April 11: Operation Jazz at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts

Operation Jazz is a fixture in the Healdsburg area, a weeklong jazz studies immersion for music students led by pro musicians and capped off by a concert at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts. This year, percussionist and Operation Jazz educator Babatunde Lea leads an ensemble that will perform the music of Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Joining Lea are former Davis saxophonist Azar Lawrence, trombonist Angela Wellman and jazz pianist Frank Martin, among others, all of whom participated in Operation Jazz. Babatunde Lea and friends play April 11, at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts, 130 Plaza St., Healdsburg. 7:30pm. 707.431.1970.

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March 22: Gumbo Smackdown at Kendall-Jackson Wine Center

The quintessential Cajun dish has got to be gumbo. While it sounds simple—meat and spices in a stew—the great thing about gumbo is that everyone can create his or her own style, with countless recipes originating from the bayous of Louisiana to the coast of California. This week, five top North Bay chefs bring their own gourmet gumbo to the table in the Gumbo Smackdown. The winner is chosen by the audience, and will take home the coveted Golden Crayfish Award and bragging rights in a night of live music and even livelier food. The Gumbo Smackdown happens Saturday, March 22, at the Kendall-Jackson Wine Center, 5007 Fulton Road, Fulton. 5pm. $50. 707.576.3810.

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Goodbye, Farewell & Amen

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There’s no simple way to say this, so I’ll just spit it out: This is my last issue as the editor of the Bohemian.

The good thing is that I’m leaving the paper in a strong position. In my three years as editor, I’ve coordinated a redesign of both the print paper and the website, won four national AAN awards for my music writing, overseen two CNPA awards for the paper as editor, increased website traffic tenfold, launched and hosted the 24-Hour Band Contest, been a voice of the paper on KSRO and continued to write for all sections of the paper.

But most importantly, the Bohemian has remained a strong voice in the community during a time when print journalism is presumed to be dying. We’ve broken stories locally in my time as editor about Efren Carrillo knocking a guy unconscious outside a Too Short show, the inability of the Santa Rosa Police Department to accurately track gang crime statistics, the $10 million tab left to the city of Petaluma by developers of the Theatre District, and the Press Democrat‘s sale by the New York Times Co.—all stories that wound up later as front-page news in the local daily. Add to that our consistently top-notch local features, news, arts, food and music coverage from the past three years, and, well, I’m supremely proud of the impact we’ve had.

Being able to have that kind of impact on the community can be addictive. Especially if, like me, you really, really love your community. I found myself working late nights, trying to do the best possible job I could. I worked weekends and days off. I worked a lot. And I shouldn’t have. Because my wife works full-time too, raising our four-year-old daughter while trying to ensure the paper was as good as possible started to alternately resemble either a madcap farce or a Cassavetes tearjerker.

So basically, I’m slowing down. I’ll be able to spend much more time with family and friends this way. And in fact, Leilani Clark, who’s been by my side doing an excellent job for these three years as staff writer, is stepping down as well.

This is not an end. I’ll still be around, in print, in one way or another. More importantly, the Bohemian should be in good hands. There’s truly no paper in the world like it.

Gabe Meline is the outgoing editor of this paper.

Jan. 25: Howard Vlieger at the Sebastopol Grange

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Politicians love to talk about the plight of the “American farmer,” but what they’re usually referring to are factory-farming corporations. Third-generation Iowa farmer Howard Vlieger has spent years studying the problems small farmers experience as a result of Big Ag’s insistence on GMO crops. No West County hippie, Vlieger is a conservative Christian Republican; he’s simply vehemently opposed to GMOs, and speaks about their destructive nature on Saturday, Jan. 25, at the Sebastopol Grange (6000 Sebastopol Ave., Sebastopol; 10am), Sunday, Jan. 26 at the Windsor Grange (9161 Starr Road, Windsor; 2pm) and the Seed Bank (199 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma; 7pm). For more, see LabelGMOs.org.

Live Review: Mat Callahan sings James Connolly

Mat Callahan at the Arlene Francis Center

The cyclical nature of revolution songs is undeniable. Take a song from 100 years ago and it will be, at least in part, relevant today. Take, for example, the songs of Irish revolutionary James Connolly.

Mat Callahan, who fronted the San Francisco political punk/worldbeat band the Looters in the 80s, has compiled a book of Connolly’s music from original publications long thought lost to history. The book is put together well, with just enough history to give a sense of Connolly’s importance but relying mostly on the man’s own words from his music, all of which was written over 100 years ago. Connolly, a leading Marxist theorist in his day and was executed by the British in 1916.

Callahan and his wife Yvonne Moore performed about a dozen songs on acoustic guitar and vocals at the Arlene Francis Center Friday night. The performance was the most punk rock thing I’ve seen all year, and will hold that title for at least a while. Callahan celebrated his 60th birthday three years ago but sends a frozen shiver down my spine with lines like, “The people’s flag is deepest red, it shrouded oft our martyred dead; and ere their limbs grew stiff and dead, their hearts’ blood dyed its every fold.”

The album, “Songs of Freedom,” includes fully orchestrated versions of the songs Callahan and Moore played Friday night. It’s got Callahan’s worldbeat sensibility and arrangement, with guitar, bass, drums, Irish whistles, pipes, vocal harmony, fiddle, accordion and harp. The production is excellent, and the arrangements are updated to modern sensibility without losing their original feeling. Some tunes to Connolly’s songs were lost, so Callahan wrote original music to his lyrics. It serves to note that Connolly’s main purpose of putting these revolutionary words to music was for people to sing them and remember them, so many of the tunes are actually traditional country songs or somewhat hokey, simple melodies. They sound best when sung with 100 of your closest, most fed-up-with-the-system friends.

Get the book and CD here. It’s perfect for fans of history, revolution and Mat Callahan, each of which is equally important.

Sept. 28-29: Wretch Like Me a

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From Michael Stipe and Woody Allen to Bill Maher and David Bazan, there exists a long line of art borne from men wrestling with their religious upbringing. Three years ago, ‘Wretch Like Me,’ the one-man show written and performed by Bohemian theater critic David Templeton, did this very thing with an added bonus: laughter. Now, in an updated revision, Templeton’s story about coming of age as a fundamentalist puppeteer with an overly devoted (to the Lord) girlfriend returns. Brush up on your New Testament verses and hark back to the weird world of the 1970s in two shows, Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 28 and 29, at the Occidental Center of the Arts. 3850 Doris Murphy Court, Occidental. 4pm. $10. 707.874.9392.

Enter the 2013 Java Jive Writing Contest!

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It Showed Up At My Doorstep.

Writers! Ever had strange things show up at your doorstep without knowing why? Here’s your chance to be published in our 2013 Fall Writing Contest, with a special-delivery twist: We’ll send you an object in the mail, and you’ll craft a 400-word short story based on what’s waiting at your front door courtesy of the good ol’ postal service.

To enter, send your name, street address and phone number to [email protected]. You have until Sept. 20 to enter, and after receiving your object in the mail, you have until Oct. 10 to submit your story to our judging panel.

Good luck!

Winners will be published in the Oct. 16 issue. All objects sent in the mail will be unique and one-of-a-kind. If you sign up and receive an object in the mail but do not submit a story about it, we will print your name in a “Hall of Shame” as a freeloader. Play nice!

Sonoma Media Investments and Magazines

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Rumor has it Sonoma Media Investments, owners of the Press Democrat, North Bay Business Journal, the Petaluma Argus, the Sonoma Index Tribune and other associated publications hired a new person to take over the magazine offerings. The publication company currently offers Home and Garden, Sonoma and Santa Rosa magazines among others.

In other SMI and magazine related news, owners of the investment company Stave Falk, Doug Bosco and Darius Anderson spoke at an event put on by North Bay Biz magazine (which is, incidentally, a direct competitor of the North Bay Business Journal) on the future of newspapers. With the new interest brewing in the magazine department, could this be the beginning of another partnership with a local publication by SMI? Only time will tell.

Political Scandals and Electability

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With the arrest and subsequent entrance into rehab of Supervisor Efren Carrillo, Sonoma County has its own political scandal.

As reported in the Press Democrat
, Carrillo was arrested in his socks and underwear allegedly attempting to break into a neighbor’s house. He had previously been arrested in San Diego for getting into a fight, and these two incidents along with admitted overuse of alcohol inspired him to, according to the most recent Press Democrat article, take a month off and check into rehab.

Is this the end of his political career?

While this is happening in Sonoma County, New York papers have had a field day with the announcement of Eliot Spitzer and Anthony Weiner’s reemergence into the political scene. Spitzer resigned as Governor of New York in 2008 after it came out he had spent up to $80,000 on prostitutes in the previous years. Weiner resigned from Congress in 2011 after “sexting” photos of his nether regions (how apropos given his name) to at least one woman he met online.

However, these two fallen politicians have come back with a vengeance. Weiner is running for mayor and Spitzer for controller. And they are doing well in the polls.

Are the American people so forgiving that prostitution and sexting are forgivable sins and just a few years out of sight and a lot of apologies render these men electable again? It appears so and Carrillo should be very happy to hear it.

NO HEADLINE

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This time it’s not the National Security Agency but the New York Police Department that employed less than ethical practices.

The NYPD, after 9/11, employed four Central Intelligence Agency officers, one

April 11: Operation Jazz at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts

Operation Jazz is a fixture in the Healdsburg area, a weeklong jazz studies immersion for music students led by pro musicians and capped off by a concert at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts. This year, percussionist and Operation Jazz educator Babatunde Lea leads an ensemble that will perform the music of Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Joining Lea...

March 22: Gumbo Smackdown at Kendall-Jackson Wine Center

The quintessential Cajun dish has got to be gumbo. While it sounds simple—meat and spices in a stew—the great thing about gumbo is that everyone can create his or her own style, with countless recipes originating from the bayous of Louisiana to the coast of California. This week, five top North Bay chefs bring their own gourmet gumbo to...

Goodbye, Farewell & Amen

There's no simple way to say this, so I'll just spit it out: This is my last issue as the editor of the Bohemian. The good thing is that I'm leaving the paper in a strong position. In my three years as editor, I've coordinated a redesign of both the print paper and the website, won four national AAN awards...

Jan. 25: Howard Vlieger at the Sebastopol Grange

Politicians love to talk about the plight of the “American farmer,” but what they’re usually referring to are factory-farming corporations. Third-generation Iowa farmer Howard Vlieger has spent years studying the problems small farmers experience as a result of Big Ag’s insistence on GMO crops. No West County hippie, Vlieger is a conservative Christian Republican; he’s simply vehemently opposed to...

Live Review: Mat Callahan sings James Connolly

Nicolas GrizzleMat Callahan at the Arlene Francis Center The cyclical nature of revolution songs is undeniable. Take a song from 100 years ago and it will be, at least in part, relevant today. Take, for example, the songs of Irish revolutionary James Connolly. Mat Callahan, who fronted the San Francisco political punk/worldbeat band the Looters in the 80s, has compiled a...

Sept. 28-29: Wretch Like Me a

From Michael Stipe and Woody Allen to Bill Maher and David Bazan, there exists a long line of art borne from men wrestling with their religious upbringing. Three years ago, ‘Wretch Like Me,’ the one-man show written and performed by Bohemian theater critic David Templeton, did this very thing with an added bonus: laughter. Now, in an updated revision,...

Enter the 2013 Java Jive Writing Contest!

We'll send something weird to your doorstep and you'll have to write about it

Sonoma Media Investments and Magazines

Rumor has it Sonoma Media Investments, owners of the Press Democrat, North Bay Business Journal, the Petaluma Argus, the Sonoma Index Tribune and other associated publications hired a new person to take over the magazine offerings. The publication company currently offers Home and Garden, Sonoma and Santa Rosa magazines among others. In other SMI and magazine related news, owners of...

Political Scandals and Electability

Once fallen politicians tend to rise again

NO HEADLINE

This time it's not the National Security Agency but the New York Police Department that employed less than ethical practices. The NYPD, after 9/11, employed four Central Intelligence Agency officers, one
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