Woman on a Wire

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What’s it like, one has to wonder, to be cast as one of the most famous fictional characters in the history of children’s literature?

“It’s very exciting,” says Alanna Weatherby, who, beginning this weekend, will play author P. L. Travers’ beloved flying nanny Mary Poppins, when the Santa Rosa Junior College’s theater arts department takes a crack at the insanely popular stage musical.

Based on the acclaimed 1964 Disney movie, with a pleasantly dark-tinged new script by Downton Abbey creator Julian Fellowes, this Mary Poppins contains many of the same moments that charmed audiences in the Julie Andrews’ film. But it removes some of the elements that horrified the author of the books (dancing penguins, upside-down tea parties!), while layering in a number of bits that those who’ve actually read the books might remember—slightly frightening dancing toys, talking statues, an adversarial nanny full of brimstone and treacle.

But the true value of any production of Mary Poppins is not measured out in teaspoons and medicine bottles, but in the actor recruited to play the title character herself.

“Julie Andrews is one of my favorite people in the world,” admits Weatherby, whose enthusiasm and exhilaration are palpable, even over the phone, as the ArtQuest graduate prepares for a rehearsal at Burbank Auditorium, just days before the Friday-night opening. “The fact that I get to play one of Julie Andrews’ most famous roles is really daunting,” she says, sounding not the least bit daunted. “She originated the role,” Weatherby adds, “and now I get to put my own spin on Mary Poppins.”

The actress almost got to make “spin” literal the first time she strapped on the harness and was pulled into the air by wire to practice the indelible moment when Mary flies into view.

“I do get to fly!” Weatherby laughs. “I was so nervous at first, but when I finally got there and I lifted up into the air, it was very exciting. I really wasn’t that frightened. After a few moments dangling above the stage,
I actually wanted to try doing a flip in the air.”

Alas, this Mary Poppins merely floats above the stage, ladylike and proper.

“Bert gets to do a flip, though,” Weatherby says.

Wait. Bert (Noah Sternhill), the chimney sweep, also flies?

“In our show he does,” Weatherby says. “Mary Poppins has that effect on people. Well, my Mary Poppins does.”

Cutting Class

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“Don’t defend yourself,” intones Leonard (Ron Severdia), an esteemed author-turned-teacher-for-hire. “If you’re defending yourself,” he tells a group of young writers he is in the middle of eviscerating, “you’re not listening.”

In Theresa Rebeck’s wickedly witty but occasionally infuriating comedy-drama, presented by Left Edge Theatre, Severdia plays Leonard with a mix of resignation, antagonism and bloodlust in a story of four would-be writers who pay a local legend $5,000 to give a private class “critiquing” their writing—and everything else about them—over the course of 10 soul-shattering weeks. Rose Roberts, as the Jane Austen–loving Kate (who rents the New York apartment where the classes take place), is at the top of her game, and her variously talented classmates (Jacob de Heer, Devin McConnell and Veronica Valencia) give strong, appealing performances in a play in which every character is required to be torn apart, before learning the fine art of tearing apart others.

As Leonard gleefully pronounces early in the show, “Writers, in their natural state, are as civilized as feral cats.” This entertaining exploration of artistic egos under pressure is a bit overcooked at times, but on the whole is deliciously fierce, ferocious and funny. Seminar runs Friday–Sunday through Nov. 28 at the Wells Fargo Center for the Performing Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. $30–$40. 707.546.3600.

Bet Noir

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There may be some overblown myths attached to the Thanksgiving holiday, but that bit about the Pinot Noir and the turkey dinner is not one of them. The Burgundy works with the bird and all the heart-burning miscellany that surrounds it on the table.

Still, those of us tasked only with choosing the right bottle of wine for the feast really owe it to those others, who are laboring over hot stoves and hand-stuffing the posterior cavities of large, dead birds, to put in a little extra effort and bring variety to the table.

You’re going to want a butterball on the table, and I’m not talking about the turkey. Unless you’re having an unconventional meal of white fish with a squeeze of lemon, that unoaked, lean style of Chard may not cut it. Go big. Go butterball, or go Chalk Hill 2013 Estate Chardonnay ($42). It’s got a good hit of quality oak and butterscotch, a sweet, round palate sensation, with juicy lemon and apple flavors that steer it well of cloying.

You want real apples, so try ACE Blackjack 21 ($15.99). This all-Gravenstein, limited edition is unlike other ACE ciders on the market; the color is deep gold, the aroma hints at cinnamon bark, and the flavors are deep with papaya and baked apple. Rich, full-bodied and fairly dry, this is aged in Chardonnay barrels. Aged in rye whiskey barrels, Tilted Shed’s new release of 2014 Barred Rock barrel-aged cider ($18) is a craft cider that promises a bit of that sweet whiskey flavor on the finish.

The best wine pairing for this holiday may be sparkling red wine—once you taste it, it’s not as oddball as it sounds. It’s festive, it’s red, it’s light on the palate, and it’s hard to find, but not if I tell you where to look: try Korbel Rouge ($14.99) or, if you’re up for a field trip, Mumm Sparkling Pinot Noir ($34.99) in Napa Valley or Harvest Moon 2013 Sparkling Pinot Noir ($42) and Zinfandel ($48) from Russian River Valley, available only at the winery.

As for the right Pinot Noir, it’s like picking a horse by her name alone, and I did OK with a bottle of Maggy Hawk 2012 Jolie Anderson Valley Pinot Noir ($65). From Jackson Family Wines, each wine in this series is named for a thoroughbred related to owner Barbara Banke’s favorite, Maggy Hawk. The medium-bodied Jolie shows muted aromas of mixed berry potpourri, rose hip tea and orange peel, and soft tannins texture the tang of cherry-cranberry fruit wrap just so.

Music on the Margins

I got high last night on LSD

My mind was beautiful,
and I was free

—’A Blind Man’s Penis’

The mischievous musical creations of John Trubee are unlike anything else in the world of pop. Known by few and understood by fewer, the longtime songwriter, bandleader and now record-label owner has called Sonoma County home for more than 20 years, yet his hermetic lifestyle and rejection of all things commercial have kept him out of the spotlight—and he wouldn’t have it any other way.

“My basic impulse is to make and create things; I’m not naturally born to self-promote and be like a politician,” says Trubee from his modest home in Santa Rosa, sitting in front of a wall of 8-tracks, LPs and a non-functioning reel-to-reel machine. “And since I tend to be introverted, it’s hard for me to go out and glad-hand or draw attention to myself.”

If Trubee had become a filmmaker, he might draw a comparison to horror director and American Movie documentary subject Mark Borchardt. Had he taken the author’s route, he might be another Charles Bukowski. As it is, Trubee is a music man, and his dark, profane and subversively hilarious songs have offended the conservative and mystified even the most progressive listeners for 30 years.

Born in Rapid City, S.D., and raised in Princeton, N.J., Trubee was a banker’s son who describes his father as neurotic and overbearing.

“It was a torturous relationship with my dad. He was John Sr. and I was John Jr., so I became the focus of whatever psychological problem he had,” recalls Trubee. “And it affected me. I grew up looking askew at his values, the normal ‘all-American’ stuff.”

Trubee says his life was ruined at age 13 when he read The Beatles: The Authorized Biography by Hunter Davies in the late 1960s.

“I heard a lot of pop music and it started to intrigue me,” Trubee says. “Pop music back then was really great rock and Motown and Phil Spector and all that.”

Grounded for an entire summer around the same time for starting a fire in a friend’s backyard, Trubee grew out his hair, learned to play guitar and joined his
first band in high school, Gloop Nox & the Stik People. His fascination with music continued to grow.

At the same time, his interest in normalcy went out the window. “I watched these suburbanites, like my dad, get up and take their briefcases and three-piece suits to their commuter jobs,” Trubee says gloomily. “It looked pretty miserable to me.”

Nothing interested Trubee except music, art and books. Yet, even as a teenager, he knew the chances of making a good living in the arts would be hard for a kid with his disposition.

“It’s almost like consigning oneself to poverty and misery,” admits Trubee. “It was a grim choice. I even knew that when I chose to go to Boston, to the Berklee College of Music, I did it in a state of dread and depression.”

The summer before attending music college, Trubee jokingly penned what would become his most famous song, “A Blind Man’s Penis.” Trubee remembers that he was lying around one day, reading the Midnight Globe tabloid. On the back pages, Trubee saw an ad that read, “Send your lyrics to Nashville, make $20,000 in royalties.”

Back in the day, the song-poem was a popular scam wherein publishing and recording companies with names like Hit Records International and Tin Pan Alley would entice the naïve to send in lyrics to be recorded by a band. The scam successfully convinced hundreds to part ways with up to $400 for the “opportunity” to have their poem turned into a bland, lifeless song.

Trubee saw the scam a mile away, but ever the prankster, decided to have a little fun with the Nashville folks. “I said, ‘Why don’t I type out the most ridiculous lyrics I can, offensive and idiotic and vulgar and silly, and send it in to get a rise out of these people?'”

All he wanted was a response that said, “Screw you.” What he got was a letter back with a contract reading, “Dear Mr. Trubee, we find your lyrics very worthy of the full Nashville production, please send $79.95 in remittance.” Startled by the absurdity of the situation, Trubee sent in the check and Nashville sent back an acetate, a one-sided record test pressing, and a reel-to-reel tape with a cowboy named Ramsey Kearney singing and half-speaking Trubee’s lyrics about electric marbles and fornicating with Martians.

His first test audience was his brother Jay, whose laughter triggered something in Trubee: a sense of power, a way to express his eccentric and alienated worldview. “I think that’s why I do music; it’s how I identify myself to the world,” Trubee says.

[page]

THE UGLY JANITORS OF AMERICA

You’re the liars and the cheaters,

The dummies and the morons who run the world

—’Leper in the Shadows’

In 1980, after graduating from Berklee, Trubee grew a handlebar biker mustache, packed all of his possessions in his car and drove out to Hollywood. He worked a day job at a film vault and played in a band with Zoogz Rift, a vitriolic and radical rock performer in the vein of Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart. That first year in L.A., “A Blind Man’s Penis” found its way to a producer, who put it on a compilation album for Enigma Records, Trubee’s first record deal.

Though Trubee’s “collaborative” debut turned out to be a country music number, his music is decidedly electric and rock. His punk and progressive riffs, with fiery guitar solos and extended jams, create a massive, pummeling sound that surprisingly retains a strong pop sense.

One of the first people who took notice of Trubee was a writer for the weekly alternative LA Reader by the name of Matt Groening, who reviewed Trubee in his “Sound Mix” column years before his own comic strip Life in Hell would lead to a television show called The Simpsons. Cassandra Peterson, aka Elvira, also played Trubee while working as a DJ at KROQ-FM. Still, Trubee’s cult status never turned into dollar signs.

“I pursued music not because I wanted to be rich and famous. I didn’t go along with that fantasy,” Trubee says. “It was more of an intellectual exercise—how do I get a piece of music out of my head and into the world?”

In 1984, Trubee released The Communists Are Coming to Kill Us by John Trubee & the Ugly Janitors of America. At the time, the band didn’t really exist, it was just a collection of tapes, a pastiche of recordings. Yet he loved the concept of a working-class band, and the Ugly Janitors of America became Trubee’s longstanding project.

Santa Rosa musician, radio host and archivist Don Campau first heard of Trubee in the underground scene and remembers thinking of him as an artist ahead of his time.

“I’ve been involved in underground music and cassette culture since the 1980s, so I knew John’s status for years,” says Campau, who also acts as programming director at KOWS-FM, runs a recording studio and label, and hosts the long-running No Pigeonholes Radio Show, which is now a podcast. “He was always the
kind of guy, like [cult musician]
R. Stevie Moore, that I thought was always one step ahead of where I was.

“We got in touch, became friends,” says Campau. “From the outside, he appears very garrulous, very sarcastic and cynical, but he’s driven creatively; it’s just something he has to do. He sees this as a lifetime achievement.”

Showing sparks of performance art in his work, Trubee also frequently performed poetry rants where he’d get up onstage, scream and yell, wear a gorilla mask and “just act like an idiot, like a buffoon, because I could get away with it,” says Trubee. “A musician friend of Zoogz Rift and mine privately mentioned to him that they thought I was mentally ill.”

After a decade in L.A., Trubee became fed up with the novelty and looked north to relocate. He landed in Santa Rosa, a perfect mix of city and country that meant he could keep a day job and continue to build his bizarre body of work.

These days, Trubee lives alone, travels by bike, obsessively reads a newspaper every morning and refuses to buy a cell phone or subscribe to cable TV. His signature mustache and long hair are now trimmed and turning a nice shade of silver, but his eyes still light up as he talks and his words are measured, though rapidly and candidly delivered.

“I live a simple hermetic life, and keep a lot of distractions and nonsense out,” he says, looking over his record collection. “If I had too many things impinging on me or people making demands on me or what little disposable income I have going out to other things, I wouldn’t be able to do this music stuff. It’s a conscious attempt to keep my plate clear.”

[page]

TRUBEE RECORDS

People are idiots, people are idiots,

O dear Lord, keep them away from me

—’People Are Idiots’

“We get plenty of odd music,” says Nate Nauseda, the studio manager and an engineer at Prairie Sun Recording Studios in Cotati. “We have an iconoclastic history here, and John is something even beyond that. I do not know how to describe his music. It is supremely weird. And I love it.”

In the two decades that Trubee has lived in the North Bay, the state of the music industry has only continued to decline, forcing bands to self-promote and sell their records as well as make music. Knowing this, and ever the man of action, Trubee started his own label, Trubee Records, to allow him to record, distribute and promote his music.

Working with Trubee over the years, Nauseda compares him to Zappa.

“I can’t say enough good things about John,” says Nauseda. “He’s an upstanding fellow, he always pays up front and he’s always looking toward the next session. It’s something he’s very proud of, and we’re certainly proud of him.”

Trubee says that Prairie Sun Studio always spoils him with their top-of-the-line analog equipment and knowledgeable engineers. Not much of a fan of lo-fi home recordings, Trubee is willing and eager to use his little disposable income for recording sessions and studio time.

“I do things on a shoestring, but I don’t have to answer to anybody or jump through anyone’s hoops, which is why I can get away with putting all this profanity and ridiculous stuff on records,” says Trubee plainly. “I don’t have anybody telling me no, and I don’t have to fight with other band members. I’m the bandleader, I write the music, I call the musicians and say play this, and they do it. Nobody’s obstructing me, and that’s extremely liberating.”

Regardless of all the anger and profanity and darkness of the lyrics, Trubee considers himself full of life and pretty happy. The irony, he says, is that he likes his day job, which keeps him away from a desk, and working with senior citizens. He says he feels very fortunate and blessed for everything, the good and the bad. He even reconciled with his estranged father last year, shortly before he passed away.

“I don’t apologize for being playful and mischievous and irreverent,” says Trubee. “It’s just who I am, and I think the world would be a better place if more adults were like that. I’m aware that we have to buckle down and work. But that doesn’t mean our imaginations or curiosity have to dry up.”

Still, every time one of his records comes out, Trubee usually gets another friend or family member who inquires as to the state of his mental health.

“I write these dark, weird lyrics that nobody understands, so I must be mentally ill, must be depressed,” Trubee laughs. “At this point, it doesn’t bother me. I think it’s funny. It’s like, who is this nut?”

Trubee Records can be found at johntrubee.com To contact John Trubee about anything, email jo*******@***il.com or send snail mail to PO Box 4921, Santa Rosa, CA 95402. Trubee reliably answers all inquiries.

Lasting Legacy

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The death of Andy Lopez, on Oct. 22, 2013, brought national attention to Santa Rosa. Hundreds of people protested the shooting. Local political leaders called for calm and promised action. The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors promised to build a park in the empty field where Lopez was killed. They dedicated the park to him and created a 21-member task force to make recommendations for civilian oversight of the sheriff’s office.

These actions did not stop the outpouring of grief and anger. The protests intensified after Sheriff Steve Freitas announced that the shooting did not violate any of the department’s policies or procedures, and District Attorney Jill Ravitch declared the shooting lawful and did not indict the shooter.

It has been over two years since that tragic shooting. The healing that community leaders talked about has not happened. The passage of time may have helped some, but it hasn’t helped the young people who knew Lopez.

Andy Lopez Cruz was a popular and outgoing kid with a big smile. His friends came together immediately after he was shot. They organized marches and protests in Santa Rosa and demanded justice. As the weeks and months passed, their protest energy dissipated and they never reached their goal. They disbanded.

But recently, neighborhood youth came together again. Community organizer Jess Perez, who last year received the Sonoma County Peace & Justice Center’s “Unsung Hero” award, asked local youth if they would be interested in helping design the new park. The youth stepped up. They formed a steering committee and recommended the park have a theme: youth and neighborhood empowerment.

Andy’s friends, more than most, realize that Lopez was a disempowered kid living in a disempowered neighborhood. They never found healing. But now, two years later, neighborhood youth are again active. They are calling for a park where they can do homework after school, receive tutoring if needed, practice music and form groups for empowerment and support. Hopefully, the Andy Lopez Park will come to represent youth and neighborhood empowerment.

Chris Wroth and Francisco Siaz on the steering committee for the Andy Lopez park.

We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Sonoma Bach Choir Explores Mozart’s Requiem

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mozart
If you’ve seen the massively-long 1984 film “Amadeus,” you know a few things about classical Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. You know he had a shrill laugh, you know of his extensive collection of powdered wigs, and you know that the young musical mastermind died before he could finish his “Requiem Mass.” And, while that film took equally massive artistic liberties, the story of Mozart’s most infamous unfinished work still captivates audiences worldwide for it’s musical wonders as much as its mythical background.
While Mozart died with the Requiem very unfinished, fellow composer Franz Xaver Sussmayr, who was an assistant to Mozart and reportedly discussed the work with him before his death, offered a completed version of the Requiem that has long been the closest the world has gotten to Mozart’s masterwork. This weekend, the long-standing Sonoma Bach Choir, led by retired Sonoma State University professor Robert Worth and joined by the Live Oak Baroque Orchestra, will present an interesting dual concert titled Mozart Requiem: The Story of a Masterwork.” The ensemble will tackle first the Requiem just as Mozart left it, before returning to the full work as completed by Sussmayr.
Before each of the two weekend performances, Worth will present a pre-concert talk that fully explores the controversial history of, and compositional significance to the Requiem. The Sonoma Bach Choir performs the masterwork on Friday, Nov 20, at St Andrew Presbyterian Church, (16290 Arnold Dr, Sonoma. 8pm, $15-$25) and then again on Sunday, Nov 22, at St. Vincent de Paul Church (35 Liberty St, Petalum. 7pm. $15_$25). Pre-concert talks begin 35 minutes before each performance. Tickets and details are here.

Watch the Music Video for 1955’s “Glory Days”

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[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XLC3Qsl5Hs[/youtube]
Sonoma’s 1955 are a sauntering garage rock trio who excel at slick throwback riffs, addictive hooks and smart songwriting. Formed in 2012, the band is made up of Sasha Papadin (lead vocals, guitar), Kieran Maloney (drums) and Dane Gaffney (bass); and their musical output thus far has been defined by high energy and hot licks.
This week, 1955 unveiled a new music video for their hand-clapping, toe-tapping single, “Glory Days.” Set in the sweltering heat of Palm Springs and directed Papdin’s brother William, the video is inspired by the visual aesthetics of one of the band’s favorite movies, “Sexy Beast,” and shines with a sunny, ultra-cool vibe that matches the colorful tune perfectly.
Currently on the road, the band plays Los Angeles tonight and San Francisco on Nov 20. Get the details here.

John Travolta, Local Linemen Hit the Red Carpet in Yountville

Recently, the Bohemian’s preview of the fifth annual Napa Valley Film Fest, running through November 15, reported that actor John Travolta was going to receive the festival’s “Career Achievement Award” and attend a screening of his new film, Life on the Line.

In the film, which will make it’s world premiere at the festival on Saturday, November 14, in Yountville, Travolta portrays a Texas lineman (those guys who work on high electrical wires and grids) who faces hardships amid a deadly storm. This movie comes at a time when NPR is reporting that electrical companies like PG&E are having trouble hiring enough linemen to replace a retiring generation, as less young people are willing to work in dangerous and physically demanding positions.

We knew that Travolta will attend the screening, but now we know he’s bringing a few friends; in form of four local PG&E linemen. Donovan Rupp, Mike Bock, Tanner Leckenby and Hubert Lowe are all responsible for maintenance and construction in the Napa County area, which extends from Lake Berryessa to Benicia, and Sonoma and Fairfield. During the recent wildfires and last year’s Napa earthquake, they all worked around the clock, along with their teams, risking life and limb to restore power as safely and quickly as possible in the wake of the disasters.

See the actor meet and talk with the real-life heroes he portrays when Life on the Line premieres on Saturday, Nov 14, at the Napa Valley Performing Arts Center at Lincoln Theater, 100 California Dr, Yountville. Red Carpet arrivals start at4:30pm. $15 Rush tickets can be purchased at the door if seats are still available after passholders have been admitted. For passes and info, visit nvff.org.

Full Interview with Abiodun Oyewole of the Last Poets

Abiodun_Oyewole_of_The_Last_Poets
Abiodun Oyewole

The Last Poets are rightly called the godfathers of hip-hop. Formed in the late ‘60s and still very active today, the spoken word group first put rhythm to their politically-charged poems in the aftermath of the Civil Rights movement, inspiring a generation to use their voice and their words as tools of social justice.
This weekend, the Last Poets appear in a daylong spoken word workshop, showcase and performance at the Phoenix Theater in Petaluma, as a fundraiser for local radio station KWTF. In the Bohemian this week, we profiled the group and spoke with founding member Abiodun Oyewole by phone from his home in Harlem. Here is our full interview.
Bohemian: How did you first get into poetry and form the Last Poets?
Abiodun Oyewole: I got into poetry because when I was a teenager in high school, I had a liking for older girls, and when I was 15 I started getting into writing poetry to win the favors of some of these ladies.
I remember my teacher had given us an assignment to write sentences with new vocabulary words. I went to my teacher, Mrs Carpenter, and I said, ‘If put these words into a poem, can I get an extra credit?’ and she looked at the words and said, ‘If you can put these words in a poem together and make sense, I’ll give you two extra credits.’ So that was the time I wrote a poem seriously. When my teacher read the poem, she looked at me and ‘You are a poet, I don’t know what you’re going to do with it, but you have quite a gift.’
I started getting into poetry seriously when they killed Dr King. Dr King was killed April 4, 1968. And when King was killed I really kind of lost my mind, because I felt it was such an insult to black people. He was representing us, and he was nonviolent. I just felt totally offended by that.
I had a friend named David Nelson, and he made mention of the idea of starting a group of poets that would be from different walks of life, and would be an example to black people as to how much we need to come together. No matter what our particular persuasions in life are, we have the same foot on our necks, and we need to unify to get the foot off.

Nov. 13: From the Ground Up in Santa Rosa

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This summer, we wrote about Santa Rosa indie rock band Rags, who were just emerging with an assured DIY attitude and rhythmic, acoustic jams. Back in July, the band’s forthcoming debut album, Grounding, was still months away, but copies of Grounding have finally shipped and are looking good on vinyl and CD. Pick one up at the band’s upcoming record release show, when Rags promise to shred it up along with opening sibling duo Quenby & Katrina, Friday, Nov. 13, at the Orchard House, location available upon RSVP. 8pm. $5-$10. Ragstheband.com.

Woman on a Wire

What's it like, one has to wonder, to be cast as one of the most famous fictional characters in the history of children's literature? "It's very exciting," says Alanna Weatherby, who, beginning this weekend, will play author P. L. Travers' beloved flying nanny Mary Poppins, when the Santa Rosa Junior College's theater arts department takes a crack at the insanely...

Cutting Class

"Don't defend yourself," intones Leonard (Ron Severdia), an esteemed author-turned-teacher-for-hire. "If you're defending yourself," he tells a group of young writers he is in the middle of eviscerating, "you're not listening." In Theresa Rebeck's wickedly witty but occasionally infuriating comedy-drama, presented by Left Edge Theatre, Severdia plays Leonard with a mix of resignation, antagonism and bloodlust in a story of...

Bet Noir

There may be some overblown myths attached to the Thanksgiving holiday, but that bit about the Pinot Noir and the turkey dinner is not one of them. The Burgundy works with the bird and all the heart-burning miscellany that surrounds it on the table. Still, those of us tasked only with choosing the right bottle of wine for the feast...

Music on the Margins

I got high last night on LSD My mind was beautiful, and I was free —'A Blind Man's Penis' The mischievous musical creations of John Trubee are unlike anything else in the world of pop. Known by few and understood by fewer, the longtime songwriter, bandleader and now record-label owner has called Sonoma County home for more than 20 years, yet his...

Lasting Legacy

The death of Andy Lopez, on Oct. 22, 2013, brought national attention to Santa Rosa. Hundreds of people protested the shooting. Local political leaders called for calm and promised action. The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors promised to build a park in the empty field where Lopez was killed. They dedicated the park to him and created a 21-member...

Sonoma Bach Choir Explores Mozart’s Requiem

If you've seen the massively-long 1984 film "Amadeus," you know a few things about classical Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. You know he had a shrill laugh, you know of his extensive collection of powdered wigs, and you know that the young musical mastermind died before he could finish his "Requiem Mass." And, while that film took equally massive...

Watch the Music Video for 1955’s “Glory Days”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XLC3Qsl5Hs Sonoma's 1955 are a sauntering garage rock trio who excel at slick throwback riffs, addictive hooks and smart songwriting. Formed in 2012, the band is made up of Sasha Papadin (lead vocals, guitar), Kieran Maloney (drums) and Dane Gaffney (bass); and their musical output thus far has been defined by high energy and hot licks. This week, 1955 unveiled a...

John Travolta, Local Linemen Hit the Red Carpet in Yountville

Actor, locals will be on hand for the world premiere of his new film, "Life on the Line," as part of the Napa Valley Film Fest.

Full Interview with Abiodun Oyewole of the Last Poets

The Last Poets are rightly called the godfathers of hip-hop. Formed in the late ‘60s and still very active today, the spoken word group first put rhythm to their politically-charged poems in the aftermath of the Civil Rights movement, inspiring a generation to use their voice and their words as tools of social justice. This weekend, the Last Poets appear...

Nov. 13: From the Ground Up in Santa Rosa

This summer, we wrote about Santa Rosa indie rock band Rags, who were just emerging with an assured DIY attitude and rhythmic, acoustic jams. Back in July, the band’s forthcoming debut album, Grounding, was still months away, but copies of Grounding have finally shipped and are looking good on vinyl and CD. Pick one up at the band’s upcoming...
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