Napa County Confirms First Death Due to COVID-19

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Napa County officials have confirmed the first death of a county resident due to COVID-19 on Tuesday, March 31.

The adult patient, who died on Tuesday, was being treated at a hospital, according to a Napa County Health Department press release. No other information about the patient is being released at this time.

“Our hearts go out to the patient’s family, and friends during this difficult time,” Napa County’s Public Health Officer Dr. Karen Relucio said Tuesday. “More than ever, it is crucial that we practice physical distancing, and if we are sick, even with mild illness, make every effort to self-isolate from others and follow the shelter at home order.

Napa County currently has 15 confirmed cases of coronavirus.

These Local Theaters Will Screen Films In Your Home

While movie theaters remain closed during the shelter-in-place ordeal, local film purveyors are taking to the web to screen movies for those who are hunkering down at home.

In Marin County, the Smith Rafael Film Center is closed, though the theater is thriving online with the Rafael@ Home series featuring several films available to rent and stream at home, including Brazilian genre-bending, award-winner Bacurau and breakout drama Saint Frances. Films coming to the rental series includes intimate documentary Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band and local filmmaker Nancy Kelly’s acclaimed Thousand Pieces of Gold.

Downtown Larkspur’s historic art deco Lark Theater is also closed in the wake of Marin County’s sheltering order, and they’ve responded with their own Lark Streams service. The nonprofit venue is working with top film distributors to develop the online programming, which currently includes Academy Award-nominated Polish film Corpus Christi and the supernatural comedy Extra Ordinary coming soon.

In Sonoma County, the Alexander Valley Film Society’s Shelter in Place Series is gaining an audience with several offerings such as online filmmaker webinars, home screenings and a weekly Wednesday Film & Food series that encourages combining the at-home screening with local takeout. Upcoming online events include a Film Noir Q&A and Discussion with film critic and Barndiva owner Jil Hales on Sunday, April 5, at 2pm. AV Film Society is even hosting online educational classes for kids who are sheltering, with a film editing course happening right now.

In Napa County, the Cameo Cinema, closed for the time being, has been busy curating its own Virtual Cinema with several titles to rent, including some hard-to-find international films such as acclaimed Romanian crime comedy The Whistlers and  German historic thriller Balloon.

Click these links above to find out how to rent the movies from each theater/ film group. You’ll be taken to their websites to purchase and watch the film, with a portion of ticket sales helping to support each group.

The Show Must Go On: Left Edge Theatre Plans Streaming Events

Ever since William Shakespeare supposedly wrote several classic plays while in quarantine due to a bubonic-plague breakout in the early 1600s, live theater and pandemics have had a tempestuous relationship.

On one hand, live theater often acts as a critical community outlet for entertainment and social examination during times of difficulty. On the other hand, you have to be in the theater to experience the theater, which is impossible in times of social isolation such as the current coronavirus outbreak.

Now, Left Edge Theatre, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts’ award-winning resident theater company, is changing the way in which we experience local, live theater with its plan to stream events and productions online instead of onstage.

In the works are streaming presentations of past productions such as 2019’s world premiere of “Drumming With Anubis.” The hilarious supernatural crowd-pleaser, written by David Templeton and directed by David Yen, concerns a drum circle of friends who encounter an Egyptian God.

Left Edge will also soon stream a new version of their 2016 production of “A Steady Rain,” with actors Nick Sholley and Mike Schaeffer reprising their powerful performances from that original award-winning show.

In addition, Left Edge embraces the expression, “the show must go on,” with an online fundraising Season Showcase on May 16 and 17, in which Left Edge will present several scenes from shows they are considering for production and then ask the audience to vote for the shows they most want to see. That event will be held via Zoom online streaming; tickets are $30 and available here.

Other new productions and events in the works include a New Play Spotlight boasting local authors and professional actors in conversation, and a planned (if needed) streaming presentation of the new play “Small Mouth Sounds,” written by acclaimed playwright Bess Wohl and directed by Left Edge Theatre Artistic Director Argo Thompson, that was originally scheduled to run onstage in June. For more information on this and other planned streaming events, visit Left Edge Theatre’s website here.

MISSING: Whereabouts of Elderly Sonoma Motorist Unknown

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When 91-year-old John Volgel left his Sonoma Valley area residence this morning, he left no trace or indication of where he was going and hasn’t been seen since.

According to an advisory issued by the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office, Volgel apparently departed in navy blue 2004 Subaru Outback with the California license plate 1634ADP but his destination and current whereabouts are unknown.

Volgel is 5-foot, 7-inches tall and weighs about 170 pounds with blue eyes and grey hair. The nonagenarian was last seen wearing a beige overcoat, black jeans, and white shoes. He is also thought to be wearing gold-rimmed eyeglasses states the advisory prepared by Sgt. Greg Piccinini.

Authorities ask that if you see Volgel or his vehicle to call the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office at 707-565-2121.

Santa Rosa Symphony Reschedules Spring Season, Pays Musicians Now

In a bittersweet bit of news, the Santa Rosa Symphony announced that they are rescheduling all of their planned Spring 2020 concert season both in response to county and state shelter-in-place orders, and “for the safety and health of its patrons, musicians and staff.”

With new summer dates already confirmed, the symphony also announced that its Board of Directors approved a plan to pay all hired musicians immediately in an effort to ease their financial burdens caused by cancelled gigs throughout the Bay Area.

The symphony’s new concert schedule currently includes “Showcasing Contemporary Women,” rescheduled from March 21–23 to June 6, 7 and 8; “Beethoven Lives Upstairs,” rescheduled from April 19 to June 14; “Visions of Hope,” rescheduled from May 2–4 to July 11–13 and the popular Symphony Pops Concert, “Remember When Rock Was Young: the Elton John Tribute,” rescheduled from April 26 to August 9.

Patrons of the symphony are encouraged to follow the news on their Facebook page and website for further updates as the shelter-in-place situation evolves.

In another bright bit of news, Santa Rosa Symphony notes that their mail has lately been filled with season subscription renewals, demonstrating the value of the arts in a time of crisis.

See Local Bands Perform ‘Onstage’ in Phoenix Theater Podcast

For more than five years, Petaluma power-duo Tom Gaffey and Jim Agius, manager and booker, respectively, at the historic Phoenix Theater, have hosted North Bay and Bay Area bands and artists in their video podcast series, “Onstage With Jim & Tom.”

The series is recorded, quite literally, on-stage at the Phoenix Theater, and episodes include in-depth and wide-ranging interviews and live performances by an eclectic lineup of local talent, with recent episodes featuring Santa Rosa singer-songwriter Schlee, Oakland synth-pop outfit Morning Hands and even goth comedian Oliver Graves.

Now is the perfect time to revisit the hundreds of episodes available online at onstagepodcast.com. Click the link below to get started binging the show now.

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Homebound Artists Are Creating Pet Portraits During Shelter-In-Place

While the North Bay continues to endure a sheltering-in-place order to stop the spread of coronavirus, many folks are hunkered down and self-isolating with their best friends; their dogs, cats and other pets.

Now, you can celebrate your furry friend with a pet portrait created by a local artist as part of a fundraising campaign by Sonoma Valley nonprofit animal shelter Pets Lifeline.

For a $20 donation, Pets Lifeline will commission a participating artist to turn a photo of your pet into a work of art. Pets Lifeline notes that it’s luck of the draw, with the array of artists ranging from accomplished painters who exhibit at SVMA to a third grader at Sassarini. You can commission more than one piece of art.

“I am wowed by the creativity and talent of the artists,” said Pets Lifeline Executive Director Nancy King. “I hope this project will bring some joy to both artist and pet owners during this challenging time.”

Go to petslifeline.org/pet-portraits to see already-completed portraits, and sign up for your own. Artists can also still sign up to participate in the project.

Gig Economy

As Sonoma, Napa and Marin county residents continue to endure a “shelter-in-place” order meant to stop the spread of the coronavirus, social gatherings and many businesses have been put on hold until at least April 7.


While many well-heeled full-time professionals in the North Bay are enduring their downtime more worried about homeschooling their kids than they are about their income, many furloughed employees of closed businesses are able to reach out for unemployment benefits.

But, for thousands of musicians, artists and entertainment professionals in the region, the sheltering has completely wiped out their main source of income, as concerts, exhibits and other social activities are canceled or postponed.

“At this point everything that I have in my calendar has been canceled,” says Sonoma County singer-songwriter Clementine Darling. “I’d say about 10 shows in the next 30 days, at least 3,000 dollars worth of income I’m losing.”

In addition to her Bay Area gigs, Darling had also booked five days of showcases for South By Southwest Conference & Festival in Austin, Texas. Now, she has zero dates coming.

“There is panic that my music career is over, and I don’t know if that’s a justified thought or not,” she says. “But I don’t know how things are going to look when we come back.”

This is not Darling’s first brush with disaster, as she was one of many forced to flee from the Mark West Springs neighborhood during the 2017 Tubbs fire. In many ways, she is still recovering from that event, subletting apartments and living part time in her van.

“I have a bit of savings, but I also have to pay my bills and my rent, so that’s what my resources are going to,” she says.

In Petaluma, vocalist Stella Heath averaged four gigs a week with her bands Bandjango Collectif, the Billie Holiday Project and Stella & the Starlights.

“As they started to shut down things, I thought I could keep my small gigs going,” she says. “But it became quickly clear that the restaurants and everywhere I would have been playing were shutting down. That has been devastating; I have zero income now, pretty much.”

Longtime North Bay 8-string guitarist Nate Lopez also feels the pinch. He has already canceled a Washington State tour in May, where he was to perform and lead workshops at the La Conner Guitar Festival, and a trip to Ireland in June.

“In addition to my regular gigs at Lagunitas and Seismic Brewing and all the winery gigs, I had some lofty plans trying to get around the world and tour,” Lopez says. “Now I have no idea what to do. I’m fortunate to have saved a little bit of money, so I think I’ll be OK for a month or two, but who knows.”

Other North Bay and Bay Area bands who’ve had to cancel or postpone tours include Kinsborough, Rainbow Girls and the Sam Chase.

San Francisco stringband Hot Buttered Rum was in Africa, performing 10 dates each in Rwanda and Zambia as part of a tour with cultural-diplomacy group American Music Abroad before the outbreak, and front man Nat Keefe nearly missed the flight back home.

“We were able to finish our tour; I took an earlier flight back and didn’t do the trip to Victoria Falls after the tour because I wanted to be back with my family,” he says.

On March 14, Keefe flew from Zambia to Dubai for a layover before flying to the US.

“I registered a slight fever,” he says. “They pulled me out of line, put me into an ambulance with a nurse in a hazmat suit, and I spent four nights in quarantine.”

Keefe eventually tested negative for COVID-19, but in those four days he worried that airlines were going to shut down, stranding him halfway around the world from his wife and two small children for weeks.

Now that he is back home and healthy, the next thing on his mind is Hot Buttered Rum’s planned April 3 release of their new album, Something Beautiful.

“It’s like one of our best albums ever,” Keefe says, laughing. “We put so much time and love into it, and we don’t get to do a big brewhaha for it.”

But it’s not just the performers who are being hit with the stoppage. Talent buyer, booker and promoter KC Turner, whose company KC Turner Presents puts on popular concerts at venues such as HopMonk Tavern in Novato and Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, says the last week has been the unraveling of six months worth of work in tour routing, promotion and everything else that goes into producing a concert.

“That’s my biggest focus lately,” Turner says. “Taking all of that and trying to reschedule and postpone, versus canceling, shows. Trying to shift the entire calendar has been the challenge.”

As of right now, Turner’s income is on standby, and the same goes for venues. Already, live music spots like the Blue Note in Napa have taken to crowd-funding sites to ask the public for help in supporting their employees through the sheltering.

Watch Party

Faced with self-isolation, musicians around the world have taken to the internet to broadcast concerts from home, performing live on platforms like Facebook and Instagram, and asking for donations with virtual tip jars. Others are using Patreon and other membership platforms, where artists upload exclusive content for monthly subscription fees.

“I don’t typically look forward to the Facebook Live stuff,” says Nate Lopez. “But I am looking forward to this opportunity because I have the time now and I have a decent online set-up like everybody does, so I’m excited to do what I’m thinking of as house concerts, where I can chat with people and take requests.”

Stella Heath is also setting up live streams with her bands, something she is learning to do as she goes. She is also beginning online vocal lessons with students.

“I’ve never done live streaming, and I’m a person who likes good quality, so I’m trying to figure that out really fast,” she says.

Heath says it’s interesting to watch, on a global scale, musicians at every level making the adjustment to live streaming.

“The jazz artist Cecile McLorin Salvant did this live stream; she had a big concert in San Francisco canceled and this was her alternative and it was cool and intimate,” Heath says. “It could open up possibilities to connect with people on a different level.”

Uncertain Future

“Well, you know, I did have a bunch of gigs booked until August,” says Marin guitarist and bandleader Danny Click. “I guess maybe some of those gigs will come back, but truthfully probably not. I don’t think we’re all going to get back to work until the summer’s out.”

Click doesn’t see a quick fix on the horizon for the pandemic, and says that if and when things return to normal, it will be a scramble for musicians to get the coveted stage time.

“It’s going to be cluster-fuck, pardon my language,” he says.

The veteran musician thinks he can last it out for a while financially, but as a guitar player in Marin County, he knows the need for a revenue stream.

“We have to rely on people donating and streaming, and I see every musician known to mankind is playing live online now, and that’s fantastic, but at a certain point I think it will be inundating,” he says.

Of course Click, like every other artist, hopes things start to return to normal soon, but the uncertainty that comes with this sheltering is at the foremost of his mind.

“I’ve had people contact me and book things for the summer—but in all of those emails, people say ‘we hope this is back to normal by then,’” Heath says.

“The way my personality works is that I can work really hard if I have something on the horizon,” Clementine Darling says. “Even if I’m exhausted I can still focus on doing this thing; but if that gets wiped out, all that time and energy is for what?”

Darling is jumping in with the live-streaming trend, but she also plans to hunker down and write and prepare to record a new album, “whenever we come out of this,” she says.

Darling also plans to reach out to MusiCares, a nonprofit associated with the Grammys, which provides musicians with emergency financial assistance. The California Arts Council, Californians for the Arts and other avenues of financial assistance for creative professionals are taking special care to ensure help during the sheltering, with Creative Sonoma and Arts Council Napa Valley providing detailed information to North Bay artists and musicians.

“When this does come around, maybe people will appreciate music again,” Danny Click says. “I think people take the arts for granted, until it’s gone. I think that’s true with anything. Maybe we’ll learn.”

Natural Magic

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North Bay singer-songwriter and rancher Ismay (aka Avery Hellman), grandchild of Hardly Strictly Bluegrass founder Warren Hellman, has spent a lifetime immersed in music and nature.

Now, Ismay merges those two territories in an enthralling, full-length debut album, Songs of Sonoma Mountain, available on vinyl, CD and digital download.

“I tried to focus my songwriting on this place as much as possible,” Ismay says of the new record. “I tried to think about what my experiences were on the mountain and tell those stories.”

Ismay wrote the album over several years while working and living on the family ranch on Sonoma Mountain, usually taking shelter in the ranch’s barn during the evening when no one was around.

“It’s kind of weird to write songs about birds and inanimate objects and places,” Ismay says. “It’s more common to write about relationships. It seems to just work for me to write songs about living in the natural world.”

In that vein, many of the songs on the album contain a folkloric quality, as if the mountain itself wrote the lyrics. Ismay’s musical approach of intricate finger-style guitars and emotionally affecting vocals set over field recordings lends a fairytale air of imagination to the entire record.

“That is a big part of my life,” Ismay says. “If we are able to spend time in the natural world, we get to engage more in those mystical elements of it; these strange things that you encounter that are unbelievable. These folklore stories used to be so much more a part of our lives.”

Within the framework of the natural world, Ismay also lyrically explores deeply personal issues such as identifying as non-binary or genderqueer.

“That was a big challenge for me in the record, because it’s so much easier for me to keep those things private,” Ismay says. “But I feel like I owe it to other people who are like me to be more honest and open with who I am and express this feeling I’ve had so deeply for so long.”

In addition to Songs of Sonoma Mountain, Ismay is also launching a new podcast, Where The World Begins, at the end of March to tell more stories from the mountain and the natural world.

“It’s a podcast about our connection to place,” Ismay says. “It’s about how humans shape places and how places change us.”

‘Songs of Sonoma Mountain’ is available now. Ismaymusic.com.

Dear Landlord

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Hi. How are you? Probably you are quite concerned, as are the rest of us. Many of you own small commercial buildings or complexes housing businesses disrupted by the shutdown. Many of you are small businesses yourselves and are straining to figure out cash flow and income for the next few periods.

I have a big favor to ask of you, and it may work to your advantage in the long run. If your tenants must continue to pay rent when no income is coming in, most of them will go out of business, which leaves your property vacant and producing no income for you until it is leased again. New leases will be difficult to sign in the midst of an economic downturn or recession. If your tenants can stay in business till the shutdown ends, your properties will stay leased and your income will resume.

Seventy percent of the U.S. economy is consumer spending. Much of that is mom-and-pop stores and restaurants that fight like terriers to stay afloat during the best of times. By keeping your tenants in business, you will see the benefits in your bottom line but also in the local and national economies as well.
We’ve often been told that a rising tide lifts all boats. Well, the opposite is true as well. We don’t want our local businesses and restaurants to fail. We don’t want you, the landlords, to lose your shirts either.

We all have a vested interest in keeping our local economy afloat. Thousands of empty storefronts and shuttered restaurants is a terrible thought to consider and will have ripple effects all throughout our area. Please consider the long-term consequences of businesses shutting down.

Can you find it in your hearts to work out arrangements with your tenants so that rent can be deferred or delayed until business comes back? To quote Fred Rogers, “I know you can.”

Thank you very much,

Andrew Haynes

Andrew Haynes lives in Petaluma.

Napa County Confirms First Death Due to COVID-19

Napa County officials have confirmed the first death of a county resident due to COVID-19 on Tuesday, March 31. The adult patient, who died on Tuesday, was being treated at a hospital,...

These Local Theaters Will Screen Films In Your Home

While movie theaters remain closed during the shelter-in-place ordeal, local film purveyors are taking to the web to screen movies for those who are hunkering down at home. In Marin County, the Smith Rafael Film Center is closed, though the theater is thriving online with the Rafael@ Home series featuring several...

The Show Must Go On: Left Edge Theatre Plans Streaming Events

Ever since William Shakespeare supposedly wrote several classic plays while in quarantine due to a bubonic-plague breakout in the early 1600s, live theater and pandemics have had a tempestuous relationship. On one hand, live theater often acts as a critical community outlet for entertainment and social examination during times of difficulty. On the other hand, you have to be...

MISSING: Whereabouts of Elderly Sonoma Motorist Unknown

When 91-year-old John Volgel left his Sonoma Valley area residence this morning, he left no trace or indication of where he was going and hasn't been seen since. According to an advisory issued by the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office, Volgel apparently departed in navy blue 2004 Subaru Outback with the California license plate 1634ADP but his destination and...

Santa Rosa Symphony Reschedules Spring Season, Pays Musicians Now

In a bittersweet bit of news, the Santa Rosa Symphony announced that they are rescheduling all of their planned Spring 2020 concert season both in response to county and state shelter-in-place orders, and “for the safety and health of its patrons, musicians and staff.” With new summer dates already confirmed, the symphony...

See Local Bands Perform ‘Onstage’ in Phoenix Theater Podcast

Interview and live performance podcast fills concert void left by COVID-19.

Homebound Artists Are Creating Pet Portraits During Shelter-In-Place

Pets Lifeline hosts artistic fundraiser

Gig Economy

As Sonoma, Napa and Marin county residents continue to endure a “shelter-in-place” order meant to stop the spread of the coronavirus, social gatherings and many businesses have been put on hold until at least April 7. While many well-heeled full-time professionals in the North Bay are enduring their downtime more worried about...

Natural Magic

North Bay singer-songwriter and rancher Ismay (aka Avery Hellman), grandchild of Hardly Strictly Bluegrass founder Warren Hellman, has spent a lifetime immersed in music and nature. Now, Ismay merges those two territories in an enthralling, full-length debut album, Songs of Sonoma Mountain, available on vinyl, CD and digital download. “I tried to focus my songwriting on this place...

Dear Landlord

Hi. How are you? Probably you are quite concerned, as are the rest of us. Many of you own small commercial buildings or complexes housing businesses disrupted by the shutdown. Many of you are small businesses yourselves and are straining to figure out cash flow and income for the next few periods. I have a big favor to ask of...
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