San antonio current april 1, 2015

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 3


music festival 2015

maverick

4  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 5


San Antonio Current FOLLOW US ON

Publisher: Michael Wagner Associate Publisher: Lara Fischer Editor-in-Chief: Hernán Rozemberg

Editorial

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Associate Editor: Bryan Rindfuss Art Director: Eli Miller Food & Nightlife Editor: Jessica Elizarraras Music Editor: Matt Stieb Staff Writer: Mark Reagan Digital Content Editor: Albert Salazar Contributors: Ron Bechtol, Christie Blizard, D.T. Buffkin, Ainsley Caffrey, Erik Casarez, Murphi Cook, James Courtney, Jade Esteban Estrada, Dan R. Goddard, Lance Higdon, Steven G. Kellman, Kiko Martinez, Jeremy Martin, David Riedel, Melanie Robinson, Heywood Sanders, M. Solis, Gary Sweeney, J.D. Swerzenski, James Woodard Editorial Interns: Antonio Ambriz, Misty Blaze, Alyssa Cantu, Jeffrey Hernandez, Sarah Flood, Cameron James, Abby Mangel, Natalie Perez, Stephen James Ross, Adriana Ruiz, Shannon Sweet

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6  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

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16

CONTENTS April 1-7, 2015

44

Club For Small Members AtticRep gets struck by The Irish Curse

Bottle & Tap 5 ways to improve your beer drinking

28 SCREENS

44 MUSIC

Broken Record It’s Al Pacino’s greatest hits on repeat in Danny Collins

11 NEWS Nobody’s Perfect While labor leader César Chávez changed America for the better, his controversial immigration views are either ignored or hijacked for propaganda

16 CALENDAR

Our top picks for the week

22 ARTS Be Well And Go Seek A Q&A with New Age guru Deepak Chopra Artist On Artist Gary Sweeney chats with celebrated Chicano painter Adan Hernandez

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41

31 FOOD Late Night Done Right Inside Crossroads Southern Kitchen Lunchtime Snob New ownership means new eats at Azro Afghan Cuisine Culinary Calendar 7 ways to get your drink/grub on this week Flavor File More Easter brunch options for you and la familia

39 NIGHTLIFE Straight To The Point The Watering Hole is a beer-drinker’s playground

Taking Back The Night Tons of new music and food options usher in the resurgence of the St. Mary’s Strip End Of An Era D.T. Buffkin crashes backstage at the historic Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard show Music Calendar What to see and hear this week

60 ETC

Savage Love, Free Will Astrology, Jonesin’ Crossword, This Modern World

ON THE COVER

As Paper Tiger sets up shop, we take a look at the ever-evolving landscape of the St. Mary’s Strip Illustrator: David Habben Art direction by Eli Miller


sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 9


VUSI MAHLASELA

THE VOICE OF SOUTH AFRICA

SATURDAY, APRIL 4 • 8 p.m.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW $35 | Jo Long Theatre Ticketmaster: 1.800.745.3000 Carver Box Office: 210.207.2234 TheCarver.org

Carver Community Cultural Center 226 N. Hackberry • 210.207.7211

10  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


NEWS

Hundreds of San Antonio activists took to downtown streets last weekend to celebrate the life and work of César Chávez, including a push to make his birthday a federally recognized national holiday.

NOBODY’S PERFECT César Chávez’s Legacy Includes Controversial Immigration Stance MARK REAGAN/@210REAGAN

When galvanizing figures rise from nothing to change the course of American history, they leave behind lasting legacies. In many cases, controversial legacies. Civil rights leader César Chávez is no exception. Chávez, co-founder of the United Farm Workers union in 1962, was remembered across the country yesterday, his birthday anniversary. President Obama designated March 31 as national César Chávez Day, though it’s not a federally-recognized holiday. Without Chavez and Dolores Huerta, his leading partner and a renowned activist in her own right, farm workers in California and across the country would have been victim to low wages and slave-like working conditions far longer. Chavez is remembered for striking, boycotting and fasting — nearly dying in the process — yet his controversial view on immigration is a thorny issue typically left out of his historical narrative.

Tea Party talking heads and antiimmigrant advocates have adopted racial slurs used by Chávez — like “wetback” — against strike-breaking immigrants in the 1970s as propaganda against immigration reform while leftist activists tend to ignore this side of the iconic activist altogether. But determining whether Chávez was virulently anti-immigrant isn’t easy when placed across a historical backdrop that has changed dramatically since the UFW first began organizing in the fields. And determining its impact back then, as well as what it means today, tends to depend on whom you ask. Miriam Pawel, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of The Crusades of Cesar Chavez, said understanding Chávez’s immigration views is complicated. “He certainly had implemented strong policies against immigrants at various points in time and against illegal immigration, particularly,” Pawel told the San Antonio Current. In 1974, Chávez spearheaded the controversial “Illegals Campaign.” The strategy was simple: UFW members were to report undocumented immigrants to the now-defunct Immigration and Naturalization Service, known as the INS. Manuel Chávez, the leader’s cousin, simultaneously ran “wet lines” in Arizona with hundreds of UFW members patrolling the border to stop undocumented immigrants from crossing the Rio Grande to work as scabs during a strike. “That was a pretty violent setup and it was financed by the UFW. So all of that is part of his record on immigration, but

stems from his feelings of difficulty of winning over immigrants,” Pawel said. Chávez felt immigrants only had an interest in money, which they sent to their families in Mexico, which worked against the union’s efforts to improve wages and working conditions of American pickers, she added. For her book, Pawel said she spent hours listening to taped meetings between Chávez and other UFW leaders during which illegal immigration, Chavez’s use of racial slurs and campaigns against immigrants were hotly debated. But talk to Marc Grossman, spokesman for the Cesar Chávez Foundation, a San Antonio nonprofit advocacy group, and a different picture emerges. “There are two separate and distinct issues and some people confuse them, unintentionally or deliberately,” Grossman, who served as Chávez’s speech writer for two decades, told the San Antonio Current. In many cases, the UFW and Chávez promoted and protected the rights of undocumented immigrants working on the

farms, but on the other hand, in the 1960s and 1970s during labor strikes, companies would hire undocumented immigrants as scabs in attempts to break union strikes. But what’s wrong is to use a broad brush in labeling him as anti-immigrant. “There are those out there who say he was against undocumented immigrants or immigrants in general and that’s just absurd, and the union’s history belies that misinterpretation,” Grossman said. “Sometimes they’ll dig up 40- or 50-year-old news clips where he uses the word ‘illegal’ or ‘wetbacks’ to describe illegal immigrants. That’s just how people talked back then.” Grossman acknowledged that his boss did go through a linguistic transformation, eventually dropping the slurs. He also pointed to Chávez’s support of President Ronald Reagan’s 1986 amnesty for nearly three million undocumented immigrants; the UFW’s 1973 opposition to a federal law requiring employers to verify immigration status of employees; and CONTINUED ON PAGE 15 ►

CÉSAR CHÁVEZ: LITTLE-KNOWN FACTS • One of his 31 grandchildren, Sam Sanchez, is a pro-golfer. • In 2011, the U.S. Navy named a cargo ship the USNS Cesar Chavez, which delivers supplies to ships at sea, including ammunition, food, repair parts, stores and fuel. • Before eighth grade, Chávez changed schools a whopping 38 times. That’s because he grew up in a migrant farm worker family. • He was a vegetarian. • Chávez joined Synanon, a drug rehab and religious group deemed by its critics as a cult.

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 11


for the 17th Annual Helotes Festival Grounds

April 11-12, 2015

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Helotes, TX 78023 Just outside Loop 1604 off Bandera Road

Saturday - 9am - 7pm • Sunday - 11am - 6pm • Free Parking Heavy Scottish Athletics • Celtic Music • Sheep Herding Trials • A Clan Village • Living History Exhibits Scottish History Seminars • Highland Dance Competition • Cooking Demonstrations • Kid’s Glen Scottish and Irish Merchandise & Food and more…

Tickets: $11 for adults and $6 for Children, Military, & Seniors (discounted tickets available on our website) Visit http://www.sahga.org

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12  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


San Antonio’s Entertainment Destination Movies • Laser Tag • Mini Bowling • Atomic Rush • Ballocity • Clip ‘n Climb The BEST birthday parties in San Antonio • The LARGEST Laser Tag Arena in town!

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4/17 Monkey Kingdom, Paul Blart Mall Cop 2, Unfriended 5/1 Avengers: Age of Ultron

5/8 Hot Pursuit

4/10 THE LONGEST RIDE 4/03

5/15 Pitch Perfect 2 Mad Max: Fury Road

Located in the City Base West Shopping Center SE Military & New Branfels Avenue 210.531.3000 | citybasecinema.com sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 13


The most pawpular place in town.

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14  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


NEWS

MAESTRO GABRIEL PSÍQUICO EXPERTO EN AMARRES DE AMOR • Acerco a tu ser amado, no importa la distancia ni preferencia sexual • Domino a tu ser amado curo enfermedades extrañas • Descubro quien te envidia y quien te hace mal • Doy suerte en juegos de azar y paso de fronteras

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César Chávez’s views on immigration are more nuanced than commonly known.

◄ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 (CESAR CHAVEZ)

efforts to end the Bracero Program, a legal guest worker scheme that legally imported Mexican farm workers from the 1940s until it ended in the 1960s. “He was someone who truly understood and predicted the mushrooming social and economic political influence of Latinos … He predicted what is happening today and what we’re seeing across the country,” he said. Grossman was critical of Pawel’s reporting on Chávez’s immigration views, but she stands by her work and is quick to list off Chávez’s myriad of accomplishments improving the lot of U.S. farm workers. “Denying that things happened is to deny people the opportunity to learn from the history,” she said. Such lessons are more important than ever now, particularly as millions of undocumented immigrants are poised to obtain legal status through President Obama’s orders — pending the outcome of a legal challenge by his detractors. Farm worker rights also continue to strike at the heart of activist movements. Giev Kashkooli, the UFW’s political and legislative director, said pickers still face atrocious work conditions, all for the lowest wages. Improving work conditions and pay are important, yet, in keeping in line with their founder’s prediction of Hispanic influence on American society, the UFW’s most pressing current issue is immigration reform. Kashkooli said 95 percent of presentday members are immigrants.

Just how crucial is Obama’s legalization program to the UFW and how influential is the organization? Its current leader, Arturo Rodriguez, sat with Obama on Air Force One to review the document with Obama before the president unveiled it in November. If it eventually goes through, it would mean legal status for a staggering 250,000 union members. “Earlier that week, dozens of farm workers from around the country had brought a Thanksgiving meal to D.C. so Americans could understand what it takes to harvest the food,” Kashkooli said. If all of America’s undocumented farm workers were deported, grocery stores across the country would struggle to fill shelves and the price of vegetables and fruits would likely skyrocket. “It’s very personal for today’s farm workers and this has been true for well over 15 years when we began intensively engaging in trying to change laws,” Kashkooli said. Were he alive today, Chávez would likely do what he always did best: organize strikes and boycotts and use the power of the people to force social justice. So he may have taken to his grave that little-discussed anti-immigrant side. Perhaps he’d want to take all that back – who knows. But nobody’s perfect. And, no matter what, no one could question the tremendous impact he had in putting Latino civil rights on the national consciousness. That is his legacy. mreagan@sacurrent.com

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CALENDAR

WED-TUE

1-7

National Poetry Month WORDS

Since 1996, April has been designated as National Poetry Month, a global celebration of “poetry’s vital place in our culture.” Billed as the largest literary celebration in the world, NPM takes shape locally through an array of happenings that overflow into May. Beyond community events like Bihl Haus Arts’ Go! Poe Reading (2pm Sat, 2803 Fredericksburg Rd.) and UNAM’s Voices, Vibes and Visions (7:30pm Sat, 600 Hemisfair Plaza), the first crop of offerings includes Twitter-driven calls for entries (such as the Witte’s Fiesta Royalty Haiku and San Antonio Public Library’s Tweet a Poem!) and the decidedly DIY incentive SLAM The Town. Visit npmsa.com for details. — Bryan Rindfuss

16  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

WED

1

The Search FILM

A companion to the exhibit “World War II in Photographs,” the McNay’s “WWII in Film” series wraps up with a screening of Fred Zinnemann’s 1948 war drama The Search, starring Montgomery Clift and Aline MacMahon. Shot in Germany, the film tells the story of an American army engineer who takes in a homeless Czech boy separated from his mother after both were sent to a Nazi concentration camp. Thought to be killed in a gas chamber, the mother is, in fact, alive and looking for her son. The Search was nominated for four Oscars, winning one for Best Writing, Motion Picture Story. $5-$10, 2pm, McNay Art Museum, 6000 N. New Braunfels Ave., (210) 824-5368, mcnayart.org. – Kiko Martínez

THU

2

Immortal Technique MUSIC

Felipe Andres Coronel, best known by his glorious emcee name Immortal Technique, is a bad motherfucker. Since 2001, Technique has proven himself as a rapper whose knack for lyricism and hip-hop delivery is matched only by the blunt force and vitality of his call to arms. In music that’s certainly not for the faint of heart, the emcee rails against cycles of violence and addiction, economic injustice, racism, capitalism and the superficiality of popular culture. On stage, Technique is a ball of righteous fire, exploding with anger sharpened by a philosopher’s sense of social critique. $20-$30, 8:30pm, Alamo City Music Hall, 1305 E. Houston St., scoremoreshows.com. — James Courtney

FRI

3

Alton Brown Live! TALKS PLUS

Food Network has turned dozens of chefs into household names, but Alton Brown stands out as a wild card — a walking book of knowledge spiked with a sharp sense of humor. Launched into the culinary spectrum via the informative yet comical series Good Eats, Brown now hosts the ruthless competition show Cutthroat Kitchen. Touching down at the Tobin this week, the James Beard Award winner’s Edible Inevitable Tour combines food experimentation, stand-up comedy, original live music, “enforced” audience interaction and a messy, Gallagher-esque “poncho zone.” $55-$150, 7:30pm, Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, 100 Auditorium Circle, (210) 223-8624, tobincenter.org. — BR


CALENDAR

FRI-SUN

3-5

La Cage Aux Folles THEATER

Everything is dandy in SaintTropez until the “Tradition, Family and Morality Party” shows up. In La Cage Aux Folles, Georges, the owner of a glitzy drag club, and his partner Albin, the club’s star performer, experience an upheaval of their charmed lives when George’s son arrives with his fiancée and her homophobic parents in tow. From there, antics ensue, love is tested and disguises are worn. Based on a 1973 French play, the Tony-winning musical comedy (which inspired the 1996 film The Birdcage) lands at the Woodlawn under the direction of Tim Hedgepeth. $17-$26, 7:30pm FriSat, 3pm Sun, Woodlawn Theatre, 1920 Fredericksburg Rd., (210) 267-8388, woodlawntheatre.org. — Murphi Cook

SAT-SUN

4-5

Starving Artist Art Show ART

More than 200 established and emerging artists and artisans are expected at the Starving Artist Art Show in La Villita, a tradition since 1963. The brainchild of Reverend Paul Soupiset (whose tireless efforts to raise funds for the needy earned him the nickname “The Beggar of La Villita”), the weekend event was devised to showcase struggling local artists while also supporting the Little Church of La Villita’s year-round food assistance program. A portion of proceeds from the 53rd annual show will benefit the elderly, widows and widowers, veterans and others in need. Free, 10am-6pm Sat-Sun, La Villita, 418 Villita St., (210) 226-3593, getcreativesanantonio.com. — BR

SAT

4

Vusi Mahlasela MUSIC

Vusi Mahlasela is a celebrated South African singer-songwriter whose music is steeped in the emotions of a never-ending quest for justice and freedom. His songs combine elements of South African folk music with the loose structures and improvisational bent of jam band rock. That his struggle music eschews resentment in favor of love and forgiveness is a true testament to Mahlasela’s beneficence. Like his message, Mahlasela’s voice resonates deeply — a breath of dewy sunlight, generous and full of optimism at the end of a long night. Essential tracks include “When You Come Back” and “Say Africa.” $35, 8pm, Jo Long Theatre, 226 N Hackberry St., (210) 207-7211, thecarver.org. — JC

TUE

7

Bad Religion MUSIC

The landscape of American punk rock was largely shaped by the West Coast movement of the late ’70s and early ’80s. Among the key players, Bad Religion has remained a staple in the punk rock world, consistently releasing albums over the last 30-plus years through guitarist Brett Gurewitz’s pioneering Epitaph Records. Syncopated drumbeats, trebly guitar riffs and frontman Greg Graffin’s powerful vocals are all hallmarks of the Bad Religion sound. Fellow LA punk legend Keith Morris, of Black Flag and Circle Jerks fame, will be providing support with his latest outfit Off! $27-$29, 8pm, Aztec Theatre, 104 N. St. Mary’s St., (210) 812-4355, theaztectheatre.com. — Erik Casarez

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Midnight Garden Good evil in the

Saturday, April 11th Of 7pm - Midnight 724 North Olive St.

A Masquerade Benefiting Fiesta Youth

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San Antonio's Premier LGBT Teen and Young Adult Support Groups Enjoy dancing under the stars, a silent auction & BELIEVER SPONSOR photo booth fun for a night to remember! 21 and up please.

VISIONARY SPONSOR ADVOCATE SPONSOR

Judge Genie Wright and Brian Nienhouse

CHAMPION SPONSORS Ramon Victor Sanchez, MD, PA

HOSTS

Darrell & Jason Garcia Parsons, Keith Wichinski & David Willett, Joseph Montaldi, LCSW, Shawn Danker, Jay Wiley, Ana Alicia Perez, Eric Alva, Mark Bigelow, Bren Manaugh & Blue Cochran, Thad & Emily Leeper, Michael Wong, Lee Cantu, Dr. Ray Sanchez & Clint Kelley, Brian Nienhouse, Steven McGee, Matthew & Josephine Juarez, Kim Mayfield & Rebekah Saville, Hector Bove, Dr. Margit B. Gerardi, Dennis Hirschey & Dr. Ramon Arroyo, Kelli Maples and Tara Rasmussen

Tickets Avalible at http://tickethookups.com/fiestayouth 18  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


CALENDAR NIGHTLIFE

THU

2

‘Amor Sin Fronteras’

FRI-SAT

Established in 1989, Hank Lee’s San Angel Folk Art is among the oldest anchors of the Blue Star Arts Complex. Although stocked with giftable wares and a whimsical line of guayaberas, Lee’s eclectic emporium chiefly traffics in works crafted by artists – folk, outsider and contemporary – from Latin America, Europe, Africa and beyond. On view through May 31, San Angel’s “Amor Sin Fronteras” serves as both a showcase and Texas début for young Mexico City artist Felix D’Eon. Referencing erotic Japanese woodblock prints from the Edo period, children’s book illustrations and lots more in between, D’Eon’s provocative yet playful gouache paintings hijack vintage sheet music and other ephemera with homosexual fantasies exploring “happy endings and outcomes in Aztec civilization, Revolutionary-era Mexico and the American West.” Free, 5:30-7:30pm, San Angel Folk Art, 110 Blue Star, (210) 226-6688, sanangelfolkart.com. — Bryan Rindfuss

Art

Art opening: “Chimera” AnArte hosts

an opening reception for local artist and educator Sarah Fox’s latest series of mixedmedia collages and drawings. Currently pursuing her MFA in painting and drawing at UTSA, Fox describes her mythologyinspired pieces as “visual poems” and “externalized portrait drawings of internalized dialogues.” Free, 6-8pm Thursday; AnArte Gallery, 7959 Broadway, (210) 826-5674.

Art opening: “There Are No Happy Endings” Recently named curator of

exhibitions at Montana’s Red Lodge Clay Center, former San Antonio resident Wesley Harvey unveils a new body of work that further examines gay male sexuality and popular culture. By use of appropriation, Harvey creates narratives and collages enveloped by queer theory on hand-built ceramic sculptures such as plates, teapots and vessels. Free, 7-10pm Thursday-Friday; Hello Studio, 1420 S. Alamo St. #106, (210) 291-8640.

International Artist-in-Residence Exhibition As guest curator for the first

IAIR exhibition of 2015, Los Angelesbased Cesar Martinez tapped Londonbased Colombian art star Oscar Murillo, theatrical Houstonite Autumn Knight and LA-based painter Henry Taylor. Dubbed by fans as a “21st-century Basquiat,” Murillo has been known to paint with a broomstick and scrawl words like “burrito” on his canvases. A trained drama therapist, Knight combines elements

of performance, video and sculpture in multimedia projects that encourage discourse about emotional, racial and geographic boundaries. Honored in 2012 with a mid-career retrospective at MoMA PS1, Taylor has depicted prostitutes and drug dealers in his folky paintings, but does not identify as an “outsider artist.” Free, noon-5pm Wednesday-Sunday, Artpace, 445 N. Main Ave., (210) 212-4900.

“Les Artistes Exposés” Southtown’s

Sexology Institute hosts a “Frisky First Friday” reception for Baton Rouge-based body painter Christina Babin and writer/ dildo designer Keisha Maria, who’ll be signing copies of her book The Best and Worst 50 Sexual Experiences Ever. Free 6-11pm Friday; Sexology Institute and Boutique, 727 S. Alamo St., (210) 487-0371.

”One Way Trail” Pittsburgh-based artist

Kim Beck’s Art in the Garden installation offers a plethora of alternatives to the “predictable” or “official” trail. Complete with phone-accessible snippets of audio from interviews the artist conducted with 16 “tour guides” — a motley crew that includes SAY Sí students, two dogs, a Buddhist priest, a Texas rancher and a 95-year-old SA native — her “One Way Trail” envisions our stories, our preferences and our desires as integral parts of our experience in the park. $5-$8, 9am-5pm daily; San Antonio Botanical Garden, 555 Funston, (210) 207-3250.

”Tooky Jelly” Revered local artist James

Cobb’s new solo exhibition features work created digitally and printed on metal —

3-4

Bugs Bunny at the Symphony II

When Bugs Bunny on Broadway (aka Bugs Bunny at the Symphony) débuted back in 1990, there was a not-so-subtle irony in having classic Looney Tunes episodes play before the stiff opera house crowds they were made to parody. But then Merrie Melodies animators likely had a clue that their cartoons would serve as so many people’s first (and often only) exposure to classical standards. Such were their influence that even today it’s hard to hear “Figaro’s Aria” without picturing Bugs in a barber’s outfit or “Flight of the Valkyries” without hearing Elmer Fudd singing “Kill the Wabbit!” A 25th anniversary update, Bugs Bunny at the Symphony II finds the Looney Tunes crew with the full backing of the San Antonio Symphony to revisit their most classic(al) moments. Besides Bugs episodes, there’ll be a wide sampling of other symphonically minded Looney Tunes selections from Daffy Duck, Pepe Le Pew, Tom & Jerry and even a couple of new Warner shorts made specifically for the show. $25-$65, 8pm Fri-Sat, The Majestic Theatre, 224 E. Houston St., (210) 226-3333, sasymphony.org. — J.D. Swerzenski

“labor intensive, though untouched by human hands save for the firm grip on a mouse.” Free, 2-7pm Thursday-Saturday, Sala Diaz, 517 Stieren St., (972) 900-0047.

Film

Food Chains Esperanza Peace & Justice

Center hosts the San Antonio premiere of Food Chains, a documentary revealing the human cost in our food supply. The narrative of the film focuses on an intrepid group of tomato pickers from Southern Florida said to be revolutionizing farm labor. Following the screening, members of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and Student/Farmworker Alliance will lead a march from Esperanza to Wendy’s. $5, 6pm Friday; Esperanza Peace & Justice Center, 922 San Pedro Ave., (210) 228-0201.

Theater

A Numbers Game Four actors take on

roles in four unusual love stories in this collection of tales written and directed by Emily Fizgerald. $10-$14, 8pm ThursdaySaturday, The Overtime Theater, 1203 Camden St. (210) 557-7562.

An Excruciatingly Ordinary Toy Theater Show Funded in part by the Jim Henson Foundation, locally-based artist Zach Dorn’s latest “live-action comic book” recounts mysterious tales surrounding a lonely puppeteer, a vertically challenged ghost and an opera-singing landlord. $15, 8:30pm Friday-Saturday; Miniature Curiosa’s Toy Theater Parlor, 1906 S. Flores St., (813) 843-3722

Crime and Punishment Curt Columbus

and Marilyn Campbell’s fast-paced theatrical adaptation of Dostoevsky’s classic tasks three actors with portraying an array of characters. David Rinear directs the Playhouse’s production. $12$30, 8pm Friday-Saturday, 3pm Sunday; The Playhouse, 800 W. Ashby Pl., (210) 733-7258.

Disney On Ice: Frozen Hosted by Mickey

and Minnie Mouse, this live action adaptation of the Oscar-winning musical fantasy features guest appearances by Disney princesses and characters from favorites like Toy Story, Finding Nemo and The Lion King. $34-$329, 7:30pm Thursday, 1pm & 7:30pm Friday, 11:30am, 3:30pm & 7:30pm Saturday; 10:30am, 2:30pm & 6:30pm Sunday; Alamodome, 100 Montana St., (800) 745-3000.

Mary Poppins Based on the books by P.L.

Travers and the 1964 Walt Disney film, Jullian Fellows’ theatrical adaptation of Mary Poppins promises to “transport audiences to the Banks’ household on Cherry Lane as well as the rooftops of London” while revisiting such classic songs as “A Spoonful of Sugar” and “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.” Jonathan Pennington Studios produces the Cameo’s production. $15-$33, 8pm Friday-Saturday, 4:30pm Sunday; Cameo Theatre, 1123 E. Commerce St., (210) 212-5454.

Special Events

210|West Gallery Talk: This Land Is Your Land (?) Francine Sanders Romero,

associate dean of UTSA’s College of Public

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 19


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sanantoniocomedyclubs.com 20  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


CALENDAR NIGHTLIFE

Policy, explores how rules of property ownership and water rights aided the settlement of the American West. $8-$10, 6:30-7:30pm Tuesday; Briscoe Western Art Museum, 210 W. Market St., San Antonio, (210) 299-4499.

Music for Your Eyes Walter Mathis

enhanced Villa Finale’s world of visual beauty by filling it with the sounds of music. Visitors to his home were treated to a unique visit as they toured Villa Finale’s collections while their ears were entertained by the musical delights of antique machines. Guests on this tour will be treated to demonstrations of some of the rare music machines in the Mathis collections, including the automated 1921 Bechstein-Welte reproducing piano. $15-$20, 6:30-7:30pm Thursday; Villa Finale, 401 King William St., (210) 223-9800.

The Settlement of Leon Springs: From Prussia to Persia In conjunction

with Igo Library’s Live Smart/Learn Well series, author Marlene Richardson recounts highlights from her 25-year journey writing about the history of Leon Springs, a vital watering hole for travelers of yore — from gypsies and gangsters to German nobility and Sufi sheikhs. Free, 2pm Thursday; Igo Library, 13330 Kyle Seale Pkwy., (210) 207-9080.

Dazzling! Léon Bakst and the Ballets Russes Versed in Russian literature, stage design and the avant-garde, University of Southern California professor John Bowlt visits the McNay to shed light on Léon Bakst — an accomplished portrait painter and landscape artist, couturier and photographer, fencer and tattooist. $5-$10, 6:30pm Thursday; McNay Art Museum, 6000 N. New Braunfels Ave., (210) 824-5368.

Mayoral Candidate Forum Moderated

by former television personality Michael Valdes, four special panelists will pose questions to all confirmed San Antonio mayoral candidates. Members of the community are invited to meet the candidates, hear their positions and obtain information about their campaigns. Free, 6pm Wednesday; Texas A&M University-San Antonio, One University Way, (210) 317-6283.

San Antonio Fetish Ball: Exotic Easter Hosted by Temple of Flesh

and benefiting the San Antonio AIDS Foundation, the latest incarnation of Exotic Easter features performances and appearances by adult film star Gen Padova, aerial artist Deborah Espinosa, the EBM Dollz dance troupe, body modification expert Ariel, drag performer Sasha Taylor and DJs Mr. Scandal and Star 23. $15-$20, 8pm-2am Sunday; Player’s Club, 11431 Perrin Beitel Rd., (210) 300-2376.

Talks Plus

DeCoursey Lecture: Jocelyn Bell Burnell Northern Irish astrophysicist

Jocelyn Bell Burnell will present Trinity University’s 2015 DeCoursey Lecture. Regarded as one of the 100 most powerful women in Britain by BBC Women’s Hour, Burnell takes interest in radio stars, which she discovered as a graduate student, and transient astronomical phenomena. Free, 7:30pm Thursday; Laurie Auditorium, Trinity University, One Trinity Pl., (210) 999-8117.

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 21


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BE WELL AND GO SEEK Controversial Author Deepak Chopra Waxes Spiritual, Answers Critics JAMES COURTNEY

Even if you’re not among the growing number of his devotees, chances are you know something about Deepak Chopra. The distinguished — and wildly popular — endocrinologist, writer, lecturer, alternative medicine advocate and New Age spiritualist has written more than 80 fiction and non-fiction books. He’s hailed by some as a postmodern visionary, bringing contemplative depth, ancient wisdom and cutting-edge science to bear on some of our most significant issues. By others, he’s lambasted as a pseudo-scientist, using his medical credentials, vague religious extrapolations and an understanding of alternative medicine to profit from his followers’ naiveté. Now, with his new fiction book The 13th Disciple just out, he’s coming to the Tobin Center to deliver a talk entitled “The Future of Wellbeing.” Chopra spoke with the San Antonio Current last month from a lecture 22  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

stop in Philadelphia. In an insightful conversation, he discussed his new book, the Tobin lecture, his response to detractors and general hopes for the planet. So your new book, The 13th Disciple, is a historical fiction with a powerful element of spiritual exploration. What’s the social value of a book like this? Let me start by providing some context. Not many people know this, but I was educated by Irish Christian missionaries in India, so I have a very strong background in Catholic theology. So that heavily influenced the writing of this book. But the book is the experience of six people who run the entire gamut of where people are in their spirituality. In society today, you have atheists, agnostics, curious people, people with a spiritual bent and people who are religious in the orthodox sense. And


ARTS

atomic universe is mysterious too, in that it is both particles and waves. Particles are things and waves are possibilities. And the second hard problem is: What is the basis of consciousness? And, again, we don’t know. So we neither know what existence is, nor do we know why there is awareness of existence. For those of us who are curious, this leads to a lot of contemplation and inner-inquiry. And that’s what this book is about. So the book is as much about non-specific inner-inquiry as it is about the Christian tradition?

this is how society is today. You know, there are people who are totally wed to the material world and have no interest in spirituality and who are, in fact, militantly atheist. But the characters in the book show the entire gamut of how we explore reality. The conclusion of the book is ultimately that reality is more mysterious than we think it is. More mysterious … How so? The five senses deliver to us a reality that we call the physical world, but we have no idea how we experience the physical world when all that goes to the brain is electrical information. How does that create a three dimensional world evolving in time? And that is one of the hard problems in science today. And there are really two important hard problems. One is: What is the universe made of? And we don’t know. See, 95 percent of the universe is mysterious dark energy and dark matter. Only five percent of the universe is atomic and the

Right, but you know one of the tenants of Christianity is Jesus as the light, the way and the truth. So my interpretation of that is that light is the light of awareness — nothing is real for you unless you are aware of it. The way is contemplative self-inquiry. And the truth is the truth of existence. We know we exist and we know there is awareness of existence. With a novel that imagines the quest for a 13th and female disciple, how do you respond to people saying you are taking liberties with Christian tradition? Well this is my third book on Christianity and it’s, you know, ultimately a work of fiction. I’m not claiming that this is the way it really is. However, I’ve spoken about Jesus at many churches. But, if you look at, for instance, the Sermon on the Mount, there are a lot of feminine attitudes there: forgiveness, love, nurturing, caring, affection, beauty, intuition. I think the feminine aspects of the gospel have been largely ignored. Tell me more about the malecentered nature of Christianity. Well, yeah, there’s a lot of guilt and retribution embedded in the religion. In

fact, institutional Christianity is basically a monument to guilt. I think that if we look deeply into the teachings of Jesus, it’s much more about love and compassion and forgiveness. But religions are based on control, aren’t they? Sure, but to what end? Wealth and power. Human tendencies toward wealth, power and control. Tell me how your lecture “The Future of Wellbeing” connects to the book The 13th Disciple. There are a lot of different types of wellbeing. I’m talking also about social wellbeing, wellbeing in your career and finances, and in your community. Once you have achieved that kind of holistic wellbeing, there’s still the spiritual hunger that we have. A hunger that asks: What is the meaning of our existence? What is the meaning of death? Is there a higher being or consciousness, and if there is do we have a connection with that? I think unless we address our spiritual yearning, mankind remains incomplete. So that’s the connection between wellbeing and my new book. You have been criticized for your promotion of alternative medicine and holistic healing on the grounds that these notions could possibly derail people with serious illnesses from seeking conventional medical treatment. How do you respond to that?

with scientists about these topics. But what I decided about six months ago is that the best way to counter this type of criticism is not to defend myself or to counter-attack. I’m an MD and I have a practice in California with six other physicians and our courses are approved by the American Medical Association. I lecture at medical schools all the time. Now I am building a library online of all the peer-reviewed articles on holistic healing. Anybody can check it out at ISHARonline.org. But I definitely don’t encourage people to go away from traditional therapy. I only ask people to realize that 80 percent of medical prescriptions are for pain, anxiety, nausea, insomnia and constipation or PANIC. We could save a lot of money by paying attention to things like stress management, meditation, exercising, yoga, healthy emotions and food that is real instead of manufactured. Approach the physical problems as well as the emotional and lifestyle connections … It’s not so radical. That’s all I’m asking people to look at. I don’t think it warrants such criticism, but people have a right. What is your overall goal in all your spiritual and academic efforts? In the biggest sense, my goal is to reach a collective consciousness for a more healthy, happy, sustainable, just and peaceful world. What’s the biggest obstacle to this progress you seek?

The hypnosis of our social Look, right now we are in a very conditioning, which always looks for a interesting time physical solution to every because of all this new problem. So the solution to Deepak Chopra: understanding of what terrorism is to kill a terrorist, The Future of Wellbeing we call neuroplasticity but you can’t kill an idea. $36.50-$100 7:30pm Wed, Apr 8 and epigenetics and the We must understand things Tobin Center for the Performing Arts connection between our like climate change and 100 Auditorium Circle consciousness and our economic and social justice (210) 223-8624 tobincenter.org biology. I’ve written books in much deeper ways.

F E B R UA RY 1 8 | M AY 1 7 , 2 0 1 5

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ARTS

GARY SWEENEY

ARTIST ON ARTIST

Gary Sweeney Interviews Adan Hernandez Adan Hernandez is one of the seminal figures in San Antonio’s Chicano art movement, which began to get attention in the 1970s. His parents were migrant cotton pickers. The family eventually settled in San Antonio, where Hernandez became interested in drawing. It wasn’t until he saw a painting show by Jesse Treviño in 1980 that it occurred to him that he could be a serious artist, and his big break came when film director Taylor Hackford chose 30 of Hernandez’s paintings for his 1993 crime-drama Blood In, Blood Out. In addition to his large body of work that occupies both public and private collections (including Cheech Marin’s definitive Chicano art collection), Hernandez also published the novel Los Vryosos: A Tale from the Varrio and is currently working on an ambitious project to bring a Chicano art museum to San Antonio. What was your first art experience? Was there a moment when you knew you wanted to be an artist? I didn’t know I could be or make a living as an artist until I was 30 years old. I would come home from work and paint the walls with trivial art, and I was evicted a few times for doing this. I didn’t realize my potential until Jesse Treviño had an art show downtown. That’s when my girlfriend (and later my wife) Debi Fischer convinced me to quit my job and focus on being a serious artist. If not for her, I never would have been an artist. How would you describe your work to someone who’s never seen it?

Adan Hernandez and Gary Sweeney in Hernandez’s West Side studio.

Antonio was an incredible experience that I wouldn’t trade for anything. In the ’60s, it was a hard time to make a living. My parents had eight kids, and I worked in the fields every summer just to put food on the table and have clothes for school. In spite of that, we had so much fun and laughed so hard. Chicano culture on the West Side was like barrio theater, with the way we handled hardship with humor and friendship. Were there artists you looked up to?

I would say my artwork is sacred to me and mi gente because it comes from a people who have suffered brutal hardships. That this art has been pummeled to the ground in hopes that it would just go away by a racist regime, which is our institutions. This art stands for something significant in the American experience. Where do you think the state of Chicano art is today? I think Chicano art today is, like most MexicanAmericans, still clawing to exist. There are, however, glimpses of hope here and there. To be a working artist is hard enough, and to be a Chicano artist is highly hopeless. Although there are pockets of collectors who have kept me, and others like me, in the art scene. What was it like growing up as a Latino in San Antonio in the 1960s? Growing up as a Chicano on the West Side of San 24  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

My peers wouldn’t even talk to me. Only after I gained national recognition when the [Metropolitan Museum of Art] bought two of my pieces for their permanent collection, and after my paintings were featured in a movie, did I gain some grudging respect. As far as influential art, I loved Jesse Treviño’s art, which was about my barrio, and César Chávez, whose art I really admired. In Los Angeles, I was influenced by the late Carlos Almaraz ... César Martínez, who has lived next door to me since 1986, has become like a brother to me, and I think his work is incredible. If someone were to ask you about the content behind Chicano art, what would you say? I prefer to call myself a Chicano artist because I come from a time when we were slave labor. My parents and grandparents knew nothing else. It was the Chicano Civil Rights movement that allowed us to realize our dreams. We came out of the fields and into the classroom and

became empowered. Most Mexican-American youths don’t know about our struggle. They think their rights were given to them by a caring America. We are also grateful for white people like Robert and Ethel Kennedy, who came to our struggle. Nobody seems to care about our struggle, even though there was plenty of violence against our leaders. Our rallying cry was, “Adelante con la causa! La gente primero! Y que viva la raza!” What’s your best advice to young artists? My advice to young artists is that if you are not obsessed with art, viewing or creating it, find other ventures. Art demands everything from you if it is to be worth viewing. And if you are that person who is devoted, remember that every age has its great truths, and it is up to artists and authors to reveal them to the world. Why do you think artists and musicians never seem to find appreciation where they live? In 1980, local Chicano artist Jesse Treviño took the city by storm. Never had this town seen such incredible Chicano art. He influenced me greatly, and 10 years later I got a break when my work was discovered by Hollywood, and I was hired to create 30 paintings for Taylor Hackford’s cult classic Blood In, Blood Out. Local actor Jesse Borrego played the Chicano artist in the film. It took Hollywood for my work to be accepted, in a film that crashed cultural barriers internationally. And most of that had to do with my art in the film. Viva Chicano art!


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ARTS

CLUB FOR SMALL MEMBERS AtticRep Revisits Martin Casella’s Raucous Comedy The Irish Curse STEVEN G. KELLMAN

In A Moveable Feast, his memoir of Paris in the ‘20s, Ernest Hemingway recounts how F. Scott Fitzgerald appealed to him for advice: According to Zelda, Fitzgerald’s penis is not large enough to satisfy her or any other woman. Hemingway tries to reassure him by taking him to the Louvre to compare his measurements to those of the museum’s nude statues. According to an ethnic stereotype, men of Irish descent — like Fitzgerald — tend to be poorly endowed. Whether anatomically accurate or not, a belief in “the Irish curse” can deflate a man’s sexual AtticRep’s Rick Frederick in The Irish Curse. performance and devastate his ego. In The Irish Curse, a support group gathers one rainy Wednesday responsible for the set design), who, evening in the basement of a Brooklyn last seen here as Austin in True West, church in order to share and assuage continues to demonstrate remarkable their anguish over anatomical versatility. Challenged to talk about insufficiency. In what is in effect “The himself, jolly Father Kevin, who gets Penis Monologues,” five anxious men flustered when the others become too each tell their stories. In the intimate bawdy or combative, reveals that he, space of the Tobin Center’s Carlos too, has the Irish curse; it is why he Alvarez Studio Theater, AtticRep’s became a priest. “Aren’t you ever angry raucous, funny and disquieting at God?” asks Kiernan. No one blames production of Martin Casella’s 2005 Saint Patrick, who chased the snakes play situates the audience within that — those phallic devils — from Ireland. group, to ponder not only a peculiar Explaining how he manages to physiological problem, but larger be hyperactive sexually despite his questions about the relationship “Irish” handicap, Stephen Fitzgerald between anatomy and destiny as well (Tyler Keyes), a belligerent gay cop, as sexuality and love. nevertheless concedes: “Some days AtticRep first produced The Irish I’d sell my soul for seven inches.” Curse in May, 2011, and this revival Weeping openly over the fact that enlists two new actors — Alejandro his beloved wife abandoned him for Cardona as Rick Baldwin, a 22-yeara well-hung stud, Joseph Flaherty old Irish-American who masks his (Lawrence Coop), a genteel, middlephysical deficiency by stuffing a sock aged lawyer, likens his own penis to a in his pants and affecting lechery, bottle cap. He riffs wildly, and wisely, and Sam Mendelbaum as Kieran on penis envy as the Riley, an actual Irish source of global conflict. immigrant who wanders The Irish Curse The five actors in this in out of the rain with a $18-$28 production seem as woeful tale that outdoes 8pm Wed-Sat, 2:30pm Sun comfortable in their roles them all. Convening Carlos Alvarez Studio Theater Tobin Center for the Performing Arts as their characters are the proceedings is 100 Auditorium Circle awkward in their bodies. Father Kevin Shaunessy, (210) 223-8624 The Irish Curse is a played with panache atticrep.org Through Apr 5 blessing in these guys. by Rick Frederick (also

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 27


SCREENS

BROKEN RECORD Can Al Pacino Actually Avoid Playing Al Pacino In Danny Collins? DANIEL BARNES

It feels as though Al Pacino has been “doing Al Pacino” in movies ever since he won the Oscar for 1992’s Scent of a Woman, where he played the blind, brash, brazenly offensive Lieutenant Colonel Frank Slade. It was a terrible film then and it’s almost hilariously unwatchable today, yet people were inexplicably charmed by Pacino’s onenote bellowing, and it raised him to a new level of popularity. Despite the fact that one-note screaming lessons came to dominate his work, Pacino’s 1990s post-Scent performances in films like Heat, Donnie Brasco and The Insider are a relatively diverse lot. But like his generational equal Robert De Niro, he succumbed to a highly lucrative life of scenery-munching self-parody. It was kind of fun at first, like a reclusive rock star playing a concert full of his greatest hits, but it’s grown progressively depressing, like that same rock star playing that same catalog of greatest hits a quarter century later. In writer-director Dan Fogelman’s scattershot Danny Collins, there is a brief sensation that Pacino will engage in some soul-searching self-commentary on the subject (sorry, Jack and Jill does not count). He plays the title character, a sensitive 1970s folk singer turned creatively bankrupt modern-day pop buffoon, a man who gets more washed up the more successful he becomes. As the film opens, Danny is drowning in the clichés of boomer rock stardom — cocaine, booze, a ridiculously young fiancée, fake tans, wigs and girdles — and his life has become a non-stop greatest hits tour played for an audience of Twizzler-eating seniors. A birthday present from his best friend and tour manager Frank (Christopher Plummer, good in even the most incredulous roles) pulls Danny out of his 28  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

Recipe for success? Or done one too many times? Actor Al Pacino seems stuck in a trend playing, well, Al Pacino. Is Danny Collins any different?

downward spiral of runaway success. It’s a framed 1971 letter written to Danny by John Lennon, stolen and lost for decades, in which Lennon responded to a magazine interview where Danny talked about his fear of commercial success, especially the negative effect it might have on his music. In the letter, Lennon advises Danny that the key is to “stay true to yourself,” which Danny interprets as a call to ditch the mansion and the fiancée to hole up at a New Jersey Hilton, where he intends to reunite with his estranged family and write the One Perfect Song that will fix everything. As soon as it becomes clear that the film is really about the megastar Danny bantering with star-struck hicks and learning how to love again, it sinks like a stone, and we’re right back to Pacino “doing Pacino.” Pacino’s shameless preening results in some enjoyably loose-limbed moments, the best of which he shares with Annette Bening (who plays the hotel manager), but the family scenes are a drag. A teeming mass of quirks, tics and inexplicable behavior, Danny’s family could have

been assembled by a Sundance Film Festival selection committee. There is the dewy-eyed but inwardly tough pregnant mother (Jennifer Garner), the resentful but sensitive father hiding a Big Secret (Bobby Cannavale) and an adorably sass-mouthed moppet named Hope. They come straight out of Juno’s Buyers Club of Little Miss Station Agents, and the contrivances stack up whenever they’re around. The actors all do fine work, but they’re swimming against the tide of Fogelman’s script, which features some sharp dialogue and interesting ideas but never assembles its pieces into a credible whole. Fogelman absolves Danny of any responsibility for the familial estrangement very early, cutting off the film’s limbs in order to make the protagonist more ostensibly likeable. Robbed of any real character stakes, Pacino is left to ham it up for the hotel staff, goof around with his granddaughter and wait for the son to get over his shit. Although the film claims to be “based on a true story a little bit,” the Lennon letter is the only sliver of a semi-fact in Danny Collins. A more accurate

description would be “based on an excuse to cram the film full of John Lennon’s greatest hits (while also slut-shaming the entire greatest hits concept).” Lennon’s music guides and comments on the story, in a fairly predictable but effective fashion — “Whatever Gets You through the Night” plays as Danny marinates in liquor and drugs, and we hear “Beautiful Boy” after one of Danny’s failed attempts to reconcile with his son. Fogelman gets a lot of emotional mileage out of his song licensing budget, but the film’s use of Lennon as a talisman of family values and artistic integrity feels false and ignores many of the facts of Lennon’s life and career. Yet that level of cognitive dissonance is strangely fitting for Danny Collins, a film that builds its star an ideal platform for game-changing introspection – then never allows him to take the stage. Danny Collins (R) Dir. and writ. Dan Fogelman; feat. Al Pacino, Jennifer Garner, Bobby Cannavale, Christopher Plummer, Melissa Benoist Opens April 2 at Santikos Bijou

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Make a donation during April at any Whole Earth Provision Co. store and help support our Texas State Parks. Donations of any amount are gratefully accepted. Donate $20 or more and receive a $5 Texas State Parks Gift Card, good toward fees or purchases at any Texas State Park. For a $50 or more donation, receive both a limited edition Whole Earth branded Buff ® headwear and the $5 gift card. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 29


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30  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

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FOOD SARAH FLOOD-BAUMANN

LATE NIGHT DONE RIGHT Comfort Food At Crossroads Southern Kitchen JESSICA ELIZARRARAS/@JESSELIZARRARAS

It’s late, and you need something to fill your belly after one too many beers. Other than hitting up the same ol’ taco joint or staying home and firing up the stove (or microwave), the post-bar cuisine options in San Anto are limited. This isn’t a knock on the Chacho’s, Las Salsas or Los Robertos that dot the area, and I would be remiss if I didn’t admit to chowing down on Los Regios when the mood strikes, but certain nights call for something different. How does fried pickled okra sound? Or how about a “ridiculous chicken biscuit” that’s not wrapped in bright yellow paper wrappers? Veggie-seekers — wouldn’t a seitan-sausage with red beans and celery relish really hit the spot after a few cocktails? Hungry party-hoppers can head to Crossroads Southern Kitchen inside Faust Tavern and satiate those late-night cravings for actually digestible fare, that’s scratch-made to boot. The kitchen first opened in May, replacing the pizza by-the-slice concept Faust had initially tried getting off the ground. After meeting chef Drew Morros at a popup dinner, Faust owner Danny Delgado offered her the space to work her magic. Morros, a native of Charleston, North Carolina, had been in San Antonio for five years at that point. The 29-year-old fan of homesteading first worked at The Cove under Mike Sohocki, where she took charge of adding vegan and vegetarian menu items such as the vegan burger and Mexican lentil stew, before transitioning into a catering manager role. “They were great about helping develop my skills,” Morros said of owners Lisa and Sam Asvestas, who paid for butchering classes and a weekend hunting trip with Jesse Griffiths of Austin’s Dai Due. She then moved over to Restaurant Gwendolyn, and helped run Sohocki’s farmers market operations and charcuterie prep. Morros (wo)mans the tiny 15-by-10-foot kitchen with childhood friend Roberta Marques, who joined her in San Antonio two years ago. Of the three major menu board changes in the last 10 months, Morros believes her current one is also her strongest offering. By now,

Firrssdt ays T hu_

Looking for something other than tacos for late night grub? How about some Southern comfort food?

the food has amassed a solid following, so favorites have started bubbling up to the surface and staying on top. The fried pickled okra, for one, is an obvious bar snack, but the smoked mozzarella mac ‘n’ cheese isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. The recipes come via Morros, who sees homesteading and Southern eats as going hand-in-hand. Her day-today consists of getting into the kitchen at around 1 p.m. to start making biscuits from scratch. Though sales from food industry insiders and bar-goers make the bulk of her revenue (“we have a window from 1:50 to 2:30 a.m.”), a happy hour crowd of professionals and teachers keep her busy in the evenings. Again, it’s the menu that sets Crossroads apart from the rest. There’s a salad of sweet peas, sugar peas and black-eyed peas on romaine, drizzled with a mint dressing and dotted with crunchy biscuit croutons, added as a way to make eaters feel better about taking down a meatloaf sandwich this winter. Though the salad is textured, light and one of the best this writer has had in the city, diners can’t help but linger on the ridiculous chicken. Served between a homemade bun as a sandwich or over the scratch biscuits and covered with red-eye gravy infused with coffee and

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bourbon, the fried chicken should not be missed. Vegetarians don’t have to miss out on the Southern fare — Morros can relate to their plight. “I’d been a vegetarian for a long time and I worked at places that allowed that, but when I moved to Texas, I figured I should start eating meat,” Morros said. “I think people are just excited to have a vegetarian option,” she continued. “They don’t have to go to a vegetarian restaurant. They can just sit down with their friends and eat.” Though the wait time is often longer than it would be at your local late-night taco joint, Crossroads is worth it. You won’t leave wishing you hadn’t eaten that pulled pork sandwich or masterful mac. Crossroads nights are numbered as Morros and Delgado head to 318 Martinez Street this summer for the opening of Lowcountry, a concept she says will be totally different. “It’s going to be very quiet, Blues-oriented and chilledout,” she said. “It’ll be a much nicer take on our food, where you can go eat some nice chicken livers with a good whiskey.” It’ll be Southern comfort, without reaching for the Jim Beam. flavor@sacurrent.com

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Steven Lee Moya sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 31


7 9 5 9 B R O A D WAY S T | 2 1 0 . 3 2 0 . 2 1 0 0

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226 W Bitters Rd #124 • (210) 545-3354 • saebthainoodlesa.com 32  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


FOOD

RICHARD TEITZ

Traditionally Delicious

$6 Miso Ramen Saturdays 12-4pm

HAPPY HOUR

DRINKS & FOOD FROM: 4-7PM

152 E Pecan St • 210.444.0702

Call for Delivery! BETWEEN 8A-2P | 210.737.8646 Bolanee (left) and borani badenjani at Azro Afghan Cuisine.

LUNCHTIME SNOB

521 E Woodlawn Ave. SA, TX 78212

Azro Afghan Cuisine

RICHARD TEITZ

First things first: This stop was with yogurt for dipping. Offered a déjà vu for me — I reviewed choice between leek and potato filling, Azro (a male name in Arabic, we opted for the leek. A thicker Afghan adapted from the far more common bread was served on the side. girl’s name Azra, meaning virgin) for For main courses we selected the San Antonio Current back in early chicken quorma (lamb quorma is also 2013, when it had recently opened at on the menu) and the kabab-e-kofta. this location as a Moroccan restaurant. Several kebabs — chicken, lamb and The décor is largely unchanged since beef — are on the menu. There are it reopened under new ownership last also a few vegetarian entrees. All main summer as an Afghan eatery. A lowcourses include basmati rice (white or padded platform for those who like to eat brown) and a salad. The quorma (more on a partial lean has been added to the commonly korma) was mildly spiced in table seating for about 50. A tiny patio is a tomato sauce with hints of coriander available with a view of the parking lot for and cumin. Our orders were mixed up those wishing to dine al fresco. with the rice, and our request for an Lunch on a recent weekday at noon extra plate to facilitate sharing was was pleasantly unhurried, with a number ignored, but it was really quite tasty of women with hijabs (head coverings) and filling. and their preschoolers at large tables, The kebab — lean ground beef formed a Saudi couple in military camouflage into small strips, seasoned with garlic, and a quartet of older women dining coriander and cumin and lightly braised together. We seated ourselves at — was the star of the show. a vacant table for four and were Playing a much smaller, and not immediately greeted by the owner and so satisfactory role, was the salad: a asked our beverage choices (if you’re small bowl of iceberg lettuce, a single looking for alcohol to wash down the cherry tomato, a few carrot peels, with food, you’re out of luck). a light oil dressing. Not much to talk For appetizers, we ordered borani about, indeed. badenjani, small eggplant slices We split and both enjoyed a rich, thick sautéed in a tomato and meat sauce rice pudding dessert, shir-berenj, with with a taste of garlic and mint and a sprinkle of cardamom on top. Prices drizzled with a thin, homemade yogurt are a tad high for lunch ($46 for two sauce. Eggplant is ubiquitous in Middle including tax and tip) — Azro charges the Eastern and Mediterranean dishes, same for lunch and dinner. However, but this was mild and the flavor had if you want to try a well-prepared meal a subtlety not found in that moves outside San Greece and Turkey. Our Antonio’s steady staple of Azro Afghan Cuisine other starter was bolanee Mediterranean restaurants, 2211 N.W. Military Hwy., Suite 131 (or bolani), a very thinAzro is an inviting place (210) 342-0011 crusted flatbread stuffed, for a leisurely lunch in 11am-3pm and 5-9 Tue-Sun; 11am-10:30pm Fri-Sat lightly fried and served Castle Hills.

210.829.7345 | 1146 Austin Highway San Antonio, TX 78209 | TongsThai.com

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offer ends 4/8/15

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 33


34  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


FOOD

CULINARY CALENDAR

7 Ways To Get Your Drink/Grub On This Week JESSICA ELIZARRARAS/@JESSELIZARRARAS

Thursday, April 2: Francophiles will get to enjoy “A Night in France” inside Speisen European Cuisine with French eats, wine and culture. Austin-based chanteuse Julie Slim will sing tunes alone with pianist Shawn Ellison. No cover, 7-10pm, 7115 Blanco Road, Suite 110, (210) 541-8911, speisens.com. Saturday, April 4: Learn how to spice up your palate using aromatic blends. The Central Market Cooking School hosts this “Spice Trail” handson class where you’ll make bruschetta Got what it takes to compete at Beardcon? with Spanish chorizo, shrimp, tomato and spicy harissa; roasted carrot soup with Egyptian Dukkah and yogurt; crispy berbere (a spicy Ethiopian blend) chicken with lentils; and ras el hanout, spiced popcorn with chocolate. $60, 11am-1:30pm, 4821 Broadway, (210) 368-8617, centralmarket.com. Saturday, April 4: The tasting room at Ranger Creek Brewing and Distilling is open for all to purchase beer and whiskey brewed right here in San Antonio. Try their take on the Moscow Mule or their frozen margarita, which combines a few secret ingredients with the distillery’s .36 white whiskey. No cover, prices vary, 5-9pm, 4834 Whirlwind Drive, (210) 775-2099, drinkrangercreek.com. Saturday, April 4: If you’re into beards or just a fan of the fuzzy follicles, you’ll want to stop by 502 Bar as they host the fourth annual Alamo Beard Club Beardcon. This year’s comic con theme facial hair competition will feature 10 unique categories including full beard over six inches, full beard under six inches, full beard with styled ’stache, partial beard, best groomed, natural mustache, styled mustache, military mustache, ladies creative beard and freestyle beard. $5 for spectators, $15 to compete, 7pm-2am, 502 Embassy Oaks, (210) 257-8125, facebook.com/alamobeard.club.1. Sunday, April 5: It’s time for veggies to take the spotlight. San Anto’s first-ever chili cook-off will be held inside the Movement Library on Easter Sunday. Stop in and taste offerings from nine chefs including Rebel Mariposa of Rebel Eats Catering, Nadia Casaperalta of Hot Joy and David Arciniega of Amaya’s Tacos & Bakery. $3, 3pm, 1412 E. Commerce St., (210) 299-2666.

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Tuesday, April 7: Fiesta’s almost here! Cornyation’s Court of Cracked Crowns and Tarnished Reputations will unveil its latest King Anchovy — Esquire Tavern owner Chris Hill — at The Friendly Spot. Visit with former anchovies, take in the festivities and enjoy food from El Mirador, Feast, Cured and the Court of Kitchen Queens and Front of the House Divas. $25, 5:30pm, 943 S. Alamo, (210) 224-2337, fiestacornyation.org.

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Tuesday, April 7: Do your chopping skills need work? Are you using the wrong knife? How does one julienne vegetables correctly? Hone your knife skills by learning the fundamentals cuts as well as how to keep your knives sharp and ready to go. $59, 6:30-8:30pm, 15900 La Cantera Pkwy., #19120, (800) 243-0852, surlatable.com. Send food- and booze-related events to flavor@sacurrent.com.

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 35


Rodriguez Butcher Supply Co.

FOOD & KITCHEN EQUIPMENT

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Mention this ad and we’ll take care of the tax! Rodriguez Butcher Supply • a 4 generation tx company 1715 W Commerce St• Mon-Fri 8am-5pm • (210) 223-6131 36  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


FOOD

447 W Hildebrand Ave Suite 15 • SA, TX • 210.320.8300

1032 S. Presa · tacohavensouthtown.com

Time to get brunch-happy at Starfish.

FLAVOR FILE

Feast’s Legal Win, More Easter Menus And A New Brunch In Southtown JESSICA ELIZARRARAS/@JESSELIZARRARAS

San Antonio’s Best Turkish Grill OPEN 11AM-10PM EVERYDAY

Feast isn’t going anywhere any time soon since the eatery’s owner, Andrew Goodman, triumphed with a recent court ruling against landlord entity Santos Holdings. The Southtown staple known for its New American cuisine will remain at its 1024 S. Alamo location at least through July 2018, and has the choice to opt for an additional three years. The end of this yearlong lease battle will help finally get the ball rolling on Goodman’s second Southtown restaurant, which he plans to open inside the Fire Station No. 7, with chef Stefan Bowers as a business partner. The duo is also collaborating on a new restaurant inside the St. Anthony Hotel, which they hope to open within the next three months. Easter menus are still rolling in. Don’t forget to get those reservations in for this Sunday or else you’ll be SOL come brunch-time. This only happens once a year: Cured (306 Pearl Pkwy., Suite 101, 210-314-3929) will open its doors on Easter for a special à la carte menu of French toast with bananas foster and praline bacon, grits and grillades and (probably the only way you can enjoy plenty of family time) table-side mimosas. The kiddos can enjoy a special treat in the “Worms, Dirt & Mud” dessert with chocolate cake crumble, gummy worms and chocolate mousse. The menu for Silo Elevated Cuisine & Bar also looks intriguing. The Alamo Heights (1133 Austin Hwy., 210-824-8686) and 1604 (434 N. Loop 1604 W., 210-483-8989) locations will host a three-course Champagne brunch at $38 per person with several options including choice of lobster bisque, ancho braised pork ragout or signature chicken fried oysters; grilled Texas redfish, eggs Benedict, pan-seared sea scallops or Maine lobster roll as a second course; and choice of vanilla bean cheesecake, dark chocolate truffle mousse or toasted coconut mousse pie for dessert. Stone Werks Big Rock Grille’s three locations will feature a special brunch and drink menu from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Easter Sunday with $2.75 mimosas, sangria and bloody marys. Starfish (709 S. Alamo, 210-375-4423) joined the brunch game two weekends ago. Available Saturdays and Sundays, the brunch is served 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and includes chef Diego Fernandez’s rye and buckwheat waffles with halibut cheek and salmon. The menu also features smoked salmon with a poached egg, green tea hollandaise and a hominy cake along with caramelized bananas and Nutella crepes. flavor@sacurrent.com

8507 McCullough #B13 • 210-399-1645 (LOCATED BEHIND NORTHSTAR MALL)

FRESH PASTRIES, SPIKED COFFEE | 7AM-7PM

FREE COOKIE WITH AD!

LUNCH: 11AM-3PM | DINNER: 7-11PM

HAPPY HOUR: 3-7PM | OPEN: 3PM-2AM

FREE APP WITH FIRST DRINK!

LOCATED AT

100 VILLITA ST sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 37


38  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


NIGHTLIFE

JAIME MONZON

Legit beer selection, big-ass TVs and corporate specials all are a plus at The Watering Hole.

STRAIGHT TO THE POINT Saddling Up At The Watering Hole JESSICA ELIZARRARAS/@JESSELIZARRARAS

Sometimes a bar needs a good makeover that’ll help attract a fun crowd without falling into a rut. I lived down the street from RBar, a tiny cantina that was wedged between a Cambridge Auto Center, a Full Service Auto Parts and a Lone Star Body & Paint, for the better part of a year – but then I moved out and was left wondering what happened to that beer joint. The answer? RBar was turned into The Watering Hole, another not-so-great example of SEO, but a very inclusive bar setting near the Medical Center. The new owners made some obvious upgrades. These are the same folks behind barcade-favorite, Slackers, and The Silver Fox, a Leon Springs roadhouse that caters to all despite its moniker. Though it’s still a hole in the wall, and RBar’s signage continues to command the outdoor façade, the bar’s inside has been tweaked. The clubby bar lights and aesthetics were swapped for rustic wooden touches used throughout the interior and outdoor patio. Long, tall wooden eight-tops are scattered throughout and touches of Slackers are visible in the

lone Beer Ball skee ball lane, Golden Tee Live golf game, two water-filled beer pong table sets and darts. Another Slacker staple, a ridiculously frustrating ring toss game, is also available at The Watering Hole, though as a bar-top game and yes, it’s equally tough. If the games, pool table and two dartboards aren’t enough to keep you entertained, the bar doubles as a Fan of Slackers? Then this game should look familiar. sports fan refuge with a handful of large flat-screens scattered around, further driving its mini-Slackers included Blue Moon (a peachy seasonal), Miller Light, impression. The pièce de résistance is the 40-foot Crispin, Killians, Abita Grapefruit IPA, a few selections projection screen that streams three games at once (they of Leinenkugel, Pedernales’ Lobo Negro and Robert Earl were basketballs deep in March Madness during our Keen’s Honey Pils, Karbach’s Hopadillo, Modelo Especial visits) that sits on the bar’s elevated second portion. and Freetail’s Soul Doubt IPA (though they were out for Just like other area bars that cater to USAA employees the evening). fresh off the clock, The Watering Hole features specials for Bottled and canned selections elevated the beer said professional clientele on Wednesday and Thursday. selection to around 50-ish brews, so hop fans won’t go The insurance claims adjusters and such filled the joint at thirsty any time soon. And a full bar means the beer-averse around 6 p.m. with their loosened ties and business attire, sect can still enjoy their outing. Though I made my way over whilst enjoying $3 wells, probably hoping to wait out the to the bar with only two buds in tow, The Watering Hole is area’s traffic jam. Sadly, San Antonio Current employees spacious enough to accommodate large groups with ease don’t get that discount, but to be fair, The Watering Hole – its homey vibe will keep it from feeling too corporate. prices were far from steep and specials are available Some folks know how to open a bar and keep bar-goers throughout the week. entertained. That’s the case for owners Mike Salinas, Sundays mean free pool and darts with $3.25 “u-callWallace Harding, Jeff Shoemaker and Steve Blames, who it on almost anything” while Tuesdays are pint night. are bringing accessible and laidback joints to San Antonio Thursday means Trivia Night and you can work on your with signature details. For USAA employees and folks from toss during Beer Pong tournaments on Fridays. Service area neighborhoods who are down to party industry folks also get a bit of a break with 20 with fun specials in a clean, lively space, The percent off their tabs. The Watering Hole Watering Hole is a convenient joint that will This being a beer joint and all, The Watering 9809 Fredericksburg soon turn into a favorite. Hole does have a fair selection of brews both (210) 778-9543 flavor@sacurrent.com facebook.com/Thewaterholesa big-brand and local. Draft choices, 20 in total, sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 39


Colao Grupo Vida

SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 2015 • 4 - 11 P.M. Our Lady of the Lake University • Behind library

FREE ADMISSION BAND LINE UP:

Grupo Vida • Colao • Finding Friday Ernie Garibay and Cats Don’t Sleep This event has been made possible through the generous support of these sponsors:

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PROCEEDS DIRECTLY SUPPORT OLLU STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS 40  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


NIGHTLIFE

HAPPY HOUR EVERY DAY FROM 2-8 PM AS WELL AS DAILY SPECIALS SUNDAY-MONDAY!

Daily & Bucket Beer Specials!

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With San Antonio Beer Week over, you may find yourself doing two things: attempting a grapefruit-and-persimmon liver cleanse and arranging your huge haul of brewerybranded glassware. Some of them might be short, bulbous and sitting on a stem; others might be long and lean and flare out at the top. Or they might look like glass-blown copies of a beer can. Having gathered all the glassware like a hoppy Pokemaster, it’s time to figure out what difference their shapes make. Aside from accidents of historical origin and practical application, the chief reasons to differentiate your glassware are the temperature and your nose. Contrary to claims made in Super Bowl beer commercials of yore, beers aren’t best ice-cold — lighter styles are best between the mid-to-high-40s, with some of the heartiest ales ideally coming up to 55 degrees Fahrenheit — and each realm of the beer-making world has developed glassware to keep its drinks right on the mercury. Aside from climate control, there are olfactory concerns to consider. While no one tends to worry over the particular aromatic profile of their favorite lawnmower lager or reliable amber ale (nor should they start doing so), there’s enough at work in the aroma of more boutique styles to warrant decanting into the proper vessel, as one might do for red wine or cognac.

The most iconic glass in America, by far, is the pint glass — the shaker pint glass, to be technical, so named for its other use (agitation for cocktails). It’s hard to botch a pour with these guys, and they’re best suited to brash American styles like Ranger Creek’s Dark Side Of The Hop or Branchline’s Woodcutter’s Rye. The shaker pint finds its European counterpart in the nonic pint. Sporting a little love handle just beneath the lip of the glass — easy to stack and easy to grip in the close quarters of the pub — and makes an ideal vehicle for porters and darker ales, like Freetail’s Local Coffee Stout. As their names imply, pilsner glasses and weisen vases are designed for the Bohemian lagers and wheat ales of central Europe. Tall and tapered, they can handle the ample head and substantial drafts favored in Cologne and Prague — hence Ranger Creek’s branding a pilsner glass for the release of its Love Struck Hefe. Rounding out this abbreviated list are the small, round glasses — tulips and snifters — that deliver the wild lambics and boozy tripels of Belgium. Similar in style to wine glasses, their diminutive serving size opens up their aromas and provides portion control. If you were lucky enough to snag one of Karbach’s snifters last week for their Double Rodeo Clown cask at the Huebner Big Hops, congrats — you’ve got the Charizard of glasses.

4032 Vance Jackson

DISCOUNTS ON EVERYTHING DURING HAPPY HOUR INCLUDING:

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$2.50 WELLS & DOMESTIC BOTTLES JACK, TITO’S, $3.50 JAMESON, SKYY & DEEP EDDY $3.00 SWEET TART & STARF*CKER SHOTS 9726 Datapoint Dr. 210-692-7620

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VISIT HAPPYHOURS.SACURRENT.COM 42  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 43

©2014 A-B, Bud Light® Beer, St. Louis, MO

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MUSIC

LINDA ROMERO

TAKING BACK THE NIGHT Boom Ups The Ante For Music (And Food) On Venerable St. Mary’s Strip MATT STIEB/@MATTHEWSTIEB

Paper Tiger’s new digs feature a papel picado banner. The Spits (right) christened the new club’s mainstage donning Ronald Reagan masks.

JESSICA ELIZARRARAS/@JESSELIZARRARAS

Go ahead and call it a comeback. It remains to be seen how far the resurrection will go, but the venerable St. Mary’s Strip is abuzz with new offerings — going way beyond the standard boozing and bar side flirtation fare. The venue shuttered in December after 18 years in operation as the White Rabbit. It reopened last week as Paper Tiger, a rock ‘n’ roll nightclub with a clear vision of independent music and illustrious speakers. The new venue, donning an orangeand-white façade, is but the latest addition to the historic nightlife area. It’s actually the new crown jewel of a growing and beer-stinking collection of St. Mary’s Strip gems. A revamped Limelight, the AMP Room, a new offering by Hi-Tones’ Danny Delgado called Phantom Room and a medley of local restaurants will open in upcoming months. To call it a revival of the Strip would be an insult to the rad work already at hand on SA’s least touristy nightlife street. But quickly, all at once, San Antonio’s best string of dives is becoming a place where formerly boarded-up joints now have new tenants and parking is a thing of the past. At 2410 North St. Mary’s, Paper Tiger is the epicenter of the return of a vibrant mix of music and food choices on the Strip. “The story is not one of strategy as much as me and Chad deciding to do more,” said Charlie Biedenharn, who runs Empty Stomach restaurant group with Chad Carey. Their portfolio includes haute spots such as Bakery Lorraine, Hot Joy, Barbaro and The Monterey. 44  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

For Paper Tiger, the duo teamed with musician Garrett Capps, Southwest School of Art professor Justin Boyd, booker Ryan Brummettt and Austin’s Transmission Events. “We don’t really sit around and stroke our beards and think about ‘oh this would be a really strategic investment,’” said Carey. “When I opened The Monterey, I did it because I thought the vast majority of dining options were sort of lame and I wanted to do something different and interesting.” Oh yeah, and there’s that thing about boosting the local music scene so people here don’t feel they have to jump on I-35 North for an hour to catch good tunes. “Acquiring the White Rabbit was sort of the same thing where me and Charlie and Justin Boyd were all fans of music, with disparate tastes,” Carey noted. “Our opinion was, we got tired of going to Austin to see the bands we wanted to see.”

Rabbit Gets Stripes It all began in August 2014, when White Rabbit owners Rhonda Moore and Richard Sciaraffa sold the venue to Empty Stomach. “Richard and Ronda had run it for a long time and they were tired,” said Carey. “I had made overtures in the past … in this case, the timing was just right.” Shortly after the announcement, Jennifer Holt of promo company Twin Productions sued the venue, claiming she was owed a 25 percent cut from

the Rabbit’s sale. Incensed that they didn’t hear of the sale until after the fact, Twin Productions and fellow bookers Scoremore Shows bailed on the venue, moving their Rabbit-scheduled gigs to The Korova and Alamo City Music Hall. Sounds like the makings of a nasty and bitter fight, but for now at least, the Paper Tiger seems to have been able to stay above the fray. Despite maintaining the adjective-animal formula for the venue’s name, Carey and Biedenharn are moving towards a mature and more critically hyped schedule of music, away from the teen-core and solid hip-hop of the former venue. To do so, they’ve brought in Austin’s Transmission Entertainment, the purveyors of Fun Fun Fun Fest. “We had never been sure if we could book San Antonio ‘cause we didn’t know what venue to work with, what the market was like or how big the scene was,” said Graham Williams, founder and talent booker for Transmission. “This seemed like a great way to do it. We have people there in San Antonio fully committed to help grow what is happening down there. And we could work with them on that as opposed to being someone from another city trying to do something in a city where we don’t live, which always felt a little egregious to us.” Founded in 2006, Transmission established a name in Austin as one of the smartest booking companies in town, with impeccable planning and giving the world a bold new invention in 2012 — the taco cannon, a Tex-Mex Gatling gun

debuted at Fun Fun Fun. “It’s going to turn everything upside down,” said Ryan Brummettt of DIY bookers Mondo Nation, in charge of Paper Tiger’s smaller tours and local shows. “It’s hard to imagine the impact it will have until we actually see it, but there’s never been a booking company like this in SA.” Already, the spring lineup has a consistency of quality that’s foreign to a venue of its size in SA. Between its opening and May, Paper Tiger will host NYC downtown legends Swans, party rockers Turquoise Jeep, soul strutter Lee Fields and Beefheartian pop star Ariel Pink. Brummettt, along with Justin Boyd and Garrett Capps, will pitch in to book local shows and provide a tastemaker’s ear for choosing larger acts. For fans of Mondo Nation, Brummettt’s mag and show-throwing project, there’s no need to say goodbye. “Mondo Nation will still exist,” said Brummettt. “It’s still based on environment and guerilla style.”

Helpers Or Interlopers? While excited to move forward, Carey and Biedenharn are careful not to step on the paws of the former White Rabbit, an institution of sorts on the Strip. With over 18 years in service, the venue has amassed such cultural weight that, perhaps not surprisingly, has put a bright spotlight on its new owners. They’re already being dubbed as interlopers in


MUSIC

some quarters. “We’re painfully aware of the perception that we’re a bunch of hipster, cultural snob elitist motherfuckers,” said Carey. Painting over the Rabbit’s rough likenesses of Iggy Pop and Frank Zappa, Paper Tiger went with a geometric white and orange pattern, obviously in deference to their animal of choice. To the right of the papel picado cat is the “C/S” brand, graffiti culture shorthand for “Con Safos,” or with respect. As another sign of respect, Paper Tiger made its three-day opening weekend “free as a gesture,” according to Carey. In that late March fest, Iceage, Roky Erickson, The Spits and Ryan Hemsworth hit the main stage, while the recently reopened side stage featured SA acts like Bill Baird, Spokesmodel and Cannibal Bitch. Both stages sound great, with their JBL toys losing no fidelity.

More To Come Elsewhere along the St. Mary’s Strip, exciting new spots for music will be in operation in the next few months. Danny Delgado, of Hi-Tones and Faust fame, is opening up Phantom Room in April in the old Enchilada Warehouse/ Web House/Los Frogs building at 2100 North St. Mary’s. “Phantom Room is looking a little more clubby, with more DJs,” said Delgado. “The inside is old school theater-ish

looking, we’ve knocked down several walls. We’re doing photos of a lot of famous spots here in San Antonio that have been haunted, like the Dancing Devil on the West Side to La Llorona to the Donkey Lady. It has an eerie, old theater feel to it. Everything in there is going to be very old school vintage-y.” Like most actors on the Strip, Delgado is optimistic about the recent investments in the area. “It has a lot of history. For a while it started to diminish,” he said. “The whole Strip is changing in a positive way. This resurgence is going to be good for everybody, including the neighborhood.” New management at the long, shotgun-sprawling venue at 2718 North St. Mary’s will keep the Limelight’s name and neon sign. Deric Wynne, purveyor of 502 Bar on the North Side, plans to add the same speaker system to the Limelight that’s made 502 a destination. After four years north of the airport, Wynne is excited to have a presence closer to downtown. “It seems like people are getting into the city a bit more,” Wynne added. “Actually going out and doing things and participating in this place … San Antonio and Atlanta are the two most passed-over large markets in the whole country. That’s a real bummer. We need to get a touring history with a lot of these groups, get ‘em coming here from the time they’re playing small clubs all the

way up to amphitheaters. We need to establish that continuity. We need cool places that people dig.”

Up, Down And Up Again With all the new spots popping up, comparisons are being made to the Strip’s heyday in the late ’80s and early ’90s, when MTV visited with its Day-Glo spring break show. “There was a lot going on but it was a little more 6th Street-ish,” said musician and Robot Monster co-owner Chris Smart. At the desk of his music gear store on the Strip, Smart recalled the street’s history, when he played in a SA post-punk outfit called Lung Overcoat. “A lot of bars, but mostly cover bands playing or Top 40,” he said. “There was a lot going on, but it was a lot straighter, honestly. There was a lot more people down here. Halloween, they used to close off the street.” As the decibel levels steadily increased, so did tensions with the neighborhood. “The Strip was at an all-time high and it was starting to be a nuisance for the neighbors,” real estate developer Don Thomas recalled. “People were parking deeper into side streets and not well lit, cars were getting broken into, petty crime.” Thomas recalled one evening in the early ’90s as the tipping point that sent the area into decline. Thomas’ friend Trey

Waters and his wife were leaving the building that Candlelight now occupies. As Thomas went across the street, he saw a group of “five to seven” kids surround Waters and hit him and his wife. “Me and the two other guys I was with ran across the street and ended up in the middle of a pretty big fight,” said Thomas. “There was a lot of commotion so it attracted some people, a bartender nearby was trying to help … I remember hearing the sound of a muted fire cracker. It didn’t dawn on me that it was a gun.” The bullet entered Waters’ heart, causing him to bleed out later on the operating table. “It was overnight — people quit going there immediately,” Thomas said. “There was a time when people were scared to come down the Strip, ‘cause it was rough and dangerous,” noted Smart, of Robot Monster. “Which is hard to think of now. I’ve been playing here since the late 80s and it’s always been pretty trashy. It’s nice to see it get a little cleaner.” Far from overdeveloped, without a single chain, the Strip is now at an exciting crossroads. With grooming, it can maintain the image of the Paper Tiger — a little edge, but no real harm, without the bark of gentrification and the bite of violence. CONTINUED ON PAGE 47 ►

LINDA ROMERO

Paper Tiger opening salvo: Iceage’s Elias Ronnenfelt (left) howls over the audience at the club’s free three-day fest while Travis Buffkin of Spokesmodel (and Current contributor) shreds the small room.

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 45


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MUSIC

SARAH FLOOD-BAUMANN

Facebook: TheLostBarAndGrill • 12730 NW Military Hwy 78231 • (210) 437-4873 • Hours: 2pm-2am Pieter Sypesteyn feels right at home living and working in the Tobin Hill neighborhood.

full bar opens at 7am! serving breakfast!

◄ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 45 (ST. MARY’S STRIP)

New Culinary Options Just as the music scene along St. Mary’s is going through a tonal renaissance, so is the neighborhood’s food and nightlife landscape. The momentum picked up in the summer of 2013 as Delgado opened Faust Tavern and Casey Lange and James Moore opened the doors of TBA (formerly Salute), promising serious cocktails, fanciful infusions and upscale snacks within a neighborhood bar. Delgado ditched the pizza-by-the slice-approach — “it might have been too soon” — and used its wee kitchen as an incubator of sorts for Drew Morros of Crossroads Kitchen (read more about Morros and her Southern fare on page 31). “We met Drew during one of her pop-up dinners and figured the kitchen was the perfect place for her to do her thing,” Delgado said. Though Delgado and Morros plan to relocate to Southtown, the eatery has grown quite the following with late-night eaters and food industry members. Delgado and business partner Andrea Vince will stick with the Strip for their next venture, La Botanica, which pairs vegan eats by chef Rebel Mariposa with Vince’s herb-filled cocktails. The restaurant will fill the empty space at 2909 N. St. Mary’s this summer. For Mariposa, a native of San Antonio and longtime Delgado buddy who had concentrated on a vegan catering

business, the decision to jump on board with the new project was not an easy one. But it felt right. “This is why I moved back to San Antonio,” Mariposa said. “I wanted some of the development to be from some of us in different neighborhoods … to keep San Anto in San Antonio.” The eatery will focus on regional fare with a focus on Tex-Mex and New Mexico cuisine, though diners can get a fried green tomato po’boy with their chile relleno. La Botanica will follow Pieter Sypesteyn’s The Cookhouse (720 E. Mistletoe) and Chris Cullum’s Attagirl (119 Kings Court) as new eateries along the Strip. For Sypesteyn, the reason to move into the area was twofold: The Tobin Hill neighborhood reminded him of New Orleans and it was affordable. “We were already invested in the neighborhood and its great feel,” Sypesteyn said of he and wife Susan’s purchase of a home in the area three years ago. The building, constructed in 1931 and the former home of Carmens De La Calle for 14 years, was the perfect size for the restaurant’s concept and their vision of the eatery. Like Mariposa, Sypesteyn also noted the area’s booming growth. “We saw it happening when they expanded the river into the museum and the Pearl,” Sypesteyn said.

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CONTINUED ON PAGE 49 ►

sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 47


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48  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com


MUSIC

JOSH HUSKIN

Look for chef Rebel Mariposa’s new venture, La Botanica, set to open this summer.

◄ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 47 (ST. MARY’S STRIP)

Feeding Off The Pearl For Casey Lange, he’s glad to see some of the Pearl’s momentum expanding into the area he had hoped would turn into a walkable bar and restaurant scene 10 years ago when he opened Limelight. Like Delgado, he stressed community instead of competition. “The new operators are bringing in some great ideas and are exactly what the Strip needs … I believe the shared vision of a number of my fellow operators on the Strip is for St. Mary’s to be a one-stop destination,” Lange said via email. “You only have to park … and then you can walk to see a show, have a delicious dinner, enjoy some great cocktails, play some pool, dance your ass off, watch a Spurs game or whatever you wish to do that night.” Lange’s all-day breakfast concept, Hash, is still in the works — it’s slated to open this summer. Though he was coy about other upcoming projects, Lange shared a bit of chisme: “I can say that in the next few years there are at least two more restaurant and bar projects that I am currently working on

renovating … on St Mary’s and will be a partner in.” Cullum’s Attagirl, first announced in September, is hoping to open its doors in the next few days. The tiny eatery, former home of Willard’s Jamaican BarB-Que, will fire up tabletop fryers and Panini presses to serve small plates of fried chicken and grilled cheese. Keep and eye out on Urbex, the newest project from Rudolfo Martinez of Tapa Tapa Truck and Concrete Jungle, inside the former filling station adjacent to Burger Boy. The tiny space will feature a full-service bar and serve a family-style tasting menu that blends technique with hyper-local foraged ingredients. “St. Mary’s has been hot since the ’80s, and it’s the third-easiest neighborhood to get into that we can still afford,” Martinez said. “It’s the natural choice.” With St. Mary’s encroaching on the Pearl’s collection of apex eateries, the area is quickly becoming a connected, pedestrian-friendly feast. From the heavenly Pearl to the hellaciously cheap Faust, it’s a nightlife destination returning to its prime. sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 49


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Legend Willie Nelson teamed up with fellow pioneer Merle Haggard for a one-of-a-kind show.

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Crashing Legendary Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard Gig D.T. BUFFKIN

After a heap of traffic on the 306, we arrived just in time for Merle Haggard to slowly walk out to his theme, provided by The Strangers. Merle sounds older and rougher than when I last saw him, but he still has unbelievable vocal control and you can hear his falsetto color some of the stuff that his natural register used to be able to bridle and hold. It doesn’t sound bad, just older. He has acclimated his secondary instrument, his voice, to get the most out of it at his age. He growls at times and his higher notes come out as a smoky whisper. I have always subscribed to the gatecrashing credo that if you act like you belong, you do. With this in mind I lowered my head and made my way through the roped off VIP line behind a large iron gate back to where Honeysuckle Rose was idling. It stank like bud. An octogenarian in an ankle-length duster and battered cowboy hat was pulling from a pipe and blowing smoke just a couple of feet away from the on-duty cop corralling folks way from Willie Nelson’s bus. It seems in the presence of Willie, even cops turn into good-humored pussycats. Out comes Merle with wife Theresa and a minute later, Willie. I see

Jim Christie, Merle’s drummer, and ask if he’d like to say anything on the record. We settle down into the green room for him to eat and for me to try to contain my schoolboy giddiness of being backstage surrounded by such total fucking legends. Jim tells me what Scott Joss and later Willie’s harmonica player, Mickey Raphael, echo throughout the evening: these two men are “the end of an era.” When I asked Mickey what he would do if just starting out now as a 20-year old harmonica player — the age he joined The Family — he states, simply: “Learn to weld. It’s the end of an era. Learn to weld.” I didn’t get to see but the last twenty minutes or so of Willie’s set, but I watched it from the stage about thirty feet behind Sister Bobbie’s piano. He sounded great, even spent time with his phrases, relishing their musicality. He looked old as hell, but distinguished. I don’t want to be too sentimental or just gush all over ‘em, but these two men are a gateway to the past. To a time when each city limit they entered greeted them with a custom sign, tailored to and for that community. Despite playing in an amphitheater usually reserved for EDM, these two are still just trying to be true to Jimmie, Django, Ray, Hank, the Playboys, themselves and the music.

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doors 8pm jacksbarsa.frontgatetickets.com sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 51


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MUSIC

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Swans

One of the sweetest rock ‘n’ roll ironies lies with a Mick Jagger quote from a 1975 interview with People: “I’d rather be dead than sing ‘Satisfaction’ when I’m 45.” Since turning 45 in 1988, Jagger has reneged on his words over and over again, making untold bundles of cash through the power of nostalgia. But when Swans returned to flight in 2010, founder Michael Gira promised on the Young God label’s site: “It’s not some dumb-ass nostalgia act.” No irony there. Longing for Swans’ original run in the heavily reminisced No Wave scene of the ’80s has nothing to do with Gira’s current demands. In fact, if he were forced to pull out the old hits (like there were ever any legit Swans “singles”), Gira might just fulfill the G.G. Allin promise of self-sacrifice onstage. Swans is now a collection of highly-talented ascetics, punishing themselves in the search for some art rock truth. With atonal stretches and marathon grooves, the sextet dives into half-hour songs with an intensity most bands can only maintain for three minutes. With Little Annie, of fellow No Wavers Annie Anxiety and the Asexuals. $20, 7pm, Paper Tiger, 2410 N. St. Mary’s, papertiger.queueapp.com Matt Stieb / mstieb@sacurrent.com

Wednesday, April 1

Devil’s Hollow From the hills of West

Texas, Devil’s Hollow pulses with a blues heart, a honky-tonk attitude and imitations of Billy Gibbons’ guitar. Sam’s Burger Joint, 7pm

Midtown Jazz Sound Drummer John

Fernandez, leader of Midtown Jazz Town, returns to Soho for his sixth year of residency at the downtown club. Soho, 10:30pm

Toro Flores & Miguel Garza Guitarists

Toro Flores and Miguel Garza team up for a capable evening in six-string jazz. Urban Taco, 6pm

Thursday, April 2

Baroque Series: Messiah The San

Antonio Symphony takes on Handel’s 1741 Oratorio based on the life of Jesus of Nazareth. Joining conductor Akiko Fujimoto, the Symphony and its Mastersingers are soprano Sherezade Panthaki, alto Kirsten Sollek, tenor Scott Mello and bass Sumner Thompson. Majestic Theatre, 8pm

Bynon Candian producer Richard Beynon

devotes his time to taking hip-hop samples and dropping them into the brotested formula of EDM. The Falls, 8pm

Collective Dreams, Animal Spirit San

Antonio’s Collective Dreams give pure instrumentation the recognition it deserves with proggy post-rock jams. On their self-titled 2013 effort, Fort Worth’s Animal Spirits uses the Texas

garage sound as a launching point into some wild and exciting pop ideas. With Swimming with Bears, Sharpen the Quills. 502 Bar, 9pm

Dawn of the Phoenix On the forthcoming album A World Without You, SA’s Dawn of the Phoenix combines well-trodden new wave with the low synths of James Murphy. With Guild. The Mix, 11pm

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creates frothing metalcore on songs like “Behind the Mask.” With XURL, Noble, Alive & Fighting, Genocide, By Humanity. The Korova, 6pm

Melina San Anto singer Melina weaves the

standards songbook with R&B classics like Etta James’ “At Last.” The Shops at La Cantera, 7:30pm

Sean McConnell, Lucas Jack Moving from Boston to Texas, soft country rocker Sean McConnell has found a strong reception in the Lone Star State On his official debut Before I Forget, piano rocker Lucas Jack observes the sacraments of his 88-key idols, including honky-tonk descending chords and an emotional outlook both anthemic and exposed. But it’s the details that bring the album into a clear and lifelike focus. Jack sings of girls in love with the “tan and risky,” lives half-lived “in and out of conditioned air” and a stalled relationship putting in maintenance sex “once a month with our t-shirts on.” Aztec Theatre, 7pm

The Suite feat. DJ Gibb and Donnie Dee Two of SA’s finest soul and funk jockeys

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sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 53


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deliver a Thursday night soundtrack in original funky drummers. Southtown 101, 10pm

Friday, April 3

Alamo City Soul Club One of San Anto’s

best vinyl nights, this week’s Alamo City Soul Club features Felipe Galvan of Los Skarnales, bringing “pachuco boogies, jump up blues, cumbias” and the usual soul hits of the ACSC. Hi-Tones, 9pm

Bleu Edmonson On his new album The

Future Ain’t What It Used To Be, New Braunfels songwriter Bleu Edmonson adds some touching piano lines to his portraits in country rock. Sam’s Burger Joint, 8pm

Blood on the Dancefloor In the music

nerd bracketology for Worst Band of All Time, emo-electronic outfit Blood on the Dancefloor is a sure number one seed. 210 Kapone’s, 7pm

Bob Schneider For better or worse, Bob

Schneider is the Dave Matthews of South Texas. So if you’re down for DMB, Bob Schneider’s pan-rock should be a treat. If not, avoid New Braunfels like the plague. Gruene Hall, 8pm

Bugs Bunny at the Symphony II The

San Antonio Symphony recreates the magic of a 1959 Chuck Jones cartoon called “Baton Bunny,” in which Bugs flails around onstage, trying to catch a fly and conduct a symphony at the same time. Inspired by this ’59 foolishness, conducter George Daugherty and the Symphony will also take on the soundtracks to classics featuring Daffy Duck Elmer Fudd, Wile E. Coyote and more Bugs favorites, including “What’s Opera, Doc?” “The Rabbit of Seville” and “Rhapsody Rabbit.” Majestic Theatre, 8:30pm

Chasca Austin glam-rocker Chasca

combines glam rock with Jethro Tull flutes on the new EP Bedtime for Bedlamites. 502 Bar, 9pm

D.T. Buffkin, Flower Jesus San Anto

singer D. T. Buffkin continues in the heavy blues and rock ‘n’ roll legacy of Doug Sahm and Augie Meyers, trying the grain of his voice against stomping brush rhythms. On Flower Jesus’ new single “Buddha and Crowley,” singers Torrin Metz and Rob Martinez walk the line between the titular poles of spirituality and the “worlds we live between.” But no words are necessary for the chorus, an excellent “Ah-ah” section that carries the song towards its faded outro. With Happy Campers. Rosella, 9pm

Henry + The Invisibles SA’s own Henry +

the Invisibles continues to turn in nothing

but spectacularly soulful, ridiculously costumed one-man shows. Rebar, 10pm

Islands and Tigers Tour Kickoff On the

strength of their 2014 EP I’m Afraid of My Brain, Islands and Tigers are embarking on a month-long West Coast tour. Their fourth EP effort is an escape from the real world into a land where spring break lasts forever, as Harmony Korine can only hope. The lyrical themes are typical to the surf genre, reflecting on the past and lovebird relationships, and generally longing for “the way things used be.” Sun-soaked and saltwater-drenched, I’m Afraid of My Brain is a love letter to the greatness of surf’s past and its future promise. Despite their relatively young age, the Islands & Tigers kids have successfully tapped into a genre as timeless as sacred memories of family beach vacations. With The Sour Notes, Tides. The Ten Eleven, 8pm

Apr. 3 Texas Jmm Band

Apr. 9 Los Lobos plus Max Baca & Los Texmaniacs

The Texas Jamm Band Beginning as a

jam session for the members of George Strait’s Ace in the Hole band, The Texas Jamm Band has become a stunning country example of what a deft band can do without its leader. Floore’s Country Store, 7pm

Apr. 10 John Wolfe

US Weekly Austin punk quartet US Weekly

is heavily engaged in the punk tradition of un-Googleable band names. On “Leather Daddy,” from the 2015 album Void of Devices, US Weekly pulls a page from the Tobias Fünke book of BDSM with 45 seconds of the line “Daddy was a leather daddy.” With Baby Fangs, Sudden Attack. Paper Tiger, 9pm

Apr.11 Pat Green & Cory Morrow

Saturday, April 4

Bitforce San Anto nerd metal quartet

Bitforce combines a love for virtuosic music with eight-bit tones. With Starfighter Dreams, DJ Mighty Iris. Oak Hills Tavern, 9pm

Apr. 24 & 25 Randy Rogers Band

Holy Wave, Shiva’s Medicine Chest With their 2012 album Knife Hits, Austin’s Holy Wave dropped the best drug reference as an album name since Spacemen 3’s Taking Drugs to Make Music to Take Drugs To. With their followup, 2014’s Relax, Holy Wave returned with a clarity to their psychedelic visions, drenched in reverb but unclouded in their harmonies. Shiva’s Medicine Chest is the solo project of Marc Smith, drummer in Creatura and head-shredder in The Mockingbird Express. Under Shiva, Smith manipulates tape loops and guitar drones to establish long, stunning mantras of psychedelia. With Verisimilitude, Hidden Ritual. K23 Gallery, 9pm

Injuries, Haunter Playing guitar in

May 31 Huey Lewis & The News

14492 Old Bandera Rd

Helotes, TX • 210-695-8827 For tickets: liveatfloores.com

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Austin’s Injuries must be a pitiless thing, destroying skin cells and cuticles with each thrashing track. With Bloodhound, Whitewash. San Anto’s Haunter creates black metal within the time constraints of punk. Paper Tiger, 9pm

Jazmine Sullivan From the soul capitol

of Philadelphia, Jazmine Sullivan first made waves with the 2009, Missy Elliotproduced single “Need U Bad.” “Bad like the food I eat,” sang Sullivan, over Stax organ and dancehall guitar. For 2015’s Reality Show, Sullivan returned on the strength of her magnificent pipes, defying the Atlanta-fication (see the cadence on Kanye’s “All Day”) of contemporary hip-hop and R&B. Aztec Theatre, 7pm

KYLE From Ventura, California, KYLE owes

something to the delivery of Drake’s Take Care, though his clever imagery, like the objectively perfect college-rap hook on “Fruit Snacks,” make him more than a flea market knockoff. Alamo City Music Hall, 8pm

Libera in America South London’s boys

choir, Libera, ranges in age from seven to 16, performing extraordinary works of choral music and crossover pop. Tobin Center, 7:30pm

mewithoutYou, Lonely Horse On

a tour bus fueled by vegetable oil, Philadelphia’s mewithoutYou travels the U.S. in costumes of post-punk, emo and acoustic rock. Stylistically, guitarist Nick Long and drummer Travis Hild of Lonely Horse have settled in to make their minimal instrumentation sound as maximal as possible. Recorded on the illustrious toys of the Sonic Ranch studio, Lonely Horse’s impending My Desert Son extends the band’s rich aesthetic in glorious high fidelity. “… And the Number 3” sounds extraordinary: Hild’s open hi-hat pounding is emotional and crisp, while Long’s guitar-bending solos wheeze like decaying, overworked

machinery. Singing a blues legend of Faustian bargains, Long’s voice pounces proudly over the mix. With Native Lights. The Korova, 7pm

Ready Revolution SA pop-punkers Ready

Revolution sing of teenage love in South Texas on songs like “All I Need” and “Love to Kill a Bomb.” Sam’s Burger Joint, 8pm

Sundary, April 5

Doc Watkins Trio Unlike some jazz

musicians whose claim to a doctorate is just a nickname (looking at you, Dr. Lonnie Smith) and others who have won honorary degrees (congrats, Sonny Rollins!), Brent ‘Doc’ Watkins has a doctorate in music from UT Austin. It’s a degree he’s put to good use, swinging viciously on his piano or Hammond B3 rig. Esquire Tavern, 3pm

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Monday, April 6

Jim Cullum Jazz Band Playing the music of King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet and Bix Beiderbecke, cornetist Jim Cullum is a leader among the growing community of trad jazz players. Tucker’s Kozy Korner, 7-10pm

Johnny P. and the Wiseguys This week

at Sam’s swing night, Johnny Panzarella and the Wiseguys bring the venue back to the Swing era, with happenin’ takes on the crooner songbook. Sam’s Burger Joint, 7pm

Small World Led by drummer Kyle Keener and guitarist Polly Harrison, Small World places world music in the jazz setting. The band features music from the Great American Songbook and bossa nova sung in the original Portuguese. Olmos Pharmacy, 7:30pm

Tuesday, March 24

Crimson Jazz Orchestra Saxophonist

George Briscoe leads his band through the repetoire of Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Buddy Rich and contemporary arrangers. Blue Star Brewery, 8pm

210 Kapone’s 1223 E. Houston, (210) 279-9430, 210kapones.com 502 Bar 502 Embassy Oaks, (210) 257-8125, 502bar. com Alamo City Music Hall 1305 E. Houston, alamocitymusichall.com Aztec Theatre 201 E. Commerce, (210) 760-2196, theaztectheatre.com Blue Star Brewery 1414 S. Alamo, 210) 212-5506, bluestarbrewing.com Esquire Tavern 155 E. Commerce, (210) 222-2521, esquiretavern-sa.com Gruene Hall 1281 Gruene, (830) 606-1281, gruenehall.com Hi-Tones 621 E. Dewey, (210) 573-6220 K23 Gallery 704 Fredericksburg, (210) 776-5635, facebook.com/k23gallery Majestic Theatre 224 E. Houston, (210) 226-5700, majesticempire.com Oak Hills Tavern 7920 Fredericksburg, (210) 614-8855 Olmos Bharmacy 3902 McCullough, (210) 822-1188, olmosrx.com Paper Tiger 2410 N. St. Mary’s, papertiger.queueapp. com Rebar 8134 Broadway, (210) 320-4091, rebarsatx.com Rosella 203 E. Jones Ave, (210) 277-8574, rosellacoffee. com Sam’s Burger Joint 330 E. Grayson, (210) 223-2830, samsburgerjoint.com Soho 214 W. Crockett, (210) 444-1000 Southtown 101 101 Pereida Street, (210) 263-9880 The Falls 226 W. Bitters, (210) 490-5553, thefallsbar.com The Korova 107 E. Martin, (210) 226-5070, thekorova.com The Mix 2423 N. St. Mary’s, (210) 735-1313 The Shops at La Cantera 15900 La Cantera, theshopsatlacantera.com The Ten Eleven 1011 Avenue B, (210) 320-9080, theteneleven.com Tobin Center 100 Auditorium, (210) 223-8624, tobincenter.org Tucker’s Kozy Korner 1338 E. Houston, (210) 320-2192, tuckerskozykorner.com Urban Taco 290 E. Basse, (210) 332-5149, dinedsrg.com Whitewater Amphitheater 11860 FM

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I think my husband is addicted to porn. I find porn in his browser history almost every single day. He says I’m the only one he wants, but I find that hard to believe knowing he watches nonstop porn before fucking me. He also parties every time he goes on a business trip. Needless to say, I also suspect he cheats. He says he would never cheat on me because he “doesn’t need to.” But what does that mean? I think he is a liar. Every time I even try to bring anything up with him, it is flung back in my face because I cheated on him. He has the ultimate trump card. In his eyes, he can do no wrong because it will never be as bad as me having slept with someone else early in our relationship. Anyway, my question is mostly related to porn: Why does he watch it? I feel as though I am not enough. I am 29 and attractive. What should I do? Wife Is Feeling Entirely Yucky You should stop looking at your husband’s browser history. I have no way of knowing exactly what your husband means by “doesn’t need to [cheat],” WIFEY, but here’s the best-case scenario: You’re his only sex partner, he’s totally into you, but like all humans he’s wired to desire a little variety and some novelty. No one is “enough” for anyone, and anyone who tells you otherwise is a liar. Which is not to say that everyone cheats (because not everyone does) or that cheating is okay (because it rarely is), but cheating is common enough that forgiving an isolated infidelity (or two) should be our default setting, not immediately lawyering up and filing for divorce. (And truly forgiving someone for cheating means not flinging it in her face during subsequent disputes.) Back to the best-case scenario: Your husband wants to have sex with other people (and so do you) but he doesn’t (and neither do you). Instead of cheating, WIFEY, your husband scratches that variety itch with porn. He pops into his favorite sites once or twice day, just like millions of other people, but he’s not cheating on you. (Unless you define viewing porn as cheating — in which

case, good luck finding a man who won’t cheat on you.) I would advise you, again, to stop scouring his browser history for evidence of what you already know to be true — your husband is attracted to other people and sometimes looks at porn — and make up your mind to enjoy the effect porn has on your husband, i.e., it revs him up and stokes his desire for you. Now here’s the worst-case scenario: Your husband is cheating on you, perhaps during those business trips, and “doesn’t need to [cheat]” was an insincere blandishment. But absent some other compelling evidence of cheating — incriminating text messages, mysterious credit-card charges, brandnew STIs — you’re just going to have to take him at his word. I have a question about the price of admission. I am a male in an eight-year het relationship. The sex is unquestionably amazing. The thing is, my girlfriend made it clear at the beginning of our relationship that blowjobs were not gonna happen often. She’s done it a few times over the years, but I could see her heart wasn’t really in it. I love going down on her, but she only tolerates it on the way to penetrative sex. She says this is not open for debate, but I would like to talk about why she doesn’t like it. The conversation quickly devolves into: “If you wanted blowjobs, you should’ve picked someone else.” I feel like we’re missing out on something — passionate and mutual oral sex — that could be great. Wanting Into Some Head Pick someone else, WISH, but only if getting oral back in your life is more important to you than having this particular girlfriend in your life. She was up-front about her disinterest in oral sex — maybe she had early and unpleasant/ traumatic experiences with oral, maybe she tried it and doesn’t like it — and just getting her to talk about it is unlikely to result in long sessions of passionate and mutual oral sex. If you can’t see yourself going without oral for the rest of your life, WISH, either get permission from this girlfriend to get oral elsewhere or get yourself a new girlfriend.


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1 Wednesday stuff 4 Rehearsed ahead of time 10 Second addendum to a letter, briefly 13 Siegfried’s colleague 14 Quasi-eco-themed Pauly Shore movie 15 Cry of recognition 16 Rock guitarist’s accessory 17 Deviating off-course 18 “Danny and the Dinosaur” author ___ Hoff 19 Stores owned by the guy who played Frasier’s dad? 22 Like xenon or krypton 23 Landing place 25 In ___ (working in harmony) 26 Just ___ (a little under) 31 Hand-held fare 32 Irish-Caribbean island chain? 34 Blackjack component 37 Ready-to-hug position 38 ___ de la Cite (Notre Dame’s locale) 39 Showy birds at the dance? 41 Creamy cracker spread 42 John Denver Band bassist Dick (anagram of SINKS) 43 Laments loudly 47 Carpentry tools 49 Ab-developing exercise

50 Make a circular trip starting between California and Nevada? 56 Columnist Savage 57 It goes up and down while you eat 58 Stare at 59 L squared, in Roman numerals 60 High flier 61 Raymond’s nickname on “The Blacklist” 62 Big boss 63 “Capote” costar Catherine 64 ‘60s campus gp.

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21 “Let’s Roll” jazz singer James 24 Throw out, as a question 26 Ogre in love with Princess Fiona 27 “Masters of the Universe” protagonist 28 Dinosaur in Mario-themed Nintendo games 29 Bassoons’ smaller relatives 30 Goat-legged deities 32 Savion Glover’s specialty 33 Cleveland ___, OH 34 “Dancing Queen” music group 35 Uno, e.g. 36 Actor Hector of “Chicago Hope” and “Monk” 40 Like “haxored” and “pwn’d” 43 “Chandelier” chanteuse 44 They may be significant 45 Encouraged, with “up” 46 Does 80 in a 40, perhaps 48 He’ll tell you there’s no “I” in “TEAM” 49 Part attached at the hip? 51 Well-off person, so to speak 52 Stubbed piggy toe, e.g. 53 “Israel Through My Eyes” author 54 Pledge drive bag 55 ___ about (roughly) 56 Hip-hop’s Run-___


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(800) 216-3885 sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 63


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WE ARE CURRENTLY RECRUITING BOTH HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS AND PATIENTS WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES FOR A CLINICAL STUDY. DIABETIC PATIENTS MAY QUALIFY IF YOU: • Are 18 to 70 years old • Have type 2 diabetes • Have an HbA1c between 7.0% and 10.0% Study participants may be reimbursed for time and travel.

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COMPENSATION FOR TIME & TRAVEL IS AVAILABLE sacurrent.com • April 1-7, 2015 • CURRENT 65


ETC

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY by Rob Brezsny ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19): “Choconiverous” is an English slang word that’s defined as having the tendency, when eating a chocolate Easter Bunny, to bite the head off first. I recommend that you adopt this direct approach in everything you do in the coming weeks. Don’t get bogged down with preliminaries. Don’t get sidetracked by minor details, trivial distractions, or peripheral concerns. It’s your duty to swoop straight into the center of the action. Be clear about what you want and unapologetic about getting it.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20): The American snack cake known as a Twinkie contains 68 percent air. Among its 37 other mostly worthless ingredients are sugar, water, cornstarch, the emulsifier polysorbate 60, the filler sodium stearoyl lactylate, and food coloring. You can’t get a lot of nutritious value by eating it. Now let’s consider the fruit known as the watermelon. It’s 91 percent water and six percent sugar. And yet it also contains a good amount of Vitamin C, lycopene, and antioxidants, all of which are healthy for you. So if you are going to eat a whole lot of nothing, watermelon is a far better nothing than a Twinkie. Let that serve as an apt metaphor for you in the coming week.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20): You may be as close as you have ever gotten to finding the long-lost Holy Grail — or Captain Kidd’s pirate treasure, for that matter, or Marie Antoinette’s jewels, or Tinkerbell’s magical fairy dust, or the smoking-gun evidence that Shakespeare’s plays were written by Francis Bacon. At the very least, I suspect you are ever-so-near to your personal equivalent of those precious goods. Is there anything you can do to increase your chances of actually getting it? Here’s one tip: Visualize in detail how acquiring the prize would inspire you to become even more generous and magnanimous than you already are.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22): People are paying attention to you in new ways. That’s what you wanted, right? You’ve been emanating subliminal signals that convey messages like “Gaze into my eternal eyes” and “Bask in the cozy glow of my crafty empathy.” So now what? Here’s one possibility: Go to the next level. Show the even-more-interesting beauty that you’re hiding below the surface. You may not think you’re ready to offer the gifts you have been “saving for later.” But you always think that. I dare you to reveal more of your deep secret power.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22): Some people believe unquestioningly in the truth and power of astrology. They imagine it’s an exact science that can unfailingly discern character and predict the future. Other people 66  CURRENT • April 1-7, 2015 • sacurrent.com

believe all astrology is nonsense. They think that everyone who uses it is deluded or stupid. I say that both of these groups are wrong. Both have a simplistic, uninformed perspective. The more correct view is that some astrology is nonsense and some is a potent psychological tool. Some of it’s based on superstition and some is rooted in a robust mythopoetic understanding of archetypes. I encourage you to employ a similar appreciation for paradox as you evaluate a certain influence that is currently making a big splash in your life. In one sense, this influence is like snake oil, and you should be skeptical about it. But in another sense it’s good medicine that can truly heal.

1830) wrote hundreds of poems. Among his most famous was “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” which is also known as “Daffodils.” The poem sprung from him after a walk he took with his sister around Lake Ullswater in the English Lake District. There they were delighted to find a long, thick belt of daffodils growing close to the water. In his poem, Wordsworth praises the “ten thousand” flowers that were “Continuous as the stars that shine / And twinkle on the milky way.” If you are ever going to have your own version of a daffodil explosion that inspires a burst of creativity, Sagittarius, it will come in the coming weeks.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22):

Your subconscious desires and your conscious desires seem to be at odds. What you say you want is not in precise alignment with what your deep self wants. That’s why I’m worried that “Don’t! Stop!” might be close to morphing into “Don’t stop!” — or vice versa. It’s all pretty confusing. Who’s in charge here? Your false self or your true self? Your wounded, conditioned, habitbound personality or your wise, eternal, ever-growing soul? I’d say it’s a good time to retreat into your sanctuary and get back in touch with your primal purpose.

According to the Biblical stories, Peter was Christ’s closest disciple, but acted like a traitor when trouble came. After Christ was arrested, in the hours before the trial, Peter denied knowing his cherished teacher three different times. His fear trumped his love, leading him to violate his sacred commitment. Is there anything remotely comparable to that scenario developing in your own sphere, Virgo? If you recognize any tendencies in yourself to shrink from your devotion or violate your highest principles, I urge you to root them out. Be brave. Stay strong and true in your duty to a person or place or cause that you love.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19):

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18): Sometimes you’re cool, but other times you’re hot. You veer from acting aloof and distracted to being friendly and attentive. You careen from bouts of laziness to bursts of disciplined efficiency. It seems that you’re always either building bridges or burning them, and on occasion you are building and burning them at the same time. In short, Aquarius, you are a master of vacillation and a slippery lover of the in-between. When you’re not completely offtarget and out of touch, you’ve got a knack for wild-guessing the future and seeing through the false appearances that everyone else regards as the gospel truth. I, for one, am thoroughly entertained!

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20): How can you ripen the initiatives you have set in motion in recent weeks? Of the good new trends you have launched, which can you now install as permanent enhancements in your daily rhythm? Is there anything you might do to cash in on the quantum leaps that have occurred, maybe even figure out a way to make money from them? It’s time for you to shift from being lyrically dreamy to fiercely practical. You’re ready to convert lucky breaks into enduring opportunities.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22): Marketing experts say consumers need persistent prodding before they will open their minds to possibilities that are outside their entrenched habits. The average person has to be exposed to a new product at least eight times before it fully registers on his or her awareness. Remember this rule of thumb as you seek attention and support for your brainstorms. Make use of the art of repetition. Not just any old boring, tedious kind of repetition, though. You’ve got to be as sincere and fresh about presenting your goodies the eighth time as you were the first.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21): In Cole Porter’s song “I Get a Kick Out of You,” he testifies that he gets no kick from champagne. In fact, “Mere alcohol doesn’t thrill me at all,” he sings. The same is true about cocaine. “I’m sure that if I took even one sniff that would bore me terrifically, too,” Porter declares. With this as your nudge, Scorpio, and in accordance with the astrological omens, I encourage you to identify the titillations that no longer provide you with the pleasurable jolt they once did. Acknowledge the joys that have grown stale and the adventures whose rewards have waned. It’s time for you to go in search of a new array of provocative fun and games.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21): The English writer William Wordsworth (1770-

THIS MODERN WORLD by Tom Tomorrow


A Comedy About Guys With a Tiny Problem By Martin Casella Directed by Seth Larson and Roberto PrestigiacomoÂ

A Comedy About Guys With a Tiny Problem By Martin Casella Directed by Seth Larson and Roberto PrestigiacomoÂ

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