In Focus: An introduction to Japanese cinema

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Coming on the heels of Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month, here’s our primer for movie-crazy, pop-cultural adventurers looking for seldom-visited territories to explore: Japan is ready for its closeup. Japanese cinema has a rich and rewarding history, but one that never seems to get the same attention eager American film buffs have always lavished on the Europeans. A trip to the real-life Land of the Rising Sun is out of reach while we’re in the throes of this pandemic, but thanks to streaming and other home-video options, we can cross the Pacific and immerse ourselves in, say, the intrigues of Tokugawa Shogunate, anytime we want.

Without delving into a comprehensive discussion of such a panoramic subject, here’s a bite-sized introduction to a few filmmakers and their movies, most of them available for streaming and all of them indispensable for anyone interested in this truly world-class national film industry. Names are listed Japanese-style, with family names first.

Kurosawa Akira: Arguably Japan’s most renowned filmmaker, Kurosawa reached for universal themes and found international audiences with: Seven Samurai (one of the greatest movies ever made); Ikiru; Rashomon; Throne of Blood (a feudal-era version of Macbeth, with three grotesque witches and the raging power lust in actor Mifune Toshirô’s eyes); The Hidden Fortress (a major influence on Star Wars); Sanjuro; Yojimbo; and the King Lear-in-feudal-Japan costumed epic, Ran. For a number of reasons, perhaps including his height—the filmmaker was almost six feet tall—Kurosawa stood out from his Japanese movie-biz contemporaries. Critics in his home country sometimes clucked disapprovingly about his choice of subjects—the Shakespeare adaptations, Seven Samurai’s tribute to Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes, etc., his popularity in the West and the “un-Japanese” point of view in many of his projects. He once described Seven Samurai as being as rich as a buttered steak topped with broiled eels. Kurosawa’s Dersu Uzala—a 1975 Soviet-Japanese co-production with Mosfilm—is of special interest because its thrilling story of the friendship between a native trapper/guide and a visiting surveyor in the Siberian wilderness is presented in Russian.

Ozu Yasujirô: Considered by many to be the most quintessentially “Japanese” of the classical directors. His spare visual style and carefully constructed scenarios tell the stories of ordinary people dealing with the ordinary heartaches of life, with extraordinary grace. But don’t be fooled by Ozu’s reputation for “austerity.” His emotion-packed family dramas are a feast of characterization and repressed sensuality lurking just beneath the surface. For example: A Story of Floating Weeds; Tokyo Story; Late Spring; Early Summer; Tokyo Twilight; and Equinox Flower. Ozu is notorious for his habit of placing his camera, in indoor scenes, at the eye level of a person kneeling on a tatami mat. Hara Setsuko, one of Ozu’s most frequent leading ladies (her fond nickname was “The Eternal Virgin”), has one of the most radiant smiles in existence, even when portraying a compromised character.

Mizoguchi Kenji: A master stylist enthralled by the stories of women, whose low status in traditional Japanese society makes them vulnerable to injustice and mistreatment. Some of the saddest films you’ll ever see: Sansho the Bailiff, aka Sansho Dayu (the heartbreaking tale of an unfortunate family’s interrupted journey); Ugetsu Monogatari (a dreamlike ghost story from ancient Nippon); The Life of Oharu (a gorgeous weepie starring the lead actress of Sansho, Tanaka Kinuyo); Utamaro and His Five Women; Miss Oyu (also with the long-suffering Tanaka); A Geisha; and A Story from Chikamatsu (aka The Crucified Lovers). Mizoguchi’s compositions are as thrillingly composed as a ukiyo e masterpiece.

Writer-director Kurosawa Kiyoshi is no relation to Kurosawa Akira, but shares the older director’s affinity for depicting characters confronting moral and ethical dilemmas. His elegantly paced contemporary projects range from outright horror to eerie relationships to soulful character-studies of modern urbanites in distress: Cure; Serpent’s Path; Séance (an extra-creepy remake of Séance on a Wet Afternoon); the internet chiller Pulse; Doppelganger; and Tokyo Sonata, the 2008 story of a middle-class family’s downward spiral after the father loses his job.

Kore-Eda Hirokazu: “The New Ozu”? Kore-Eda’s closely observed dramas have a strong social consciousness, none more so than Nobody Knows, the 2004 story of a family of school-age Tokyo children abandoned by their mother. Also recommended: Shoplifters; After the Storm; Our Little Sister; Like Father, Like Son; Hana; Maborosi; and Air Doll, the tale of a lonely man who falls in love with his inflatable sex doll.

Suzuki Seijun: His jazzed-up, frantic, gaudy, sexy gangster-and-spy flicks of the 1950s–1990s made him a hipster art-house fav in the U.S. Dig these shiny entertainments: Branded to Kill; Youth of the Beast; Gate of Flesh; Tokyo Drifter; and the inimitably titled Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards! Some of Suzuki’s most distinctive movies feature actor Shishido Jo, notorious for having tissue from his butt cheeks grafted onto his face, in an attempt to give him a more “Western” appearance.

Imamura Shôhei: Sardonic social and political commentary—with more than a touch of grim humor and sexuality—adorn this director’s hyperactive array of films from 1950–2000. The standouts: The Insect Woman; Pigs and Battleships; The Ballad of Narayama (Imamura’s adaptation of a story by Fukazawa Shichirô, first filmed in 1958 by director Kinoshita Keisuke); Black Rain (a moving protest against nuclear warfare); Vengeance Is Mine; The Pornographers; and Profound Desires of the Gods.

Honda Ishirô: Best known for creating the original Godzilla (Japanese title: Gojira, from 1954), Honda’s filmography is packed with loads of audience-pleasing sci-fi and horror spectacles, including: Mothra vs. Godzilla (1964, pick hit from the long-running kaiju giant-monster franchise); The Mysterians (1957); 1959’s The H-man (another atomic-age mishap); Destroy All Monsters (1968); and Matango (1963), the fantastic saga of a group of shipwrecked men and women battling a killer fungus on a spooky island—American tagline: Attack of the Killer Mushrooms.

Twisted genre excitement with a sadistic streak is the trademark of cult figure director Miike Takashi. One of his most unforgettable is Audition (1999), in which a selfish businessman tries to hoodwink a succession of prospective would-be “brides” and ends up paying the price. Also in Miike’s immense, bizarre filmography: irreverent cowboy actioner Sukiyaki Western Django; the enormously influential Dead or Alive; Ichi the killer; Blade of the Immortal (piles of corpses ad absurdam); and Over Your Dead Body.

For rip-roaring, costumed sword-fighting action, try: director Inagaki Hiroshi’s 1954-56 Samurai trilogy (Musashi Miyamoto; Duel at Ichijoji Temple; and Duel at Ganryu Island). Also fine: The Sword of Doom (1965) by director Okamoto Kihachi, with actor Nakadai Tatsuya’s amazing freakout bloodbath in the climactic scene. Further genre-action fun, from underworld intrigue to youth-market ultra-violence: anything by jack-of-all-trades Fukasaku Kinji, especially Yakuza Graveyard. Fukasaku’s Battle Royale movies, in which teenage contestants kill each other on a tropical island, outraged audiences and spun off a host of imitators.

Also recommended are the works of Oshima Nagisa (his intense sexual melodrama In the Realm of the Senses created a sensation in 1976); Naruse Mikio (the urban prostitute drama When A Woman Ascends the Stairs); and Shindo Kaneto (Onibaba, a ghost story about a predatory mother and daughter living in a marshland shack). Ichikawa Kon, director of acclaimed sports documentary Tokyo Olympiad, ranged over a variety of genres: family relationship dramas like The Makioka Sisters; the samurai adventure 47 Ronin (a remake of Mizoguchi’s 1941 samurai pic); and Ichikawa’s harrowing World War II nightmares, Fires on the Plain and The Burmese Harp. Kobayashi Masaki’s powerful three-part The Human Condition strikes a similar chord in tracing the ordeal of an anti-war Imperial Army soldier (played by Nakadai Tatsuya) stationed in Manchuria. Kobayashi’s trilogy clocks in at nearly 10 hours total running time.

Likewise on the bellicose side of the slate are the graphic tough-guy antics of actor-filmmaker “Beat Takeshi” Kitano (Boiling Point; Fireworks), and the comparatively benign swordplay of mega-popular actor Katsu Shintarō (“Kats-Shin”), who portrayed the blind masseur/gambler Zatoichi, defender of cute little kids and threatened women, in some 26 movies.

Mishima: A Life In Four Chapters (1985) is that rarity of rarities, an intelligent Japanese-language film by an American director, Paul Schrader. It’s a heavily stylized dramatization (starring actor Ogata Ken) of the life of controversial novelist-actor-militarist Mishima Yukio, who committed seppuku after unsuccessfully attempting a 1970 coup d’état in Tokyo. Before coming to his bloody end the real-life Mishima wrote and/or acted in a lengthy roster of art films and campy extravaganzas, including Black Lizard (1968) and Black Rose (1969), both of which starred “gender illusionist” Miwa Akihiro, and both of which were helmed by the above-mentioned Fukasaku Kinji.

Lastly, an easy choice from among the ocean of Japanese anime films is the oeuvre of the creative genius Miyazaki Hayao, guiding light of Studio Ghibli, who gave us the animated masterpieces My Neighbor Totoro; Princess Mononoke; Spirited Away; Howl’s Moving Castle; and Ponyo.

Many (but not all) of the above titles are available from various home video streaming services. Check JustWatch.com.

Enough is Enough

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I have asked myself many times this week, when will enough be enough? How many times do we have to see a black man killed in front of us by a police officer for us to say enough is enough?

It is not enough to not believe the stereotypes, to not tell that racist joke, to be nice to people of color. I can insert many lies I have told myself over the years here. I am guilty myself of thinking that I am doing enough, while black people are suffering everyday. I am ashamed of myself for being complacent for far too long. I can no longer sit on the sidelines and not actively take part in tearing apart a system that does not work for everyone. Society does not work unless it works for everyone in that society.

I tell myself I’m doing the best I can, but am I? I can do better; we all can. I liken it to trimming trees. We need to cut off the dead limbs and the branches that are sucking energy from the healthy part of the tree. To be stronger, grow taller and bear more fruit, the useless parts need to be cleared away.

I would like to say that it is time that we listen to the black people in our lives, but that time has long passed. Yes, we still need to listen, but the time now is for action. We have been told, and we have known for hundreds of years, that this is not working. Recognizing the problem is not enough. Taking steps to solve the problem is a good start, but also not enough. It is time to have conversations with the people we love about what we are doing to make things better every day. It is time to be in the trenches instead of standing aside thinking things will be better when the dust settles. It is time to fight, and to continue fighting, until there is some resolute change.

It is time to do more than just enough.

Deborah Unger lives in Graton.

Top Cop’s Kerfuffle

Down on the corner and out there in the streets they’re calling it “Ravitch’s kerfuffle.” Jill Ravitch, the Sonoma County DA, mocked citizens when they protested the Georgia slaying of African-American, Ahmaud Arbery.

“I seek to do justice in the work I do, not by marching,” Ravitch boasted.

Fifth District Supervisor Lynda Hopkins replied, “I worked, and I marched.”

Hopkins’ sentiments were widely echoed.

Over the past two weeks, hordes of citizens like Hopkins have worked and protested the death of George Floyd and marched against police brutality. It’s the American way.

Defense lawyer Omar Figueroa cranked up his sarcastic and said, “Jill is hard at work ignoring environmental crimes and police brutality. Time to retire. I’ll pay for the cake.”

Still, Figueroa allows that Ravitch was a “great trial lawyer” who did good when she created The Family Justice Center. He isn’t thrilled about her stance on cannabis, though her office has been clearing nearly 3,000 cannabis-related convictions.

As the county’s “top cop,” and nearing the end of her 10th year in office, Ravitch is less popular than ever. Courthouse buzz says she won’t run for reelection, though when I called Ravitch and popped the question, she wouldn’t answer.

Lawyer and longtime Sonoma County “police watchdog,” Jerry Threet, suggests that Ravitch’s record has been mixed and that she might have gone after white-collar and environmental crimes more vigorously.

“Usually the violators get a slap on the wrist,” Threet says. But he’s quick to add that as a young woman Ravitch didn’t have an easy time “stepping into the old boys’ network that ran the criminal justice system in the county.”

Ravitch is Sonoma County’s first woman DA. Unlike young, feisty DAs around the country, she has not gone out of her way to redress inequalities in the criminal justice system based on class and race. She didn’t lobby for the legalization of cannabis or take part in the movement to reform California’s marijuana laws. Some DAs did.

Threet says that Ravitch’s story is “complicated.” She brought criminal assault charges against a police officer, but the jury declined to find him guilty.

Veteran defense lawyer Chris Andrian says, “The cultural divide in the county makes it hard to convict cops.” He adds, “Sometimes I kicked the DA’s butt and sometimes I had my butt kicked.”

When Ravitch retires, the cannabis industry won’t shed tears. Neither will friends and family members of Andy Lopez, the 13-year-old shot and killed by deputy Erick Gelhaus on October 23, 2013, whose ghost still haunts Santa Rosa’s streets.

Jonah Raskin is the author of “Marijuanaland: Dispatches from an American War.”

Oh Captain, My Captain: Cloverdale Performing Arts Center Shares Online Poetry Series with the North Bay

When the Covid-19 pandemic forced North Bay theater companies to shutter their stage productions in March, many theaters took to the Internet to continue their work.

Some have taken to Zoom for live-streaming presentations of their productions, others are putting up videos of past productions for viewing.

The Cloverdale Performing Arts Center is taking a new route for their stay-at-home plans by undertaking a series of social media-based entertainment programs like the center’s online Dead Poets Society, led by Cloverdale native and CPAC resident director Amy Lovato.

“When the theatre shut down, I reached out to the board and Artistic Director Yavé Guzmán, to see what the future held,” Lovato says. “It was hard to hear that the theatre may not survive the shutdown due to cancelled performances and no known date to re-open.”

Lovato teamed up with fellow CPAC director and actor Alessandra Ziviani to think about how they could produce a form of programming for patrons and the North Bay community that would also benefit the performing arts center.

With the board’s encouragement, they went forward with three social media campaigns; “Make-Up Mondays”, which provides theatrical make-up tutorials; “FlashBack Fridays” where the performing arts center posts photos, videos or slideshows of productions from the past and the new Dead Poets Society.

“As far as CPAC’s Dead Poets Society is concerned, we wanted there to be an outlet for the community to express themselves during this time, and poetry is such a versatile piece of art,” Lovato says. “It can be read, performed and interpreted in so many ways. Poetry is also a wonderful form of self-expression, which gives people a way to release pent-up emotions in a creative way; especially during shelter in place, when emotions are running high.”

Already, the poetry series has uploaded dozens of videos on YouTube, where poets and non-poets alike. Participants can recite their own words, or –if they can’t find the words themselves, or aren’t interested in writing their own poetry– participants can choose one of the many poetic works that can be found within the public domain; which is what led Lovato to the name “Dead Poets Society.” Poetry that is not within the public domain is also able to be performed under the principle of fair use.

“Social media is an open platform for sharing creativity and self-expression and the easiest way to reach the community during a shutdown,” Lovato says. “Kim Ziviani, a former CPAC board member, aptly nicknamed our Dead Poets Society artists ‘The Pandemic Players,’ which I thought was appropriate. But, CPAC’s Dead Poets Society is a way for everyone to engage as much or as little as they want.”

Anyone in the community can send Lovato and CPAC any poetry that they would like to see read, or they can participate by sending CPAC their own poetry videos and “check in” at CPAC when they post to Facebook or Instagram. The society encourages participants to base their poems on the weekly themes that the society takes on, with recent themes concerning injustice, love and nature. Those who simply want to watch the poetry videos can easily find them on CPAC’s Youtube, and the other social media programs can also be found on the center’s Facebook page.

The community artists that have lent their talents on camera include Lovato and Ziviani as well as Beulah Vega, Arte L Whyte, Jonathan Graham, Christopher Johnston, William B Thompson, Karen Lovato, Caitlin Morrison, Dan Stryker, Nichole Phillips, Dawn Gibson, Marisha Zeffer, Emily Stryker, Joe Dobbins, Guy Conner, Seana Maclure, Ashlyn Delfino, Tania Richardson, Dobie Edmonds, Jude Gibson, Angela Squire, José Esparza, Domenic Bianco, Bob Williams, Linda Hughes Freeth, Sarah Bird, and Scarlett Johnston, Jessika Ceniceros and Kim Ziviani.

“We welcome feedback and invite the community to share their ideas for themes for upcoming weeks,” Lovato says. “When we started we had no idea how long we’d be putting these things together, so it’s definitely a work in progress. We’ve adjusted our schedule a few times, and will continue to do so. We love to see how people interpret the theme each week!”

Lovato adds that the video series’ ultimate goal is to create a continued collaboration with the community, partially to stay relevant during the theatre’s closure, but mostly to give an outlet to those that may want or need one during this time.

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Streaming Beethoven: North Bay Chamber Musicians Take to the Internet

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Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1856) was one of the most famous and revered composers of his time, and he’s remained one of the most popular figures in classical music for more than two centuries, so it’s safe to assume he knew his works would be performed long after his death.

Yet, there’s no way he could have predicted that those concerts would come via radio and television broadcasts as well as Internet streaming. Though that’s exactly what is happening this summer, as the Valley of the Moon Music Festival becomes the latest North Bay event to move online for 2020 in the wake of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

Based in the heart of Sonoma Valley, the historically accurate chamber music organization originally planned an ambitious 2020 program centered around Beethoven’s influence on chamber music. That program has been delayed to summer of 2021, and in its place, the festival will present an equally ambitious virtual schedule of concerts that will focus on Beethoven’s many smaller works.

First, Valley of the Moon Music Festival co-founder and musician Eric Zivian performs a series of weekly solo concerts that will be broadcast on local radio and television before they are available to stream on the festival’s website.

That series begins this Saturday, June 13, and runs through the calendar year. Given that 2020 is the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, Zivian will perform the complete cycle of Beethoven’s 32 sonatas for piano.

“Were it not for the shelter-in-place order, this is a project I would never have had time to take on,” says Zivian. “As a feat of endurance, it’s a challenge not unlike hiking the full length of the Pacific Crest Trail. It’s also a wonderful opportunity to explore the full range of Beethoven’s style, and the emotion, humor and spirituality of these treasures.”

Zivian specializes in playing the fortepiano, an early version of the piano that dates between the late 18th to early-19th century and which was heavily used by composers like Haydn, Mozart, and the younger Beethoven, who wrote his piano sonatas on the instrument.

Over the course of the 2020 sonata cycle, Zivian will use two different Viennese fortepianos corresponding with the instrument’s changing sound during Beethoven’s lifetime. Zivian will use a smaller Paul Poletti-made copy of a 1795 fortepiano for the earlier sonatas and an original 1841 Rausch-made fortepiano for the later sonatas.

Every Saturday, the concerts will broadcast on KSVY 91.3 FM radio at 11am and Sonoma Valley Television, SVTV 27, at 6pm, and the performances will also be available for streaming free of charge on the Valley of the Moon Music Festival website for a week after each broadcast.

Bay Area musicians and scholars from the festival’s Blattner Lecture Series will introduce each sonata and provide commentary, with speakers including Nicholas Mathew, author of Political Beethoven and associate professor in the Department of Music at UC Berkeley; Nicholas McGegan, former artistic director at Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra; and Kate van Orden, Harvard University’s Dwight P. Robinson, Jr. Professor of Music. Members of the festival’s “Virtual Beethoven Society” can also get early access to each new installment with weekly live-streams of Zivian’s performances on Wednesdays.

In addition to the year-long weekly cycle of Beethoven’s piano sonatas, Valley of the Moon Music Festival hosts a Virtual Beethoven Festival, running online July 18 – August 2, with concerts exploring the composer’s various chamber works and featuring performers including Zivian alongside fellow festival co-founding director and cellist Tanya Tomkins, violinist Francisco Fullana, viola player Liana Bérubé, fellow fortepiano player Audrey Vardanega and soprano vocalist Maya Kherani.

The Virtual Beethoven Festival will live-stream a new concert each Saturday and Sunday from July 18 – August 2 at 4pm. All programs are entirely free to the public. A suggested donation of $10 will go directly to supporting the festival’s artists and staff.

The complete Valley of the Moon Music Festival virtual program and more information can be found at valleyofthemoonmusicfestival.org.

Sonoma County Photography Project Offers a Way to Protest Through Art

For the last two weeks, peaceful protests around the North Bay and around the country have dominated headlines, as scores of citizens have taken to the streets to demand major changes to policing and to renew the call that “Black Lives Matter.”

In Sonoma County, thousands of people have marched in Santa Rosa, and hundreds more have made their voices heard in towns like Healdsburg and Sonoma.

Now, Sonoma County-based FTA (For the Art) Productions–formed by actor Carmen Mitchell and photographer Marcus Ward–is offering an additional way for locals to participate in these demonstrations with a Peaceful Protest Portrait Project.

FTA Productions kicked-off the protest art project last week with a Black Lives Matter curbside photo booth in Healdsburg, where approximately 75 people showed up with signs and face coverings. Ward took individual and group portraits of protesters that can be viewed online now and will be turned into a large mosaic collage at a later date in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

FTA Productions is organizing a second photo booth event this Saturday, June 13, at Brew Coffee & Beer House in downtown Santa Rosa. Given that June is Pride month for the LGBTQIA+ community, this upcoming photo booth will continue supporting the BLM movement against police brutality as well as celebrating the lives of queer Black people and the Pride movement.

FTA Productions co-founder Carmen Mitchell is a Sonoma County native who grew up as a competitive figure skater and ballet dancer, training at Snoopy’s Home Ice and the Santa Rosa Dance Theater respectively. She skated professionally with ‘Disney on Ice’ for many years and now works as an actor and singer, founding nonprofit Redwood Theatre Company in Healdsburg.

Mitchell recently moved to New York City to pursue musical theater, though the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the arts industry there and everywhere else in the country. “All of my friends in the arts became unemployed overnight,” she says.

Back at home in Sonoma County until the entertainment industry reopens, she found herself surrounded by other North Bay artists also stuck in the same predicament.

One of those artists is FTA Productions’ other co-founder, Marcus Ward, who works as a freelance photographer and dancer in Sonoma County. Last month, the two friends found a communal inspiration to add to Sonoma County’s peaceful protests through their art.

“We started with a few portraits of our friends in the dance community here in Santa Rosa, and it just grew,” Mitchell says.

After Mitchell and Ward hosted the first protest photo shoot at the black-box Redwood Theatre Company in Healdsburg on June 5, Mitchell says that Brew Coffee & Beer House got wind of the project and offered to host the upcoming Black Lives Matter and Pride photo booth on June 13.

“We’re providing the paper, pens, everything for people, they just need to come with a mask,” says Mitchell. The upcoming photo event will also have a video component where Ward will record people delivering their personal messages of protest.

Mitchell points out that the protest art project is more than a two-person operation, and she credits fellow organizers Desmond Woodward, Alleya Torres and Eddie Melendéz for making the project a success.

“The definition of art is to hold a mirror up to humanity, it is a reflection of society,” Mitchell says. “This is very personal for me because I grew up in a Disney filter. For the first time, I feel like I’m tapping into powerful art that is more than just commercial.”

Mitchell wants to assure protesters that the project is not trying to lessen the importance of the Black Lives Matter movement by incorporating the Pride element in this weekend’s event, but rather the group is focused on how the two communities intersect. “Queer Black Lives Matter also,” she says. “We’re trying to incorporate the celebration of Pride and equality.”

Mitchell also notes that this project is not meant to replace the marches and gatherings that are happening every day, but to bolster those movements. “We are trying to create a safe space where everyone is welcomed to participate in art without judgment,” Mitchell says. “There’s so many ways to take action, this was our way of hitting the pavement, and we’ve got some backlash hate from it, but it’s ok. We are trying to do better in creating community support and awareness through art.”

The Black Lives Matter/Pride curbside photo booth runs Saturday, June 13, at Brew Coffee and Beer House, 555 Healdsburg Ave, Santa Rosa. Noon to 3pm. Get details on Facebook.

New Moon: Marin musician goes solo on EP

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Like many people in Marin County, teacher and musician Colin Schlitt has been stuck at home for more than two months.

The longtime Point Reyes Station resident is best known musically in Marin as the bassist and occasional vocalist for eclectic alternative-pop ensemble El Radio Fantastique. Now, Schlitt turns up the reverb with his solo project Peppermint Moon, which released a digital EP, A Million Suns, in late April.

The new EP follows Peppermint Moon’s 2019 debut album, Symphony of Sympathy, and the five tracks on A Million Suns find Schlitt crafting psychedelic dream pop that walks the line between the Beatles and early Radiohead, with forlorn vocals akin to Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy and melodic hooks that would make Beck jealous.

Schlitt grew up in Point Reyes Station after his family moved there from New York. His musical education began early.

“I’ve always been interested in music,” Schlitt says. “I started tinkling on the piano as soon as I was tall enough to reach the keys.”

He also discovered his parents’ record collection at a young age, playing their copy of the Beatles’ Revolver until he wore out the vinyl.

“I was so fascinated with those sounds,” he says. “That is one of my earliest memories.”

After reluctantly taking piano lessons and learning guitar, Schlitt found his instrument of choice in the electric bass when he was 16 years old.

“I feel like the bass is the essence of every song, like every song can get boiled down to the bass musically,” Schlitt says.

Schlitt’s bass influences include Paul McCartney, John Entwistle of The Who, Motown-legend James Jamerson and Bruce Thomas, who is best known as the bass player with Elvis Costello & the Attractions.

After high school, Schlitt moved to Los Angeles to play music, though he moved back to Point Reyes Station more than a decade ago to raise his daughter with his partner.

Once back in Marin, Schlitt hooked up with songwriter and bandleader Giovanni Di Morente and joined Di Morente’s bombastic El Radio Fantastique.

“When I joined the band, (Di Morente) asked me if I had any songs, and I played some songs for him,” Schlitt says. “He was so encouraging that I started to develop that more. This side project Peppermint Moon would not exist without his encouragement.”

Schlitt’s songwriting process employs a lyrical trick that he learned from Di Morente.

“You come up with a melody first, and instead of coming up with lyrics, you sing gibberish with a lot of vowels,” Schlitt says. “As you do that over and over, subconsciously you start to fill in words here and there, and it’s amazing how the meaning of the songs develop themselves in this subconscious way.”

For this project, Schlitt played every instrument himself, including drum tracks performed on a synthesizer, and he assembled up to 24 individual musical tracks for each song. The entire record was recorded in Schlitt’s Point Reyes house, where he turned his bedroom into a makeshift studio.

“I love being in the band and I love collaborating with people, but it’s also really satisfying doing it myself in its own way,” he says.

At first, A Million Suns was simply going to be a single, but the shelter-in-place orders gave Schlitt plenty of time to write more songs, and he turned the single into an EP.

“This project has made a big difference keeping me sane and busy,” Schlitt says.

In addition to this solo EP, Schlitt can be heard on El Radio Fantastique’s new tracks that will be released digitally over the summer. The first released single, “London’s Fatal,” is up now on El Radio Fantastique’s Bandcamp page.

“We had these songs we were just finishing up mixing when the pandemic hit,” Schlitt says. “As a band, El Radio Fantastique is waiting for this to play out. Thankfully, we had this stuff recorded and ready to go.”

Peppermint Moon’s ‘A Million Suns’ EP is available online now at peppermintmoon.bandcamp.com.

Peppermint Moon Goes Solo on New EP

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Photo By Tamarind Free Jones
Photo By Tamarind Free Jones

Like many people in Marin County, teacher and musician Colin Schlitt has been stuck at home for more than two months.
The longtime Point Reyes Station resident is best known musically in Marin as the bassist and occasional vocalist for eclectic alternative-pop ensemble El Radio Fantastique. Now, Schlitt turns up the reverb with his solo project Peppermint Moon, which released a digital EP, A Million Suns, in late April.
The new EP follows Peppermint Moon’s 2019 debut album, Symphony of Sympathy, and the five tracks on A Million Suns find Schlitt crafting psychedelic dream pop that walks the line between the Beatles and early Radiohead, with forlorn vocals akin to Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy and melodic hooks that would make Beck jealous.
Schlitt grew up in Point Reyes Station after his family moved there from New York. His musical education began early.
“I’ve always been interested in music,” Schlitt says. “I started tinkling on the piano as soon as I was tall enough to reach the keys.”
He also discovered his parents’ record collection at a young age, playing their copy of the Beatles’ Revolver until he wore out the vinyl.
“I was so fascinated with those sounds,” he says. “That is one of my earliest memories.”
After reluctantly taking piano lessons and learning guitar, Schlitt found his instrument of choice in the electric bass when he was 16 years old.
“I feel like the bass is the essence of every song, like every song can get boiled down to the bass musically,” Schlitt says.
Schlitt’s bass influences include Paul McCartney, John Entwistle of The Who, Motown-legend James Jamerson and Bruce Thomas, who is best known as the bass player with Elvis Costello & the Attractions.
After high school, Schlitt moved to Los Angeles to play music, though he moved back to Point Reyes Station more than a decade ago to raise his daughter with his partner.
Once back in Marin, Schlitt hooked up with songwriter and bandleader Giovanni Di Morente and joined Di Morente’s bombastic El Radio Fantastique.
“When I joined the band, (Di Morente) asked me if I had any songs, and I played some songs for him,” Schlitt says. “He was so encouraging that I started to develop that more. This side project Peppermint Moon would not exist without his encouragement.”
Schlitt’s songwriting process employs a lyrical trick that he learned from Di Morente.
“You come up with a melody first, and instead of coming up with lyrics, you sing gibberish with a lot of vowels,” Schlitt says. “As you do that over and over, subconsciously you start to fill in words here and there, and it’s amazing how the meaning of the songs develop themselves in this subconscious way.”
For this project, Schlitt played every instrument himself, including drum tracks performed on a synthesizer, and he assembled up to 24 individual musical tracks for each song. The entire record was recorded in Schlitt’s Point Reyes house, where he turned his bedroom into a makeshift studio.
“I love being in the band and I love collaborating with people, but it’s also really satisfying doing it myself in its own way,” he says.
At first, A Million Suns was simply going to be a single, but the shelter-in-place orders gave Schlitt plenty of time to write more songs, and he turned the single into an EP.
“This project has made a big difference keeping me sane and busy,” Schlitt says.
In addition to this solo EP, Schlitt can be heard on El Radio Fantastique’s new tracks that will be released digitally over the summer. The first released single, “London’s Fatal,” is up now on El Radio Fantastique’s Bandcamp page.
“We had these songs we were just finishing up mixing when the pandemic hit,” Schlitt says. “As a band, El Radio Fantastique is waiting for this to play out. Thankfully, we had this stuff recorded and ready to go.”
Peppermint Moon’s ‘A Million Suns’ EP is available online now at peppermintmoon.bandcamp.com.

Why Review Theatre Now?

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What is the point of reviewing theatre?

If you had asked me that question 90 days ago, my answer would be to provide potential audience members some information with which they could make informed decisions on which of the numerous North Bay productions they might choose to spend their discretionary income.

If you had asked me that question 60 days ago, it would be to let potential audience members know about how local theatre companies and artists were trying to stay connected with their patrons via new technology and how that technology worked in comparison to live, in-person performances.

But now?

It’s a question I’ve been wrestling with after “attending” the latest live streaming productions of two companies with North Bay connections – the Zoom Theatre production of Anna Ziegler’s Actually and the Left Edge Theatre production of Small Mouth Sounds.

The events of the past few weeks have weighed as heavily on me as anyone, and the questions being raised nationally about the safety and disenfranchisement of people of color, equal opportunity and fairness are being echoed in the local artistic community, as they should in every micro-community.

Artists of color, sick of seeing the platitudes of inclusiveness being regurgitated once again, are rightfully demanding change after too many years of hearing “your idea is great, but it’s just not right for our audience.”

With that dialogue on-going, do I really want my contribution to it be a discussion of the quality of acting and costuming in a particular production? The difficulties of doing a two-person scene with actors 1,000 miles apart? Bandwidth, screen size and buffering?

Not really.

I believe in the art of theatre. I believe in its power to inform, educate, and entertain. I believe that the North Bay deserves a vibrant theatre community and while I support all theatres’ efforts to stay afloat, the question must now be asked “to what purpose?” It’s a question that companies must now answer with actions, not words.

But words are a start, as long as they are the right words – words of understanding, words of recognition, words of inclusiveness – words that are followed by concrete actions. As much as I’d like to think I have addressed the issues of diversity in casting and material through my reviews, I will put more thought into what my contribution to the discussion can and should be now.

So I’m going to step back from critiquing for a time as theatres do what they must to survive and chart a course of action. I will continue to report on local theatre and through that reporting support and promote those companies that truly embrace inclusiveness (and yes, I recognize there are some that already do) and challenge those that don’t.

I will also challenge the audience to support those companies that are truly welcoming of their presence beyond the price of their admission and for artists to work with companies that value their perspective and acknowledge their artists’ vital role in the commerce of theatre. I will encourage companies to do serious outreach to underserved communities (and, yes, I recognize there are some who do that already, too) and to help facilitate that relationship in any way that I can.

Laurence Olivier once said that he believed “that in a great city, or even in a small city or a village, a great theatre is the outward and visible sign of an inward and probable culture.”

With what we are going through as a society right now, what will North Bay theatre ultimately project?

Sonoma Sheriff Bans Controversial Neck Hold Amid Countrywide Protests

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The Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office will no longer allow officers to use carotid holds, according to a statement released on the agency’s Facebook page on Friday.

The statement, signed by Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick, comes after the agency received a “flurry of emails” about the Sonoma Sheriff’s grade on 8cantwait.org, a newly-formed website that reports whether or not an agency has enacted any of eight recommended safety policies.

“There are several significant errors in their reporting,” Essick wrote of the 8cantwait’s report, pushing back on five points.

First, Essick singled out whether or not the Sheriff’s Office has a ban on chokeholds and strangleholds.

“These holds are not allowed,” Essick wrote on Friday, June 5.

Indeed, a note on the Sheriff’s Policies and Training web page states that “Effective June 5, 2020 the carotid hold is no longer authorized. Policies and training are being updated accordingly and will be posted as soon as they are available.”

That may be true now. But, in the case of the carotid hold, it’s a very recent development and a reversal of Essick’s previous decision.

In implementing the carotid hold properly, an officer places the subject’s neck in the crook of their elbow, applying pressure on the subject’s carotid arteries which run parallel to the windpipe. Because the technique restricts blood flow to the head – the carotid arteries supply between 70-80 percent of blood flow to the brain, according to a California law enforcement training manual – the subject falls unconscious quickly.


But the 2005 training manual also states that “The carotid restraint control hold should not be confused with the bar-arm choke hold or any other form of choke hold where pressure is applied to restrict the flow of air into the body by compression of the airway at the front of the throat.”


Because of the risk of death or serious injury associated with improper use of the carotid hold have led to discussion about its use should still be allowed.

Last December, Essick turned down a long list of Use Of Force policy recommendations prepared by the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO) Community Advisory Committee, a group of volunteers who spend their evenings studying law enforcement policies and interfacing with the community.

(The recommendations are no longer available on IOLERO’s website but the Bohemian has uploaded them here. The Sheriff’s Response to the recommendations is available here.)

[LINK:

IOLERO_Sherriff_Use_Force_Policy_Recommedations_November-15-2019.pdf

Sheriff_s-Response-to-CAC-Recommendations.pdf

]

Among 20 Guiding Principles recommended by the CAC was this: “Carotid restraints and other dangerous chokeholds and maximum restraints are banned.”

In its response, the Sheriff’s Office stated that “In order to truly consider this recommendation, we would need to see data that supports the assumption the carotid restraint and maximum restraint are unreasonably dangerous when applied appropriately.”

“We would also need to have a list of alternatives to these options to deal with combative individuals. Without them the deputies will be restricted to the use of other, potentially more dangerous, uses of force,” the Sheriff’s response continued.

Although the CAC had been working on the recommendations for well over a year, the carotid hold had sparked renewed outrage at the Sheriff’s Office just a week before the CAC formally issued their recommendations to the Sheriff.

On the morning of Wednesday, November 27, officers from the Sheriff’s Office and Sebastopol Police Department stopped a car which had been reported stolen near Sebastopol.

David Ward, the driver and owner of the car, had led officers on a car chase. But, body camera video of the incident shows, that officers did not de-escalate the situation.

Instead, after Ward did not exit his car, Sheriff’s deputy Charles Blount slammed Ward’s head into the car doorframe, Tasered Ward, attempted a carotid hold from an awkward angle and later tried to pull Ward through the car window.

While they were still on the scene, the officers discovered that the man in the car was in fact Ward, not a car thief.

“Oh well,” Blount can be heard saying when he learns who the man lying on the ground is, according to a body camera video of the incident. [TK – CHECK TAPE.]

On Dec. 5, KQED reported that Blount had a history of using the carotid hold—and then lying about it in court.

In May, the Marin County coroner declared Ward’s death a homicide, the result of “Cardiorespiratory Collapse, Blunt Impact Injuries, Neck Restraint and Application of Conducted Energy Device.”

According to data released by the Sheriff’s Office in response to California Public Records Act request, the Sheriff’s Office used two carotid restraints per year between 2015 and 2018, for a total of eight.

Of course, considering that Blount lied about using a carotid restraint in court, it’s not clear whether the data released is entirely accurate.

[LINK: Response_Letter_7-1-19.PDF

In Focus: An introduction to Japanese cinema

Coming on the heels of Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month, here’s our primer for movie-crazy, pop-cultural adventurers looking for seldom-visited territories to explore: Japan is ready for its closeup. Japanese cinema has a rich and rewarding history, but one that never seems to get the same attention eager American film buffs have always lavished on the Europeans....

Enough is Enough

I have asked myself many times this week, when will enough be enough? How many times do we have to see a black man killed in front of us by a police officer for us to say enough is enough? It is not enough to not believe the stereotypes, to not tell that racist joke, to be nice to people...

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New Moon: Marin musician goes solo on EP

Like many people in Marin County, teacher and musician Colin Schlitt has been stuck at home for more than two months. The longtime Point Reyes Station resident is best known musically in Marin as the bassist and occasional vocalist for eclectic alternative-pop ensemble El Radio Fantastique. Now, Schlitt turns up the reverb with his solo project Peppermint Moon, which released...

Peppermint Moon Goes Solo on New EP

Like many people in Marin County, teacher and musician Colin Schlitt has been stuck at home for more than two months. The longtime Point Reyes Station resident is best known musically in Marin as the bassist and occasional vocalist for eclectic alternative-pop ensemble El Radio Fantastique. Now, Schlitt turns up the reverb with his solo project Peppermint Moon, which released...

Why Review Theatre Now?

What is the point of reviewing theatre? If you had asked me that question 90 days ago, my answer would be to provide potential audience members some information with which they could make informed decisions on which of the numerous North Bay productions they might choose to spend their discretionary income. If you had asked me that question 60 days ago,...

Sonoma Sheriff Bans Controversial Neck Hold Amid Countrywide Protests

The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office will no longer allow officers to use carotid holds, according to a statement released on the agency's Facebook page on Friday. The statement, signed by Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick, comes after the agency received a "flurry of emails" about the Sonoma Sheriff's grade on 8cantwait.org, a newly-formed website that reports whether...
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