Live Review: Dar Williams at City Winery Napa


Singer and songwriter Dar Williams began her career in music just over 2o years ago, crafting a debut album in 1993 that belied the then-24-year-old alternative folk artists years. The Honesty Room is a record that displayed deep emotional maturity and it introduced the world to Williams unique perspective. This year, the artist is touring in honor of that first album, performing The Honesty Room in its entirety live.
Last night, Williams performed at City Winery Napa with opener Lucy Wainwright Roche in a night of sublime songwriting played with intimate tenderness and passion. Roche began the night by walking up and diving right into her simple, finger-picked acoustic melodies under a soaring, searing voice. Roche played tunes off her latest record, There’s a Last Time for Everything, including a devastating cover of Swedish pop-star Robyn’s hit “Call Your Girlfriend.” In between songs, Roche engaged the crowd in light banter and impromptu Q&A sessions. She shared an especially bizarre tale of playing in Lithuania a few months ago. The crowd there silently ignored her completely, the only reactions coming after someone yelled out, “you should sing about basketball!” The crowd at City Winery was much more receptive, and joined Roche in a sing-along version of her cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart.”
This was my first time inside the newly recreated City Winery Napa, located in the historic Napa Valley Opera House. It’s a beautiful space, with tables and chairs throughout the floor level for a dinner and concert experience, and some of the original Opera House seats up in the balcony (where I sat) that are ideal if you’re just coming to the show.
It was also a first for Dar Williams,making her City Winery debut last night. Joined occasionally on piano by Bryn Roberts, Williams opened her set with a spirited rendition of her popular tune, “The Mercy of the Fallen,” and then jumped right into performing her debut album. Songs like “When I Was a Boy” and “The Babysitter’s Here” sounded as fresh and relevant today as they did 20 years ago, testifying to the songwriters universal and timeless appeal. Williams was at times somber and serene, and also at times equally bouncy and fun; as her early work alternated from wistful and melancholy to hopeful and empowered. Throughout the set, Williams also reminisced about the events surrounding these songs, sharing the inspirations that were mined from her lifetime of meaningful relationships and traveling.
The singer did seem to be fighting a bit of a cough in between songs, with a cup of tea and a glass of water at the ready. Towards the end of her set, Williams admitted to waking up that morning with no voice, but thankfully, she was well enough to perform, and battled through with aplomb. Her effervescent vocals were especially airy, though to no ill effect. After playing through the album, Williams capped the show off with two more well known hits, and again the small crowd helped in singing along during “As Cool As I Am” and “Iowa (Traveling III).”
City Winery’s line up keeps getting more and more interesting with every new announcement. I’m looking forward to seeing another show there soon. As for Williams, she is a performer who’s not to be missed, and any time she comes around it’s cause for celebration. I can’t wait to catch her playing again.

Kashkari For the Win: Support Legalization, Bro

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California Republican gubernatorial candidate Neel Kashkari gave his party a major wingnut reprieve this week when he narrowly beat out Minuteman Assemblyman Tim Donnelly for the right — as the common parlance goes — to lose badly to incumbent Gov. Jerry Brown in November.

Kashkari slipped by Donnelly with a 4 percent margin, but both GOP candidates drew vote percentages in the teens, whereas Brown hogged up some 54 percent of the total vote cast.

Kashkari, a former Treasury Department official who has said he voted for Barack Obama in 2008, has emphasized low taxes, lots of fracking, expanding educational opportunities, and killing the SMART Train. Meh. He’s gonna have to kick it up a few notches if he’s got any chance here.

Did somebody just say, marijuana to the rescue?

At a campaign stop not long ago Kashkari said he didn’t support legalization, but also didn’t support the War on Drugs as currently waged. One surefire way to end the war, brother Neel, is to legalize marijuana!

What if — what if — Kashkari were to, as these things go, “study the issue a little more closely” in coming weeks before coming out in favor of legalization? He might start with recent polls that show at least 55 percent of Californians support legalization. He might then study Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper’s budget proposal that says legal weed in that state will bring in around $100 million in taxes this year.

Closer to home, Kashkari might study a Marijuana Policy Project’s statistic that indicates California is itself reaping over $100 million a year in taxes from its pot dispensaries. He might take a look at how California dispensaries will now operate under a single, statewide set of rules, with the help of law enforcement, and he might have a look at a Harvard study from a few years back that said prohibition costs taxpayers about $17 billion a year.

He might eat a chocolate bar with Maureen Dowd in a Colorado hotel room and freak out at the enormity of the opportunity to overtake Moonbeam with a Nixon-in-China move that would send every last freaking pothead in the state to the polls to vote for him!

Brown has already signaled opposition to legalization of the demon weed on the grounds that people will get lazy if they smoke it, costing jobs and productivity. Meanwhile, half the state is already getting baked.

It’s a lazy argument premised on a dumb stereotype. Try some sativa, governor, that stuff will keep you up all night working on your budget — or, just maybe, working on your plan to outflank Kashkari on the pro-pot tip if the moderate GOP candidate gets wise and supports legalization as a way to beat you.

June 6: Jeremy Novy Art Reception at Epicurean Connection

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If you’ve ever wandered the streets of San Francisco and seen those brightly colored koi fish stenciled on sidewalks and abandoned buildings, you can thank celebrated street artist Jeremy Novy. The leading voice in the city’s queer street-art movement is also known for his series of stenciled drag-queen portraits, pop-culture-inspired pieces that explode with color and attitude. Pride Month brings Novy’s work to Sonoma, opening this week and benefiting the Russian River Sisters’ Grant Fund. A Collection of Drag Queens and Koi Stencils by Jeremy Novy exhibits through June, with an opening reception Friday, June 6, at the Epicurean Connection, 122 West Napa St., Sonoma. 6pm. 707.935.7960.

June 8: Petracovich at Arlene Francis Center

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Jessica Peters Malmberg, aka singer and songwriter Petracovich, has spent the last year battling cancer with the help of her family, friends and the community at large. As she recovers from successful treatments, Petracovich gets back onstage, headlining the first annual Journey to Heal benefit this week. The powerful and melodic songwriter is joined by accomplished musician Tad Wagner; art and a silent auction are also featured, raising money to give families battling cancer a chance to recover and reconnect. Petracovich plays the Journey to Heal show Sunday, June 8, at the Arlene Francis Center, 99 Sixth St., Santa Rosa. 3—6pm. $15—$25. 707.528.3009.

June 6: The Rock Collection at Hopmonk, Sebastopol

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As North Bay supergroups go, few can claim all-star status as readily as the Rock Collection. The five-piece collaborative group is led by drummer Greg Anton and features heavy hitters Melvin Seals (Jerry Garcia Band), Stu Allen, Dan Lebowitz (ALO) and Robin Sylvester (RatDog). This week, the Rock Collection returns to Hopmonk, and they’re set to make history by filming the band’s debut music video live. Join these very talented musicians for a night of fun and filming. The Rock Collection play Friday, June 6, at Hopmonk Sebastopol, 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 8pm. $20. 707.829.7300.

June 9: Garrison Keillor at Lincoln Theater

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Garrison Keillor is the consummate storyteller. Best known for his national radio program, A Prairie Home Companion, Keillor has spent 40-plus years spotlighting great music and stories. Now Keillor is in the spotlight himself, with his newest collection, The Keillor Reader. Compiling work from The New Yorker, monologues from A Prairie Home Companion and new, never-before-published pieces, The Keillor Reader is essential for any fan of the masterful raconteur. Keillor makes two North Bay appearances this week, first on Monday, June 9, at the Lincoln Theater (100 California Drive, Yountville; $20—$35; 7pm; 707.226.8742) and again Tuesday, June 10, at Book Passage (51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera; 1pm; 415.927.0960).

Letters to the Editor: June 4, 2014

Get It Straight

Sure hope your new feature “Debriefer” is not a harbinger of the way the new editors at the Bohemian will be dealing with the community they are attempting to serve. This alternative to Sonoma County’s daily has a proud history of covering the local progressive community, so your snarky piece about the Andy Lopez coalition (“Ravitch, Run,” May 21) was a surprise.

Maybe the “Debriefer” had a bad day, so he couldn’t find the time to actually contact anyone from our group regarding our plans for responding to the much-delayed decision by the Sonoma County district attorney as to whether or not she’ll ever be indicting Deputy Gelhaus for Andy’s murder last Oct. 22. But wait! He admittedly had time for his contact in Ravitch’s office, who gave him the feedback that the Justice Coalition for Andy Lopez (JCAL) is spreading “rumors” in an attempt to “push Ravitch’s hand” for said decision. He even compared our “tactics,” which he misrepresented, to those of “irresponsible right-wing news outlets”!

Wow! Those are a lot of assumptions without talking to anyone! Unless your “Debriefer” is psychic, could you please explain just how he arrived at all these erroneous conclusions? It’s true that the JCAL has been on alert for the past two weeks and has organized around the possibility that the DA might actually make her decision after over seven months of investigation. Would the “Debriefer” prefer that we just wait without any kind of contingency plans? And he was just plain wrong when he wrote that “protests were planned unless she ruled now.” The protests are planned only if she doesn’t charge Gelhaus. Get it straight, Debriefer!

And by the way, isn’t the idea of “debriefing” its readers the whole point of a respected newspaper’s mission? Are you now just limiting this effort to a short, skinny column on one page? We understand that it is difficult to fit in the actual news with all the wine and food ads, but somehow this paper has managed to do it for over 30 years. I sincerely hope that a new editorial team will not change that tradition. Gabe Meline—we miss you!

Camp Meeker

Editor’s note: ‘Debriefer’ is two columns in length, twice as long as the Bohemian’s previous news brief column. ‘Debriefer’ included a follow-up item about Ravitch’s forthcoming decision in the May 28 issue.

Bike Friendly

I’ve ridden close to 100,000 miles, on three different bicycles, mostly in Sonoma County. Showing drivers you care about staying out of the way, and using courtesy, eye contact and a smile, makes the experience a lot more enjoyable and a lot less fearful (Open Mic, May 21). I’ve been buzzed a few dozen times, and have had the “Why did you get so close?” chat with some bikers trying to show me something, but most folks are pretty cool. Be nice out there, folks. Some of these drivers are also lovers, and you may need ’em on your side of the bed some day.

Via the internet

Good points, Tom, but it’s worth keeping in mind that there are situations when a bicyclist or group is in no way acting out of “self-entitlement” or aggression by occupying a lane when safe to do so. As drivers, we should keep this in mind and not bug out and honk a horn whenever we have to wait 10 seconds to pass. Bridges are key examples. Many, like the bridge out of Pt. Reyes on Shoreline Highway south out of town, have no bike lane. Just because a stripe exists somewhere on the side of the road does not mean that you can safely pass.

As of June this year, you cannot legally pass a bike without three feet of clearance, minimum. On a bridge like that, it’s totally unsafe to pass anyway. The dude honking in a case like this was likely the aggressive instigator, although he may have not realized that, and did not necessarily deserve a beat-down. Clearly, everybody needs to chill a bit. I’m just pointing out that occupying a lane, in some situations, like a blind curve or bridge, is the correct thing to do per California’s motor vehicle code, and not a display of aggression.

Via the internet

Electoral Guidance

I would have appreciated an article of recommendations from the Bohemian editorial team for the current election. The Press Democrat had a few recommendations, as did the San Francisco Chronicle. As the leading liberal journal in the North Bay, your input on the election was missed. Please do so for the big election in November.

Via the internet

Editor’s note: Because we cover Sonoma, Napa and Marin counties, it’s not feasible to publish a complete voter’s guide, but we will continue to publish coverage of key races and ballot initiatives.

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

Bonum Donum Estate

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Don’t blame yourself if you’ve never heard of Donum Estate. Ditto Robert Stemmler, Donum’s sister brand named for Sonoma County’s most influential wine legend whose name is news to you. But if you experience a little déjà vu on the road to the winery, you can blame the Microsoft corporation.

Anyone who switched on a Windows PC since fall 2001 has seen “Bliss,” the image of surreally green, rolling hills purchased from local photographer Chuck O’Rear by the software giant to serve as the default wallpaper on its Windows XP system. Since replanted in grapevines, the actual landscape is just up the road from Donum Estate, also launched during the harvest of 2001. This spring, while “Bliss” cropped up in the media again when XP was put to pasture, Donum invited a few wine-media types to the estate to quietly announce a sort of reboot of their own.

German winemaker Robert Stemmler came to California at the invitation of Peter and Michael Mondavi in 1961. He set up his own winery in the late 1970s, and while he did not focus on Pinot Noir at first, he was ahead of his time, sourcing from the Bohan vineyard on the Sonoma Coast. Famed Napa winemaker André Tchelistcheff, fond of glove-related tasting notes, was said to have described Stemmler’s Pinot Noir as having the sensual aroma of a woman’s leather glove.

Since Stemmler retired in 1989, his friend Anne Moller-Racke has had a hand in the business, first running it as a sideline to Buena Vista, which the Racke family, German spirits barons, then owned. In 2001, Moller-Racke created Donum Estate on a one-time dairy that retains its working ranch character.

The Donum label goes on “highly allocated” Pinot Noir at $70 and up; the Stemmler label, which pictures the 15th-century tapestry Les Vendanges, sells $20–$45 bottles of more fruit-forward wines. New winemaker Dan Fishman, who ditched a doctoral program on a whim to start as a harvest intern at the winery seven years ago, has been given liberty to experiment; the 2012 Skin Contact Chardonnay ($30), for instance, was fermented on the skins like a red wine. It’s a different animal of Chardonnay, but not one of those lately controversial “orange wines.” With aromas of raw, chopped papaya, Sweet Tarts and salty Vermentino on the tongue, it’s rich without being buttery, and has a long, tangy finish. Barrel samples of upcoming Carneros and Anderson Valley Pinots from whole-cluster fermented and single clone selections show lots of smoky potpourri and red plum promise.

Stemmler Wines, 24520 Ramal Road, Sonoma. No tasting room; visits by appointment only (inquire for availability). 707.939.2293.

North Bay Scene Setters

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While it doesn’t have the size or support of the local food movement, the North Bay’s local fashion scene is home to a growing coterie of designers.

“They’re hiding, they’re very scattered,” says Andrea Kenner, a radiant fashionista herself.

Kenner, a Sonoma County native, is the owner of Tamarind, a new boutique at the Barlow in Sebastopol. After 10 years of designing ever-changing trends for fashion brands in New York City, Kenner needed to make a change.

“There was a feeling of pumping down so many things, like flipping hamburgers,” she recalls. “Now I’m focusing on curating timeless pieces with a story behind them that are created in a slower process and are going to last forever.”

Among Tamarind’s selection of well-known luxury brands is a small selection of local accessory designers. The store carries leather bags by Chantel Garayalde, jewelry by Becky Kelso and Padé Vavra, and handcrafted scarves by A Curious Beast, all from Sonoma County.

Garayalde came back to Sonoma County in 2009 after stints in L.A and New York.

“Lately, I see more curiosity and sophistication in the local market,” Garayalde says.

As a local designer, she feels less pressure compared to fast-paced Los Angeles. “There’s so much talent here, even if we don’t mold ourselves around trends,” she says.

Kenner is determined to turn this miniature representation into a movement. To expand the local fashion community, Kenner and Santa Rosa designer Hilary Heaviside are creating a fashion “think tank” to exchange ideas and help grow the local scene.

When Kenner talks about her plans for Tamarind and the North Bay, a wishful question arises: While L.A is slowly becoming the cool, understated alternative to New York, could Northern California be next in line? Anything is possible, as the local fashion community currently leaves a lot to the imagination.

If lifestyle blogger Adrienne Shubin can’t name a local fashion designer off the top of her head, what are the chances you can? Shubin, the vibrant woman behind therichlifeonabudget.com, a Kenwood-based blog, loves shopping—online and, alas, at Macy’s.

“I feel badly that my go-to places are Macy’s or Goodwill, as I miss out on handcrafted, special goods,” she admits. “I’d love to help the community and shop local, be exposed to more designers.”

Kenner is hoping to give local fashion that exposure at an all-local fashion event at the Sonoma County Museum. The event is being imagined as part fashion show and part exhibition.

“Innovative clothing and accessories design are a natural extension of the creative culture of this region, so it’s a natural fit for the museum,” says Diane Evans, the museum’s executive director.

Meanwhile, Kenner is putting together her own fashion line.

“We’ll see what comes out of the woodwork,” she concludes with shy optimism.

Better fashionably late than never.

Don’t Thread on Me

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Like so many icons of American culture, the T-shirt owes its ascendancy to the U.S. military. In what is widely considered the first printed T-shirt, an American Air Corps gunnery unit shirt made the cover of Life magazine in July 1942, complete with a wearer bearing a large weapon.

But the history of the T-shirt goes back even further in military lore, to earlier American military adventures. The original T-shirt wearers were members of the American Navy fighting in the Spanish American War at the end of the 19th century. The soldiers were issued T-shirts as part of their uniform, and they henceforth carried the mantle of the T-shirt as outerwear.

The T-shirt would become the go- to garment for blue-collar America. In time, it would then emerge as an icon in its own right, malleable to the whims of the Zeitgeist.

By the 1950s, T-shirt-cool had taken hold and spoke to the newly self-anointed American rebel spirit, with its whiff of anti-heroic martyrdom and the triumph of the underdog: Marlon Brando in his white T-shirt prowling the waterfront, James Dean’s outsider-loner in denim and white cotton.

“The T-shirt has been used to convey both rebellion and conformity, depending upon the context and the type of messages,” writes Diana Crane in her book, Fashion and Its Social Agenda: Class, Gender, and Identity in Clothing.

America gave the world the T-shirt, and the world, in turn, gave Americans cheap Chinese T-shirts of the “big box” variety. Crane notes that Americans purchase about a billion T-shirts every year.

“Technical developments in the 1950s and 1960s, such as plastic inks, plastic transfers and spray paint, led to the use of colored designs and increased the possibilities of the T-shirt as a means of communication,” writes Crane.

Nothing says conformity like the social phenomenon of the big-box uniculture wardrobe, recognizable as a regional fashion trend where everyone wears the same T-shirt and khaki-shorts combo to the beach.

While itchy and ill-fitting, these shirts offered ersatz individuality in the guise of innocuous or goofy declarations, or, more to the point, with pictures of a large and intimidating pickup truck with messages about God, Guns and Freedom.

But wherever we buy them and for whatever reason we wear them, we all love our T-shirts and we all have that one we’ve kept forever. We go on vacation, we buy the shirt. There’s a family reunion, and we’re making shirts to commemorate it. “I was there: McCarthy Family Picnic, 1995.”

We wear some T-shirts until they’re practically falling apart; others occupy nostalgia space in our bureaus until such time as a garage sale is declared or a rag is needed to wash the car.

We may outgrow the T-shirt, but not the message. Or we may outgrow the message and sell the shirt on E-bay for $60 to some crazed Uriah Heep fan in Antwerp.

T-shirts are basically an easy and generally cheap way to self-identify. But our era does offer more than its share of the willfully offensive T-shirt—shock for shock’s sake messaging under the mantle of “free expression” as the obtuse rationale du jour. Earnest expressions of self-identity and defiance—”I Had an Abortion”— have given way to the truly tasteless T’s of our time.

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For example, those “Keep Calm and . . .” T-shirts raise questions about how shock value has entered our politics as a form of legitimate discourse—and what the implications are for a country that greets serious issues with mocking retorts.

When so much national energy is spent, for example, talking about rape and trying to end it, what’s the social value of wearing a T-shirt that declares “Keep Calm and Rape On”?

One might argue, none at all.

Or maybe it’s all just payback for the “identity politics” movement of the American progressive left.

“I think stupid is the new cool,” says Matt Morgan, founder and president of Sebastopol’s Farm Fresh Clothing, which sells organic cotton T-shirts made with sustainable practices. “Conservatives have figured out that they have to do something to be cool, to connect. But they are trying too hard.”

Conversely, the T-shirt, lowly though its origins may be, has been absorbed into haute couture rituals of appropriation as well. The legendarily most expensive T-shirt available costs $400,000, is custom-made and comes with diamonds embedded into the fabric.

We’ve come a long way from the three-for-$10 concert T-shirts from 1970s flea markets. Those shirts were pretty cool, but they fell apart after one washing.

And, speaking of falling apart, you can tell a lot about where a country’s sensibilities lie by the T-shirts it favors. In this country, the most iconic T-shirt image these days has got to be the famous Gadsden “Don’t Tread on Me” flag.

That shirt has supplanted the iconic face of Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara. The Che shirt had a decades-long run as go-to garb for any would-be radical with a bone about imperial America and its various excesses of war and white privilege.

Got a problem with America? Get yourself a Che shirt! That’ll show ’em!

The Che shirts had built-in shock appeal for anyone interested in posturing radical chic while still chomping a Big Mac with the “I’m with Stupid” masses.

But Che has left the building. The 9-11 attacks unleashed waves of embittered hypernationalism in this land, as right-wing intolerants got their footing in the smoldering ruins and ran with the imagery like so many chuckleheads with bullhorns. The premise was a nasty nostalgia for easy arguments of the “America: Love It or Leave It” variety.

Those attacks, commemorated in the aftermath with T-shirts proclaiming “Never Again,” which came complete with an appallingly distasteful duo of flaming buildings, sharpened lines of disagreement over how America reckons with its various global roles, including and especially those weirdly conjoined roles where we throw lots of bombs and culture out there and see what sticks.

The ascendancy of an invigorated American right wing, with the Nuge at the helm, found purchase in the culture war with a twin-barreled push of nationalist symbolism and a self-assertion notable for its pig-headed indifference to the offensiveness it was spewing. Often, the two co-mingled on T-shirts. A new vocal minority of right-wing culture warriors strapped on the Gadsden T-shirt and the gun, watched Red Dawn for the 243rd time, and went to war . . . at Chilis.

The election of Barack Obama in 2008 upped the culture-right ante by proposing that the easy symbolism of Obama trumped his wishy-washy neo-liberal pragmatism and complex, corporatist mind-set. Obama defied an easy T-shirt designation, so we were treated to all of them: Obama with a Hitler moustache, Obama wearing Muslim garb, Obama with “the Joker” paint job.

As Che chic gave way to Gadsden harrumphing in the Obama era, new questions were raised about the symbolism depicted across one’s chest: How are we defined by T-shirts, and how do we define ourselves to the global T-shirt culture created by Americans?

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Americans’ twin obsessions with self-identity and consumption—the relentless pursuit of pigeonholing and product—come to roost in the T-shirts we purchase as signifiers of a cultural or ethnic sensibility. And in our world of rampant false equivalencies, false flags and false charges concerning “the Other” in the White House, the right wing has managed to insert itself squarely into the field of “identity politics” with some pungently abrasive Che mojo of its own.

“Identity politics” has been appropriated and reconfigured as anti-government chic, complete with a new conservative discourse that demands a “post-racial” vernacular. It’s payback time, and the T-shirt is front and center in these days of down-market right-wing reckoning.

I’m reminded of those old shirts from the 1980s that read, “It’s a Black Thing: You Wouldn’t Understand.” Nowadays, the theme from race-baiting agitators is, we understand all too well.

“T-shirts speak to like-minded people; a particular T-shirt may not be meaningful to those with different views and affiliations,” writes Crane. “This reflects the fragmentation of leisure cultures into lifestyles and subcultures and other groupings whose members respond to the enormous cultural complexity of their surroundings by orienting themselves toward those who are like rather than those who are unlike themselves.”

Nowadays, right-wing fringe politics have re-oriented mainstream discourse into a mucked-up post-racialism with the help of T-shirts and other messaging vehicles that, for example, decry welfare and food stamps. There’s a T-shirt that puts Obama’s face on a food stamp and declares him the “Food Stamp President,” for all the self-selected world to see.

This is the shock-for-shock’s-sake state of America, where reactionaries offer snidely imagistic putdowns in lieu of debate: One man’s “New Jim Crow” is another’s “Been There, Done That.”

At the same time, a new, homegrown industry of T-shirt manufacturers, embodied by Farm Fresh, has emerged on the scene, offering U.S.-made products whose politics are stitched into the fabric of the shirts themselves—and who offer a sort of “Don’t Thread on Me” counter to the Gadsden flag-wavers.

Farm Fresh’s client list includes the worker bees at Facebook and Google (they also make the Bohemian‘s T-shirts), and the company also creates message shirts that light-heartedly tread onto hot-button issues like global warming or melting Japanese nuclear reactors.

But Morgan hits on an issue that speaks to the way the cultural right has been winning the “messaging” war. “The issues are real,” he says, “but we are being light-hearted about it. I do sense a basic fear—in our market, in our meetings—that everyone is afraid to go that extra step.”

Morgan recounts the hullabaloo that ensued when Farm Fresh created a T-shirt reading “Dog Has a Plan.”

“Everyone was so nervous about releasing that shirt,” he says.

Live Review: Dar Williams at City Winery Napa

Singer and songwriter Dar Williams began her career in music just over 2o years ago, crafting a debut album in 1993 that belied the then-24-year-old alternative folk artists years. The Honesty Room is a record that displayed deep emotional maturity and it introduced the world to Williams unique perspective. This year, the artist is touring in honor of that...

Kashkari For the Win: Support Legalization, Bro

California Republican gubernatorial candidate Neel Kashkari gave his party a major wingnut reprieve this week when he narrowly beat out Minuteman Assemblyman Tim Donnelly for the right — as the common parlance goes — to lose badly to incumbent Gov. Jerry Brown in November. Kashkari slipped by Donnelly with a 4 percent margin, but both GOP candidates drew vote percentages...

June 6: Jeremy Novy Art Reception at Epicurean Connection

If you’ve ever wandered the streets of San Francisco and seen those brightly colored koi fish stenciled on sidewalks and abandoned buildings, you can thank celebrated street artist Jeremy Novy. The leading voice in the city’s queer street-art movement is also known for his series of stenciled drag-queen portraits, pop-culture-inspired pieces that explode with color and attitude. Pride Month...

June 8: Petracovich at Arlene Francis Center

Jessica Peters Malmberg, aka singer and songwriter Petracovich, has spent the last year battling cancer with the help of her family, friends and the community at large. As she recovers from successful treatments, Petracovich gets back onstage, headlining the first annual Journey to Heal benefit this week. The powerful and melodic songwriter is joined by accomplished musician Tad Wagner;...

June 6: The Rock Collection at Hopmonk, Sebastopol

As North Bay supergroups go, few can claim all-star status as readily as the Rock Collection. The five-piece collaborative group is led by drummer Greg Anton and features heavy hitters Melvin Seals (Jerry Garcia Band), Stu Allen, Dan Lebowitz (ALO) and Robin Sylvester (RatDog). This week, the Rock Collection returns to Hopmonk, and they’re set to make history by...

June 9: Garrison Keillor at Lincoln Theater

Garrison Keillor is the consummate storyteller. Best known for his national radio program, A Prairie Home Companion, Keillor has spent 40-plus years spotlighting great music and stories. Now Keillor is in the spotlight himself, with his newest collection, The Keillor Reader. Compiling work from The New Yorker, monologues from A Prairie Home Companion and new, never-before-published pieces, The Keillor...

Letters to the Editor: June 4, 2014

Get It Straight Sure hope your new feature "Debriefer" is not a harbinger of the way the new editors at the Bohemian will be dealing with the community they are attempting to serve. This alternative to Sonoma County's daily has a proud history of covering the local progressive community, so your snarky piece about the Andy Lopez coalition ("Ravitch, Run,"...

Bonum Donum Estate

Don't blame yourself if you've never heard of Donum Estate. Ditto Robert Stemmler, Donum's sister brand named for Sonoma County's most influential wine legend whose name is news to you. But if you experience a little déjà vu on the road to the winery, you can blame the Microsoft corporation. Anyone who switched on a Windows PC since fall...

North Bay Scene Setters

While it doesn't have the size or support of the local food movement, the North Bay's local fashion scene is home to a growing coterie of designers. "They're hiding, they're very scattered," says Andrea Kenner, a radiant fashionista herself. Kenner, a Sonoma County native, is the owner of Tamarind, a new boutique at the Barlow in Sebastopol. After 10 years of...

Don’t Thread on Me

Like so many icons of American culture, the T-shirt owes its ascendancy to the U.S. military. In what is widely considered the first printed T-shirt, an American Air Corps gunnery unit shirt made the cover of Life magazine in July 1942, complete with a wearer bearing a large weapon. But the history of the T-shirt goes back even further in...
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