Mirth at MacMurray

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Before his name was plastered on bottles of wine, Fred MacMurray was an actor most famous for roles in Double Indemnity, The Absent-Minded Professor and My Three Sons. Though successful, MacMurray, referred to by friends as “the thrifty multimillionaire, remained humble, driving a VW squareback and bringing a brown-bag lunch to . (MacMurray was generous, though—in the 1950s, he called up Hugh Codding, developer of Montgomery Village in Santa Rosa, to offer a wooden covered wagon from his ranch for Codding’s new shopping center, where it remained a landmark for decades.)

MacMurray’s original intent when purchasing land in the Russian River Valley in 1941 was to establish a cattle ranch. The property remained in this form until MacMurray’s death in 1991, which led E. & J. Gallo to purchase it five years later. Keeping its wine under the label MacMurray Ranch and hiring MacMurray’s daughter, Kate, as spokesperson, the company is now one of the largest sellers in the industry.

This year’s highlight of Sonoma Wine Country Weekend, Taste of Sonoma occurs at the now historic MacMurray Ranch. Kate, who still lives on the ranch, invites attendees to indulge in cuisine provided by over 60 chefs and sip vino from over 200 wineries. With wine seminars, cooking demonstrations and more, Taste of Sonoma delivers one of the best glimpses into the wine country. Catch this perspective Saturday, Aug. 31, at MacMurray Ranch.
9015 Westside Road, Healdsburg. $165–$175. 11am–4pm. 800.939.7666.

On Fire

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Adam Traub, singer and keyboardist for the Burning of Rome, has the phrase “Don’t Give Up the Ship” scrawled across the back of his synthesizer. And if anyone’s familiar with surviving misfortune, it’s this 28-year-old, whose diagnosis in his late teens with a rare muscular disorder led to a series of surgeries and the end of a promising future as guitarist in the band Nobody’s Hero.

Fortunately, the post-op downtime led Traub to the small, upright piano in the corner of his house, a move that permanently changed his musical direction.

“I propped my leg up on a stool and tinkered away, trying to figure out Beatles songs,” says Traub, on the phone from his home in Echo Park. “I ended up taking some piano classes and studied theory to boost my ability and hone my craft.”

The Burning of Rome, who open for the Psychedelic Furs Sept. 1 at the Uptown Theatre, are the result of what started as a solo recording project. Eventually, Traub realized that he’d created an incredibly full sound—with echoes of Danny Elfman, Mr. Bungle and Pink Floyd—and he began hunting for musicians to take it live. A 2012 album, With Us, is loaded with cinematic, solidly orchestrated songs that show the fruits of that effort, netting the band a San Diego Music Award nomination.

Described as everything from a Danzig carnival ride to goth music for the new millennium, the band, Traub says, is really about creating a blitzkrieg of sounds influenced by the likes of the Buzzcocks, Ennio Morricone, Mozart and the Velvet Underground—a genre the band calls “death pop.”

The band has such avid fans back in their home base of San Diego that last year the head brewer at Pizza Port Brewing Company, one of the better Southern California breweries, created a beer in their name.

“Brewing is a spiritual process for this guy,” explains Traub. “He had the new album playing on a loop, with headphones over the fermenter, to serenade the yeast while it was fermenting—like in Italy, the winemakers will play opera to the grapes.”

The resulting beer, the Burning of Rome IPA, can be found at the brewery’s San Diego pubs. But does it taste how the band sounds?

“It did taste like the band,” says Traub with a laugh. “It had a sharp edge to it on the first sip, but then it mellowed out the further you went with it.”

Peak Season

Frost is the on the pumpkin, geese are on the wing, the autumn clichés are in the newspaper and the cornucopia of cinema belches out some of its best offerings of the year.

After the underwhelment of Europa Report, ‘Gravity’ (Oct. 4) looks like it’ll have significant punch. Once upon a time, critic Pauline Kael declared the deadly Gemini-kidnapping pre-titles of You Only Live Twice more exciting than 2001: A Space Odyssey. Director Alfonso Cuarón seems to agree there was something going on in that pre-title. Gravity is a technically startling, artistically excruciating version of the astronaut’s dilemma—stuck in a space walk from which he can’t return. The previews are unbearably tense, and Cuarón has already made some of the best movies of the past few years (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Children of Men, Y Tu Mamá También). George Clooney and Sandra Bullock co-star.

Destin Cretton’s ‘Short Term 12’ (fall) is already one of the most applauded films of the coming season. Brie Larson plays a young counselor at a home for volatile foster kids. Cretton worked at such a home for a couple of years, and he won an award at Sundance in 2009 for the short version of this feature film.

Highly anticipated: ‘Museum Hours’ (Sept. 20), Jem Cohen’s story of a friendship that carried out in Kuntshistorisches Museum, the 120-year-old Vienna gallery where the Hapsburgs put their treasures; the centuries of art are the backdrop to a tale of two lonely people at loose ends
in that city.

I adore writing about ‘Adore’ (Sept. 6), which, under its original title Two Mothers, got used as a punching bag at Sundance this year. There are a few reasons to tune out the adverse buzz. The director, Anne Fontaine, has shown wit and a gift for the erotic in the past. Two first-rate actresses are in the lead, Naomi Watts and Robin Wright. Adore has a Doris Lessing novella as its source and a Christopher Hampton script, and was apparently filmed with prime 35mm photography on the coast of New South Wales. At last, the subject matter: old female friends commence affairs with each other’s sons . . .

Strange how something more ghastly would feel less ooky. ‘Machete Kills’ (Oct. 11) brings back ol’ rockface, Danny Trejo, and no more Mr. Politeness this time.

Remakes of ‘Oldboy’ (Oct. 25) and ‘Carrie’ (Oct. 18) may, in the bigger scheme of things, only function as necessary in the sense that some producer’s son really needed ermine mudflaps for his Escalade. But I am interested in what aspects of race Spike Lee will bring to retelling Park Chan-wook’s captivity thriller Oldboy, just as I’m curious to see what a female director (Kimberly Peirce) will bring to a new version of Carrie. And the superb Chloë Grace Moretz has the role of the hellbound Carrie White.

The documentary ‘Inequality for All’ (Sept. 27) has Robert Reich, a familiar figure on the Sunday talk shows, delivering worrisome news about the growing gap between the hyper-rich and the working poor. Bill Condon’s ‘The Fifth Estate’ (Oct. 11) likely won’t help Julian Assange’s hurt feelings after We Steal Secrets, particularly since he’s being played by Benedict Cumberbatch—not the man to warm up one’s image.

Back at It

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Rick Bartalini, the man-about-the-music-industry and former talent buyer for the Wells Fargo Center, has found a new home at the Green Music Center. Three years after splitting ways with the Wells Fargo Center, Bartalini is on staff at SSU, hired to book shows for an 18–25 student demographic under the center’s On Campus Presents banner.

“I’ve known Rick for years,” says Larry Furukawa-Schlereth, the GMC’s executive director, who kept an eye on Bartalini’s successful shows with Bill Maher, Willie Nelson, Diana Ross and others over the past three years. “He’s always had a strong interest in what’s happening with the Green Music Center.”

Eventually, Bartalini will have three venues as his playground: the center’s existing main hall, the new SSU student center opening in October, and a large outdoor pavilion with seating for 10,000, projected to open the summer of 2015.

The outdoor pavilion, boosted by a $15 million donation and naming-rights deal from Mastercard, still needs $3.7 million more for completion, Furukawa-Schlereth says. (Meanwhile, the student recital hall needs about $625,000 for completion, and “I feel very confident that we’re gong to get that done by the end of the calendar year,” says Furukawa-Schlereth, hoping for a fall 2014 opening.)

Bartalini, who during his time at the Wells Fargo Center gained a reputation in the entertainment industry for attending to artists’ every need and creatively courting them to return, has already assisted the Green Music Center with a Josh Groban concert last month. An upcoming show with Lyle Lovett and John Hiatt is slated for Nov. 18.

The Show Must Go On

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It was nearly the end of the first act. The lead actress took her position onstage for “I Got Rhythm,” the band took it from the top, and—poof! Lights out. Power out. Everything out in the winery ruins at Jack London State Park, where Transcendence Theatre Company played to a sold-out crowd of 820 people suddenly sitting in the dark. The outage, it was soon learned, was citywide.

“Of course, we had about 10 minutes where we were, like, ‘Oh my, God, do we have to send everybody home?'” says Transcendence executive director Stephan Stubbins. But some Glen Ellen firefighters were in the house and offered to illuminate the stage via their truck’s floodlight. A couple generators were found for the PA, with “literally just enough gas to turn on but not to run,” says Stubbins, then Mike Benziger of Benziger Winery showed up from his nearby house with two cans of gas. A bullhorn was used for announcements, lanterns were scattered on the stage as makeshift footlights, and the show went on as planned under a bright moon. “It was so special,” Stubbins says of the collective wonder in the audience. “Everybody felt like they shared something.”

There are only two more shows in Transcendence’s “Broadway Under the Stars” series, and lovers of top-notch theater songs and dances performed by nimble and quick-witted off-season professionals shouldn’t hesitate. The season-closing Gala Celebration is on Friday and Saturday, Aug. 30–31, at Jack London State Park. 2400 London Ranch Road, Glen Ellen. 7:30pm; picnicking starts at 5pm. $29–$69. 877.424.1414.

Letters to the Editor: August 28, 2013

Twelve Bars & the Truth

Great to know the blues are alive and well in Sonoma County (“Rebirthing the Blues,” Aug. 21). I run the Tuesday Bluesday Jam every other Tuesday night at Aubergine in Sebastopol, and Levi Lloyd runs it on the alternate Tuesdays. So every Tuesday night there are some rippin’ blues happening at Aubergine, featuring some of the best local players.

Here’s to the blues!

Sebastopol

Huh?

Gabe, Secular Humanist Fundie, Evolutionist kool-aid drinker . . . . . get real and step up to the mic . . . . . “sound and fury signifying nothing,” say the Darwinists when their epistemic hands are cuffed, there is no there, there, nada, no thing, nothing (“Parental Advisory,” Aug. 14). Let’s go back to Phil 101, without an objective standard, God, you have nothing to rail against. Shut your bohemian piehole up and cry out for God’s grace to have mercy on you if He should so ordain such a great feat. Otherwise, continue your pathetic railing against all true Truth and incur the just-deserved wrath that has been part of your DNA matrix from a little baby boy.

Via online

Hotel Not the Problem

People will be winetasting regardless of a new hotel. (“Ban the Boutique,” Aug. 21). People will also be going to bars regardless of a new hotel. People will also be going to tasting rooms regardless of a new hotel.

People need to not drink and drive. Sebastopol lost its small-town charm years ago. Sebastopol has more wine grapes being planted, and tasting rooms are everywhere. I think this is not worth fighting against. The owner of French Garden is a responsible, involved member of the Sebastopol community.

Sebastopol

Nuisance Houses

How does Sonoma County feel about “nightly rentals” / nuisance boarding houses springing up in many residentially zoned neighborhoods? The activity compromises cohesive and familial surroundings, neighbor accountability, etc., when most towns have adequate accommodations in commercial areas. Inherent noise at all hours, traffic, internet clients, etc. Very disconcerting. Compromises our quaint Sonoma County neighborhoods.

Petaluma

Mothers & Addiction

I commend Karla Garrison for her courage in making public the thoughts and feelings of moms dealing with the pain and horrors of addiction (“Save Yourself,” Aug. 14). Her message of recovery is one that needs to be heard. Two resources to help in regaining one’s own life and working on recovery for oneself are Nar-Anon and the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). Nar-Anon is a 12-step meeting which supports families dealing with drug addiction. Meets every Wednesday in Sebastopol from 4pm to 5pm at the Community Church. NAMI offers a dual-diagnosis support group for families dealing with a loved one with drug addiction and mental illness, which meets the second Monday of each month from 4pm 6pm at the Sonoma County Mental Health clinic on Chanate Road in Santa Rosa. Over 60 percent of addicts are also coping with mental health issues. While recovery is possible, I believe that support is essential on the difficult and challenging journey.

Sebastopol

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

Step Down, Efren

The Sonoma Latino PAC believes that two arrests in the past 10 months, coupled with an abrupt and ill-conceived return to duty, show that Supervisor Efren Carrillo is not fit to serve as a county supervisor in the 5th District.

In addressing the county last Tuesday, Supervisor Carrillo attempted to deflect his arrests as a “personal” issue that has no bearing on his work. “Amidst this torrent of well-deserved and justified criticism directed toward me, I note that little of this criticism relates to the performance of my official duties,” Carrillo said.

We disagree. Being arrested while inebriated and dressed only in underwear and socks, while trying to initiate contact with a nonconsensual constituent in his neighborhood, violates
Section 10.3 A.(3) of Sonoma County’s Civil Service Code and qualifies as “conduct which brings discredit to the county.” Most county employees would be fired after egregious behavior such as this, and Supervisor Carrillo should at the very least be subject to the same standards as county employees, indeed if not a higher standard altogether.

Supervisor Carrillo’s history of poor decision-making now includes a hurried attempt to return to work with little notice or preparation. Does he believe that the serious crimes for which he was arrested can be forgotten after a hurried and contrived “rehab experience”? If so, his behavior is a disrespectful minimization of what must have been a terrifying experience for his victim.

We endorsed Supervisor Carrillo due to his self characterization as “a role model for the Latino Community.” His arrest is a significant blow to the community we represent. Thus, it is imperative that we as an organization send a message that we do not condone his actions.

We request that Mr. Carrillo resign his position immediately. We ask our brothers and sisters in the Hispanic/Latino community to also let the community know that Latinos do not condone the recent conduct that resulted in Supervisor Carrillo’s arrest. Supervisor Carrillo’s career is not more important than the best interests of our community and the safety and security of women and girls in their homes.

Efren Carrillo has a court date to discover what formal charges he faces on Friday, Aug. 30.

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

Honoring Heritage

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An online memorial slideshow for Brent Bearskin Smith, a Santa Rosa teenager who committed suicide on Nov. 13, 2011, tells the story of a somewhat typical teen. The dark-haired and dark-eyed young man wears baggy pants and “Latin Rollers” T-shirts, smiles at car shows, hangs out at barbecues with friends, hugs girls and loads up on food at potlucks.

What’s not so typical are the shots of Smith dancing in traditional Pomo dance attire, an elaborate orange headdress covering his eyes and a wooden flute in his mouth. Taken together, the photos tell a story of a young man caught between two cultures: one that took Smith to the edge of gang violence, and another that connected him to his heritage as a member of the Round Valley Indian Reservation.

And Smith was not alone. “These kids don’t know which way to go; they’re being pulled left and right,” says Agustin Garcia, project coordinator at the Sonoma County Indian Health Project (SCIHP). According to Garcia, Smith’s scenario is all too common—young Native Americans caught between two worlds, feeling they have no place to call their own.

For this reason, SCIHP, with support from the Family Service Agency of Marin, is holding a Gathering of Native Americans (GONA) specifically for Native American youth ages 12 to 17 at the Marin Headlands from Aug. 30–Sep. 2. The GONA curriculum has been applied to numerous events around the country, but the upcoming gathering is the first event of its kind in the Bay Area.

Garcia, himself a member of the Elem band of Pomo in Lake County, calls the GONA a “template” for the four-day ceremony, bringing together Native American youth in the Bay Area and helping them to develop “a sense of belonging.” According to the GONA
training manual, one element
of human growth is addressed each day, beginning with “belonging,” followed by “mastery,” “interdependence” and “generosity.”

The curriculum for the Marin Headlands GONA has been tailored to address specifics of Pomo life, and delves into the history of the area, with the arrival of the Spanish, the Mexicans, the Gold Rush and forced boarding schools run by the U.S. Department of War—and the tragic implications for native cultures in the Bay Area, which were decimated by the imposition of Western cultural economics and values, according to Garcia.

“We live in a society where we’re not seen or even talked about,” he adds. “The version of history we learn in public schools was not written by our own people. There’s such a dark history that nobody wants to discuss.” The goal of the second day of the GONA, “mastery,” is to address this history, specifically in California, where tribes are smaller and entire villages were wiped out overnight by mercenaries like the Humboldt Minutemen.

Those who have studied the issue, like Garcia, trace the high rates of suicide and drug and alcohol abuse among Native American youth to unaddressed trauma, compounded by unpleasant and often abusive experiences in boarding schools and handed down through native families.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suicide is the second leading cause of death among American Indian and Alaska natives aged 15–24, right behind accidents. The suicide rate for American Indian teens and young adults is 2.5 times higher than the national average for the same age group, averaging about 31 per 100,000 in comparison to the national average of 12.2 per 100,000.

The national epidemic has hit home locally with the 2011 suicide of 18-year-old Sam Benzor, followed by Brent Bearskin Smith’s just a few days later. Both were former Elsie Allen students and danced together in a Santa Rosa–based Pomo Indian youth dance troupe.

The final two days of the GONA builds roads toward healing, with youth discussing ways they can develop healthy community connections. According to Dr. Leon Wakefield, director of behavioral health at the Sonoma County Indian Health Project, the community-building element is just one part of a multi-step effort to step up youth services for Native American youth—seven different tribes are represented at SCIHP—in addition to increasing collaboration between counties and developing suicide prevention efforts in what’s called “Indian Country.”

“Our most important thing is to stress prevention,” says Wakefield, “To stress that there’s a place where kids can come to talk about what’s going on in their lives and try to create bonds among the elders, the adults and the kids.”

English Pig-Dogs

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Those unfamiliar with Monty Python and the Holy Grail will probably be surprised, and a bit appalled, at the taste-challenged exercise in existentialist vaudeville that is Spamalot.

Bu tasteless or not, it’s among the best musicals Sixth Street Playhouse has staged. Inspired by the subversive siliness of the 1975 film, Spamalot is a giddy, goofy delight—and it carries a high degree of life-affirming advice.

Well, sort of.

Eric Idle—who co-wrote the film and adapted it to the Broadway stage in 2005, and who appears as God in a clever bit of stage projection—includes many of the most memorable bits from the original film: the head-banging monks, the “Bring out your dead” guy, the obnoxious French taunters, the Trojan rabbit, the Knights Who Say Ni, and even the fluffy bunny with sharp, nasty, pointed teeth.

The show does an exceptionally clever job of encapsulating all of the film’s teasingly indelicate mayhem. But it does more than just add a few songs and throw it up onstage. With Spamalot, Idle has taken the opportunity to also spoof the traditions and excesses of Broadway musicals in general.

Beginning with a small misunderstanding which results in a chorus of singers praising the country of Finland instead of England (“The Fisch Schlapping Dance”), the story skips back and forth between Arthur’s quest to find the Holy Grail (“Find Your Grail”) and his knights’ gradual discovery that they are actually characters in a Broadway play (“Twice in Every Show”).

Arthur, portrayed with a playful sense of stiff, authoritarian befuddlement by Barry Martin, attempts to keep order with the help of his coconut-clapping servant Patsy (Erick Weiss, a comic delight) and the occasional assistance of the sassy, sexy Lady of the Lake (Taylor Bartolucci, whose strong voice was not served on opening night by some negligent attention to her mic volume).

The knights are a motley crew. There’s Sir Lancelot (a hilarious Mark Bradbury, who dons an outrageous French accent when necessary), the preening Sir Galahad (Evan Atwood) and Sir Robin (Trevor Hoffman), who is frightened by everything except a good tune and stops the show with a second-act number titled “You Won’t Succeed on Broadway,” lamenting the absence of Jewish entertainers in Arthur’s merry band of misfits.

Directed with confident, comic grace by Craig Miller, Spamalot is something completely different, as bracing and funny as a hit upside the head with a shovel.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★

Catch the Wave

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Sept. 1 Jazz Bliss Brazil, Healdsburg Center
for the Arts

Sept. 13 Gift of Gab (Blackalicious),
19 Broadway

Sept. 15 George Thorogood, Uptown Theatre

Sept. 21 Dr. John, Uptown Theatre

Sept. 27 Billy Cobham, Uptown Theatre

Oct. 3 Raw Oyster Cult (ex-Radiators), Hopmonk Sebastopol

Oct. 6 Natalie Maines (Dixie Chicks), Uptown Theatre

Oct. 7 Del McCoury, Lagunitas Brewing Co.

Oct. 16 Chris Cornell (Soundgarden), Uptown Theatre

Oct. 17 Bryan Adams, Wells Fargo Center

Oct. 20 Pat Monahan (Train),
142 Throckmorton

Oct. 30 Vince Gill, Wells Fargo Center

Nov. 2 Emmylou Harris, Wells Fargo Center

Nov. 8 Buddy Guy, Wells Fargo Center

Mirth at MacMurray

Before his name was plastered on bottles of wine, Fred MacMurray was an actor most famous for roles in Double Indemnity, The Absent-Minded Professor and My Three Sons. Though successful, MacMurray, referred to by friends as "the thrifty multimillionaire, remained humble, driving a VW squareback and bringing a brown-bag lunch to . (MacMurray was generous, though—in the 1950s, he...

On Fire

Adam Traub, singer and keyboardist for the Burning of Rome, has the phrase "Don't Give Up the Ship" scrawled across the back of his synthesizer. And if anyone's familiar with surviving misfortune, it's this 28-year-old, whose diagnosis in his late teens with a rare muscular disorder led to a series of surgeries and the end of a promising future...

Peak Season

Frost is the on the pumpkin, geese are on the wing, the autumn clichés are in the newspaper and the cornucopia of cinema belches out some of its best offerings of the year. After the underwhelment of Europa Report, 'Gravity' (Oct. 4) looks like it'll have significant punch. Once upon a time, critic Pauline Kael declared the deadly Gemini-kidnapping pre-titles...

Back at It

Rick Bartalini, the man-about-the-music-industry and former talent buyer for the Wells Fargo Center, has found a new home at the Green Music Center. Three years after splitting ways with the Wells Fargo Center, Bartalini is on staff at SSU, hired to book shows for an 18–25 student demographic under the center's On Campus Presents banner. "I've known Rick for years,"...

The Show Must Go On

It was nearly the end of the first act. The lead actress took her position onstage for "I Got Rhythm," the band took it from the top, and—poof! Lights out. Power out. Everything out in the winery ruins at Jack London State Park, where Transcendence Theatre Company played to a sold-out crowd of 820 people suddenly sitting in the...

Letters to the Editor: August 28, 2013

Twelve Bars & the Truth Great to know the blues are alive and well in Sonoma County ("Rebirthing the Blues," Aug. 21). I run the Tuesday Bluesday Jam every other Tuesday night at Aubergine in Sebastopol, and Levi Lloyd runs it on the alternate Tuesdays. So every Tuesday night there are some rippin' blues happening at Aubergine, featuring some of...

Step Down, Efren

The Sonoma Latino PAC believes that two arrests in the past 10 months, coupled with an abrupt and ill-conceived return to duty, show that Supervisor Efren Carrillo is not fit to serve as a county supervisor in the 5th District. In addressing the county last Tuesday, Supervisor Carrillo attempted to deflect his arrests as a "personal" issue that has no...

Honoring Heritage

An online memorial slideshow for Brent Bearskin Smith, a Santa Rosa teenager who committed suicide on Nov. 13, 2011, tells the story of a somewhat typical teen. The dark-haired and dark-eyed young man wears baggy pants and "Latin Rollers" T-shirts, smiles at car shows, hangs out at barbecues with friends, hugs girls and loads up on food at potlucks. What's...

English Pig-Dogs

Those unfamiliar with Monty Python and the Holy Grail will probably be surprised, and a bit appalled, at the taste-challenged exercise in existentialist vaudeville that is Spamalot. Bu tasteless or not, it's among the best musicals Sixth Street Playhouse has staged. Inspired by the subversive siliness of the 1975 film, Spamalot is a giddy, goofy delight—and it carries a high...

Catch the Wave

Sept. 1 Jazz Bliss Brazil, Healdsburg Center for the Arts Sept. 13 Gift of Gab (Blackalicious), 19 Broadway Sept. 15 George Thorogood, Uptown Theatre Sept. 21 Dr. John, Uptown Theatre Sept. 27 Billy Cobham, Uptown Theatre Oct. 3 Raw Oyster Cult (ex-Radiators), Hopmonk Sebastopol Oct. 6 Natalie Maines (Dixie Chicks), Uptown Theatre Oct. 7 Del McCoury, Lagunitas Brewing Co. Oct. 16 Chris Cornell (Soundgarden), Uptown Theatre Oct. 17...
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