On Metal Wings

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Conceived over a game of Magic: The Gathering and named for the Viking spirits, the North Bay’s newest heavy metal outfit, Arm the Valkyrie, come armed with an array of Norse mythology, Dungeons & Dragons lore, comic-book cues and cosplay culture built into its grindingly ethereal sound.

“The goal was to allow no restrictions on scope or vision, no compromise of identity,” says vocalist Anjrew

Joseph Johnson, who goes by the name of Spectre; all five members have adopted pseudonyms, like characters in a role-playing game.

“We listen to everything we can get our hands and ears on,” Johnson says. “And between the combined experience of all the members, there probably isn’t a style of metal we haven’t played in some past project.”

For Arm the Valkyrie, the band members decided to pool their resources into a new body of music. The results can be heard on Arm the Valkyrie’s debut three-track EP, Sojourn, which displays a diverse crossover of prominent metal styles blended into a new brand of Viking metal.

Each track on the EP builds in speed and scale, lyrically evoking images of frost-covered vistas while haunting atmospheres of sonic otherworldliness permeate through the use of aggressively strummed 12-string bass lines, pummeling percussion and smoldering guitar riffs.

Recorded live in one afternoon at Loud & Clear studios in Cotati, Sojourn sounds all the heavier due to Johnson’s extreme vocals, which were exasperated by a bout of bronchitis.

“It was a wretched experience for sure,” he says. “Our bassist, Mordred [Ben Shackelford], thought the effects of the sickness just added to the sound and insisted we keep the take.”

Originally a four-piece, Arm the Valkyrie recently added guitarist Ed “the Shred” Fullmer, whose other band, Barren Altar (“Play It Black,” March 1, 2017), just released their doom-laden debut LP, Entrenched in the Faults of the Earth, to rave reviews in the metal community. Arm the Valkyrie open Barren Altar’s album-release concert on June 22 at the Arlene Francis Center.

“Every one of us is in the band that we want see play live,” Johnson says. “That’s the reason why we do this, and as long as you stay true to that ideal, you stop needing any other reason to play music.”

Arm the Valkyrie storm the North Bay with Barren Altar and others on Friday, June 22, at the Arlene Francis Center, 99 Sixth St., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $13; all ages. armthevalkyrie.bandcamp.com.

Art Rock

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Live music makes people do all sorts of things. Some folks are compelled to dance, some can’t resist singing along and some feel the need to shout “‘Free Bird’!”

For Neal Barbosa, live music puts him in the mood to paint, and he does it onstage while bands perform at venues throughout the Bay Area and beyond, a practice known as live painting.

Originally from Orange County, Barbosa was already a talented young artist when he moved to the North Bay at age 15 to live with his “hippie uncle.”

“He introduced me to all kinds of music that was going on around here,” Barbosa says. “I really wanted to be involved in that, but I didn’t play an instrument at the time, so I asked myself, ‘What do I do?’ And I came up with the idea of live painting.”

Barbosa isn’t the first to paint live onstage; artists like Denny Dent have been painting along to live music since the 1960s, though Barbosa didn’t know about Dent when he started. Evolving organically over the last 15 years, Barbosa’s live painting was born out of a love for music and art, and his work synergizes both creative endeavors.

“I’ve worked with so many bands that like it, because it’s something new and something that gets the crowd going,” Barbosa says. “I’ve had musicians tell me that they can feel my energy, and vice versa, and it sparks them to do something a little more.”

Barbosa originally went to gigs without a clue as to what he would paint, but he’s refined the process in the last decade and a half. These days, he’ll sketch out several rough ideas before the set so the crowd can watch a piece take shape in a timelier manner, usually over the course of three to five songs. Some pieces are portraits, some are abstract; Barbosa says it all depends on what energy he taps into once he hears the music.

Barbosa has painted onstage with artists like Les Claypool, the Wailers, the New Mastersounds, Eric Lindell and others. This week, he’ll be on an outdoor stage in downtown San Rafael, painting along to live sets by Danny Click & the Hell Yeahs! and Moonalice at the annual Italian Street Painting Marin fine art event on June 23–24.

For this annual showcase’s 2018 theme, “Wonders of Space & Time,” Barbosa is incorporating images of celestial bodies into his planned live paintings, which will be available for sale after they’re completed.

“I’m really excited about it,” Barbosa says. “I’ll be painting with both hands.”

Letters to the Editor: June 20, 2018

New Sheriff
in Town

I’m an ardent John Mutz supporter. The loss was tough, but this is an encouraging piece about Mark Essick and his program (“The Road Ahead,” June 13). It would be beneficial for the citizens of Sonoma County if Essick reached out to Mutz for advice on applying quality management techniques to the department. This is an approach Mutz developed to change the challenging culture of the LAPD—bringing in top management experts from private industry to provide a true service approach to policing.

Via Bohemian.com

Word Choices

I don’t see why the second letter referring to Jewish influence on our political system should not have been printed (“Ugly Words,” June 13). Jewish Power is the title of a book by J. J. Goldberg, extolling and examining the power of American Jews in U.S. politics, and Californian Joel Stein explains clearly why Jews own (and should, he argues) Hollywood. It’s certainly within the Bohemian‘s purview to deprive readers of a topic they should be aware of, but to do so renders them a disservice.

Via Bohemian.com

Do Bohemian readers actually know what they have in this award-winning newspaper? Stett Holbrook’s “Ugly Words” is clear, accurate and truthful. It goes beyond the legal requirements for the policy of a newspaper. It’s a lesson in democracy. Without a free press, we lose the democracy. The Bohemian is one of the last bastions of the free press.

Via Bohemian.com

ICE Cold

The U.S. Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, has violated established international law and cherished American values by requiring immigrants seeking asylum in the United States to abandon their children in order to gain entry. In defense of his usage of such a threatening “deterrent,” he is quoted as saying that immigrants will be “prosecuted according to the law” for any violations, and “if they don’t want to leave their children, then they can stay out of the country. It’s not our fault.” I don’t agree with the “president” on much of anything, but I do agree with one of his latest tweets that he should never have appointed Sessions as attorney general.

Santa Rosa

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

There Goes the Neighborhood

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What I will miss most are the children. Babies in carriers, 10-year-old girls coming from soccer games with their “besties,” boys in baseball uniforms. That’s what Carmen’s Burger Bar has meant to me: a neighborhood restaurant serving families. The bar defined the smallish adult space. The large dining area opened up with tables and a high ceiling where families assembled. Older folks came in. A covered porch in front provided al fresco dining.

Carmen’s Burger Bar served the families of the Proctor Terrace area. It has been—and will be until June 30—a place where families could gather and order excellent hamburgers, an assortment of Mexican food, milkshakes, beer, wine and Margaritas for a reasonable price.

Carmen’s Burger Bar was a focal point for the neighborhood. All that will change after June 30, when the Stark’s juggernaut displaces Carmen’s with a new iteration of the upscale Willi’s Wine Bar that burned down in the October fires.

The Stark empire comprises four upscale Sonoma County restaurants metastasizing from Stark’s Steakhouse. Willi’s Wine Bar was located on Old Redwood Highway north of town. None could remotely be classified as a neighborhood restaurant. I have never seen a kid in a sports uniform in any of them.

Proctor Terrace organizes a warren of streets around a small shopping center featuring the Pacific Market and Carmen’s, brooded over by the Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery. The new Willi’s Wine Bar will not be a place to take your kids after a tough game or to socialize with the parents of the kids’ teammates. Not a place to watch the Giants on one of Carmen’s two TV sets, or to feed a family of four for $50. Willi’s attracted crowds of young, well-paid, Mercedes-driving, college-educated professionals who could afford the steep prices. If they had children, they’d left them with a sitter.

I will miss the children, the families and the feeling of neighborhood.

Dr. John Omaha is a marriage and family therapist who lives in
Santa Rosa.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Rock On

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If you’re still looking for a fruit-forward wine that doesn’t suck rocks, get with it: wet stones are the hot topic in wine these days. Minerality is the on-trend, catch-all term for aromas of crushed rock and flavors of wet slate, and some winemakers are trying to find out how to get more of it in the bottle.

So what is minerality? The big surprise at a seminar on minerality recently presented by the wine lab Enartis USA in Windsor was how little time was spent on what it is not: minerals. When asked something along the lines of, “You all know that minerality doesn’t come from the soil, right?” none of the attendees dared shake their head in ignorance.

While acknowledging that he has often compared wines to the sight of the vineyard soils, veteran winemaker Christian Roguenant said it’s just the power of suggestion. In his presentation, Roguenant ticked off a list of reasons that various aromas like iodine, flint and fossilized seashells—all common descriptors for wines of various regions—are not actually derived from the mineral composition of the soil or the wines, with the possible exception of some salts, which, romantic notions of sea breezes aside, can land on the grapes as dust, far from the ocean.

“We need a little romance,” said presenter Deborah Parker Wong, global wine editor for The SOMM Journal and a wine instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College, “but the facts can be just as interesting as fiction.” She said that when her students understand the terms of minerality, even after learning it’s not a direct taste of the soil (as is still touted by wine marketers and vignerons, alike), they’re willing to trade up in wine quality—and price—all the same. Parker Wong lamented that American wineries lag far behind the Europeans in using mineral terms in a consumer-friendly way.

I hit the minerality jackpot when I received a bottle of Benziger 2017 Paradiso de Maria Sonoma Mountain Sauvignon Blanc ($36), as it’s one of the few domestic wines that mentions minerality on the back label, and the wine’s showy aroma of crushed tufa brings me right back to the Enartis classroom, where I was treated to a neutral wine spiked with benzyl mercaptan—with a background hint of the stemmy pyrazine sample. These and other compounds, formed during winemaking but also, presenters said, influenced by viticulture and sometimes terroir, are responsible for the aromas wine tasters experience as minerality.

Fruit aromas are largely sidelined here, although crushed lemon blossom and white grapefruit add character to the candied, crystalline acidity. But now I’m thinking back to the time I visited the place where the winery crushes crystals in its biodynamic preparations shop, so there’s that power of suggestion again.

Illegal No More

Among the many illogical aspects of federal drug policy, the classification of hemp as a Schedule I narcotic is near the top. But that may be over with the Senate’s passage of a new farm bill last week.

Great for making clothes, paper and biodegradable plastic (but incapable of getting you high), hemp is classified the same as heroin and PCP, thanks in large part to the racist roots of American drug policy that saw use of cannabis—redubbed “marijuana” because it sounded scarier and more foreign— as a scourge among blacks and Latinos. Hemp, a non-psychoactive form of Cannabis sativa once a staple crop in America, got caught up in the dragnet.

The Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 regulated the cultivation and sale of all cannabis varieties, hemp included. The Nixon-era Controlled Substances Act of 1970 classified all forms of cannabis as a Schedule I drug. But the good news is the bad policy is slowly unraveling.

While you’d never hear him say a discouraging word about Donald Trump’s ruinous policies, Sen. Mitch McConnell is bullish on hemp as an alternative to tobacco in his home state of Kentucky. Before the Senate’s vote on a five-year farm bill last week that included a hemp rider, McConnell championed the plant. The Senate Majority Leader’s legislation, the Hemp Farming Act, removes industrial hemp from the list of federal controlled substances.

“I think it is time to act. People have figured out this is not the other plant [cannabis],” McConnell said. “I think it is an important new development in American agriculture.”

McConnell backed a pilot program in the 2014 farm bill that allowed for industrial hemp production for fiber and edible seeds.

Besides legalizing hemp as an agricultural commodity, the legislation names states as the primary regulators of industrial hemp, encourages research through USDA competitive grants and allows hemp farmers to apply for crop insurance, reports the Food and Environment Reporting Network.

The House of Representatives takes up the farm bill next; if it passes, it then awaits the president’s signature.

Meanwhile in California, an industrial hemp bill from Sen. Scott Wilk, R-Antelope Valley, is making its way through committee. Among other things, SB 1409 would open the door to more hemp farmers and hemp varieties by removing the requirement that industrial hemp seed cultivars be certified on or before Jan. 1, 2013. The bill would also create a hemp pilot project like that conducted in Kentucky and also Oregon and Colorado.

Critics of the bill, however, say it restricts hemp cultivation to larger, deep-pocketed companies at the expense of small-scale farmers looking to reap the economic benefits of hemp, which is a major source of CBD oil.

June 14-16: Showcase Weekend in Healdsburg

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Benefiting the Healdsburg Center for the Arts, the three-day Healdsburg Art Food Wine event boasts all things artisanal, as local and international artists are displayed in several galleries with the best food and wine from the region on hand. From a kick-off cocktail party near the Healdsburg Plaza to art tours of Oliver Ranch and Chalk Hill Road wineries, and evening receptions at locales like Geyserville’s Dallas Saunders Gallery and downtown Healdsburg’s ÆRENA Galleries & Gardens, there’s something to satisfy art lovers of every taste. Thursday to Saturday, June 14–16, at several locations. Times and prices vary. healdsburgartfoodwine.com.

June 16: New Tradition in Cotati

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After 37 years of the Cotati Jazz Festival, the town and its chamber of commerce are updating their agenda and expanding on the concert concept with this summer’s inaugural Cotati Music Festival. Celebrating Cotati as a varied and vibrant musical hub, the new festival features performances from Sonoma County rock ’n’ roll, Americana and rockabilly acts like the John Courage Trio, Highway Poets, Danny Sorentino and Derek Irving. Local food, wine and beer will flow, and families are invited to spend a day grooving to the music on Saturday, June 16, at La Plaza Park in downtown Cotati. Noon to 6pm. Free admission. cotati.org.

June 18: Hop On in Napa

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The Wine Train has long been a popular tasting tour of the Napa Valley for wine aficionados, but the valley is branching out into the microbrew scene and the train is switching tracks for the new Hop Train weekly riding event. Think of it as a tap takeover on the rails, as Napa Palisades Beer Company hops aboard and brings a couple kegs with them to serve their Gold Rush Red, Loco IPA and other selections alongside small bites in an open-air car. Hop to it on Monday, June 18, 1275 McKinstry St., Napa. 5pm. $75. winetrain.com.

June 18: Pedal Party in Petaluma

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Bicycling is an everyday activity in communities across the North Bay, and it’s thanks in part to the work of organizations like Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition, which promotes bicycling in and between local cities, and the Redwood Empire Mountain Bike Alliance, which focuses on bicycling in nature. These two groups host the debut Paths & Pavement Mixer, where bicycle advocates and lovers can come together to enjoy Lagunitas brews, catered food from Lombardi’s Gourmet Deli and BBQ, and live music from the Pulsators. Monday, June 18, at Lagunitas Tap Room, 1280 N. McDowell Blvd., Petaluma. 5:30pm. $20–$25. pathsandpavement.brownpapertickets.com.

On Metal Wings

Conceived over a game of Magic: The Gathering and named for the Viking spirits, the North Bay's newest heavy metal outfit, Arm the Valkyrie, come armed with an array of Norse mythology, Dungeons & Dragons lore, comic-book cues and cosplay culture built into its grindingly ethereal sound. "The goal was to allow no restrictions on scope or vision, no compromise...

Art Rock

Live music makes people do all sorts of things. Some folks are compelled to dance, some can't resist singing along and some feel the need to shout "'Free Bird'!" For Neal Barbosa, live music puts him in the mood to paint, and he does it onstage while bands perform at venues throughout the Bay Area and beyond, a practice known...

Letters to the Editor: June 20, 2018

New Sheriff in Town I'm an ardent John Mutz supporter. The loss was tough, but this is an encouraging piece about Mark Essick and his program ("The Road Ahead," June 13). It would be beneficial for the citizens of Sonoma County if Essick reached out to Mutz for advice on applying quality management techniques to the department. This is an...

There Goes the Neighborhood

What I will miss most are the children. Babies in carriers, 10-year-old girls coming from soccer games with their "besties," boys in baseball uniforms. That's what Carmen's Burger Bar has meant to me: a neighborhood restaurant serving families. The bar defined the smallish adult space. The large dining area opened up with tables and a high ceiling where families...

Rock On

If you're still looking for a fruit-forward wine that doesn't suck rocks, get with it: wet stones are the hot topic in wine these days. Minerality is the on-trend, catch-all term for aromas of crushed rock and flavors of wet slate, and some winemakers are trying to find out how to get more of it in the bottle. So what...

Illegal No More

Among the many illogical aspects of federal drug policy, the classification of hemp as a Schedule I narcotic is near the top. But that may be over with the Senate's passage of a new farm bill last week. Great for making clothes, paper and biodegradable plastic (but incapable of getting you high), hemp is classified the same as heroin and...

June 14-16: Showcase Weekend in Healdsburg

Benefiting the Healdsburg Center for the Arts, the three-day Healdsburg Art Food Wine event boasts all things artisanal, as local and international artists are displayed in several galleries with the best food and wine from the region on hand. From a kick-off cocktail party near the Healdsburg Plaza to art tours of Oliver Ranch and Chalk Hill Road wineries,...

June 16: New Tradition in Cotati

After 37 years of the Cotati Jazz Festival, the town and its chamber of commerce are updating their agenda and expanding on the concert concept with this summer’s inaugural Cotati Music Festival. Celebrating Cotati as a varied and vibrant musical hub, the new festival features performances from Sonoma County rock ’n’ roll, Americana and rockabilly acts like the John...

June 18: Hop On in Napa

The Wine Train has long been a popular tasting tour of the Napa Valley for wine aficionados, but the valley is branching out into the microbrew scene and the train is switching tracks for the new Hop Train weekly riding event. Think of it as a tap takeover on the rails, as Napa Palisades Beer Company hops aboard and...

June 18: Pedal Party in Petaluma

Bicycling is an everyday activity in communities across the North Bay, and it’s thanks in part to the work of organizations like Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition, which promotes bicycling in and between local cities, and the Redwood Empire Mountain Bike Alliance, which focuses on bicycling in nature. These two groups host the debut Paths & Pavement Mixer, where bicycle...
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