June 11: DJ Vadim at the Hopmonk Tavern

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The music of America and England often exists in entirely separate circles, but concentricity was achieved for a brief time in the late ’90s electronica scene, with labels like Quannum, Asphodel and Mush in the U.S. and Ninja Tune, Warp and MoWax in the UK erasing borders both geographical and musical. No artist personifies this cross-pollination like DJ Vadim, who was born in the former Soviet Union, raised in London and now splits his time between New York and Port-au-Prince. Vadim’s series of USSR albums for Ninja Tune between 1996 and 2002 straddled the head-nod beatmaking of Japan’s DJ Krush and the scattered sounds of D.C.’s DJ Spooky, and placed Vadim squarely at the forefront of an exciting time in music. His more recent albums Sound Catcher and U Can’t Lurn Imaginashun have been noticeably tinged with reggae, R&B, old soul and ’70s jazz, ensuring a lively dance floor when DJ Vadim comes to the Juke Joint on Thursday, June 11, at the Hopmonk Tavern. 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 9pm. $10. 707.829.7300.Gabe Meline

June 10: Henry Kaiser at the Sleeping Lady

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There are guitarists like Angus Young, who play the same recycled riffs over and over with the same guys for the rest of their lives. Then there’s guitarists like Henry Kaiser. Truly a renaissance musician, Kaiser’s played with John Zorn and Derek Bailey, recorded with indigenous Malagasy musicians with David Lindley, collaborated with Richard Thompson, played with the drummer for Journey, gone head-to-head with Wilco sideman Nels Cline and freaked out with free-jazz saxophonist John Tchicai. Kaiser—the grandson of industrialist Henry J. Kaiser—cleverly titled a 1991 album Hope You Like Our New Direction, an in-joke on the constantly-changing scope of his career. Kaiser appears with guitarist and Acoustic Guitar magazine senior editor Teja Gerken and East Bay fret-wrangler Ava Mendoza in a challenging and provocative showcase of edgy guitar artistry on Wednesday, June 10, at the Sleeping Lady. 23 Broadway, Fairfax. 9pm. Free. 415.485.1182.Gabe Meline

June 9: Brandi Carlile at the Lincoln Theater

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You’d be hard-pressed to find many lines on Brandi Carlile’s face, and yet the lines on the fresh-skinned young singer provide the jump-off for her biggest hit, “The Story.” “All of these lines across my face,” she sings, eruptively and with an otherworldly crack in her voice, “tell you the story of who I am.” That incredible split-second vocal crack, and not the imagined wrinkles around her eyes, tells the true story of Carlile, a talented songwriter with an unswerving knack for emotional wallop who had the good fortune of blowing away Dave Matthews at the Sasquatch Music Festival in Washington and hooking up with producer T-Bone Burnett. Even those unfamiliar with Carlile’s name have probably heard her music. Grey’s Anatomy has featured her repeatedly, and television commercials have used “The Story” to sell cars and beer to fast-driving, gut-bulging guys. Carlile, a lesbian, is having a good laugh, enjoying sold-out shows and planning her follow-up album after winning over crowds on the Indigo Girls’ latest tour. She appears on Tuesday, June 9, at the Lincoln Theater. 100 California Drive, Yountville. 7pm. $26–$36. 707.944.1300.Gabe Meline

June 6: Fur Dixon and Steve Werner at Studio E

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The Hollywood Hillbillies might not have received much press for their music, but the Southern California country-punk outfit brought live chickens out onstage with them, and that was enough to earn attention for Fur Dixon and her fellow band mates. As a bassist for the Cramps during a short but influential spell in 1986, Dixon toured the world in a fuzz- and reverb-drenched haze behind the unpredictable onstage presence of Lux Interior, but shortly afterwards got back to her hat-and-boots roots alongside Rosie Flores in the Screamin’ Sirens. With her wilder days mostly behind her, she conjures Bakersfield-like imagery with Steve Werner, with whom she has an infectious musical rapport. Dustbowls, tumbleweeds and rambling are central to their well-blended two-part harmonies. Sit a spell next to the old wood stove and hear their songs and stories on Saturday, June 6, at Studio E. Address provided with ticket, Sebastopol. 8pm. $23. 707.542.7143.Gabe Meline

June 6: Beerfest at the Wells Fargo Center

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After 18 years, the microbrewery mecca Beerfest still hasn’t succumbed to the brand of hoity-toity, touristy gimmickry that so pervasively seduces our long-running institutions. After all, what more does anyone need besides killer music, great food and cold beer? The grooves this year come in the form of the Thugz, who pepper their starry tributes to Monte Rio with a barrelful of Grateful Dead covers and who’ve honed the art of the long set list at their weekly nights at the Pink Elephant bar. The food comes courtesy of over 35 booths, from Johnny Garlic’s to Larry Vito’s barbecue, and the beer comes from every good place in the North Bay and beyond. Furthermore, it’s beer! It’s summertime! Bottoms up! Ticket price includes all the food you can eat and all the beer you can drink, but moderation is encouraged. All proceeds benefit Face to Face, and last year’s event sold out, so get your tickets now for Saturday, June 6, at the Wells Fargo Center. 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. 1–5pm. $35–$40. 707.544.1581.Gabe Meline

June 4-7: DjangoFest at 142 Throckmorton

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Of all the guitarists with limited use of their fingers, Django Reinhardt far and beyond stretched the guitar to its furthest capability. With only two properly working fretting fingers, Reinhardt nonetheless laid down some of the finest solos in the history of the instrument, and remains a looming influence on every jazz guitarist today (guitarist Jim Hall’s dog is named Django, for example). It is impossible to separate Reinhardt’s music from the extraordinary circumstances in his personal life—including a Gypsy caravan lifestyle and signing some of the shrewdest contracts in the history of recorded music—but one need only to listen to his timeless statement of beauty, “Nuages,” to hear pure genius. Reinhardt is celebrated this week at the fourth-annual DjangoFest Mill Valley, a series of concerts and workshops celebrating Reinhardt’s cosmopolitan style with performers Panique, Hot Club of Marin, Pearl Django, Mimi Fox, Gonzalo Bergara, Hot Club of San Francisco, Stochelo Rosenberg and far too many more to list. There are now DjangoFests all over the West Coast. Find out why Thursday–Sunday, June 4–7, at 142 Throckmorton Theater. 142 Throckmorton, Mill Valley. $20–$60. 415.383.9600.Gabe Meline

May 28-June 1: Circo Osorio at Sonoma County Fairgrounds

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You’ve picked up the special coupons at area drugstores and taquerias, you’ve fielded phone calls from other parents and now it’s finally time for Circo Osorio! The big top goes up for just five short days, during which children of all ages can thrill to the wacky antics of Coconut the Clown, the daring maneuvers of tightrope walkers and trapeze artists, and the gravity-defying stunts performed by gymnasts and unicycling jugglers. Unrenewed immigration exemptions for temporary work visas are threatening smaller traveling circuses such as Circo Ososrio, a wing of the American Crown Circus, so the time is now to finally load up the kids and show them a disappearing vestige of pure entertainment. They’ll be talking about the amazing motorcycle “Globe of Death” for days after the fantastic tent show, which runs Thursday–Monday, May 28–June 1, at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds. 1350 Bennett Valley Road, Santa Rosa. 6pm and 8pm. $15 adults; kids under 12, free. 707.592.7812.Gabe Meline

May 31: Larkspur Food and Flower Festival

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It’s a food and flower lover’s delight when the Larkspur Food and Flower Festival takes over Magnolia Avenue to celebrate its 20th year. Nothing spells springtime quite like the largest gathering of nosegays, bouquets and vase arrangements on one street in Marin, where flowers of all manner are displayed, celebrated and for sale. Gourmet offerings for the palate will be offered from the Ward Street Cafe, the Yankee Pier, the Left Bank, the Lark Creek Inn, Back Yard BBQ and the Melting Pot. A kids’ area with the usual face painting and jumpy house will placate the young-uns while the Marin Community Chorus, the James Moseley Band, Rubber Souldiers and Steve Lucky and the Rhumba Bums provide danceable musical entertainment. It’s all going down on Sunday, May 31, on Magnolia Avenue between Ward and King streets, downtown Larkspur. 11am–6pm. Free. 415.924.3808.Gabe Meline

May 29: Lynn Harrell at the Napa Valley Symphony

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It happens to the best of us. You’re in a rush after the performance, you stash your $4 million cello in the back of a taxi. and, well, gosh-a-roonie, you forget the dang thing! Yo-Yo Ma and Philippe Quint have famously left their irreplaceable instruments in taxicabs, and cellist Lynn Harrell joined this club the hard way—is there any easy way?—by accidentally leaving behind his 1673 Stradivarius once owned by Jacqueline du Pré while the squat yellow automobile drove away down the New York City streets. Cellist and cello were soon reunited, and Harrell, recipient of the first Avery Fisher Prize in 1975, continued to tour the world, playing for the finest conductors and orchestras. He plays Dvorák’s Cello Concerto in a whimsical program including Stravinsky’s Jeu de Cartes and the overture to Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the Napa Valley Symphony on Friday, May 29, at the Lincoln Theater. 100 California Drive, Yountville. 8pm. $30–$65. 707.226.8742.Gabe Meline

May 27: Eilen Jewell at the Last Day Saloon

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There’s the hair, the dress, the boots and then there’s the sound. Eilen Jewell’s voice, a glissando droplet that adheres easily to the ear, was discovered at age seven when the Idaho-born balladeer joined a rock band; like every other seven-year-old’s rock band, they used fake instruments made of cardboard. Sea of Tears, her latest and very rock- and R&B-influenced album, is a throwback to those early days in the living room, a culmination of childhood dreams mimicking the Animals, the Kinks and Buddy Holly. Expecting a backlash from her fan base, Jewell has instead seen even more adoration for the departure from her usual folk-swing-country-rockabilly style. Constantly on tour from her native Boston, Jewell’s also got a terrific band behind her, driving with a propulsive keel her own originals alongside choice covers by Sleepy John Estes, Loretta Lynn and Them. She’ll be shakin’ all over on Wednesday, May 27, at the Last Day Saloon. 120 Fifth St., Santa Rosa. 8pm. $10–$13. 707.545.2343.Gabe Meline

June 11: DJ Vadim at the Hopmonk Tavern

The music of America and England often exists in entirely separate circles, but concentricity was achieved for a brief time in the late ’90s electronica scene, with labels like Quannum, Asphodel and Mush in the U.S. and Ninja Tune, Warp and MoWax in the UK erasing borders both geographical and musical. No artist personifies this cross-pollination like DJ Vadim,...

June 10: Henry Kaiser at the Sleeping Lady

There are guitarists like Angus Young, who play the same recycled riffs over and over with the same guys for the rest of their lives. Then there’s guitarists like Henry Kaiser. Truly a renaissance musician, Kaiser’s played with John Zorn and Derek Bailey, recorded with indigenous Malagasy musicians with David Lindley, collaborated with Richard Thompson, played with the drummer...

June 9: Brandi Carlile at the Lincoln Theater

You’d be hard-pressed to find many lines on Brandi Carlile’s face, and yet the lines on the fresh-skinned young singer provide the jump-off for her biggest hit, “The Story.” “All of these lines across my face,” she sings, eruptively and with an otherworldly crack in her voice, “tell you the story of who I am.” That incredible split-second vocal...

June 6: Fur Dixon and Steve Werner at Studio E

The Hollywood Hillbillies might not have received much press for their music, but the Southern California country-punk outfit brought live chickens out onstage with them, and that was enough to earn attention for Fur Dixon and her fellow band mates. As a bassist for the Cramps during a short but influential spell in 1986, Dixon toured the world in...

June 6: Beerfest at the Wells Fargo Center

After 18 years, the microbrewery mecca Beerfest still hasn’t succumbed to the brand of hoity-toity, touristy gimmickry that so pervasively seduces our long-running institutions. After all, what more does anyone need besides killer music, great food and cold beer? The grooves this year come in the form of the Thugz, who pepper their starry tributes to Monte Rio with...

June 4-7: DjangoFest at 142 Throckmorton

Of all the guitarists with limited use of their fingers, Django Reinhardt far and beyond stretched the guitar to its furthest capability. With only two properly working fretting fingers, Reinhardt nonetheless laid down some of the finest solos in the history of the instrument, and remains a looming influence on every jazz guitarist today (guitarist Jim Hall’s dog is...

May 28-June 1: Circo Osorio at Sonoma County Fairgrounds

You’ve picked up the special coupons at area drugstores and taquerias, you’ve fielded phone calls from other parents and now it’s finally time for Circo Osorio! The big top goes up for just five short days, during which children of all ages can thrill to the wacky antics of Coconut the Clown, the daring maneuvers of tightrope walkers and...

May 31: Larkspur Food and Flower Festival

It’s a food and flower lover’s delight when the Larkspur Food and Flower Festival takes over Magnolia Avenue to celebrate its 20th year. Nothing spells springtime quite like the largest gathering of nosegays, bouquets and vase arrangements on one street in Marin, where flowers of all manner are displayed, celebrated and for sale. Gourmet offerings for the palate will...

May 29: Lynn Harrell at the Napa Valley Symphony

It happens to the best of us. You’re in a rush after the performance, you stash your $4 million cello in the back of a taxi. and, well, gosh-a-roonie, you forget the dang thing! Yo-Yo Ma and Philippe Quint have famously left their irreplaceable instruments in taxicabs, and cellist Lynn Harrell joined this club the hard way—is there any...

May 27: Eilen Jewell at the Last Day Saloon

There’s the hair, the dress, the boots and then there’s the sound. Eilen Jewell’s voice, a glissando droplet that adheres easily to the ear, was discovered at age seven when the Idaho-born balladeer joined a rock band; like every other seven-year-old’s rock band, they used fake instruments made of cardboard. Sea of Tears, her latest and very rock- and...
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