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The (latest) KPFA battle Behind the upcoming recall election P4

Dancing Truly underground from the heart

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The (latest) battle of KPFA Fight over content, money erupts into recall campaign By Yael Chanoff yael@sfbg.com If you’re a member of KPFA, the progressive Berkeley radio station, you’ll be receiving a ballot in the mail shortly with one issue at hand: the recall of Tracy Rosenberg. She’s an elected member of the Local Station Board, and her critics want her removed from office. Rosenberg is also the former chair of the Finance Committee at Pacifica Network, the nonprofit that owns KPFA. And she has become the face of a conflict at KPFA that is about issues much bigger than Rosenberg herself. The petition to recall Rosenberg accuses her of stealing an email list of KPFA supporters, of election fraud in a 2011 Local Station Board election, and of orchestrating the cancellation of the station’s beloved Morning Show. But there’s a deeper issue here: How should the famously fractious KPFA handle a downturn in financial support — and should the station rely more on volunteer programming and less on paid professional staff? How will the station, which is an essential part of the Bay Area left, face a changing media landscape? As the staff at KPFA—administrative and broadcaster, paid and unpaid, union and non-union— try to answer these questions, most of them with a real commitment to progressive radio, they are also mired in a political dispute that’s been draining for everyone involved. KPFA has a long history of providing news and critique that supports progressive efforts and questions the status quo. But, like most businesses, it took a hit in the 2008 financial crisis. That came a decade after some dramatic governance changes. In July 1999, Pacifica put all the local staff on administrative leave and brought in staff from Houston affiliate KPFT to run the station. In response, hundreds protested in the streets, and the establishment of a detailed democratic editorials

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governing structure came out of the dispute. Soon after, listener donations took off—parties on both sides attribute this to an increased demand for progressive content in the wake of 9/11 and the war on Iraq. But around 2007, KPFA started to use up the last of its reserves. According to data provided by the station, listener contributions peaked at more than $4 million during fiscal year 2005, and then began to level off. By 2010, donation income was back below $3 million —still more than 2001 levels. As donations dropped significantly during those five years, salaries and related personnel expenses continued a slow and steady increase, and KPFA managed to avoid outright staff and programming cuts. That is, until September 2008, when the hosts and producers of the Morning Show were laid off and the show cancelled. According to the recall campaign, the lay offs were retaliatory (the Morning Show staff had criticized Pacifica management on the air). According to defenders, canceling the Morning Show was a necessary budget decision. The recall campaign argues that the dire financial situation has stabilized after the Morning Show was cancelled; the recall people say that the local board had already balanced it through buyouts. The recall crowd says donations have gone down; the other crowd, they’ve shifted, but remain about the same. According to Brian EdwardsTiekert, one of the forces behind the recall effort, “At the start of the dispute were these retaliatory firings a year and a half ago. It became a recall because of how they dealt with it.” The Pacifica Foundation has partnered with KPFA since they were both founded out of anti-war movements in the late 1940s, but their relationship has evolved over the years. As it stands, KPFA and Pacifica’s four other member stations pay yearly dues to the foun-

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dation; Pacifica, in turn, provides program that is syndicated over many stations such Free Speech Radio News and Democracy Now! The Save KPFA campaign website makes the case that Pacifica “uses KPFA as a cash cow,” and notes money KPFA loaned to Pacifica around 2000, from which Pacifica apparently still owes KPFA $1.4 million. As a staff-elected representative on KPFA’s Local Station Board, Edwards-Tiekert pushed back on attempts by Pacifica to seize station funds. The Morning Show invited Pacifica’s executives onto to the airwaves and “challenged them about how much they were taking from KPFA, and about Pacifica’s spending priorities,” the site reads. “All of those charges are somewhat overstated. There’s a certain percentage of KPFA’s budget that goes to overall expenses,” Rosenberg told us. In fact, according to Rosenberg’s allies, the situation was reversed; KPFA had run out of funds and was threatening to bankrupt Pacifica. In response to budget shortfalls, Pacifica’s execumusic listings

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tive director Arlene Engleheart “asked all five Pacifica stations to cut down on paid staff 2-3 years ago, as the only way to meet escalating deficits, KPFA’s 4 “sister” Pacifica stations have already done this. Only KPFA continued to employ more paid staff than it can afford.” According to the website of a campaign against the recall, Support KPFA, in the fall of 2010, KPFA owed Pacifica more than $100,000 in unpaid dues. “At that time I was the representative from KPFA at the national Finance Committee, which does the budget from KPFA after it comes back from the local level,” said Rosenberg. She claims that the budget that the board came up with came short of meeting expenses. “So as a board member I went to the station and said, where’s the budget? So I pushed for a couple of meetings saying look, a budget has to come up here that makes sense and is balanced. I told the executive director it was her responsively to make sure a plan for a balanced budget went forward. I would say that I put

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news some pressure on the executive director to make some hard decisions.” Communication Workers of America Local 9415, a union that represents KPFA’s paid workers, brought the issue to the National Labor Relations Board in late 2011, and the federal agency dismissed five charges of retaliation and layoffs out of the seniority order. Edwards-Tiekert, however, was reinstated as the result of a successful union grievance. The other charges on the recall petition include putting forward two motions to overturn Jan 2011 local station board elections under fraudulent auspices and for specious reasons and misappropriating a list of KPFA members’ personal email addresses. The election fraud charge refers to a motion Rosenberg brought disqualify Dan Siegel, an attorney who was elected to the Local Station Board, from holding his seat, based on Pacifica policy barring individuals who hold a public office from serving on the board.

The Morning Mix is disTincTly noT a Bay area version of deMocracy now!

“I pointed out that this seemed to be a violation of the bylaws. That’s all I did,” she said. But the incident turned into a court battle, and a judge eventually issued an injunction reinstating Siegel. The email theft charge refers to an email blast that Rosenberg sent out concerning the Morning Mix, the Morning Show’s replacement. The Morning Show provided an in-depth look at stories from around the Bay Area. It had, and still has, a large following. “The corporate media doesn’t cover real issues as they really affect people,” said Sasha Futran, a listener mem-

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Psychic Dream astrology, complete events, alerts, art, and music listings, Hotlist, comments, and so much more! Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sfbg

on the blogs Politics Ed Lee’s proposed ad campaign to discourage giving money to panhandlers in plain wrong Come to us for the latest on the Mirakarimi hearings

Noise Minimal punk duo Street Eaters take the Localized Appreesh questionnaire Sean McCourt talks to former Hole guitarist Eric Erlandson about his new book about Cobain, Letters to Kurt Must-see show suggestions: Tragedy, The Touré-Raichel Collective, Hype Williams, Sonya Cotton, and The She’s

Ting for Assembly. Yes an A and B. Saving the local Democratic Party. Our complete San Francisco endorsements for the June 5 election As usual, California is irrelevant to tax the millionaires represented ate Democrat, at best, was weak-toU.S. Congress, District 12 to the presidential primaries, a change in outlook, the reality is terrible on the war, is hawkish on except as a cash machine. The Republican Party has long since chosen its nominee; the Democratic outcome was never in doubt. So the state holds a June 5 primary that, on a national level, matters to nobody. It’s no surprise that pundits expect turnout will be abysmally low. Except in the few Congressional districts where a high-profile primary is underway, there’s almost no news media coverage of the election. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t some important races and issues (including the future of San Francisco’s Democratic Party) — and the lower the turnout, the more likely the outcome will lean conservative. The ballot isn’t long; it only takes a few minutes to vote. Don’t stay home June 5. Our recommendations follow.

President Barack Obama

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Sigh. Remember the hope? Remember the joy? Remember the dancing in the streets of the Mission as a happy city realized that the era of George Bush and The Gang was over? Remember the end of the war, and health-care reform, and fair economic policies? Yeah, we remember, too. And we remember coming back to our senses when we realized that the first people at the table for the health-policy talks were the insurance industry lobbyists. And when more and more drones killed more and more civilian in Afghanistan, and the wars didn’t end and the country got deeper and deeper into debt. Oh, and when Obama bailed out Wall Street — and refused to spend enough money to help the rest of us. And when his U.S. attorney decided to crack down on medical marijuana. We could go on. There’s no question: The first term of President Barack Obama has been a deep disappointment. And while we wish that his new pledge editorials

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that it’s most likely an election-year response to the popularity of the Occupy movement. Last fall, when a few of the most progressive Democrats began talking about the need to challenge Obama in a primary, we had the same quick emotional reaction as many San Franciscans: Time to hold the guy accountable. Some prominent left types have vowed not to give money to the Obama campaign. But let’s get back to reality. The last time a liberal group challenged an incumbent in a Democratic presidential primary, Senator Ted Kennedy wounded President Jimmy Carter enough to ensure the election of Ronald Reagan — and the begin of the horrible decline in the economy of the United States. We’re mad at Obama, too — but we’re realists enough to know that there is a difference between moderate and terrible, and that’s the choice we’re facing today. The Republican Party is now entirely the party of the far right, so out of touch with reality that even Reagan would be shunned as too liberal. Mitt Romney, once the relatively centrist governor of Massachusetts, has been driven by Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum so deeply into crazyland that he’s never coming back. We appreciate Ron Paul’s attacks on military spending and the war on drugs, but he also opposes Medicare and Social Security and says that people who don’t have private health insurance should be allowed to die for lack of medical care. No, this one’s easy. Obama has no opposition in the Democratic Primary, but for all our concerns about his policies, we have to start supporting his re-election now.

U.S. Senate Dianne Feinstein The Republicans in Washington didn’t even bother to field a serious candidate against the immensely well-funded Feinstein, who is seeking a fourth term. She’s a moder-

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Pentagon spending (particularly Star Wars and the B-1 bomber), has supported more North Coast logging, and attempts to meddle in local politics with ridiculous ideas like promoting unknown Michael Breyer for District Five supervisor. She supported the Obama health-care bill but isn’t a fan of single-payer, referring to supporters of Medicare for all as “the far left.” But she’s strong on choice and is embarrassing the GOP with her push for reauthorization of an expanded Violence Against Women Act. She’ll win handily against two token Republicans.

U.S. Congress, District 2 Norman Solomon The Second District is a sprawling region stretching from the Oregon border to the Golden Gate Bridge, from the coast in as far as Trinity County. It’s home to the Marin suburbs, Sonoma and Mendocino wine country, the rough and rural Del Norte and the emerald triangle. There’s little doubt that a Democrat will represent the overwhelmingly liberal area that was for almost three decades the province of Lynn Woolsey, one of the most progressive members in Congress. The top two contenders are Norman Solomon, an author, columnist and media advocate, and Jared Huffman, a moderate member of the state Assembly from Marin. Solomon’s not just a decent candidate — he represents a new approach to politics. He’s an antiwar crusader, journalist, and outsider who has never held elective office — but knows more about the (often corrupt) workings of Washington and the policy issues facing the nation than many Beltway experts. He’s talking about taxing Wall Street to create jobs on Main Street, about downsizing the Pentagon and promoting universal health care. He’s a worthy successor to Woolsey, and he deserves the support of every independent and progressive voter in the district. music listings

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Nancy Pelosi

Nancy Pelosi long ago stopped representing San Francisco (see: same-sex marriage) and began representing the national Democratic party and her colleagues in the House. She will never live down the privatization of the Presidio or her early support for the Iraq war, but she’s become a decent ally for Obama and if the Democrats retake the House, she’ll be setting the agenda for his second term. If the GOP stays in control, this may well be her last term. Green Party member Barry Hermanson is challenging her, and in the old system, he’d be on the November ballot as the Green candidate. With open primaries (which are a bad idea for a lot of reasons) Hermanson needs support to finish second and keep Pelosi on her toes as we head into the fall.

U.S. Congress, District 12 Barbara Lee This Berkeley and Oakland district is among the most leftleaning in the country, and its representative, Barbara Lee, is well suited to the job. Unlike Pelosi, Lee speaks for the voters of her district; she was the lone voice against the Middle East wars in the early days, and remains a staunch critic of these costly, bloody, open-ended foreign military entanglements. We’re happy to endorse her for another term.

U.S. Congress, District 13 Jackie Speier Speier’s more of a Peninsula moderate than a San Francisco progressive, but she’s been strong on consumer privacy and veterans issues and has taken the lead on tightening federal rules on gas pipelines after Pacific Gas and Electric Company killed eight of

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newS her constituents. She has no credible opposition.

State Senate, DiStrict 11 mark leno Mark Leno started his political career as a moderate member of the Board of Supervisors from 1998 to 2002. His high-profile legislative races — against Harry Britt for the Assembly in 2002 and against Carole Migden for the Senate in 2008 — were some of the most bitterly contested in recent history. And we often disagree with his election time endorsements, which tend toward more downtown-friendly candidates. But Leno has won us over, time and again, with his bold progressive leadership in Sacramento and with his trailblazing approach to public policy. He is an inspiring leader who has consistently made us proud during his time in the Legislature. Leno was an early leader on the same-sex marriage issue, twice getting the Legislature to legalize same-sex unions (vetoed both times by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger). He has consistently supported a singlepayer health care system and laid important groundwork that could eventually break the grip that insurance companies have on our health care system. And he has been a staunch defender of the medical marijuana patients and has repeatedly pushed to overturn the ban on industrial hemp production, work that could lead to an important new industry and further relaxation of this country wasteful war on drugs. We’re happy to endorse him for another term.

State aSSembly, DiStrict 17 tom ammiano Ammiano is a legendary San Francisco politician with solid progressive values, unmatched courage and integrity, and a history of diligently and diplomatically working through tough issues to create ground-breaking legislation. We not only offer him our most enthusiastic endorsement — we wish that we could clone him and run him for a variety of editorials

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public offices. Since his early days as an ally of Harvey Milk on gay rights issues to his creation of San Francisco’s universal health care system as a supervisor to his latest efforts to defend the rights of medical marijuana users, prison inmates, and undocumented immigrants, Ammiano has been a tireless advocate for those who lack political and economic power. As chair of Assembly Public Safety Committee, Ammiano has blocked many of the most reactionary toughon-crime measures that have pushed our prison system to the breaking point, creating a more enlightened approach to criminal justice issues. We’re happy to have Ammiano expressing San Francisco’s values in the Capitol.

State aSSembly, DiStrict 19 Phil ting Once it became abundantly clear that AssessorRecorder Phil Ting wasn’t going to get elected mayor, he started to set his eyes on the state Assembly. It’s an unusual choice in some ways — Ting makes a nice salary in a

job that he’s doing well and that’s essentially his for life. Why would he want to make half as much money up in Sacramento in a job that he’ll be forced by term limits to leave after six years? Ting’s answer: he’s ready for something new. We fear that a vacancy in his office would allow Mayor Ed Lee to appoint someone with less interest in tax equity (prior to Ting, the city suffered mightily under a string of political appointees in the Assessor’s Office), but we’re pleased to endorse him for the District 19 slot. Ting has gone beyond the traditional bureaucratic, makeno-waves approach of some of his predecessors. He’s aggressively sought to collect property taxes from big institutions that are trying to escape paying (the Catholic Church, for example) and has taken a lead role in fighting foreclosures. He commissioned, on his own initiative, a report showing that a large percentage of the foreclosures in San Francisco involved some degree of fraud or improper paperwork, and while the district attorney is so far sitting on his hands, other city officials are moving to address the issue. His big issue is tax reform, and

he’s been one the very few assessors in the state to talk openly about the need to replace Prop. 13 with a split-role system that prevents the owners of commercial property from paying an ever-declining share of the tax burden. He wants to change the way the Legislature interprets Prop. 13 to close some of the egregious loopholes. It’s one of the most important issues facing the state, and Ting will arrive in Sacramento already an expert. Ting’s only (mildly) serious opponent is Michael Breyer, son of Supreme Court Justice Breyer and a newcomer to local politics. Breyer’s only visible support is from the Building Owners and Managers Association, which dislikes Ting’s position on Prop. 13. Vote for Ting.

Democratic county central committee You can say a lot of things about Aaron Peskin, the former supervisor and retiring chair of the city’s Democratic Party, but the guy is an organizer. Four years ago, he put together a slate of candidates that wrenched control of the local party from the folks who call themselves “moderates� but who, on critical economic issues, are really better CONTINUES ON PAGE >>

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defined as conservative. Since then, the County Central Committee, which sets policy for the local party, has given its powerful endorsement mostly to progressive candidates and has taken progressive stands on almost all the ballot issues. But the conservatives are fighting back — and with Peskin not seeking another term and a strong slate put together by the mayor’s allies seeking revenge, it’s entirely possible that the left will lose the party this year. But there’s hope — in part because, as his parting gift, Peskin helped change state law to make the committee better reflect the Democratic voting population of the city. This year, 14 candidates will be elected from the East side of town, and 10 from the West. We’ve chosen to endorse a full slate in each Assembly district. Although there are some candidates on the slate who aren’t as reliable as we might like, 24 will be elected, and we’re picking the 24 best.

District 17 (east siDe) John Avalos David Campos David Chiu Petra DeJesus Matt Dorsey Chris Gembinsky Gabriel Robert Haaland Leslie Katz Rafael Mandelman Carole Migden Justin Morgan Leah Pimentel Alix Rosenthal Jamie Rafaela Wolfe

District 19 (west siDe) Mike Alonso Wendy Aragon Kevin Bard Chuck Chan Kelly Dwyer Peter Lauterborn Hene Kelly Eric Mar Trevor McNeil Arlo Hale Smith

ProPosition 29 Yes Cigarette tax for CanCer reSearCh

State ballot meaSureS ProPosition 28 Yes legiSlative term limitS Let us begin with a stipulation: We have always opposed legisla SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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tive term limits, at every level of government. Term limits shift power to the executive branch, and, more insidiously, the lobbyists, who know the issues and the processes better than inexperienced legislators. The current system of term limits is a joke — a member of the state Assembly can serve only six years, which is barely enough time to learn the job, much less to handle the immense complexity of the state budget. Short-termers are more likely to seek quick fixes than structural reform. It’s one reason the state Legislatures is such a mess. Prop. 28 won’t solve the problem entirely, but it’s a reasonable step. The measure would allow a legislator to serve a total of 12 years in office — in either the Assembly, the Senate, or a combination. So an Assembly member could serve six terms, a state Senator three terms. No more serving a stint in one house and then jumping to the other, since the term limits are cumulative, which is imperfect: A lot of members of the Assembly have gone on to notable Senate careers, and that shouldn’t be cut off. Still, 12 years in the Assembly is enough time to become a professional at the job — and that’s a good thing. We don’t seek parttime brain surgeons and inexperienced airline pilots. Running California is complicated, and there’s nothing wrong with having people around who aren’t constantly learning on the job. Besides, these legislators still have to face elections; the voters can impose their own term limits, at any time. Most of the good-government groups are supporting Prop. 28. Vote yes.

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Seriously: Can you walk into the ballot box and oppose higher taxes on cigarettes to fund cancer research? Of course not. All of the leading medical groups, cancerresearch groups, cancer-treatment groups and smoking-cessation groups in the state support Prop. 29, which was written by the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association. We support it, too. Yes, it’s a regressive tax — most smokers are in the lowermusic listings

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income brackets. Yes, it’s going to create a huge state fund making grants for research, and it will be hard to administer without some issues. But the barrage of ads opposing this are entirely funded by tobacco companies, which are worried about losing customers, particularly kids. A buck a pack may not dissuade adults who really want to smoke, but it’s enough to price a few more teens out of the market — and that’s only good news. Don’t believe the big-tobacco hype. Vote yes on 29.

San franCiSCo ballot meaSureS ProPosition a Yes garbage ContraCt A tough one: Recology’s monopoly control over all aspects of San Francisco’s waste disposal system should have been put out to competitive bid a long time ago. That’s the only way for the city to ensure customers are getting the best possible rates and that the company is paying a fair franchise fee to the city. But the solution before us, Proposition A, is badly flawed public policy. The measure would amend the 1932 ordinance that gave Recology’s predecessor companies — which were bought up and consolidated into a single behemoth corporation — indefinite control over the city’s $220 million waste stream. Residential rates are set by a Rate Board controlled mostly by the mayor, commercial rates are unregulated, and the company doesn’t even have a contract with the city. Last year, when Recology won the city’s landfill contract — which was put out to bid as the current contract with Waste Management Inc. and its Altamont landfill was expiring — Recology completed its local monopoly. At the time, Budget Analyst Harvey Rose, Sup. David Campos, and other officials and activists called for updating the ordinance and putting the various contracts out to competitive bid. That effort was stalled and nearly scuttled, at least in part

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nEws because of the teams of lobbyists Recology hired to put pressure on City Hall, leading activist Tony Kelley and retired Judge Quentin Kopp to write this measure. They deserve credit for taking on the issue when nobody else would and for forcing everyone in the city to wake up and take notice of a scandalous 70year-old deal. We freely admit that the measure has some significant flaws that could hurt the city’s trash collection and recycling efforts. It would split waste collection up into five contracts, separating residential and commercial collection, an inefficient approach that could put more garbage trucks on the roads. Each of those contracts would be for just five years, which makes the complicated bidding process far too frequent, costing city resources and hindering the companies’ ability to make longterm infrastructure investments. It would require Recology to sell its transfer station, potentially moving the waste-sorting facility to Port property along the Bay. Putting the transfer station in public hands makes sense; moving it to the waterfront might not. On the scale of corrupt monopolies, Recology isn’t Pacific Gas and Electric Co. It’s a worker-owned company and has been willing to work in partnership with the city to create one of the best recycling and waste diversion programs in the country. For better or worse, Recology controls a well-developed waste management infrastructure that this city relies on, functioning almost like a city department. Still, it’s unacceptable to have a single outfit, however laudatory, control such a massive part of the city’s infrastructure without a competitive bid, a franchise fee, or so much as a contract. In theory, the company could simply stop collecting trash in some parts of the city, and San Francisco could do nothing about it. As a matter of public policy, Prop. A could have been better written and certainly could, and should, have been discussed with a much-wider group, including labor. As a matter of real politics, it’s a messy proposal that at least raises the critical question: Should Recology have a no-bid, no contract monopoly? The answer to that is no. editorials

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Prop. A will almost certainly go down to defeat; Kopp and Kelly are all alone, have no real campaign or committee and just about everyone else in town opposes it. Our endorsement is a matter of principle, a signal that this longtime garbage deal has to end. If Recology will work with the city to come up with a contract and a bid process, then Prop. A will have done its job. If not, something better will be on the ballot in the future. For now, vote yes on A.

ProPosition B YEs Coit tower poliCy In theory, city department heads ought to be given fair leeway to allocate resources and run their operations. In practice, San Francisco’s Department of Recreation and Parks has been on a privatization spree, looking for ways to sell or rent public open space and facilities as a way to balance an admittedly tight budget. Prop. B seeks to slow that down a bit, by establishing as city policy the premise that Coit Tower shouldn’t be used as a cash cow to host private parties. The tower is one of the city’s most important landmarks and a link to its radical history — murals painted during the Depression, under the Works Progress Administration, depict local labor struggles. They’re in a bit of disrepair –but that hasn’t stopped Rec-Park from trying to bring in money by renting out the place for high-end events. In fact, the tower has been closed down to the public in the past year to allow wealthy patrons to host private parties. And the city has more of that in mind. If the mayor and his department heads were acting in good faith to preserve the city’s public spaces — by raising taxes on big business and wealthy individuals to pay for the commons, instead of raising fees on the rest of us to use what our tax dollars have already paid for — this sort of ballot measure wouldn’t be necessary. As it is, Prop. B is a policy statement, not an ordinance or Charter amendment. It’s written fairly broadly and won’t prevent the occasional private party at Coit Tower or prevent Rec-Park from managing its budget. Vote yes. 2 picks

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APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com


news the (latest) battle of kpfa CONT>>

ber of the Local Station Board. With its cancellation, she said, “I want to know what’s going on. I want intelligent analysis.” Democracy Now!—the foremost example of professional progressive journalism in the country—is now KPFA’s highest donation-generating show. And in style and content, the Morning Mix is distinctly not a Bay Area

version of Democracy Now! Instead, it is a show with rotating hosts Dennis Bernstein, Davey D Cook, JR Valrey, Andres Soto, Anita Johnson, Peter Phillips and Mickey Huff. The content and approach varies depending on the host. Henry Norr, a listener and elected member of the Local Station Board, is pleased with the format, and thinks it might represent a good path for KPFA. “The station should be more com-

We’re tops.

munity-oriented. We should have a diversity of voices, and lots of people on who aren’t skilled or paid but represent progressive voices and active movements,” said Norr. The new show has increased coverage of Richmond politics and has provided a forum for Valrey and Cook to talk about left-wing politics from an AfricanAmerican perspective. But cutting the Morning Show had its financial implications: The old format brought

in significantly more donations than the Morning Mix. According to KPFA documents, donations have increased in other time slots that air more traditional-sounding journalism, including during Letters and Politics, Flashpoints, and the Evening News. So the recall is about the Morning Show, but it’s also about the future: Should KPFA seek to retain a traditional structure, with paid staff who can earn a decent living and focus on making news

programs whose quality compares to that of more mainstream outlets? Or should the station solve its budget woes by relying on more community volunteers with more wide-ranging content? And should the people who work at KPFA have the right to discuss the station’s finances, policies and future openly, on the air, without fear of retaliation? Rosenberg or not, those issues aren’t going away. 2

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SCeneS thRough the Smoke on the el Rio patio. | photos by nark magazine

DEAD NATION PRESENTS

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We haD a paRty By Caitlin Donohue caitlin@sfbg.com heRBWiSe As excited as I was for our Guardian Stoned Soul Picnic 420 party, not everyone in our office was convinced the afternoon at El Rio on Friday, April 20 would pass without incident. “I’m a little bit worried about getting raided,� said my publisher Bruce Brugmann, towering over my cubicle earlier that day. Well we weren’t, although swirling rumors of federal agents in the crowd did culminate in slight rudeness directed towards the buzzcutted and be-khakied among us. We celebrated 420 with a free, public party, no one got arrested, and we raised over a thousand dollars for marijuana patient advocacy — $1,092, drummed up through a raffle featuring prizes from all kind of local businesses and El Rio’s generous bar charity. Owner Dawn Richardson says the total was the most money for charity ever genereditorials

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SOULEYMAN FRIDAY June 1st

ated in the bar during that particular time period. This had to be the weirdest party ever — reggae and soul music both, from Mr. Lucky of I&I Vibrations and Carnita of Hard French, respectively. Then there was the pickled apples and bacon lovingly stacked in Hot Bike’s grilled cheese sandwiches. The boys from Roughneck Skateboards self-started to create a limbo game made out of paper mache joints. And four stand-up comedians bravely assumed the stage towards the end of the afternoon. We even had free pastries. There were old folks in motorized wheelchairs, tough guy stoners on the side, a ton of pretty people that showed up just to dance and be stoned on a sunny patio in 70-degree weather. If ere there was an advertisement for the broad swath of San Franciscans that support medical marijuana, this was it. And we did good — look Bruce, no handcuffs! 2 picks

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11


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COMMUnal jOyS: niçOiSe TarT aT CaSTagna (TOP) anD MiSSiOn BOWling ClUB’S SCene | guardian photos by virginia miller

By Virginia Miller

myself in conversation with tables next to me. On a good night, it exudes that neighborhood conviviality found in similar-sized restaurants around Europe. Decor isn’t particularly memorable, though red walls always bring a space to life. Sticking closer to tradition is the best way to navigate Castagna’s menu. Stephane’s classic Niçoise caramelized onion tart ($7.50) is the best dish, silky with caramelized onions in a flaky crust, with (the good stuff) white anchovies on the side, which they explained neighborhood diners weren’t quite ready for — I say place them on top and let diners sort it out. I found the steak in my steak frites ($18) too well done (medium rare, please) despite a lush green peppercorn sauce. I’d opt instead for Frenchstyle campagnarde pizza ($15), in the spirit of flammkuchen (Alsatian flatbread), covered in potato sauce, bacon, crème fraîche and raclette.

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aPPeTiTe Incredible burgers in a bowling alley, SF’s deaf community gathering over Neapolitan pizzas, brothers serving food from their hometown of Nice in a tiny restaurant, dining around a U-shaped counter off a FiDi alley... each of the restaurants below opened within the last 6 months, providing a unique communal experience (and, most important, fine food to go with) that makes one feel like actually engaging with, rather than ignoring, fellow diners.

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MiSSiOn BOWling ClUB Mission Bowling Club (MBC) is one badass bowling alley. Squeaky clean hipster all the way: there’s no funky smell or dated dinginess in this brand new space. Open and industrial, it boasts a front patio, separate dining room downstairs and one upstairs overseeing six lanes and a wood-lined bar area. Cheer on bowlers from comfy couches while sipping a cocktail (solid, though not noteworthy drinks) and filling up on French onion casserole. As soon as I heard chef Anthony Myint, Mission Chinese Food and Mission Street Food wunderkind, would oversee the menu, it was easy to guess MBC was going to boast exceptional food. The beloved Mission Burger ($15, $10 during happy hour) is back. I missed the rich, granulated patty, lathered in caper aioli. An avowed carnivore, I was shocked to find the vegan burger ($10) is almost as exciting. A fried chickpea, kale, shitake fritter is brightened up with sambal (Indian chili sauce), guacamole, and fennel slaw. A juicy sausage corn dog ($7) arrives upright in molecular fashion, standing watch over a dollop of habanero crema. Only a hard, small “everything pretzel” ($5) disappointed. Not bad for a bowling alley.

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3176 17th St., SF. (415) 863-2695, www.missionbowlingclub.com

CaSTagna Brothers Jerome and Stephane Meloni from Nice infuse their Italian heritage and French upbringing in Italian and Niçoise dishes. I enjoyed Stephane’s cooking at their former Restaurant Cassis, a far roomier Pac Heights space, but their tiny new Castagna lends itself to connection. Stephane cooks within full view, Jerome interacts with diners, and I found 12 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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2015 Chestnut, SF. (415) 440-4290, www.castagnasf.com

MOZZeria The communal award could easily go to the Mission’s Mozzeria. Maybe we didn’t need an umpteenth Neapolitan pizza place, but there’s none quite like this, run by a deaf couple and staff. San Francisco’s deaf community gathers en masse at a hangout where speaking with your eyes and hands is as important as speaking verbally. Of course, verbal processors are welcome, too. The dining bar is my preferred perch, particularly to engage with chef Russell Stein (who co-owns Mozzeria with wife Melody). He’s hilarious and reads lips like a master, joking with diners as he spreads ingredients over wheels of dough before popping them into a woodburning oven. His heartwarming Neapolitan pizzas ($12-18) are topped with the likes of caramelized onion, pancetta, mozzarella or goat cheese and eggplant. I must admit, my favorite item, Mozzeria bar ($8), isn’t the most gourmet, but hearkens back to my Jersey youth. Let’s call it what it is: a fried mozzerella cheese log doused in pomodoro sauce and basil. Sheer comfort. 3228 16th St., SF. (415) 489-0963, www.mozzeria.com

a convivial dining experience, the bar is so small so you can’t help but exchange good will with neighboring patrons. You can dine at a table, but the bar is far more fun, and works for a casual meal all day. Much has been made of the meatball, kale, and fregola soup ($7/10), and rightly so. It is an unexpected culinary delight: olive oil-laced broth, laden with Parmesan, onions, carrots. I can be bored by broth soups at times, but this one holds my interest with plump veal-pork-beef meatballs and pleasantly soggy kale. Roasted mussels ($12 and $17) arrive aromatic with fennel sausage in lemon and white wine, while even avocado toast ($12) delights topped with dill gravlax, Spanish black radish, and lemon. Leave room at the end for Claudine favorite s’mores ($7) baked in a glass bowl with layers of marshmallow and chocolate on graham cracker crust. My meals at dinner have been more satisfying than at lunch, but each visit improves my opinion.

ClaUDine

8 Claude Lane, SF. (415) 362-1988, www.myclaudine.com 2

Claudine’s chic cafe charms. Big picture windows and corner space on an alley up a half flight of stairs appeal, while a u-shaped bar creates music listings

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Subscribe to Virgina’s twice-monthly newsletter, The Perfect Spot, www.theperfectspotsf.com

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food + drink: cheaP eaTs

le.chicken.farmer@gmail.com CHEAP EATS The good wings were at Noriega Pizza in the Sunset. So there, Mission District! First Wayway leaves the building and takes his cutie-pie with him — not to mention their baby. And now this. And not only to the Sunset, by the way, did they move, but way the hell out there in the Sunset, on 40-somethingth Avenue, around the corner from Noriega Pizza. Or, as it is more officially known, The Pizza Place on Noriega. Which Wayway likes better than Delfina, but maybe just because it’s possible to eat there. We could have sat down, for example. As we carried our pizza and wings back home to the cutie pies, he pointed with his nose toward the little store he likes better than Bi-Rite, and the this he likes better than that. And so forth. “Uh-huh, uh-huh,� I said. “And where’s Joe Montana?� “Excuse me?� he said. Changing tactics, I started to remind him he’d had me haul them out a pound of Faye’s coffee, ground for drip — but then remembered I’m in no position to ride my friends for leaving the neighborhood when I spend half my time in the deep goddamn South. Speaking of which, I managed to wing my way back to New Orleans in time for the French Canadian Quarter Festival, and — more to the point — a cochon de lait po-boy from the Love At First Bite stand. Which wasn’t as knee-buckling as last year’s, but still I would list it as something worth risking your life for. On the plane, the sweet man sitting next to me said I could hold onto his arm during landing, if I wanted. He’d gotten a pretty good read on my body language during takeoff, when I permanently damaged the kidneys of the poor person seated in front of me, and crumpled a whole entire Cosmo, cover to cover, in my hands. By the time we reached cruising altitude, it was the size, shape, and approximate consistency of a baseball. So I was already thinking the dude was brave, to sacrifice an entire limb to those same hands; then he told me he’d been in an emergency landing himself. Only his was worse than mine! It ended with him falling off the wing onto his face and editorials

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breaking his knee cap, whereas I only sustained a real bad fear of flying. Or love of trains, as I sometimes like to put it. Anyway, the weather wasn’t right, and the pilot had pretty much promised a rough ride most of the way. While I was dropping valium (and maybe for the same reason) my new soon-to-be-one-armed friend was dropping names: something about working in the music biz in San Francisco in the ‘60s and ‘70s, his association with “Jerry.� And then Willie Nelson. (Who I happen to like.) He’d written a book. I wrote this. In other words, there was so much to talk about, that we wound up landing without him losing his arm! As far as Sunset chicken wings go, though, you’re still up in the air, aren’t you? OK. Noriega clips its wings off of bigger birds, so they come out juicier from the fryer. And the buttery hot sauce in which they are enslathered ... it tastes like heaven — or at least upstate New York. By comparison New Yorker’s (now Pizzeria’s) Mission District hot wings are small and dry, and the sauce has something off about it. The wings will grow on you, but will never lift you off the ground. Never mind heaven. So: advantage Wayway. As for Noriega’s pizza, Delfina it is not. His point about actually being able to eat there was well taken, though. And it’s a fun, likeable, more casual place to sit, with sports on TV, and a patio. And I enjoyed the pie, with good sausage, olives, and lots of sauce. Like I like it. The crust was pretty thin, but not thin enough, or at any rate not crispy enough. They do use a brick oven. If they used a little bit of a hotter one, and hand-tossed the dough a little thinner ... Then maybe. Which isn’t to say it isn’t, on the strength of its wings, my new favorite restaurant. 2

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picks Wednesday 4/25 Eric Erlandson As the guitarist for Hole, Eric Erlandson was at the center of alternative rock explosion of the early ‘90s, a member of one of the most popular bands of the time, and a friend and confidant to one of the scene’s most influential players, Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain. With the 18th anniversaries of both the suicide of Cobain and the release of Hole’s hit record Live Through This passing this month, Erlandson has just released his first book, Letters To Kurt (Akashic Books) a touching and enlightening collection of prose poems addressed to his departed friend. He’ll read from the book and do an acoustic performance tonight. (Sean McCourt)

Just icing on the poo.

for more visit sfbg.com civilized thought. In their salons its members argued about poetry, painting, and history. They passionately believed in Art and embraced total freedom — artistic, sexual, personal. Some of them became famous; others dropped by the wayside. Yet in retrospect, Bloomsbury looks like a small Shangri-la. Or was it? Jenny McAllister has been popping the balloons of pretense for close to 20 years, creating dance theater pieces that are as witty as they are humorous. In “Bloomsbury Group/It’s Not Real” she and her 13th Floor Dance Theater introduces us to some of those peculiar characters that called Bloomsbury home. (Rita Felciano)

trippple nippples see thursday 4/26

Thu/26-Sun/29, 8pm, $18–$23 ODC Theater 3153 17th St., SF (415) 863-9834 www.odctheater.org

Thursday 4/26 The Touré-Raichel Collective

7:30pm, free Moe’s Books 2476 Telegraph, Berk. (510) 849-2087 www.moesbooks.com In conversation with Andi Mudd Thu/26, 7pm, free City Lights 261 Columbus, SF (415) 362-8193 www.citylights.com

Wednesday 4/25 “A Change of the World: In Memory of Adrienne Rich” The iconic contemporary poet — how many of those have we got left, friend? — passed away at her home in Santa Cruz last month. But Adrienne Rich’s legacy of strong-willed, powerfully voiced feminism, radical lesbian activism, perfectly illuminated quotidian details, and, hopefully, incredible control of poetic form, is set to be carried on for generations, beginning with this huge tribute at the SF Main Library from notable Bay Area wordsmiths. Join Elana Dykewomon, Aaron Shurin (whose latest volume, Citizen, is a stunner), Jewelle Gomez, Justin Chin, 14 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

Kevin Killian, Toni Mirosevich, and oodles more as they resurrect Rich’s voice and offer their own oblations on the rough altar of her inspiring genius. OMG she would hate that I got all over-dramatic with the language back there. (Marke B.) 6pm, free

hilarious solo performer, and photographer) hangs out after to chat about his filmmaking career — and the fact that this killer event is free (part of CCA’s Cinema Visionaries program and Design and Craft Lecture Series) is just icing on the poo. Er, cake. (Cheryl Eddy)

Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center at the SF Main Library

7-9pm, free

100 Larkin, SF

California College of Arts

www.sfpl.org

1111 Eighth St., SF

Timken Lecture Hall

(415) 703-9563

Wednesday 4/25

www.cca.edu

“John Waters in Conversation”

Wednesday 4/25

Oh hell yes. Sometimes San Francisco resident John Waters (if you’ve spotted him on Muni, I am sooo jealous) visits California College of the Arts to screen 2004 sex-com A Dirty Shame, which features a typically eclectic cast (including Waters regulars Mink Stole and Patricia Hearst, and Selma Blair’s memorable, uh, udders). The “Pope of Trash” (he’s also an author, occasional actor,

It’s been a good decade since the Detroit Beatdown sound was unleashed on the world via an eponymous tripledisc release on the UK’s Third Ear Records, which collected the works of several integral Motor City dance music producers. In truth, the Beatdown sound wasn’t so much a cohesive style — although it did reflect the spinetingling synthesis

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of Detroit’s hypnotic, unhurried house sound with the Zen-like disco-funk loopiness that was earning Moodymann and Theo Parrish rabid followers at the time — than a foray into sophisticated, erotic grooviness, no matter the tempo or sample source. An uptick in Beatdown sound reverence has lead to recent tours by many of the original players, including Norm Talley, who will bring almost 30 years worth of decks magic to the incredibly welcoming Housepitality weekly party. (Marke B.) 9pm, $5 before 11pm, $10 after Icon 1192 Folsom, SF (415) 626-4800 www.housepitalitySF.com

Thursday 4/26 “Bloomsbury/ It’s Not Real” In the early part of the 20th century and for a short period only, the London neighborhood of Bloomsbury became a center of music listings

Israeli pianist Idan Raichel and Malian guitarist Vieux Farka Touré forged a friendship after crossing paths at a Germany airport in 2008. The Israeli pop star, known for culling from many worldly influences, had been a fan of Vieux’s father, legendary guitarist Ali Farka Touré. Raichel beckoned the younger Touré to visit him in Tel Aviv for a jam session. Their serendipitous collaboration resulted in The Tel Aviv Session, an acoustic, improvisational masterwork. Throughout Tel Aviv, Touré sets the stage with dramatic strumming and guitarpicking, while Raichel engages with his own meticulous, twinkling ripostes. The duo’s casual chemistry facilitates a rare and absolutely mesmerizing interplay fused together by impeccable technique. (Kevin Lee) 8pm, $25–$85 Herbst Theatre 401 Van Ness, SF (415) 392-4400 www.cityboxoffice.com

Thursday 4/26 Trippple Nippples

Poised to make a splash at SXSW this year with its hyperkinetic live show, Tokyo’s Trippple Nippples unfortunately had to cancel due to visa complications. The band is now making up for lost time with a string of West Coast shows that includes a Thursday stop at Thee Parkside. A stage listings

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Eric Erlandson photo by Drew Barrymore; afrolicious photo by john snyder; treat social club photo by bill evans; “Bloomsbury/It’s Not Real” photo by pak Han ; Bad Unkl Sista photo by Eric Gillet.

mix of psychedelic performance art, electronics. and in-yourface noise rock, the group has caused a stir in Japan, in addition to finding endorsements from American artists such as Pharrell, who recently championed it in Vice’s mini-documentary, Tokyo Rising. Check out the Dan Deacon-esque slice of kaleidoscopic electropop “LSD” for a taste. (Landon Moblad)

“Someday, Someway.” In 1987, he portrayed Buddy Holly in the film La Bamba, playing an excellent cover of Holly’s thenobscure outtake “Crying, Waiting, Hoping,” virtually turning the song into his own, one which remains a staple in his live shows to today. The past few years have seen Crenshaw nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Original Song for the title track he wrote for the movie Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, and the release of the album Jaggedland—don’t miss your chance to see him at this unique solo performance. (McCourt)

treat social club see tuesday 5/1

With Ass Baboons of Venus and Ghost Town Refugees 9pm, $10 Thee Parkside 1600 17th St., SF (415) 252-1330 www.theeparkside.com

Thursday 4/26 Afrolicious Five-Year Anniversary

Give it up for unstoppable, adorable DJ brothers Señor Oz and Pleasuremaker, a.k.a. Oz and Joey McGuire. A half-decade ago, when the idea of mixing as many global dance music styles into one party as possible was still pretty radical, the bros’ Afrolicious party went one better with live instrumentation (often courtesy of Joey’s band, Pleasuremaker, which drops a new full-length later this year), remarkable guest stars, and a fantasy Latin funk sheen. Best of all, Afrolicious pumped a welcoming, soulful, old-school smiley vibe — free of the slightly sour, scene-y sting of other such endeavors. Afrolicious anniversary parties burst apart at the seams with guest-star goodies and span two wild nights. This one is no exception, with resident percussionists Qique and Diamond, Brazilian drum troupe Fogo Na Roupa, DJs New Life and Sergio, and more. (Marke B.)

8pm, $18 Yoshi’s 1330 Fillmore, SF (415) 655-5600 www.yoshis.com

Tuesday 5/1 Treat Social Club

Thu/26-Fri/27, 9:30pm, $10

instance), take over Z Space this weekend for the world premiere of a new performance work, “First Breath — Last Breath,” directed, choreographed, and costumed by founder and artistic director Anastazia Louise, a Butoh-trained dancer and dance teacher who honed her skills in the “wearable art” costuming department as a core member of the Carpetbag Brigade from 2000 to 2009. A sensory-stimulating meditation on life and death, the piece promises an apt element of the unscripted in its hybrid spectacle of dance, Butoh, aerial work, couture, percussive scenic design, film, and music. (Robert Avila)

Elbo Room

Fri/27, 8pm; Sat/28, 2 and 8pm, $35

647 Valencia, SF

Z Space

(415) 552-7788

450 Florida, SF

www.elbo.com

(415) 209-5569 www.badunklsista.com

Friday 4/27 “First Breath — Last Breath” Bad Unkl Sista, makers of arts-party mega-fare (like Maker Faire, for editorials

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for more visit sfbg.com

Saturday 4/28 Jim Gaffigan Comedian and actor Jim Gaffigan could pontificate on any subject, but his delightful treatises on bacon picks

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bits, Cinnabons, and other dubious delectables rank as fan favorites. “I’ve never eaten a Hot Pocket and been like, ‘I’m glad I ate that,’ ” he opines during a popular sermon on the sloppy snack. Followers gravitate toward his languid style and natural inclination to poke fun at his own comedy, especially through whiny, one-line asides he whispers as an aghast faux audience member. New 75-minute stand-up routine “Mr. Universe” is available for $5 as an online stream, $1 of which will go toward The Bob Woodruff Foundation in support of veterans and their families. (Lee) Sat/28, 7:30 and 10pm; Sun/29, 7pm, $39.75–$49.75 Warfield 982 Market, SF (415) 567-2060 www.thewarfieldtheatre.com

Saturday 4/28

The Garage

On a blustery evening in March, organizers Finn Kelly and Adam Theis invited their friends to converge inside a hangar-like space in the Mission for Treat Social Club’s inaugural event. No one knew quite what to expect but once inside revelers found themselves swaying to Realistic Orchestra’s moody silent film score, awed by fabulous visuals, and mesmerized by the aerial choreography Amanda Boggs. It was an auspicious start for the monthly series and with performances by tap dancer Tyler Knowlin, and an aerial piece that will be influenced by crowd participation, the second edition promises to be just as tantalizing as the first. (Mirissa Neff)

6pm, performance

7:30pm, $10-20

975 Howard, SF

Go Game Headquarters

8pm, procession

400 Treat (Suite F), SF

8:30pm, party

www.treatsocialclub.com 2

all out in this regard. This joint fundraiser between the Garage and THEOFFCENTER benefits the new home for the Garage at 715 Bryant. The current Garage space at 975 Howard was literally that in 2007 when Joe Landini moved in and converted it into his “safehouse” for local artists, an ambitious low-rent breeding ground for dance, theater, and performance. The name stays but the venue changes to a more accommodating space nearby. In celebration, the Garage plays, parades, parties, and moves this Saturday in cunningly pragmatic programming that starts at 975 Howard and ends, via “procession,” with a bash at the new digs. (Avila)

715 Bryant, SF

“Dear Howard, I Love You But I’m Leaving You For Bryant”

www.715bryant.org

You know how friends get your help moving with a little beer and a few laughs? Artists go

Marshall Crenshaw

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Monday 4/30 Singer-songwriter-guitarist extraordinaire Marshall Crenshaw has been writing and making records for more than 30 years now, first gaining mainstream exposure with his 1981 hit

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The Guardian listings deadline is two weeks prior to our Wednesday publication date. To submit an item for consideration, please include the title of the event, a brief description of the event, date and time, venue name, street address (listing cross streets only isn’t sufficient), city, telephone number readers can call for more information, telephone number for media, and admission costs. Send information to Listings, the Guardian Building, 135 Mississippi St., SF, CA 94107; fax to (415) 487-2506; or e‑mail (paste press release into e‑mail body — no text attachments, please) to listings@sfbg.com. Digital photos may be submitted in jpeg format; the image must be at least 240 dpi and four inches by six inches in size. We regret we cannot accept listings over the phone.

april 25 - may 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

15


arts + culture: visual art

Utopia, mon amour

By Marke B. marke@sfbg.com VISUAL ART With Occupy gearing up again and a fresh round of election hell full upon us, another cycle of protest — and the urge to engage with the problems of the world while somehow escaping them — is in the air. The Oakland Museum’s current “1968 Exhibit” (through August 19) offers a familyfriendly, multimedia trip through the Bay Area’s most famous political and cultural upheaval, but here are three ongoing shows that look closely at individual creators from the past whose work transcends nostalgia, transmits a fair amount of beauty, and drums up some idealistic lessons for the present.

“ARTHUR TRESS: SAN FRANCISCO 1964” A miracle to inspire cafe artists everywhere. In 1964, 23-year-old NYC photographer Arthur Tress winged through San Francisco for a season, shooting the populace at a particularly turbulent time: the Republican National Convention, the Beatles’ first North American tour, auto worker protests along Van Ness, the passage of the Civil Rights Act. He developed the negatives in the communal darkroom off Duboce Park, had an unremarkable show in the back of a cafe, packed the photos up at his sister’s, and moved on. After his sister died, he found them in a box of her effects, and realized their significance. And what a find: Forget Mad Men, this is the real 1964, perched on the edge of a cultural unraveling, its existential beehive slowly loosening into flower child ideals. The 70 photographs on show at the de Young, curated by James Ganz, expertly play with composi16 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

Up and away: Left to right, a 1964 Arthur Tress photograph, a 1954 Buckminster Fuller patent application, and a ritual from the first Radical Faerie gathering in 1979.

Arthur Tress, Bucky Fuller, Harry Hay exhibits offer engagement and transcendence tion to bring rough social patches to artful life. A distorted shot of a George Romney presidential campaign poster delivers Orwellian chills. Screaming girls hoisting “Ringo for President” banners intimate repressed political hysteria. Dashing union workers form impressive phalanxes. Patrons at a Fifth and Market diner embody an microcosm of economic disillusionment. A transgender woman suns her hairy legs on the Embarcadero, a plaid-shirted boy holds up a hand-drawn hammer and sickle. All of it coated with the glamour of deconstructed nostalgia, in which one can indulge and critique at once. But there’s more: “You have throw into the mix a heavy dose of social commentary and criticism — the idea that the photograph can be a vehicle for social change,” Tress tells an interviewer in the show’s handsome if carelessly annotated monograph. “You photographed street demonstrations, you photographed protests ... it was a way of becoming part of the movement.” Through June 3. De Young Museum, 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr., deyoung.famsf.org

THE UTOPIAN IMPULSE: BUCKMINSTER FULLER AND THE BAY AREA Inside the great Henry Ford automotive museum just outside of Detroit, you can tour an actual Dymaxion House, designed by preternaturally productive designer, philosopher, and dissembler R. Buckminster Fuller. It’s as perfect a realtime experience of walking around in someone’s 1940s sci-fi Utopian dream as one can editorials

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ever have. A polished aluminum mushroom cap subdivided into tiny rooms bursting with ingenious “squee!”-worthy gadgetry to handle all of life’s projected needs, the Dymaxion House never took off as vernacular American architecture, despite its supposed ease of construction, light weight, and good intentions to house an expanding population. (Among its bland nemeses: rain, expense, and snarky architecture critics.) But while it’s particularly poignant to see this polished dream deferred nestled among the many wheeled ones populating Henry Ford’s shrine to the former glories of the Motor City — and even though geodesic monument Spaceship Earth at Disney’s Epcot, another eerie graveyard of sleek Utopian ideals, remains Bucky Fuller’s only famous American architectural manifestation — the Dymaxion concept, and several other Bucky wonders, have had a profoundly positive and energizing effect on the Bay Area, as this visionary show at the SFMOMA reveals. Curator Jennifer Dunlop Fletcher forewarned, “To be clear, it’s not so much a show about Fuller.” Indeed, but in the first rooms prepare to be blown away by gorgeous blow-ups of Massachusetts-born Bucky’s hypergeometric blueprints, which will surely provide several indie electro bands with album cover inspiration for years to come, and a wall of insanely detailed notecards from “Everything I Know,” his late-life video-recorded brain dump. Then the real magic of the show kicks in, as it opens up into

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displays of Bay Area movements and products directly traceable to Fuller, from glorious hippie artifacts like the Ant Farm architecture collective, the Whole Earth Catalog scene, and the iconic North Face “Oval Intention” dome-shaped tent (really!) to contemporary tech initiatives, like bright neon specimens from the “One Laptop One Child” campaign and the utterly transfixing “Local Code” by UC Berkeley Assistant Professor Nicholas de Monchaux, which digitally renders the transformation of all the unused public space in SF into “a common ecological infrastucture.” Beyond reviving interest in Fuller, the ambitious project of SFMOMA here is to showcase the deep connection between the Bay Area’s brilliant tech legacy and its transcendental communal one, an audacious, successful synthesis that would bring Bucky joy — and one that only a full-size recreation of Steve Wozniak’s garage could probably best. Through July 29. SFMOMA, 151 Third St., SF. www.sfmoma.org

RADICALLY GAY: THE LIFE OF HARRY HAY Harry Hay seemed to drop almost effortlessly into so many essential 20th century ideal-driven environments — Hollywood, unions, the Communist Party, gay rights, naturism, really the list goes on. That this modest show at the SF Main Library, curated by Joey Cain, not only clearly distills Hay’s timeline and influence, but also manages to illuminate new corners of his life and sometimes bring on music listings

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a few tears, is rather a sensation. Seriously, the man was multitude. Hay is best known as the founder of one of the first gay rights organizations, the Mattachine Society — here revealed through documents, org charts, and touching photos to have been a sort of Moose Lodge for “homophiles.” In one of the show’s most astounding touches, the exquisite Edwardian tea set used by his mother Margaret to caffeinate the early Mattachine meetings is displayed in full. But of course there was more for this Mad Hatter, including pleading the Fifth before the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s for his Communist party membership and Marxist musicology studies, his 1930s radicalizing tryst with actor and union supporter Will Geer, a.k.a. Grandpa from The Waltons, the “Circle of Loving Friends” desert commune, the national campaign to stop the damming of the Rio Grande — all laced through with references to underground SF gay clubs and arts happenings. (Some things, like his controversial early support for NAMBLA, which could benefit from some honest contextualization, seem glossed over, perhaps due to space concerns.) Hay’s creation in the 1970s of the Radical Faeries, a collective whose anti-assimilationist, Pagan aesthetic continues to influence and inform Bay Area style, is wellrepresented here, as is perhaps Hay’s most stable pursuit: his loving 40-year relationship with John Burnside. Two seemingly politically contradictory Utopian ideals, embodied in one mercurial spirit, revealed beautifully. Through July 29. SF Main Library, 100 Larkin, SF. www.sfpl.org 2

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Performances by AXIS Dance Company (USA) with Marc Brew Company (UK) Carpetbag Brigade (USA) Cid Pearlman Performance Project (USA & Estonia) Compagnie 7273 (Switzerland) with Sir Richard Bishop (USA) Dance Elixir (USA & The Netherlands) The Earplay Ensemble (USA, China & Germany) inkBoat with Ko Murobushi (USA& Japan) Liquid Theatre (Russia)

The US debut of legendary Afro-Cuban ensemble Raices Profundas

Liquid Theatre of Russia perform the US Premiere of Antidot

SF Mime Troupe’s Velina Brown is one of 14 stars of the San Francisco stage to read White Rabbit, Red Rabbit

Mansaku no-Kai (Japan) Marc Brew Company (United Kingdom) Post:Ballet (USA) Raices Profundas (Cuba) Susanna Leinonen Company (Finland) Teatro Taller de Colombia (Colombia) and a cast of stars of the San Francisco Stage perform White Rabbit, Red Rabbit by Iranian playwright Nassim Soleimanpour

Kyogen by Japanese Living National Treasure Mansako Numura and Mansaku-no Kai

UK based Marc Brew Company shares the stage with AXIS Dance Company

Japan’s Ko Murobushi and inkBoat invoke the spirit of Ikkyu Sojun in The Crazy Cloud Collection

San Francisco’s Post:Ballett presents the world premiere of Mine is Yours

DXp )$)'# )'() 9fo F]]`Z\1 +(,$..($-0'' nnn%j]`X]%fi^

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WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SMALL BUSINESS IN SAN FRANCISCO? CAST YOUR VOTE AT WWW.SFBG.COM/2012SMALLBUSINESSAWARDS

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ISSUE DATE: MAY 16 editorials

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APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

17


arts + culture: music

Clarinetist Don Cunningham and lights up the Embarcadero station. | Photo by Renee Frojo

Destination unknown

Catching up with San Francisco’s underground BART musicians

Renee Frojo arts@sfbg.com MUSIC From classically trained conservatory graduates and seasoned performers to self-taught beginners, the musicians that play throughout the city’s transit stations claim it’s one of the best places to earn a living busking. “The people here really cherish music,” said longtime jazz musician Don Cunningham, who played in several other cities before settling in San Francisco over three decades ago. Now a recognized faced within the BART music scene, Cunningham has regulars who look forward to hearing him play familiar tunes on his clarinet, even if only for a brief moment on the way to work. While the stage might not be glamorous, many underground performers are talented musicians. And with oftentimes uninterested audiences and unsteady pay, they’re taking a risky shot at doing what they love. Making minimum wage can take several months, said violinist Christa Schmid, who has played in San Francisco for about four years. “When I first started playing in the city people tried to kick me around because I was new and younger,” she said. “I get a certain amount of respect now — people know me.” Like Schmid, all underground musicians — whether busking for a living, supplementing their 18 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

income, or simply playing for publicity — must learn how to operate in a system full of unspoken rules. Every morning and afternoon during rush hour, musicians must race to secure a corner or hallway in the busiest downtown BART stations. While some attempt to stake out the same spot every day, others prefer mixing it up — and sometimes they don’t have a choice either way. The most important rule is setting up far enough from another musician. On average, most musicians play for two to three hours per day in one location, as anything more is disrespectful to others vying for a spot. But just like the musicians themselves, theories vary on what times and which spots are the most lucrative. Cunningham said the trick is finding a stable location so that “people know where to find you.” On most days, he can be found playing in the same spot at the Embarcadero station. Newcomers, Cunningham added, tend to head straight to the Powell BART station because it’s teeming with tourists and constantly busy. “I started out there — everyone does,” he said. “But you learn after a while that quieter spots can be better for making money.” While the musicians might be as transient as the crowd at Powell, there are a few that claim the station is their sweet spot. Schmid, for example, is “guareditorials

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anteed at least $50 a day” at the busy station, where she has been playing for a year. Playing in BART stations has some obvious advantages, such as shelter from the rain and cold and a somewhat captive audience. According to several musicians, the biggest draw is the underground’s great acoustics. There are some restrictions on equipment and noise levels, and musicians are allowed only in the stations’ non-paid areas. All performers also are supposed to carry a free expressive activities permit, but enforcement is rare and it seems many don’t even realize it exists. On the other hand, playing in the BART arena can be dangerous, as many musicians have to fend off aggressive beggars. As a woman playing alone, Schmit said she’s particularly vulnerable. If successful at navigating the system, the payoff can be huge. “I can’t remember the last time I was this happy,” said young violinist Danica Hill, who quit her nineto-five to give full-time busking a real shot six months ago. Hill used to be terrified of playing in public by herself and took to BART to overcome her stage fright. Playing in the underground “can give you a bit of anonymity,” she said, adding that her confidence as a musician has grown tremendously and she has even landed a few gigs. 2

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arts + culture: trash Check it out! With John C. Reilly TRASH He’s an actor so versatile he can handle serious drama (2011’s Carnage and We Need to Talk About Kevin) and screamingly hilarious comedy (especially, but not necessarily, when paired with Will Ferrell). But John C. Reilly is also an accomplished musician, a talent he’s turned into a flourishing side gig that’s now on tour. Read on for Reilly’s best (so far!) musical moments to date. “Feel My Heat,” Boogie Nights (1997) With a candy apple red leather get-up and an iconic Flying V guitar resting casually on his sturdy thigh, Reilly (as porn starbudding musician Reed Rothchild) matches wits and near notes with Mark Wahlburg’s well-endowed aspiring coke head Dirk Diggler on their own ‘80s power ballad creation, “Feel My Heat.” The result is shaky at best. But Reilly’s character feels it’s good enough to print and asks the recording engineer if he was “rolling on that rehearsal.” “Mr. Cellophane,” Chicago (2002) This is where Reilly’s perfectly sculpted, rounded-scoops-of-sherbet cheeks get to shine. They’re buffed up with rosy pink as a dusty clown of a man — poor Amos — makes his way to the spotlight with some downtrodden vaudeville jazz. It’s one of the few slower paced songs in the production — that is, until that fantastic orchestral swell at the climax, Reilly’s voice rising “never even know I’m there...” Not true. Chicago, the musical-turned-movieturned musical, is likely when mainstream audiences first recognized his true vocal ability. Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007) The whole movie really is Reilly performing music, lampooning dramatic biopics (with particular relish in sending up 2005’s Walk the Line). He does so with humorous aplomb, letting his greasy curled pomp shake vigorously with each Elvis-esque guitar-and-hips swing. The star was even nominated for a Grammy for his performance of the titular song, “Walk Hard.” The lampooner becomes the lampoonee. In an interesting coincidence, songwriter Marshall Crenshaw, who was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Original Song for writing the “Walk Hard” track — and who years before pormusic listings

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pop culture news, notes, and reviews

Renaissance man John C. Reilly (with his band) wears many hats, including the one in this photo. trayed Buddy Holly in 1987’s La Bamba — is also in town this week, at Yoshi’s SF Mon/30. 79th Annual Academy Awards, with Jack Black and Will Ferrell (2007) Opening with the tinkling of piano and frequent Reilly co-star Ferrell (holding a rose) crooning “A comedian at the Oscars/is the saddest man of all” alongside Jack Black. More sad clown. Then from the crowd, in a low octave, Reilly sweetly sings back, “You can have your cake and eat it too. Just look at my career!” Prop 8 — The Musical (2008) Reilly portrays a slick-haired Biblethumper (“Sodomyyyyy!”) in Marc Shaiman’s mini-musical, a star-studded protest posted to Funny Or Die after the passage of Proposition 8. Step Brothers (2008) “Boats n’ hos!” Also, don’t you dare touch his drum set. John C. Reilly and Friends Despite all the jests and subtle winks, the man can sing. And with his John C. Reilly and Friends group, including Tom Brosseau and Becky Stark (a.k.a. Lavender Diamond), he harmonizes on lovely old-timey country folk. As a true-blue artist, Reilly recently released a few Third Man singles — produced by entrepreneurial troubadour Jack White — including a plucky duet with Brosseau (a cover of the Delmore Brothers’ “Gonna Lay Down My Old Guitar”) and a satisfying match-up with Stark on “I’ll Be There If You Ever Want.” So sweet and twangy, it goes down like cool spiked lemonade on a sticky summer afternoon. (Emily Savage and Cheryl Eddy) 2 John C. Reilly and Friends Sat/28, 9pm, $20 Bimbo’s 365 Club 1025 Columbus, SF www.bimbos365club.com

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APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

19


ARTS + CULTURE: MUSIC

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arts + culture: food

FooD aCtiviSt Bryant terry: “onCe they DeCiDe to Stop FeeDing you, you’re going to Starve.”

Please Visit

cafedunord .com Available for Private Rental get tickets at

yoshis.com

Student discounts of 50% off are back! Check yoshis.com/discounts for available shows!

san francisco 1 3 3 0 f i l l m o r e s t. 4 1 5 - 6 5 5 - 5 6 0 0

YOSHI’S LOCAL TALENT SERIES

Free Music in the Lounge every night 6:30pm-10pm Weekly Jazz Jam Wed 9:30-11pm ..................................................... Wed, April 25

WiLL Bernard Trio

havana d’Primera Sun, April 29

steady rollin’ bob margolin ...................................................

Mon, April 30 - Solo acoustic

marShaLL crenShaW ...................................................

Tues, May 1 Quincy Jones presents

aLFredo rodriguez Trio

caitlin@sfbg.com FooD Veganism isn’t just for rich people. It’s okay to care about what you eat. It doesn’t diminish your commitment to social issues — in fact, it is one. He just wrote a cookbook that I love, but in his modest home in hills above Fruitvale, food activist and vegan chef Bryant Terry is telling me about class struggle. “So often, I think that the stories that are told are from young, privileged white kids,” says Terry. He’s not a young white kid, but he is the epitome of health. Terry’s clean house smells like incense and when I rolled up to the front yard he was gardening in cargo shorts in raised beds of greens. He tells me his beds started a trend — indeed, many of the houses on the block now have a similar vegetal presence. “Part of my goal is to shed light on other communities that haven’t had much of a voice,” he says. If broadening the appeal of healthful cooking is Terry’s goal, then his new book The Inspired Vegan (Da Capo Lifelong Books, 240 pp, $19) is a step in the right direction. Each chapter holds a complete menu with a social justice-related theme. Informative introductions teach about the plant-based, whole food recipes, but the most exciting features are complimentary play lists and reading suggestions that go along with each chapter’s theme. The Inspired Vegan advises you on a editorials

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better term for it. He learned early on that growing food could be the basis of independence for African Americans. “Once they decide to stop feeding you, you’re going to starve,” he says simply. He quibbles with the definition of food deserts, saying oftentimes they overlook the DIY kitchen gardening tradition in minority communities. After going to cooking school “with the express goals of starting a project to help young people,” Terry started b-healthy!, a New York City program that taught kids in poor neighborhoods about healthy eating habits. He counts Edible Schoolyard founder and Chez Panisse icon Alice Waters as a role model. Like Waters, he’s become a national figure, drawing decent crowds across the country to events. Terry is a realist — he doesn’t believe that everybody needs to be vegan, or a raw foodist, or follow any one nutritional track necessarily. “I’m not that guy. This is someone who understands that we have diverse nutrition needs. To just say that fixing food is going to help resolve issues in these communities — it’s not looking at the bigger picture. If we do have access to healthful foods, that would address a lot of other issues, but we can’t look at food to fix everything.” It’s not like those raised beds in the front yard are going to save the world. But as far as the sustainable food movement goes, it could do worse than have a mind like Terry’s at its forefront. 2

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WeDNeSDAY APRiL 25th 8PM $10 (iNDie)

the BRight Light SOciAL hOUR ALLOFASUDDeN • hijk

thURSDAY APRiL 26th 8PM $10/$12 (ROck)

DRiVeN: A FeMALe FRONteD ShOWcASe FeAtURiNg:

DOLORAtA

UPSiDe DROWN hARRiOt W/ SOPhiA MABeLitiNi

FRiDAY APRiL 27 9PM $10/$12 (cOUNtRY/FOLk)

FRiDAY APRiL 27th 8PM $18 (SiNgeR-SONgWRiteR) ALL AgeS

Fri-Sat, April 27-28

lifestyle, not just a shopping list. Weeks after meeting Terry, I helped host a dinner through the Urban Eating League, a social sustainability project started within the folds of the hyper-educated, environmentally-geared Wigg Party group in the Western Addition. Hosts serve locally-harvested meals, and choose themes to help eaters remember them when it comes time to vote on winners of various honors. We decided to base the dinner around Terry’s suggestion, his “Detroit Harvest” menu. The recipes pulled their flavor cues from the work of a Motor City nonprofit, Detroit Summer, which started connecting high school students with senior citizens in the early 1990s, young helping old grow produce in their gardens. My co-hosts and I played the recommended tracks during our meal: Detroit classics like J Dilla, Motown sounds, Aaliyah (yeah, she’s from there). We chatted with the other participants about where they learned about sustainable food systems, what they thought needed to be done to strengthen the good food movement. Few mentioned poor and minority families, but all staunchly believed that the way we eat today will play a big role in what our future will look like tomorrow. Terry learned about food from his family, from a grandpa whose rows covered a sideyard so large that Terry is reluctant to call it a garden — maybe farm would be a

hAYLeY SALeS

david pack

w/ special guest mINdI AbAIR

By Caitlin Donohue

gRiFFiN hOUSe

AARON hARRiS & the FARM BAND /the StAiRWeLL SiSteRS

Thurs, April 26 - The voice of ambrosia

#SZBOU 5FSSZ CSFBLT UIF WFHBO TUFSFPUZQF

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL:

Wil blades & simon lott ................................................... feat.

Something to Chew on

Dinner ‘til 11PM WeDNeSDAY APRiL 25th 8PM $16 (SiNgeR-SONgWRiteR) ALL AgeS

Fri-Sat, May 4-5 - 8pm

RICk jAmES’ ORIgINAL

stone city band Fri, May 4 - 10pm

martin luther w/ Siddartha ...................................................

Sat, May 5 - 10:30pm

CINCO dE mAYO pARTY

mexiCan institute of sound oakland 510 embarcadero west, 510-238-9200

Wed, April 25

Fared ShaFinury & TehranoSauruS

in the moment ...................................................

Thurs, April 26

cello heaven

w/ BarBara higBie, Jami SieBer

& Joan Jeanrenaud

Fri-Sun, April 27-29

cedar walton Tues, May 1

the queens of boogie Woogie starring Lady Bianca,

doña oxFord, Sue PaLmer & Wendy deWiTT ................................................... Wed, May 2

Juan eScovedo & friends Thur-Fri, May 3-4

lowrider Band Sat, May 5 - a celebration!

The Johnny oTiS ShoW feat. Lucky oTiS, nicky oTiS,

Jackie Payne, BarBara morriSon, gaiL “LiTTLe BiT” muLdreW, charLeS WiLLiamS & Larry JameS ................................................... Sun, May 6

LLoyd gregory

All shows are all ages. Dinner Reservations Recommended.

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the BARBARY gh OStS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL:

MAtt ALBeR jeB hAVeNS

SAtURDAY APRiL 28th 9:30PM $12 (ROck/SOUL)

PLANet BOOtY

gReeNhORSe • Dj Ace

SUNDAY APRiL 29th 7PM $10 (ROck) ALL AgeS

ANDReW cOheN PReSeNtS:

iNSPectOR gADje DANgeRAte W/ SPeciAL gUeSt PeRFORMANce BY keLSeY gReeNBeRg tUeSDAY MAY 1St 8:30PM $10 (iNDie)

YUkON BLONDe

the WiLD kiNDNeSS tOgetheR, We cAN RULe the gALAxY thURSDAY MAY 3RD 9PM $12 (iNDie)

WiLLiS eARL BeAL YASSOU BeNeDict

thURSDAY MAY 3RD 8PM $17/$20 (SONgWRiteR) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL:

tRAce BUNDY

FRiDAY MAY 4th 9:30PM $15 (ROck)

BRAD

hAPPY chicheSteR

FRiDAY MAY 4th 8PM $13.50/$15 (SONgWRiteR) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: tOh kAY (tOMAS OF StReetLight MANiFeStO)

DAN POtthASt SYcAMORe SMith

SAtURDAY MAY 5th 9:30PM $10 (iNDie)

DiRtY ghOStS

DANte VS zOMBieS SUNDAY MAY 6th 8PM $10/$12 (ROck/POP) ALL AgeS

jASON ReeVeS / AMBeR RUBARth ANDY kONg

MONDAY MAY 7th 8PM $10/$12 (ROck/FOLk)

cOMMUNiON FeAt.

the SkiNNY SiNgeRS

jOhN FULLBRight BReAthe OWL BReAthe hONeYMOON jAckie gReeNe (SOLO AcOUStic)

tUeSDAY MAY 8th 9:30PM $10/$12 (iNDie)

cARiNA ROUND

WeDNeSDAY MAY 9th 9:30PM $10/$12 (ROck/POP)

BUShWALLA

thURSDAY MAY 10th 9PM $14/$16 (ROck/POP)

chRiS PURekA

FRiDAY MAY 11th 9:30PM $12 (iNDie)

RAMONA FALLS chURcheS

SAtURDAY MAY 12th 9PM $10 (ROck)

FULL ON FLYheAD / DROP APOLLO DUBiOUS RANgeR RiOt eARP

SAtURDAY MAY 12th 8PM $25 (jAzz) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL:

SF jAzz SPRiNg SeASON 2012: cYRO BAPtiStA’S BANQUet OF the SPiRitS FeAtURiNg

tiM SPARkS AND ShANiR BLUMeNkRANtz WeDNeSDAY MAY 16th 8PM $10 (iNDie)

Big tRee kAPOWSki BeLLS

2170 MARket StReet • 415.861.5016 Box Office Now Open for Phone Sales ONLY Mon-Fri, 2-6pm APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

21


arts + culture: Dance

StaRS anD StRipeS FoReveR: Soul Project. Photo by AnjA hitzenberger

Soul to Solo .PWFNFOU NFMET XJUI NVTJD JO %BWJE ;BNCSBOPÂľT Soul Project By Rita Felciano arts@sfbg.com

Dianne Reeves Fri, May 4, 8 pm, Zellerbach Hall - ! ) ** $ # ( % '! !& %! # ' # & /$ . ,The New York Times ( ' (*!) $ ' + ')*$( )- "%'$+ ( ) $# ! %'$, (( # *# &* .. # ()-! # ( ## + ( ,$# ) ' $#( *) + ' ""-( $' () .. $ ! ' $'" # / '() # #- +$ ! ) $'- !($ "$*(!- %% ' # % ' $'" # $' !$$# -0( "- , ' #$" # ) !" Good Night, and Good Luck ) ($*# )' , ## # + ( - ) #$) ' ' ""- # ) ' " . # ) ' $ ) + ' # # + ')*$( % ' ( # ( ) ( .. + $#( () #)!- ! + '( *# $' )) ! % ' $'" # ( # # !( !# % $% %$

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Dance David Zambrano: never heard of him? That just means you’re not a member of the international dance community, where he is a superstar. Accolades, particularly about his teaching, flood the internet; phrases like “genius,� “not to be missed,� and “has changed my life� abound. The only complaint I could find was from a disgruntled student who said “the class was so full that I could barely see the teacher.� So who is this Venezuelanborn, Amsterdam-based, globe-trotting dancer-choreographer-teacher who engenders such enthusiasm and yet is so little-known in this country? Starting this weekend, Zambrano (re)introduces himself with the West Coast premiere of Soul Project, a series of solos, each one based on an American blues song. They will be performed — in a sequence to be determined just before each show — to an audience seeking out the dancers. Zambrano is best known for rethinking improvisation as a tool to freshly connect dancers to the physics of their bodies — and its relationship to the environment. In the process, he developed a technique he calls “flying low,� which examines dance’s unavoidable partner, the floor, in order to find efficient ways for giving into and rebounding from the ground. Fundamental questions Zambrano asks revolve around essential concepts: how do two dancing bodies change the space on a stage? What is the food + Drink

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relationship between intimacy and community? How can movement be best used as a means of transmitting information? If these topics sound esoteric and theoretical to most of us, to dancers they embody the core of what they do. One admirer is San Francisco dancer-choreographer Keith Hennessy, himself no slouch in the thinking-about-the-fundamentals-of-performance department. He first took a workshop with Zambrano at Dancers’ Group in the mid-1990s and has watched his work ever since. “I’m a huge fan of his teaching,� says Hennessy. “His classes are a kind of inspirational ritual. He teaches dancers to circulate energy with the earth and the other dancers, through their own bodies and then through space.� He appreciates Zambrano as a performer “who loves dancing, moving, flying. He travels through space quickly, with the fastest of small precise steps — running and running, before diving or sliding into rolling on the floor, and always spiraling up and down and around.� Hennessey, who has seen a fair amount of Zambrano’s work, including four improvised duets in 2010 which he describes as “truly joyful,� is looking forward to the upcoming performances because “I haven’t seen him do anything like this before.� One who has already seen Soul Project is choreographer Ralph Lemon, who remembers Zambrano as a major force in New York’s Downtown improvisation scene music listings

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until his move to Amsterdam in 2000. “I hadn’t seen his work for years,� Lemon explains. “I saw Soul Project in 2008 at a summer dance festival outside Paris. I saw a lot of work at the time, yet this is the one that made me want to dance. I was so moved by the project because this is music I grew up with.� He adds, “For me as a black American this was curious, particularly since there were no black Americans in the cast. There was only one American — and she was a white woman who had moved to Brussels.� So when, in 2010, New York’s Dancespace asked Lemon to organize their first dance platform (i.e., artist-curated program), he immediately thought of Soul Project. “It is such an American work,� he says, “and I knew that in terms of its cultural implications it was important that it come to the states. Audiences here will see it so differently from those in other places.� So how was it? “It was fantastic, but also frustrating, because you want to dance. But David makes it clear that he knows that we want to dance, but we can’t because ‘the dancing is for us.’ It creates a very nice tension: you feel the dance internally but the dancing is happening with his performers.� 2 DaviD Zambrano’s Soul Project Fri/27-Sat/28, 8pm, $20 Yerba Buena Center for the Arts 701 Mission, SF (415) 978-2787 www.ybca.org May 3, noon, 6pm, 9pm (Stanford students only), free (advance reservations required) Cantor Arts Center 328 Lomita, Stanford (650) 725-2787 livelyarts.stanford.edu

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arts + culture: theater

for more arts content visit sfbg.cOM/pixel_visiOn

A dog’s life 5IFBUSF8PSLT SFWJWFT 0G .JDF BOE .FO GPS B OFX FSB PG EFTQFSBUJPO BOE TPMJEBSJUZ By RoBeRt AvilA arts@sfbg.com tHeAteR There’s a clipped Spanish twang in the roughhewn but lucid English of George Milton (Jos Viramontes) and Lennie Small (A.J. Meijer), the iconic bindlestiff protagonists in Of Mice and Men. It’s the only obvious bit of updating in TheatreWorks’ and artistic director Robert Kelley’s generally faithful rendering of the 1937 John Steinbeck classic (a stage adaptation penned by the author himself for a Broadway premiere the same year). Shoehorning two Latin ranch hands (whose ethnic identity is not remarked upon) into so casually racist an environment naturally demands a little lenience in terms of verisimilitude. But it’s a worthy nod to the overwhelmingly Latino population of migrant farm laborers otherwise crowded out of this tragic if colorful drama of working lives set in the Depression-era Salinas Valley. And it also sets a subtle present-minded tone for a play that, for all its unfashionably heavy dramatic underscoring, probably resonates more strongly with the general plight of working people than at any time since the 1930s. George and Lennie, social realist cousins of Vladimir and Estragon, are on a migrants’ trail that leads nowhere, while pining for salvation just out of reach: a plot of land to call their own. Their dream is the only respite they’ll get from a desperate system of labor that chews up the bodies it needs and in most cases leaves nothing behind. An appealing Viramontes plays George, the brains of the pair, as a man a bit too intelligent and proud to stomach this lot easily, but whose world-weariness is kept in check by a compassionate regard for his charge, the overgrown man-child Lennie, imbued by Meijer with the proper balance of childish timidity and wild enthusiasm. Playing ego to Lennie’s id, George uses the tenderly embellished dream of a proper home (with, famously, a rabbit hutch for Lennie to tend) to temper his volatile sidekick, whose innocent propensity to let his sensual appetites run away with him already has them on the run from trouble at their last job in Weed. Scenic designer Tom Langguth’s silhouette of low rolling hills against a fuchsia sky, fronted by a field of tall grass burned a golden brown by the California sun, provides an initial atmosphere of possibility and, just vaguely, of desolation (the later gently heightened by Jeff Mockus’s spare and spacious sound design). The stage evokes a near Eden, such that we can easily imagine the stream George and Lennie scoop their palms into, just off the lip of the stage, as they prepare to camp for the night in the warm open air. That scene transitions a moment later to the rugged timber construction of the sleeping quarters on a working ranch near Soledad, where George and Lennie join up with a crew of characters lovingly drawn and expertly realized by a fine ensemble cast. This dip back into society from the trail vexes George and Lennie almost immediately, as the owner’s pugnacious son Curley (Harold Pierce) vies for dominance over the newcomers and everyone else, while chasing endlessly after his desperately lonely new bride (Lena Hart). Even without the threat posed by the editorials

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lAst-cHAnce RAncH: lennie (A.J. MeiJeR), geoRge (Jos viRAMontes), And cuRley’s wife (lenA HARt) in Of Mice and Men. Photo by tracy Martin

local bully — or his wife’s dangerously familiar manner and unstoppable need to find someone to talk to — the men living and working here too readily submit to an everyday pettiness, racism, and sexism that divides natural allies in an exploitative system. Steinbeck the onetime migrant and journalist informs Steinbeck the artist as a brutish reality becomes a knowing drama — still affecting in its details, if finally watery in its contrived, loudly broadcasted tragedy. Significantly, George and Lennie’s partnership immediately arouses suspicion among the other hired hands. Even for Slim (a sure and compelling Chad Deverman), the ranch’s gracious cowboy hero, two men traveling together is at the very least a source of wonder, so unexpected is the show of mutual support along the otherwise solitary, competitive labor circuit. But when aging and maimed worker Candy (an excellent Gary Martinez) accepts the mercy killing of his beloved old dog, he and we know the operative social compact isn’t much better: those who have only their usefulness to sell have no foothold when its gone. Candy accordingly latches onto George and Lennie’s scheme, followed soon by another desperate outsider, African American worker Crooks (a wonderfully measured Charles Branklyn). It may prove a pipe dream, but the lure of escape from hopeless drudgery produces a powerful impetus to solidarity that is the play’s enduring hope. 2 Of Mice and Men Wed/25, 7:30pm; Thu/26-Sat/28, 8pm (also Sat/28, 2pm); Sun/29, 2pm, $19-$69 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts 500 Castro, Mountain View (650) 463-1960 www.theatreworks.org

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23


arts + culture: sfiff

More short takes on sFIFF 2012’s second week at sfbg.com

FoR youR ConSideRaTion: ShoRT TakeS on SFiFF 2012, Week TWo Wed/25 Last Screening -BVSFOU "DIBSE 'SBODF " CJU PG BO PEE EVDL JTI OPO EFTDSJQU 4ZMWBJO 1BTDBM $FSWP JT JO EFOJBM PWFS UIF JNNJOFOU DMPTVSF PG UIF TNBMM 'SFODI SFQFSUPSZ DJOFNB IFµT PQFSBUFE BOE MJWFE JO GPS ZFBST #VU UIBUµT IBSEMZ IJT NPTU BMBSNJOH NFOUBM IBOH VQ JO

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ZFBS JO 'SBODF TP BMM CFUT BSF PGG BT UP IPX UIF VOGPSUVOBUF GJBTDP XJMM SFTPMWF 4USJLJOH DBNFSBXPSL EJTUJOHVJTIFT UIJT UFOTF NPSBMMZ DPNQMFY ESBNB XIJDI GFBUVSFT ,BTTPWJU[ BT -FKPSVT B IVNBOF OFHPUJBUPS JO UIF NJETU PG B QPMJUJDBMMZ DIBSHFE CBUUMF GPS IFBSUT NJOET BOE DJWJM SJHIUT 5IF GJMN JT FEJUFE UP FNCPEZ JUT QPMJUJDBM DPOUFYU XJUI EJTUBODJOH FGGFDUT TVDI BT WPJDFPWFS BOE TVEEFOMZ SFGSBNFE TIPUT UIBU FNQIBTJ[F UIF UXP TJEFT PG B EJTBHSFFNFOU 4BN 4UBOEFS Thu/26, 6pm; Tue/1, 9:45pm; May 3, 4:30pm, Kabuki FRi/27 Pierre Rissient: Man of Cinema 5PEE .D$BSUIZ 6 4 -FHFOEBSZ 'SFODI GJMN QVCMJDJTU QSPHSBNNFS EJSFDUPS BOE NPWJF KVOLJF 1JFSSF 3JTTJFOU HFUT IJT PXO GJMNJD IPNBHF JO UIJT EPDVNFOUBSZ GSPN )PMMZXPPE 3FQPSUFS DSJUJD 5PEE .D$BSUIZ 24 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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µT Visions of Light . 3JTTJFOU XIP XJMM SFDFJWF UIF .FM /PWJLPGG "XBSE BU UIJT ZFBSµT GFTUJWBM JT DFSUBJOMZ B DIBSBD UFS ± UIF SPVOE GBDFE TFQUVBHFOBSJBO PP[FT B QVQQZ EPH DVEEMJOFTT DVU XJUI B GPSNJEBCMF JOUFMMFDU BOE B IJOU PG UBSU PME NBO QFSWZ OFTT #VU UIJT DPMMFDUJPO PG UBMLJOH IFBET JOUFSTQFSTFE XJUI DMBTTJD GJMN DMJQT JT VOGPSUVOBUFMZ B CJU PG B TOPP[F $POTJEFSJOH TBJE UBMLJOH IFBET JODMVEF DJOFNBUJD GJSFCSBOET MJLF 8FSOFS )FS[PH BOE UIF MBUF $MBVEF $IBCSPM BOE XJUI B DIBSBDUFS QBTTJPOBUF BT 3JTTJFOU BU JUT DFO UFS UIBUµT TVSQSJTJOH ²/P POF JO UIF XPSME PG DJOFNB DBO UFMM ZPV XIBU IF EPFT ³ $IBCSPM SFNBSLT "GUFS XBUDIJOH UIF GJMN ZPV QSPCBCMZ XPOµU CF BCMF UP GJHVSF JU PVU FJUIFS .JDIFMMF %FWFSFBVY Fri/27, 4pm, FSC. Mon/30, 6:30pm, PFA SaT/28 Somebody up There Likes Me #PC #ZJOHUPO 6 4 " UFYUCPPL JMMVT USBUJPO PG XIBUµT TP GSFRVFOUMZ SJHIU BOE XSPOH XJUI "NFSJOEJF DPNFEJFT UPEBZ #PC #ZJOHUPOµT GFBUVSF TUBSUT PVU OFBS CSJM MJBOUMZ JO B GBNJMJBS IFJHIUFOFE Napoleon Dynamite UZQF NJMJFV PG PTUFOTJCMZ

OPSNBM QFPQMF BT TFMG BCTPSCFE TPDJBMMZ IBQMFTT TBUFMMJUFT SFWPMWJOH BSPVOE BO FYJT UFOUJBM IPMF BU UIF DFOUFS JO UIF VOJWFSTF 5IF UISFF NBJO POFT NFFU XPSLJOH BU B TVCVSCBO TUFBLIPVTF &NPUJPOBMMZ OFSWF EFBEFOFE ZPVUI .BY ,FJUI 1PVMTPO UIF FWFO NPSF DSBTTMZ JOTFOTJUJWF 4BM /JDL 0GGFSNBO BOE OJDF CVU TUJMM XFJSE -ZMB TeethµT FTUJNBCMF +FTT 8FJYMFS "MM JT XFMM VOUJM UIF GJMN TUBSUT TLJQQJOH BIFBE GJWF ZFBST BU B UJNF HSPXJOH NPSF TNVHMZ NJTBOUISPQJD BOE QPJOUMFTT BT UJNF BOE TPNF ESBTUJD TIJGUT JO GPSUVOF EP OPUIJOH UP DIBOHF PS EFFQFO UIF DIBSBDUFST 4UJMM UIF QFSGPSNFST BSF JOUFSNJUUFOUMZ IJMBSJPVT UISPVHIPVU )BSWFZ Sat/28, 6:45pm, Kabuki. Sun/29, 9:15pm, FSC. Tue/1, 6:15pm, Kabuki Tue/1 hysteria 5BOZB 8FYMFS 6 4 &OHMBOE 5BOZB 8FYMFSµT QFSJPE SPNBOUJD DPNFEZ HMFFGVMMZ EFQJDUT UIF HFOFTJT PG UIF XPSMEµT NPTU QPQVMBS TFY UPZ PVU PG UIF JODIPBUF NVSL PG 7JDUPSJBO RVBDLJTIOFTT *O UIJT EVMDFU WFSTJPO PG FWFOUT SFBM MJGF WJCSBUPS JOWFOUPS .PSUJNFS (SBOWJMMF )VHI %BODZ JT B IBOETPNF ZPVOH -POEPO EPD UPS XJUI TVDI QSPHSFTTJWF DPOWJDUJPOT BT B CFMJFG JO UIF FYJTUFODF PG HFSNT )F JT IPXFWFS B NBO PG IJT UJNFT BOE UIVT TXBM MPXT VOCMJOLJOH UIF VNCSFMMB EJBHOPTJT PG XPNFO XJUI TZNQUPNT MJLF BOYJFUZ GSVT USBUJPO BOE SFTUMFTTOFTT BT WJDUJNT PG B QMBHVF MJLF VUFSJOF EJTPSEFS LOPXO BT IZT music listings

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UFSJB -BOEJOH B KPC JO UIF IJHI FOE QSBD UJDF PG %S 3PCFSU %BMSZNQMF +POBUIBO 1SZDF XIPTF DMJFOUFMF DPOTJTUT FOUJSFMZ PG EJTTBUJTGJFE IPVTFXJWFT TFFLJOH USFBU NFOUT PG ²NFEJDJOBM NBTTBHF³ BOE TVC TFRVFOU ²QBSPTZTN ³ (SBOWJMMF CFDPNFT BDRVBJOUFE XJUI %BMSZNQMFµT UXP EBVHI UFST UIF EFDPSPVT &NJMZ 'FMJDJUZ +POFT BOE UIF GJSTU XBWF GFNJOJTU $IBSMPUUF .BHHJF (ZMMFOIBBM " TVCTFRVFOU CPVU PG 34* PGGFST FNQJSJDBM FWJEFODF GPS UIF BEBHF BCPVU OFDFTTJUZ CFJOH UIF NPUIFS PG JOWFOUJPO XJUI UIF FWFS VOEFSVTFE 3VQFSU &WFSFUU QMBZJOH &ENVOE 4U +PIO 4NZUIF (SBOWJMMFµT BSJTUPDSBUJD GSJFOE BOE QBSUOFS JO FMFDUSJDBM FOHJOFFSJOH -ZOO 3BQPQPSU Tue/1, 9:30pm, Kabuki. May 3, 6pm, FSC May 3 don’t Stop Believin’: everyman’s Journey 3BNPOB 4 %JB[ 6 4 5IF EJSFD UPS PG µT Imelda SFUVSOT XJUI UIJT QPSUSBJU PG B XBZ NPSF TZNQBUIFUJD 'JMJQJOP DFMFCSJUZ "SOFM 1JOFEB QMVDLFE GSPN PCTDVSJUZ WJB :PV5VCF BGUFS +PVSOFZµT /FJM 4DIPO TQPUUFE IJN TJOHJOH XJUI B .BOJMB CBTFE DPWFS CBOE Don’t Stop Believinµ GPMMPXT 1JOFEB XIP PQFOMZ BENJUT QBTU TUSVHHMFT XJUI IPNFMFTTOFTT BOE BEEJD UJPO GSPN BVEJUJPO UP TFBU BSFOB TVDDFTT BT +PVSOFZµT DIBSJTNBUJD OFX GSPOU NBO IF GBDFT JOTUB TVDDFTT XJUI BO FOEFBSJOH DPNCJOBUJPO PG OFSWPVT

OFTT BOE GBOCPZ UISJMM )FµT BMTP IPOFTU BCPVU GFFMJOH IPNFTJDL BOE UIF QSFTTVSFT UIBU DPNF XJUI SFQMBDJOH POF PG UIF NPTU GBNPVT WPJDFT JO SPDL 4UFWF 1FSSZ EPFTOµU BQQFBS JO UIF GJMN PUIFS UIBO JO WJOUBHF GPPUBHF &TQFDJBMMZ GVO UP TFF JT IPX 1JOFEB JOWJHPSBUFT UIF SFTU PG +PVSOFZ BT UIF UPVS QSPHSFTTFT BMM JOWPMWFE ± FWFO UIF CBOEµT WFUFSBO NFNCFST XIPµWF OP EPVCU QMBZFE ²0QFO "SNT³ UFO NJMMJPO UJNFT ± SBEJBUF XJUI FYDJUFNFOU $IFSZM &EEZ Thu/3, 7pm, Castro 2 The San Francisco International Film Festival runs through May 3; most shows $13. Venues: Castro Theatre, 429 Castro, SF; Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft, Berk.; SF Film Society Cinema, 1746 Post, SF; and Sundance Kabuki Cinema, 1881 Post, SF. More info at www.sffs.org.

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arts + culture: film

Have gUn, wiLL TraveL: wiLLeM DaFoe in The hunTer. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

Tiger wooDs

" MPOF USBDLFS QSPCFT B USPVCMFE XJMEFSOFTT JO The Hunter By Dennis Harvey arts@sfbg.com FiLM The Tasmanian tiger wasn’t a cat at all, but a pouched marsupial resembling a ring-tailed dog, with the most fearsome steel-trap jaws imaginable. It was hunted out of existence as a menace to domestic livestock; the last one died in captivity in 1936. Nonetheless, alleged sightings persist. Like Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster, the tiger is kept alive at least in the imagination by the fervency of stubborn believers. The search to prove something now-mythological to be true and extant is always a good hook for fiction. Julia Leigh’s 1999 novel The Hunter is a cool, precise yet ambiguous story — the kind that you’d classify as a “thriller” if it weren’t so pointedly detached — about a lone-gun mercenary of sorts hired by a biotech conglomerate for a topsecret mission. He’s to stalk, kill, and extract DNA of potential great pharmacological value from a last Tasmanian tiger which, purportedly, has duly been sighted. The chimera of the tiger and its moral weight as yet another sacrifice to corporate greed interests Leigh less than the enigmatic hunter himself, a damaged soul whose past is off-limits (even to the reader), and who’s long since walled himself off by a highly efficient, methodical guardedness both professional and emotional. The current job is his exclusive focus; if someone has to be killed to ensure its completion, he won’t revel in the task, but neither will he hesitate. editorials

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His focus is disrupted, however, not just by the hostility of local loggers who assume he’s one of the tree-hugging “greenies” who obstruct their employment, but by the very messy circumstances of the household he’s forced to bunk in between outback treks. Eventually the latter demands his engagement beyond the call of duty, a lowering of self-protective reserve. But Leigh is much less comfortable with that humanizing material; her novel is most at home alone in the wilderness, suiting a protagonist who’d rather avoid contact with others of his species if he can help it. Leigh is an interesting talent. But on the basis of that first novel, her second, Disquiet, and last year’s debut film Sleeping Beauty — which stirred controversy at Cannes because it centered on a woman who lets men have sex with her when she’s drugged unconscious — or was it because there was disagreement whether the film was more shocking than it was cold and boring? — it’s a good thing she didn’t write or direct the Hunter movie. Daniel Nettheim did both, and he’s been faithful to the source while ultimately creating a much more involving, powerful experience. Like its hero, this Hunter does what Leigh couldn’t, or wouldn’t: it realizes the value of compassion. Willem Dafoe’s Martin — in the book he doesn’t even have a name — travels incognito to a remote area, posing as an academic researching Tasmanian devils. (That large rodent-like animal is still very much alive, albeit endangered.) Expecting ordinary accommodations, instead he finds himself picks

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staying at the hippie-ish abode of a family in crisis. The husband was an actual environmental researcher who disappeared in the woods a year ago, quite possibly killed by those antagonistic loggers. Since then his wife Lucy (Frances O’Connor) has been in a medicated stupor of grief, rarely getting out of bed, leaving their young children — assertive Sass (Morgana Davies) and apparently mute-by-choice Bike (Finn Woodlock) — to fend for themselves. Against all his instincts and professional ethics, Martin finds himself pulled into their obvious neediness. Nothing else about The Hunter is obvious, though. Some may find it too short on back story, mystery resolution, or genre definition. (Like the book, it’s almost an action thriller.) But from the story’s spare bones Nettheim has built a narrative about overcoming isolation and adversity that is aptly chilly for a while yet finally very moving. The actors, also including Sam Neill as a local of uncertain loyalties, are economically perfect. The diverse Tasmanian scenery is both spectacular and somber in Robert Humphreys’ widescreen photography. The only element too conventional at times is the musical scoring, although it suits the final turn in emotional urgency beautifully. Confusingly, this Hunter arrives not long after an Iranian film with the same title, one also having much to do with alienation and wild landscapes. That film was very good, but this one might be indelible. 2 THe HUnTer opens Fri/27 in Bay Area theaters.

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APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

25


arts + culture: nightlife

ADDRESS OF THE BEAST

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What better thigh to gnaw on than a drag queen’s? Hostess with the hot plate Juanita More pitches in for the Dining Out for Life AIDS fundraiser (www.diningoutforlife.com) with her traditional menu of chicken covered in honey goo, blue cheese salad, corn muffin, and red velvet cupcake. Plus old school soul from the Hard French DJs and a crowd of gorging gorgeousness. Eat it, ladies!

Thu/26, 6-9pm, $22. Mars Bar, 798 Brannan, SF. For reservation info, see www.juanitamore.com.

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GREG WILSON

ZEBRA KATZ READS YOU AT PUBLIC ACCESS.

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SUPER EGO Is San Francisco experiencing a douche drain? Suddenly a heck of a lot of, er, “upscale� clubs are mediating their bottle service images with creative, musically forward parties. I can’t think they’ve run out of Appletini orderers, or that the real nightlife money is in importing obscure Crosstown Rebels label DJs — although maybe all the bachelorettes really have fled to Castro gay bars and the stiff-collar dudes are glued to their Girls Around Me app? I’m loving finally feeling comfortable (and digging the quality sound systems) at some of these shiny joints. I’m also tickled by the occasional accidental crash collision of crowds, as when a bleach-blond klatch of stilettoed, squealing singles found their meat market had been occupied by lumbering gay techno bears, but stayed to dance anyway. The trend kicked off three years ago when 1015 Folsom rebranded its “underground� basement as 103 Harriet, then Holy Cow roped in Honey Soundsystem Sundays and Vessel launched techno-riffic Base Thursdays. Now a number of clubs, including Monroe in North Beach on weekend mornings and Otis on Sunday nights, have joined in. The kooky part is how some of these clubs have been surreptitiously changing their names to their addresses in promotions when they get a little “alternative.� Besides 103 Harriet, Harlot is “46 Minna,� Icon Ultra Lounge is “1192 Folsom,� Ruby Skye’s former VIP room is “4Fourteen� (Mason). This is so hilariously shady and bland at the same time! Please don’t call it pop-up nightlife — call it a stealth takeover, darling.

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26 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

JUANITA’S FUNKY CHICKEN

marke@sfbg.com

BY MARKE B.

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I admire a ton of DJs, but Greg is one that I actually love. His tailormade funk and soul re-edits, many from the darker reaches of the vaults, hit me just right. And when this UK veteran (almost 40 years of experience! The first DJ to scratch on British TV!) mixes them all together and throws in some unexpected singalongs and sound effects, it’s party heaven. Fri/27, 9pm, $20. Monarch, 101 Sixth St., SF. www.monarchsf.com

PUBLIC ACCESS Party promoter wunderkind Marco de la Vega is filling several fun voids in our nightlife with his audio edgeplay productions. And he’s upping our intellectual ante, too: “Club culture is inherently performative. Public Access is an experiment in the nature of that performance. A feedback loop of spectacle and spectator,� he says of his latest extravaganza of Technicolor darkness, featuring lo-fi nihilists Hype Williams, dream-rave duo Teengirl Fantasy, lurid discothequers Gatekeeper, and Zebra Katz, whose filthy “Ima Read� track is spring’s official club anthem thus far. Fri/27, 9pm-3am, $15-20. Public Works, 161 Erie, SF. www.publicsf.com

CLAUDE YOUNG He lives in Tokyo now, but second generation Detroit techno man of many talents Claude Young honors his roots on the decks — mostly by slaying crowds with his signature jazzy-tech flair and insane manual dexterity (let’s just say the man can mix with his chin). A perfect complement to the jawdropper that was fellow Detroiter Jeff Mills’ set at Public Works last week, and a rare opportunity to hear Young on these shores. For $5! Sun/29, 9pm, $5. Holy Cow, 1535 Folsom, SF. www.tinyurl.com/claudeyoung

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for more music content visit sfBg.com/noise

happy hour t-f 5-8pm $3 well/draft $5 bloody mary & fry bread w/ rocky tree m/w/f/sat

fRiday 27 Rock /Blues/hip-hop

LOQUAT PLAYS THE INDEPENDENT FRI/27. .VTJD MJTUJOHT BSF DPNQJMFE CZ &NJMZ 4BWBHF 4JODF DMVC MJGF JT VOQSFEJDUBCMF JUÂľT B HPPE JEFB UP DBMM BIFBE PS DIFDL UIF WFOVFÂľT XFCTJUF UP DPOGJSN CPPLJOHT BOE IPVST 1SJDFT BSF MJTUFE XIFO QSPWJEFE UP VT 7JTJU XXX TGCH DPN WFOVF HVJEF GPS WFOVF JOGPSNBUJPO 4VCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT BU MJTUJOHT!TGCH DPN 'PS GVSUIFS JOGPSNBUJPO PO IPX UP TVCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTU JOHT TFF 1JDLT

wednesday 25 Rock /Blues/hip-hop

Bright Light Social Hour, Allofsudden $BGF %V /PSE QN Allen Clapp and His Orchestra, Hollyhocks, Corner Laughers #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Damir +PIOOZ 'PMFZ¾T QN GSFF Fancy, Music Wrong, Meridians &M 3JP QN Griffin House, Hayley Sales 4XFEJTI "NFSJDBO )BMM QN Guntown, Bender, Silent Motif, Midnight Snackers 3FE %FWJM -PVOHF QN Hazel’s Wart, Future This, Business End )FNMPDL QN Ingrid Michaelson 'JMMNPSF QN Eddie Roberts’ Roughneck #SJDL BOE .PSUBS .VTJD )BMM QN She’s, Bilinda Butchers, Trails and Ways 3JDLTIBX 4UPQ QN Jimmy Thackery #JTDVJUT BOE #MVFT BOE QN Todd vs. Charlie +PIOOZ 'PMFZ¾T %VFMJOH 1JBOPT QN Jonathan Wilson, Magic Trick, Tortured Genies (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN

jazz/new music

Cat’s Corner with Nathan Dias 4BWBOOB +B[[ QN Chris Amberger Trio & Jazz Jam :PTIJ¾T -PVOHF BOE QN Cosmo AlleyCats -F $PMPOJBM $PTNP 1MBDF 4' XXX MFDPMPOJBMTG DPN QN Dink Dink Dink, Gaucho, Michael Abraham "NOFTJB QN GSFF Ricardo Scales 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN Will Bernard Trio :PTIJ¾T 4' QN

dance cluBs

Booty Call 2 #BS $BTUSP 4' XXX CPPUZ DBMMXFEOFTEBZT DPN QN +VBOJUB .03& BOE +PTIVB + IPTU UIJT EBODF QBSUZ Coo-Yah! 4PN UI 4U 4' QN GSFF %+T %BOFFLBI BOE (SFFO # TQJO SFHHBF BOE EBODFIBMM XJUI XFFLMZ HVFTUT Full-Step! 5VOOFM 5PQ QN GSFF )JQ IPQ SFHHBF TPVM BOE GVOL XJUI %+T ,VOH 'V $ISJT BOE #J[[J 8POEB “KUSF 35th Anniversary Partyâ€? 7FSUJHP 1PML 4' XXX TBWFLVTG PSH QN 8JUI ,64' *O &YJMF %+T $BDUVT 5FSSZ %BDUZM $BSPMZO "OESF BOE NPSF Mary Go Round -PPLPVU UI 4U 4' XXX MPPLPVUTG DPN QN %SBH XJUI 4VQQPTJUPSJ 4QFMMJOH .FSDFEF[ .VOSP BOE (JOHFS 4OBQ Megatallica 'JEEMFSÂľT (SFFO $PMVNCVT 4' XXX NFHBUBMMJDB DPN QN GSFF )FBWZ NFUBM IBOHPVU Shutter &MCP 3PPN QN XJUI %+T /BLP 0NBS BOE +VTUJO Southern Fried Soul ,OPDLPVU QN 8JUI .FEJVN 3BSF +BTPO %VODBO BOE 1TZDIZ .JLFZ

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thuRsday 26 Rock /Blues/hip-hop

All Together, BVHM Band, Chiles Verdes "NOFTJB QN Big Drag, Schande, Night Call )FNMPDL QN Charlie vs. Todd +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT %VFMJOH 1JBOPT QN Dig, Mist and Mast, Farewell Typwriter #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Dolorata, Upside Down, Harriot $BGF %V /PSE QN Fancy, Foxtails Brigade 3FWPMVUJPO $BGF OE 4U 4' XXX SFWPMVUJPODBGFTG DPN QN Bob Frazier and Lenny, Kate Fiano, Quite Time, New Thoreaus "NOFTJB QN Fruit Bats, Kelley Stoltz, Gold Leaves *OEFQFOEFOU QN Greensky Bluegrass, Ten Mile Tide 4MJNÂľT QN Holy Shit! #SJDL BOE .PSUBS .VTJD )BMM QN John Lawton Trio +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT QN GSFF Kittie, Blackguard, Agonist 3FHFODZ #BMMSPPN QN Knocks, popscene DJs 3JDLTIBX 4UPQ QN Ben Kweller, Sleeper Agent, Noah Gunderson (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Lean, Freedom Club, Street Justice ,OPDLPVU QN Jimmy Thackery #JTDVJUT BOE #MVFT BOE QN Three Guys: The Mix &M 3JP QN GSFF 8JUI +PTI ,MJQQ +PF 4UFWFOT &MJ $POMFZ BOE #FBV %SFBN Trippple Nippples, Ass Baboons of Venus, Ghost Town Refugees 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN

jazz/new music

Stompy Jones 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN Varla Jean Merman 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Ned Boynton Trio #PUUMF $BQ 1PXFMM 4' XXX CPUUMFDBQTG DPN QN David Pack :PTIJÂľT 4' QN QN Savanna Jazz Jam 4BWBOOB +B[[ .JTTJPO 4' XXX TBWBOOBKB[[ DPN QN

folk / woRld/countRy

Bluegrass and old time jam "UMBT $BGF UI 4U 4' XXX BUMBTDBGF OFU QN GSFF Twang! Honky Tonk 'JEEMFSÂľT (SFFO $PMVNCVT 4' XXX UXBOHIPOLZUPOL DPN QN -JWF DPVOUSZ NVTJD EBODJOH BOE HJWFBXBZT Toure-Raichel Collective )FSCTU 5IFBUSF 7BO /FTT 4' XXX TGXNQBD PSH QN

dance cluBs

Afrolicious &MCP 3PPN QN 8JUI %+T IPTUT 1MFBTVSFNBLFS BOE 4FOPS 0[ "GSPMJDJPVT MJWF CBOE BOE %+ 4NBTI Get Low 4PN UI 4U 4' QN GSFF +FSSZ /JDF BOE "OU TQJO )JQ )PQ ¾T BOE 4PVM XJUI XFFLMZ HVFTUT Joakim 1VCMJD 8PSLT -PGU QN KUSF in Exile DJ Carolyn )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN Thursdays at the Cat Club $BU $MVC QN GSFF CFGPSF QN ´ T XJUI %+T %BNPO 4UFWF 8BTIJOHUPO %BOHFSPVT %BO BOE HVFTUT Tropicana .BESPOF "SU #BS QN GSFF 4BMTB DVNCJB SFHHBFUPO BOE NPSF XJUI %+T %PO #VTUBNBOUF "QPDPMZQUP 4S 4BFO 4BOUFSP BOE .S &

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Aerosols, Soft Bombs, Goldenhearts #SJDL BOE .PSUBS .VTJD )BMM QN Matt Alber, Jeb Havens 4XFEJTI "NFSJDBO )BMM QN Baxtalo Drom "NOFTJB QN Body and Soul +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT QN GSFF Cypress Hill 3FHFODZ #BMMSPPN QN “Deathrock Night Terrors Music Festivalâ€? 4VC .JTTJPO QN 8JUI .PJSB 4DBS #VSOJOH 4LJFT BOE NPSF Glorious First of June, Ivan and Alyosha )PUFM 6UBI QN “Guitarmageddon Blues Ballâ€? 4MJNÂľT QN 8JUI .BSL $BMEFSPO +PTI $MBSL %BSJB +PIOTPO BOE NPSF Arann Harris and the Farm Band, Stairwell Sisters, Barbary Ghosts $BGF %V /PSE QN Inciters, Bang, Police and the Thieves, DJ Dr. Scott 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN Lord Loves a Working Man, Quinn DeVeaux and the Blue Beat Review, Song Preservation Society #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Loquat, Mister Loveless, Excuses for Skipping *OEFQFOEFOU QN Nectarine Pie, Cumstain, Molestations, Coke and Glitter )FNMPDL QN Orgone, Aggrolites (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Sista Monica #JTDVJUT BOE #MVFT BOE QN Rosie Thomas )PUFM 6UBI QN Todd, Rome Balestrieri, Charlie +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT %VFMJOH 1JBOPT QN

jazz/new music

Audium #VTI 4' XXX BVEJVN PSH QN 5IFBUFS PG TPVOE TDVMQUVSFE TQBDF Black Market Jazz Orchestra 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN Terry Disley #PUUMF $BQ 1PXFMM 4' XXX CPUUMFDBQTG DPN QN GSFF Havana D’Primera :PTIJ¾T 4' BOE QN Lady Rizo 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Carol Luckenbach 4BWBOOB +B[[ .JTTJPO 4' XXX TBWBOOBKB[[ DPN QN Dmitri Matheny +$$4' $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX KDDTG PSH QN GSFF

WED Apr 25 HAZEL'S WART 9pm $6 Future This, The Business End THU Apr 26 BIG DRAG 9pm, $6 Schande, Night Call FRI Apr 27 NECTERINE PIE 9pm, $7 Cum Stain (Burger), The

SAT Apr 28 MUCK AND THE MIRES 9:30pm, $10 (Boston), The Hi-Nobles, The Krells (members of The Rip-Offs and Wendy Kroys)

the fancy, the music wronG, meridians */%*& 14:$) 1.

thu three Guys: the mix w/Josh klipp, 4/26 Joe stevens, eli conley, beau dream ".&3*$"/" '3&& '30/5 300. 1.

bonfire madiGan, evan Greer, davend, ac & the veGa

SUN Apr 29 Subliminal SF co-presents EARLY BADR VOGU 6pm, $7 Author & Punisher, Prizehog, Apocryphon

MON Apr 30 COMEDY SUPERPAC EARLY 7pm $5 with Sean Keane, and special guests LATER 10pm, FREE PUNK ROCK SIDESHOW TUE May 1 FAYROY 9pm, $5 Old Monk (Brooklyn) WED May 2 FEZANT 9pm, $6 Stratic, Blood Wedding THU May 3 SHEPHERD & OUTLAW 9pm, $6 ELECTRIC Blues For Carl Sagan

(feat. Cody from White Manna), Douglas (formerly Apache Thunderbolt)

FRI May 4 RUINS ALONE 9:30pm, $10 (Yoshida from Ruins, Japan), ADV TIX ON SALE Bronze, Bill Orcutt (electric), SAT May 5 MARK SULTAN (In The Red) 9:30pm, $10 Burnt Ones, Primitive Hearts ADV TIX ON SALE UPCOMING: North Fork, Post Paint (Australia), Ion High, Pamela, Dean Wareham Plays Galaxie 500, David Nudelman, Seize the Night, Enabler (Southern Lord), Naytronix, CCR Headcleaner, Dimesland

'0-, 101 4-*%*/( 4$"-& 1.

fri '3&& 0:45&34 0/ 5)& )"-' 4)&-- 1. 4/27 dJ’s carmen&miranda

at the el rio fruit stand '6/, %*4$0 101 1. 5*-- ". /0

red hots burlesque 1.

the people’s party 0-% 4$)00- )*1 )01 %+4 /0 1.

sat 4/28

manGo, sweet sexy fun for women, 1.

filthy thievinG bastards, the bloodtypes, midnite snaxxx (16/, 1.

dyke march benefit

sun 4/29 )"3% '3&/$) ."/(0 45": (0-% 1. mon 1#3 8&-- %0--"3 %": "-- %": 4/30 circus finelli presents:

blinky winky’s presidential fundraiser w/ circus finelli & beau and betsey 30$, $*3$64 4-*%*/( 4$"-& 1.

radical vinyl

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Taste Fridays *OEJBOB 4' XXX UBTUFGSJ EBZT DPN QN 4BMTB BOE CBDIBUB EBODF MFTTPOT MJWF NVTJD

SF COMEDY SHOWCASE - EVERY SUNDAY! O=<F=K<9Q ,'*- % K9LMJ<9Q ,'*0 From “red-NexicaN� aNd “Hick-SpaNic�!

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carla clayy, Big al goNzaleS

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Afrolicious &MCP 3PPN QN 8JUI %+T IPTUT 1MFBTVSFNBLFS BOE 4FOPS 0[ "GSPMJDJPVT MJWF CBOE BOE 7PP%PP ,JMMFS %+ /FXMJGF %+ 4FSHJP BOE 'PHP /B 3PVQB Joe -PPLPVU UI 4U 4' XXX MPPLPVUTG DPN QN &JHIU SPUBUJOH %+T TIJSU PGG ESJOL TQFDJBMT Old School JAMZ &M 3JP QN 'SVJU 4UBOE %+T TQJOOJOH PME TDIPPM GVOL BOE IJQ IPQ. Paris to Dakar -JUUMF #BPCBC UI 4U 4' QN "GSP BOE XPSME NVTJD XJUI SPUBUJOH %+T JODMVEJOH 4UFQXJTF 4UFWF $MBVEF 4BOUFSP BOE &MFNCF Public Access: Hype Williams 1VCMJD 8PSLT QN 8JUI (BUFLFFQFS 5FFOHJSM 'BOUBTZ BOE ;FCSB ,BU[ Teenage Dance Craze ,OPDLPVU QN 8JUI %+T 3VTTFMM 2VBO 0LJF 0SBO E9 UIF 'VOLZ (SBOQBX Greg Wilson, Green Gorilla Lounge .POBSDI 4JYUI 4U 4' XXX NPOBSDITG DPN 1N

witH kyle kiNaNe aNd Nato greeN

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Sammy oBeid, kaBir SiNgH L@MJK<9Q -'+ From comicS uNleaSHed aNd comedy.tv!

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JaSoN wHeeler, dave tHomaSoN >JA<9Q -', % K9LMJ<9Q -'Book SigNiNg eveNt! reScHeduled dateS

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Call the box office for no service charges! Limit 8 tickets per person. All dates, acts and ticket prices are subject to change without notice. All tickets are subject to applicable service charges.

CONTINUES ON PAGE 28 >>

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??? +7**;+75-,A +75 .7447? =; 76 <?1<<-: )6, .)+-*773

+-4-*:)<16/ 7=: <0 )661>-:;):A .7: )44 7.

satuRday 28

stage listings

weds red hots burlesque 1. 4/25 omG! karaoke no$ '30/5 300. 1.

Molestations, Coke and Glitter

folk / woRld/countRy

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APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

27


music listings CONT>>

Tragedy, Needles, Sete Star Sept, Permanent Ruin, Stressors 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN

Janam and Broken Shadows Family Band #SBWB 5IFBUFS $FOUFS UI 4U 4' XXX TPOHCJSEGFTUJWBM PSH QN 1PXFS PG 4POH 4FSJFT Alex Kelly #SBWB 5IFBUFS $FOUFS UI 4U 4' XXX TPOHCJSEGFTUJWBM PSH QN 1PXFS PG 4POH 4FSJFT Muck and the Mires, Hi-Nobles, Krells )FNMPDL QN Planet Booty, Greenhorse $BGF %V /PSE QN John C. Reilly and Friends #JNCPÂľT QN Ronnie Mund Block Party (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM BOE QN Rupa & the April Fishes, Shake Your Peace *OEFQFOEFOU QN Earl Thomas & the Blues Ambassadors #JTDVJUT BOE #MVFT BOE QN Tipper 'JMMNPSF QN

jazz/new music

Audium #VTI 4' XXX BVEJVN PSH QN 5IFBUFS PG TPVOE TDVMQUVSFE TQBDF Anna Estrada 4BWBOOB +B[[ .JTTJPO 4' XXX TBWBOOBKB[[ DPN QN Havana D’Primera :PTIJÂľT 4' BOE QN “Israeli Jazz Festivalâ€? +$$4' $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX JTSBFMJKB[[GFTU PSH QN Lady Rizo 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Living Earth Show 6OJUBSJBO 6OJWFSTBMJTU 4PDJFUZ PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP $IBQFM 'SBOLMJO XXX UBOHFOUHVJUBSTFSJFT DPN QN Scott Nicholson and Anthony Bello &YJU $BGF &EEZ 4' XXX TPOHXSJUFSTBUVSEBZT DPN QN GSFF SF Contemporary Players 0%$ %BODF $PNNPOT 4IPUXFMM 4' XXX TGDNQ PSH

QN Slippery Slope, Broun Fellinis .BTPO 4PDJBM )PVTF .BTPO 4' XXX NBTPOTPDJBMIPVTF DPN QN $FMFCSBUJOH #PC ,BVGNBO

folk / world/country

Madjo Theater -B 1FSPVTF 0SUFHB 4' XXX MFMZDFF PSH QN Craig Ventresco & Meredith Axelrod "UMBT $BGF UI 4U 4' XXX BUMBTDBGF OFU QN GSFF

dance clubs

Blow Off 4MJNÂľT QN )PTUFE BOE %+ÂľE CZ #PC .PVME BOE 3JDI .PSF Bootie SF: Aprilween %/" -PVOHF QN 8JUI 4NBTI 6Q %FSCZ %JF %JF .Z %BSMJOH %+ 5SJQQ DPTUVNF DPOUFTU BOE NPSF Dark Room )PU 4QPU .BSLFU 4'

GVMM!CBS!8!EBZT!ÂŚ!Ibqqz!Ipvs!N.G-!3.9qn PQFO!BU!3QN-!TBU0TVO!BU!23QN LJUDIFO!PQFO!EBJMZ

a soul Jazz Residency eddie’s BiRTHday BloWouT! feaT MeMBeRs of ozoMaTli, Jazz Mafia, suRpRise paRTy GuesTs and special dJ’s

HIPTU!UPXO!SFGVHFFT BTT!CBCPPOT!PG!WFOVT

Fri 4/27

sMile! pResenTs

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THe aeRosols

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:QN!%21 Nby!Npouf{!Qsftfout

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NPOEBZ!5041!!:QN!!GSFF

NJLF!NJLFĂ–T! NPWJF!OJHIU

Esjol!tqfdjbmt!bmm!ojhiu!mpoh"

604!!!!.!!UIF!GMZUSBQT-!TUBOEBSE!QPPEMF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJHI!BOYJFUZ" 605!!!!.!!FBSMZ!NBO-!JUĂ–T!DBTVBM! !!!TIPDL!EJBNPOE-!TBUZB!TFOB 606!!!! .!!DBTZ!'!CSJBO!)SFDPSE!SFMFBTF*! !!!IJEFT-!EBSL!NBUFSJBMT 609!!!!.!!OFHVSB!CVOHFU-!FDMJQTF!FUFSOBM-! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!EJO!CSBE 6022!!!.!!UIF!TIPOEFT-!RVJFU!DPZPUF-! ! !!!OJHIU!DBMM-!EBSL!CFBDI 6023!!!.!!TPVOE!PG!NBZ!UIVOEFS;! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!DIFSWPOB-!NBOP!DIFSHB-! !!!!!!!!!! !!!!!UXJO!QFBLT-!CPUTNBO!'!DP/ 6028!!!.!!CMBDL!FML-!QJOT!PG!MJHIU-!IFMM!TIJQ 602:!!!.!!NFMUFE!UPZT-!NFNPSJFT-! ! !!!QFSNBOFOU!DPMMFDUJPO-!DPPM!BOHFMT! 6032!!!.!!SJWFSCPBU!HBNCMFST-!CJUFST

THe fResH & only’s

10pm fRee!

AFroLICIoUS

THe lonely Wild

disco no longeR sucks! classic disco, Hip-Hop, funk, & soul!...

& SENor oz pLUS AFroLICIoUS LIVE bAND

Tue 5/01 Wood sHoppe

THu 4/26 6pm no coveR!

THe House of windsoR

AND DJ SmASh FRI 5 yEAr ANNIVErSAry pArTy

a neW, fRee MonTHly... MidniGHT youTH

psycHedelic, kRauT-Rock, sHoegaze 9pm no coveR!

AFroLICIoUS

4/27 10pm $8 ADV/ DAy 2 wITh DJ/hoSTS: $10 Dr pLEASUrEmAKEr

Fri 5/11

weB of sound!

souTHeRn coMfoRT pResenTs

special faRewell To jess ponaman ediTion dj’s jackie sugaRlumps, jane BeeRkin, medium RaRe

Royal souTHeRn BRoTHeRHood feaT. cyRil neVille & deVon allMan Guy foX SaT 5/12

fRi 4/27 7:30-9:30 $8

miles counTRy kenTucky Blue Balls

& SENor oz wITh AFroLICIoUS LIVE bAND pLUS ThE VooDoo KILLEr DJ NEwLIFE (ChICAgo) AND DJ SErgIo (gKr)

souTHeRn coMfoRT pResenTs

eveRy fRiday! 10pm $5

Royal souTHeRn BRoTHeRHood feaT. cyRil neVille & deVon allMan cRackeRJack HiGHWay

loose joinTs!

w/ djs Tom THump, damon Bell & cenTipede RaRe gRoove/funk/soul/Hip-Hop & moRe!

saT 4/28 6pm fRee!

SaT

4/28 10pm $12

90’s Hip-Hop w/ dj sma

SUn

pHoTo BooTH, food, dooR pRizes! 10pm, $5

4/29 9pm

$6

RogeR mas y el kool kyle

Wed 4/25 Japanese noise RockeRs!

cumBia, danceHall, salsa, Hip-Hop

sun 4/29 7:30pm $8

senTimenTal sundays THe wRong woRds • gRavy’s dRop • dimples

GaRdens and Villa WaTeRsTRideR

Ronco vs. k-Tel

ankH MaRkeTinG & Tnp pResenT

poweRpeaRls

sHafiq Husayn (sa-Ra) & doVe socieTy

w/ dj nasTy naTe

“noRTHeRn moveRs & sweeT soul melodies� 9:30pm no coveR!

losT & found

Thu 5/03

TasTeMakeR liVe and sHp pResenT

deVin THe dude

food + Drink

equipTo, couGHee BRoTHaz, HosTed By Bud Bundy fRoM MaRRied WiTH cHildRen (daVid fausTino)

picks

arts + culture

music listings

stage listings

ELbo room prESENTS

CoLES whALEN mENTAL 99

ELbo room prESENTS

CLUb CrAShErz gIggLE pArTy yoUNg DIgErATI

UpComINg:

JiMeTTa Rose, J. Maka el (foRMely J MiTcHel), BReezy loVeJoy, kWeen, keV cHoice & fRiends

deep & sweeT 60s soul 45s

news

5/1 9pm $5

Sun 4/29

Tue 5/1 6pm fRee!

editorials

TUE

JaVieR naVeRReTTe & Juan caRlos

60s & 70s Rock, pop, soul, BuBBlegum

djs k-maRTs, w.T. gRanT & mc kResge

DJ SEp,

pLUS

Fri 4/27 locuRa BanG daTa

as seen on Tv!

prESENTS ThE bEST IN DUb, DUbSTEp, rooTS & DANCEhALL wITh

4/30 EArLy (DENVEr, Co) 6-9pm $7

kalX pResenTs

mon 4/30 8pm no coveR!

DUb mISSIoN

(SUryA DUb) AND gUEST b-LoVE

mon

Thu 4/26

2711!28ui!Tusffu!ÂŚ!526.363.2441

KEV ChoICE ENSEmbLE

mANEESh ThE TwISTEr

TRippple nipples

3225 22nd sT. ! mission sf ca 94110 415-647-2888 • www.makeoutroom.com

VIDEo rELEASE pArTy

bAyoNICS DJ JULICIo

muni diaRies 4TH BiRTHday paRTy!

djs lucky & pRimo & fRiends

wITh rEADErS: CAroLyN CooKE, grAhAm grEmorE, JoE QUIrK, AND KATE mILLIKEN; AND JUDgES: rAKESh SATyAL, JoN woLANSKE, AND mELISSA grIFFIN ADV. TIx: www.LITErAryDEAThmATCh.Com

4/26 9:30pm $8 ADV/ DAy 1 wITh DJ/hoSTS: $10 Dr pLEASUrEmAKEr

Sun 4/29 escalaToR Hill

fRisco disco!

LITErAry DEATh mATCh

THU 5 yEAr ANNIVErSAry pArTy

younG pRisMs + MallaRd, liGHT fanTasTic

THe Romane evenT

4/25 EArLy Show 6:30-9pm $7ADV/ $10Dr

NAKo, omAr, JUSTIN

(((folkyeaH!))) pResenTs

wed 4/25 7:30pm $10 paco Romane’s HilaRious comedy sHow!

xxx/uiffqbsltjef/dpn 28 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

Apocryphon, Prizehog, Author & Punisher, Badr Vogu )FNMPDL QN Sonya Cotton, Conspiracy of Venus #SBWB 5IFBUFS $FOUFS UI 4U 4' XXX TPOHCJSE GFTUJWBM PSH QN 1PXFS PG 4POH 4FSJFT Escalator Hill, Lonely Wild #SJDL BOE .PSUBS .VTJD )BMM QN Julia Holter, Jib Kidder, William Winant Percussion Group 3JDLTIBX 4UPQ QN Inspector Gadje, Dangerate $BGF %V /PSE QN John Lawton Trio +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT QN GSFF

CLUb ShUTTEr

SaT 4/28

el supeRRiTmo!

VQDPNJOH!TIPXT

rock /blues/hip-hop

LATE Show 10pm $5 wITh DJS

THe sofT BoMBs, THe GoldenHeaRTs

UIF!JODJUFST

GFNBMF!USPVCMF

sunday 29

wED opIUm mAgAzINE prESENTS

eddie RoBeRTs’ RouGHneck

USJQQQMF!OJQQQMFT

TBUVSEBZ!5039!!4QN!!GSFF IBQQZ!IPVS!TIPX

XJUI 3471 8JUI %+T +BNJF +BNT 1MBDFOUJOB -JUUMF "NZ BOE :VMF #F 4PSSZ TQJOOJOH JOEJF QPQ ESFBN QPQ BOE TIPFHB[F

Wed 4/25

UIVSTEBZ!5037!!:QN!!%21

UIF!CBOH QPMJDF!BOE!UIJFWFT EK!ES/!TDPUU

&MFDUSP QVOL BOE JOEVTUSJBM XJUI 7JPMFOU 7JDLJF %+ -F 1FSW BOE %BSL %SBH QFSGPS NBODFT Go Bang! %FDP -PVOHF -BSLJO 4' XXX HPCBOHTG DPN QN 8JUI 5JN ;BXBEB 4UFWF 'BCVT 4FSHJP 'FEBT[ BOE NPSF Mad: Reprise .POBSDI 4JYUI 4U 4' XXX NPOBSDITG DPN QN 1SFTFOUFE CZ .BE 5FDIOP XJUI .S $ Mango &M 3JP QN 4XFFU TFYZ GVO GPS XPNFO XJUI %+T &EBK .BSDFMMB 0MHB BOE -B $PRVJ Paris to Dakar -JUUMF #BPCBC UI 4U 4' QN "GSP BOE XPSME NVTJD XJUI SPUBUJOH %+T JODMVEJOH 4UFQXJTF 4UFWF $MBVEF 4BOUFSP BOE &MFNCF Rocket 3JDLTIBX 4UPQ QN Roots and Rhythm Series "NPFCB .VTJD )BJHIU 4' XXX TBWFLVTG PSH QN 8JUI ,64' *O &YJMF %+ )BSSZ %VODBO Shine On ,OPDLPVU QN GSFF CFGPSF QN

ThU 5/3 FrI 5/4 SAT 5/5 SUN 5/6

AFroLICIoUS 120 mINUTES: AmEN DUNES SAT NITE SoUL pArTy DUb mISSIoN: DJ SEp ADVANCE TICKETS

www.browNpApErTICKETS.Com ELbo room IS LoCATED AT 647 VALENCIA NEAr 17Th

on the cheap

film listings

classifieds


music listings jazz/new music

Daria, Jean Michel Hure, Alex Baum #MJTT #BS 4U 4' XXX CMJTTCBSTG DPN QN “Israeli Jazz Festivalâ€? +$$4' $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX JTSBFMJKB[[GFTU PSH QN Savanna Jazz Jam 4BWBOOB +B[[ .JTTJPO 4' XXX TBWBOOBKB[[ DPN QN Steady Rollin’ Bob Margolin :PTIJÂľT 4' QN

folk / world/country

Festival of the Mandolins $SPBUJBO "NFSJDBO $VMUVSBM 0OPOEBHB 4' XXX DSPBUJBOBNFSJ DBOXFC PSH QN Twang Sunday 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN GSFF 8JUI (SBWFM 4QSFBEFST

dance clubs

Dub Mission &MCP 3PPN QN %VC EVC TUFQ BOE EBODFIBMM XJUI %+T 4FQ .BOFFTI UIF 5XJTUFS BOE %+ # -PWF

45 Club ,OPDLPVU QN GSFF 'VOLZ TPVM XJUI &OHMJTI 4UFWF %JSUZ %JTIFT BOE E9 UIF 'VOLZ (SBOQBX Jock -PPLPVU UI 4U 4' XXX MPPLPVUTG DPN QN 3BJTF NPOFZ GPS -(#5 TQPSUT UFBNT XIJMF FOKPZJOH %+T BOE ESJOL TQFDJBMT La Pachanga #MVF .BDBX .JTTJPO 4' XXX UIFCMVFNBDBXTG DPN QN 4BMTB EBODF QBSUZ XJUI MJWF "GSP $VCBO TBMTB CBOET

monday 30 rock /blues/hip-hop

Black Crown String Band "NOFTJB QN GSFF Damir +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT QN GSFF Coles Whalen, Mental99 &MCP 3PPN QN

jazz/new music

Bossa Nova 5VOOFM 5PQ #VTI 4' QN GSFF -JWF BDPVTUJD #PTTB /PWB

oakland music complex Monthly Music Rehearsal Studios

Marshall Crenshaw :PTIJÂľT 4' QN SF Contemporary Players )FSCTU 5IFBUSF 7BO /FTT 4' XXX DJUZCPYPGGJDF DPN QN

dance clubs

Death Guild %/" -PVOHF QN (PUIJD JOEVTUSJBM BOE TZOUIQPQ XJUI +PF 3BEJP %FDBZ BOE .FMUJOH (JSM Krazy Mondays #FBVUZ #BS .JTTJPO 4' XXX UIFCFBVUZCBS DPN QN GSFF )JQ IPQ BOE PUIFS TUVGG M.O.M. .BESPOF "SU #BS QN GSFF %+T 5JNPUFP (JHBOUF (PSEP $BCF[B BOE $ISJT 1IMFL QMBZJOH BMM .PUPXO FWFSZ .POEBZ Sausage Party 3PTBNVOEF 4BVTBHF (SJMM .JTTJPO 4' QN GSFF %+ %BOEZ %JYPO TQJOT WJOUBHF SPDL 3 # HMPCBM CFBUT GVOL BOE EJTDP BU UIJT IBQQZ IPVS TBVTBHF TIBDL HJH Vibes’N’Stuff &M "NJHP #BS .JTTJPO 4'

QN GSFF $POTDJPVT KB[[ BOE IJQ IPQ GSPN T FBSMZ ´ T XJUI %+T -VDF -VDZ 7JOOJF &TQBS[B BOE NPSF

jazz/new music

tuesday 1

Gaucho #PUUMF $BQ 1PXFMM 4' XXX CPUUMF DBQTG DPN QN GSFF Maureen McGovern 3SB[[ 3PPN QN

rock /blues/hip-hop

dance clubs

Club Crasherz, Giggle Party, Young Digerati &MCP 3PPN QN FayRoy, Old Monk )FNMPDL QN Girl in a Coma, Pinata Protest, Sara Radle *OEFQFOEFOU QN Midnight Youth #SJDL BOE .PSUBS .VTJD )BMM QN GSFF Joe Pug, Bailiff, Goodnight Texas #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Stan Ernhart Band +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT QN GSFF Colin Stetson )PUFM 6UBI QN Yukon Blonde, Wild Kindness, Together We Can Rule the Galaxy $BGF %V /PSE QN

Eclectic Company 4LZMBSL QN GSFF %+T 5POFT BOE +BZCFF TQJO PME TDIPPM IJQ IPQ CBTT EVC BOE FMFDUSP KUSF in Exile DJ Carolyn Casanova Lounge 7BMFODJB 4' XXX TBWFLVTG PSH QN Post-Dubstep Tuesdays 4PN UI 4U 4' QN GSFF %+T %OBF #FBUT &QDPU 'PPUXFSLT TQJO 6, 'VOLZ #BTT .VTJD Study Hall +PIO $PMJOT -PVOHF .JOOB 4' XXX KPIODPMJOT DPN QN )JQ IPQ EBODFIBMM XJUI %+ -FGU -BOF 2

KITCHEN OPEN MON-SAT AT 6PM

4/25

£8)*4,&: 8&%/&4%":Œ4¤

4/28

#&/&'*5 '03 +"40/ .&5;

113 "/% 8)*4,&: 4)05 "-- /*()5 -0/(

8*5) (&5 %&"% "/% 5&/%&3 9 '6$, &.04 8*'&:

1255 21St St. Oakland, Ca (510) 406-9697 OaklandMusicComplex.com

8*5) 8"3$)*-% .&.#&34 0' )*()508&3 -045 (0"5 %"-50/

1 . %0/"5*0/4

4/29 £4$)-*5; */%6453: /*()5¤ 4)054 0' '&3/&5 #3"/$" 4$)-*5; #055-&4 4)054 #6--*5 #063#0/ 450--* 4)",: 4)054 '3&& 4/"$,4 '30. $-"3&Œ4 %&-*

oaklandmusiccomplex@gmail.com

4/30

£.0+*50 .0/%":4¤

.0+*504 "-- %": "/% "44 &/% )"11: )063 1 . 50 " . 0'' %3"'5 8&--

BENDERS BAR & GRILL 806 S. VAN NESS @ 19TH 415.824.1800 MON-THU 4PM-2AM FRI-SUN 2PM-2AM WWW.BENDERSBAR.COM

4/27 9pm-2am $8

4/28 5:30-8:30pm FREE

9pm-2am $8

! " # $ % #

news

food + Drink

picks

arts + culture

music listings

sFsu Mecha PReseNts: aRt auctioN aRt FRoM FaviaNNa RoDRiguez, RaMiRo goMez aND otheRs, BeNeFit FoR the 16th aNNual chicaNX gRaD

Death Rock Night teRRoRs!! (Night 2)

heaDless lizzy & heR iceBoX Pussy, elegy oF MaDeliNe, liMNus, the tuNNel

editorials

MoiRa scaR, cRiMsoN scaRlet, altaR De Fey, huMaN toys

Plus Djs: BuRNiNg skies, NecRoMos, ash, XavieR, Rick

Death Rock Night teRRoRs!! (Night 1)

Plus Djs: BuRNiNg skies, NecRoMos, ash, XavieR, Rick 4/29 7pm-12am $4

Kids On A Crime Spree Silian Rail James & Evander Whiskerman

Adios Amigo Michael Musika

Rocky Votolato Father John Misty Devotionals Har Mar Superstar Kevin Long TBA

iDols Plague,

aBeRRaNt Phase, hellBeaRD, heMoRage

stage listings

on the cheap

WK 6W LQ 6) ‡

www.bottomofthehill.com/tickets.html film listings

classifieds

APRIL 25 - May 1, 2012 / SFBG.com

29


sTAgE lisTings

Kf X[m\ik`j\ `e fli Ôcd j\Zk`fe ZXcc +(,$,/,$0'0/%

for more arts content visit sfbg.com/pixEl_vision

NeIGHBOrS: CuTTING BaLL THeaTer PreSeNTS THe WOrLD PreMIere OF Tenderloin. 4UBHF MJTUJOHT BSF DPNQJMFE CZ (VBSEJBO TUBGG 1FSGPSNBODF UJNFT NBZ DIBOHF DBMM WFOVFT UP DPOGJSN 3FWJFXFST BSF 3PCFSU "WJMB 3JUB 'FMDJBOP BOE /JDPMF (MVDLTUFSO 4VCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT BU MJTUJOHT!TGCH DPN 'PS GVSUIFS JOGPSNBUJPO PO IPX UP TVCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTU JOHT TFF 1JDLT 'PS DPNQMFUF TUBHF MJTUJOHT TFF XXX TGCH DPN

THEATER opEning

kids on a crime spree james & evander adios amigo

Killing My Lobster Chops Down the Family Tree 5+5 'MPSJEB 4' XXX LJMMJOHNZMPCTUFS DPN 0QFOT 5IV QN 3VOT 5IV 4BU QN .BZ TIPXT BU BOE QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI .BZ 5IF TLFUDI DPNFEZ USPVQF QFSGPSNT B OFX TIPX JOTQJSFE CZ DPOUFNQPSBSZ GBNJMJFT Tenderloin &YJU PO 5BZMPS 5BZMPS 4' XXX DVUUJOHCBMM DPN 1SFWJFXT 'SJ 4BU QN 4VO QN 0QFOT .BZ QN 3VOT 5IV QN 'SJ 4BU QN BMTP 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI .BZ "OOJF &MJBT BOE $VUUJOH #BMM 5IFBUFS BSUJTUT QSFTFOU B XPSME QSFNJFSF ²EPDVNFOUBSZ UIFBUFS³ QJFDF MPPLJOH BU UIF QFPQMF BOE QMBDFT JO UIF $VUUJOH #BMM 5IFBUFSµT PXO ´IPPE

Bay area

In Paris #FSLFMFZ 3FQFSUPSZ 5IFBUSF 3PEB 5IFBUSF "EEJTPO #FSL XXX CFSLFMFZSFQ PSH 0QFOT 8FE QN 3VOT 5VF BOE 5IV 4BU QN BMTP 4BU QN 8FE QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI .BZ .JLIBJM #BSZTIOJLPW TUBST JO %NJUSZ ,SZNPWµT SPNBOUJD OFX QMBZ Not Getting any younger .BSTI #FSLFMFZ "MMTUPO #FSL XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 0QFOT 'SJ QN 3VOT 'SJ QN 4BU QN 5ISPVHI .BZ .BSHB (PNF[ JT CBDL BU UIF .BSTI B DPVQMF PG UPP CSJFG EFDBEFT BGUFS JOBVHVSBUJOH UIF UIFBUFSµT OFX TUBHF XJUI IFS GJSTU TPMP TIPX ± BO BQU TFUUJOH JO PUIFS XPSET GPS UIF XSJUFS QFSGPSNFSµT MBUFTU NPOPMPHVF B SFGMFDUJPO PO UIF JOFWJUBCMF QSPDFTT PG BHJOH GPS B -BUJOB MFTCJBO DPNFEJBO BOE BSUJTU XIP TUJMM IBOHT BU 4UBSCVDLT BOE DBOµU CF USVTUFE XJUI UIF EFUBJMT PG IFS PXO 8JLJQFEJB FOUSZ *G UIF UIPVHIU PG TPNFPOF BT QFSFOOJBMMZ JSSFWFSFOU JOTPVDJBOU BOE BQQFBMJOHMZ JNNBUVSF BT (PNF[ NBLFT ZPV EFQSFTTFE UIF TIPX JT TUSBOHFMZ FOPVHI UIF CFTU BOUJEPUF Note: review from the show’s 2011 run at the Marsh San Francisco. "WJMB

ongoing

act One, Scene Two 1IPFOJY "SUT "TTPDJBUJPO 5IFBUSF .BTPO 4UF 4' XXX VO TDSJQUFE DPN 5IV 4BU QN 5ISPVHI .BZ 6O 4DSJQUFE 5IFBUFS $PNQBOZ QFSGPSNT UIF CFHJOOJOH PG B OFX VOGJOJTIFE QMBZ CZ B MPDBM BVUIPS ± BOE DSFBUFT BO FOEJOH PO UIF TQPU PODF UIF TDSJQU SVOT PVU The aliens 4' 1MBZIPVTF 4VUUFS 4' XXX TGQMBZIPVTF PSH 5VF 5IV QN 'SJ 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI .BZ 0O UIF IFFMT PG "VSPSB 5IFBUSFµT QSPEVDUJPO PG Body Awareness 4' 1MBZIPVTF JOUSPEVDFT MPDBM BVEJFODFT UP BOPUIFS PG DPO UFNQPSBSZ "NFSJDBO QMBZXSJHIU "OOJF #BLFSµT BDDMBJNFE QMBZT JO B GJOFMZ UBJMPSFE 8FTU $PBTU QSFNJFSF EJSFDUFE CZ -JMB /FVHFCBVFS "WJMB

any Given Day .BHJD 5IFBUSF 'PSU .BTPO $FOUFS .BSJOB BU -BHVOB 4' XXX NBHJDUIFBUSF PSH &YUFOEFE SVO 8FE 4BU QN BMTP 4BU QN 4VO BOE

1

Weds. may 2nd Bottom of the hill 30 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

editorials

news

food + Drink

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arts + culture

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QN .BHJD 5IFBUSF QFSGPSNT -JOEB .D-FBOµT (MBTHPX TFU QMBZ BCPVU NPEFSO VSCBO MJGF “Bay One acts Festival” #PYDBS 5IFBUSF /BUPNB 4' XXX CBZPOFBDUT PSH 8FE 4BU QN BMTP .BZ BOE QN 4VO BOE QN 5ISPVHI .BZ 5FO CPME BOE BEWFOUVSPVT TIPSU QMBZT CZ MPDBM QMBZXSJHIUT QFSGPSNFE UXP GVMM QSPHSBNT SVOOJOH JO SFQFSUPSZ Fwd: Life Gone Viral .BSTI 4BO 'SBODJTDP 7BMFODJB 4' XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 5IV QN OP TIPX 5IV 4BU QN 4VO QN OP TIPX .BZ 5ISPVHI +VOF 5IF JOUFSOFU CFDPNFT DPNJD GPEEFS GPS DSFBUPS QFSGPSNFST $IBSMJF 7BSPO BOE +FSJ -ZOO $PIFO BOE DSFBUPS EJSFDUPS %BWJE 'PSE Glengarry Glen ross "DUPST 5IFBUSF PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP #VTI 4' XXX CSPXOQBQFSUJDLFUT DPN 8FE 4BU QN "DUPST 5IFBUSF PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP BOE EJSFDUPS ,FJUI 1IJMMJQT PGGFS B TIBSQ TQJSJUFE QSPEVDUJPO PG UIF QMBZ CZ %BWJE .BNFU JO XIJDI GPVS SFBM FTUBUF BHFOUT .BSL #JSE 4FBO )BMMJOBO +PIO ,SBVTF BOE $ISJTUJBO 1IJMMJQT KPDLFZ BOE TDIFNF GPS BEWBOUBHF JO UIFJS $IJDBHP PGGJDF JO B MBOETDBQF PG JOTFDVSJUZ BOE GJFSDF DPN QFUJUJPO "WJMB

Goodfellas Live %BSL 3PPN 5IFBUFS .JTTJPO 4' XXX EBSLSPPNTG DPN 'SJ 4BU QN 5IF %BSL 3PPN PGGFST B DPNFEJD UBLF PO 4DPSTFTFµT HBOHTUFST Hot Greeks )ZQOPESPNF 5IFBUSF UI 4U 4' XXX CSPXOQBQFSUJDLFUT DPN 5IV 4BU QN &YUFOEFE UISPVHI .BZ $IFBQ UISJMMT EPOµU DPNF NVDI DIFBQFS PS NPSF UISJMMJOH UIBO BU B 5ISJMMQFEEMFST NVTJDBM FYUSBWBHBO[B BOE UIFJS OFXMZ SFNPVOUFE SVO PG Hot Greeks BGGPSET BMM UIF HMJUUFS EVTUFE FZF DBOEZ BOE MBCZSJOUIJBO QMPU QPJOUT XFµWF DPNF UP FYQFDU GSPN UIFJS HMFFGVMMZ FYIJCJUJPOJTU SBOLT -JLF PUIFS $PDLFUUFTµ SFWJWBMT QSFTFOUFE CZ UIF 5ISJMMQFEEMFST UIF NPNFOUVN PG UIF TIPX JT DBS SJFE GPSXBSE OPU CZ UIF SBUIFS UIJOMZ TLFUDIFE OBS SBUJWF CVU CZ UIF HSPVQ TPOH BOE EBODF OVNCFST FYUSBWBHBOU DPTUVNJOH BOE MBDL UIFSFPG SJCBME XPSEQMBZ BOE PWFSU HFOEFS GVDLFSZ (MVDLTUFSO

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The Lucky One *SBR 8BS WFUFSBO -PHBO ;BD &GSPO CFBUT 154% CZ XBMLJOH XJUI IJT (FSNBO TIFQIFSE GSPN $PMPSBEP UP UIF -PVJTJBOB CBZPV JO TFBSDI PG B HPMEFO IBJSFE BOHFM JO DVUPGG CMVF KFBO TIPSU TIPSUT 5BZMPS 4DIJMMJOH )JT TUBUFE JO TPQPSJGJD WPJDF PWFS BJN JT UP NFFU BOE UIBOL UIF BOHFM XIP IF CFMJFWFT SFQFBUFEMZ TBWFE IJT MJGF JO UIF DPNCBU [POF BGUFS IF QMVDLFE IFS QIPUPHSBQI GSPN UIF SVCCMF PG B CPNCFE PVU CVJMEJOH 5IF TOBQTIPU PGGFST MJUUMF JO UIF XBZ PG CJPHSBQIJDBM JOGPSNBUJPO CVU MVDLJMZ UIFSF BSF CONTINUES ON PAGE 32 >>

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Pursued by her husband’s killers, Regina (Hepburn) turns to a mystery man with many identities (Grant). Is he a clever disarming rogue after her money or the only thing standing between her and certain doom? 4EVEQSYRX 1SZMI 'PEWWMGW MRGPYHI PMZI ;YVPMX^IV SVKER WIVIREHI (IG 3 ;MR VEJ¾I newsreel, cartoon and previews. Admission ONLY $5 ticketmaster.com or 800-745-3000

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A NEW HOPE? Dünyayi Kurtaran aDam (1982), A.K.A. “THE TURKISH Star WarS,” PLAYS THE VORTEX ROOM. COurTesy Of The vOrTex rOOm

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arts + culture

FOREMEN AND TECHNICIANS to lead Utility Field Crews. Outdoor physical work, many positions, paid training. Foremen $17.0023.09/hr and Technicians $16.72/hr., weekly performance bonuses after promotion, company truck and benefits. Must have strong leadership skills, good driving history and able to travel in California and nearby States. Email resume to Recruiter1@osmose.com or apply online at www.OsmoseUtilities.com. EOE M/F/D/V. (Cal-SCAN) Help Wanted!!! Make money Mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Helping Home-Workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.theworkhub.net (AAN CAN)

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ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-12548584. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Maricel Mondala for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Maricel Mondala filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name Camila Merce Mondala - Latoza. Proposed Name: Camila Merce Mondala Latoza . THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: June 19, 2012. Time: 9:00 AM room - 514. Signed by Donald Sullivan, Presiding Judge on April 16, 2012. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on April 16, 2012, by The Deputy Clerk. Publication dates April 18, 25, May 2 and 9, 2012. L#113579 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342190-00 The following person is doing business as Originate Travel 247 16th Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94118. This business is conducted by an Individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date March 20, 2012. Signed by Maggie Eskicioglu. This statement was filed by Magdalena Zevallos, Deputy County Clerk on March 22, 2012. L#113585, April 25, May 2, 9 and 16, 2012

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stage listings

for more visit sfbg.com/classfieds FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342268-00 The following person is doing business as Electroportal 2515 Kirkham Street, San Francisco, CA 94122. This business is conducted by husband and wife. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date March 26, 2012. Signed by Samuel E. Wonderly. This statement was filed by Elsa Campos, Deputy County Clerk on March 26, 2012. L#113575, April 18, 25, May 2 and 9, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342282-00 The following person is doing business as Salle Musical Arts 1632 C Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94102. This business is conducted by a general partnership. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date March 27, 2012. Signed by Tibor Szabo. This statement was filed by Magdalena Zevallos, Deputy County Clerk on March 27, 2012. L#113568, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342287-00 The following person is doing business as TAL Diamonds Royal Design & Jewelry Maker 3463 Freeman Road, Walnut Creek CA 94595. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date March 21, 2012. Signed by Michael Tal. This statement was filed by Elsa Campos, Deputy County Clerk on March 27, 2012. L#113574, April 18, 25, May 2 and 9, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342289-00 The following person is doing business as Tacos El Paisano 3480 Cesar Chavez Street, San Francisco, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an Individual. Registrant commenced business under the abovelisted fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Heriberto Jimenez. This statement was filed by Elsa Campos, Deputy County Clerk on March 27, 2012. L#113584, April 25, May 2, 9 and 16, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342318-00 The following person is doing business as Passive House BB 2875 21st Street Apt 4, San Francisco, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date October 20, 2011. Signed by Bronwyn Barry. This statement was filed by Jennifer Wong, Deputy County Clerk on March 28, 2012. L#113563, April 4, 11, 18 and 25, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342349-00 The following person is doing business as Blackwood Thai 2150 Chestnut Street, San Francisco, CA 94123. This business is conducted by a corporation. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Hoyul S. Choi, CEO. This statement was filed by Susanna Chin, Deputy County Clerk on March 29, 2012. L#113565, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342387-00 The following person is doing business as Happy Dogs Go Walking 840 Van Ness Ave. #106, San Francisco, CA 94109. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Emily Leduc. This statement was filed by Magdalena Zevallos, Deputy County Clerk on March 30, 2012. L#113564, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342400-00 The following person is doing business as 1. Sajani Music 2. Bijuri Records 4336 California Street #4, San Francisco, CA 94103. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date January 13, 2012. Signed by Anne Sajdera. This statement was filed by Alex Liang, Deputy County Clerk on April 2, 2012. L#113567, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342443-00 The following person is doing business as Whomp Entertainment 1061 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94103. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Joseph Bender. This statement was filed by Magdalena Zevallos, Deputy County Clerk on April 3, 2012. L#113566, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012

on the cheap

film listings

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342446-00 The following person is doing business as La Gringa Writing and Design 1472 Filbert Street #107 San Francisco, CA 94119. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date March 26, 2012. Signed by Teryll Hopper. This statement was filed by Susanna Chin, Deputy County Clerk on April 3, 2012. L#113569, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342507-00 The following person is doing business as Southwest Construction Consultants 1118 Red Tail Road, Healdsburg, CA 95448. This business is conducted by a general partnership. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date April 2, 2012. Signed by Wilkes R. Morgan. This statement was filed by Jennifer Wong, Deputy County Clerk on April 4, 2012. L#113573, April 18, 25, May 2 and 9, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342536-00 The following person is doing business as QuickFox Events 121 Leese Street, Studio A, San Francisco, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the abovelisted fictitious business name on the date April 5, 2012. Signed by Julie Miller King. This statement was filed by Elsa Campos, Deputy County Clerk on April 5, 2012. L#113570, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342564-00 The following person is doing business as Drewes Meats 1706 Church Street, San Francisco, CA 94131. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Joshua Epple. This statement was filed by Alex Liang, Deputy County Clerk on April 6, 2012. L#113571, April 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342590-00 The following person is doing business as Cayelano Seafood Company 1717 Holloway Ave., San Francisco, CA 94132. This business is conducted by an Individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date April 9, 2012. Signed by Anthony C. Guzman. This statement was filed by Maribel Jaldon, Deputy County Clerk on April 9, 2012. L#113583, April 25, May 2, 9 and 16, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342708-00 The following person is doing business as LCS Consulting 260 Mullen Ave., San Francisco, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Lynda Smith. This statement was filed by Mariedyne L. Argente, Deputy County Clerk on April 12, 2012. L#113576, April 18, 25, May 2 and 9, 2012 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILED NO. A-0342812-00 The following person is doing business as Etnochik 3655 Broderick Street, Apt 203, San Francisco, CA 94123. This business is conducted by an Individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date N/A. Signed by Veronica Tovar. This statement was filed by Elsa Campos, Deputy County Clerk on April 17, 2012. L#113582, April 25, May 2, 9 and 16, 2012 NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE LICENSE Date of Filing Application: April 13, 2012. To Whom It May Concern: The name of the applicant is: BERNARDA LLC . The applicant listed above is applying to The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 2522 MISSION STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110-2512. Type of License Applied for: 47 - ON-SALE GENERAL EATING PLACE . Publication dates: April 25, 2012. L#113581 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Date of Filing Application: April 5, 2012. To Whom It May Concern: The name of the applicant is: PIER THREE, LLC . The applicant listed above is applying to The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: PIER 3 STE 102, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111-2027. Type of License Applied for: 47 - ON-SALE GENERAL EATING PLACE . Publication dates: April 18, 25 and May 2, 2012. L#113572

classifieds

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: Kryste Gaye Young. CASE NUMBER: RP12615891. To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Kryste Gaye Young. A Petition for Probate has been filed by: Shaunette Comer in the Superior Court of California, County of Alameda. The Petition for Probate requests that Shaunette Comerbe appointed administrator and Letters issue upon qualification.The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant authority. A Hearing on the petition will be held in this court SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF ALAMEDA, 2100 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Berkeley, CA 94704. as follows: April 23, 2012, Probate Department, Time: 9:30 AM room- 201. Endorsed Filed, Alameda County Superior Court of California on February 06, 2011 by Deborah Copes, County Clerk. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months of the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. Petitioner: Shaunette Comer, 2100 Havenscourt Blvd., Oakland, CA 94621 Ph: 510-706-7597 #113578 April 18, 25th and May 2nd 2012 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-12548591. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Dennis Charles Zak for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Dennis Charles Zak filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name Dennis Charles Zak. Proposed Name: Christopher Charles Hertzler . THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: June 19, 2012. Time: 9:00 AM room - 519. Signed by Donald Sullivan, Presiding Judge on April 17, 2012. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on April 17, 2012, by D. Steppe, Deputy Clerk. Publication dates April 25, May 2, 9, and 16, 2012. L#113580 SWF Seeking Someone to Spoil Me - 25, blonde I’m a clean, young sexy girl seeking a generous older man for some adult fun. I can host in a safe, discreet place. Only contact me if youíre serious. Check out my profile and photos at www.EstMen. com/Ashlee4

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33


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