Gone Buggy

06.18.08

The underlying theme of this week’s special issue is listed on our editorial sheet as “The Earth: A User’s Guide.” That’s got a certain panache to be sure, but really, every week is a so-called green week at the Bohemian. We’re always striving to highlight ecological issues, concerns, solutions and the good people who work on them, whether in our News section, in Gianna De Persiis Vona’s weekly “Green Zone” column, in the Eats area and even in Arts & Ideas.

Green, c’est . . . um, us.

Which set us to thinking. From this chair, it appears that the collapse of our fisheries and the collapse of our pollinators—particularly the colony collapse disorder haunting bees—are the two most under-reported ecological stories of the year. (Except, of course, in the Boho, where it’s lately been nothing but an ocean of ink on fish and, curiously, a barrel of bytes on wine—but that’s another matter.)

From the most vitriolic point of view, bees are used as mere slaves, trucked all over the United States to pollinate the vast almond orchards and other monocultures of Big Ag. Bee stories usually have a humorous tone and emphasize the many English-language puns afforded by their efforts (and, no, we’re not immune). But the current story about bees is not at all funny. Experts estimate that almost 25 percent of all commercial bee operations suffered from CCD during the winter of 2006&–2007. With a full third of all the food produced on earth relying on bees and other pollinators, this little-understood epidemic directly threatens human life. Honey, what’s the buzz—indeed.

Estimated to have been on the earth for some 150 million years, bees are the only insect to produce anything eagerly eaten by humans. Their social structure is complex and perfect, their biology complex and perfect, their communication strategies complex and utterly, entirely perfect. Bees deserve to be hailed, and that’s exactly what we’ve striven to do in this issue, devoting three stories to different apiarian aspects of the modern world.

on a recent sunny afternoon. to report on what can be done to create a safe haven and “spa” for bees in Healdsburg. . A short list of farms that raise bees and sell their products is included in our calendar.

And once we started thinking about bees, things got more than a little buggy, prompting us to hail other insects in this issue, too. , and it turns out that some insects are just so crunchy and yummy when they’re cooked that snacking is in order.

, and. Finally,

It’s all in good fun, but it’s all in good earnest. Bees may prompt a plethora of puns, but their current situation is deeply dire. To highlight this situation, there’s even such a thing as National Pollinator Week, running Sunday&–Saturday, June 22&–28. To learn more, go to www.pollinator.org or to the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign at www.nappc.org.

Plant something that flowers. Reduce regular almond consumption. And please, don’t kill that bee. 


Takin’ Care of Business

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One would think that smiling on your brother would have broad, cross-generational appeal. But when you’re talking about hippie icon Jesse Colin Young, age 66, playing at the teen-friendly Phoenix Theater, then pierced eyebrows get raised. They ask, what’s with all the geezer acts at the Phoenix, man?

Never fear—it’s just the adventurous taste of 24-year-old Jim Agius, whose ancestors were in Petaluma before the Phoenix started life as the Hill Opera House and who has manned the Phoenix Theater’s booking now for nearly a year. While a small handful of teens who spend time at the Phoenix might cry treason, Agius has been challenging perceptions of an older local demographic who might otherwise fall back on the tired subscription of the Phoenix as a run-down punk palace covered in spray paint. “It is definitely a punk-rock-looking venue,” he admits, “and some people aren’t into that.”

The Phoenix’s reputation may have had something to do with this weekend’s Gallagher show getting cancelled, Agius thinks. Of the 50 dates on the watermelon-smashing comedian’s current tour, Petaluma’s show had the lowest ticket sales (about 80). Agius cites two sold-out shows at the then-LBC in 2001 as an indicator that Gallagher should theoretically still be popular around here, but, he says, “I just think a lot of people don’t really like the Phoenix, older people, and I think they will not go see a show at the Phoenix. I think that’s why this show didn’t do well.

“Ironically, before I started doing shows a year and a half ago,” he adds, “I never really went to the Phoenix at all, and I was in that same mentality. So I can see where they’re coming from.” But through sold-out shows in the past year with David Allan Coe and Blue Öyster Cult, Agius has also seen first-hand what experience can do to locals’ preconceptions about the historic haven. “They get there, and they probably have a bad first impression,” he says, “but then they get in and they like it.”

For the upcoming season at least, Agius is back to booking shows with younger appeal. Tiger Army, Bone Thugs -n- Harmony, MxPx, the GZA and New Found Glory are all on deck through October. But don’t count out classic rock just yet. Agius promises that he’ll remain on the power-chord prowl. And hey, after all, the Phoenix in the 1980s hosted the Allman Brothers, Van Morrison, Los Lobos and the Band. “I am open to any huge act who would want to play there,” he says. “I mean, Grand Funk Railroad? Sure! Bachman Turner Overdrive? That’d be neat! I hear they’re getting back together, actually.”

Jesse Colin Young performs this Saturday, June 21, at the Phoenix Theater, 201 E. Washington St., Petaluma. 8pm. $30. All ages; alcohol served. 707.762.3565.

The Big Chill

06.18.08

We live in very cold times, and the forecast is for an even chillier future. Yes, summer has brought warmth and sunshine to the North Bay. And in the longer term, it appears that 21st-century consumption is driving up average global temperatures. And yet in a deeper sense, our way of life is increasingly frigid. Despite signs to the contrary, we paradoxically live in an age which is characterized by a lack of fire—as in the energy of heart, connection, community and transformation. This kind of fire is at the core of most, if not all, spiritual traditions.

For many eons, our ancestors regularly gathered around the fire. Here they shared the big stories that gave life meaning. Around the fire, they laughed, danced and reaffirmed their bonds to one another. Here they encountered the Great Mystery. Through heart and fire, they found their connection to the deep wisdom of those who came before them. This state of grace is celebrated in the story of Genesis as the garden of Eden before the Fall.

The great march of history from Eden to virtual reality is really a retreat from the warmth of the heart into the coldness of the mind. (Recall that Adam and Eve were cast out of Eden for eating fruit from the tree of knowledge.) That descent from a felt connection to the divine has brought us dogmatic religion as well as the cool, detached rationalism that is so celebrated in modernism. We have gone from being a myriad of peoples, each honoring the Great Mystery in his or her own way, to a world in which ideas, both theological or scientific in nature, battle for primacy.

Not that the mind is without its utility. The fear-based energy of the mind keeps us out of trouble and is also good for planning out a course of action. But whereas the heart feels its connection to all things and innately knows its eternal nature, the mind understands through distinction and separation, it frets about comfort and ultimately, about mortality. The mind seeks power, predictability and control. The heart is about connection, balance and surrender. Whereas the mind fears, the heart feels joy.

When indigenous peoples (at least those few who still have their traditions intact) look upon our Western culture, they recognize the cleverness of our science and technology. Yet they also see a great sickness in us, how we are driven by a gnawing hunger, a kind of emptiness that we try to fill by consuming more and more. This hunger is now bringing us to a crisis of global proportions.

As cold as our world has become, there are signs of hope. More of us are talking about sustainability, community and a sense of well-being that goes beyond our aptly named “gross” national product. Many are being drawn to the wisdom traditions that help to bring mind and heart back into balance.

I am fortunate to be part of one organization helping to bring heart energy back to our people. The Sacred Fire Community (SFC) is doing so literally by sponsoring regular community fires around the United States and overseas. These fires are an opportunity for people of all spiritual traditions to meet and share stories just as our ancestors once did. Sitting around a consecrated fire, sharing from our hearts, we begin to experience the kind of deep community that is so lacking in our culture. The SFC also has a host of “lifeways” offerings that provide the support of ancestral wisdom for the major transitions, such as initiation, which are part of every individual’s journey.

Contrary to the prevailing wisdom, we won’t be able to think our way out of the challenges to come. But as more of us connect with fire and the wisdom of the heart, as we gather in community and forge alliances across traditions, we will once again find our place in the Great Mystery. And with the help of the ancestors and the grace of the gods, we may just survive.

 Lawrence Messerman is initiated as a ‘marakame’ or shaman in the Huichol tradition. He and his wife, Jessica De la O, host monthly community fires in Sebastopol. Contact la*******@***oo.com for more information.

Open Mic is now a weekly feature in the Bohemian. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 700 words considered for publication, write [ mailto:op*****@******an.com” data-original-string=”OKyM14DEsvLjnAd7Bt2aWw==06atTBLQ4Tg1QJJTfr1dQ4v9NEmlfQwBMx0XrEGPSWcK34iewAhgY65QfKFPZ1wpOpZg4C8yvs/2aOm5q8fx3l9rIuyyT9e+44IzMbGcqNgQQ8=” title=”This contact has been encoded by Anti-Spam by CleanTalk. Click to decode. To finish the decoding make sure that JavaScript is enabled in your browser. ]op*****@******an.com.


Bug Eatin’

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06.25.08

I‘ve figured it out. I’ve come up with a way to counter the world food crisis, ease global warming and alleviate rural poverty while at the same time interjecting some excitement into the daily routines of millions of Americans.

The solution? Eat bugs.

As a source of protein, eating insects is dramatically more efficient and easy on the environment than a bacon cheeseburger. Raising livestock is a resource-greedy industry that requires vast acres to grow feed crops, huge petroleum inputs in the form of pesticides, fertilizers and transportation. Then there are the clouds of heat-trapping methane gas that cattle release, shall we say, into the atmosphere. It’s estimated that cow flatulence is 23 times more potent than CO2, a major heat-trapping gas.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), livestock are responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse-gas emissions as measured in carbon dioxide equivalent. This figure includes 9 percent of all CO2 emissions, 37 percent of methane and 65 percent of nitrous oxide. Altogether, that’s more than the emissions caused by transportation.

Insects, on the other hand, are the clear green and nutritious alternative. In a recent issue of Science News, researchers found that that the lowly cricket contained more than 1,550 milligrams of iron, 25 milligrams of zinc and 340 milligrams of calcium, and can be more nutritious than an equal quantity of beef or pork.

Many insects also are richer in minerals than meat. And most lipids in insects, i.e. fats, tend to be long-chain, unsaturated fats that are healthier than those in conventional livestock. Many insects also have high concentration of essential amino acids including lysine and tryptophan, two nutrients that tend to be scarce in the diets of people in the developing world.

Of course, my idea isn’t new. Traditional, rural-based cultures around the world have been eating insects for thousands of years, because they recognize a free lunch when they find one. In Mexico, grasshoppers are an ancient delicacy. Toasted grasshoppers seasoned with lime juice, salt and chile are known as chapulines. The little bugs are cleaned and washed before being cooked, and have a nutty flavor. They’re served in a little bowl, and you eat them with your fingers, kind of like pretzels. They’re quite good.

In Southeast Asia, fierce-looking giant water bugs are roasted and yield a succulent morsel of meat that’s said to taste like scallops. Bamboo trees are host to the succulent bamboo worm.

In Central Africa, mopani worms, actually the larvae of the emperor moth, are a significant source of nutrition and income for the rural poor. They’re a good snack, too. I tried a dried and smoked mopani worm, and while it was a bit dry, it packed a crunchy texture and mild, meaty flavor. Add a little salt and maybe some chile powder, and it would go great with a cold beer.

There’s even a handful of entomophagy (insect eating) advocates in America, like Sunrise Land Shrimp (www.slshrimp.com), a company that seeks to educate people about the benefits of eating insects and develop sources and markets for edible bugs. Of course, there is some rather entrenched opposition to eating bugs in the United States. But our tastes are learned, culturally acquired behaviors. Why is it OK to eat fermented mammary-gland secretions (cheese) and trash-eating marine arthropods (lobsters) but not roasted grasshoppers? Maybe the changing climate and global food shortages will force us to reevaluate what we eat one day.

Who knows? Insects could be the next culinary trend. Peasant cultures have given us some of our most delicious food. Oxtails, short ribs, pig trotters, polenta and broccoli raab were once lowly ingredients that have been elevated to haute cuisine. At the French Laundry, one of chef Thomas Keller’s signature dishes is “Tongue in Cheek,” braised beef cheeks paired with sliced calf’s tongue, a dish made with cheap ingredients that don’t usually conjure up fine dining.Is it hard to imagine an avant-garde, white-tablecloth restaurant serving something like sautéed bamboo worm curry? At this point, yes. But with food prices high and climbing, and the environmental impacts of industrial agriculture, I’ve already expanded my little vegetable garden to help reduce my grocery bill. Maybe I’ll start training my ears toward the bushes when I hear that familiar chirp-chirp at sunset.

Land shrimp on the barby, anyone?

Quick dining snapshots by Bohemian staffers.

Winery news and reviews.

Food-related comings and goings, openings and closings, and other essays for those who love the kitchen and what it produces.

Recipes for food that you can actually make.

“In Its Entirety”: Built to Spill and Liz Phair

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The news hit like a one-two kiss of sloppy, wonderful indie-rock love: both Built to Spill and Liz Phair have announced that they’ll perform their great masterpieces—Perfect From Now On and Exile In Guyville—in a series of shows around the country this year.
I’ve fielded countless questions about if I’m going to these shows, because of a truly million-to-one coincidence: I myself have actually performed both of these albums.
Okay, so maybe it’s not a million-to-one shot, but it’s pretty uncanny: in 2001 as part of a duo, and then again in 2006 with my band, Santiago, I learned and performed Perfect From Now On in its entirety. Earlier this year with my friends Dean and Steve, I learned and performed Exile In Guyville. And now, as if to answer our weird but urgent prayers, both albums are getting the ‘In Its Entirety’ treatment by the OGs.
I’m not claiming any kind of cosmic credit for altering the creative waves of the universe. Lets face it, Sonoma County’s not that big. But I will gladly use the news as a reason to talk about what it was like to learn two of the best records of the 1990s.
As anyone familiar with Perfect From Now On and Exile In Guyville can imagine, they were incredibly daunting projects to take on, especially since I had to not only figure out some truly otherworldly guitar parts but also remember hundreds of lyrics. Yet each album compelled me. They’re both crammed with mystery. I felt like if I could wrestle with them in the most direct way possible—figuring out how to play them, and then playing them in public—I could unlock some of that mystery.
When I first heard Perfect From Now On I hated it. All the songs were long and slow and repetitive, and it didn’t grab me at all. Then Built to Spill put out Keep It Like A Secret, which I instantly loved. “Finally,” I said, “I understand what all my friends have been crazy about!” So I went back and listened to Perfect From Now On. I still thought it was a boring formless piece of shit.
It was, however, a boring formless piece of shit that I kept coming back to, and I can’t explain how it happened, except that one night I was sitting alone in my apartment half-drunk, pitifully alone and staring at the carpet, and “Velvet Waltz” came on, and Doug Martsch sang those lines:
And you’d better not be angry
And you’d better not be sad
You’d better just enjoy the luxury of sympathy
If that’s a luxury you have

Suddenly, Perfect From Now On was the most incredible revelation in my entire life, bursting from its ruminations on the meaning of eternity to its sharp, final accusation: what are you gonna do? As a salve for one of my darkest hours, I listened to it every day and every night for a week, over and over. It was an enormous ocean, and I swam through it like a lost soul from a shipwreck, looking for an island.
I’d heard about a guy named Nick Jackson who played guitar and who knew how to play some Built to Spill songs, so I called him completely out of the blue. “Hi, Nick? Hey, my name’s Gabe. Rob gave me your number, and he says you know some Built to Spill songs on the guitar. I’ve got a totally ridiculous idea for you, and feel free to say no, but do you want to learn Perfect From Now On with me and play it at a show?”
His classic response: “Uh, sure. What’s Perfect From Now On?”
He went out and bought it and quickly and amazingly learned every single note, and we started practicing two weeks later. Just us and our guitars, with me singing. The show, at the Old Vic, went well, and afterwards I felt like I’d not only conquered the record in a way, but also made personal amends for talking so much shit about it all those years.
Fast-forward to 2006, and Santiago’s just finished recording Rosenberg’s After Dark, a sprawling concept album all about Santa Rosa. We needed to clean out our systems, so we started fucking around with There’s Nothing Wrong With Love. But it didn’t seem right, and we kept coming back to the songs from Perfect From Now On. It sure sounded a lot better with a full band. I called up Nick Jackson, who was down to fill in again on guitar, and we planned the ultimate joke: for our record release show, we’d play someone else’s record.
It was such an excellent idea. Then my world fell apart. In the middle of rehearsing, my mom died in a terrible car accident. Suddenly Perfect From Now On took on an entirely new emotion for me, and all of its intertwining mystery came rushing back. There was a lot of pain and confusion and heartache going on, and just as the album had earlier given me a salve for my solitude, it sprang up again and offered me a cathartic way to say goodbye.
The show we played was a blur. I remember only one thing vividly about it: singing those lines from “Velvet Waltz”—the ones about about anger, sorrow, and the luxury of sympathy. Someone recorded the show, and when I hear myself singing those lines today, I realize that I’m not one step closer to understanding Perfect From Now On. It’s still a vast ocean, and for as long as I spent swimming around in it, I never found the island. I like it that way.
Exile In Guyville is another story altogether.
I have an ex-girlfriend who listened to Exile in Guyville all the time when we were together. I’d heard about the album when a friend of mine saw Liz Phair on the cover of Rolling Stone, and at first I thought it was basically a wimpy soft-rock record with some token sex references thrown in for attention’s sake. I couldn’t understand why my girlfriend loved it so much, but how can you argue with a girlfriend who loves songs about sex? So I put up with it. She played it over and over.
Eventually, in a haze of prescription Vicodin and Seagram’s gin and English ovals, Exile In Guyville sunk in. I realized that there’s a lot of songs on the record (like “Explain it to Me”) that drone in a really cool way and some (“Dance of the Seven Veils”) that are just plain surreal, lyrically. Those are the ones that I really fell in love with. The eerie ones. My girlfriend kept on playing the ones about blowjobs, though. Years later, as our relationship soured, she kept turning to the blowjob songs for support, and I decided that I couldn’t understand her anymore at all if she still, after all those years, found more solace in “Fuck and Run” than in “Shatter.” So fuck her and fuck Liz Phair and fuck that record, I thought.
Songs don’t disappear. I eventually bought Exile in Guyville again, cuing up my favorite songs first, of course, and then listening to the whole thing. A healthy dose of distance from the mitigating circumstances of its arrival into my life helped me appreciate it all over again. And again, I picked up the phone and called some people and somehow talked them into learning it and playing it in public.
This idea actually had its genesis in 1995, when I distinctly remember walking around a small town in Indiana, waiting for a flat tire to get fixed, singing “Fuck and Run” in my best Johnny Cash impersonation with Alyssa. How crazy would it be, I asked, to take on the ultimate indie-rock feminist statement and perform it from a male point of view?
13 years later, I had even more of a reason to learn and perform Exile in Guyville. Liz Phair had started completely embarrassing herself with teen-girl-whore pop bullshit, and I needed to remind myself and others that she was once great. Also, there was a serious element of reclamation involved; a personal creed, I suppose, that I could love a record on my own terms, and that it didn’t belong to any one person, or to one ex-girlfriend, or to one gender, or to one line of thinking. Plus, a couple years after being stranded in Indiana together, Alyssa had died of a heroin overdose, and I always remembered that she thought it was a cool idea.
We learned the thing in about 4 or 5 practices, cramped into my small office room, and it was an amazing musical experience. Lots of unnerving surprises. I played piano on “Canary.” The show went incredibly well—even the songs about blowjobs—and I think, somehow, we achieved our goals. If nothing else, it was intensely satisfying.
My favorite Exile in Guyville song is still “Shatter.”
So anyway, the long and short of all this is that no, I don’t think I’m going to see Built to Spill perform Perfect From Now On in its entirety, nor do I fathom I’ll go see Liz Phair perform Exile in Guyville in its entirety. The purpose of going those kinds of shows is to commune, in the most direct way, with an album that you love, and I feel like I’ve already done that in the best way possible. Actually, I feel like I’ve inhabited those albums—and to paraphrase the song, I’m not sure I want to go back to the old house.

Harmony Festival: Missed Connections

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Heath and Harmony… Damien Marley… – w4m – 28 (santa rosa)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-10, 8:04PM PDT
I am looking for the cutie that my friend and I ran into while we were obnoxiously weaving throught the crowd at the damien marley concert. You were in a blue collared shirt with small stripes. Your hair was longer but it was under a hat. My friend flirted with you, said you had a great smile, and you turned away and smiled as if you were embarrassed a little. I made a comment about how you had some Jordan’s on from the ealry 90’s, you laughed because you knew I was right.
I doubt you are from Santa rosa, but I hope you find this somehow and contact me….
———-
harmony festival -me.. berkeley woman…you -santa rosa guy.. – w4m – 32 (santa rosa)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-10, 7:09PM PDT
i never found you again….
we danced at arrested development… you had the nice hat …
then we danced on stage with kidjo… i left to go to the bathroom.. then you were nowhere to be found…
i though you were sweet and cute…. will you read this???? i dont know…
———-
In Serch Of A Girl Named Harmony – m4w – 21 (Harmony Festival)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-11, 12:52AM PDT
I am the guy you hung out with Sunday night. My friend and I gave you a ride home to Petaluma. I lost your number and have no idea how to find you. I hope somehow you or one of your friends finds this. You were such an awesome girl, I would like to see you again.
———-
Harmony Festival – m4w – 32 (santa rosa)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-09, 2:56PM PDT
You sat across from me at that back support booth. Your smile is too cute! I was drinking Iced coffee.
———-
Health and Harmony backstage – m4w (santa rosa)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-11, 8:28PM PDT
We met saturday after the show on the mainstage. I felt like we really clicked, had a lot in common, and enjoyed talking. I am afraid that I might have communicated something wrong in a text message to you later that night and now I am afraid of messing things up. I really liked you a lot and dont want to come on too strong and risk looking a new friend.
Hoping you might see this understand.
———-
TO ALL THE WOMAN AT TECHNO- TRIBAL – m4w (santa rosa)
Reply to: pe************@********st.org
Date: 2008-06-08, 10:04AM PDT
Really enjoyed the show. Just wish more of you lovely ladies would actually wear lesssssssss!!! I can literally have an orgasm just watching each and every one of you shake you things dancing and moving and a grooving to the scene. The costumes are one of the main reasons I go, to see the fish net stockings and the little skirts, short shorts and I just want to lick your toes… A HUGE THANK YOU GOES TO YOU ALL AND PLEASE REMEMBER LESS IS MORE!!!!!

The Dept. of Defense Wants Us?

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The following is an actual email we received; after the jump, please amuse yourself hugely by reading P. Joseph Potocki’s businesslike reply.

Listing ID: 2223456108

Complete and update information to list North Bay Bohemian, as a supplier available for Department of Defense bid and sales opportunities in the 2008 Department of Defense Buyers Guide. The information on your company and products will be accessed by Department of Defense and military purchasing agents and buying facilities.

Please complete and submit before 06/20/2008 or you will not be listed.

The Department of Defense Buyers Guide is published by Federal Buyers Guide Inc., a private sector organization that has provided vendor information to the government for over 30 years. If you have any questions regarding pricing or information required to list, please don’t hesitate in contacting me.

Craig Heller

Vendor Listing CoordinatorPotocki answers:

Dear Sirs,

Thank you for the wonderful opportunity to feature our North Bay Bohemian defense industry services in your 2008 Defense Department Buying Guide.

Maudlin Street

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06.11.08

Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington in Long Island Sound on Monday Eve’g, Jan’y 13th, 1840, by which Melancholy Occurrence Over 100 Persons Perished. That’s the title given by Nathaniel Currier, of the 19th-century printmaking team Currier and Ives, to one of his earliest and most successful lithographs. Now, well over a century and many generations later, one of Currier’s direct descendants is bestowing similarly morbid titles on her work. “Two Shots to the Head.” “The Demon.” “Sleeping Dead.”

These are just a handful of many minor-key songs contained on Dark Overcoat, the debut album by Currier’s great-great-great-give-or-take-a-few-granddaughter, Emily Jane White, who stumbled upon Currier’s maudlin reputation while recently researching family genealogy. “I was like, ‘Oh my God, it’s in my genes,'” the 26-year-old says of her dark streak. “And my dad is very much the same.”

If recent write-ups in Rolling Stone and Spin and a successful tour of Europe earlier this year are any indication, White could be as important to San Francisco’s burgeoning indie-folk movement as her ancestor was to lithography. Also like Currier, she’s not going to do it by singing anything bubbly or light—or, for that matter, particularly contemporary, commercial or hip. “I’m kind of a classic person,” she says.

“I could listen to Bob Dylan forever.”

While most of the music emanating from the City by the Bay’s neckerchiefed hipsters pushes psychedelically toward the future through acts like Devendra Banhart, Xiu Xiu and Six Organs of Admittance, it would be remiss to ignore an equal regional pull into the past. Be it Two Gallants’ 78-rpm-era fingerpicking, Jolie Holland’s timeless and tortured drawl or Joanna Newsom’s infatuation with the Renaissance age, the Bay Area’s typically progressive thought stops short, it seems, in bearded and milk-faced lads and lassies who take up stringed shell and make merry in song.

White’s young obsessions with the past, in the form of Bessie Smith and Edgar Allen Poe, coalesce into the gothic storytelling of Dark Undercoat, a 10-song journey through the shadowy side of an already darkened imagination. Utilizing blues idioms, religious imagery and traditional icons, White’s lyrical content, at times doubled, acts like a demon of both shoulders who long ago killed off the angel. The recording’s atmosphere is similarly evocative, with squeaking cellos and rattling bass strings; close your eyes, and it’s like stumbling across a band of troubadours in the forest, warning of impending despair.

It might have helped that White grew up in a house built by her father on 30 acres of woodland outside of Fort Bragg, and that she took up horseback riding and reading Jack London and Shakespeare to pass the days. As for music, her parents had programmed a constant stream of Frank Sinatra, which she hated, but alternatives were few. “My first album ever? God, I think it was Madonna, on cassette tape.”

Going away to college in Santa Cruz, she says with an extended giggle, “was like going to a giant metropolis!” After playing in a reverb-laden surf-punk band and an all-female country group on the Central Coast, White took off to France, where she began accumulating material for Dark Undercoat. Upon returning home to Mendocino, she met Santa Rosa&–based musician John Courage, who encouraged her to record with fellow Sonoma County musicians Muir Houghton and Ross Harris.

Sounding far older than her age, and with an attraction to the final end, it’s no wonder that White’s recently gotten an email from a woman imploring her to learn and perform the songs of her deceased brother. She’s still not sure what to make of it.

“There’s so much out there that’s very dark for no reason at all other than to freak people out,” White says. “I feel like if you’re gonna talk about darkness, then make it literary, make it beautiful and also make it really important.”

Emily Jane White performs with the Spindles on Friday, June 13, at the Black Rose Irish Pub, 2074 Armory Drive, Santa Rosa. 8:30pm. Free. 707.546.7673.


Hidden in Plain Sight

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06.11.08


Trevor D’Arcy and Nick Livingston are driving up the winding road to a lake. The air is thick with the scent of barbecue and wood smoke, but they aren’t going to the reservoir to cook, kayak, fish or camp. They’re going there because they’re geocaching—looking for hidden containers filled with tchotchkes using the Internet and GPS technology in what is essentially a thousand-man Easter egg hunt.

Geocaching became possible when the U.S. Army made its powerful global positioning system (GPS) technology available to the public. Dave Ulmer of Beavercreek, Ore., decided it would be fun to bury a bucket full of stuff in the middle of a field and then post the bucket’s coordinates on the Internet afterward. He did. The bucket was found in three days, and geocaching was born.

Now, eight years later, geocaching is played by legions of the technologically savvy. They’re using Internet bulletin boards and GPS devices to find geocaches—usually stored in Tupperware, but also sometimes in military surplus containers—and they’re posting the coordinates for other people to find on websites like www.geocaching.com, www.navicache.com or www.terracache.com. Geocaches have been hidden all over the North Bay. For something so common, almost no one knows about them. That’s because they’re hidden so well.

Some of the slyest of the sly will put their caches into things that people wouldn’t ever consider searching. One North Bay cache is a metal tube attached to a metal statue with a magnet. One legendary geocacher buys sprinkler heads from Kmart, puts geocaches in them and then puts them in public parks. Another local geocacher puts them up trees. There’s one above the Arctic Circle. They’re underwater.

D’Arcy and Livingston are after a three-part geocache with a cheesy Arthurian legend theme. They’re discussing how they’re going to get to the island in the lake where a geocache is supposed to be hidden, when park ranger Josh Laeder interrupts to tell them that the cache has gone missing. Someone found it, he says, and took it home.

This happens. It’s not unusual for people who aren’t actively searching for caches to stumble on them, especially the caches that are poorly hidden or hidden by people who think it’s a good idea to hide bomb-shaped caches in conspicuous places. One of the stupider examples of conspicuous geocache misconduct took place on Nov. 7, 2004, during the presidential elections when a large, bearded man named Jay Furr tried to hide a cache around the perimeter of the Los Angeles International Airport. His “I was hiding treasure for people on the Internet” defense didn’t fly with security.

However, geocaching is fun and safe as long as one obeys the law and remembers not to cross Homeland Security. Laeder says it’s mostly parents who take their kids up to look for a cache, and that it’s mostly the hairy survivalist types, not geocachers, who get in the way of the park authorities. D’Arcy and Livingston ditch the plan to get onto the island and head out for the next cache, located on a peninsula at the farthest edge of the lake. They find it hidden in a niche in a rock; inside it is an array of odd stuff: a piece of paper with a story about Merlin, lots of little pieces of Lego toys, a quarter, a stamp and a metal washer. Also in the container is a little logbook with the times and dates of the cache find. According to the logbook, someone else found the cache just a few hours earlier.

The two head off for the next cache, which is described as being hidden in plain sight, and spend the better half of an hour looking for it, but this cache, too, has gone missing. D’Arcy remembers a post on the Internet describing the cache as very easily found, which throws up a red flag for him. Figuring it’s probably been stolen, they head home.

In D’Arcy’s apartment, a discussion follows: even though two out of the three caches were impossible to find, something was accomplished. There’s the satisfaction that comes from knowing that there’s someone on the Internet who is hiding things, but not well enough to hide them from you. And there’s the pleasant knowledge that there’s a group of adult people who don’t know each other but play hide-and-seek with little pieces of plastic and military hardware. Nothing wrong with that.


Stop the Spray

06.11.08

There is nothing about the words “aerial spraying” that soothes the mind, and nothing about the term “pest eradication” that speaks to environmentally friendly farming practices. Put together, the terms “aerial spraying and pest eradication” become even less benign. The light brown apple moth has been well-covered within these pages, and many of us are aware that forced aerial spraying has already taken place in both Monterey and Santa Cruz counties, that hundreds of people reported health problems after the spraying occurred and that the dangers of this moth are no more well-documented than the dangers of the pesticides rained down upon us. By mid-August, spraying is slated to begin in Marin County as well as the San Francisco Bay Area. Sonoma and Napa will no doubt be next in line, as this multimillion-dollar spraying campaign works its way across California.

The moment we stop acting is the moment it becomes too late to manifest change. For this reason, when I heard about Chic for a Cause: Stop the Spray, a fashion fundraiser for StopTheSpray.org, I decided to drive down to the city for a night of light brown apple moth awareness, live music, fresh fruit, funky fashion and raw chocolate delicacies. The event, hosted and organized by Annette Richmond, owner or the Bay Area fashion PR firm Avant Garde Public Relations, took place at Muse Studios, a bright, open space located in the Tenderloin district. In only a month and a half of planning, which is about how long ago Richmond first learned about the moth, she managed to pull together a fantastic event, attended by over a hundred people.

While waiting for the fashion show to begin, I ate and ogled all sorts of wonderful donated products available through silent auction—I was particularly taken with a Be Sweet handbag that was way out of my price range. The band Diamond Ortiz played tunes, people mingled and Stop the Spray Marin showed up with educational materials and a friendly group of volunteers. I chatted with nature photographer Jocelyn Knight, who has been frantically framing in preparation for this one-night event. Her nature shots of Marin County adorn the walls featuring coyotes, butterflies, flowers and other living things that will suffer from the spray.

This event was held by people who are donating their products, their efforts and their time to raise money and awareness about the proposed spraying. I overheard things like, “If they spray, I’m leaving the country” and “What is this about? Who’s spraying what?” I spoke with violinist Wallace Harvey, on hand to offer musical accompaniment to Laurie Tumer’s Glowing Evidence series, in which she documents the way pesticides travel and persist on skin and clothing. Harvey said that he’s feeling a little fatalistic about it at this point, but was here to support the resistance anyway.

Lisa Chipkin, co-coordinator for Stop the Spray Marin, has been working on this issue full-time ever since hearing about it. She cautioned that the governor’s temporary hold on aerial spraying should not be believed. This is just a way to put people to sleep, she said, to make them relax and think the threat is over. The threat is not over, she warned, and we must stay alert and persistent. Already there are lawsuits in the works in both Monterey and Santa Cruz counties, and with the amount of passion I saw in this single studio space, I have no doubt that these NorCal residents will not hesitate to do the same.

Once the models began walking, the crowd settled down. The fashion show started with botanical couture by Theron Nelson Designs. Nelson happened to be standing next to me, still holding a pair of garden clippers in one hand. He’d been working since the day before to make outfits crafted entirely out of leaves, flowers and dried grasses. While a bikini made out of straw and leaves cannot be pulled off by just anyone, the models did justice to his work, and though the ensuing organic-wear was not quite as exciting as Theron’s more minimalist style, the mood was properly set.

Richmond said that when she heard about the spraying, she knew she had to do something. Because her comfort zone is fashion, she decided to focus her energies on putting together an event that she could feel excited by. With this event alone, she managed to raise over $1,000 for the cause, and she’s not stopping there. Because some of the donated items available for auction did not sell (unfortunately, my handbag did), Richmond’s next goal is to start Stop the Spray eBay. Keep your eyes open for a great opportunity to both support the cause and hook yourself up with some amazing eco-products.

For more information about Stop the Spray go to www.stopthespray.org or www.stopthespraymarin.org.To see fashion show pix, go to bohemian.com/bohoblog.


Gone Buggy

06.18.08The underlying theme of this week's special issue is listed on our editorial sheet as "The Earth: A User's Guide." That's got a certain panache to be sure, but really, every week is a so-called green week at the Bohemian. We're always striving to highlight ecological issues, concerns, solutions and the good people who work on them, whether...

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The Big Chill

06.18.08We live in very cold times, and the forecast is for an even chillier future. Yes, summer has brought warmth and sunshine to the North Bay. And in the longer term, it appears that 21st-century consumption is driving up average global temperatures. And yet in a deeper sense, our way of life is increasingly frigid. Despite signs to the...

Bug Eatin’

06.25.08I've figured it out. I've come up with a way to counter the world food crisis, ease global warming and alleviate rural poverty while at the same time interjecting some excitement into the daily routines of millions of Americans. The solution? Eat bugs.As a source of protein, eating insects is dramatically more efficient and easy on the environment than...

“In Its Entirety”: Built to Spill and Liz Phair

The news hit like a one-two kiss of sloppy, wonderful indie-rock love: both Built to Spill and Liz Phair have announced that they'll perform their great masterpieces—Perfect From Now On and Exile In Guyville—in a series of shows around the country this year. I've fielded countless questions about if I'm going to these shows, because of a truly million-to-one coincidence:...

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The Dept. of Defense Wants Us?

The following is an actual email we received; after the jump, please amuse yourself hugely by reading P. Joseph Potocki's businesslike reply.Listing ID: 2223456108Complete and update information to list North Bay Bohemian, as a supplier available for Department of Defense bid and sales opportunities in the 2008 Department of Defense Buyers Guide. The information on your company and products...

Maudlin Street

06.11.08Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington in Long Island Sound on Monday Eve'g, Jan'y 13th, 1840, by which Melancholy Occurrence Over 100 Persons Perished. That's the title given by Nathaniel Currier, of the 19th-century printmaking team Currier and Ives, to one of his earliest and most successful lithographs. Now, well over a century and many generations...

Hidden in Plain Sight

06.11.08Trevor D'Arcy and Nick Livingston are driving up the winding road to a lake. The air is thick with the scent of barbecue and wood smoke, but they aren't going to the reservoir to cook, kayak, fish or camp. They're going there because they're geocaching—looking for hidden containers filled with tchotchkes using the Internet and GPS technology in what...

Stop the Spray

06.11.08There is nothing about the words "aerial spraying" that soothes the mind, and nothing about the term "pest eradication" that speaks to environmentally friendly farming practices. Put together, the terms "aerial spraying and pest eradication" become even less benign. The light brown apple moth has been well-covered within these pages, and many of us are aware that forced aerial...
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