ability to musically move between Bay Area R&B, Southern soul, Delta blues and New Orleans funk. The title track that opens the EP boasts dueling guitars and organs before a raucous chorus takes over.

“These songs are an open invitation for anyone listening to follow that sound you might hear from the street, coming from the little house tucked away in the back,” says drummer Ben Malament, in a statement. “We want to conjure a place where anyone and everyone is welcome to pick up an instrument or a microphone, a piece of floor to tear up, and just be appreciated for digging in and being a part of it.”

That place in Malament’s mind could easily be the Sweetwater Music Hall, where the band has played several times over the years. In addition to co-founders Wierzynski and Malament, the California Honeydrops lineup includes Johnny Bones on tenor sax and clarinet, Lorenzo Loera on keyboards and Beau Bradbury on bass.

For the last decade, the California Honeydrops have extensively toured in support of legendary artists including Bonnie Raitt, B.B. King, Buddy Guy and Dr. John. On their own the California Honeydrops regularly sell out headlining shows at venues across the country, and they have performed at major festivals such as Outside Lands, Monterey Jazz, High Sierra and many others.

While the upcoming concert on June 26 will not include a live audience at the Sweetwater, the band is still eager to get on the stage and musically conjure that happy place for the viewers and listeners at home, as the group remains dedicated to cultivating a live music connection with their audiences.

“The whole point is to erase the boundaries between the crowd and us,” Wierzynski says. “To make people become a part of the whole thing by dancing along, singing, picking the songs and generally coming out of their shells.”

The California Honeydrops perform live online Friday, June 26, at 7pm. Reservations and more information are available here.

Protesters Allege Motorist Tried to Hit Them

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A white Porsche SUV was driven into a crowd that was marching to the Santa Rosa Police Department — now, the driver and police claim she was the victim. The incident occurred just before 9:20 p.m. on Saturday, June 20, 2020, as about 150 marchers participating in a 24-Hour Protest for Peace and Justice took to Santa Rosa’s Sonoma Avenue as part of a candlelight vigil for victims of police brutality.

The crowd was led by a bicyclist and a pedestrian, each wearing body cameras, who alerted cars to the marchers so drivers could wait or alter their route. At about 9:20 p.m., protesters say that a white Porsche SUV briefly paused before the cyclist, then angled directly toward the center of the road and the crowd and accelerated toward marchers.

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Several protesters say they filed police reports that night against the driver. Rigel Bowen and another protester who wished to remain anonymous each downloaded their body camera footage onto USB drives and provided them to police that evening when they filed official reports of the incident.

These videos show the vehicle approaching the front of the crowd. One protester motions toward the motorist with a flashlight to alert the vehicle of the march, directing her to turn around. The marchers can be heard chanting, “Black Lives Matter!”

Then, the car’s engine revs. The cyclist can be heard saying, “Hey, slow down,” just before the driver accelerates directly toward the marchers. The crowd’s chanting turns to screams and shouts of “What the f—-?”

Panicked protesters shouted to one another to get out of the way as the driver sped at them, dispersing marchers to each side of the road.

Protester Cindy Norman—who elected to use a pseudonym to protect her privacy—told The Bohemian that she and two of her children were almost hit by the driver.

Norman’s 11-year-old son said, “I was terrified. One minute we were peacefully marching down the street with our candles and then people started screaming…I froze until my mom told me to run. [The driver] was just a couple of feet from running me over.”

The next day, Santa Rosa Police Department issued a press release via Nixle titled, “Vehicle Vandalism and Assault during Planned Protest.” It describes the driver as a local nurse who was on her way home from work when she encountered the protesters.

The release, which describes only the driver as a victim, notes that several protesters called to report that the driver had driven recklessly through the crowd.

According to the press release, the driver stated that she pulled over as far to the right as she could, thinking protesters would let her through. She told police that she was “scared due to a ‘swarm’ of people blocking the street and her vehicle as she tried to continue westbound out of the crowd.”

As she passed, the driver told police that her vehicle was hit with a bicycle and a skateboard, breaking her windshield. She then alleged that someone followed her on a bike and punched her through her open window.

Protesters who spoke to the Bohemian expressed doubts that the driver was punched. “I don’t believe anyone was able to catch up to her car,” said Bowen.

In the press release, Santa Rosa Police Sgt. Summer Gloeckner said, “The videos do show the driver trying to accelerate somewhat away from the crowd.”

Norman disputes this account. “I absolutely feel that she meant to scare and hit as many people as possible. Her actions were not self-preservation — ours were,” she said.

Libby Cuffie called the motorist’s actions “domestic terrorism” and attempted murder. “The cops and local media are spinning that story as much as possible about her being a nurse to make her out to be a victim,” Cuffie said.

On June 22, a group of about 20 protesters who witnessed the encounter with the car gathered outside the Sonoma County District Attorney’s office and the Santa Rosa Police station, speaking to deputies at each location.

Cuffie said, “The goal was to get the DA and the cops to speak out on the situation and offer their support to the community and denounce this.”

“I’m worried,” said Cuffie. “Are more people going to be emboldened to do what this driver did, knowing that they may get away with it?”

On Monday, June 22, the Santa Rosa Police Department said the case has been passed to their Violent Crimes Investigation Team. That same day, protesters who spoke with a Deputy District Attorney indicated that charges have not yet been brought to their office.

Stay Real: Rio Nido’s Popular Music Fest Goes Online

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When Eli Meyskens was very young, he misheard his parents talking about the town of Rio Nido and thought they said, “Real Neato.”

That phrase stuck with the Sonoma County–raised and San Francisco–based musician, and after he shared the story with music promoter and booker Daniel Strickland, the Real Neato Music Festival was born.

Last year’s inaugural Real Neato helped kick off the North Bay’s summer with a concert on June 15, 2019, at the historic Rio Nido Roadhouse. This year’s planned festival was canceled in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic that is keeping everyone at home.

Undeterred, Strickland, Meyskens and fellow organizers will present Real Neato at Home, a virtual music festival streaming on Saturday, June 27, at 9pm. The online showcase will feature several Bay Area and North Bay bands and artists, and in keeping with the festival’s original fundraising mindset, donations are encouraged and will support the performers as well as raise money for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.

Daniel Strickland works in San Francisco, promoting concerts with Noise Pop and managing shows at venues such as the Swedish American Music Hall. Back in 2018, he held an independent fundraiser to support people impacted by the Mendocino Complex Fire of August that year. There he met Meyskens, who plays in the San Francisco indie-rock trio EagleWolfSnake.

The two became friends, and quickly began talking about doing an event together. Once the term Real Neato was revealed by Meyskens, they decided upon hosting the show at the Rio Nido Roadhouse.

“No sooner had we gone up and done some site visits with [Rio Nido Roadhouse manager] Raena Metzger, [then] the flooding happened,” Strickland says, referring to the Russian River flooding in February of 2019.

“We wanted to move forward and Raena was really excited about having the event when she re-opened,” Strickland says. “We did a fundraiser for her in April 2019 to help her rebuild and then we had our event last June.”

The first Real Neato Music Festival was a huge success, and all parties were excited to host a second fest this summer, until Covid-19 put the plans on hold.

“Three years and three different disasters,” Strickland says.

While Rio Nido Roadhouse is open for take-out food orders, Strickland is not entertaining the idea of hosting an on-site, 400-person concert. Instead, he and the other festival organizers decided to offer Real Neato at Home on June 27 as a way to keep the music alive and support the artists who have seen their source of income disappear since live music events went away in March.

“In talking with bands, we found out they are struggling with their finances,” Strickland says. “At first, we were going to do a fundraiser because of what’s going on with Black Lives Matter. Now, we’ve settled on doing something online that raises money for both the artists and for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.”

Real Neato at Home’s confirmed online lineup of bands and artists include Oakland indie-pop artist Emily Afton, world music ensemble La Gente SF, North Bay rocker John Courage, psychedelic soul outfit Down Dirty Shake, self-proclaimed “Beach Funk Americana” group The Ha, outlaw country stars Caravan 222, folk singer-songwriter Dominique Gomez, longtime North Bay alternative rock band The Spindles and indie-rock duo Jesse Judies.

“It’s going to be like a TV show,” Strickland says.

Strickland’s recent work with Noise Pop, producing streaming concerts and online events with bands such as Built to Spill and Rogue Wave, inspired Real Neato at Home’s format.

“What I found about live streams is that there are a lot of challenges in making the sound and video quality good, because you have so many potential technical bottlenecks between where the artist is and where we are in the control room,” Strickland says. “Each of our artists is working on videos they are recording live. They’re sending that to us, we edit it and we’re going to stream it out on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Twitch in real time. The artist will then be on our site and will be able to chat, and that will give people a live experience with the artist while they are watching the show.”

While Strickland and the rest of the Real Neato crew hope to get back to hosting live shows later this year, he says, “the big thing for us is that we want to give people something fun to watch at home and to remind people that just like local restaurants and other businesses, musicians need your support right now, too.”

‘Real Neato at Home’ streams online Saturday, June 27, at 9pm. For information on where to watch and how to donate, visit Realneato.com or linktr.ee/realneato.

Pride Month in the North Bay Wraps with Busy Week of Events

When the Covid-19 pandemic forced North Bay residents to shelter-in-place in mid-March, Sonoma County Pride was one of the first organizations that made the difficult decision to cancel its planned summer event, namely the 2020 Pride Festival & Parade scheduled for June 6.

This development does not mean that Pride Month 2020 is canceled, but several planned get-togethers have been delayed or updated to accommodate the social distancing that is required to stop the spread of Covid-19. Now, as June reaches its final week, Sonoma County Pride and other North Bay LGBTQI+ groups are hosting events to celebrate Pride Month while remaining safe and healthy.

On Thursday, June 25, the Museum of Sonoma County invites everyone to get an interactive history lesson during an online look back on “The Lesbian History of Sonoma County” with  presenters Tina Dungan and Shad Reinstein, creators of the Sonoma County LGTBQI Timeline.

For those who don’t know, Sonoma County found itself at the intersection of the women’s movement and gay rights movement in the 1970s when a confluence of lesbian women moved to the area. These women opened businesses, produced theater and musical events, created Women’s Studies programs at Sonoma State University and Santa Rosa Junior College–two of the first such programs in California–and helped lead political fights that such as the defeat of Prop 6 in 1978, which sought to ban gay and lesbian people from working in public schools.

“The Lesbian History of Sonoma County” presenters Tina Dungan and Shad Reinstein are longtime lesbian activists, historians and educators. Dungan is a lifelong Sonoma County resident who came out as a lesbian in the early 1970s while a student at SSU. Since 2007, she has been working with others through the Lesbian Archives of Sonoma County and she teaches through the Older Adults Program at SRJC.

Reinstein has been involved in local and national LGBTQI culture and politics since coming out after the Stonewall riots, most notably co-producing the documentary film, Mom’s Apple Pie: The History of the Lesbian Mothers’ Custody Movement.

Dungan and Reinstein first collaborated to create the Sonoma County LGBTQI Timeline in 2018, and they have also co-created a talk on “The LGBTQI History of Sonoma County,” 

“The Lesbian History of Sonoma County” is presented over Zoom on Thursday, June 25, at 7pm. The online program is free, though pre-registration is required at Museumsc.org.

After learning about the past, get involved in a discussion of the present on Friday, June 26, as The California Census Office hosts a moderated panel talk on “Including the LGBTQ + Community in the Census” over Facebook Live.

The California Census Office’s Mignonne Pollard will be moderating the conversation, which features input from Meghan Maury, Policy Director at the National LGBTQ Task Force, Jeremy Payne from the Equality California Institute, and Eddie Martinez and Yesenia Mendoza from the Latino Equality Alliance & Mi Centro.

In addition to celebrating Pride, the discussion will answer questions on intersectionality in terms of the census as well as the impact of Covid-19 and how everyone can help lift up the LGBTQ+ community in 2020. Tune in on June 26 at 1:30pm on Facebook.

Saturday, June 27, features two of the biggest Pride events of the month in the North Bay. First up, “Unmask Your Pride” brings Sonoma County Pride to your computer with a virtual event. Local performers and artists will offer an evening of live music, comedy, drag queen and drag king performances and more that is meant to spread some much-needed love and showcase Sonoma County’s vibrant LGBTQI+ community. “Unmask Your Pride” live streams June 27 at 6pm. The virtual show is free, though registration is required on Eventbrite.

Also on Saturday, June 27, Napa Valley’s LGBTQI+ Pride movement gets moving, quite literally, with the Pride Night Cruise in downtown Napa. This socially-distant event invites folks to decorate their cars with Pride and drive up and down Jefferson, where Pride banners and other festive decorations will be on display. KVYN 99.3 FM The Vine will broadcast a specially curated playlist of Pride music for cars to blast as they cruise, and prizes will be awarded for best decorated cars.

“While it’s unfortunate that we can’t be together in person this year, we are happy to be able to provide a fun night in celebration of Napa Valley Pride,” said cruise organizer Rob Doughty in a statement. “We are hoping our LGBTQ+ community and all of our allies will join us.”

The Pride Night Cruise begins at 7pm on June 27. In addition to the cruise, attendees can join the official after party at Napa Valley Distillery, beginning at 9pm. Masks and social distancing will be in effect. The event benefits North Bay initiative LGBTQ Connection.

For more information on these and other events, visit SonomaCountyPride.org.

Six Ways to Celebrate Juneteenth in the North Bay


Juneteenth
may not be an official national holiday in the United States, though it is one of the country’s longest-running celebrations.

Since 1866, June 19 has marked the end of slavery in the country, as that was the date in 1865 that Union soldiers, led by Major General Gordon Granger, landed at Galveston, Texas with news that the Civil War had ended and federal orders to free the enslaved. Today, 49 of the 50 US states and the District of Columbia recognize Juneteenth as either a state holiday or a day of observance. The only state that does not recognize Juneteenth is Hawaii.

Juneteenth is often a local community celebration that honors Black freedom and Black people’s unique contribution to the struggle for justice in the US, though the day is taking on new meaning in 2020 as the movement for Black Lives Matter and the protests against police brutality gain strength in every state, even as the Covid-19 pandemic is turning many in-person events into virtual gatherings.

In the North Bay, today, June 19, is a chance to address systematic racism and lift up black voices, and local group Uplifting Black Leaders of Sonoma County opens the day with a Juneteenth Festival at Pioneer Park in Northeast Santa Rosa from noon to 6pm.

Uplifting Black Leaders is the same group that has organized recent protest marches at the Santa Rosa Junior College, and today’s Juneteenth Celebration will have food vendors, black owned business vendors, games, kids activities, music, performances and speakers coming together to celebrate the emancipation of slaves. The free, family-friendly event is open to all, and organizers ask participants to wear face coverings.

In Petaluma, a Defend Black Lives event will converge at 208 Petaluma Blvd North, on the corner of Petaluma Boulevard and Washington Street today, June 19. The event is part of Six Nineteen, a nationwide series of events organized by the Movement For Black Lives (M4BL).

Six Nineteen will see major marches in cities across the US, and Petaluma’s event, beginning at 1pm, will begin with participants taking a knee in silence for 8 minutes and 46 seconds in memory of George Floyd, who died in police custody after a Minneapolis officer knelt on Floyd’s neck for that length of time.

After the initial remembrance, Petaluma’s event encourages people to stay and display signs as long as they want, and organizers ask that all participants wear masks and observe social distancing.

In Napa County, Calistoga’s Pioneer Park has seen several Black Lives Matter demonstrations over the last month, and local group Calistogans for Change is hosting a Juneteenth Peaceful Protest today, June 19, at 3pm. Masks are required and social distancing rules are encouraged.

On the Calistogans for Change Facebook page, organizer Nicole Sierra Drawsky writes, “The goal of this demonstration is to show ongoing support and solidarity for the Black Lives Matter Movement. Our end goal is to support the changing of systems that allow for brutality and racism, and to raise awareness for those who have been harmed or killed every day because of institutionalized racism.”

Marin City has been the epicenter of Marin County’s Black Lives Matter movement, and today’s Juneteenth Rally in Marin City’s Rocky Graham Park continues to bring the community together. Today’s event, beginning at 3pm, is all in on spreading knowledge and power, and the rally’s highlights include guest speakers, black-owned business vendors and more.

San Geronimo Valley is the scene of another Marin County gathering this weekend in support of Black lives. On Saturday, June 20, the Rally in the Valley meets up at the intersection of Nicasio Valley Road and Sir Francis Drake Boulevard at 1pm. Organizers suggest bringing signs supporting Black lives and calling for an end to police brutality, and masks and social distancing will be required.

One of the biggest Juneteenth events in the North Bay this year will be held on Zoom, as the Sonoma County Juneteenth Celebration goes online due to Covid-19.

Mrs. Marteal Perry originally founded the Sonoma County Juneteenth Celebration as Santa Rosa’s Juneteenth Celebration in 1954. A staple in the Santa Rosa community, Perry worked tirelessly for the local underserved community, heralding social causes like clean water issues, child welfare and many more.

This year’s virtual Sonoma County Juneteenth celebration, taking place Saturday, June 20 at 1pm, will feature a program of diverse and inclusive entertainment and education led by Entrepreneurs of Tomorrow Foundation. Formed in 2006, the foundation works toward improving the education of students surrounding Sonoma County and the North Bay.

Neal Casal Music Foundation Launches with Online Fundraiser

Last year, on August 26, 2019, the music community lost Neal Casal, a multi-dimensional songwriter, singer and guitarist who was both beloved as a solo artist and a band member of several acclaimed ensembles.

In the North Bay, Casal was best known for his involvement in the Chris Robinson Brotherhood as well as his many appearances on stage and in studio with the likes of Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Vetiver and the Skiffle Players.

Heavily influenced by bands like the Grateful Dead and The Rolling Stones, Casal was also a member of bands Hazy Malaze, Ryan Adams & The Cardinals, GospelBeacH, Hard Working Americans and Circles Around The Sun. Casal’s extensive body of solo work, features more than a dozen albums, and Casal was also a record producer and an avid photographer.

Now, the newly formed Neal Casal Music Foundation is officially launching as a nonprofit organization and is hosting a Kickstarter campaign online to raise funds for the purpose of honoring Casal’s memory and sharing his musical legacy and the body of work he left behind, including an extensive archive of unreleased material.

The nonprofit foundation is also funding a series of charitable initiatives, beginning with a program to provide instruments and music lessons to students in New Jersey and New York state schools where Casal was born and raised.The organization will also be making donations to mental health organizations such as MusiCares, Backline and others that support musicians in need. In fact, the foundation has already donated over $25,000 to MusiCares from it’s preliminary tribute concert fundraiser that took place at the Capitol Theatre in New York on September 25, 2019; one month after Casal died by suicide.

Casal’s longtime manager Gary Waldman, along with a team of Casal’s closest friends is spearheading the foundation.

“In a note left behind, Neal told the story of how he got his first guitar when he was 13,” Waldman says in a statement. “As he explained it, ‘I remember the day on one of those drives where dad asked what I wanted for Christmas and I said an Atari, and he said ‘c’mon Neal, you can do better than that. I always see you with your radio playing music; do you want more records? Do you want to play an instrument? I want to get you something useful. I sheepishly said I like guitar, and his eyes lit up and he said, sure I’ll get you a guitar, at least you’ll be learning something.’”

With that idea in mind, the foundation’s concept is to shine a light on Casal’s artistry and provide resources to raise money for positive change though music. For the foundation’s Kickstarter fundraising campaign, donors can choose to pledge $10 to $1500 or more, and the campaign is providing two primary donation packages as a reward for donating; a tribute album, Highway Butterfly: The Songs of Neal Casal, and a coffee table photography book, Tomorrow’s Sky: Photographs by Neal Casal.

The double CD/triple vinyl tribute album, featuring more than 30 of Casal’s songs, is being co-produced by Dave Schools of Widespread Panic and Grammy-winning producer and engineer Jim Scott.

Highway Butterfly: The Songs of Neal Casal features almost 30 artists and bands, including Billy Strings, Jaime Wyatt, Circles Around the Sun, Vetiver, Cass McCombs, Shooter Jennings, Leslie Mendelson, Warren Haynes, Phil Lesh & The Terrapin Family Band, Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, Robert Randolph & The Family Band, Jason Crosby, Beachwood Sparks and many others.

The photography book, available now for pre-order on the Kickstarter campaign, comes from one of Casal’s last wishes; that a book be made of the photographs he took over the last 20-plus years while on the road as a musician and global explorer.

Tomorrow’s Sky is a stunning hard cover book that features over 250 of Casal’s beautiful photographs. Broken up into six sections covering travel, surfing, music and more, the book is essentially a biographical document of where Casal was at various points in his life, with photos of him backstage with his bands, in a recording studio with Willie Nelson, on an empty stretch of highway, or on the beach with a surfboard.

Photographer Jay Blakesberg is producing the book, and photo archivist and editor Ricki Blakesberg is curating the images using Casal’s Instagram, Tumblr and photo albums as a creative guide.

On the Kickstarter site, the Foundation writes, “These projects are intended to continue expanding Neal’s artistry and to give the Neal Casal Music Foundation a proper kick-off. Our hope is that the foundation will inspire future musicians and also provide access to mental health support for musicians already on the path. And let these projects bring comfort to the many fans of Neal who miss him every day!”

Photo project supports Black Lives Matter movement

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For the last three weeks, peaceful protests around the North Bay and the rest of the country have brought tens of thousands of citizens to the streets to demand major changes to policing and to renew the call that “Black Lives Matter.”

Now, Sonoma County–based FTA (For the Art) Productions—formed by actor Carmen Mitchell and photographer Marcus Ward—is offering an additional way for locals to participate in these demonstrations through the Peaceful Protest Portrait Project.

FTA Productions kicked off the protest art project on Friday, June 5, with a Black Lives Matter curbside photo booth in Healdsburg, where approximately 75 people showed up with face coverings and handmade personal protest signs featuring messages of anger, hope and equality. 

Ward took individual and group portraits of protestors that can be viewed online now and will be turned into a large mosaic collage at a later date in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

FTA Productions organized a second photo-booth event last Saturday, June 13, at Brew Coffee & Beer House in downtown Santa Rosa, in which more than 80 people showed up and made signs that continued supporting the BLM movement while also celebrating Pride.

“We provide the paper, pens, everything for people; they just need to come with a mask,” says Mitchell.

A third photo event in the works is planning to add voters’ rights to the protest messages. 

FTA Productions co-founder Carmen Mitchell is a Sonoma County native who grew up as a competitive figure skater and ballet dancer, training at Snoopy’s Home Ice and the Santa Rosa Dance Theater respectively. Now working as an actor and singer, she recently formed the nonprofit Redwood Theatre Company in Healdsburg.

Out of work until the entertainment industry reopens, she found herself surrounded by other North Bay artists also stuck in the same predicament.

One of those artists is FTA Productions’ other co-founder, Marcus Ward, who works as a freelance photographer and dancer in the North Bay. For this project, the pair recruited coordinator Desmond Woodwar and videographers Alleya Torres and Eddie Melendéz .

“The definition of art is to hold a mirror up to humanity, it is a reflection of society,” Mitchell says. “This is very personal for me because I grew up in a Disney filter. For the first time, I feel like I’m tapping into powerful art that is more than just commercial.”

Mitchell notes that this project is not meant to replace the marches and gatherings that are happening every day, but to bolster those movements.

“We are trying to create a safe space where everyone is welcomed to participate in art without judgment,” Mitchell says. “There’s so many ways to take action, this was our way of hitting the pavement, and we’ve got some backlash hate from it, but it’s OK. We are trying to do better in creating community support and awareness through art.”

See more images and get details on the Peaceful Protest Portrait Project at carmenmariamitchell.com/protest-art.

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Photo project supports Black Lives Matter movement

For the last three weeks, peaceful protests around the North Bay and the rest of the country have brought tens of thousands of citizens to the streets to demand major changes to policing and to renew the call that “Black Lives Matter.” Now, Sonoma County–based FTA (For the Art) Productions—formed by actor Carmen Mitchell and photographer Marcus Ward—is offering an...
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