Fancy Footwork – Transcendence returns

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By Beulah F. Vega 

Transcendence Theatre Company opens their 2022 season with Let’s Dance! Conceived by Luis Salgado, Matt Smart and Amanda M. Stuart, the production offers Transcendence’s standard formula of combining familiar faces and music with dance styles that are new and refreshing.

The show follows a young woman (Mariana Herrera Juri) as she struggles to answer an “audience member’s” (Colin Campbell Mcadoo) question as to why musical theater and dance is important. Utilizing Jack London quotes, musical numbers and bicycling (though sadly not set to the classic Queen song), her explanation concludes with a joyful number titled “The Dance Megamix.”

Director Salgado considers the show to be a multicultural celebration of dance, but it heavily focuses on the Afro-Caribbean roots of Salgado and a New York-based team of Latinx performers. While they do a good job of infusing the music with their own cultural nuances, it is when they are allowed to break free of the tired and overdone “classics” that the performance shines.

The highlight of the evening was Luis Antonio Vilchez Vargas. His dancing has won him recognition from the U.N., and it is easy to see why. He has a natural charisma on stage and works an audience with ease.

Other notable performances come from Emily Yates and Brianna-Marie Bell. If the show had simply starred them, it still would have been worth watching due to their powerful voices and riveting stage presence.

British Performer Simon Pearl is underutilized. He really only comes into his own during the “I Go to Rio” number. It is unfortunate that many of the pieces he and fellow newcomer CorBen Williams could have done went to some of the company’s legacy actors, instead of allowing the newcomers more opportunities.

Outdoor performances are challenging no matter how professional the company. While Let’s Dance! did suffer from some of the usual issues (the wind and the sun), the technical team, for the most part, did an admirable job in difficult conditions. Once Christopher Annas-Lee’s lighting design became visible in the second act, it greatly enhanced the show with the clever use of LEDs to highlight the performances.

Go see this show for its electric second act, the amount of real diversity on stage and Antonio Vargas. Just go see Vargas in anything that you can.

‘Let’s Dance!’ runs Fri-Sun through July 3 in Jack London State Historic Park. 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen. Park opens at 5pm; show starts at 7:30pm. $25–$165. 877.424.1414. transcendencetheatre.org

Integrity Key to Common Ground

June 21. Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers was testifying to the House Select Committee, with Rep. Adam Schiff questioning, his composure professional. I want to blurt, “Serves ya right for backing Trump!” but as Bowers continues, I become more sympathetic—all those scary pressures to “do the right thing,” mob-style boss-speak for helping the president overturn a free election.

Bowers shares his devout religious belief that the U.S. Constitution is a divinely-inspired document. Instead of cringing at the display, I’m strangely moved by it, by Bowers’ integrity in upholding his oath of office against his president, and his party.

It was a memorable moment for me. I’m watching every hearing as a Democrat concerned about the hair-raising shape-shifting GOP under Trumpism, but also from a sense of civic duty; to actually bear witness to the testimony, analysis and reporting offered to us, the so-called American people.

But I didn’t expect to be so moved by, sympathetic towards politicians “across the aisle” who stumped for Trump. As we know, most of those testifying thus far are Republicans, while the select committee is (necessarily?) composed mostly of Democrats. But my hopes for our country at large are being deeply stoked because this chamber is alive with persons of varied stripes, all acting together in good faith, honorably, on behalf of our democracy. These are true patriots: Democrats, Republicans, government officials finding common ground in truth-telling, regardless of persecution by Herr Trump, for refusing his offers of perks—or threats of retaliation for not doing his bidding. If any of these brave, principled public servants had caved…

I shudder at the thought as I listen to the courageous testimony from Georgia poll workers Shay Moss and her mother, Ruby. Here are two vulnerable Black women, testifying before millions, even while fearing for their lives since being fingered by the Don, and stalked by his duped MAGA-filliates. But beyond the stellar and sensational testimony, lingering, is my gratitude that they’re all standing so tall, that I get to see beyond my own political biases, my us-and-them-ing. No small thing.

Marcia Singer, MSW, is a local writer and heads the Love Arts Foundation in Santa Rosa.

Ruff Look – World’s ugliest dog named

With a lolling tongue, googly eyes and a head of spectacularly stringy gray-white hair, Jeneda Benally’s Chihuahua-mix pooch would probably strike anyone as an excellent contender for the world’s ugliest dog. On a hot day in Petaluma Friday, it became official.

The inaptly named “Mr. Happy Face” triumphed over nine other scrawny, goofy, scruffy competitors at the World’s Ugliest Dog Contest at the Sonoma-Marin Fair in Petaluma. The annual contest has been held for nearly 50 years, and returned from two years of COVID-19 hiatus just in time to provide some comic relief to developments including the U.S. Supreme Court’s Friday decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

The Ugliest Dog (we refuse to refer to him as Mr. Happy Face, in the interests of journalistic accuracy) won the $1,500 grand prize and an appearance on NBC’s Today show. The collective attractiveness quotient for New York City will doubtless plummet by at least 10 points when the hairless Chinese crested-Chihuahua mix arrives in town to appear on the show.

Second prize went to Wild Thang, a Pekingese, according to the fair’s website.

While the contest winner’s visage doesn’t exactly match up with his name, the evidence suggests that he is a very lucky—and, indeed, happy—critter.

The circumstances of the Ugliest Dog’s adoption are enough to make even the most cynical of humans throw down an “Aaaaaaw!”

In August 2021, Benally visited a local shelter in hopes of adopting a dog. Because of Mr. Happy Face’s, er, lack of photogenic qualities, “the shelter staff tried to prepare me for what I was about to see. I saw a creature who … needed a second chance and deserved to be loved. Mr. Happy Face was born into our family at the age of 17 years,” Benally said in a statement on the Sonoma-Marin Fairgrounds website.

The 17-year-old dog suffers from a number of health conditions and wasn’t expected to live more than a month when Benally adopted him. But now, 10 months later, he’s still around.

All together now: “Aaaawwww!”

Indie Oversight – IOLERO’s authority expands

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Sonoma County has reached an agreement after more than a year of negotiations with two labor associations to expand independent oversight of law enforcement, the county announced Thursday.

The agreement, between Sonoma County and two groups representing county law enforcement employees, the Sonoma County Deputy Sheriffs’ Association and Sonoma County Law Enforcement Association, will expand the authority of the county’s Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO).

Established in 2015 as an independent, non-police county agency, IOLERO’s primary functions include reviewing complaints against the Sheriff’s Office, community outreach and making policy recommendations to the Sheriff’s Office.

The negotiations between the county and labor associations began after county voters adopted Measure P with 64.7% of the vote in November 2020. Measure P gave IOLERO new authority to investigate potential wrongdoing, post body-worn camera video and make discipline recommendations, thus signaling voters wanted greater law enforcement oversight in the county.

Before Measure P was implemented, however, California’s Public Employment Relations Board, an administrative agency that oversees collective bargaining statutes covering employees of California, voided several provisions of Measure P in June 2021, following complaints from the Sonoma County Deputy Sheriffs’ Association, which represents 529 county employees in corrections, criminal, probation and other services, and Sonoma County Law Enforcement Association, which represents approximately 229 deputies and sergeants in the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office.

The labor associations complained that Sonoma County had violated their members’ collective bargaining rights by failing to “meet and confer” with the two unions in accordance with state labor law about the changes put forth by Measure P.

The county and the labor associations came together to negotiate the measure and implement the voters’ will. The agreement, finalized on Thursday, June 23, gives IOLERO the authority to conduct independent investigations of serious instances of alleged misconduct and allows greater access to and cooperation with Sheriff’s Office internal investigations, all while the association members are treated fairly. 

“The county is pleased that this agreement affirms the will of the voters regarding IOLERO’s expanded powers and duties while also recognizing the associations’ legitimate interests and statutory rights in negotiating over those powers and duties,” said James Gore, chair of the Board of Supervisors. “The parties’ collaborative efforts produced a comprehensive, effective and responsible agreement governing the implementation of Measure P.”

Cody Ebert, president of the Sonoma County Deputy Sheriffs’ Association, added that he was proud of the agreement that ensures “new law enforcement oversight measures are both effective at building and maintaining the community’s trust, and fair to the deputies putting their lives on the line for the public’s safety,” while Damian Evans, president of Sonoma County Law Enforcement Association, said that “the agreement strikes the right balance between increased transparency and oversight and fair and consistent investigatory procedures for the affected correctional deputies, sergeants and dispatchers. We are encouraged that the county, IOLERO, SCLEA and the DSA can move forward together to better serve the citizens of Sonoma County.”

No Nuke Talk

Normally, I would automatically agree with most anything Norman Solomon has to say. I put him in the same category of Lynn Woolsey and Barbara Boxer, both of whom I greatly respect. But not this time….

There is NO discussion about nuclear weapons that can occur at high government levels that can end well. All that can be said is one-sided posturing: what our nation will or will NOT do with our nuke stockpile. In a world where both Russia and North Korea have nuclear stockpiles, do we—really—want the U.S. to NOT have nukes? About the ONLY thing that keeps their egocentric, megalomaniacal leaders from lobbing nukes at whomever they dislike today is MAD, Mutual Assured Destruction. He who lobs the first nuke can expect 20 coming back his way by the holders of the several major powers around the globe that also have stockpiles of nukes.  The ONLY “winning solution” is to NOT launch.

But just what could our president say that wouldn’t make a tense situation even more tense?  He can’t, for instance, speak for any other country. He can’t tell Putin, “Get rid of your nukes.”  That line can only be followed by a retort of “Make me.”  And it would be incredibly stupid to “assure” the world that the U.S. will NOT ever launch first. That can only get the mad leader crowd wondering if their first punch would be sooo devastating that the counterattack might actually be survivable. But more importantly, as the conversation would inevitably boil down to, “They have nukes. We have nukes. And they—probably—wouldn’t dare to use them.” Such a speech can ONLY make a nervous population even more nervous.

Sometimes, silence IS the best approach. Because talking about it only makes things worse.

Marcus Mulkins

San Rafael

Anxious Crossings – A bridge too far

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By Christian Chensvold

As we came out of the tunnel and the bridge came into view, the busload of kids let out a roar, but not my friend Craig seated next to me. He started to squirm, clutching the empty box of Milk Duds, which he’d announced, when we were passing through Novato, that he was going to use to throw up in when we passed over the Golden Gate Bridge.

It was 1982 and we were on a field trip to the aquarium. I’m guessing the only reason I remember the moment was because I’d never seen anyone have a panic attack before, certainly not for riding over the Golden Gate Bridge, which for me was always a source of excitement.

But now here I was, 40 years later, coming out of the tunnel to the sight of the crimson towers, and my own anxiety alarm going off. I’d returned to my hometown in the North Bay after a dozen years on the East Coast, and this was my first trip to the city, and suddenly the expectation of imminently crossing the bridge triggered a fight-or-flight response.

An earlier version of me would have tried to brush it off, which only would have made it worse, and left me writhing in agony just like my schoolmate, with the difference that I was in charge of operating a vehicle. Older and wiser now, I respected the inner siren bells and pulled off at Vista Point to figure out what was going on.

After a confused stroll over to the observation spot, I looked across the sun-dappled waters at the magnificent City By The Bay, and all my agitation evaporated. I was feeling emotions, just like back in the pre-digital days, and they weren’t even negative.

I was back home in the Bay Area, and was realizing just how vital crossing the Golden Gate Bridge has been through all the divergent chapters of my life.

While tourists took photos of themselves with the bridge in the background, I reminisced about how the bridge was always the passageway to some obscure object of desire on the other side. It was grandma’s house for Christmas, then comic book shops, then record stores and rock concerts, then skateboarding, fashion and training at the Letterman Fencing Club in the Presidio. After college there was opera, museums, swing dancing and seeking out rare tomes at City Lights Bookstore in the days before Amazon.

But after that it was 20 years in Los Angeles and New York. And now here I was, again in search of some obscure sought-after thing, except that this time that thing was myself. I needed a time-out to pull over and take it all in.

For five years I’ve been working tirelessly to get my life story straight, and how I went from being a happy 12-year-old on a field trip that day to a hardened man of middle age who’d been forced, with the greatest reluctance, to face his demons and re-orient himself after having been hopelessly lost in the forest of life.

Standing there at Vista Point, looking at the bridge and the amazing city on the other side, my mind began writing the transitions between all the disparate chapters, and gained new insight on the bizarre, higher logic that had been working itself out all along, despite my ignorance.

I’ve heard that today people in the North Bay are reluctant to cross the bridge, and perhaps their reasons are not so different from my nerve-wracked schoolmate. The demon behind it is always the same—the ego’s fear of its imminent destruction—even as it adopts a thousand guises, depending on where your soft spot is.

But the fear of getting your car broken into, being robbed or stepping in excrement is likely exacerbated by your own catastrophic imagination, as that of my friend, who thought the bridge would collapse and he would be swallowed into the sea. He did not actually have to face this danger that day when crossing the bridge; what he did have to face was fear itself, and there’s a reason the wise man said that there’s really nothing to fear but fear itself, because it acts so irrationally upon the imagination on which it feeds.

After stopping to figure out what I was feeling—and, more important, to let myself feel it—I ended up having a wonderful day in the city, walking around with nothing else to do except simply feel once again what it’s like to just be in San Francisco, the big-city home-away-from-home.

No, the city isn’t what it once was, but neither are you—you’re better than before, or at least you ought to be. You don’t have to cross the Golden Gate if you don’t want to, but don’t let your imagination stop you.

Maybe just tell yourself you’re going to take a drive to Vista Point, have a look and see how you feel. You might find that a lifelong love for crossing the bridge, and the thought of what obscure object of desire you may find on the other side, is its own kind of irrational delight.

DIGABLE PLANETS The jazz-informed hip-hop group will play at the Marin County Fair Sunday, July 3 at 7pm.

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Petaluma

Sunday Jazz

Summer is here and so are the dulcet tones of outdoor jazz. Every Sunday afternoon, stop by the Speakeasy Restaurant in Helen Putnam Plaza to find Live Jazz in Petaluma in full swing. Some of the best jazz musicians in the Bay Area are flocking to the plaza to play together, and there’s a new lineup every weekend. This Sunday come groove to Ken Cook on the piano, Luis Carbo on percussion, Michael Aragon on the drums and Chuck Sher on the bass. Live Jazz in Petaluma is organized by Chuck Sher of Sher Music Co., a music book publishing company with over 100 song and method books for jazz and Latin music. The next Live Jazz in Petaluma performance is Sunday, July 3 at the Putnam Plaza, 139-B Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. From 1:30pm-3:30pm. This event is free.

Rohnert Park

Teen Film Festival

The Sonoma County Library is hosting its second annual Teen Film Festival.Sonoma County teens ages 12-19 are invited to submit their own six minute film for a chance to win first, second or third place. Prizes include Best Buy and local cinema gift cards. All films must be conceived, written, shot and edited by teens from 12-19, who are residents of Sonoma County. Both individual and group projects are accepted. Adult guidance is allowed, as is adult acting, but planning and production must be completed by teens. Submissions are open through July 31. Films will be judged through Aug. 15 and winners announced Aug. 22. An in-person premiere of the winning films will be held ​​Aug. 31 at the Rohnert Park-Cotati Library, 6250 Lynne Condé Way, Rohnert Park. 7pm-8pm. This event is free. www.sonomacountylibrary.org  

San Rafael

Marin County Fair

It’s a fair season for fair season! The 2022 Marin County Fair kicks off Thursday and runs through July 4. The theme this year is “So Happy Together” and includes outdoor entertainment such as headline concerts, jugglers, unicyclists, stilt walkers and interactive art experiences for attendees of all ages. Plein air painting, Irish dancing and fun runs are just a few of the activities. Returning fair favorites will include traditional carnival rides, the Global Marketplace, the Barnyard, food and drinks, and fireworks every night over the Civic Center’s Lagoon Park. The musical lineup this year is stacked, including San Francisco’s Pablo Cruise and Grammy-winning hip-hop group Digable Planets. The 2022 Marin County Fair opens June 30 and runs through July 4 at the Marin County Fairgrounds, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. Early bird General Admission tickets are $20 until June 30, then $25 adults and teens, $20 seniors 65+ and children ages 4-12. Children under 4 free. www.fair.marincounty.org 

Novato

Free Family Day

MarinMOCA is hosting another Free Family Day for those youngsters and their caretakers looking to explore the world of art. Come to the MarinMOCA art studio for crafting and art projects, led by one of MarinMOCA’s professional art instructors. The projects are different every time, and there’s always something to take home to remember the afternoon. Free Family Days accommodate four families at a time, to ensure Covid safety. Families can schedule at 11am, noon, 1pm, 2pm or 3pm. Free Family Day is July 10, in MarinMOCA’s art classroom, 781 Hamilton Parkway, Novato. Classes from 11am-3pm. Free event. Registration is required. Call 415-506-0137, or email in**@*******ca.org. www.marinmoca.org.

—Jane Vick

Astrology – Week of 06/29/22

ARIES (March 21-April 19): In her poem, “Two Skins,” Bahamian writer Lynn Sweeting writes, “There is a moment in every snake’s life when she wears two skins: one you can see, about to be shed, one you cannot see, the skin under the skin, waiting.” I suspect you now have metaphorical resemblances to a snake on the verge of molting, Aries. Congratulations on your imminent rebirth! Here’s a tip: The snake’s old skin doesn’t always just fall away; she may need to take aggressive action to tear it open and strip it off, like by rubbing her head against a rock. Be ready to perform a comparable task.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “Imagine a world 300 years from now,” writes Japanese novelist Minae Mizumura, “a world in which not only the best-educated people but also the brightest minds and the deepest souls express themselves only in English. Imagine the world subjected to the tyranny of a singular ‘Logos.’ What a narrow, pitiful and horrid world that would be!” Even though I am primarily an English speaker, I agree with her. I don’t want a world purged of diversity. Don’t want a monolithic culture. Don’t want everyone to think and speak the same. I hope you share my passion for multiplicity, Taurus—especially these days. In my astrological opinion, you’ll thrive if you immerse yourself in a celebratory riot of variety. I hope you will seek out influences you’re not usually exposed to.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Imagine you’re not a person, but a medley of four magical ingredients. What would they be? A Gemini baker named Jasmine says, “ripe persimmons, green hills after a rain, a sparkling new Viking Black Glass Oven and a prize-winning show horse.” A Gemini social worker named Amarantha says she would be made of “Florence and the Machine’s song, ‘Sky Full of Song,’ a grove of birch trees, a blue cashmere knee-length sweater and three black cats sleeping in the sun.” A Gemini delivery driver named Altoona says, “freshly harvested cannabis buds, a bird-loving wetlands at twilight, Rebecca Solnit’s book, Hope in the Darkness, and the Haleakalā shield volcano in Maui.” And now, Gemini, what about you? Identify your medley of four magical ingredients. The time is right to re-imagine the poetry of YOU.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard believes there’s only one way to find a sense of meaning, and that is to fill your life to the bursting point, to be in love with your experience, to celebrate the flow of events wherever it takes you. When you do that, Godard says, you have no need or urge to ask questions like “Why am I here?” or “What is my purpose?” The richness of your story is the ultimate response to every enigma. As I contemplate these ideas, I say: wow! That’s an intensely vibrant way to live. Personally, I’m not able to sustain it all the time. But I think most of us would benefit from such an approach for brief periods now and then. And I believe you have just entered one of those phases.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I asked Leo readers to provide their insights about the topic “How to Be a Leo.” Here are responses that line up with your current astrological omens. 1. People should try to understand you’re only bossing them around for their benefit.—Harlow Hunt 2. Be alert for the intense shadows you may cast with your intense brightness. Consider the possibility that even if they seem iffy or dicey, they have value and even blessings to offer.—Cannarius Kansen 3. Never break your own heart. Never apologize for showering yourself with kindness and adoration.—Amy Clear 4. At the moment of orgasm, scream out your own name.—Bethany Grace

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It’s your birthright as a Virgo to become a master of capitalizing on difficulties. You have great potential to detect opportunities coalescing in the midst of trouble. You can develop a knack for spotting the order that’s hiding in the chaos. Now is a time when you should wield these skills with artistry, my dear—both for your own benefit and for the betterment of everyone whose lives you touch.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): One of my heroes died in 2021: the magnificent Libran author bell hooks (who didn’t capitalize her name). She was the most imaginative and independent-minded activist I knew. Till her last day, she articulated one-of-a-kind truths about social justice; she maintained her uncompromising originality. But it wasn’t easy. She wrote, “No insurgent intellectual, no dissenting critical voice in this society escapes the pressure to conform. We are all vulnerable. We can all be had, co-opted, bought. There is no special grace that rescues any of us. There is only a constant struggle.” I bring this to your attention, Libra, because I suspect the coming weeks will require your strenuous efforts to remain true to your high standards and unique vision of reality.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You now have the power to make yourself even more beautiful than you already are. You are extraordinarily open to beautifying influences, and there will be an abundance of beautifying influences coming your way. I trust you understand I’m not referring to the kinds of beauty that are worshiped by conventional wisdom. Rather, I mean the elegance, allure, charm and grace that you behold in old trees and gorgeous architecture and enchanting music and people with soulful idiosyncrasies. P.S.: The coming weeks will also be a favorable time to redefine the meaning of beauty for yourself.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): It’s the Season for Expressing Your Love—and for expanding and deepening the ways you express your love. I invite you to speak the following quotes to the right person: 1. “Your head is a living forest full of songbirds.”—E. E. Cummings 2. “Lovers continuously reach each other’s boundaries.”—Rainer Maria Rilke 3. “You’re my favorite unfolding story.”— Ann Patchett 4. “My lifetime listens to yours.”— Muriel Rukeyser

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In the coming weeks, make sure you do NOT fit this description articulated by Capricorn novelist Haruki Murakami: “You’re seeking something, but at the same time, you are running away for all you’re worth.” If there is any goal about which you feel conflicted like that, dear Capricorn, now is a good time to clear away your confusion. If you are in some sense undercutting yourself, perhaps unconsciously, now is the time to expose your inner saboteur and seek the necessary healing. July will be Self-Unification Month.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A Tweeter named Luxuryblkwomen articulates one of her ongoing goals: “bridging the gap between me and my ideal self, one day at a time.” I’d love it if you would adopt a similar aspiration in the coming months. You’re going to be exceptionally skilled at all types of bridge-building, including the kind that connects you to the hero you’ll be in the future. I mean, you are already a hero in my eyes, but I know you will ultimately become an even more fulfilled and refined version of your best self. Now is a favorable time to do the holy work of forging stronger links to that star-to-be.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A blogger named Lissar suggests that the cherry blossom is an apt symbol for you Pisceans. She describes you as “transient, lissome, blooming, lovely, fragile yet memorable and recurring, in tune with nature.” Lissar says you “mystify yet charm,” and that your “presence is a balm, yet awe-inspiring and moving.” Of course, like all of us, you also have your share of less graceful qualities. And that’s not a bad thing! We’re all here to learn the art of growing into our ripe selves. It’s part of the fun of being alive. But I suspect that in the coming weeks, you will be an extra close match for Lissar’s description. You are at the peak of your power to delight and beguile us.

Finding Melody – Strauss’ latest solo album 

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By Jane Vick 

Guitarist Walter Strauss has released his third solo album.

For Melody, Wherever She May Find Me is the result of an exploration of melodies, both original and covered. During the pandemic, Strauss, an often-touring and collaborating musician, found himself alone with time and his guitar.

Without an audience to perform for or players to perform with, Strauss found himself taking more time with the music, exploring the stripped down throughline of melody. Playing his guitar solo resulted in a different, more focused attention to melody over all else.

In his own words: “The isolation offered a special window to engage the transcendent power of great melodies. I followed where they led.” 

For Melody is a beautiful homage to Strauss’ solitude, his devotional attention to the pathways of music and his mastery of the instrument. Seasoned guitar lovers and new listeners alike will find inspiration and tranquility in these tracks.

Though a Sebastopol local now, Strauss was raised in Pennsylvania, the youngest of four in a creative family with European heritage on his mother’s side. Strauss describes his mother as immensely creative and a gifted landscape painter. Creativity of any kind was encouraged in his household. He began playing drums at the age of eight, and at ten took up the guitar. 

Strauss went to Hampshire College for writing, but during his studies came across a collection of field recordings of West African music that significantly inspired him, specifically because of its polyrhythmic quality. Strauss refers to it as “a feast of rhythm and melody.”

He discovered the kora, a 22-stringed gourd harp from West Africa. Strauss has been engaged with the instrument ever since, translating many kora melodies onto the guitar.

The musician’s appreciation for African music and instruments has resulted in myriad collaborations with Malian musicians, including Grammy Award-winning kora player Mamadou Diabaté. The two met in Ithaca, NY by chance in the 1990s and later completed several international tours.

In 2012, Strauss’ capacity for translating the layered, multi-tonal sound of the kora onto guitar garnered him an invitation to Mali from esteemed kora player Toumani Diabaté to further expand his knowledge of the instrument. Strauss stayed in Mali for several months and recorded a record with Diabaté’s son, Sidiki, a talented 20-year-old kora player.

Strauss has an ongoing collaboration with West African artist Mamadou Sidibe. Together they are known as the Fula Brothers, with Strauss on guitar and Sidibe playing the six-stringed donso ngoni, another African instrument.

Strauss says that while the influence of West African instruments and musicians on his playing has been significant, he does not attempt to recreate or imitate their sound. Still, Strauss has garnered respect from expert kora and kamale ngoni players because of his ongoing effort to understand the music and the culture it represents.

“I’ve basically stirred some of the beautiful and inspiring musical leanings of these traditions into the pot of my own creative drive and musical history, in a way that I hope is unique and new,” said Strauss. 

All of this to say, Strauss’ music is generally collaborative and percussive. For Melody offers a different, more reflective face of his music.

His unique, West-African inspired guitar playing was able to express itself in full on an entirely solo album. Much like the kora or the kamale ngoni, Strauss plays his guitar like a harp, stretching his hands to play a note on each string.

The album,recorded at Soundwell Studios by Strauss and Rich DePaulo, is available for purchase on bandcamp.com. Dave Hall of Lone Cricket Productions filmed creative videos to several tracks on the album, which can be found at walterstrauss.com.

Strauss will be performing songs from the new album this Thursday, July 30 at Jam Cellars in Napa. The music starts at 8pm.

Trivia – Week of 06/22/22

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1 This treelike southern California plant was so named because its greatly extended branches resembled the outstretched arm of a biblical figure. What unusual tree is this?

2 This bird’s name means flame in Portuguese, because of its bright reddish-orange color. What is it?

3 What African-American writer won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993 for the “visionary force and poetic import” of her writing?

4 What were the first two edible nuts mentioned in the Bible?

5 Dolly Parton established her personal theme park in Sevierville, TN, with what clever name?

6 What two U.S. presidents were fifth cousins?

7 Reggae music evolved in the early 1960s in what capital city of what island nation?

8 Suffering from short-term memory loss, an ex-insurance investigator named Leonard uses notes and tattoos to hunt for the man he thinks killed his wife. The story is told backward, in what clever 2000 mystery film from Christopher Nolan?

9 Identify each of these quadrilaterals (four-sided figures) whose names begin with the same letter:

9a. Has equal angles but not equal sides. 

9b. Has equal sides but not equal angles. 

10 What U.S. state is home to Glacier National Park?

BONUS QUESTION: This active game originated in Britain in the 1880s, mostly among the upper-class as an after-dinner parlor game. They commonly called it “Wiff-Waff,” but today we call it what?

Want more trivia for your next party, fundraiser or special event? Contact ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 Joshua Tree, resembles the biblical Joshua pointing with his spear (Joshua 8:18)

2 Flamingo

3 Toni Morrison

4 Almonds and pistachios

5 Dollywood

6 Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt

7 Kingston, Jamaica

8 Memento

9a. Rectangle  9b. Rhombus

10 Montana

BONUS ANSWER: Ping Pong or Table Tennis. The ball was made of cork and the paddle from parchment, and it made a wiff-waff sound.

Fancy Footwork – Transcendence returns

Photo by Rob Martel DANCE Simon Pearl makes moves with the ensemble.
By Beulah F. Vega  Transcendence Theatre Company opens their 2022 season with Let’s Dance! Conceived by Luis Salgado, Matt Smart and Amanda M. Stuart, the production offers Transcendence’s standard formula of combining familiar faces and music with dance styles that are new and refreshing. The show follows a young woman (Mariana Herrera Juri) as she struggles to answer an “audience member’s”...

Integrity Key to Common Ground

June 21. Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers was testifying to the House Select Committee, with Rep. Adam Schiff questioning, his composure professional. I want to blurt, “Serves ya right for backing Trump!” but as Bowers continues, I become more sympathetic—all those scary pressures to “do the right thing,” mob-style boss-speak for helping the president overturn a free election. Bowers shares...

Ruff Look – World’s ugliest dog named

Mr. Happy Face
With a lolling tongue, googly eyes and a head of spectacularly stringy gray-white hair, Jeneda Benally's Chihuahua-mix pooch would probably strike anyone as an excellent contender for the world's ugliest dog. On a hot day in Petaluma Friday, it became official. The inaptly named "Mr. Happy Face" triumphed over nine other scrawny, goofy, scruffy competitors at the World's Ugliest Dog...

Indie Oversight – IOLERO’s authority expands

ZONE A Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office vehicle parked in a red zone under a surveillance camera.
Sonoma County has reached an agreement after more than a year of negotiations with two labor associations to expand independent oversight of law enforcement, the county announced Thursday. The agreement, between Sonoma County and two groups representing county law enforcement employees, the Sonoma County Deputy Sheriffs’ Association and Sonoma County Law Enforcement Association, will expand the authority of the county's...

No Nuke Talk

Normally, I would automatically agree with most anything Norman Solomon has to say. I put him in the same category of Lynn Woolsey and Barbara Boxer, both of whom I greatly respect. But not this time.... There is NO discussion about nuclear weapons that can occur at high government levels that can end well. All that can be said is...

Anxious Crossings – A bridge too far

He did not actually have to face this danger that day when crossing the bridge; what he did have to face was fear itself, and there’s a reason the wise man said that there’s really nothing to fear but fear itself, because it acts so irrationally upon the imagination on which it feeds. Photo by Carl Solder GGB Like a bridge over troubled waters.
By Christian Chensvold As we came out of the tunnel and the bridge came into view, the busload of kids let out a roar, but not my friend Craig seated next to me. He started to squirm, clutching the empty box of Milk Duds, which he’d announced, when we were passing through Novato, that he was going to use to...

DIGABLE PLANETS The jazz-informed hip-hop group will play at the Marin County Fair Sunday, July 3 at 7pm.

Photo courtesy of Clara Franco
Petaluma Sunday Jazz Summer is here and so are the dulcet tones of outdoor jazz. Every Sunday afternoon, stop by the Speakeasy Restaurant in Helen Putnam Plaza to find Live Jazz in Petaluma in full swing. Some of the best jazz musicians in the Bay Area are flocking to the plaza to play together, and there’s a new lineup every weekend....

Astrology – Week of 06/29/22

ARIES (March 21-April 19): In her poem, “Two Skins,” Bahamian writer Lynn Sweeting writes, “There is a moment in every snake’s life when she wears two skins: one you can see, about to be shed, one you cannot see, the skin under the skin, waiting.” I suspect you now have metaphorical resemblances to a snake on the verge of...

Finding Melody – Strauss’ latest solo album 

Strauss went to Hampshire College for writing, but during his studies came across a collection of field recordings of West African music that significantly inspired him. Photo by David Hall
By Jane Vick  Guitarist Walter Strauss has released his third solo album. For Melody, Wherever She May Find Me is the result of an exploration of melodies, both original and covered. During the pandemic, Strauss, an often-touring and collaborating musician, found himself alone with time and his guitar. Without an audience to perform for or players to perform with, Strauss found himself...

Trivia – Week of 06/22/22

1 This treelike southern California plant was so named because its greatly extended branches resembled the outstretched arm of a biblical figure. What unusual tree is this? 2 This bird's name means flame in Portuguese, because of its bright reddish-orange color. What is it? 3 What African-American writer won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993 for the “visionary force and...
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