Rock Steady with North Bay Musicians at Upcoming Virtual Festival

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North Bay grass-roots organization RockSteadyFest is committed to connecting local audiences and artists through the shared experience of live music.

Since 2017, the group has held several local, live events to do just that, though their plans to hold a concert last month were canceled in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We canceled one week before it was a mandatory stay-at-home order; we saw the writing on the wall,” says RockSteadyFest artistic director Jeffrey Trotter.

Like other event producers in the North Bay, RockSteadyFest knew they would have to transform their model to continue their musical mission. This weekend, the organization unveils the RockSteadyFest Virtual Concert, which is in fact three days of live musical performances from popular North Bay artists that runs Friday to Sunday, May 29–31, via Facebook TV and airing on Marin TV, channel 30.

The virtual weekend opens with a Youth concert on May 29, 3–8pm, featuring talented Marin student musicians. Saturday and Sunday concerts begin at 2pm and 3pm respectively, and feature artists including the boogie-woogie team of Wendy DeWitt and Kirk Harwood, the Tom Finch Trio, Jonathan Korty, Darren Nelson and Jimmy Dillon, among many others.

“We already had this festival planned, and we’re not going to let the virus run things completely,” Trotter says. “There are ways to make this work and the artists all said, ‘“Let’s try to do something online.’”

Trotter and the organizers of RockSteadyFest have been working hard for the last month and a half to ensure the online event will be as seamless as possible, with one-off shows to test the Facebook video feed and a slew of technical rehearsals with the musicians from their studios and with youth performers.

“The kids are performing from their backyards, of course with the consent of their parents,” Trotter says.

“The youth concert is in cooperation with the Tomales Bay Youth Center, so lots and lots of talented kids out in West Marin are going to play music on Friday, and they’re going to scare everybody or everybody is going to love it,” Trotter adds, laughing.

On Saturday, RockSteadyFest opens its lineup with a tribute to late North Bay–vocalist Stefanie Keys, who headlined the organization’s first concert in 2017 with Big Brother & the Holding Company. Keys lost her battle with ovarian cancer last year at the age of 51.

Saturday’s lineup then opens with keyboardist Peter Keys, brother of Stefanie, and also features Chelsea the Piper, Courtney Erwin, Lorin Rowan, Vikki D’Orazi, Kevin Griffin, Susan Zelinsky, Jimmy Dillon, Darren Nelson and Jonathan Korty.

Sunday’s locals lineup includes Danielle Vantress-Salk, Gene Ptak, Clementine Darling, Chris Holbrook, John Ford, Tom Finch Trio, John Allair and Wendy DeWitt with Kirk Harwood. All the performances are free to stream on Facebook and watch on Marin TV channel 30; donations are welcomed through Paypal and Venmo.

RockSteadyFest Virtual Concerts happen Friday to Sunday, May 29–31, Fri, 3–8pm; Sat, 2–8pm; Sunday, 3–8pm. Visit www.rocksteadyfest.org for more details.

San Francisco’s Punk Pioneers Tell Their Stories in Online Exhibit

“In the 1980s, San Francisco grew blander, wealthier and more corporate almost by the day, but a resilient multi-cultural underground thrived in nooks and crannies.”

So writes former Sonoma State University professor, prolific author and longtime Bohemian– and Pacific Sun–contributor Jonah Raskin in his introduction to the new virtual exhibit, “Alternative Voices.”

The show, originally scheduled to open at the San Francisco Main Public Library’s Jewett Gallery this month, looks back on the city’s ’80s punk scene with intimate and grandiose black-and-white images taken at the time by Jeanne Hansen that are paired with recollections from the subjects as told to Raskin in interviews over the last few years. Raskin also wrote the introduction for the show.

“It was very interesting for me to find out about San Francisco and this underground culture in the 1980s,” Raskin says. “This was a way for me to get connected to a generation that was not my own generation, and to see the way that counterculture gets reinvented as each new generation comes along.”

Luckily, almost all of the individuals Hansen photographed in the ’80s were still alive to tell their stories, and they all still embody their younger, DIY personas in their work and their ethos.

Those subjects include Stannous Flouride (real name Kevin Kearney), who now works as a local historian leading Haight-Ashbury walking tours. Back in the day, Flouride worked the door at punk venues like Deaf Club and Target Video and was part of the Suicide Club, a group of urban spelunkers who went on outings at abandoned sites in the city.

Raskin writes the interviews from a first-person perspective, allowing each “Alternative Voices” subject’s personal experiences to come through in the writing as well as the photos.

“At first, I wasn’t sure about the title of the exhibit, because it started with the photographs,” Raskin says. “Though I think the two of them, the photos and words, go really well together. It’s a good combination.”

Raskin’s main challenge in writing these 500-word stories was the editing.

“Some of these people’s interviews started as a manuscript with, like, 10,000 words,” he says. “I was really wrestling with the text to get it down to a manageable length while being true to the people and using some of their language and their expressions to keep them as distinct individuals.”

Of the sample interviews that are available to view online now, Raskin’s words paint detailed and imaginative memories from people including Mia Simmons, leader of punk band Frightwig, whose story includes gems like this paragraph:

“In the ’80s we could work our crappy little jobs and get minimum wage, which was, I remember, $3.25 an hour at the Egyptian and the Strand on Market Street. Our studio was opposite the Sound of Music; we had to carry our equipment at three a.m. downstairs in spiked heel shoes and really blotto drunk.”

In addition to revealing details about the city in the ’80s, the interviews also tell the story of how San Francisco remained a hub for creative and nontraditional people after the ’50s Beat movement and the ’60s hippie movement, as all but one of the exhibit’s subjects were San Francisco transplants who moved there from across the country.

“It’s about people who want to spread their wings and do something different and not be knocked down the way that can happen in so many other places in the country where there’s more conformity than in San Francisco,” Raskin says.

Even today, as tech companies continue to push San Francisco towards a bland corporate epicenter, Raskin says there’s still some subterranean culture left in the Bay Area.

“There’s people still doing their thing, Jeanne (Hansen) is still taking photographs,” Raskin says. “There are still pockets of alternative voices.”

“Alternative Voices” is available to view online now, with an in-person exhibit opening at the San Francisco Main Public Library at a later, so far undetermined date. Visit sfpl.org for more details.

Tune In: Santa Rosa Symphony Hits North Bay Radio Waves

Had enough of logging onto Facebook Live for all your stay-at-home concert needs?

Well, close the laptop and turn on the radio this Sunday, May 24, at 3pm,when Northern California Public Media’s radio station, KRCB, broadcasts a Santa Rosa Symphony concert featuring special guest guitarist Sharon Isbin on 91.1FM and 90.9FM in Sonoma County.

Recorded in November 2018 at the acoustically immaculate Weill Hall at the Green Music Center in Rohnert Park, the concert, “Dancing Across Time,” features the Santa Rosa Symphony, led by conductor and music director Francesco Lecce-Chong, performing musical selections as varied as “Dances of Galánta,” a 1933 orchestral work by Zoltán Kodály; “The Mephisto Waltz No.1” composed by Franz Liszt in 1859; and Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story, extracted from his own musical score in 1960.

Isbin joined the symphony for the 2018 concert to perform the “Guitar Concerto,” written by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos in Rio de Janeiro in 1951. A multiple Grammy-Award winning guitarist, Isbin has been acclaimed for expanding the role of the guitar in classical and contemporary music, earning her Guitar Player magazine’s Best Classical Guitarist award.

In addition to this weekend’s broadcast, Isbin is premiering two new recordings of works. One album, Affinity, features multi-faceted works created by leading composers from three continents. Isbin’s other new album, Strings for Peace, is steeped in the North Indian classical tradition of ragas and talas, with help from sarod-master Amjad Ali Khan and his virtuoso sons Amaan and Ayaan Ali Bangash.

In addition to the May 24 KRCB radio broadcast, Santa Rosa Symphony is keeping up with the community through a series of other online offerings. Francesco Lecce-Chong, who took over as the Santa Rosa Symphony’s fifth music director in 91 years with his first full season in October 2019, is hosting live watch parties on his Facebook page, (I know, Facebook is still the main source for online events), where he touches upon several educational and musical topics.

The maestro has also created three music playlists on Spotify with some of his favorite compositions by Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Vivaldi, Prokofiev, Mahler and more. Find those playlists now and check back often; they are updated every week.

Also available for your listening pleasure, groups from the Santa Rosa Symphony Youth Orchestra recently collaborated on a virtual performance, featuring the world premiere of Michael Murrin’s “Fuel for the Soul,” which was commissioned by the youth orchestra to celebrate its 60th anniversary. That virtual chamber concert, sponsored by Santa Rosa’s Stanroy Music Center, features a whopping 14 separate chamber groups from the youth orchestra performing various selections, and the whole video can be seen on Santa Rosa Symphony’s YouTube channel.

Finally, a challenge grant from Dr. Richard and Barbara Ferrington has given the Santa Rosa Symphony the opportunity to raise $10,000 through matching donations for their education programs, and they invite patrons to double their support of the Santa Rosa Symphony’s ongoing community work.

Five Ways to Stay Connected in the North Bay This Weekend

Though Memorial Day weekend is customarily a time for gatherings, Covid-19 has put a halt to all the parties and festivals that usually take place in the North Bay over the three-day weekend.

Even with some North Bay parks opening back up, most folks may still want to stay at home—but that doesn’t mean they have to be bored. Many arts groups have ramped up their online offerings in recent weeks as venues and artists alike adapt to the new era of social distancing get-togethers.

San Rafael’s Terrapin Crossroads is one such venue, having expanded their digital offerings since closing down in March. Terrapin co-founder and Grateful Dead–icon Phil Lesh leads the way on the new Terrapin TV, performing with his son Grahame Lesh and friends from their respective living rooms to raise funds for the venue’s 100-plus staff members who are feeling the financial strain since the stay-at-home orders shuttered the space.

This evening, May 22, Terrapin Crossroads hosts a special cook-along dinner and show from vocalist Elliott Peck and guitarist Jesse Barwell, live from their kitchen and living room at 5pm. First, join the pair in making “Something like a Stroganoff” before enjoying some comforting music.

Deadheads can also enjoy live and recorded concerts streaming on Deadheadland. The long-running, Marin-based Grateful Dead fan site is hosting over 10 different streaming sessions this weekend, including performances by Marin musicians Scott Guberman and Stu Allen, as well as classic sets from Mark Karan and friends. Visit Deadheadland.com for a full schedule.

Napa’s Blue Note Jazz Club, another venue renowned for hosting nightly concerts, has also been dark for two months. In the meantime, it is participating in “Blue Note at Home,” a daily streaming showcase hosted by the original Blue Note in New York City. The live-streaming series showcases artists in their homes, and this weekend’s schedule includes a set from influential jazz-guitarist Marcus Miller, who will be talking about Miles Davis and playing bass on May 23 at 5pm. The next day, on May 24, Soul Rebels’ trombonist Paul Robertson streams at 1pm, followed by a set from harpist Brandee Younger and double-bassist Dezron Douglas at 3pm.

Up the road from Napa, St. Helena’s Cameo Cinema is one of several local theaters streaming on-demand films. In addition to offering streaming movie rentals, Cameo takes the online concept to new heights with its upcoming Zoomfari, in cooperation with Santa Rosa’s Safari West wildlife preserve.

The live virtual experience will feature a meet-and-greet with Safari West’s resident giraffes, and Safari West’s expert rangers will be on hand to answer questions. This Zoomfari pairs with Cameo’s streaming of the documentary The Woman Who Loves Giraffes, which follows 23-year-old biologist, Anne Innis Dagg, on her unprecedented 1956 solo journey to South Africa to study giraffes in the wild. The documentary is available to stream now, and the Zoomfari, presented as part of the theater’s “Science on Screen” series, happens on Saturday, May 23, at 10am on Zoom; RSVP links available on cameocinema.com.

In addition to this family-friendly event, kids will also get a kick out of a pair of online readings being offered this weekend through the new virtual version of the Bay Area Book Festival.

First, bestselling children’s author Colin Meloy—who’s other talent is leading the rock band The Decemberists—and illustrator Shawn Harris appear on YouTube together to discuss their newest collaboration, Everyone’s Awake. The read-aloud book for families is a fun new bedtime-routine for kids who have trouble getting to sleep. That program happens on May 23 at 10am, and is immediately followed by another kid-centric event, as the Bay Area Book Festival hosts author Brian Weisfeld on May 23 at 11am for a lemonade-making session aimed at inspiring kids to get that lemonade stand ready for summer.

Both of these events are part of a massive online pivot for the Bay Area Book Festival, which presents its #UNBOUND series of engaging conversations and readings through June at baybookfest.org.

Local Arts Groups Coordinate on Virtual Summer Camps

Three Sonoma County arts and education organizations are coordinating their summer schedules this year to collectively provide North Bay students with seven weeks worth of virtual summer arts camps, June 22 to August 7.

The Alexander Valley Film Society, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts and Transcendence Theatre Company are each engaging local youth with online arts experiences in their respective disciplines this summer, with the AVFS Filmmaking Bootcamp, the LBC Summer Arts Sampler Camp, the Transcendence Virtual Kids Camp and then a final AVFS Editing Bootcamp running consecutively to keep the kids busy all season.

“The collaboration is in the scheduling,” says Ashleigh Worley, director of education and community engagement at Luther Burbank Center. “The camps are independently run, and we’re working together so kids can participate in all three.”

Worley and the LBC have been offering virtual arts programming since a week after the shelter-in-place orders took effect in late March, and by meeting with several other arts organizations, it became apparent that everyone was worried about the status of summer camps in the North Bay.

“We started talking about how we can uplift and support each other’s work, whatever form it ended up taking,” Worley says. With so much unknown about the evolution of social distancing rules through the summer, LBC quickly made a plan to host a virtual summer arts camp, and Worley found likeminded groups in AVFS and TTC, which aligned their individual virtual camp schedules so students could attend all three camps.

First, the AVFS Filmmaking Bootcamp, running June 22–26 and led by Sonoma County–based writer/director and film educator Malinalli Lopez, welcomes students grades 5–12 to learn the basics of filmmaking over Zoom, using smartphones to creatively capture their story. The idea is for students to then continue to film themselves and their families during the rest of the summer camps for the final Editing Bootcamp that happens in August.

“The reason the three of us collaborated to get these programs out was to give families a sure-fire schedule that they could put into their calendars now and count on in the months to come,” says Alexander Valley Film Society founder and executive director Kathryn Hecht. “Even though we might be dealing with a little bit of screen fatigue, we want kids to stay engaged, meet new people and try to prevent much of that learning slide that is supposed to happen in the summer anyways.”

After the initial AVFS bootcamp, students are invited to participate in LBC’s Summer Arts Sampler Camp, a weeklong virtual experience for students grades 5–12 that will explore music in the form of ukulele, percussion and hip-hop dance. Available in three sessions, June 29–July 3, July 6–10 and July 13–17, the camps rotate through all three activities. The center’s massive instrument lending library will be open for students who don’t have a ukulele, and Worley adds there is no skill requirement to attend the virtual camps.

From there, students ages 7–12 can also choose to attend Transcendence Theatre Company’s virtual camp, July 27–31, that focuses on musical theater, improvisation, dance and movement. TTC is also hosting a Virtual Teen Intensive Camp for ages 13–18 a week earlier.

“Each day, they’ll have an hour of instruction and it’ll culminate in a 10-minute musical and solo concerts,” says Transcendence Theatre Company director of education and community engagement Nikko Kimzin. “It’s taking our in-person experience that we’ve had and seeing what works virtually and what can we amend for the virtual experience.”

The AVFS filmmaking bootcamps and the LBC sampler camps are free to attend. Transcendence Theatre Company is charging a modest fee, $35–$100, to pay the Broadway professionals who will be leading their camps, though Kimzin adds that TTC has several need-based scholarships available for students on their website.

“This is a collective mission of our arts organizations in the county,” says Kimzin. “I think arts are sometimes viewed as the side dish and not the main meal. We are trying to band together to say, especially in this time, connection and creating things as a group, as an ensemble, is a necessity for the mental health of our youth. The arts can be a main meal when it comes to that.”

The Alexander Valley Film Society, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts and Transcendence Theatre Company virtual summer arts camps run June 22–Aug 7. Registration is required for each camp. Avfilmsociety.org; lutherburbankcenter.org; bestnightever.org.

Rivertown Revival Comes to Your Living Room

During the past 10 years, Petaluma’s Rivertown Revival has become one of the North Bay’s most beloved annual events of the summer.

Dubbed “the Greatest Slough on Earth,” and held on the Petaluma River to benefit the conservation and education organization Friends of the Petaluma River, the one-day festival annually attracts thousands of attendees to the river to enjoy live music, art, kid-friendly entertainment and even weddings, all done up with avant-garde revivalist flair and boasting communal creativity.

The organizers of the planned 11th annual Rivertown Revival were just beginning to map out the details of the event in early April, when Sonoma County went into shelter-in-place mode meant to stop the spread of Covid-19. Given the current pandemic’s uncertain timeline, Rivertown Revival—like many other popular summer offerings—was forced to cancel the show this year in the name of public health and safety.

“It was going to be awesome,” says Rivertown Revival music director Josh Windmiller. “Every year, it always is a mind-blowing event.”

Windmiller, who also organizes the annual Railroad Square Music Festival in Santa Rosa, not only laments the loss of the Rivertown Revival’s festivities this summer, he realizes how much funding the Friends of the Petaluma River will fail to receive as a result of the cancellation.

“I’m sure so many people can relate to how devastating this is, not just in terms of having parties, but in terms of fundraising,” he says. “It’s kind of a bleak summer for a lot of people. So, we thought, ‘What could we do?’”

To answer that question, Windmiller and the other festival organizers asked themselves, what is Rivertown Revival besides that one-day festival each summer?

“It’s about celebrating the arts, celebrating the community and supporting our natural resources, our environment, through raising awareness and funds,” Windmiller says.

With those goals in mind, Rivertown Revival and Friends of the Petaluma River are teaming up for a new, free online venture, Living Room Live, which will present all of the best parts of the festival in a streaming weekly showcase.

Living Room Live kicks off at 7pm this Saturday, May 23, and will run for four weeks, with new performers and new surprises each week. Windmiller will play Johnny Carson for the show, hosting and interviewing musicians, artists and others from the comfort of his living-room couch.

The streaming production will feature three to four musical performances each week, starting with May 23’s lineup featuring rock ’n’ roll giant John Courage, spirited singer-songwriter Sebastian St. James (Highway Poets) and melodic indie-folk performer Ismay.

Each week, kid-friendly musician, artist and author Gio Benedetti will lead a family-oriented segment, “My Town Is Magical,” that will be a show-within-a-show, and Living Room Live will also feature videos from visual artists, comedy segments and even a mass vow-renewal for stay-at-home married couples who may or may not have tied the knot at a previous Rivertown Revival.

“Basically, it will be a mix between a variety show and late-night talk show,” Windmiller says. “We’re trying to fit in what people love about Rivertown into something we can get right into their living rooms.”

Living Room Live will stream for free on the Rivertown Revival Facebook page and YouTube page, and audiences are encouraged to engage in the show through the online chat that will be available.

Windmiller hopes folks will also hit the donate button that will accompany the stream to support the Friends of the Petaluma River, which connects the community to the Petaluma watershed through hands-on educational activities as well as artistic events like Rivertown Revival.

“Stuff like Rivertown, it’s these crossroads, these meeting points, where you get to encounter your own community, and we still want to be that,” Windmiller says. “I’m really happy, and Rivertown is really happy, to provide another place where people and the artists can meet and build something stronger. That’s what the event has always been, so this is the same thing. A different time, different conditions, but the same thing.”

Rivertown Revival and Friends of the Petaluma River present Living Room Live Saturdays, May 23, May 30, June 6 and June 13, on Rivertown Revival’s Facebook page and YouTube page. 7pm. Free, donations welcome.

All That Jazz

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Musician, arranger, bandleader and soon-to-be-professor Peter Welker spent more than 50 years embodying the spirit of jazz in the Bay Area.

Schooled in tradition and musically evolving since the early ’60s, Welker’s eclectic tastes helped carve the San Francisco, East Bay and North Bay jazz scenes for many years. But he’s not long for the region, as he’s soon moving to Arizona to begin a new career (at nearly age 78) as a university-level music instructor.

Before he goes, Welker looks back on a half-century of jazz in the Bay Area.

Welker is actually an East Coast native, born to musical parents. His mother, who was born blind, was an acclaimed jazz pianist and vocalist, and his father was a bandleader in New York City. Welker first picked up his primary instrument, the trumpet, at age nine. When he graduated from the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston in 1962, he set his sights not on New York or London, where many of his classmates were headed, but on San Francisco.

“You know, I was intimidated by the thought of either going to Europe or New York,” Welker says. “And I would see some of the football games in October and November with the 49ers. I would be freezing in Boston and see them playing at the old Kezar Stadium on Stanyan Street, and I’d go, ‘Man, look at the sunshine, they’re in their shirtsleeves.’ So that was partly it.”

Welker adds that he also thought he would have a better shot at making it in the Bay Area as opposed to the highly competitive New York City scene. With that intent, he hopped on a Greyhound bus and arrived in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district in 1962.

Shortly after arriving in town, he assembled a sextet, three horns and three rhythm players, and quickly established the group as the house band at the Jazz Workshop in the city’s North Beach neighborhood.

“What you would do back then, there were all these jazz clubs on Haight Street and Divisadero, and the first five people that made up a reasonable band that showed up every night, that would be the band,” Welker says. “So I made sure I’d get there early and then we’d split the door at the end of the night. Back then, you’d end up with 10 bucks a night each, but I was living in a rooming house in the Haight that was 40 bucks a month. I was living large, and there were a lot of good players back then.”

Welker’s musical life took a massive turn in 1967 when he discovered rock ’n’ roll and broadened his musical vistas to fuse jazz and rock together with funk, Latin and more.

“Probably ’68, I hooked up with a great horn band, and I was playing at a club in Jack London Square, and we were alternating with Tower of Power, who hadn’t been signed by Bill Graham yet, but they sure sounded great,” Welker says.

It was at one of these gigs that guitarist Marvin Holmes heard Welker play. Holmes, regarded as one of the Oakland funk scene’s founding fathers, recruited Welker to lead a horn section on a short-lived project named Rush that also featured players including trombonist Steve Turee and trumpet-player Tom Harrell.

In 1969, Welker received his first big break when he auditioned for and was hired to play in the touring Glenn Miller Orchestra. After that, he returned to the Bay Area and performed with Cesar’s Latin Band, again in North Beach, and played four nights a week with musicians including Latin Jazz percussion legends Pete and Coke Escovedo and Victor Pantoja.

“We had a 12-piece band, it was incredible,” Welker says. “We sold out that club every night for four years.”

Welker then joined East Bay R&B legends Cold Blood, booking the gig after a two-day audition while he recovered from pneumonia. From there, he just got busier and busier.

During the last five decades, Welker toured and recorded with other eclectic artists such as Buddy Miles, Van Morrison, Dr John, Narada Michael Walden, Deborah Winters, Merl Saunders and Jerry Garcia.

“Jerry was great, I got to record on the Not for Kids Only album he did with David Grisman,” Welker says. The 1993 album, which featured children’s songs performed in stringband and other old-timey traditions, was dedicated to Welker’s son Jacob, who died that same year at the age of five after a four-year battle with leukemia.

“Jerry knew him, and David knew him too,” Welker says. “It was really sweet of them.”

Other musicians who knew Jacob, including Pete Escovedo, Norton Buffalo and organist Dave K. Mathews, also joined Welker on his own 1997 album, Para Peachy, which marked his return to music after his son’s passing.

Welker has lived in Petaluma since the mid-’70s, and most recently, has co-led the instrumental sextet Sidemen. Welker cofounded the group with drummer Todd Tribble and hand-picked players including bassist Cliff Hugo, guitarist Morris Acevedo and saxophonist Steve Steinberg, with a rotating keyboard player to mix it up.

“Every one of the guys in the band has played with every big name you can think of, that’s why we came up with the name Sidemen,” Welker says.

Sidemen recently released their debut, self-titled album—which features several guest stars performing on the album’s 11 tracks—online.

“We have six multi-Grammy winners on the album, which is unheard of,” Welker says. “We have the core band and 24 musicians on the project.”

Album guests include bassist Tony Levin (King Crimson, Peter Gabriel), guitarist Steve Morse ( Dixie Dregs, Deep Purple) and singer Bill Champlin (Chicago, Sons of Champlin). Welker co-produced the album with Tribble at Mesa Recording in Sonoma County with Grammy-winning engineer Jim Stern (Van Morrison, McCoy Tyner). Welker wrote or co-wrote the album’s seven original tunes and all the arrangements. The album is available to listen to on the band’s website.

“I pulled together all of my favorite genres of music; jazz, funk and Latin, and the band has all those influences going on,” Welker says. “I have seven albums out under my name, and they were all jazz, but I’ve never done anything like this and I’m so excited about it.”

Despite the excitement of performing with Sidemen, Welker soon departs the Bay Area for the drier Arizona climate. Once he gets there, he will interview with five Phoenix-area universities and hopes to settle into a teaching position at one of them.

Though he’s never taught music before, Welker calls himself a “Road Scholar.” He has amassed fifty thousand hours of music composition and arrangement in addition to building a touring resume that is a million miles long; meaning he should have no trouble getting a position once he relocates.

In fact, Welker was already scheduled to have conducted the interviews and sold his Petaluma home, but the Covid-19 outbreak put those plans on hold. He hopes to be in Arizona by the start of the Fall 2020 semester.

“I would love to be able to share all the stuff I‘ve learned over the years and pass it on to the young folk and hopefully brighten their life a bit,” Welker says. “I’ve taught a little bit privately, and I’ve seen the joy it brings a student to learn new stuff that they can add to their tool belt. I just want to keep passing this music along.”

Peterwelker.com/sidemenmusic.com

Looking ahead to the most uncertain season ever

Unfortunately, the upcoming summer season is going to be anything but social, as many large California and the North Bay events have already announced postponements or cancellations in the face of the pandemic.

Some major events, such as BottleRock Napa Valley, have been delayed until fall. Other long-running summer specials, including Marin’s century-old Mountain Play, have outright canceled their planned productions as they look ahead to next season. Other performance organizations are going the online route with virtual versions of their summer spectacles.

One such group is Sonoma County–based Transcendence Theatre Company,  best known for their summer-long Broadway Under the Stars series of live, outdoor theater productions at Jack London State Park.

Forced to cancel its live 2020 season of shows, Transcendence Theatre Company will instead present “The Best Night Ever Goes Online,” a virtual compilation of the last eight seasons of Broadway Under the Stars concerts with never-before-seen footage featuring hundreds of Broadway artists.

The virtual season will stream online Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, July 10 through Sept. 13, with evening and matinee presentations. The virtual season includes four different concert offerings. “Don’t Stop Believin’” opens the series with uplifting music July 10-19, the beloved “Fantastical Family Night” presents kid-friendly numbers July 24-26, “I Hope You Dance” brings the most moving shows to the stage Aug. 14–23 and a retrospective of the annual “Gala Celebration” caps the season Sept. 11–13. Tickets can be found at bestnightever.org.

Also in Sonoma County, the Valley of the Moon Music Festival is moving from in-person to online concerts for the 2020 season. The festival presents a wide range of classical, romantic and other chamber music concerts to local audiences, and this year was meant to mark the 250th birthday of Ludwig van Beethoven. The online season is still committed to celebrating Beethoven and 2020 with live-streamed and socially distant ensembles scheduled to perform later this summer. Details are coming soon to valleyofthemoonmusicfestival.org.

Chamber music fans can also look forward to Napa Valley’s Music in the Vineyards virtual festival in August. The annual concert series is postponed as planned, though the virtual fest hopes to bring its high-quality music to the public in a new online format. Details are forthcoming at musicinthevineyards.org.

Several other Napa Valley events remain hopeful about operating this summer, especially given that the Napa County Public Health Officer highlighted the county’s low rates of Covid-19 cases and high levels of preparedness in a May 14 report. One event, the popular Napa Porchfest, is scheduled to take place on several porches and lawns throughout downtown Napa on July 26. The neighborhood event is also one of the best for possible social distancing, as crowds wander from house to house to see a wide range of local bands and musicians. With proper face coverings and separation, the show could potentially go on. Details can be found at napaporchfest.org.

Art is a large part of Marin County’s summer, though many events, such as the Novato Festival of Art, Wine & Music and the Sausalito Art Festival, have already been put on pause. Still, art lovers have a few things to look forward to, beginning with the annual MarinScapes fine-art exhibit and sale that benefits recovery agency Buckelew Programs. Often held in June, the fundraiser debuts online this year May 28–31, capping Mental Health Month and marking Buckelew Programs’s 50th anniversary. Buckelew Programs serves North Bay individuals and families dealing with mental health and related behavioral health challenges. View and bid on art and other items online while supporting mental health in a time of crisis at buckelew.org/events/marinscapes.

Also in Marin, the “Lost Coast” exhibit brings local visions to life online via the Marin Museum of Contemporary Art, opening with a virtual reception on June 6 at 5pm at marinmoca.org.

One Day More

Like always, just when I think things cannot get any weirder (worse?) and I’m ready to jump ship, letters to the editor (May 13) make me want to live another day.

Thank you Mr. Allen for setting me straight on the eating of meat, the tragic downfall of the Bohemian and the Pacific Sun and most importantly: THE BIG LIE. I had no idea just how lame I am.

I also want to give a shout-out to the letter writer from West Marin; I have met the enemy and I can say with no uncertainty, Daedalus Howell it is not. Mr. Howell can meander about my neighborhood any dang time he wants. Mask, no mask, sober or …, just as long as he brings me lunch in a brown bag.

Thank you for giving me one more day.

David Dale

Sonoma Valley

Less Is More

Hear, hear (“Diet & Covid-19,” Open Mic, May 6). Other benefits of less meat eating are land preservation and methane reduction. Hopefully a lot of other things will change, too, like healthcare, labor rights and fossil fuel dependency.

Leslie

via bohemian.com

Art Critic

I am an art salesman. I have never seen such stuck-up, slimy folks as these art galleries, selling fu-fu art to jerks (“Ailing Arts,” April 29). Crap for outrageous prices. Only a fool would buy art here unless they were bathing in cash waiting to have their a– kissed … kissed to buy something. I have NO sympathy for these galleries. You want crap? For LOTS of money? Go to Marin.

Johnny Nevola

Via PacificSun.com

How staying at home is helping the planet

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This is what a climate strike will look like. Because it’s not humans that are warming the planet. It’s human activity.

We all know that fossil fuels are the problem. What if we all just picked a day and significantly didn’t use any?

We can’t depend on “leaders” to fix it. Just as Chamberlain famously placated Hitler to preserve “peace in our time” for a war-weary England, our “leaders” are well aware that it is political suicide to disrupt a prosperity that is predicated on fossil fuels—and a prosperity predicated on fossil fuels is almost all that any living First World citizen has ever known.

Trump has said, significantly, when asked about a fracking ban, “I’m not leaving all that wealth in the ground.”

And there’s the crux of it. That’s the beauty of that guy. He lies a lot, but to his handlers’ and his sponsors’ dismay, at the most inopportune moments he sometimes suddenly tells the truth. What’s the expression? “Born with a silver foot in his mouth”?

What will be required is a relative generational asceticism. To use fossil fuels less prodigally we need to change, not our policy, but our behavior. Much of the world still observes the religious practice of fasting—why can’t we, for example, observe a fossil-fuels Sabbath? Just behave as you are now once a week, for starters. That would theoretically cut our consumption by one-seventh, and send a stark message to leaders who are not lodestars, as they should be, but weathervanes. Let’s get them spun around and pointed in the right direction.

The environmental benefits of this enforced global calming are already clearly visible by satellite.

So if you’ve been cooped up in your house all day, for weeks, and you step outside to howl about it at 8, pat yourself on the back at the same time for demonstrating the abnegation that reversing climate change, our War—the mother of all heroic struggles come ’round at last—is going to require.

The remedy for global warming is Global Calming.

Lito Brindle lives in Sausalito.

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Unfortunately, the upcoming summer season is going to be anything but social, as many large California and the North Bay events have already announced postponements or cancellations in the face of the pandemic. Some major events, such as BottleRock Napa Valley, have been delayed until fall. Other long-running summer specials, including Marin’s century-old Mountain Play, have outright canceled their planned...

One Day More

Like always, just when I think things cannot get any weirder (worse?) and I’m ready to jump ship, letters to the editor (May 13) make me want to live another day. Thank you Mr. Allen for setting me straight on the eating of meat, the tragic downfall of the Bohemian and the Pacific Sun and most importantly: THE BIG LIE....

How staying at home is helping the planet

This is what a climate strike will look like. Because it’s not humans that are warming the planet. It’s human activity. We all know that fossil fuels are the problem. What if we all just picked a day and significantly didn’t use any? We can’t depend on “leaders” to fix it. Just as Chamberlain famously placated Hitler to preserve “peace in...
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