Limit Look

Jenny DeYoung, new owner of Disguise the Limit

By Jane Vick

Hey loves! Happy Wednesday! How is everyone?! Surviving this heat wave? Rush, rush to the coast, gas prices be damned! Bring roasted chicken and cherries and a light heart. Go!

And straight to this week’s Look, which is lovely indeed. Jenny DeYoung, new owner of Disguise the Limit, the 40 year standing costume shop in Santa Rosa’s Railroad Square, is a gem of a human, and I was thrilled to learn more about her this week. See below, and for any costume needs—especially during Pride Month!—look no further.

Jane Vick—When and why did you buy Disguise the Limit?

Jenny DeYoung—I’ve always had a dream of owning my own shop, selling all my favorite things, to include fashionable items like festival wear, vintage wear and also costumes! But I always wanted the store that had a little bit of everything, so that everyone would find a little bit of treasure when they came to the shop. The year 2016, this store became available for purchase, and my business partner at the time helped me with acquiring it. It was the beginning of everything I had ever wanted and more. I’ve been working hard to re-design it and making it the favorite store for everyone in every sense.

JV—Where does your love of costume come from?

JD—I  started off being a theater major at UCLA, primarily focused on production design for film and theater. Production design encompasses the entire art department of a film or theater play. Which means it also encompasses costume design. I love all things fashion, and I love dressing up so it all comes together. My shop is like my biggest set design I have ever created yet.

JV—Is there a message you’d like to share with the community this Pride Month?

JD—First of all, we are so grateful that there is a Pride Parade here and that we get to participate in it by vending and supporting that community! Disguise the Limit stands for unity and that we should all love and respect and appreciate each other‘s diversities and love choices! Love is love!

You heard it here, everyone. Love is LOVE!

See you next week!

Love always,

Jane

Jane Vick is an artist and writer based in Oakland. She splits her time between Europe, New York and New Mexico. View her work and contact her at janevick.com.

Vote Volunteers

I’ve been a voter in Marin County since I first voted at age 18 in 1975.

We must recruit as many nonpartisan volunteers as possible to ensure that no eligible voter is discouraged or wrongly turned away from the polls in 2022.

In America, voters should have the final say. But Donald Trump and far-right extremists engaged in a criminal conspiracy by helping to promote and pay for election sabotage efforts that culminated in the deadly attack on our country on Jan. 6, 2021.

The January 6th House Select Committee’s public hearings are present[1] ing the facts about this attack and its lead up. The committee’s investigation has been nonpartisan and factual.

We must support the January 6th Committee in investigating and holding accountable everyone involved in this crime—to both ensure it never happens again and make sure that our elected leaders respect the will of the people. This includes making sure everyone’s vote is counted by volunteering as an Election Protection volunteer.

Register to volunteer for Election Protection to make sure we protect the results of the 2022 election at cmnca.us/jan6ep.

Dennie Mehocich

Marin County

Freedom Lost

Your freedom wasn’t in Iraq and it’s not in Ukraine. It isn’t gone yet, but as soon as Julian Assange is extradited, you will lose it. It might not be immediately apparent, but one day you will miss its absence sorely. I don’t care if you hate him, if you’re convinced he was working for Trump or Russia. Assange’s extradition is the precedent that will begin the end of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Those rights apply to all of us, and this is how close we are to losing them completely.

Jason Kishineff

American Canyon


Eliminated the word “upcoming” here, and changed “will present”  to “are presenting,” since several have already happened.

Silent = Death

How the media and congress enable president’s silence on nuclear war

By Norman Solomon

I’ve just finished going through the more than 60 presidential statements, documents and communiques about the war in Ukraine that the White House has released and posted on its website since Joe Biden’s State of the Union address in early March. They all share with that speech one stunning characteristic—the complete absence of any mention of nuclear weapons or nuclear war dangers. Yet we’re now living in a time when those dangers are the worst they’ve been since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

You might think that the risks of global nuclear annihilation would merit at least a few of the more than 25,000 words officially released on Biden’s behalf during the 100 days since his dramatic speech to a joint session of Congress. But an evasive pattern began from the outset. While devoting much of that speech to the Ukraine conflict, Biden said nothing at all about the heightened risks that it might trigger the use of nuclear weapons.

A leader interested in informing the American people rather than infantilizing them would have something to say about the need to prevent nuclear war at a time of escalating tensions between the world’s two nuclear superpowers. A CBS News poll this spring found that the war in Ukraine had caused 70% of adults in the U.S. to be worried that it could lead to nuclear warfare.

But rather than publicly address such fears, Biden has dodged the public—unwilling to combine his justifiable denunciations of Russia’s horrific war on Ukraine with even the slightest cautionary mention about the upward spike in nuclear-war risks.

Biden has used silence to gaslight the body politic with major help from mass media and top Democrats. While occasional mainstream news pieces have noted the increase in nuclear-war worries and dangers, Biden has not been called to account for refusing to address them. As for Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill, party loyalties have taken precedence over ethical responsibilities. What’s overdue is a willingness to insist that Biden forthrightly speak about a subject that involves the entire future of humanity.

Giving the president and congressional leaders the benefit of doubts has been a chronic and tragic problem throughout the nuclear age. Even some organizations that should know better have often succumbed to the temptation to serve as enablers.

In her roles as House minority leader and speaker, Nancy Pelosi has championed one bloated Pentagon budget increase after another, including huge outlays for new nuclear weapons systems. Yet she continues to enjoy warm and sometimes even fawning treatment from well-heeled groups with arms-control and disarmament orientations.

And so it was, days ago, when the Ploughshares Fund sent supporters a promotional email about its annual “Chain Reaction” event—trumpeting that “Speaker Pelosi will join our illustrious list of previously announced speakers to explore current opportunities to build a movement to reduce and eventually eliminate nuclear weapons once and for all.”

The claim that Pelosi would be an apt person to guide listeners on how to “build a movement” with such goals was nothing short of absurd. For good measure, the announcement made the same claim for another speaker, Fiona Hill, a hawkish former senior director for Europe and Russia at the National Security Council.

Bizarre as it is, the notion that Pelosi and Hill are fit to explain how to “build a movement to reduce and eventually eliminate nuclear weapons” is in sync with a submissive assumption—that there’s no need to challenge Biden’s refusal to address nuclear-war dangers.

The president has a responsibility to engage with journalists and the public about nuclear weapons and the threat they pose to human survival on this planet. Urgently, Biden should be pushed toward genuine diplomacy, including arms-control negotiations with Russia. Members of Congress, organizations and constituents should be demanding that he acknowledge the growing dangers of nuclear war and specify what he intends to do to diminish instead of fuel those dangers.

Such demands can gain momentum and have political impact as a result of grassroots activism rather than beneficent elitism. That’s why (on June 12,) nearly 100 organizations co-sponsor(ed) a “Defuse Nuclear War” live stream—marking the 40th anniversary of the day when 1 million people gathered in New York’s Central Park, on June 12, 1982, to call for an end to the nuclear arms race.

That massive protest was in the spirit of what Martin Luther King Jr. said in his speech accepting the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964: “I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of thermonuclear destruction.”

In 2022, the real possibility of such a hell for the entire world has become unmentionable for the president and his enablers. But refusing to talk about the dangers of thermonuclear destruction makes it more likely.

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of a dozen books, including ‘Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State,’ published this year in a new edition as a free e-book.

Culture Crush – Week of 06/22/22

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Santa Rosa

Blushin’ Tunes

Never a let down, Lost Church Santa Rosa is bringing another great musical lineup to the Santa Rosa scene this Saturday—get ready for The Blushin’ Roulettes and Ring of Truth Trio. The Blushin’ Roulettes features Angie Heimann on guitar and songwriting, Cas Sochacki on double bass, and Jay Brown also on guitar, with harmonica and vocals to boot. San Francisco Free Folk Festival describes their music as “stripped down, sexy little jewel boxes stuffed with ancient mountain magic.” Ring of Truth Trio, local to Santa Rosa, features Rory McNamara, David Olney and Roxana Olvia and has a dusty, hearty, country quality perfect for those who appreciate Mary Gauthier or Rosanne Cash. The Blushin’ Roulettes and Ring of Truth Trio are playing Saturday, June 25 at Lost Church Santa Rosa, 427 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. Event from 2:45pm-5pm. Tickets $12 in advance, $15 at the door. www.lostchurch.org

Sebastopol

SebastoSoul

It’s a groovy time to be at the 6th Annual SebastoSoul Festival this Saturday, celebrating food, beer and good music! Featuring music by Marshall House Project (MHP), a soul-funk mashup bringing energetic and danceable music with a psychedelic twist and an uplifting undertone. MHP is a hybrid of meaningful lyric and accessible rhythm for the optimal contemplative, connected dance experience. Be sure to also check out Santa Cruz-based band Space Heater, who bring Prince and James Brown-inspired sounds with a cosmic influence, guaranteed to take listeners to a galaxy far far away… The revelry is starting at 9pm. The Marshall Project and Space Heater are playing Saturday, June 25 at HopMonk Tavern, 30 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. Doors at 8pm. Tickets $20 online or $22 at the door. This event is 21+. www.hopmonk.com 

Petaluma

La Gente SF

Welcome La Gente SF to “Everybody’s Fair,” aka the “Marin-Sonoma Fair” in Petaluma! La Gente SF,led by Rafael Bustamante Sarria, is an energetic, loving and unique blend of cumbia, reggae, salsa, hip-hip and reggaeton. The blend of Caribbean and Latino American cultural influences with a San Francisco flavor creates inimitable music! La Gente SF has toured internationally for years, performing in New York, Austin, Portland, Spain, Brazil, Italy, France and more. They have played with such acts as E-40, MALO, Pete Escovedo and Pato Banton. La Gente SF has just released their first single, “Lotus Hotel.” “Everybody’s Fair” in Petaluma is a promotion of and homage to the current and historical agricultural presence in Northern California, and an opportunity to showcase the exceptional and diverse talent of the residents of both Sonoma and Marin counties. For more information on the fair, visit sonoma-marinfair.org. La Gente SF will perform Sunday, June 26 at “Everybody’s Fair,” 175 Fairgrounds Drive, Petaluma. 4:30pm-6:30pm. Tickets $17. www.sonomamarinfair.ticketspice.com

San Rafael

Yoga + Brews

Is there a better combination?! Maybe, but this one is pretty dang good. Join a great group at Pond Farm Brewing this Sunday, from 10:30am to whenever, for Yoga in the Taproom, led by yoga teacher Jordin Rodondi. Rodondi is primarily trained in the tantric lens of yoga with Sianna Sherman and the Rasa Yoga Collective. She brings an inclusive, conscious energy to her practice that will soothe and ground practitioners. Pond Farm Brewing is a bright and inclusive community space, great for grabbing a drink and getting to know the neighbors. Stop in with a mat and a towel, and stay after the flow for a chat! Yoga in the Taproom is Sunday, June 26 at Pond Farm Brewing, 1848 4th St, San Rafael. 10:30am-11:30am. Tickets $30, include one beer or kombucha. www.mettayogastudio.com

—Jane Vick

Astrology – week of 06/22/22

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries actor Marilu Henner has an unusual condition: hyperthymesia. She can remember in detail voluminous amounts of past events. For instance, she vividly recalls being at the Superdome in New Orleans on Sept. 15, 1978, where she and her actor friends watched a boxing match between Leon Spinks and Muhammad Ali. You probably don’t have hyperthymesia, Aries, but I invite you to approximate that state. Now is an excellent time to engage in a leisurely review of your life story, beginning with your earliest memories. Why? It will strengthen your foundation, nurture your roots and bolster your stability.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Poet Elizabeth Bishop noted that many of us are “addicted to the gigantic.” We live in a “mostly huge and roaring, glaring world.” As a counterbalance, she wished for “small works of art, short poems, short pieces of music, intimate, low-voiced, and delicate things.” That’s the spirit I recommend to you in the coming weeks, Taurus. You will be best served by consorting with subtle, unostentatious, elegant influences. Enjoy graceful details, quiet wonders and understated truths.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In the coming weeks, you will need even more human touch than usual. Your mental, physical and spiritual health REQUIRE you to have your skin in contact with people who care for you and are eager to feel their skin against yours. A Tumblr blogger named Friend-Suggestion sets the tone for the mood I hope you cultivate. They write, “I love! human contact! with! my friends! So put your leg over mine! Let our knees touch! Hold my hand! Make excuses to feel my arm by drawing pictures on my skin! Stand close to me! Lean into my space! Slow dance super close to me! Hold my face in your hands or kick my foot to get my attention! Put your arm around me when we’re standing or sitting around! Hug me from behind at random times!”

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Author John Banville wrote what might serve as a manifesto for some of us Crabs: “To be concealed, protected, guarded: that is all I have ever truly wanted. To burrow down into a place of womby warmth and cower there, hidden from the sky’s indifferent gaze and the harsh air’s damagings. The past is such a retreat for me. I go there eagerly, shaking off the cold present and the colder future.” If you are a Crab who feels a kinship with Banville’s approach, I ask you to refrain from indulging in it during the coming months. You’re in a phase of your long-term astrological cycle when your destiny is calling you to be bolder and brighter than usual, more visible and influential, louder and stronger.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “We wish to make rage into a fire that cooks things rather than a fire of conflagration,” writes author Clarissa Pinkola Estés. That’s good advice for you right now. Your anger can serve you, but only if you use it to gain clarity—not if you allow it to control or immobilize you. So here’s my counsel: Regard your wrath as a fertilizing fuel that helps deepen your understanding of what you’re angry about—and shows you how to engage in constructive actions that will liberate you from what is making you angry.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo author Jeanette Winterson was asked, “Do you fall in love often?” She replied, “Yes, often. With a view, with a book, with a dog, a cat, with numbers, with friends, with complete strangers, with nothing at all.” Even if you’re not usually as prone to infatuation and enchantment as Winterson, you could have many experiences like hers in the coming months. Is that a state you would enjoy? I encourage you to welcome it. Your capacity to be fascinated and captivated will be at a peak. Your inclination to trust your attractions will be extra high. Sounds fun!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran lexicographer Daniel Webster (1758–1843) worked hard to create his dictionary, and it became highly influential in American culture. He spent over 26 years perfecting it. To make sure he could properly analyze the etymologies, he learned 28 languages. He wrote definitions for 70,000 words, including 12,000 that had never been included in a published dictionary. I trust you are well underway with your own Webster-like project, Libra. This entire year is an excellent time to devote yourself with exacting diligence to a monumental labor of love. If you haven’t started it yet, launch now. If it’s already in motion, kick it into a higher gear.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Shouldn’t the distance between impossible and improbable be widened?” asks poet Luke Johnson. I agree that it should, and I nominate you to do the job. In my astrological view, you now have the power to make progress in accomplishing goals that some people may regard as unlikely, fantastical and absurdly challenging. (Don’t listen to them!) I’m not necessarily saying you will always succeed in wrangling the remote possibilities into practical realities. But you might. And even if you’re only partially victorious, you will learn key lessons that bolster your abilities to harness future amazements.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian novelist George Eliot wrote, “It is very hard to say the exact truth, even about your own immediate feelings—much harder than to say something fine about them which is not the exact truth.” I believe you will be exempt from this rule during the next seven weeks. You will be able to speak with lucid candor about your feelings—maybe more so than you’ve been able to in a long time. And that will serve you well as you take advantage of the opportunity that life is offering you: to deepen, clarify and refine your intimate relationships.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Author bell hooks (who didn’t capitalize her name) expressed advice I recommend for you. She said, “Knowing how to be solitary is central to the art of loving. When we can be alone, we can be with others without using them as a means of escape.” As you enter a phase of potential renewal for your close relationships, you’ll be wise to deepen your commitment to self-sufficiency and self-care. You might be amazed at how profoundly that enriches intimacy. Here are two more helpful gems from bell hooks: “You can never love anybody if you are unable to love yourself” and “Do not expect to receive the love from someone else you do not give yourself.”

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In April 2005, a 64-year-old Korean woman named Cha Sa-soon made her first attempt to get her driver’s license. She failed. In fairness to her, the written test wasn’t easy. It required an understanding of car maintenance. After that initial flop, she returned to take the test five days a week for three years—and was always unsuccessful. She persevered, however. Five years later, she passed the test and received her license. It was her 960th try. Let’s make her your role model for the foreseeable future. I doubt you’ll have to persist as long as she did, but you’ll be wise to cultivate maximum doggedness and diligence.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In the eighth century, Chinese poet Du Fu gave a batch of freshly written poems to his friend and colleague, the poet Li Bai. “Thank you for letting me read your new poems,” Li Bai later wrote to Du Fu. “It was like being alive twice.” I foresee you enjoying a comparable grace period in the coming weeks, Pisces: a time when your joie de vivre could be double its usual intensity. How should you respond to this gift from the Fates? Get twice as much work done? Start work on a future masterpiece? Become a beacon of inspiration to everyone you encounter? Sure, if that’s what you want to do. And you could also simply enjoy every detail of your daily rhythm with supreme, sublime delight.

Going Solo

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Joshua James Jackson releases first solo album

By Jane Vick 

Sonoma County, rife with talent, can lay claim to another artist on the rise: Josha James Jackson. Born and raised in Santa Rosa, JJJ (as he is sometimes known) is releasing his first solo album, Livin’ the Dream, with a music video accompanying the titular track.

Head straight to YouTube for an independently made work of video art starring “Queenie,” the main character of the music video, and coincidentally, a ball of purple Play-Doh.

Jackson has always been musical, performing with bands like Fishbear, which once opened for Cake, and the marching band Church, which did a live parade through the streets of Railroad Square one summer.

Livin’ the Dream is Jackson’s debut not only as a solo act, but as himself—pursuing the type of questions, through music, he was unable to explore in other music projects.

It started with a high school band that didn’t pan out—Fishbear—after which Jackson spent the better part of a decade working with several different singer-songwriters, helping them tour and playing in their bands. Jackson’s thought was that he was accruing experience, which he says he feels he did, but ultimately the process left him unfulfilled creatively.

“In 2016 or 2017, I made a big stink of quitting all the bands I was working for and started trying to run a band. It was probably more dramatic than was ultimately needed, but it was what I felt like I needed at the time,” said Jackson.

The band in question, Sharkmouth, actually provided Jackson with several songs featured on his upcoming album, including Livin’ on a Dream. The group toured a lot, and Jackson describes it as a “really high concept musical group that relied heavily on a lot of work from a small team.”

The stress of it, he said, became ultimately untenable.

“Everything was last minute; I’d show up making it work by the skin of my teeth, and it felt like we were letting people down. It was too much pressure on too small a team. So I made the choice to transition to using my own name again, a probably ultimately more dramatic than necessary move,” said Jackson, laughing.

Jackson realized he needed to pursue his own art rather than create a dream band.

“I think a lot of musicians suffer from this—I grew up watching Beatles movies. I thought that being in a band would be like that—you know, team, siblings, family. All the time. And I was trying to cultivate that, when it doesn’t really exist in that way. Which was on me for trying to create an idyllic community from my idea of what that could be, instead of a real reflection of what it was.”

He still collaborates with some of his old Sharkmouth band members, and shares no bad blood, but Jackson saw the need to truly honor the singularity of his creative calling. After over a decade of collaborations, Jackson began his first solo project in earnest in 2019.

“I right away started putting a record together, and it was scheduled to be released in 2020. But we all know what happened, so here it is now.”

Jackson recorded Livin’ the Dream in the OK Theater in Enterprise, OR, the oldest operating purpose-built theater in Oregon, erected in 1919. He tracked the bulk of the record there, and worked also with Dimed Records with musician and producer Jeremy Lyon.

The record in full is still to be released—meaning I haven’t heard it all yet—but Livin’ the Dream,  the title track, is a feat of poignant yet upbeat melody layered with brass, keyboard and percussion, and Jackson’s vocals, all at once playful, crackly like a record and sad.

The lyrics, “I’m living the dream, if that’s what we’re gonna call it,” pretty overtly suggest that the dream isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Jackson wrote this song while touring with Sharkmouth, at a moment when people would look at him and assume he was living a magical dream, when in fact he was struggling to find a sense of happiness and balance in his life.

“I’m super grateful for that time, and it was magical, but I also wasn’t getting enough to eat, I wasn’t bathing right. A lot about that lifestyle was so hard. So many of us who are trying to make work that we think is important live this experience where we struggle with our basic needs. It’s tough,” he reflected.

That said, Jackson says his life is more charmed than hard, though he adds that what looks cool can actually feel bad.

“The classic Instagram versus reality type thing,” he said. “So it’s kind of that. And at the time too, I was really depressed and lacking the tools to deal with that, and at the same time felt like I was actively living out my dreams. It was a strange dichotomy.”

Jackson’s work now, as a solo artist, is to continue exploring dichotomies like this one, and others he confronts, including feeling both incredibly privileged as a white male, but also experiencing real financial struggle in pursuing his art.

He feels that his work “oscillates between feeling self-indulgent and culturally useful.” And he is courageously exploring that cognitive dissonance. In going solo, he seeks to figure himself out, and hopes to also regain the momentum he had just before the pandemic hit, when he returned from a three week tour in England and was gearing up to sign with a record label.

“In a way, I’m totally starting over,” said Jackson.

Jackson gave his track over to Dana Merwin, a producer, writer and comedian originally from Georgia, who has performed at The Moth’s Grand Slam in Los Angeles, SXSW in Austin, TX, and SF Sketchfest, to name a few. Merwin, along with director, editor and animator Mike Manzielo and cinematographer Steve Kaye—both of whom Merwin emphatically acknowledged as vital players in the entire process and critical in bringing “Queenie” to life—took Jackson’s song and ran with it, creating the inimitable aforementioned “Queenie” and a totally unique music video filmed in downtown Oakland.

As Merwin tells it, “Queenie” is  a purple ball of Play-Doh, but so much more. Merwin chose Play-Doh because of the nostalgic nature of the smell, and the child-like quality of the substance. It represents a love of childhood that we all, especially artists and creatives, seek to reconnect with, and keep alive.

“What I love about all of Josh’s work is that combination of soul sadness and joy,” said Merwin. “That’s the struggle that Josh’s music is asking us to acknowledge. How do we live that dream, the waking dream that was asked of us as kids—what do we want to be when we grow up?—while also living ‘the American dream’? This is going back to what we really wanted as kids, and facing that reality as an adult, without being overwhelmed by it, is what ‘Queenie’ is working through.”

It’s fitting that in this moment a music video and album come out asking us to confront our dreams and the harsh nature of reality also. Taking a look at duality, dichotomy and dissonance, the way Jackson is doing in Livin’ the Dream, is perhaps the best chance any of us have to actually create the symbiotic relationship between our childhood dreams and what life asks of us as adults.

Watch ‘Queenie’ in ‘Livin’ the Dream’ today, and stay up to date with JJJ by following @joshuajamesjackson on Instagram. 

Howland finds ‘Lost On Me’

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Liam Howland Nelson releases first solo EP

By Jane Vick

Liam Howland Nelson…

Time was on his side. With the Covid lockdowns in full swing and a lifetime of musical experience percolating within him, Petaluma-based musician and producer Liam Neslon (aka Howland—a family name) found the perfect moment to craft his first solo EP.

The result, Lost On Me, released by Marin-based Unreachable Records, comes after decades spent recording other bands, a profession the musician says he naturally fell into.

“Helping other people achieve their musical dreams is rewarding in a different way,” says Nelson. “But it was something I sort of never meant to get into—it was something that happened. I mean, I started recording bands when I was 18.”

That early start in the studio led Nelson to develop a successful career in audio production, while also performing—from local shows at Petaluma’s Phoenix Theater as a kid to later touring the country with Santa Cruz-based act The Dying Californian. Throughout, the notion of producing solo work remained, though the moment wasn’t yet right.

Even while working at San Francisco’s Hyde Street Studios, famous for recording Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Dead Kennedys, and Crosby Stills and Nash, among others, Nelson “didn’t find the inspiration to do my own thing.”

Then came the Covid lockdowns of the past couple of years, and with his family close by “buzzing around in the background,” inspiration struck.

“Sitting in my little spot at home during the pandemic, I felt richly creative,” says Nelson. “I don’t know, maybe I was putting up barriers where they didn’t exist.”

Lost On Me, a five-track EP with additional musical contributions from Shannon Ferguson, Will Collins, David Noble and Hannah Jern Miller, made its way into the world. Think The Shins, LCD Soundsystem and a touch of The Strokes in the guitar work.

“Not Right Now,”the first track, kicks off strong with a bouncy, bobbing four count that had me out of my chair pretty quickly. “Coach,” the track from which Lost On Me derives its name, features strong vocals from Nelson. “Hang Around” has a breakdown starting at 2:47 that has me fully shooketh—it’s like a sample from an alien landing on top of a solid four count.

Throughout, Nelson’s many years as both an audio producer and a musician are evident. The layering is tight and the levels are perfect.

Though produced during the pandemic, this project was not pandemic-inspired. Nelson says that more than anything, this was an unexpected opportunity, an allotment of time that he made a pact with himself to utilize.

“I don’t know if I have any great insight into the album,” says Nelson with a wry smile. “I try to let it happen to me.”

And it did.

‘Lost On Me’ can be found on bandcamp.com[1] . Visit howlandtheband.com.

Sense and Senselessness – Confronting major issues requires societal reorientation

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I just received an email from our local Assemblymember, Marc Levine. He began by saying,

“This week, we saw another senseless act of gun violence.” He went on to pledge his ongoing commitment to the issue of gun control.

These acts of violence are no more “senseless” than paying “essential workers” sub-minimum wages while billionaires blast off into space. Or not having a universal healthcare system like every other “advanced” country. Or subsidizing fossil fuels and industrial farming instead of non-polluting energy and regenerative agriculture. Or building more prisons instead of ending poverty and building more schools. The list goes on and on. And we will never make progress on any of these “senseless problems” until we recognize that all of these social choices, while they may not make “sense,” make plenty of cents for those who gain wealth and power from these policy choices.

We, as a society, have made a choice to prioritize cents over sense. Or, rather, we have allowed this decision to be made and to stand as the basis of our social decision making.

And so, we are in a situation that makes no sense. Until we recognize, say it out-loud and change the basis of our decision making to prioritize sense over cents, all these acts of “senseless violence” will continue, despite the sincere efforts of people like our assemblymember. We cannot solve these problems without a fundamental reorientation of our priorities that will put people ahead of profits.

—Abraham Entin

Abraham Entin is a singer, songwriter and storyteller who dances at every opportunity. He resides in Sonoma County.

Trivia – 06/15/22

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1 How did Chileno Valley, located in the rolling hills of northern Marin and the region west of Petaluma, get its name?

2 What are the only animals that generally drink milk drawn from other animals? 

3 From 1954 to 1991, the USSR’s top security and intelligence agency was known by what three-letter name?

4 Tom Cruise’s latest film has produced the biggest box office revenues of any of his movies.  What’s the full title?

5 In English, it’s called the French Riviera, but in the French language, it’s called what?

6 What is the world’s most common blood type?

7 Ludwig Van Beethoven’s ONLY opera, written in 1816, had what faithful title?     

8a. What American airline company is named after a Greek letter?

8b. What Swiss watchmaking company is named after a Greek letter?

9 The Japanese drink called sake is made from what plant, fermented?

10 Which Asian countries have the flags shown?

BONUS QUESTION: Infant babies have about 300 of these, and adult humans have about 200 of them. What are they?

Want more trivia? Contact ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 Chileno Valley was settled in the 1860s by immigrants from Chile, who grew hops. Thanks for the question to Dewey Livingston from Inverness, historian of Marin and Bay history.

2 Humans

3 KGB

4 Top Gun: Maverick

5 Cote D’Azur

6 Type O+, common in about 40% of the people.

7 Fidelio

8a. Delta       

8b. Omega

9 Rice

10 South Korea (with the yin-yang symbol) /Nepal (triangular)/ India (red, white and green parallel stripes)

BONUS ANSWER: Bones. Some infant bones fuse together to form the 206 bones that adults have.

Here, Kitty, Kitty! – ‘Wink’ slinks on stage at Main Stage West

By Harry Duke 

Feline conspiracy theorists who believe that cats are plotting to take over the world might count playwright Jen Silverman as an ally to their cause with Wink, Silverman’s absurd look at the nature of human transformation… and a vengeful cat. Sebastopol’s Main Stage West has a production running through June 25.  

Sophie (Ilana Niernberger) is quite upset. She hasn’t seen her cat Wink in days, and her life seems to be collapsing around her. Her cold, passionless husband, Gregor (John Browning), seems not to care a whit. But in a session with his therapist, Dr. Franz (Michael Fontaine), Gregor confesses to offing the cat. He confesses to much more, but the good doctor thinks he just needs to repress what are obviously latent homosexual tendencies and go on vacation with his wife.

Sophie, in a separate therapeutic session with Dr. Franz (Why are they both seeing him? He’s horrible!), has a few admissions of her own. Once again, the good doctor suggests suppression, as well as housework and a vacation, as the solutions to her problems.

And then Wink shows up, significantly worse for wear and really, really pissed.  

Wink is played by Sam Coughlin in a masterful physical performance. Part Rum Tum Tugger, part Sweeney Todd, Coughlin’s Wink prowls the stage with all the familiar feline movements gleaned no doubt from watching hours of cat videos under the careful tutelage of director James Pelican.

Once you buy into a talking, preening cat with murder on his mind, the transformation of Sophie from uptight, middle-class housewife to scheming terrorist seems less absurd. Gregor and Dr. Franz go through their own transformations, but I’ll just leave it at that.

Silverman packs a lot into her script about the dichotomy of who we are under the skin versus who we present ourselves to be, and she does it in a show that runs a little over an hour. The cast is strong, and the show works well in the relatively small space. It features a nice David Lear-designed set representing two homes and a medical office, which happens to get trashed at each performance. 

Wink is a strange show. How strange? Well, it’s not quite Cats on acid, but it’s far enough out there to offend some, amuse others and confound the rest.

It’s not a purr-fect show, but it sure is different.

‘Wink’ runs through June 25 at Main Stage West, 104 N. Main St, Sebastopol. Thu-Sat at 8pm; Sun, 5pm. $20-$32. Proof of vaccination and masking required. 707.823.0177. mainstagewest.com

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Here, Kitty, Kitty! – ‘Wink’ slinks on stage at Main Stage West

Lauren Heney CAT PEOPLE John Browning and Ilana Niernberger play a couple divided by a cat with murder on his mind in a local production of Jen Silverman’s ‘Wink.’
By Harry Duke  Feline conspiracy theorists who believe that cats are plotting to take over the world might count playwright Jen Silverman as an ally to their cause with Wink, Silverman’s absurd look at the nature of human transformation… and a vengeful cat. Sebastopol’s Main Stage West has a production running through June 25.   Sophie (Ilana Niernberger) is quite upset. She...
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