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Chinook on the Edge p6 | Interview with Marin Alsop p12 | Introducing Foodie File p27 k o oo Chin e dg e E n th o p6 | th wi w e e w i v r e t n n t I p o h Marin Als p122 | cing odu tr In le i F e i d o o g F F o SANTACRUZ.COM/GIVEAWAYS SYAWGIVEAM/ ANCEBOOK:SAF Y | TWITTCRUZWEEKLAT CRUZWEEKLAANTTER:@S OCCRUZ.AANTY|WEB:S 12 |31,20Y25-OM|JUL . 11OL.4,NOV FACEBOOK: SANTACRUZWEEKLY | TWITTER: @SANTACRUZWEEKLY | WEB: SANTACRUZ.COM | JULY 25-31, 2012 | VOL. 4, NO. 11 7p2TRANSCRIPT
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GirlsThe Cabrillo Music Festival and
the Kitchen Sisters explore
the meaning of growing
up female p9
Chinook on the Edge p6 | Interview with Marin Alsop p12 | Introducing Foodie File p27
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ON THE COVERPhotograph by Terry Way Photographywww.terryway.com
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Our affiliates:
EDITOR
TRACI HUKILL
STAFF WRITERS
GEORGIA PERRY
JACOB PIERCE
RICHARD VON BUSACK
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
CHRISTINA WATERS
PROOFREADER
GABRIELLA WEST
EDITORIAL INTERN
LILY STOICHEFF
CONTRIBUTORS
ROB BREZSNY,
PAUL M. DAVIS,
MICHAEL S. GANT,
JOE GARZA,
ANDREW GILBERT,
MARIA GRUSAUSKAS,
JORY JOHN,
CAT JOHNSON,
STEPHEN KESSLER,
KELLY LUKER,
SCOTT MACCLELLAND,
AVERY MONSEN
STEVE PALOPOLI,
PAUL WAGNER
DESIGN DIRECTOR
KARA BROWN
PRODUCTION OPERATIONS
COORDINATOR
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ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES
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DAN PULCRANO
MOURNING BECOMES COMICNO Binky, no Akbar? Now I understand Life in Hell!
Nick PasqualSanta Cruz County
REAL PROBLEMSSANTA Cruz, you are amazing. You have everything you could ever want and more than you could ever need, yet you feel compelled to complain about poor people in your midst. Even to the point of avoiding downtown altogether. Bums win! Look: if the worst thing that happens on any given day is someone asks you for a quarter, well, you are truly blessed, dontcha know. So the next time you get the urge to
tell a panhandler to “go to work,” consider this: Panhandling for a living is hard work. If you don’t believe it, try it.
Gibral JillardSanta “oh look, another BMW” Cruz
FROM THE WEB
FOOD TRUCK OBSTACLE COURSE[RE: “Where Are the Santa Cruz Food Trucks?” July 18]: Good story. Seems like SC City is downplaying all of the hoops they create. A friend tried getting a food truck here and it was nearly impossible. The Truck Stop folks are still going through it. UCSC also has mega rules and limits how many trucks are allowed on campus. That
might prevent mobile businesses as well. There are some nondescript Mexican trucks in the southern part of SC. There is the Aunt LaLi ice cream truck. And we can’t not mention the pushcarts, which appear to be not permitted. You raise a good question as to why the craze has not been embraced by this area. Is it the people? Or perhaps the outdated rules of the gov’t and UCSC? I look forward to this discussion.
Mac
WHEN DOES IT END?[RE: “RTC Weighs Ballot Measure for County Roads,” July 18]: It’s important to note the amount of money collected for road repair to date. I believe the amount taken out of property taxes is $56 per parcel per year. On top of that, 67.7 cents per gallon of gas (49.3 cents state, 18.4 cents fed) also gets collected for this purpose. Being that roads are high on the list of what citizens expect the government to maintain, the $56 figure is quite low. In my humble opinion, yes, $10 is not a lot, but when will asking for more money stop, and the inefficient, poor use of money by the government stop? Send government a message and reject this measure. Cut costs on programs that you do not want to pay for, and increase the $56 to around $250. And provide that all of the 67.7 cents per gallon go directly into an account for this purpose, with none going to government bureaucrats.
Bill Smallman
MOVE ON[RE: “Letters to the Editor,” July 18]: DeCinzo: get over it; a humorist without humanity; mean-spirited and most often, not funny.
Kathy Cheer
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CDelta BluesCan salmon survive the Peripheral Canal? BY ALASTAIR BLAND
approve and build a large canal intended to deliver Sacramento River water to Southern California.
The project has been tentatively called the “Peripheral Canal” for decades, since state voters rejected a proposal to build such a conveyance structure in 1982. Opponents of the canal say the project would remove so much water from the Sacramento River that it would make the estuary habitat of the Delta, where juvenile salmon spend their first six months of life, incapable of supporting
certain native fishes. But now, the Peripheral Canal
plan is back on the drawing board of state government officials, including Gov. Jerry Brown—and the Golden Gate Salmon Association, based in Petaluma, wants to see the project halted before it destroys one of the West Coast’s largest runs of Chinook salmon.
“These are critical times, in the next year or two, for what the Bay-Delta and its salmon will look like for the rest of our lives,” says Victor
CHINOOK salmon are abundant this year in one of the best seasons of local fishing memory, with sport and commercial fishermen reeling in easy boatloads of the most prized food and game fish on the Pacific Coast.
Still, at least one conservation group warns that all this could change if state officials in Sacramento, now plotting the near future of California’s water-development infrastructure,
AGAINST THE TIDE Critics of the governor’s plan for a canal around the Deltafear it would leave the estuaries too dry to support young salmon.
Gonella, founder and president of the Golden Gate Salmon Association. “It’s a rare time. We’re sitting here while our future is shaping up.”
Southern Stronghold
Chinook salmon spawn in many watersheds along the West Coast, as far north as Alaska’s Yukon River. The Sacramento River is the southernmost stronghold of the species, but its salmon runs have seen a roller-coaster ride in the last decade between record high and record low levels. Experts largely agree that water conditions, including f low rates, of the river and Delta, where baby salmon spend their first months of life, have a direct effect on salmon abundance.
State and federal records show a long-term average spawning return of the fall-run Chinook, the most historically abundant of the Sacramento’s four distinct runs of salmon, to be between 300,000 and 400,000 fish. But 2009’s record low of 39,000 spawners came after water pumping rates from the Delta jumped by 20 percent, to all-time high levels, from 2003 to 2006.
Fishermen fear that the proposed canal is likely to cause an overall decrease in water-f low rates, causing a decline in salmon numbers.
“[Gov.] Brown needs to scrap the Peripheral Canal until further notice,” says Mike Hudson, a commercial fisherman in Oakland. Hudson says the current fishing is as good as it’s been in at least five years, but adds that he isn’t confident about the future. “Along the entire West Coast we have managed to stop overfishing. Now, if we could only stop overfarming we’d have it made.”
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Young and Confused
Peter Moyle, a fisheries biologist at UC-Davis, says that the current system for water removal from the Sacramento River, which involves two giant pumps in the Delta, reverses the entire f low of the estuary system when the pumps are operating at full force. This phenomenon confuses young salmon trying to migrate out to sea, Moyle says. Many become lost or stranded in sloughs, where they make easy pickings for predators. Others are sucked directly into the pumps and killed. Moyle says the canal, which would draw water from a location far upstream of the Delta, could be beneficial for the Delta habitat since the reverse f low effect would no longer occur.
But he says that a healthy salmon population requires a minimum amount of water f lowing through the Delta and out to sea.
“A conveyance in any form will be positive from a native fish perspective only if it is connected to no net increase in diversion [of water],” Moyle says.
What makes Gonella at the Golden Gate Salmon Association nervous is that current plans for the canal’s construction include a 15,000 cubic foot per second capacity, enough to virtually suck the Sacramento River dry. Gonella wants to see that capacity downsized, or see a guarantee written into the plans for the Peripheral Canal which
assures that recipients of the water could never turn the f low up to full.
The current surge in salmon abundance seems to come partly in response to a federal law that took effect three years ago that limits how much water can be removed from the Sacramento River Delta during the winter and spring months, when juveniles of the protected spring- and winter-run salmon are present in the Delta. The fall run, which is not a listed species, has seen benefits from these water-restriction laws.
Still, habitat conditions in the Delta are generally so poor that baby salmon born in the Sacramento’s tributaries must be transported by the millions in trucks and released into the bay, downstream of the Delta and its dangerous water pumps. This trucking program, however, may be downsized due to state budget cuts—which could be a disaster for salmon numbers. Jon Rosenfield, a conservation biologist at the Bay Institute in Novato, says that in spite of the Chinook salmon’s hardiness, the Sacramento River has been so severely altered from its natural state by dam-building and water diversions that it can no longer support self-sustaining runs of salmon.
“What [salmon] require is pretty simple,” he says. “Sufficient cold water must f low unimpeded from the mountains to the ocean during the appropriate season. The fact that salmon populations are declining dramatically throughout the Central Valley indicates how badly our thirst for water has overtaxed the capacity 0
of our rivers to support wildsalmon populations.”
Be Not Deceived
Gov. Brown has told reporters that the canal, which is now being designed as part of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan and which could be in operation within several years, will cost $15 billion. But others have second-guessed the governor and believe the water conveyance project could cost state voters as much as $50 billion or more.
Other critics have made the case that the Peripheral Canal could be illegal. In 1992, the Central Valley Project Improvement Act was passed, requiring that the federal government, in words from the Fish and Wildlife Service’s website, “protect, restore, and enhance fish, wildlife, and associated habitats in the Central Valley and Trinity River basins of California.” Conservationists say this law has been continuously broken for 20 years, and that the Peripheral Canal will only further the deterioration of Sacramento River native fishes’ habitat.
Gonella asserts that people must not be deceived by the summer’s great salmon fishing into believing the fishery is healthy and stable.
“We’re having a great year, and they’re expecting a great year next year,” Gonella says. “But people don’t realize that if we don’t get this right, it’s game over. The salmon will be gone.”
OUT OF WATER In 2009 the fall run of the Sacramento River salmon, historicallysome 300,000 strong, hit an all-time low of 39,000 returning fish.
An ambitious multimedia project, ‘Hidden World of Girls’ is deeply rooted in personal stories about growing up female
Hidden World of Girls: Stories for Orchestra is a sensory invention of sound, light, story and music involving the combined gifts of two storytellers, one creative director, four composers, one conductor, vocalists, instrumentalists and a digital design team. The project emerged from a PBS series developed by the Kitchen Sisters—oral anthropologists Nikki Silva and Davia Nelson—who gathered the coming-of-age stories of girls from the four corners of the globe.
In a conversation with the Weekly, Silva, who lives in La Selva Beach, recalls how it all began. “It all grew out of a Creative Work Fund grant,” she remembers. “A couple of years ago Cabrillo had asked us to apply for the funding for a future project that would involve artists from different disciplines.” The result is the Kitchen Sisters’ collaborative “stories for orchestra” for the Festival’s 50th anniversary. It has been, Silva says, “a fun and joyful thing to do.”
The subject of girls and girlhood is rich, to say the least—interesting enough to catch the attention of Tina Fey, who’s hosted two hour-long specials for the radio version of “Hidden World of Girls.” Interview subjects for the series including trailblazing girls and women of all stripes: the first female Olympic boxers, an octogenarian radio host in Uruguay, New Wave icon Patti Smith.
For such complex subject matter, a lushly textured, multimedia approach seems appropriate.
“I don’t think much has been done for symphonic orchestra that includes audio and radio,” Silva says. “We’re beginning to see more and more experiments involving symphonic orchestra and multimedia, but I think the idea of live orchestra and visuals merging with radio and narrative storytelling seems exciting and unexpected.”
With composer Laura Karpman underscoring all the stories, composers Clarice Assad, Alexandra du Bois and Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum came to listen to the stories and began writing their own symphonic compositions. San Francisco–based Obscura Digital, which counts among its digital installation clients Google, NASA and the United Arab Emirates, is doing the imagery for the evening.
Girl Talk
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Composer Clarice Assad says working on ‘Hidden World of Girls’ made her think of her own girlhood and how it shaped her life. The multimedia piece has its world premiere this weekend as part of the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music.
BY CHRISTINA WATERS
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The Kitchen Sisters, Nikki Silva (left) and Davia Nelson, on break from the studio
For the Cabrillo world premiere, the journey is global. “You’ll be hearing from women from the Sahara and their rituals and music, and then to Ireland to hear about the Travellers,” says Silva, referring to the nomadic ethnic Irish who maintain separate language and traditions. She says she thinks of these narrative strands as “coming-of-age ceremonies and portraits.”
Each of these stories, she confesses, was discovered thanks to a tip. “As we did with our other NPR series (“Hidden Kitchens,” “Lost and Found Sound,” “Sonic Memorial”), we opened up a phone line on NPR and asked listeners to share their ideas of hidden worlds of girls,” says Silva. “Involving the community in the storytelling process has led to so many incredibly rich narratives—stories we might never have come across otherwise.”
Global GatheringThe episode “Brave Heart Women’s
Society,” featured as part of the Cabrillo performance, was inspired by a phone message from Brook Spotted Eagle, who called to tell Silva and Nelson about a coming-of-age ritual on South Dakota’s Yankton Sioux reservation. (Brook’s mother, Faith Spotted Eagle, will be part of the “Stories Behind the Stories” forum on Sunday at 3:30.) Another tells the story of Pat Cadigan, well-known cyberpunk and sci-fi writer.
“We chose the stories we did,” Silva
recalls, “because the characters compelled us and the ideas and arc of the story were revealing—and often unexpected.”
Visuals count more than one might think. While the Kitchen Sisters deal in radio sagas, Silva says imagery is always a consideration. “I think Davia and I both think of ourselves as making movies—stories you can visualize and imagine through voices, sound and music.”
One of the musical episodes, “The Hidden World of Traveller Girls,” was inspired by a photograph of a housing development for Irish Travellers. “It caught our eye. We knew nothing about Travellers and were just beginning to gather stories for ‘The Hidden World,’” Silva recalls. After a visit to a Traveller settlement, the story emerged. The radio version features a riveting interview with a young mother of two adjusting to life in a “halt,” or government settlement. She and her family still prefer to sleep in their caravan.
The composers selected have woven these stories into their compositions, which are then “all woven together with Laura’s music,” Silva explains. What began as an aural collection of rites of passage has “evolved into a project with women composers, each bringing their interpretation of the stories and their own experiences and hidden worlds to the project.”
The composers’ personal stories are fascinating in themselves. Says Brazilian-born Clarice Assad of her upbringing in the politically turbulent 1980s, a time when her rebellious mother’s constant quarreling with her dictatorial grandmother seemed to reflect the greater social unrest: “The fights, the yelling, the combats filled the air daily. And, because of the vast size of the family, it was impossible, as a child, to be heard. … At some point I became so frustrated, I stopped talking altogether and just started to sing. From this point forward, whenever I felt conflict was about to arise, I would make music.”
Still Cookin’The Kitchen Sisters started at
KUSP in 1979, gathering oral history interviews and doing a live weekly radio program. “We were both
Calloway, Tom Waits, lullabies and work songs thrown in. Our style of storytelling really grew out of those early years of experimenting at KUSP.”
When a friend sent in one of their stories, “The Road Ranger,” to a new radio syndicate called
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passionate about documenting the people, history and traditions of the region. It was an eclectic show,” Silva recalls, “everything from Wobblies to elephant seals, farmers, cowboys, Italian grandmothers, filmmakers, politicians, with a lively mix of Cab
Sculpting SoundscapeLaura Karpman’s résumé
looks like the result of a life without downtime. The genre-bending lead composer for Hidden World of Girls has been nominated for four Emmys for her sci-fi television scores and written music for video games, film, opera, string quartets and world premiere commissions. “I definitely do collaboration,” Karpman says. “All of these concert music pieces I’ve done lately so profoundly draw from my work as a film composer. Even the really technical stuff came directly from the TV work.”
Hidden World made new demands on the lead composer. “For a piece like this—unlike scoring for film—we couldn’t have music running the whole time, so I would spot the music, which means figure out when it was needed, and where, and then add it.”
What Hidden World audiences will experience, as Karpman describes it, will be two layers of pre-recorded sound: voices speaking and sound effects, which can be bits of music, pre-recorded sound and source music. “Then there are musical pieces I’m composing on top of that.” Fundamentally, she says, this project “takes radio and explodes it into a live setting.”
As with the stories themselves, the music evolved from the individuals. “The way we did Girls was to compose on samplers,” she continues. “We listened to the stories, then the directors and collaborators would make suggestions.”
One of Karpman’s pieces is in response to Debra Luster’s photographs in southern jails. “Her photos transcend and transform one’s opinion of the place and people. I used [folklorist and ethnomusicologist] Alan Lomax recordings to build on, and then there’s the actual stories as well.”
Karpman predicts, “It will be a serious listening experience.”When asked what special skill she provides that has made her in such
demand, Karpman pauses, then answers, “Probably drama. It’s something I feel I’ve honed after working so long on commercial projects. I know what is needed, when, and how long things should last.”
She believes there will be more opportunities for women to compose symphonic and operatic works “when there are more role models. That will help to inspire more women to think in these larger terms. It’s the same issue as in every field.”
Karpman’s own work—and composing history—will doubtless trigger more than a few emerging careers, hidden worlds of girls that will blossom on larger, public stages. —Christina Waters
Lead ‘Hidden World of Girls’ composer Laura Karpman says her understanding of drama helped her with this project.
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The Wow FactorMarin Alsop on the festival that celebrates ‘the wacky and the wonderful’ and why she’s completely satisfied INTERVIEW BY CHRISTINA WATERS
It is, of course, a milestone season for the festival, and it deserves to be celebrated. I think it’s interesting to think of a new festival that has a real history, not simply a tradition. Maybe “legacy” is more what I mean. Some of what we will perform—the Carlos Chavez and the Lou Harrison—will be an opportunity for us all to reminisce together about that legacy, being secure and proud in what we are.
This festival is the go-to place
for new composers. The vitality of our creativity that’s going on here—it embraces the weird and the wonderful. It wouldn’t be the festival it is any other place.
Well, it involves a different paradigm. The assumption is that people who come here are adventurous. The musicians are adventurous, the audience comes because they’re adventurous. They’re doing it because
NPR, their careers were born.“We did our live show until the early
1980s. That was our test tube. Then we did pieces on NPR—we’ve been so amazingly lucky to work with NPR and to do these stories,” she says.
Shortly after September 11, 2001, as part of the Kitchen Sisters’ “Lost & Found Sound” series then airing on NPR, they brought together a national collaboration of radio producers, artists, historians and public radio stations nationwide to collect and preserve the stories and sounds of the World Trade Center and its neighborhood.
“We opened up a phone line with NPR and asked listeners to contribute their voicemails, home recordings and remembrances to this effort to create a kind of sonic memorial,” Silva says.
“Hundreds called in with their stories. These recordings, along with interviews gathered by radio producers across the country, were broadcast on NPR during the year following the attack.”
The Sonic Memorial and its website received Peabody Awards, and the project continues online at The Sonic Memorial Project.
HIDDEN WORLD OF GIRLS: STORIES FOR ORCHESTRA
“Now we’re doing new KQED stories,” Silva says. “The ‘Making of ’ series. We’re just starting to gather stories. In fact people can call in and tell us their stories and who we should know about. Here’s the number—(415) 553-3362,” Silva says, shamelessly plugging her new project. “So far we have the making of the Bay Bridge, the making of the iPhone, an opera, a surfboard, a jar of jam,” she laughs. “Everyone is rich with stories.”
And yes, radio discovery is still engaging for Silva, who is excited about reaching out to new audiences with the innovative Hidden World of Girls performances next week.
“Pushing all these individuals into collaboration,” Nikki Silva admits happily—“it’s truly an experiment.”
Maestra Marin Alsop leads the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music through its 50th-anniversary season
they want the unexpected. Even new music can get dull. Not only the quality of music but also the quality of the experience as a whole. This festival is about the creative process, not simply an experience. We don’t put ourselves in a box.
I want people to be able to say, “Ah! I never expected to hear that,” or “Surprising!” I want it to be unique, to stimulate thinking in a new way.
And in the music, I’m looking for an emotional payoff. I want to be moved by art. I have to have an emotional reaction. That’s my measuring stick, and not merely a gratuitous “wow” factor, although I don’t mind “wow.”
The potential of the composer is something I look for. If they are young composers, emerging composers, I’m looking for their future potential, how their work might develop. If established, I’m looking for a unique voice, a unique point of view.
Art has the capacity to capture shared moments, shared histories that other types of experience don’t have the ability to capture. Poetry, art, music speaks to
shared humanity—the essence of humanity, I guess.
Nikki and I started talking about it two summers ago. It was a natural idea. Just like the Frans Lanting collaboration. They see in the festival a shared commitment to creativity. So I thought, “Let’s talk.” We began talking, and gradually it became a work in progress.
Then Laura Karpman came into it and really pulled it all together. It does have a lot of different moving parts, but I don’t have a prescribed outcome.
I’d say the plate is full [laughing]—but not just in the sense that I’m very busy. I feel that all my artistic interests are being fed. Baltimore is a major orchestra with great traditional repertoire. Cabrillo is where I can be experimental, where I can be completely wacky. And São Paolo is a new, emerging place. It is the future, both artistically and economically.
Given all of that, I feel completely satisfied. Maybe I won’t always feel that, but for now, it’s great. And I have time to be with my 8-year-old son. Life is good. 0
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WE BUY YOURCLOTHES
No Appointment Needed
811 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-458-0555
StageDANCEBelly Dancers
Rotating cast of belly dancing talent each Saturday on the garden stage at the Crepe Place. Sat, 1:30pm. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.429.6994.
Weaving the Unicorn
Winslow School of Dance presents Weaving the Unicorn, a pageant celebrating the myths and legends of the unicorn. Children will join hands with professional artists in a performance of dance, music and a giant unicorn puppet inspired by the “Unicorn Tapestries” as well as Renaissance art. www.winslowschoolofdance.com. Fri, Jul 27, 6pm. $8 children, $12 adults. Santa Cruz Waldorf School, 2190 Empire Grade, Santa Cruz, 917.532.7761.
THEATERA Chorus Line
One of the longest running shows on Broadway and winner of nine Tony Awards, A Chorus Line depicts the achingly poignant ambitions of those auditioning for a chorus part in a Broadway musical. Visit www.cabrillostage.com for schedule and tickets. Wed, 7:30pm. Thru Aug 12. $15-$42. Cabrillo Black Box Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos, 831.479.6154.
Anything Goes
This saucy and splendid revival of the Cole Porter classic is set on a cruise ship and is full of catchy and memorable tunes, such as “It’s De-lovely” and “You’re the Top.” www.cabrillostage.
com. Wed-Sun, 2 and 7:30pm. Thru Aug 18. $20-$46. Cabrillo Black Box Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos, 831.479.6154.
Cinderacula: The Curse of the Brothers Grimm
This original rock musical performed by the Little People’s Repertory Theatre is a monster mash-up of 1950s-inspired horror characters and present-day pop culture icons. Watch as “poor Cinderbella struggles to Keep up with the Kardraculin’s” and more. Musical numbers range from the Beatles to Britney Spears, with original lyrics. Tickets available online at LPRT.org. Wed, Jul 25, 7:30pm, Thu, Jul 26, 7:30pm, Fri, Jul 27, 7:30pm, Sat, Jul 28, 7:30pm and Sun, Jul 29, 2:30pm. $13.50. Park Hall, 9370 Mill St., Ben Lomond, 831.334.4321.
Shakespeare Santa Cruz: The Man in the Iron Mask
The Musketeers are back! Only older. Aramis, Porthos, Athos and D’Artagnan, long since retired from their heroic endeavors, reunite in a final pursuit of glory to oust King Louis and replace him with his twin brother, the man in the iron mask. Written by SSC Associate Artist Scott Wentworth, this comedy has its world premiere on July 28 and runs through Aug. 26. Visit www.shakespearasantacruz.org for schedules and tickets. Sat, Jul 28, 8pm. $14-$50. Sinsheimer-Stanley Glen, UCSC, Santa Cruz, 831.459.2159.
Shakespeare Santa Cruz: Twelfth Night
A shipwreck on the coast of Illyria leads to a hilarious love triangle. The ultimate in Shakespearean comedies hasn’t been onstage in Santa Cruz for seven years. This show opens July 27 and runs
through Aug. 26. Visit www.shakespearesantacruz.org for schedules and tickets. Fri, Jul 27, 8pm. $14-$50. UCSC Mainstage Theater, 1156 High St, Santa Cruz, 831.459.2121.
CONCERTSEvenings by the Bay
Located in the aquarium’s mammal gallery, “Evenings by the Bay” concert series features live jazz performances in stunning surroundings. This is the fifth year of the concert series. Sat-Sun, 6-8pm. Thru Sep 3. Free with museum admission. Monterey Bay Aquarium, Cannery Row, Monterey, 831.648.4800.
Hidden World of Girls
Hidden World of Girls: Stories for Orchestra is an evening-length work based on stories developed by Peabody Award-winning radio producers The Kitchen Sisters (a.k.a. Nikki Silva and Davia Nelson) for their series on National Public Radio. This groundbreaking new work uses the power of the symphonic form and contemporary multimedia to explore the diverse lives of girls and the women they become. Sat, Jul 28, 8pm and Sun, Jul 29, 1 and 8pm. $32-$50. Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St, Santa Cruz, 831.420.5260.
Music of the Spheres
A summer concert series benefitting UC Observatories, each event includes a concert, astronomy talk, viewing session and commemorative wine glass or coffee cup. For more information visit www.ucolick.org. Sat, Jul 28. $40 general; $90 preferred; $150 VIP. Lick Observatory, Mt Hamilton Rd, San Jose, 408.274.5061.
ArtGALLERIES
OPENING
Santa Cruz Mountains Art Center
Bonny Doon Studio Tour. High above the coastal fog, in the majestic redwood forests and pastoral fields of Bonny Doon, explore roads less traveled visiting working artist’s studios. Demonstrations, entertainment, refreshments, picnic spots abound. Maps available online and at Beauregard Winery. www.bonnydoonstudiotour.com. Sat, Jul 28, 11am-6pm and Sun, Jul 29, 11am-6pm. Free, 831.426.4906. Wed-Sun, noon-6pm. 9341 Mill St,Ben Lomond.
CONTINUING
Felix Kulpa Gallery
Alligator to Zebra. A show by animal sculptor Peter Koronakos, who specializes in using recycled and found materials to construct quirky, appealing creatures. Through July 29. Gallery hours are Thu-Sun, noon-5pm. www.felixkulpa.com. Thu-Sun. Thru Jul 29. 107 Elm St, Santa Cruz, 408.373.2854.
Santa Cruz County Bank
Picturing Music. An exhibition of artwork inspired by the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music’s 50 years as an organization. The exhibit will be on display in the following Santa Cruz County Bank offices: Aptos - 7775 Soquel Drive; Capitola - 819 Bay Ave; Santa Cruz - 720 Front St; Scotts Valley - 4604 Scotts Valley Drive; Watsonville - 595 Auto Center Drive. Mon-Thu, 9am-5pm. Thru Aug 30. 720 Front St, Santa Cruz, 831.457.5000.
Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History
Joan Brown: Art at the MAH. Visit the MAH to see never-before-shown work by celebrated painter and assemblage artist Joan Brown, who is considered part of the second generation of the Bay Area Figurative movement. Mon-Sun . Thru Jul 29. Museum hours Tue-Sun, 11am-5pm; closed Mon. 705 Front St, Santa Cruz, 831.429.1964.
Santa Cruz Stoves and Fireplaces
ArtWorx Gallery. ArtWorx Gallery presents “Awake,” an art exhibition of new paintings of land, sea, and figure by local artist Michael Mote. Tue-Sat, 10am-5pm. Thru Jul 28. 1043 Water St, Santa Cruz, 831.476.8007.
EventsAROUND TOWNCoast Nature Walks
Meet at the Wilder Ranch Interpretive Center for a two-hour natural history excursion exploring the plants, animals and geology of the spectacular coastal bluffs. Sat, Jul 28, 11am-1pm. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Rd, Santa Cruz, 831.426.0505.
English Country Dance
Second and fourth Thursdays of each month; beginners welcome. Fourth Thu of every month. $5-$7. First Congregational Church of Santa Cruz, 900 High St, Santa Cruz, 831.426.8621.
Fruit Tree Pruning Workshop
Join fruit tree expert Matthew Sutton for a lecture and demonstration workshop on summer fruit tree pruning and care, with a focus on getting people familiar with when and how to summer prune, which differs significantly from the more familiar winter pruning. www.casfs.ucsc.edu. Sat, Jul 28, 10am-1pm. $20 members; $30 public. UC Santa Cruz Farm, One quarter-mile up the road from the Blacksmith Shop, Santa Cruz, 831.459.3376.
Hides & Tallow
Come and see how Mission
Santa Cruz participated in the world economy back in the early 1800s. This event will look at some of the major products of the mission, leather and tallow, and demonstrate how they were used. Participants will see how a branding iron works and get to make their own candles. Sat, Jul 28, 1-2pm. Free. Santa Cruz Mission State Park, 144 School St, Santa Cruz, 831.425.5849.
Li’l Ones Nature Camp
Designed for kids ages 4-7, this fun-filled session helps little ones experience all the park has to offer through crafts, stories and games. A parent must be present throughout the program. Meet at the Campfire Center. Fri, 11-11:45am. Thru Aug 10. Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, Hwy 9, Felton, 831.335.7077.
Sand Sculpting Competition
Bring tools and sunscreen and build the best sand sculpture this side of Monterey Bay. Participants will have four hours to build their sculptures. Judging and prizes will be awarded. This event is open to campers and the public. Sculptures will be judged on creativity, imagination and originality based around the theme, Monterey Bay Wonders. Sat, Jul 28, 10am-2pm. Sunset State Beach, off San Andreas Rd, Watsonville, 831.763.7123.
Summer Greenwood Arts
With music, circle dance, drawing, writing and a sharing
circle, this event is intended to cultivate artistic expression. It will be held outside in Aptos. Call for directions and a specific location. Registration required. Tue, Jul 31, 11am-1pm. $10. Aptos Village, NA, Aptos, 831.662.0186.
LITERARY EVENTSAuthor Event: Vanessa Diffenbaugh
The Language of Flowers, Vanessa Diffenbaugh’s elegantly written debut novel, weaves past and present, creating a vivid portrait of a young woman whose gift for flowers helps her change the lives of others even as she struggles to overcome her own troubled past. New York Times bestselling author Diffenbaugh will be available to discuss her book. Email [email protected] to register for a private book discussion before the main event. Thu, Jul 26, 7:30pm. Capitola Book Cafe, 1475 41st Ave, Capitola, 831.462.4415 .
Memoir Writers Workshop
Robert Sward, a recipient of the Guggenheim fellowship who has taught at Cornell University, the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and UC-Santa Cruz, presents a workshop about writing family stories. Participants should bring family photos, letters, journals and other documents to class. Register online at www.memoirjournal.net. Sat, Jul 28,
9am-5pm. $115. Capitola Book Cafe, 1475 41st Ave, Capitola, 831.462.4415.
Storytime
Former Shakespeare Santa Cruz actress Billie Harris and Book Cafe manager Jill Rose perform animated readings of children’s stories. Mon, 11am. Capitola Book Cafe, 1475 41st Ave, Capitola, 831.462.4415.
FILMDocumentary: Bill W.
This documentary tells the story of Bill Wilson, the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous. With interviews and rare archive material, this film shows how Wilson, a hopeless drunk near death, found a way out of his own addiction and then forged a path for countless others to follow. One-night-only screening followed by a Q&A with producer/director Dan Carracino. Tue, Jul 31, 7pm. $10.50. Nickelodeon Theatre, 210 Lincoln St, Santa Cruz, 831.426.7500.
Movies on the Beach
Come to the Main Beach by the boardwalk Wednesdays this summer for viewings of classic movies framed by the twinkly lights of the roller coaster and other rides. Bring a blanket, picnic, and enjoy the show. Visit www.beachboardwalk.com/movies for the schedule. Wed, Jul 25, 9pm. Free. Santa Cruz Main Beach, West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.
LIST YOUR LOCAL EVENT IN THE CALENDAR!Email it to [email protected], fax it to 831.457.5828, or drop it by our office. Events need to be received a week prior to publication and placement cannot be guaranteed.
FRIDAY 7/27
ANYTHING GOESThe multitalented Briana Michaud had fans swooning in 2010’s Cabaret, so it’s good to hear she’s back, along with fellow Cabrillo Stage favorites Andrew Ceglio and Max Bennett-Parker, for a romp through Cole Porter’s beloved madcap musical comedy. How many hijinx can happen on one Transatlantic crossing? Lots. Opens Friday, July 27 at 7:30pm at Cabrillo Crocker Theatre. Through Aug. 19. Tickets $20–46 at cabrillostage.com or 831.479.6154.
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LOU HARRISON:A WORLD OF MUSICEva Soltes’ documentary about Lou Harrison, one of America’s most original musical minds, includes a post-viewing Q&A with Soltes. Monday, July 30 at 7pm in the Grand Auditorium of the Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Tickets $10.50.
What’s on Your Plate?
This short film is a witty and provocative documentary produced and directed by award-winning Catherine Gund about kids and food politics. Filmed over the course of one year, the film follows two 11-year-old multiracial city kids as they explore their place in the food chain. www.newleaf.com. Mon, Jul 30, 6pm. Free. New Leaf Market Westside, 1101 Fair Ave, Santa Cruz.
NOTICESA Course In Miracles Study Group
A weekly meeting on learning how to forgive and live in peace. Drop-ins are welcome. Thu, 7-9pm. The Barn Studio, 104b Park Way South, Santa Cruz, 831.272.2246.
Grand Re-Opening: Santa Cruz Stroller Strides
Stroller Strides is a total body fitness program moms can do with their babies in their strollers. This event will include a free class, raffle prizes and giveaways. Wed, Jul 25, 9:15am. Lighthouse, West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz, 800.490.1805.
Business Networking Mixer
A business networking mixer put on by the Scotts Valley Chamber. Enjoy meeting other professionals. www.scottsvalleychamber.com. Thu, Jul 26, 5:30-7pm. Encore Consignment Boutique, 5163 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley, 831. 438.1010.
Hemlock Discussion Group
Discuss end-of-life options
for serenity and dignity. Meets in Aptos the last Wed afternoon of every month except Dec; call for more info. 831.251.2240.
Insight Santa Cruz
Meditation sits, talks and discussions every day of the week. Learn the formal practice of meditation and engage with a community dedicated to reducing suffering by cultivating compassion. Visit www.insightsantacruz.org for specific times and more information. Ongoing. Insight Santa Cruz, 1010 Fair Avenue, Suite C, Santa Cruz, 831.425.3431.
Jane Addams Peace Camp
Registration is now open for the Jane Addams Peace Camp, a one-week day camp that promotes an understanding of peace and justice through art. For more information, call 831-459-9248. Thru Aug 3. $150. Orchard School, 2288 Trout Gulch Rd, Aptos, 831.459.9248.
Tick Protection
Presented by Carol Fox RN and sponsored by Sierra Club Santa Cruz, this interactive presentation will give up to date information on Lyme disease and how to avoid it. Find out what to wear while hiking, which ticks carry Lyme and how to minimize risk of infection if you get a tick bite. Includes hands-on demo and proper tick removal procedure. Thu, Jul 26, 6:30-8:30pm. Free; donations accepted. Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.426.3689.
Red Cross Mobile Blood Drive
Red Cross Blood Drives are held at numerous locations throughout the county all month. Find one at redcrosblood.org and give. Thu, Jul 26, 11am-4pm. Simpkins Family Swim Center, 979 17th Ave, Santa Cruz, 1-800-RED CROSS.
Yoga Instruction
Pacific Cultural Center: 35+ classes per week, 831.462.8893. SC Yoga: 45 classes per week, 831.227.2156. TriYoga: numerous weekly classes, 831.464.8100. Aptos Yoga Center, 831.688.1019; Twin Lotus Center, 831.239.3900. Hatha Yoga with Debra Whizin, 831.588.8527.
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San Francisco’s City Guide
St. Lucia Hailing from Johannesberg, Jean-Philip Grobler makes bright, rhythm-doused pop music. Jul 26 at Rickshaw Stop.
Dirty Projectors Brooklyn’s quirkiest yelping quintet with new album in tow, “Swing Lo Magellan!” Jul 27 at the Fox Theater.
Henry Butler Trio Wildly versatile New Orleans pianist with a singular feel for the music of his hometown. Jul 27 at Yoshi’s Oakland.
Fiona Apple The interminably captivating songwriter tours on new album with title far too lengthy to fi t here. Jul 28 at the Fox Theater.
Big K.R.I.T. That’s “King Remembered In Time,” for this Mississippi native—who remembers older R&B, too. Jul 27 at Slim’s.
Find more San Francisco events by subscribing to the email newsletter at www.sfstation.com.
FRIDAY 7/27 & SATURDAY 7/28
SHAKESPEARE SANTA CRUZShakespeare Santa Cruz opens its season with Twelfth Night on Friday on the Mainstage and the world premiere of The Man in the Iron Mask, written by SSC Associate Artist Scott Wentworth, on Saturday in the Glen. Friday, July 27 at 8pm and Saturday, July 28 at 8pm. Through Aug. 26. UCSC Performing Arts Complex, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. Tickets $14–50. www.shakespearesantacruz.org for info.
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THURSDAY | 7/26 THURSDAY | 7/26
CHRIS WEBSTER & NINA GERBERChris Webster entered the spotlight as vocalist and multi-instrumentalist for the good-time party band Mumbo Gumbo, but a string of solo albums have secured her rep as an adept artist who can take on torch songs, ballads, bluegrass and folk-rock with style and charm. Guitarist Nina Gerber is one of Northern California’s great musical talents. An accompanist who has played alongside Kate Wolf, Greg Brown, Nanci Griffith, Peter Rowan and many others, she is a natural musician who makes her masterful playing look effortless. Don Quixote’s; $17 adv/$20 door; 7:30pm. (Cat Johnson)
MEKLIT HADERODrawing comparisons to Joni Mitchell, Nina Simone and Norah Jones, the Ethiopian-born, San Francisco–based Meklit Hadero is graced with a magnificent voice, a songwriter’s heart and a dynamic delivery that f loats from note to note like a butterfly on a lazy summer’s day. Imbued with the emotion of soul, the timing of jazz, the storytelling of the blues and the humanness of global folk music, Hadero creates songs that are unique and personal. Kuumbwa; $20 adv/$23 door; 7pm. (CJ)
HAMSA LILASometimes music does more than entertain, it heals. World trance funk group Hamsa Lila strives to do just that as it plunges listeners into a new world full of ancient rhythms and timeless grooves. Their performances are enhanced with spoken word, velvety harmonies, ritual dance and a few rare, goat-gut–stringed traditional instruments. And because they only perform at a handful of events each year, each Hamsa Lila experience is potent, organic and unique. Moe’s Alley; $16 adv/$20 door; 9pm. (Lily Stoicheff)
FRIDAY | 7/27
DISCO BOYS The Grandmothers of Invention features original membersof Frank Zappa’s band.
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!Celebrating Creativity Since 1975
320-2 Cedar St Santa Cruz 831.427.2227
kuumbwajazz.org
Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served 1-hr before
Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.
GOLD CIRCLE SOLD OUT!
KUUMBWA PRESENTS @ THE RIO THEATRE9/10 Chick Corea/Stanley Clarke/ Jack DeJohnette Trio11/18 Angelique Kidjo11/30 Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile
Thurs. July 26 7 pmMEKLIT HADEROHints of Billie Holiday, Tracy Chapman and Joni Mitchell – a uinique blend of jazz, Ethiopia, the San Francisco art scene and visceral poetry 1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS
Mon. July 30 7 pm “The New Voice of Brazil.” – NPRLUISA MAITA
Wed. August 1 7 and 9 pm“The greatest guitarist in the world.” – Eric ClaptonALBERT LEE BAND
Thurs. August 2 7 pm Rising Star Musicians!SPIRAL BOUND
Mon. August 6 7 pm Jazz, Calypso and Caribbean influencesETIENNE CHARLES QUINTET
Mon. August 13 7 and 9 pm TERENCE BLANCHARD9 pm: 1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTSNo Jazztix/Comps
Wed. August 15 7 and 9 pmKEIKO MATSUINo Jazztix/Comps
Mon. August 27 7 and 9 pm JIMMY COBB / JOEY DEFRANCESCO / LARRY CORYELL TRIO “IN TRIBUTE TO JIMMY SMITH & WES MONTGOMERY”No Jazztix/Comps
Sat. July 28 7 pm Contemporary jazz guitaristDAVID BOSWELLTickets: Brownpaperptickets.com
Sun. August 5 2 Shows!Matinee 3 pm & Evening 7:30 pm WHITE ALBUM ENSEMBLE “UNPLUGGED”Tickets: Streetlight Records and tix.com
Fri. August 17 7:30 pmALESSANDRO PENEZZI DUO & KEN PEPLOWSKI QUARTET“AN EVENING OF CLARINET”No Jazztix/Comps
Thurs. August 9 7:30 pm A sensible, groovy and poetic trio!YESBERGER BAND1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS
aloha spirit. When he’s not decorating his home with Grammys and Hoku Awards for his slack key guitar playing, he’s teaching art and music, maintaining his three-acre Maui farm and passing out bundles of fresh produce to friends and students. Kahumoku’s music embodies the cultural richness of the Islands, and his famed collaborations with fellow artists have garnered much critical acclaim. His earthy vocals and unique 12-string slack key sound are a fresh island breeze here on the mainland. Don Quixote’s; $17 adv/$20 door; 7pm. (LS)
feel-good beats with a message instead of just stringing a slew of hits together. His tracks stand on their own, leaving few doubts in the minds of critics and fans alike that the King Remembered In Time’s reign will continue to rise. Catalyst; $15 adv/$19 door; 9pm. (LS)
A FLOCK OF SEAGULLSWhile A Flock of Seagulls’ claim to fame is the 1982 hit single “I Ran (So Far Away),” the British band’s contributions to the pop canon extend beyond their career-making song. Early entrants to the New Wave scene, the band influenced numerous other ’80s bands and trends with its synth-driven sound, sci-fi themes and, perhaps most memorably, the signature winged hairstyle worn by frontman Mike Score. Taking on a cult following of its own, the iconic ’do has been referenced in Pulp Fiction, The Wedding Singer, The
Daily Show and more. Sharing the bill is U.S. synth-pop outfit Animotion. Beach Boardwalk; free; 6:30 & 8:30pm. (CJ)
FRIDAY | 7/27
SATURDAY | 7/28
SATURDAY | 7/28
SAO PAOLO LASS Luisa Maita blends samba and electronica at Kuumbwa on Monday.
BIG K.R.I.T.Big K.R.I.T.’s hip-hop career went from zero to 60 within a few months in 2009, but the Mississippi native had been preparing for that moment since he was 12. Working a vein of traditional Southern rap, K.R.I.T. counts Pimp MC, T.I. and B.I.G. as influences, but isn’t raising himself in their image. The respected rookie insists on remaining an individual identity and delivering
GRANDMOTHERS OF INVENTIONPlaying the music of Frank Zappa is not as easy as, say, sitting down and playing a cover of “Leaving On a Jet Plane.” His compositions are thick, textured, quirky and at times hard to pin down. So who better to bring the late Rock and Roll Hall of Famer’s music back to the stage than the people who played it with him the first time around? Made up of original members and alumni of Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, the Grandmothers of Invention revel in the genre-blending style, uninhibited self-expression and onstage experimentation that made Zappa and the Mothers one of rock’s most inimitable acts. Moe’s Alley; $22 adv/$25 door; 9pm. (CJ)
SUNDAY | 7/29
MONDAY | 7/30
SARITAH
KOTTONMOUTH KINGS
ALBERT LEE BAND
CORY CHISEL
KASEY CHAMBERS
CONCERTS
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LUISA MAITAWith roots that extend deep into the heart of traditional Brazilian music and a future-forward embrace of contemporary urban, pop and electronic influences, Luisa Maita has established herself as a musical ambassador to the world. Hailed by NPR as the “new voice of Brazil,” the Sao Paolo–born Maita began her professional music career singing advertising jingles at age 7. These days Maita is known for wrapping her sultry, soulful voice—which has garnered her comparisons to Sade, Billie Holiday, Feist and Cat Power—around her own songs, which are steeped heavily in the syncopation of samba, the cool stylings of bossa nova and the spirit of life in Brazil today. Kuumbwa; $20 adv/$23 door; 7pm. (CJ)
GEORGE KAHUMOKU JRGeorge Kahumoku Jr embodies the true
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APTOS / CAPITOLA/ RIO DEL MAR / SOQUEL WED 7/25 THU 7/26 FRI 7/27 SAT 7/28 BRITANNIA ARMS Trivia Quiz Night Karaoke The Love Dogs 8017 Soquel Dr, Aptos
THE FOG BANK John Michael Vinny Johnson Marshall Law 211 Esplanade, Capitola
MANGIAMO’S PIZZA AND WINE BAR David Paul Campbell David Paul Campbell George Christos Roberto-Howell 783 Rio del Mar Blvd, Aptos
MICHAEL’S ON MAIN Choice Karaoke Wild Blue Lara Price Tsunami 2591 Main St, Soquel
PARADISE BEACH GRILLE Johnny Fabulous Dennis Dove 215 Esplanade, Capitola
SANDERLINGS Live Hawaiian Music In Three 1 Seascape Resort Dr, Rio del Mar
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL Don McCaslin & Roots 66 West Coast Soul 7500 Old Dominion Ct, Aptos The Amazing Jazz Geezers
SHADOWBROOK City Rocks Joe Ferrara Nonette 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola
THE UGLY MUG Acoustic 4640 Soquel Dr, Soquel
ZELDA’S Jake Shandling Trio DJ J. Dex Bay Area Heat 203 Esplanade, Capitola
SCOTTS VALLEY / SAN LORENZO VALLEY DON QUIXOTE’S Black Cat Chris Webster Moonalice + VERB 6275 Hwy 9, Felton Accordion
HENFLING’S TAVERN Jam Session Joint Chiefs Vito & Friends 9450 Hwy 9, Ben Lomond
WATSONVILLE / MONTEREY / CARMEL CILANTRO’S Hippo Happy Hour Mariachi Ensemble KDON DJ Showbiz 1934 Main St, Watsonville & KDON DJ SolRock
MOSS LANDING INN Open Jam Clam Idiots Steve Troop Group Hwy 1, Moss Landing
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SUN 7/29 MON 7/30 TUE 7/31 APTOS / CAPITOLA /RIO DEL MAR / SOQUEL Comedy Nite BRITANNIA ARMS 831.688.1233
Dennis Dove Karaoke THE FOG BANKPro Jam with Eve 831.462.1881
MANGIAMO’S PIZZA AND WINE BAR 831.688.1477
SambaRena Mark Harvey MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 831.479.9777
Lara Price Ken Constable PARADISE BEACH GRILLE 831.476.4900
SANDERLINGS 831.662.7120
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 831.688.8987
Frank Sorci SHADOWBROOK 831.475.1511
Open Mic with Jordan Movie Nite THE UGLY MUG 831.477.1341
Bleu ZELDA’S 831.475.4900
SCOTTS VALLEY / SAN LORENZO VALLEYGeorge Kahumoku Jr. Native Vibe Brittany Haas DON QUIXOTE’S Fiddle 831.603.2294
Next Blues Band Karaoke with Ken HENFLING’S TAVERN 831.336.9318
WATSONVILLE / MONTEREY / CARMELSanta Cruz Trio KPIG Happy Hour CILANTRO’S Happy hour 831.761.2161
Shane Dwight Karaoke MOSS LANDING INN 831.633.3038
july 25-31, 2012
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Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.
1011 PACIFIC AVE.SANTA CRUZ
831-423-1336
Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-435-9849 & online
www.catalystclub.com
Friday, July 27 In the Atrium AGES 16+BLITZKID plus Stellar Corpses
Thursday, July 26 In the Atrium AGES 16+THE NEW BOYZ
Monday, July 30 In the Atrium AGES 16+KOTTENMOUTH KINGS plus Big B
also Prozac
In the Atrium AGES 21+LOS SHAKAS plus Diana Leon
also Commando Effectivo
Saturday, July 28 AGES 16+
BIG K.R.I.T.plus Casey Veggies also Big Sant and Tito Lopez
Aug 3 The Smokers Club Tour (Ages 16+)Aug 4 The Grouch & Eligh (Ages 16+)Aug 22 Hank 3 (Ages 21+)
Steel Pulse (Ages 16+)Buckethead/ Samples (Ages 16+)Against Me! (Ages 16+)James McMurtry/ The Gourds (Ages 21+)Big Bad Voodoo Daddy (Ages 21+)Carolyn Wonderland (Ages 21+)Easy Star All Stars (Ages 16+)Menomena (Ages 18+)Odd Future (All Ages)
Oct 6 Roach Gigz (Ages 16+)Oct 12 Yelawolf (Ages 16+)Oct 24 Macklemore & Ryan Lewis (Ages 16+)Oct 26 Brother Ali (Ages 16+)Oct 21 Tiger Army (Ages 16+)
Tuesday, July 31 In the Atrium AGES 18+THE HOOD INTERNET plus Psalm One
also Tanya Morgan
APTOS CINEMAS 122 Rancho Del Mar Center, Aptos 831.688.6541 www.thenick.com
Best Exotic Marigold Hotel — Wed-Thu 1:30; 6:40; Fri-Wed 1:30; 4; 6:30; 8:50.Ice Age: Continental Drift — Daily 12:10; 2:10; 4:20; 6:30; 8:30.Savages — Wed-Thu 4; 9:10.
41ST AVENUE CINEMA 1475 41st Ave., Capitola 831.479.3504 www.cineluxtheatres.com
The Watch — (Opens Fri) 11:45; 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 9:45.The Amazing Spiderman — Wed-Thu 12:45; 4; 7; 10.Brave — Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:30; 7; 9:30.The Dark Knight Rises — Wed-Thu 11; 11:55; 2:45; 3:45; 6:30; 7:30; 10:15; Fri-Wed 11; 12:30; 2:45; 4:15; 6:30; 8; 10:15.Hugo — Wed-Thu 10am.Ted — Wed-Thu 11:45; 2:20; 4:55; 7:30; 10:10.Puss in Boots — Wed-Thu 10am.The Adventures of Tintin — Wed 8/1 10am.
DEL MAR1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com
Beasts of the Southern Wild — Wed-Thu 2:10; 4:50; 7:15; 9:40; Fri-Wed 1:30; 3:30; 5:30; 7:30; 9:30 plus Fri-Sun 11:30am.Brave — Daily 2:20; 4:40; 7; 9:20 plus Fri-Sun noon.To Rome With Love — Daily 2:10; 4:50; 7:15; 9:40 plus Fri-Sun 11:40am.Dirty Dancing — Fri-Sat midnight.Lou Harrison: A World of Music — Mon 7pm.
NICKELODEON Lincoln and Cedar streets, Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com
The Intouchables — (Opens Fri) 2:20; 4:40; 7:20; 9:30 plus Fri-Sun noon.Trishna — (Opens Fri) 2:10; 4:30; 6:50; 9:10 plus 11:50am.Moonrise Kingdom — Daily 2:40; 4:50; 7; 9:20 plus Fri-Sun 12:30pm.People Like Us —Wed-Thu 11:15; 9:40.Safety Not Guaranteed — Daily 5:10; 9:40. Take This Waltz — Wed-Thu 11:40; 2:10; 4:40; 7:10; 9:40; Fri-Wed 2:50; 7:20 plus Sat-Sun 12:10pm. (No Tue 7:20pm)Bill W. — Tue 7pm.
SANTA CRUZ CINEMA 9 1405 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1700 www.regmovies.com
The Amazing Spiderman —Wed 7/25 12:05; 3:05; 10:50; Thu 12:05; 3:05; 6:05; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.The Amazing Spiderman 3D — Wed-Thu 10:15; 2; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.The Dark Knight Rises — Wed-Thu 10; 10:30; 11:40; 12:10; 1:45; 2:15; 3:20; 3:50; 5; 5:35; 6; 7; 7:30; 8:30; 9:30; 10; 10:40; 11:10; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.Ice Age: Continental Drift — Wed-Thu 10:45; 1:15; 3:45; 6:45; 9:25; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.
Ice Age: Continental Drift 3D — Wed-Thu 10:20; 12:45; 3:05; 5:30; 8:05; 10:25; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.Magic Mike — Wed-Thu 12; 2:35; 5:05; 7:50; 10:35; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.MET Opera: Der Rosenkavalier — Wed 7/25 6:30pm.Ghost — Thu 9pm.
RIVERFRONT STADIUM TWIN 155 S. River St, Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1701 www.regmovies.com
The Watch — (Opens Fri) 11:45; 2:45; 4:45; 7:15; 9:45.Savages — Wed-Thu 12:30; 3:30; 6:30; 9:30; Fri-Wed 1; 6:45.Ted — Wed-Thu 1; 4; 7; 9:45; Fri-Wed 4; 9:50.
SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA226 Mt. Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley 831.438.3260 www.cineluxtheatres.com
Step Up Revolution — (Opens Fri) 2:15; 4:55; 7:30.Step Up Revolution 3D — (Opens Fri) 11:45am; 10.The Watch — (Opens Fri) 11:30; 2:10; 4:45; 7:20; 9:45.The Amazing Spiderman — Wed-Thu 12:30; 3:45; 7; 10:10; Fri-Wed 12:30; 3:50; 7; 10:10.Brave — Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:30; 7; 9:30; Fri-Wed 11; 1:30; 4; 6:30.The Dark Knight Rises — Wed-Thu 11; 11:55; 12:45; 1:30; 2:45; 3:45; 4:30; 5:15; 6:30; 7:30; 8:15; 9; 10:15; Fri-Wed 11; 11:55; 12:45; 1:45; 2:45; 3:45; 4:30; 5:30; 6:30; 7:30; 8:15; 9:15; 10:10.Ice Age: Continental Drift — Wed-Thu 11:10; 2; 4:20; 6:45; 9; Fri-Wed 11:15; 11:40; 2; 4:20; 6:45; 9.Ice Age: Continental Drift 3D — Wed-Thu 11:45am.Moonrise Kingdom — Wed-Thu 11:55; 2:30; 4:45; 7:15; 9:40.Savages — Wed-Thu 1; 4; 7; 10.Ted — Daily 11:55; 2:20; 4:55; 7:30; 10.The Adventures of Tintin — Wed-Thu 10am. Puss in Boots — Wed 8/10am.
GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 81125 S. Green Valley Rd, Watsonville 831.761.8200 www.greenvalleycinema.com
Step Up Revolution — (Opens Fri) 1:15; 7; 9:30.Step Up Revolution 3D — (Opens Fri) 3:50 plus Fri-Sun 10:55am.The Watch — (Opens Fri) 1:15; 4; 7:15; 9:40 plus Fri-Sun 10:55am.The Amazing Spiderman — Daily 1:20; 4; 6:50; 9:40 plus Fri-Wed 10:40am.The Amazing Spiderman 3D — Wed-Thu 9:20.Brave — Wed-Thu 10:55; 1; 3:05; 5:05; 7:15.The Dark Knight Rises — Daily 12:30; 2:45; 4; 6:15; 7:30; 9:45 plus Fri-Sun 11:15am.Ice Age: Continental Drift — Daily 12:45; 2:50; 4:50; 7; 9:50 plus Fri-Sun 10:40am.Ice Age: Continental Drift 3D — Daily 1; 3:05; 5:05; 7:15; 9:20 plus Fri-Sun 10:55am.Magic Mike —Wed-Thu 1:20pm.Savages — Wed-Thu 10:40; 3:50.Ted — Daily 1:20; 3:50; 6:50; 9:30 plus Fri-Sun 11am.
S H O W T I M E SShowtimes are for Wednesday, July 25, through Wednesday, Aug. 1, unless otherwise indicated.
Programs and showtimes are subject to change without notice.
FILM CAPSBILL W.
DIRTY DANCING
GHOST
INTOUCHABLES
LOU HARRISON: A WORLD
OF MUSIC STEP UP REVOLUTION
Movie reviews by Traci Hukill, Lily Stoicheff
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leader of a dance crew that puts on cutting-edge flash mobs. When a businessman threatens to develop the crew’s neighborhood, dancers of all kinds rally to the cause. (Opens Fri at Santa Cruz 9, Scotts Valley and Green Valley) (TH)
TRISHNA (R; 125 min.) Michael Winterbottom (The Killer Inside Me, The Trip, 24-Hour Party People) transplants Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles to modern-day India in this story about a girl from the provinces (Freida Pinto) who winds up in the big city at the mercy of a wealthy businessman (Riz Ahmed) of changeable affections. (Opens Fri at Nickelodeon) (TH)
THE WATCH (R; 104 min.) Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn, Jonah Hill and Richard Ayoade are suburban dads who band up to protect the ‘hood from interlopers and wind up having to defend it against aliens. Directed by Akiva Shaffer, one-third of the Lonely Island comedy team. (Opens Fri at 41st Ave, Santa Cruz 9, Riverfront, Scotts Valley and Green Valley) (TH)
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG-13; 136 min) Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) discovers a clue that may
help him understand why his father abandoned him as a child. It leads him to his father’s former partner, Dr. Curt Connors, an encounter with a radioactive spider and the unraveling of a vengeful mystery. Emma Stone co-stars. (LS)
BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN
WILD (PG-13; 99 min.) Cannes and Sundance hit has a little girl (Quvenzhane Wallis) and her ailing father (Dwight Henry) surviving life in the swamps where a flood wreaks havoc.
BRAVE (PG; 93 min) Merida, a headstrong princess and skilled archer, longs to live her own life but is destined to marry one of three lords from a nearby kingdom. Determined to change her fate, she enlists the help of an old woman who casts a spell on her overbearing mother. Everything goes terribly wrong, and Merida must discover the true meaning of bravery if she is to change her mother back. (LS)
THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13; 164 min.) The third in Christopher Nolan’s trilogy picks up eight years after the events of The Dark Knight. Batman (Christian Bale), having taken the fall for DA Harvey Dent, is in exile from Gotham City, which complicates his efforts
to save the city when a terrorist (Tom Hardy) shows up. With Gary Oldman, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Anne Hathaway. (TH)
ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL
DRIFT (PG; 102 min.) Manny the mammoth, Sid the sloth and Diego the saber-toothed cat are stuck on the wrong side of the breakup of Pangaea, which is caused when Scrat the saber-toothed squirrel gets a little too aggressive in his hunt for acorns.
MAGIC MIKE (R; 110 min) Veteran stripper Magic Mike (Channing Tatum) is adored by his female fans and rolling in cash. When Mike falls for his new protégé’s sister, he begins to consider retiring from his raucous lifestyle, though his after-hours life is not so easily forgotten. (LS)
MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13; 94 min) In September 1965, gifted 12-year-olds Suzy (Kara Hayward) and Sam (Jared Gilman) head off to the wilderness of the fictional New England island of New Penzance. They are sought by a sad constable (Bruce Willis) and an intrepid “Khaki Scouts” leader (Edward Norton). Gilman and Hayward demonstrate flawless precociousness, but the conceit is uneven. Sometimes the film is
like Our Gang, as in a Boy Scout camp of kids acting like adults. Sometimes, it is as ooky as Bugsy Malone. Director Wes Anderson’s toy showboat is keeled with adult regret, particularly the drinker’s sorrows embodied by Bill Murray as Suzy’s dad. The coolness and preciousness keep a glass barrier up as thick as a store window. (RvB)
TO ROME WITH LOVE (R; 102 min) Woody Allen’s latest delivers huge helpings of Roman vistas and musical familiarities (“Volare” and better accordion playing than in Midnight in Paris). In a sprawling, multipart tale, Penelope Cruz is a gold-hearted hooker interfering with a bewildered newlywed couple. Ellen Page is a flighty actress visiting her friends (Jesse Eisenberg and Greta Gerwig) and sowing mayhem, Alec Baldwin materializes to warn Eisenberg’s character of the dangers of such dames, Roberto Benigni is a dull businessman paying the price of fame and Allen himself is aboard as a retiree visiting the city with his wife (Judy Davis). (RvB)
SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED (R; 94 min.) Three cynical Seattle magazine employees investigate a classified ad placed by
a paranoid supermarket clerk looking for a companion in time travel. From the producers of Little Miss Sunshine, this heartfelt tale goes places viewers might not expect. (JP)
SAVAGES (R; 127 min) When their shared girlfriend O (Blake Lively) is kidnapped by a dangerous Mexican drug cartel, two marijuana growers (Taylor Kitsch and Aaron Taylor-Johnson) will stop at nothing to get her back. Featuring John Travolta and Salma Hayek.
TAKE THIS WALTZ (R; 116 min.) In Toronto’s Little Portugal district, Margot (Michelle Williams) is working out her feelings for hubby Lou (Seth Rogen) on their fifth anniversary or so when along comes hot artist/rickshaw driver Daniel (Luke Kirby) to complicate matters. With Sarah Silverman. Sarah Polley directs. (TH)
TED (R; 106 min) In the directorial debut of Seth MacFarlane, a young boy’s wish for his teddy bear to come to life is granted. Ted remains his friend into his adult years, when John’s desire to embrace adulthood is encumbered by Ted’s slovenly ways. With Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis. (LS)
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THE NEW NORMAL (L-R) Anne Le as Yvonne, Francois Cluzet as Philippeand Omar Sy as Driss adapt to a new reality in ‘Intouchables.’
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. Pruning is one of those dicey gardening chores that can make or break your carefully tended fruit trees. The lecture and demonstration workshop will focus on getting people familiar with when and how to summer prune, which differs significantly from the more familiar winter pruning. “Summer pruning can be used to control the size and shape of an overly vigorous tree, making it easier to harvest and increasing production,” Sutton reminds us. Good to know. During the workshop, Sutton will also discuss after-
, and gazillions more, plus all that live music. To help you work your way through these elegant brewskies, there will be ample food on hand from venues like
and many more.
Gates open at 12:30pm, with beer sampling for general admission starting at 1pm. The Festival ends at 5pm sharp. VIP tickets are $65 and get you in an hour early for samples of reserve and specialty brews from participating breweries, plus a souvenir pint glass, a meal ticket and one bottle of water. General admission ($45) includes beer samples, live music and entertainment. Better get your tickets ASAP.
http://www.californiabeerfestival.comOr you might want to prune your
fruit trees. On Saturday, July 28 from 10am to 1pm, join fruit tree expert
for a demo workshop on summer fruit tree pruning at the
Brewed BehaviorThe California Beer Festival heads to Aptos for a second year
Epicure.
harvest care to prepare your trees for fall and the coming dormant period
The workshop is $30 general, $20 for members of the Friends of the UCSC Farm & Garden and $5 for UCSC students, payable the day of the class (check or cash only). Call 831.459.3376, email [email protected] or visit http://casfs.ucsc.edu. 0
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California Beer Fest is this Saturday.
The , your basic craft beer extravaganza, is coming to Aptos Village Park this Saturday, July 28. Let’s see, that’s 70 craft brews on tap, three live bands including “Foreverland”—an unforgettable tribute to Michael Jackson—plus mouthwatering food and bocce ball. Michael Jackson and bocce ball in one afternoon—life is good! CBF sounds like hog heaven for any beer aficionado, especially fans of handcrafted suds. Know that this event will sell out, space is very limited. Proceeds will benefit student athletes in Santa Cruz County.
Invited breweries to the July 28 alfresco beer fest include
F O O D I E F I L E
CL: Currently we have been messing around with the odd cuts. We are breaking whole animals, so that allows us to get creative and have pork skirt steaks, secretos, oyster steaks, teres majors—nifty cuts you can’t find anywhere else. That’s what gets me excited! In the sausage world, anything that has proper balance and creative flavors is exciting.
Without a doubt I’m working harder! But it’s for a good cause, and I get to work with awesome people and my whole family. Getting the shop up and running was a job. We were working seven days a week for nine months straight doing construction.
Yes. Sanitation. I can’t stress that enough. After that, achieving balanced flavors and using what’s in season. Creativity is also key.
I eat a lot of organic vegetables! I love me some greens! Having access to meat all the time is cool but vegetables are just as awesome.
Working in the mountain bike industry. Shredding on my bike is what keeps me sane.
BY CHRISTINA WATERS
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¡ Employment 30™ Classes & Instruction 30£ Family Services 30¢ Hiome Services 30∞ Real Estate 31
BY PHONE Call the Classified Department at 408.298.8000, Monday through Friday, 8.30am to 5.30pm.
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Brimblecom, BCA beautiful and quaint neigh-borhood just a minute fromtown. 4+ acres private, wood-ed, sunny and like a storybook.
Owner financing available forqualified buyer. Shown byappointment only. Offered at$295,000. Call Debbie @Donner Land & Homes, Inc.408-395-5754www.donnerland.com
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RIDGE TOP LOG CABINOwner Financing on this FullyPermitted, Log House on 40Acres. Private, Sunny &Secluded. Back-up propanegenerator, propane heat &hot water, well w/electricpump & working windmillpump. Internet service avail-able. Completely off the grid.Offered at $595,000. Shownby appointment only. Brokerwill help show. Call Debbie@ Donner Land & Homes, Inc.408-395-5754 408-395-5754www.donnerland.com
LITTLE BASIN Rare opportunity!A serenely, quiet and seclud-ed paradise! Extraordinaryparcel on Little Basin has notbeen on the market in 40years! Paved road access to8 acres of beautiful, rugged,redwood forests surroundedby Big Basin State Park.Working, permitted Well.Workshop/cabin in need ofTLC. Phone line on property.Power lines down the road.Shown by appointment only.Broker will help show.Offered at $275,000. CallDebbie @ Donner Land &Homes, Inc. 408-395-5754www.donnerland.com
NINA DELIGHT ~BOULDER CREEKSeller says this is one of thelast buildable properties inNina Heights! Sun and viewawait you. South-facingmagic, high up on a hill, sur-rounded by trees and goodneighbors. Near post office,grocery store, and quaint lit-tle town. Pavement, powerat the street, and city water.Owner financing available.Offered at $225,000.00.
Shown by appointment only.Call for your private viewing:Donner Land & Homes, Inc.,Deborah J. Donner, 408-395-5754.
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