Warren Haynes Comes to LBC

To say Warren Haynes wears a lot of creative hats is truly an understatement.

Not only was he recruited to play guitar alongside co-founding member Dickey Betts when the Allman Brothers Band reformed in 1989, right up through the band’s 2014 farewell show. But Haynes found enough time to form jam-band Gov’t Mule as a side project in 1994—a group he continues to lead to this day.

In addition, Haynes hit the road as a part of Phil Lesh and Friends, The Dead and The Last Waltz Tour. And somehow, the North Carolina native has managed to carve out a solid solo career. After nearly a decade, Haynes pivoted from the group dynamic with last year’s Million Voices Whisper, his first solo effort since 2015’s Ashes & Dust.

Credit the pandemic and a chance for the 65-year-old musician to spend some time contemplating life for this addition to his catalog. Haynes will perform at Santa Rosa’s Luther Burbank Center for the Arts on May 4.

“I usually only do a solo record when I feel like I’ve written a fresh batch of songs that don’t sound like Gov’t Mule songs but seem to work together and have some sort of intertwining connection,” Haynes said in a recent interview. “I was just writing so much music starting with the Covid lockdown that carried forward. I have a lot of music that I was really excited about recording, so that’s what led to this record.”

He added, “I think the common thread seems to be, from a lyrical standpoint, looking at things from a different lens, from a new vantage point, and doing a lot of reflecting—looking at the future and trying to approach life from a new light in a positive way in letting a lot of the baggage from the past go.

“Musically, I was just kind of exploring some new directions. I think the lyrical approaches on this record are fresh for me as well. I just felt like in a lot of ways, it’s a new chapter, and I didn’t want to explore the same themes, subject matters and utilizations that I had explored in the past,” Haynes continued.

Helping realize Haynes’ vision for Million Voices Whisper are an array of guests, including former Allman Brothers Band bandmate guitarist Derek Trucks, keyboardist John Medeski and Dirty Dozen Brass Band drummer Terence Higgins, along with Last Waltz Anniversary tour mates Lukas Nelson and Jamey Johnson.

The album starts off strongly with opener “These Changes,” a soulful Haynes-Trucks co-write that channels Curtis Mayfield in sentiment and is quickly followed by the snappy Johnson co-write “Go Down Swinging,” a jam co-written by Johnson that gets its juice from crisp horn arrangements that would suit Van Morrison. Elsewhere, “This Life as We Know It” is chock full of inspiration and hope while shining the spotlight on the rock-solid vocal accompaniment of touring backup singer Saundra Williams.

A major highlight is “Real, Real Love,” an unfinished song penned by Gregg Allman that Haynes completed with the help of Trucks. The journey for his tune began with photocopied lyrics in Allman’s handwriting sent to Haynes by former Allman manager Bert Holman, who asked the guitarist if he remembered working on it with the late Rock and Roll Hall of Famer.

While Haynes recalled being shown the song by Allman, he didn’t remember seeing any music for it. After tweaking the lyrics, adding some of his own along with music, Haynes called Trucks to help finish it.

“I got very inspired, called Derek on the phone and told him I just finished this tune Gregg wrote a long time ago, and I thought we should record it together,” Haynes said. “I wound up spending three days at Derek’s place in Georgia, just the two of us writing for three days. And then he came into the studio for two days, and we got a lot of work done.

“It’s the only time I can remember trying to honor someone else’s songwriting and vocal style to this extent. The song was Gregg’s initial inspiration, and I wanted to finalize it in as much of a way that he would as possible,” he continued.

Being a creature of the road, Haynes promises fans his concerts will feature a wide swath of material from his considerable canon, solo material and otherwise.

“We do a lot of stuff from Million Voices Whisper,” he shared. “We do some songs from each of my solo records. We also do a handful of Gov’t Mule songs, a handful of Allman Brothers songs, a handful of choice covers. It’s different every night, but not to the extent that a Gov’t Mule show is different every night. We don’t have as large a repertoire to choose from, but we’re expanding that all the time. People that come out to multiple shows will get a different experience each time.”

This year is shaping up to be an interesting one for Haynes. Not only did he play a recent pair of dates at Madison Square Garden as part of The Brothers, consisting of friends and surviving members of The Allman Brothers Band’s final lineup, but 2025 is also the 30th anniversary of Gov’t Mule’s self-titled debut. That album will be re-released with archival unreleased material and unreleased live material featuring the late bassist Allen Woody, a member of the original trio.

Haynes will also perform a handful of shows with Gov’t Mule and the Tedeschi Trucks Band. A remixed and remastered version of his first solo record, 1993’s Tales of Ordinary Madness, will also be getting the reissue treatment.

But what Haynes might most be looking forward to is a live record he cut with his hometown Asheville Symphony Orchestra.

“I recorded it right before Covid, and we decided not to put it out during the pandemic because it’s kind of a once-in-a-lifetime retrospective, in the way that it’s all live versions of songs from my solo career, Gov’t Mule, The Allman Brothers, The Grateful Dead and all different things I’ve been associated with over the years,” he said.

“It took a lifetime to put it out, because we didn’t want it to get lost during the Covid madness,” Haynes noted. “It’s a really exciting record in the way that there is a lot of improvisation that gets incorporated with the symphony, which is not an easy thing to do.

“It’s something I worked at going back to the Garcia Symphonic Celebration (a show celebrating the music of the Grateful Dead),” he continued. “It was really important for me to figure out ways of doing that. And we incorporated all those different ways into this recording. I’m really excited for it to come out.”

Warren Haynes performs at 7:30pm, Sunday, May 4, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd., Santa Rosa. For tickets, visit bit.ly/haynes-25.

Common Enemy: What we share (and what to do)

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Don’t let the billionaires behind the curtain distract you while they steal your money and your freedom.

George W. Bush believed that replacing theocratic government in the Middle East with democracy would bring peace, justice and equality to that part of the world. With this rationale, he and his party justified the Iraq War, which went on for eight years, with the loss of 4,500 American lives and a cost of two trillion borrowed dollars.

I voted for Bush. I admired his love for democracy. If only Donald Trump could show that devotion, but sadly, it is not in his nature. The conservatives I know did not want or expect this outcome. They knew Trump was a narcissist, but he concealed his plans. He denied any knowledge of Project 2025, for example. But in the first six weeks of his administration, he followed that plan step by step.

Freely electing an autocrat was not a historic first. It happened 90 years ago in Germany when the disheartened German people became enamored with Adolf Hitler. But as chaotic as this Trump administration is, this is not Nazi Germany, and the onslaught of our democracy can be stopped. For that to happen, the root cause of people’s disillusionment must be appreciated, for it conditioned voters to accept the disinformation from and about Trump that flooded social media.

Sixty years ago, our presidents and congress people valued America’s founding principles, freedom, equality and democracy. Elected officials honored their oath to the Constitution, and they supported other liberal democracies that shared our values. Issues of religion were handled by religious leaders, who were satisfied with America’s guarantee of religious freedom. They did not have political agendas.

We must again elect representatives who are principled and stop mixing religion with politics. And reality TV personalities should not be running American government.

The Trump administration and the billionaire oligarchs are working at a lightning pace to take your money and make America another Russia.

We can still stop them.

Bob Topper is a retired engineer.

Pricey Truths: ‘Other Desert Cities’ staged in Napa

The plot of Jon Robin Baitz’s Other Desert Cities can be summed up in a single line from the play itself: “Telling the truth is a very expensive hobby.”

Ironically, that line is delivered by Silda, the character furthest from the truth and with the least to lose. The entire show is a nesting doll of truths sealed with spite, fear and, ultimately, love. Napa’s Lucky Penny Community Arts Center hosts a Dana Nelson-Isaacs-directed production through May 4.

Brooke Wyeth (Taylor Bartolucci) is a novelist who has overcome a mental breakdown by writing a memoir. She has told her parents, Polly (Cynthia Lagodzinski), a protégé of Nancy Reagan, and Lyman (Barry Martin), a retired actor and former ambassador under Ronald Reagan, that it’s a novel. Now, with a book deal in hand, she has come to her parents’ Palm Springs home for Christmas. Joining them is Brooke’s younger brother, Trip (Max Geide), a television producer, and Polly’s freshly rehabbed alcoholic sister, Silda Grauman (Titian Lish).

In the spirit of full disclosure, this script was one of the first shows I ever produced and holds a special place in my heart, so I was delighted to see that the set by Barry Martin, Gary Green and Kade Morrill was so detailed and beautiful. The small stage becomes a mid-century masterpiece, overlooking the desert.

A script like this takes a steady hand. It’s a challenging task to strike a balance between the depth required and the glib comedy that keeps the play moving. Geide’s Trip comes the closest. Written as the middle-ground character, he does a good job of keeping the energy up and the show moving. His funny lines land well, and his journey is the most believable.

The rest of the cast, however, does not maintain the pace or tension. The heartbeat of the family drama is the tension of things left unsaid, of memories unknown to the audience. Without that draw to pull the audience in, a great deal of the play is adrift, leaving the viewer waiting for something to happen.

Other Desert Cities is a family dramedy on a knife’s edge. One way too much or the other, and the show doesn’t work. Silda is correct; the truth is expensive, as it often requires taking a risk. Sure, a knife’s edge can be uncomfortable, but sitting on the handle looking at the blade will never cut anything.

‘Other Desert Cities’ runs through May 4 at the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center, 1758 Industrial Way, Napa. Thurs–Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2 pm. $24-$47. 707.266.6305. luckypennynapa.com.

Culture Crush, April 23

San Rafael

Ballet? Yes, Pliés

Hear ye, hear ye—entertainment awaits. And villagers so inclined may come and feast their senses upon modern ballet dancers, Renaissance-era choral music and more. In other words, RammDance’s modern ballet studio is joining forces with a live chorus from Areté Singers to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the West Coast Arts Foundation. One may come out to watch and maybe even join in as RammDance puts on a show to celebrate the West Coast Arts Foundation’s quarter-century anniversary in appropriate style, pomp and circumstance.

RammDance Company’s performance will take place at 2pm on April 26 at the West Coast Arts Foundation performance studio in San Rafael, located at 1554 Fourth St. To learn more, visit rammdance.org.

Petaluma

Join the Circus

Time to run away to the circus—Petaluma’s new Cider Circus, to be exact. One may pack a bag and brush up on their acrobatics, because everyone and their grandmother is running away for a day at Cider Circus to celebrate cider, beer and other beverages from more than two dozen natural Northern California producers. And they may join in on the music, games and food to match the beverages. If joining Cider Circus is wrong, then no one wants to be right. Cider Circus runaways may come via train, bike, tightrope or by paddling up the river—that is to say, no drinking and driving clown car shenanigans. Early bird tickets cost $45 each, and children are welcome to attend for free (as are dogs, provided they stay on their leashes).

Tickets are at bit.ly/cider-circus. Cider Circus will take place from 1 to 6pm on Saturday, April 26 along the banks of the Petaluma River at Steamer Landing Park, located at 6 Copeland St. in Petaluma.

Petaluma

Surfs Up in Petaluma

Some serious waves are about to hit Petaluma … and before y’all get worried, this is an announcement for an art exhibition (and definitely not a tsunami warning). Now that we’re on the same wavelength here, it’s time to get stoked for a local exhibition from water and surf landscape artist Robb Havassy. Those who love art, the ocean and/or artwork of the ocean may follow the current down to Usher Gallery, which is hosting Havassy and his expressive and aquatic collection of works entitled Into the Light. So, do not barrel roll gently into that good light, folks—instead, one may catch a wave and hang loose looking at some art.

The opening reception of ‘Into the Light’ will take place from 5 to 8pm on Saturday, May 3 in the Usher Gallery, located at 1 Petaluma Blvd. N. in Petaluma.

Sausalito

Local Treasures Meet Legal Heist 

What if local art lovers could spend a night feeling like a bougie and legal version of Bonnie and Clyde? Well, no need to speculate when Marin Open Studios hosts their Local TreasuresBenefit for Art in a historic bank vault turned art room at the Sausalito Center for the Arts. The pièce de résistance of the evening is the “pick a treasure” game, which goes alongside a wine pull and a vacation auction (and art, obviously). One may grab their finest pinstripe suit and bowler hat, and not forget their getaway car—i.e., a sober designated driver—’cause the benefit is all set to have an open bar alongside gourmet catering from Insalata’s and other local restaurants.

The Marin Open Studios ‘Local Treasures Benefit for Art’ will take place from 6 to 9pm on Saturday, April 26 at the Sausalito Center for the Arts, located at 750 Bridgeway. To buy tickets, go to bit.ly/MarinOS25.

There Goes the Neighborhood, Sonoma County’s Local Defense Contractors

While conflicts like the yearslong war in Ukraine or the shaky Gaza ceasefire seem comparatively far away, the weapons manufacturing capabilities of Sonoma County have brought the logistics—and potentially the threats—of war to Wine Country. 

Keysight Technologies in Santa Rosa and General Dynamics Ordnance in Healdsburg are two large defense contractors that produce components and software for weapons that have been deployed in Ukraine and Gaza. 

Ken McCallum, head of British intelligence agency MI5, noted in his annual speech to the Counter Terrorism Operation Center last October that defense contractors’ participation in these conflicts brings with it the risk of sabotage operations, as already seen in several European nations. 

“Over the last year, the Russian government and its proxies have planned and directed sabotage attacks against European military installations, foreign defense companies, logistics facilities and public utilities in an effort to undermine Allied support to Ukraine,” a public release from the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) warned in November of 2024. 

The release cautioned that such activity could be repeated at defense industry base facilities in the United States. 

Known as “hybrid warfare,” Russia’s tactics are thought to have included framing political parties for vandalism, destruction of undersea cables and a plot to assassinate the CEO of a German arms maker, resulting in the effects of the Ukraine war being felt far beyond the frontline. But Wine Country is also “fire country,” so it is the arson attacks that are of most concern when considering how Sonoma County’s businesses are embroiled in foreign policy. 

Keysight Technologies is headquartered off Fountaingrove Parkway in northern Santa Rosa, sitting on a 200-acre campus nestled between oak trees and senior assisted living communities. The location is idyllic, and security is tight. The company’s website describes its mission to “connect and secure the world,” through hardware and software for electronic detection and emulation. 

Essential capabilities on today’s high-tech battlefield.

“We do not make a single component that goes into a weapon,” said Hamish Gray, senior vice president of corporate services for Keysight, who has been with the company for 36 years. Nonetheless, he confirmed that Keysight is “absolutely a defense contractor.”

Gray added, as if to emphasize the point, “There’s not a single aircraft carrier that doesn’t have our tech on it.”   

“We monitor the news constantly,” said Alicia Benson, vice president of workplace solutions for Keysight. “When the Ukraine war started, we had a Russian footprint. We got out. We have a big Israel headquarters as well.” She added that, because this monitoring is constant, they did not make any security changes based directly on the DNI release. 

General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems is another powerful local contractor with reported revenues of $47.7 billion in 2024. The nondescript, almost homey-looking warehouse on Grove Street, less than a 15-minute walk from the well-dressed wine tasters in downtown Healdsburg, is one of 27 locations owned by the third-largest U.S. government aerospace and defense contractor, as of 2023.

According to GD-OTS’s website, its Healdsburg facility manufactures guidance components for precision munitions such as the Javelin anti-tank missile and the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS). Both weapon systems were publicly lauded as key to turning the tide of the war in Ukraine when sent as military aid.

Hybrid warfare isn’t limited to Russia. Iran has a long history of using international proxies for acts of sabotage and terrorism to further the state’s interests. As the U.S. becomes more deeply embroiled in the Middle East, the chances of those proxies taking aim at Americans goes up.

Whether munitions heading to Israel for use in the war in Gaza are manufactured in General Dynamics’ Healdsburg location specifically is unclear, but the company is known to produce the bodies of the MK-80 series of bombs, which has seen extensive use in that conflict, including in the 2024 bombing of the Jabalia Refugee Camp, according to American Friends Service Committee.

A shipment of 35,529 MK-84 bomb bodies manufactured by General Dynamics will be delivered next year as part of the latest round of military aid to Israel, according to a February press release from the Defense Security Cooperation Agency. The cost of these bombs and their ancillaries is more than $2 billion of the total $12 billion in arms authorized for Israel since President Donald Trump took office. 

Last December, activists organized by the Jewish Voice for Peace Sonoma County, the Party for Socialism and Liberation of Sonoma County and Sonoma County for Palestine gathered outside of General Dynamics’ Healdsburg facility to protest what they deemed the company’s complicity in the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

“General Dynamics makes bombs and artillery shells used against people in Gaza,” a poster on Sonoma County for Palestine’s Facebook page said. 

Inhui Le, a community organizer with Sonoma County for Palestine, said her own experiences growing up in a ravaged postwar South Korea deeply impacted her views on the effects of war and defense contractors who profit from it. 

 “We want people to know that, even in Northern California, in the heart of Wine Country, there is a weapons industry,” Le said.  

General Dynamics did not respond to attempts for comment. 

The high stakes at which these companies play in the national security game came into focus in 2021 when the State Department fined Keysight Technologies $6.6 million for exports of unauthorized technical data, software used to test radar equipment, to 17 countries. 

“Keysight’s exports to the PRC [China] and Russia harmed U.S. national security,” said the charging letter the State Department sent to call out the problem. 

According to Gray, the incident was simply a case of an engineer misidentifying a line of code. “Technically it was dual-use anyway,” Gray said.  

Negotiations to end the Russo-Ukrainian conflict are moving like molasses while hope for peace in Gaza languishes between ceasefires. But, escalations in Yemen notwithstanding, both of these firestorms are showing signs of cooling. That said, either could flare back up. And there are plenty of others brewing. 

As John Mearsheimer, University of Chicago professor of international relations, said during a 2024 lecture at Notre Dame University’s International Security Center, the world is moving into an era of multipolarity and escalating militarization between three great powers, namely Russia, China and the United States. Some small countries will be made to choose which sphere of influence they fall under, but many, like Ukraine, will have the choice made for them. 

World leaders, including Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, echoed this observation at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Turkey recently. “Generally speaking about multipolarity, it is gaining ground, no doubt about this,” Lavrov said. “What we observe is fragmentation of the world economy. This is the time of uncertainty. I would say nobody knows how the situation with world trade and investment is going to evolve, because there would be new twists in this situation.”

Trump’s tariff war is another manifestation of this emerging power dynamic shaking out as the rules based international system gives way to a tangled web of trade and security agreements. As each great power jockeys to maximize their sphere of influence in this new world order, tensions between these alliances create trip wires for escalation.

Defense industrial base facilities that are the target of protestors and saboteurs today could be the targets of conventional military or even nuclear strikes should that escalation spiral out of control. This may sound dramatic. But since “war supporting and economic factories” are one of four categories of targets named in the United States General Accounting Office’s “Nuclear Weapons Targeting Process” fact sheet, we can assume the same applies for America’s adversaries.

“We have a lot of defense contractors in Sonoma County,” congressperson for California’s 4th district and former House Intelligence Committee member Mike Thompson told Santa Rosa Junior College students on April 15. “They fly under the radar.” 

Adding to that, he blames the executive branch for elevating the threat to those facilities. “Part of the problem with this administration is we’ve told the world we are in chaos. And when we’re in chaos, we’re much more open to any type of attack,” Thompson said.

Though multipolarity suggests the world is dividing, ever-increasing technological interconnectivity is also shrinking it, bringing potential adversaries closer and blurring the lines between foreign and domestic concerns. 

While the prospect of saboteurs setting fire to Sonoma County to disrupt the United States’ military industrial base remains relatively remote, the DNI’s warning serves as a reminder that the fear and consequences of conflict often reverberate far beyond the battlefield, touching communities much like our own. 

If a distant threat can stir unease here, in one of the safest corners of the world, it may offer a glimpse—however faint—into the daily reality of people who live at the center of those conflicts, where policies shaped by our votes often disrupt their homes, families and futures.

Day at the Bay: Hitchcock, Hospitality & the Sonoma Coast

Thanks to wine industry conjunctive labeling laws, talking about the “Sonoma Coast” requires some semantic gymnastics—we’re not discussing the sprawling American Viticultural Area, but rather the craggy shoreline. 

Further complicating matters is the “Bodega” conundrum—are we talking about the bay or the town? Alfred Hitchcock didn’t help matters by blurring geography in his feathered fright-fest, The Birds. 

Also, doesn’t Yoda live in the Bodegabah System?

On a bluff overlooking iconic Highway 1, The Lodge at Bodega Bay started out in 1972 as a modest seaside motor lodge. Today, it’s grown into a plush, 83-room coastal getaway, complete with EV-friendly charging stations, Arts & Crafts-inspired decor (think nautical chic without the kitsch) and fireplaces begging one to pretend it’s colder than it actually is. The place has precisely that mid-century mod coastal vibe to make Don Draper want to buy the world a Coke.

That said, no matter how cozy their room, one will spend half their time gawking at the ocean views.

The Lodge doubles as the perfect staging ground for local exploration. Just steps away is Doran Beach, one of the Sonoma Coast’s favorite sandy playgrounds. Pro tip: Snag a free beach parking pass from the front desk and save $7—enough for a gas-station burrito on the drive home. Trails for hiking, biking and even horseback riding are everywhere. Though, judging by the folks I saw, horses are strictly BYOH (bring your own horse).

Bird lovers will find Bodega Bay to be feathered-friend heaven, officially recognized by the Audubon Society. Hitchcock would no doubt approve. Though hopefully one’s avian encounters won’t involve fleeing in terror like Tippi Hedren (from Hitch’s unwanted advances).

Speaking of bird themes, Black Kite Cellars’ Jasper House recently opened as Freestone’s preeminent tasting room in the historic district. Conveniently close to Wild Flour Bread and Osmosis Day Spa Sanctuary, Jasper House showcases terroir-driven pinot noirs and chardonnays expertly crafted by winemaker Jeff Gaffner. 

Owners Tom Birdsall and Rebecca Green Birdsall have cultivated their family-owned winery’s reputation since 2003, cementing west Sonoma County’s status as Wine Country royalty. Located at 12747 El Camino Bodega, Jasper House is open daily, 10am–5pm. Appointments are encouraged, but spontaneous tastings are welcome—perfect for wine emergencies. Visit BlackKiteCellars.com.

For those downsizing their mad money expenditures, follow my lead: Tell your workmates you’re going into “the field”; grab a frosty, $4 20-ounce Pabst Blue Ribbon from Diekmann’s Bay Store on Highway 1; claim a dune at Salmon Creek South; write your damn story; and let the great gaping maw of the Pacific Ocean remind you that simple pleasures can often be the best. Just don’t get sand in your laptop.

Coalition Building, Where to Protest Nearby

With vast segments of American society feeling threatened by the agenda of President Donald Trump, protests and rallies opposing it have been popping up across the country like daffodils in the spring. 

Now a local Sonoma County group is planning to take this resistance a step further by, as one of the organizers, Robin Latham, said, “building a coalition for the long haul.”

Working out of the Peace & Justice Center of Sonoma County, the group is calling itself Community United to Resist Fascism (CURF). 

“We come together to safeguard the equal and inalienable rights, and inherent dignity, of all people, that is the foundation of the relationship between a government and its people, because we recognize that those rights and dignity are under threat from the Trump administration,” their statement of purpose reads in part.

In a few months, the fledgling group has brought together dozens of individuals from organizations around the county—everything from the more mainstream like the Windsor Democratic Club, to the more marginal like Rohnert Park-Cotati Pride and the bilingual radio station KBBF-FM.

Another participant in the effort is the Healthcare for All Working Group of Sonoma and Marin counties. A spokesperson for that organization, retired nurse Terry Winter, explained, “It is in the best interest of everyone to resist Trump’s agenda to dismantle the apparatus that provides healthcare for millions, because this will even affect those who support the Republican agenda.”

To reach out even farther into the community, CURF has been organizing five days of marches, rallies and other events, scheduled for May 1-5—International Workers’ Day through Cinco de Mayo. And because the long-term goal is to build a coalition, the group is incorporating some on-going events like the annual May 1 march and rally for workers’ and immigrants’ rights and the weekly Palestinian support rally, as well as creating a new event that will bring it all together.

One of the organizers of the May 1 event, Santa Rosa attorney  Renee Saucedo, said the goal of that event is two-fold—to convince Sonoma County Sheriff Eddie Engram to agree to a “no collaboration” ordinance with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) and “to send a message to the decision makers that the undocumented community is not going anywhere.”

Representing both Sonoma County for Palestine and Taxpayers Against Genocide, Sonoma State University staff member Tarik Kanaani acknowledged that coalition building is a perfect way to address a host of concerns.

“From the beginning, one of my goals was to build the coalition and solidarity that goes multiple ways. All of these issues are pretty much the same struggle, but with different details,” he said.

For a list of upcoming events, go to bit.ly/pjc-curf.

Laugh In: Comedies Take the Stage

No less a source than the Mayo Clinic recommends laughter as a great source of stress relief. And in these stressful times, two North Bay productions may be just what the doctor orders for local audiences. 

Neil Simon’s Rumors is being presented by the SRJC Theatre Arts Department through April 27, while Sonoma Arts Live presents the musical comedy revue I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change through May 4.  

Simon, best known for the classic, The Odd Couple, took a stab at farce in 1988 with Rumors. An anniversary party for New York Deputy Mayor Charley Brock starts out with a bang but goes rapidly downhill thereafter with the staggered arrivals of some of the Big Apple’s upper crust. Eight guests draped in formal wear gossip, slam doors, race up and down a staircase, and crawl on the floor until the police show up. Oh, the scandal.

Director Elizabeth Dale’s (mostly) young cast does a good job keeping the energy level up and the laughs coming, with AJ Correia and Emerson Reynolds doing particularly good work as a catty New York power couple. 

Meanwhile, Sonoma Arts Live has a musical revue that ran for decades off-Broadway running now on the Rotary Stage at the Sonoma Community Center. Originally produced in 1996, I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change is a series of musical vignettes about dating, falling in love, marrying, raising a family and facing the inevitable end of it all. Carl Jordan directs a cast of four (Robert Nelson, Sarah Lundstrom, Jourdán Taylor-Verdé, Jenny Veilleux), who play a variety of characters navigating the often torturous/funny path to a long-term relationship.

The vignettes are announced by some clever projections (designed by Nelson), followed by patter between the characters and then a song. First dates, physical relations, weddings, children and the passing of a partner are all targeted with such songs as “A Stud and a Babe,” “Single Man Drought” and “Always a Bridesmaid.”

The bits are amusing, the songs are clever, and the vocals are strong. Actually, a bit too strong. Mic levels seemed high, with several instances of the cast drowning out the audience’s laughter. 

We could all stand to hear more laughter these days.

Santa Rosa Junior College Theatre Arts presents ‘Rumors’ through April 27 in the Burbank Auditorium, 1501 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. Thur-Sat, 7:30pm; Sat & Sun, 2pm. $15-$25. 707.527.4307. theatrearts.santarosa.edu.

Sonoma Arts Live presents ‘I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change’ through May 4 on the Rotary Stage at Andrews Hall in the Sonoma Community Center, 276 E. Napa St., Sonoma. Thurs-Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $25-$42. 707.484.4874. sonomaartslive.org.

Isaac Mizrahi Brings Cabaret to North Bay

Break out the suits, ties, top hats and yes—polish those pearls—because the North Bay is about to get a whole lot more fabulous with the arrival of the legendary designer and multi-hyphenate performer Isaac Mizrahi, whose live show will play in Sonoma County this spring as part of his newly-announced California concert tour.

Mizrahi is a celebrity of many talents, best known for his influence in the world of fashion as well as his magnetic stage presence, razor-sharp wit and captivating storytelling. He brings his signature flair to a one-night-only cabaret-style performance at the Green Music Center in Rohnert Park on Wednesday, April 24. There, he will perform accompanied by a top-tier jazz sextet, giving guests an evening that promises a genre-defying blend of song, humor and charm that only he can deliver.

Those who attend Mizrahi’s upcoming Sonoma show can expect a show that’s equal parts intimate salon and polished stage production—curated yet casual, hilarious yet heartfelt, with music perfectly matched to the moment. It’s a performance that mirrors the Sonoma spirit: artful, vibrant and with just the right amount of glam to match. In short, a perfect pairing for the acoustically stunning Weill Hall at the Green Music Center.

But beyond fashion and TV, Mizrahi really seems to come alive and dazzle audiences when live on stage. Rohnert Park’s performance falls between tour stops in La Jolla and San Francisco, making it the only North Bay appearance on the tour. For Sonoma County audiences, it’s a rare chance to catch a world-class performer without leaving Wine Country.

For those who don’t know or could use a quick reminder, Mizrahi initially joined the hall of fame for his work in helping to redefine American fashion in the 1990s. In the past three decades since then, he has remained a pop culture fixture across multiple entertainment and apparel industries. He’s dressed A-list icons, made high fashion more accessible to all and has even appeared on television (notably as a judge on seven seasons of Project Runway All-Stars). 

Now, Mizrahi is a true Renaissance celebrity, with a New York Times bestselling memoir under his belt, a podcast underway, and he’s working as a producer on a Hulu show to boot. Oh, and somehow Mizrahi is still finding the time to travel up and down California to put on live shows for his fans.

Tickets for Isaac Mizrahi’s April 24 show at the Green Music Center—and all other California tour dates—are available now at HelloIsaac.com.

Open Mic: The North Bay Way, Putting Ourselves on the Map

The North Bay—we know where it is but not necessarily what it is.

Is it a particular vibe? A state of mind? A swelling real estate bubble about to burst? 

Yes, yes, and you can afford real estate?

Unlike its geographic sibs, the North Bay has long endured something of an identity crisis. The South and East Bays are both major cultural hubs that boast world-class universities and have made a global impact on arts and technology. 

Our local university just gutted a dozen programs, so don’t expect any impactful art or tech. But there’s enough wine and weed here to show you a better time than any on-campus amateur anyway. 

What we need is our own set of “You know you’re in the North Bay when … ” jokes. Humor has a way of getting to the heart of the matter. For example, you know you’re in the North Bay when your glass of wine costs more than your entree.

Remember when Sonoma County identified as the “Redwood Empire?” Trees. You’re going to base your brand on trees, SoCo? “Wine Country” has certainly been an upgrade, though nobody checked in with Napa about sharing the moniker. When finally asked, Napa replied, “Sonoma who?”

To this day, Marin County operates under the specter of being, as writer Duncan Campell wrote in the UK’s Guardian, “ … A home for superannuated hippies, lying around in hot tubs listening to Grateful Dead tapes with a joint in one hand and a glass of Chardonnay in the other.”

For reasons I have yet to understand, there’s a “We don’t talk about Solano” vibe regarding that particular county, which crowd-sourced info hubs like Wikipedia claim is in the North Bay, whereas frenemy combatants on Reddit argue it’s not.

Whatever it is, there’s still room for another North Bay county, right? Here’s my radical secession plan: Novato and West Petaluma, which border each other on at least two sides of the compass—and share an outsider ethos to their respective counties—could secede and form a new county. We’ll call it Olompali (for the state park they also co-border, which likely means “Southern Village” in the Coast Miwok language). There, I fixed it.

But speaking to the totality of The Great N.B., it’s not that we need to define what’s within our tri-county borders; we just need to define ourselves. As Thor said after his planet was destroyed in the movie Ragnarok, “Asgard is not a place; it’s a people.”

Ditto for the North Bay. We’re a people. And a lot of dogs. But mostly a people. And I’m happy to be a people with you.

Daedalus Howell is the editor of the Pacific Sun and North Bay Bohemian. He makes media and movies at dhowell.com. Reprinted from the spring edition of North Bay Magazine, a Weeklys publication.

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