Summer Score, Music Season in Napa Valley Hits a High Note

One would be forgiven if their first association with Napa Valley is wineโ€”itโ€™s everywhereโ€”but so is music, continuing a perfect pairing that lasts through summer with a whirlwind of concert events.

Between the cultural heavy-hitters at Festival Napa Valley and the chamber music connoisseurs of Music in the Vineyards, the season hits all the right notesโ€”sometimes literally, like the nine high Cs in Donizettiโ€™s La Fille du rรฉgiment. Whether oneโ€™s in it for the arias, the Prokofiev or the pinot, thereโ€™s a seatโ€”and probably a glassโ€”ready.

Festival Napa Valley

The regionโ€™s flagship summer arts festival, Festival Napa Valley, is once again uncorking its signature blend of music, wine and culinary delights at the Culinary Institute of America at Copia and other prime venues throughout the valley. The summer season runs through Sept. 1 and includes everything from opera under the stars to symphonic finales with world-class musicians. While festival passes fetch as much as $12,000, individual tickets range from free to $35โ€”a surprisingly accessible ticket price for the kind of programming that usually comes with black tie and binoculars.

This weekend, the action kicks off with a showcase of rising stars: the students and faculty of the Frost School at Festival Napa Valleyโ€™s Blackburn Music Academy. The immersive, tuition-free program offers emerging professional instrumentalists the rare opportunity to study with some of the worldโ€™s top artists in an environment thatโ€™s more vineyard than practice room.

The chamber concert takes place at 11am, Friday, July 18 at the Jackson Family Wines Amphitheater at CIA at Copia (500 1st St., Napa). Overlooking the Napa River, the venue offers a dramatic open-air stage perfect for midday musical musings. Admission is free, though reservations are recommended.

From there, itโ€™s a quick corkscrew over to PlumpJack Estate Winery (620 Oakville Cross Rd., Napa), where the midday Vintnerโ€™s Luncheon pairs fine dining with fine drama. The estate, founded in the mid-โ€™90s and named for Shakespeareโ€™s wine-loving rogue, Falstaff, hosts a performance of arias and duets from Plump Jack, the opera by Napaโ€™s own Gordon Getty. Soprano Alexandra Armantrading, baritone Lester Lynch and pianist Kevin Korth lead the bill, accompanied by a display of Christian Lacroix costumes from that eveningโ€™s opera performance. Think couture meets cabernet.

Later that evening, the festival shifts gears to the grand stage at Charles Krug in St. Helena (2800 Main St.) for the North American debut of the Versailles Royal Opera. The production? Donizettiโ€™s La Fille du rรฉgiment, the perennially crowd-pleasing comic opera about Marie, a plucky orphan raised by soldiers, who falls in love with the wrong aristocrat. Itโ€™s got everything: slapstick, star-crossed lovers and one of the most acrobatic tenor arias in the repertoire.

The show-stopping aria with its nine high Cs will be matched in flair by the productionโ€™s visual aesthetic. Christian Lacroixโ€™s costumes lend a haute-couture air to the already ebullient staging by director Jean-Romain Vesperini. Itโ€™s fashion-forward, operatically old-school and perfectly Napa.

This evening begins with a festive reception for patron passholders in the Festivalโ€™s Patron Lounge. General admission guests can enjoy Charles Krug wines, available for purchase, and take in the festivalโ€™s Culinary Garden during intermission. A dessert reception closes the night for patrons, because no aria should go unanswered without a petit four.

Finally, the festival wraps this weekend with its Symphonic Finale on Sunday, July 20, once again at the Charles Krug stage. Stรฉphane Denรจve conducts Festival Orchestra Napa in a program that nods to both Shakespeare and summerโ€™s end.

The concert includes a suite from Mendelssohnโ€™s A Midsummer Nightโ€™s Dream, complete with the famed Wedding March, and is paired with Prokofievโ€™s Romeo and Juliet Suite, a musical rendering of love and fate (and swords). Visual art created by students and seniors from the festivalโ€™s year-round How I See Music workshops will illuminate the performance, tying community and creativity into one elegant bow.

Festival Napa Valley runs through Sept. 1 at various venues throughout Napa Valley. Tickets range from free to $35; festival passes $3,750-$12,000. For full schedule, tickets and more information, visit festivalnapavalley.org or call 707.346.5052.

Music in the Vineyards

While Festival Napa Valley might grab headlines with its gala-sized grandeur, the 31st season of Music in the Vineyards (MITV) offers an equally compelling counterpoint. Running Aug. 1-24, the chamber music festival brings world-class musicians to intimate, often iconic, winery venues across Napa Valley.

Opening night, now relocated to the CIA at Copia to accommodate more attendees, sets the tone with Schubertโ€™s โ€œTroutโ€ Quintet performed by pianist Evren Ozelโ€”fresh off his bronze win at the 2025 Van Cliburn International Piano Competitionโ€”and a cadre of acclaimed string players. The performance overlooks the Napa River and Oxbow Preserve. And for those who like to pregame their sonatas, the onsite Grove at Copia is accepting dinner reservations.

This yearโ€™s MITV theme is Transformation, with performances that cast new light on familiar compositions. Featured artists include the Borromeo, Pacifica and Ariel string quartets, as well as the Pavone String Quartetโ€”this yearโ€™s fellowship winners from Rice Universityโ€™s Shepherd School of Music.

And itโ€™s not just high-brow programming for ticketed audiences: MITV also delivers music directly into the community through events in senior centers, Boys & Girls Clubs and other public spaces. Their โ€œPlay-Alongโ€ concert invites community musicians to bring their own instruments to Napa First Presbyterian Church and join in the ever-popular Canon in Dโ€”a musical rite of passage that turns the audience into the ensemble.

Family-friendly programming includes a recital by the Pavone Quartet at Congregation Beth Shalom, offered at special pricing. Other venues throughout the season include the likes of Domaine Carneros, Hess Persson Estates, Spottswoode Estate and Silverado Vineyardsโ€”making each concert not just a performance but a place-based experience.

Whether one finds themself sipping a well-structured cab while watching Mendelssohn at sunset or hearing Schubertโ€™s piano ripple through a barrel room, the valley offers a symphony of experiences worth toasting.

Music in the Vineyards runs Aug. 1-24 at winery venues across Napa Valley. Tickets and full schedule available at musicinthevineyards.org.ย 

Petaluma’s Rivertown Revival Offers Music & Art

Now in its 14th year, Rivertown Revival returns to Steamer Landing Park on the McNear Peninsula Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, from 5 to 10 each night. The waterfront festival brings together music, art, food and community spirit in celebration of the Petaluma Riverโ€”and all things delightfully eccentric.

Hosted annually as a benefit for the nonprofit Friends of the Petaluma River, Rivertown Revival is known for its vibrant mix of local culture and creative spectacle. The event helps fund year-round educational and environmental programs, including river cleanups, nature camps, in-school watershed education and free boating initiatives.

This yearโ€™s music lineup spans two evenings on the Barn Stage, starting Friday with a family-friendly set by Farmer Arann & Miss Heidiโ€™s Farm Music at 5:20pm, followed by performances from Van Goat, LaiddBackZach and headliners The Space Orchestra at 8:45pm. 

Known for recreating the legendary 1970 โ€œMad Dogs and Englishmenโ€ concert led by Joe Cocker and Leon Russell, The Space Orchestra features a three-piece horn section, two drummers, backup singers and lead vocals by Sebastian Saint James. The evening closes with a roving set by The Hubbub Club at 9:45pm.

Saturdayโ€™s musical slate opens with Farmer Arannโ€™s Barn Dogs and continues with Spike Sikes & His Awesome Hotcakes, Audio Angel & Her Good Intentions and headliner Sean Hayes at 8:45pm. Hayes, whose soulful sound reflects his roots in New York and North Carolina as well as three decades in the Bay Area, has collaborated with artists including Aimee Mann, Frazey Ford and The Wood Brothers. The Bourbon Street Brass Band concludes the festival at 10pm.

In addition to music, Rivertown Revival features a curated selection of local visual artists and large-scale installations. Painter and builder Jonny Hirschmugl brings Petaluma-inspired work steeped in nostalgia and storytelling, while WonderStump previews its soon-to-open immersive art venue with interactive sculptures blending technology, narrative and play.

Sculptor Kevin Clark of Reared in Steel contributes dramatic fire-infused metalworks, and Karen Lockert shares pieces shaped by years of imaginative reinvention following a career in art education. Her sons, Jim and Stephen Lockert, both exhibit original works as wellโ€”ranging from sculptural to conceptual.

Returning favorites include Stan Clarkโ€™s Astro Botanicals, large inflatable forms designed as dreamlike flora, and Tony Speirs and Lisa Beerntsenโ€™s โ€œGame of Hope and Fear,โ€ an interactive installation presented by the duoโ€™s collaborative project, Art Farm. Also returning is artist and inventor Stephen Milborrow and his โ€œPortrait Drawing Machine.โ€

Festival-goers can also enjoy food and beverages from local vendors, acrobatic performances andโ€”for those so inclinedโ€”$5 weddings. A hallmark of the event, the pop-up ceremonies offer legal or symbolic nuptials performed by volunteer officiants, including Bohemian and Pacific Sun editor Daedalus Howell, who will also emcee the event.

โ€œWe are incredibly excited to bring Rivertown Revival back to the community for another fantastic year,โ€ says Elizabeth Howland, Friends of the Petaluma Riverโ€™s founder and board secretary. 

โ€œThis festival is not just about great music and art; itโ€™s a vital fundraiser that directly supports our mission to promote stewardship of the Petaluma River through education, conservation and community engagement. Every ticket purchased helps us continue our vital work for this incredible natural resource,โ€ Howland continues.

Rivertown Revival began as a grassroots celebration of the Petaluma River and has grown into one of the North Bayโ€™s most anticipated annual events. Its blend of entertainment and environmental advocacy remains at the core of its mission, with all proceeds supporting Friends of the Petaluma Riverโ€™s work to protect and promote the local watershed.

Rivertown Revival,  5-10pm, Friday and Saturday, July 18-19 at McNear Peninsula, Steamer Landing Park, Copeland Street, Petaluma  Tickets and full lineup information are available at rivertownrevival.com and vor.us/b2e6e

The Stars Depart with Closing of Strange Constellation Art Space

Although the queer and BIPOC led art space was open for โ€œjustโ€ a year and nine months, Strange Constellation was met with the kind of sudden, galvanic, runaway horsesโ€™ success that only happens when a new venture fills a deep yearning need in a community.

The closure comes with multiple reasons. The easiest of which to grasp was the question of money, and how to maintain such an expressly anti-capitalist space for community amid the grinding requirements of late capitalism. There were giftsโ€”oh, there were so many gifts of time, talent, art and flowers from the marginal community that they served, but too few dollars among them. Owners Dani DiAngelo and Lee Johnson were forced to work multiple other jobs amid housing insecurity, debt spending, car troubles and no safety net. And now the limit has been reached.

Still raw in their grieving process, DiAngelo and Johnson agreed to meet for an early statement on the closing, and to talk at my request about how the wider community might thank them for their unpaid work and help them through their next steps.

Cincinnatus Hibbard: Tell me about opening the space.

Dani DiAngelo: I had come from restaurant management. I was GMing and hating it. I took a year off to study herbalism and figure out what I wanted to do that wasnโ€™t working for a millionaire white man. And I was frustrated by the lack of spaces like this that represent usโ€”us being BIPOC and other marginalized communities that have been told a million times that this is Wine Country and itโ€™s a happy place if you love working in wine and serving people wine โ€ฆ but I donโ€™t enjoy any of those things (they laugh).

Lee Johnson: Factual.

DD: In Northern California, everyone thinks they are an ally and impervious to racism and classismโ€ฆ

LJ: โ€ฆwhich we both found is so far from the truth, in so many ways (they laugh) from working in the [wine focused] restaurant where we met to walking around the streets togetherโ€ฆ

DD: Yeah, so many micro-aggressionsโ€”and macro-aggressions on the regular.

LJ: We were always in other peopleโ€™s spaces, not having anywhere to feel safe. Not having anywhere to let my shoulders down and just breathe. Always walking around ready for a fight.

Tell me about co-creating the space with the community.

DD: When we opened as an art space, people were like, โ€œWhat does that mean?,โ€ and we said, โ€œYou tell us.โ€

LJ: What do you need it to mean? This worldโ€™s a little scary โ€”what do you need?

You tried a lot of their ideas and there were a lot of one-offs, but you were best known for what emerged as regularโ€”your weekly craft night hangs, your Sunday performance spotlights, your First Friday events and your annual Juneteenth block parties. Could you shout out just a few of the key collaborators that helped you build this?

DD: Cecilia ลženocak, Bianey Esquibel of Quince Project, Da Components Collective, nadia solano of Cariรฑo Vintage, Dabid Ortega of Tacos El Gran Mac, Mathilde Amiot and Joshua Thwaites of Big Mouth Unique, BiankA AlloyN & SabreeN NaimaH of I Love Cute Coffee. Many moreโ€ฆ

What advice do you have for those that will come after you?

LJ: Itโ€™s never going to be easy, but do it anyway, because no matter how far or long it goes, itโ€™s going to be worth it.

Learn more. For closeout events and final sales, follow @__strangeconstellation, and help DiAngelo and Johnson continue to make art with donations at gofund.me/046b3e8d.

Free Will Astrology: July 16-22

0

ARIES (March 21-April 19): For the Dagara people of Burkina Faso, the element of fire has profound cultural meanings. Itโ€™s a symbol of innovation and inspiration. Itโ€™s a mediator between the physical and spiritual worlds and a conduit for communication with the ancestors. Through rituals, fire is a purifying and renewing force that helps people reconnect with their purpose, heal relationships and catalyze positive change in the community. In the coming weeks, Aries, I hope you will be deeply aligned with all these symbolic meanings. What are you ready to ignite for the sake of nurturing and care? What truths need light and heat? What future visions would benefit from surges of luminosity?

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the Nahuatl language spoken by Indigenous Mexicans, the word nepantla describes an in-between space. Itโ€™s a liminal threshold where a transition is in process. The old ways have fallen away, but the new ways are not yet fully formed. Itโ€™s unsettling and perhaps confusing, yet seeded with the potential for creative change. I suspect you are now in a state resembling nepantla, Taurus. Please understand that this isnโ€™t a crisis. Itโ€™s a chrysalis. Any discomfort you feel is not a sign of failure, but a harbinger of the wisdom and power that will come by molting the identity you have outgrown. I hope you will honor the rawness and speak tenderly to yourself. You are not lost; you are mid-ritual.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The sea slug Elysia chlorotica is a small, unassuming creature that performs a remarkable feat: It eats algae and steals its chloroplasts, then incorporates them into its own body. For weeks afterward, the slug photosynthesizes sunlight like a plant. I believe, Gemini, that you are doing a metaphorical version of this biological borrowing. Some useful influence or presence you have absorbed from another is integrating into your deeper systems. Youโ€™re making it your own now. This isnโ€™t theft, but creative borrowing. Youโ€™re not copying; youโ€™re synthesizing and synergizing.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ancient beekeepers in Anatolia carved hives directly into rock faces, coaxing honey from the cliffs. This practice was designed to protect bees from harsh weather and predators while maximizing honey production. The bees adapted well to their unusual homes. I suspect, Cancerian, that in the coming weeks, your sweetness and bounty may also thrive in unlikely structures. It could take a minute or two for you to adjust, but that wonโ€™t be a problem. Your nectar-making instincts will guide you. So I advise you not to wait for the perfect container before beginning your work. Make honey in the best available setting.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I laughed until I sobbed as you earnestly played the game of love even after the rules had changed. I sighed till I panted as you dredged up a new problem to avoid fixing an overripe hassle. I rolled my eyes until I got dizzy as you tried to figure out the differences between stifling self-control and emancipating self-control. But all thatโ€™s in the past, right, Leo? Now Iโ€™m preparing to cheer until my voice is raspy as you trade in a dried-up old obsession in favor of a sweet, fresh, productive passionโ€”and outgrow all the fruitless nuisances.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The ancient scribes of Mesopotamia etched records onto clay tablets with styluses, pressing wedge-shaped marks into wet earth. Once baked, these tablets endured for thousands of years. Some are still readable today. In my astrological assessment, Virgo, you are undergoing a metaphorically comparable process. Messages and expressions that are forming within you are meant to last. They may not win you immediate attention and applause. But you already suspect how crucial they will be to both your own future and the destinies of those you care for. Be bold, decisive and precise as you choose your words.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Is there any aspect of your life or character that is still unripe even though it is critical to your life-long journey? Have you held on to your amateur status or remained a bit dilettantish beyond the time when you might have progressed to the next highest level? Are you still a casual dabbler in a field where you could ultimately become masterful? If you answered yes to these queries, now is a perfect moment to kick yourself in the butt and leap to the next level. Waiting around for fate to kick your butt would be a mistake.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Many astrologers rightfully say that Virgo is the most detail-oriented, meticulous sign. I think you Scorpios may be the most methodical and thorough of all the signs, which means that you, too, can be meticulous and detail-oriented. A prime example is the Scorpio sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840-1917). Eventually, his work became world-renowned, but his career developed gradually because of his painstaking patience and scrupulous devotion to excellence. I propose we make him your role model for now. Inspired by him, resist pressure for immediate results. Trust in the slow, steady refinement process.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Here are half of your words of power for the coming days: windfall, godsend and boon. The other half are potion, remedy and healing agent. If youโ€™re lucky, and I think you will be, those terms will blend and overlap. The blessings that come your way will be in the form of cures and fixes. Iโ€™m being understated here so as to not sound too wildly excited about your immediate future. But I suspect you will wrangle at least one amazing victory over hardship. Your chances of a semi-miraculous visitation by a benevolent intervention are as high as they have ever been.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The ancient Chinese character for โ€œlisteningโ€ contains symbols for ears, eyes and heart. I interpret this to signify that itโ€™s not enough to seek the truth with just one of your faculties. They must all be engaged and working together to get the full story. You are wise to survey the world with your whole being. Keep these meditations in mind during the coming weeks, Capricorn. Your natural inclination is to be practical, take action and get things done. But for now, your main superpower will be listening to everything. So my advice is to listen with your skin. Listen with your breath. Listen with your gut. Let your attention be so complete that the world softens and speaks to you about what you really need to know.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): If you would like to glide into rapt alignment with astrological rhythms, give gifts to your two closest allies. These offerings should inspire their ambitions, not indulge their cravings to be comfortable. They shouldnโ€™t be practical necessities or consumer fetishes, but rather provocative tools or adult toys. Ideally, they will be imaginative boons that your beloved companions have been shy about asking for or intriguing prods that will help beautify their self-image. Show them you love both the person they are now and the person they are becoming.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Piscean photographer Ansel Adams is so renowned that heโ€™s in the International Photography Hall of Fame. We know the moment that his lifelong passion erupted. At age 14, his family gave him a simple camera and took him to Yosemite National Park in California. โ€œThe splendor of Yosemite burst upon us, and it was glorious,โ€ he wrote later. โ€œOne wonder after another descended upon us. A new era began for me.โ€ In the coming months, I foresee you encountering a comparable turning point, Piscesโ€”a magical interlude awakening you to a marvel that will become an enduring presence in your life. Be alert for it. Better yet, declare your intention to shape events to ensure it happens and youโ€™re ready for it.

Your Letters, July 16

Gov Is the Prob

Itโ€™s pretty easy to say that the government is the problem, as Ronald Reagan did.

The people who represent his party often run for office claiming the government doesnโ€™t work, and then when they get in, they do whatever it takes to prove they were right. The party of Richard Nixon. 

OK, then, anyone who doesnโ€™t like the government should be required for just one day to keep their kids home from public school, stay out of public parks or any public recreation area, stay out of a post office and stay off of any public highway or other civic thoroughfare. 

Get docked of Social Security benefits, stay out of court, stay off the phone with police and fire officials, avoid free vaccinations at public health facilities, donโ€™t take classes at COM, stay home from the county fair and off of all Civic Center property, and otherwise free oneself of any public benefits. No library visits, either, and you canโ€™t register to vote.

No bridges, no beaches, no fishing and no hunting on public access land, like Yosemite. No Medicaid, no school lunch programs, no food stamps, no empathy allowed.

This is the new Mike Johnson fundamentalist Proud Boys Viking hat feet on Nancy Pelosiโ€™s desk, run, Josh Hawley run, bribe a justice, oligarch regime. Knock yourselves out, kids. When you get mad enough, go burn down 30 Rock. They started it.

Craig J. Corsini
San Rafael

Devil in the Details

I take exception to Tom Tomorrow’s misrepresentation of Donald Trump as the Devil (This Modern World, July 9). First of all, the Devil is personally attractive and charming. Trump is not. The Devil is intelligent. Trump is not. The Devil is sophisticated. Trump, for all his worldly experience, remains a yahoo. Finally, the Devil, despite his disreputable status, was and still remains an angel, albeit a fallen one. Believe me, there is nothing angelic about Trump.

David Madgalene
Windsor

Culture Crush, 7/16

0

Santa Rosa

Fridays at the Hood

The Fridays at the Hood Summer Concert Series returns to the lawn of historic Hood Mansion on July 18, launching six weeks of live music under the stars. Opening night features the Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra with powerhouse vocalist Willy Jordan, performing on the Levi Lloyd Stageโ€”named for the late Santa Rosa blues icon. The family-friendly series blends music, food, dancing and community in an outdoor setting. Proceeds support the Peace & Justice Center of Sonoma County. 6-9pm, Friday, July 18, at Hood Mansion, 389 Casa Maรฑana Rd., Santa Rosa. Tickets $15-$25; kids 12 and under free. More at fridaysatthehood.com.

Petaluma

โ€˜Blueโ€™ To-Do

Opening July 17, My World in Blue is a juried group exhibition at the Petaluma Arts Center that explores the symbolic and emotional depth of the color blue. Through painting, photography, collage and mixed media, artists take on themes ranging from serenity to vastness to melancholy. Digital artist Jeffrey Ventrella contributes โ€œCosmic Atomโ€ (as seen above), a 30″x30″ metal print created with generative algorithms that echo both micro and macro worldsโ€”a convergence of art, code and imagination. 5:30-7:30pm, Thursday, July 17 (opening reception); on view through Aug. 23, at Petaluma Arts Center, 230 Lakeville St. More at petalumaartscenter.org.

San Rafael

Childโ€™s Eye View

Donโ€™t Letโ€™s Go to the Dogs Tonight, opening July 18 at the Smith Rafael Film Center, follows eight-year-old Bobo as she navigates a divided world on the eve of Zimbabweโ€™s 1980 independence. Based on Alexandra Fullerโ€™s memoir, the film captures the emotional complexity of growing up amid war, with a childโ€™s perspective illuminating both love and loss. A Sony Pictures Classics release, the film runs 98 minutes, is rated R, and is presented in English and Shona with English subtitles. Opens Friday, July 18, at Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael. Tickets and showtimes at rafaelfilm.cafilm.org.

San Geronimo

Last Great Dream

As part of the Valley Arts and Lecture Series, the San Geronimo Valley Community Center hosts author and cultural historian Dennis McNally for a discussion of his latest book, The Last Great Dream: How Bohemians Became Hippies and Created the Sixties. McNallyโ€”well known as the Grateful Deadโ€™s longtime publicistโ€”traces the roots of the counterculture from the salons of North Beach to the communes of Haight-Ashbury. Heโ€™ll be in conversation with poet and author Albert Flynn DeSilver. Books will be available onsite via Point Reyes Books. 6:30pm, Wednesday, July 30, at San Geronimo Valley Community Center, 6350 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. More at sgvcc.org.

Open Mic: In Reply…to the Social Security Commissioner

Dear Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignanoโ€”I received your letter. It looked like an official Social Security Administration (SSA) communique, but I could see it was not from the institution that, as you say, โ€œFor nearly 90 years โ€ฆ has been a cornerstone of economic security for older Americans.โ€

So, it must have come from you, commissioner.

Iโ€™d like to explain how the many astoundingly bad measures in โ€œThe One Big Beautiful Billโ€ will hurt Americans; how loss of health care for 17 million Americans will damage the health of the entire nation; how loss of food assistance, for millions of children who depend on it, will hurt them through their entire lives; how increasing the federal deficit by $4 trillion, without investing that money in benefits for most citizens, will mean less prosperity for all but a microscopic minority; how the tax changes, sold as beneficial to everyone, give less than $300 savings to a family earning under $50,000 a year, but give $90,000 to those with $1 million annual income. 

It would take many pages to debunk the many lies inherent in your ludicrous claim that the bill will provide โ€œโ€ฆ meaningful and immediate relief to seniors who have spent a lifetime contributing to our nation’s economy.โ€ But the truth is simple. The bill will cause a colossal shift of wealth from regular folks to the super wealthy, and an overall impoverishment and sickening of our nation.

Your fraudulent letter confirms you donโ€™t intend to do the job the American people have given you. That job can only be done by someone with thorough expertise in the field, and a passion to serve and protect our fellow Americans. You have neither. You only have the competence to do the job youโ€™ve really been assigned: destroy Social Security.

There is only one way that you can say, โ€œSocial Security remains committed to providing timely, accurate information to the public and will continue working โ€ฆ to ensure beneficiaries understand how this legislation may affect them.โ€ That is that you are lying.

Robert Nuese is a retired general and electrical contractor who receives Social Security in Graton.

Gin Win: Griffo Distilleryโ€™s Scott Street Gin crowned โ€˜Americaโ€™s Greatestโ€™

Time to raise a glassโ€”Petalumaโ€™s own Griffo Distillery has just been named the producer of โ€œAmericaโ€™s Greatest London Dry Ginโ€ for 2025 by The Gin Guild at American Distilling Instituteโ€™s (ADI) International Spirits Competition.

The winning bottle? Scott Street Gin, a crisp, citrus-forward spirit made with wild juniper berries and locally sourced Sonoma Meyer lemons (it must be mentioned that master distiller Dr. Mike Griffo has an app that alerts him when neighborsโ€™ lemon trees are ripe for the zesting). The Gin Guildโ€”a global body dedicated to promoting excellence in ginโ€”praised the Petaluma spiritโ€™s keen balance of botanicals. 

CEO William Maroun sees the award as something bigger than bragging rights. โ€œTake one award by itself and it doesnโ€™t mean a whole heck of a lot,โ€ he said. โ€œBut you start stacking themโ€”Best of Show, White Spirit of the Year, now thisโ€”and itโ€™s validation. It means something.โ€ In fact, Scott Street Gin quietly nabbed yet another Best of Show award just days before this one. Let the celebration beGIN.

And itโ€™s not just spirits judges swooning. Anecdotally, itโ€™s become the gin for people who think they hate gin. โ€œYou pour them a taste and they go, โ€˜Ohโ€ฆ I didnโ€™t know I liked gin,โ€™โ€ said Maroun. He chalks that up to Griffoโ€™s deft dodge of common pitfalls: too piney, too floral, too syrupy. Instead, Scott Street Gin leans into something subtler. A soft complexity. A balance.

Thatโ€™s the word that comes up again and again: balance. Not surprising, given Dr. Mike Griffoโ€™s scientific approach to distillation. The guy designed their custom Vendome still himselfโ€”and monitors its performance via text alerts. The man is half wizard, half engineer. โ€œHeโ€™s very much a scientist,โ€ Maroun said. โ€œBut heโ€™s got a phenomenal palate. Thereโ€™s artistry in the science.โ€

Griffo Distillery, founded in 2013, specializes in what it calls โ€œscientifically crafted spiritsโ€โ€”a term redolent of beakers and Bunsen burners but more a testament to the precision exhibited in every pour. From their award-winning gin and vodka to their cult-favorite Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur (made with Equator Coffees, naturally), the distillery has become a quietly potent force in American craft spirits.

It helps that Griffoโ€™s Petaluma DNA runs deep. The fermenter is an old dairy tank. The vibe is farm-to-glass. And while the juniper berries are imported from Italy (organic, of course), the brandy grapes and Meyer lemons are decidedly local. One can taste the terroirโ€”or at least the neighborhood.

Though two-thirds of Griffoโ€™s business comes from contract distilling (yes, thereโ€™s a secret gin or two out there with a Griffo provenance), Scott Street remains their flagship. Itโ€™s been their standard bearer since the beginningโ€”same formula, same still, no tweaks to chase trends. โ€œWe might launch a new SKU if the market drifts,โ€ said Maroun. โ€œBut this one? This one is perfect.โ€

And now, officially, America agrees. Drink accordingly.

Visit Griffo Distillery at 1320 Scott St., Suite A, Petaluma. 707.879.8755. griffodistillery.com.

We Hold These Truths: A New Declaration of Independence

0

In high school, she was quiet. She was kind, with flashes of dark wit, but boy was she quiet. Basically, she was a typical kid. 

Today, โ€œJenny W.โ€ is still pretty reserved, but has emerged as a powerful writer and thinker, a woman who senses the national moment and offers a document. Descended from โ€œa handful of founding fathers,โ€ including Declaration of Independence author Thomas Jefferson, she heard, she says, a call. Aware of her specific position as descendent of those enslaving, genocidal settlers, she took on the work of rewriting that declaration.

โ€œIโ€™m a researcher, a pattern spotter,โ€ she says. Her concerns include chronic pain, trauma, the healthcare system; these have affected her own life. She especially focuses on government structures, and she perceives the U.S. to be controlled by a small number of corrupt, self-interested peopleโ€”that is, an oligarchy.

โ€œThe intention in writing this is to create a focal point,โ€ Jenny says, โ€œto awaken the people to the fact that we are in control, not the ruling class.โ€ That there are so many more of us than there are of them. That together, we can make change, as the people often have. As Ursula K. LeGuin said of capitalism, that oligarchyโ€™s โ€œpower seems inescapableโ€”but then, so did the divine right of kings.โ€

The two declarations are related, like their authors, but like the humans, theyโ€™re also philosophically opposed. Crucially, Jenny W. makes no call to arms. โ€œThis is a peace movement,โ€ she says, aligned with ambitious nonviolent projects including the General Strike, generalstrikeus.com/strikecard, inspired by historical bloodless revolutions, the Indivisibles and the numberless, leaderless, acts of resistance of the majorityโ€”most recently the spontaneous good trouble in Minneapolis, where an ICE arrest was forcefully opposed by people who happened to be walking by when it happened.

On June 14, copies of the New Declaration of Independence will circulate on paper in original colonial cities including Boston, New York, Williamsburg, Jamestown and Philadelphia. With a โ€œSend to Seven,โ€ phone-tree, tell-a-friend approach instead of social media plus a simple web presence, the declaration is everyoneโ€™s to sign. Later, a Third Continental Congress.

As we head into yet another round of massive anti-fascist, pro-democracy street protests, we might find inspiration by screaming these lines aloudโ€”even this typical kid canโ€™t stay quiet any longer.


When a government fails to represent its constituents and performs tyrannical acts affecting Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, it is the right and duty of the people to throw off that government and return equality to every person.

In the year 2025, in the United States alone, 801 billionaires possess a combined wealth of $6.22 trillion. The richest 1% of the global population now own more money than the bottom 95% combined.

The rapid accumulation of such wealth among the few negatively impacts a high percentage of the American people. 

We address this Declaration to the ruling class of oligarchs that has created this inequality and challenge your authority to do so. 

We see the despair you have created in millions of Americans due to your greed.

We see the distractions you create as you exploit the last resources of the earth. 

We know hate is your favored tool of division, and you stir it up for your own benefit, by pitting your two factions, the right and the left, against each other. 

We know there are harmful chemicals, metals and plastics in our food, cosmetics, air and water. Microplastics and other toxins are a cause of illness and anxiety. 

We see you profiting from an exorbitant yet largely ineffective medical system, and we no longer believe itโ€™s our fault we canโ€™t thrive. 

We see war as a battle among oligarchs. We have no hate for our fellow humans across the globe or across town, and we will not fight for you.

We see you culling the sick, disabled and the elderly by removing resources or applying endless layers of red tape until dispirited people are homeless or dead. 

We see why you ban abortion: Oligarchs need workers and buyers, or capitalism dies. But women are not baby machines to prop up your tottering dynasties.

We see violence toward women and the LGBTQ+ community as a tactic to keep them feeling divided and unsafe. This came about with widespread conditioning.

We know the American people have been kept compliant with ill health, delivered through a chemical-laden and barely nutritious food supply and stress. 

We see how you discredit doctors who donโ€™t play big pharmaโ€™s game, and ostracize or jail those who use plant healing.

We see your showmanship, your denials and your bullying, carefully orchestrated for division and control. 

We know you intentionally drive up the cost of housing by buying up affordable homes and raising the rents or leaving them empty.

We see employees with signs of mental illness are discarded to the streets. The pressure to cope with your constraints as well as untreated trauma is incredible.

We see how we are encouraged to soak in entertainment and alcohol to numb ourselves to the constant friction of this life.

We see how forcefully you discredit people wakeful enough to see you. 

The American people are powerfully raising our consciousness levels, high enough to see your inexcusable constraints on our right to live in abundance on this earth. We demand the cessation of all hostile actions towards the American people so we can heal the divisions you put forth for us to stumble over.


The ruling class criminally exempted themselves from taxes while forming illegal monopolies and paying stagnant wages for many millions. We will levy back taxes and distribute that wealth to where it is needed.

We demand the end of immigrant persecution and enslavement now.

We demand an education system that prepares us for being fully human, not for subservience to an oppressive ruling class.

We demand alternate energies at a fair cost, phasing out earth-warming fossil fuels.

We forbid the use of nuclear arsenals and demand their dismantling.

We demand the end of harmful plastics, chemicals and coatings that poison us and make us anxious.

We demand a free press which delivers uncensored news.

We demand retribution for the victims of โ€œManifest Destiny,โ€ the original peoples, and for the descendants of the enslaved.

We demand the dissolution of this โ€œfor-profitโ€ puppet government.

We demand the redevelopment of democracy by a diverse group of people who want to lead, not get rich. We will trust those who have earned respect to lead deep reform of biased systems. 

Prisoners will be rehabilitated meaningfully to help them recover from tragic lives and forced labor. The for-profit prison system will be dismantled.

If the oligarchy walks away from businesses that are vital services to humans, we will take them over and run them with heart and fairness.

The vast real estate held by the super-rich will be turned over to the people, and rents and property values will be controlled by the people.

Medicine will revert to a focus on healing the whole person, not on profits, and will be widely available and affordable.

Our energy and attention will no longer be on hate. Rather, community and connection will arise for all races, genders, cultures and creeds.

Industries damaging to the earth will cease, such as fracking, polluting, mining, damming rivers and burning fossil fuels. Green energies will fill the gaps.

We will reestablish the American Dream for our youth and teach them what freedom feels like. 

Our species is not inherently warlike. It is the current ruling class that places the rest of us in peril. They profit from war and try to keep us hatefully divided. We wonโ€™t forget that united we stand, divided we fall. 

We understand what follows may be a collapse of money systems that most benefit capitalists. We will build a better system, and we will develop it with the safety of millions of people in mind: the students, the artists, the elderly, the scientists, the sick. 

Nothing in this document promotes exclusion, non-democratic control or a dominance by any one gender, race, group, religious affiliation or any other body that may attempt to conquer or take control.

Scan this!

Kitchen Collab, Lodge at Marconiโ€™s Chef Les Goodman

It would be hard to find any similarities between West Marin County and Las Vegas. But for chef Les Goodman, a culinary career spanning 25 years is the connecting point from his hometown of Las Vegas to Marshall, leading up the kitchen at Lodge at Marconiโ€™s brand new restaurant, Mableโ€™s. 

Goodman has a passion for exploring different cultures and cuisines from across the globe, as well as imparting his knowledge with others through a collaborative approach with his staff. He also serves as associate faculty chef instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College, teaching the next generation about global influences in modern cuisine. 

Having settled in Sonoma County more than 15 years ago, he previously served as executive chef and CEO of Goodmanโ€™s Jewish Delicatessen in that same county. Outside the kitchen, he enjoys family time, traveling, outdoor exploration and gardening.

Amber Turpin: What is your job?

Les Goodman: Executive chef at Mableโ€™s at Lodge at Marconi

How did you get into this work?

My mother would tell you that I started as a toddler trying to make myself some eggs. I had the pan on the stove, eggs in the pan, but didnโ€™t know how to turn the burner on, thankfully. 

I grew up watching a lot of PBS cooking shows in the โ€™80s and early โ€™90s. Then in 8th grade I had a choice between doing a science project and a mentor program. I chose the mentor program and was able to secure a stint with Andre Rochat back home in Las Vegas. I had to work a full dinner service on a Saturday night and never looked back.

Did you ever have an โ€˜ahaโ€™ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

Thatโ€™s a hard one. There have been some new types and styles of wines that I have been introduced to that I love, like a delicious assyrtiko from Greece or the newest varietal being a picpoul, which some wineries are moving towards because of its sustainability aspect of not needing as much water as most grapes.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

Wine with dinner. But at the end of the night, I stick with whisky, scotch, rye or bourbon.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I donโ€™t go out to drink that often, but Lo and Behold in Healdsburg or Fern Bar in Sebastopol have some great drinks.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

Itโ€™s an island, so something refreshing: a mojito or caipirinha-style drink.

Mableโ€™s at Lodge at Marconi, 18500 Hwy. 1, Marshall, 415.663.9020. mablesrestaurant.com.

Summer Score, Music Season in Napa Valley Hits a High Note

Culture and music in Napa Valley
One would be forgiven if their first association with Napa Valley is wineโ€”itโ€™s everywhereโ€”but so is music, continuing a perfect pairing that lasts through summer with a whirlwind of concert events. Between the cultural heavy-hitters at Festival Napa Valley and the chamber music connoisseurs of Music in the Vineyards, the season hits all the right notesโ€”sometimes literally, like the nine...

Petaluma’s Rivertown Revival Offers Music & Art

Waterfront art and music festival returns to Petaluma
Now in its 14th year, Rivertown Revival returns to Steamer Landing Park on the McNear Peninsula Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, from 5 to 10 each night. The waterfront festival brings together music, art, food and community spirit in celebration of the Petaluma Riverโ€”and all things delightfully eccentric. Hosted annually as a benefit for the nonprofit Friends of...

The Stars Depart with Closing of Strange Constellation Art Space

Dani DiAngelo and Lee Johnson
Although the queer and BIPOC led art space was open for โ€œjustโ€ a year and nine months, Strange Constellation was met with the kind of sudden, galvanic, runaway horsesโ€™ success that only happens when a new venture fills a deep yearning need in a community. The closure comes with multiple reasons. The easiest of which to grasp was the question...

Free Will Astrology: July 16-22

Free Will Astrology by Rob Brezsny
ARIES (March 21-April 19): For the Dagara people of Burkina Faso, the element of fire has profound cultural meanings. Itโ€™s a symbol of innovation and inspiration. Itโ€™s a mediator between the physical and spiritual worlds and a conduit for communication with the ancestors. Through rituals, fire is a purifying and renewing force that helps people reconnect with their purpose,...

Your Letters, July 16

Gov Is the Prob Itโ€™s pretty easy to say that the government is the problem, as Ronald Reagan did. The people who represent his party often run for office claiming the government doesnโ€™t work, and then when they get in, they do whatever it takes to prove they were right. The party of Richard Nixon.  OK, then, anyone who doesnโ€™t like the...

Culture Crush, 7/16

Petaluma Art Centerโ€™s โ€˜My World in Blueโ€™ exhibit.
Santa Rosa Fridays at the Hood The Fridays at the Hood Summer Concert Series returns to the lawn of historic Hood Mansion on July 18, launching six weeks of live music under the stars. Opening night features the Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra with powerhouse vocalist Willy Jordan, performing on the Levi Lloyd Stageโ€”named for the late Santa Rosa blues icon. The...

Open Mic: In Reply…to the Social Security Commissioner

Open Mic writers express their perspectives on a variety of topics.
Dear Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignanoโ€”I received your letter. It looked like an official Social Security Administration (SSA) communique, but I could see it was not from the institution that, as you say, โ€œFor nearly 90 years โ€ฆ has been a cornerstone of economic security for older Americans.โ€ So, it must have come from you, commissioner. Iโ€™d like to explain how...

Gin Win: Griffo Distilleryโ€™s Scott Street Gin crowned โ€˜Americaโ€™s Greatestโ€™

Time to raise a glassโ€”Petalumaโ€™s own Griffo Distillery has just been named the producer of โ€œAmericaโ€™s Greatest London Dry Ginโ€ for 2025 by The Gin Guild at American Distilling Instituteโ€™s (ADI) International Spirits Competition. The winning bottle? Scott Street Gin, a crisp, citrus-forward spirit made with wild juniper berries and locally sourced Sonoma Meyer lemons (it must be mentioned that...

We Hold These Truths: A New Declaration of Independence

In high school, she was quiet. She was kind, with flashes of dark wit, but boy was she quiet. Basically, she was a typical kid.  Today, โ€œJenny W.โ€ is still pretty reserved, but has emerged as a powerful writer and thinker, a woman who senses the national moment and offers a document. Descended from โ€œa handful of founding fathers,โ€ including...

Kitchen Collab, Lodge at Marconiโ€™s Chef Les Goodman

Chef Les Goodman from Mable's, a new restaurant in Marshall, California
It would be hard to find any similarities between West Marin County and Las Vegas. But for chef Les Goodman, a culinary career spanning 25 years is the connecting point from his hometown of Las Vegas to Marshall, leading up the kitchen at Lodge at Marconiโ€™s brand new restaurant, Mableโ€™s.  Goodman has a passion for exploring different cultures and cuisines...
11,084FansLike
4,606FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow