Jun. 15: On My Mind in Napa

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The genius of blues and soul man Ray Charles still captivates audiences, and this week the best Bay Area musicians celebrate his songbook in the Ray Charles Project. Singer Tony Lindsay and pianist David K. Matthews, both formerly of Santana, lead the ensemble of players that includes celebrated blues guitarist Chris Cain and groovy Bay Area bassist Dewayne Pate. Singer Linda Tillery, currently the head of the Cultural Heritage Choir and a central figure in the women’s music movement of the ’70s and ’80s, will also lend her powerful voice, along with S.F. bandleader Glenn Walters. This swinging septet brings the music of Ray Charles to life on Monday, June 15, at City Winery Napa, 1030 Main St., Napa. 8pm. $25. 707.260.1600. 

Jun. 17: Cultural Roots Celebration in Freestone

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From the meditation gardens to the one-of-a-kind cedar enzyme baths, the Osmosis Day Spa Sanctuary takes many of their practices and treatments from the traditions of Japan. This month, the spa celebrates 30 years in business with a special Japanese Cultural Day and Local’s Night. Come early for traditional koto music, tea ceremonies, massages and facials; a Japanese lunch and art bazaar are also on hand. In the evening, the monthly Local’s Night honors Japanese heritage with cedar enzyme footbaths, traditional cuisine, sake and tea, and an elegant Japanese sword demonstration in the garden. Enjoy the mindful and meditative celebration on Wednesday, June 17, at Osmosis Day Spa, 209 Bohemian Hwy., Freestone. Full day, 10am-4pm ($199); evening program, 6-8:30pm ($20). 707.823.8231.

Cheerleader for the Local

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Barefoot and in a bright green T-shirt, Richard Heinberg kicks back in his Santa Rosa living room and outlines his views on the local, the global and the future of civilization. A charismatic public speaker and the author of a dozen books including Afterburn, his latest, Heinberg and his wife, Janet Barocco, raise chickens, grow vegetables and cultivate backyard fruit and nut trees that nourish them all year long.

“I’m a cheerleader for local and all in favor of local solutions to economic problems,” he says. “We need to reverse the trend toward the global civilization that creates instability and imbalance, and that wreaks havoc with communities everywhere.”

Heinberg offers suggestions for local consumers: take your money out of big banks and deposit it in credit unions; buy at food co-ops; vote with pocketbooks; and push for local power apart from PG&E.

He also urges political activism. “Citizens should tell their representatives to reject the Trans-Pacific Partnership [TPP] that was negotiated in secret and that’s meant to increase the volume of international trade at the expense of local businesses and local economies,” he says. “One provision of the TPP says that if municipal governments promote local over imported, the importers can sue for lost profits.”

Born in Missouri in 1950, Heinberg didn’t tune into localism until 1992, when he settled in Sonoma County and began to track the dangers of globalization. From 1998 to 2008, he taught localism at the New College of California in Santa Rosa. In 2009, he joined the Post Carbon Institute, where he’s now the senior fellow-in-residence.

Heinberg points out the limits to localism. “If your goal is to be 100 percent local, then you won’t consume very much at all,” he says. “The point, however, ought not to be 100 percent local. Trade from distant places will always be necessary. But we ought to return to some kind of balance.”

In Afterburn, Heinberg offers gloomy thoughts on Santa Rosa, Sonoma County and California generally. They’ve all “bet their futures, mostly on cars, trucks, airplanes, highways and runways—and therefore, in effect, on oil,” he writes. “It appears to be a losing bet.”

Heinberg hopes to see a dismantling of the power of corporations to maximize profits at the expense of society as a whole. “Our civilization is well in decline,” he says. “The process will accelerate, though we can slow it by moving away from corporations and toward co-ops that operate locally and that offer high-quality products to consumers.”

Despite gloomy thoughts and a host of even gloomier book titles to his name—The Party’s Over, Powerdown and The End of Growth—Heinberg enjoys a good party, a good laugh, a good meal and the good life itself. And he’s positively upbeat in a chapter called “All Roads Lead Local.”

Country Heart

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Mary Murfitt and Betsy Howie’s obscure, country-fueled Cowgirls surprises because it’s much more than it appears to be. And so are the six women who make up the colorful cast of mismatched characters.

Continuing its inaugural season, Napa’s new Lucky Penny Productions plucked the 19-year-old Cowgirls out of thin air, and it turns out to be a shrewd choice for the Penny’s cozy, 99-seat venue. Neatly transformed into a Midwest honky-tonk, the theater even has a working bar onstage—early arrivals can step up and order a brew from the fully in-character cast members.

Jo (a magnificent turn by Daniela Innocenti Beem) is the owner of Hiram Hall, once a thriving country-music spot now facing foreclosure. After the death of her dad, Jo plans to save the joint with a concert featuring the Cowgirl Trio.

Not too happy are Jo’s employees, Mo (Staci Arriaga, adorably goofy) and Mickey (Taylor Bartolucci, effectively playing against type), who’d hoped Jo would have given them their own shot at stardom. Particularly peeved is Mickey, who, with less talent than she thinks she’s got, unleashes her inner-bitch-diva upon the Trio.

Unfortunately, Jo messed up there, accidentally booking the Coghill Trio, a classical group desperate for a successful gig while out on a disastrous reunion tour. As the frazzled Mary Lou, Rita and Lee, the powerhouse threesome of Dyan McBride, Heather Buck and Danielle DeBow are pitch-perfect. With the future of Hiram Hall hanging in the balance, Jo reluctantly gives the Coghills a crash course in country singing, gradually revealing her own singing chops, which she’s dead set on keeping under wraps.

Directed by Barry Martin with a keen sense for silly but sensitive comedy-drama, the slight story springs to life in the performances of the marvelous cast. Each character has her own dramatic arc, with all six women having something to prove, hide or learn. What might have descended into a mostly plotless showcase for Murfitt’s catchy songs becomes something much more.

Ultimately, Cowgirls is a show about the power of transcending expectations, somehow managing, with loads of heart and heaps of charm, to do the very same thing.

Rating (out of 5):

‘Cowgirls’ runs June 4–21 at the
Lucky Penny Community Arts Center, 1758 Industrial Way, Napa. Thursday at 7pm; Friday–Saturday at 8pm; Sunday at 2pm. $35. 707.266.6305

Letters to the Editor: June 10, 2015

Required Viewing

If you haven’t seen The Russian River: All Rivers—The Value of an American Watershed, you can catch it June 16 at 7 pm at Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol. As drought threatens every aspect of our lives here in Sonoma County, this film is a timely reminder that we have to protect our watersheds for our future and for our children’s future.

This independently and locally produced film should be required viewing for all Sonoma County citizens and elected officials.

Anne O’Brien

Santa Rosa

Pay Attention

The so-called Freedom Act further poisons our democracy by allowing access to our private phone calls and emails by merely keeping them one step removed from our voracious National Security apparatus. With 1.5 million contractors and employees holding top secret security clearances at a cost of over $50 billion a year, they have got to keep inventing reasons for their bullying and continued existence. Like Bush’s color-coded security alerts, their main tactic is to make us afraid by using faulty risk analysis.

Of course, Congress is either too gullible or too ignorant of the actual probabilities to deny the military anything less than the 50 percent of our federal discretionary budget they feed upon, with great waste and damage to our democracy. Over 70 democracies have collapsed and given away to authoritarian regimes during this century, many due to the reckless operations of the CIA and the National Security establishment.

Rand Paul and Bernie Sanders are both right on this one. We should pay attention.

Lagunitas

Crying Foul

The California Assembly Health Committee will be the sole committee to vote on SB 277 before it goes to the Assembly for a general vote, and if passed there, will go to the governor’s desk. Senate Bill 277 will require a state-mandated vaccination schedule for children to attend public or private school, and will eliminate the personal and religious exemptions, prompting many to call this law draconian, as it infringes on informed consent laws, which are highlighted in the Nuremberg and California Health and Safety codes as a personal right.

Previously in the Senate, this bill was heard in the Health, Education and Judicial Committees, but over the protest of thousands, the Assembly Rules Committee bypassed the Education and Judicial Committees in the Assembly. How can we have such a significant piece of legislation that will effect thousands of California children and their education and not have it heard in the Education and Judicial committees?

People are crying foul for good reason. It is looking like this bill is being fast-tracked by Big Pharma lobbyists and their partners in the California State Legislature like Richard Pan and Ben Allen. Please call your Assembly member and demand this bill be heard in the Education and Judicial Committees and also ask them to vote no.

Castro Valley

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

The Frack Hack

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There’s an old joke about state departments of conservation that holds that they’re really better in the department of conversations about environmental issues. They talk the talk but don’t necessarily walk it—especially in the face of deep-pocket special interests. In the case of California, it’s a petrochemical industry that has gushed more than
$2 million into the pro-fracking campaign coffers of
Gov. Jerry Brown.

I was reminded of the canard last week when, on the same day (June 4), the EPA released a draft report on hydraulic fracturing and its impact on water safety, Brown’s head of the California Department of Conservation abruptly quit his post.

The Los Angeles Times broke the latter story and reminded readers that Mark Nechodom was a Brown appointee already in the EPA crosshairs. Under his watch, the Times reported, he allowed “oil producers to drill thousands of oilfield wastewater disposal wells into federally protected aquifers.”

Nechodom’s resignation came a day after a federal racketeering lawsuit was filed on behalf of Central Valley farmers. They accuse Brown of an oleaginous conspiracy, the Times noted, which “deprived Kern County farmers of access to clean water.”

Meanwhile, the EPA report on fracking sparked an instant Rorschach moment in a frack-happy media eager to downplay any note of caution. The report concluded that while there’s been some evidence that water has been contaminated through fracking, it’s not a systemic problem. To the Wall Street Journal, the EPA report meant that the drilling practice, utilized in places like Kern County, was totally safe.

Nobody seemed to take much note that the EPA report warned of potential vulnerabilities that could render fracking a systemic problem, if left unchecked, unregulated—or, perchance, in the hands of oil-friendly agency heads such as the departed Nechodom. The first vulnerability the EPA identified was “water withdrawals in areas with low water availability.”

Such as, say, Kern County.

Time to cue the appropriate line from Chinatown: “Let me explain something to you, Governor. This business requires a certain amount of finesse.”

Tom Gogola is the news editor for this paper.

To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for Open Mic, write to op*****@******an.com.

Whale Mystery

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Walking Sonoma and Marin county beaches recently has yielded some unusual sights and smells.

According to officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 12 dead whales have washed up on Northern California beaches in the last three months, including two along the Sonoma County coast and one in Marin County. The carcass of a young gray whale showed up on Portuguese Beach on May 23, with another gray whale washing ashore near Jenner around May 28. In Marin, a headless whale came ashore on South Beach along the Point Reyes National Seashore on May 26.

Other than the fact that they are all whales, what do the carcasses share in common?

“There is no unifying factor,” says Mary Jane Schramm, spokeswoman for the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary.

Marine scientists have identified four species among the dozen dead whales: orca, humpback, sperm and gray, which are commonly seen heading north along the coast this time of year. Their ages, along with their causes of death, have varied.

According to Schramm, one of the dead whales found in Pacifica was mature and possibly died of “old age,” given the condition and apparent wear on various body parts. Several others were young, possibly calves from the winter birthing season in Mexico, and may have been victims of predation by orcas.

One humpback was a victim of shipping traffic, while other whale carcasses have shown signs of possible “fishery interactions” such as net entanglements, which can mortally wound the immense animals.

In a typical year, one or two gray whale carcasses wash ashore. So what is different this year?

Since the 2013–14 winter, climatologists have noticed the formation of a “blob” of water in the northeastern Pacific Ocean that runs 3 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than usual. Nick Bond, a scientist with the Office of the Washington State Climatologist, says it currently extends from Baja to the Gulf of Alaska, and is up to 1,000 miles wide in places.

Both Bond and California state climatologist Michael Anderson agree that the warm-water mass is not directly related to climate change or the whale deaths since the phenomenon has been noted before. But Anderson believes that “climate change may be impacting the magnitude of the anomalies.”

Though climatologists believe the warmer water is a short-term condition that will likely last only a few years, it is nonetheless an unusual event which, according to Bond, we could consider “a dress rehearsal for climate change.”

Scientists agree that linkages between climate and organisms of all types are difficult to make. In order to conduct sound, meaningful research, commercial activities that could disrupt the ecosystem, such as the oil spill near Santa Barbara, need to be tightly managed or eliminated.

As it happens, the NOAA recently announced the expansion of marine sanctuaries along the Marin, Sonoma and Mendocino coasts. The Gulf of the Farallones and the Cordell Bank national marine sanctuaries are both increasing to more than twice the area they previously encompassed.

The expanded areas contain significant resources and habitats, including an “upwelling zone” originating off Point Arena. Upwelling is a process by which deep, nutrient-rich water rises to the surface. The upwelling zone along the Sonoma and Marin coasts is one of the most productive systems in North America, and contributes to the rich marine life in local waters.

The sanctuary designation protects these areas from oil and gas exploration, and makes it possible to regulate activities that could be detrimental to the ecosystem, such as commercial shipping speeds and fishing.

Frances Gulland, senior scientist with the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, believes that while the number of dead whales seen on North Coast beaches this spring may not be alarming, relative to the 1999–2000 catastrophe when 40 gray whales washed up on North Coast beaches, it is cause for concern.

“We just don’t know what is altering the distribution of these whale carcasses,” Gulland says.

The NOAA is hosting a celebration of the sanctuary expansion on June 28 from 11am to 3pm at the Gualala Arts Center.

Strong ‘Will’

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Popular folk songwriter John McCutcheon is a regular sight at Sonoma’s Sebastiani Theatre, but this week he sings a different tune when he stars in Joe Hill’s Last Will, a one-man play that examines the activist and songwriter on the last day of his life through some of Hill’s most enduring songs.

“No one would be more surprised than Joe Hill that someone is doing a one-man show based on him,” says McCutcheon.

Utah authorities executed Hill 100 years ago over a dubious conviction. Hill was a member of the International Workers of the World union and a prolific songwriter who practically invented the protest song.

“He’s a central figure that almost nobody knows,” says McCutcheon. An influence on icons like Woody Guthrie, Hill repurposed old melodies with new, socially conscious lyrics that are still relevant today. McCutcheon feels an affinity with the character, whom he first portrayed when the show originally debuted in 2011. “The wonderful thing about theater is that, much more so than books or songs, they are real living documents,” says McCutcheon. With an expanded set of Hill’s songs, McCutcheon commands the stage in this stirring show that he says “treads the turf” between live concert and live theater.

Joe Hill’s Last Will is presented on Sunday, June 14, at Sebastiani Theatre, 476 First St. E., Sonoma. 7:30pm. $22. 707.996.9756.

Bad Vibes

Love and Mercy centers on the life of the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and his overzealous psychotherapist, Eugene Landy. My brother knew Landy’s son, so I met Wilson at his house during the events seen in this first-rate biopic, the days when the famed musician was immobilized by emotional problems and hired a psychiatrist 24/7 to heal him.

What made a stronger impression than getting a very wary handshake from the supposed host was the way the Landys made themselves at home, as depicted here, but I never saw anything as sordid as the business here with Landy (played by Paul Giamatti) rationing Wilson’s hamburger, as the composer responsible for so many celestial songs whined for food.

If the much-bullied Wilson in those days looked like anyone, it was Ed Begley Jr., so one has to ignore the physical wrongness and deliberately “rain man”–like acting of John Cusack as the older Wilson. Wilson lost a ton of weight, but was he ever that lean? Working against Cusack’s recessiveness, Wilson’s second wife Melinda (Elizabeth Banks) turns on the Klieg lights all the way as his rescuer. She’s irresistible and accurate to the time portrayed, as an open, sweet, alluring soul, with a good spine on her.

The expert sound-mixing that gets us into the mind of Wilson is especially fine in Love and Mercy, with its ecstasies and terrors. We’re with the madcap genius composing “Good Vibrations” alongside a group of studio musicians—we see the iridescent shards before it became a stained-glass window. Using a hand-held camera, director Bill Pohlad convinces us that we’re present at the creation.

Paul Dano is superb as the younger Wilson. His scarily good impersonation of the troubled Beach Boy is one of the best performances of the year. I hope it’ll ensure a revival of Wilson’s gorgeous, lesser known music—and maybe also serve as a warning to those who trust their therapists too much.

‘Love and Mercy’ is playing wide release in the North Bay.

Glen Ellen Green Tour

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One of the best parts about a hike is satisfying the hunger and thirst you work up after it’s over. The folks at Jack London State Historic Park must have had that in mind when they created the Glen Ellen Green Tour in partnership with Quarryhill Botanical Garden and Benziger Family Winery.

The 10:30am–3pm tour covers each property and includes a picnic and winetasting at the end, all for $59. Advance reservations are required and must be made at least two weeks prior to the tour date.

The morning begins at Quarryhill Botanical Garden with a docent-led tour of the 25-acre property and its 20,000 wild-origin plants and flowers. Quarryhill is a woodland garden in the foothills of the Mayacamas Mountains. Winding gravel paths pass among flowering shrubs and exotic trees, ponds and seasonal waterfalls. Rolling hills are planted with rare and endangered species grown from seed collected in East Asia.

Next stop is Jack London park. The docent-led tour here includes a visit to the author’s home and ranch, and a picnic lunch. The tour concludes at Benziger Family Winery with a close-up look at their biodynamic vineyards, fermentation facility, crush pad and barrel caves. The winery tour is about 45 minutes and includes a special tasting of the Benziger wines.

Lunch selections are made when you reserve your space at jacklondonpark.com.

Jun. 15: On My Mind in Napa

The genius of blues and soul man Ray Charles still captivates audiences, and this week the best Bay Area musicians celebrate his songbook in the Ray Charles Project. Singer Tony Lindsay and pianist David K. Matthews, both formerly of Santana, lead the ensemble of players that includes celebrated blues guitarist Chris Cain and groovy Bay Area bassist Dewayne Pate....

Jun. 17: Cultural Roots Celebration in Freestone

From the meditation gardens to the one-of-a-kind cedar enzyme baths, the Osmosis Day Spa Sanctuary takes many of their practices and treatments from the traditions of Japan. This month, the spa celebrates 30 years in business with a special Japanese Cultural Day and Local's Night. Come early for traditional koto music, tea ceremonies, massages and facials; a Japanese lunch...

Cheerleader for the Local

Barefoot and in a bright green T-shirt, Richard Heinberg kicks back in his Santa Rosa living room and outlines his views on the local, the global and the future of civilization. A charismatic public speaker and the author of a dozen books including Afterburn, his latest, Heinberg and his wife, Janet Barocco, raise chickens, grow vegetables and cultivate backyard...

Country Heart

Mary Murfitt and Betsy Howie's obscure, country-fueled Cowgirls surprises because it's much more than it appears to be. And so are the six women who make up the colorful cast of mismatched characters. Continuing its inaugural season, Napa's new Lucky Penny Productions plucked the 19-year-old Cowgirls out of thin air, and it turns out to be a shrewd choice for...

Letters to the Editor: June 10, 2015

Required Viewing If you haven't seen The Russian River: All Rivers—The Value of an American Watershed, you can catch it June 16 at 7 pm at Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol. As drought threatens every aspect of our lives here in Sonoma County, this film is a timely reminder that we have to protect our watersheds for our future and for...

The Frack Hack

There's an old joke about state departments of conservation that holds that they're really better in the department of conversations about environmental issues. They talk the talk but don't necessarily walk it—especially in the face of deep-pocket special interests. In the case of California, it's a petrochemical industry that has gushed more than $2 million into the pro-fracking campaign...

Whale Mystery

Walking Sonoma and Marin county beaches recently has yielded some unusual sights and smells. According to officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 12 dead whales have washed up on Northern California beaches in the last three months, including two along the Sonoma County coast and one in Marin County. The carcass of a young gray whale showed...

Strong ‘Will’

Popular folk songwriter John McCutcheon is a regular sight at Sonoma's Sebastiani Theatre, but this week he sings a different tune when he stars in Joe Hill's Last Will, a one-man play that examines the activist and songwriter on the last day of his life through some of Hill's most enduring songs. "No one would be more surprised than Joe...

Bad Vibes

Love and Mercy centers on the life of the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson and his overzealous psychotherapist, Eugene Landy. My brother knew Landy's son, so I met Wilson at his house during the events seen in this first-rate biopic, the days when the famed musician was immobilized by emotional problems and hired a psychiatrist 24/7 to heal him. What made...

Glen Ellen Green Tour

One of the best parts about a hike is satisfying the hunger and thirst you work up after it's over. The folks at Jack London State Historic Park must have had that in mind when they created the Glen Ellen Green Tour in partnership with Quarryhill Botanical Garden and Benziger Family Winery. The 10:30am–3pm tour covers each property and includes...
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