Portland Phoenix 04/18/14

Page 1

april 18 - 24, 2014 | portland’s news + arts + entertainment authority | Free art

Mansion crashers not so prim anD proper anymore

_by mariah Bergeron p 14

Happy 420!

fertile ground

Pro-pot sentiment keeps growing in Maine _by Deirdre Fulton | p 8

local music

record store day

Celebrate with Standard Issue | p 18

victory at usm

!

Layoffs reversed | p 4


PoRTLANd.THEPHoENIX.CoM | THE PoRTLANd PHoENIX | APRIL 18, 2014 3

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p 18 ELTON JOHN / KANYE WEST / JACK WHITE / LIONEL RICHIE VAMPIRE WEEKEND / THE AVETT BROTHERS / PHOENIX / SKRILLEX ARCTIC MONKEYS / FRANK OCEAN / THE FLAMING LIPS / NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS / KASKADE / WIZ KHALIFA / DAMON ALBARN NEUTRAL MILK HOTEL / SUPERJAMS: SUPERJAM WITH SKRILLEX & FRIENDS SUPERJAM "?" / THE BLUEGRASS SITUATION SUPERJAM HOSTED BY ED HELMS DISCLOSURE / CUT COPY / THE HEAD AND THE HEART / ZEDD / MS. LAURYN HILL FUNKIEST DANCER / CHROMEO / BROKEN BELLS / TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND JAMES BLAKE / BOBBY WOMACK / UMPHREY'S MCGEE / ICE CUBE / BEN HOWARD SLIGHTLY STOOPID / FITZ AND THE TANTRUMS / CAKE / JANELLE MONÀE GROUPLOVE / AMOS LEE / CHVRCHES / CAGE THE ELEPHANT / DIE ANTWOORD DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS / ANDREW BIRD & THE HANDS OF GLORY / MASTODON CAPITAL CITIES / JAKE BUGG / CHANCE THE RAPPER / DR. DOG / YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND / JOHN BUTLER TRIO / LITTLE DRAGON / CITY AND COLOUR THE GLITCH MOB / THE NAKED AND FAMOUS / PHOSPHORESCENT / WASHED OUT DANNY BROWN / WARPAINT / SAM SMITH / A$AP FERG / DARKSIDE SEASICK STEVE / SHOVELS & ROPE / LUCERO / REAL ESTATE / CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS / THE WOOD BROTHERS / THE MASTER MUSICIANS OF JAJOUKA LED BY BACHIR ATTAR, WITH SPECIAL GUESTS BILLY MARTIN, MARC RIBOT, DJ LOGIC AND SHAHZAD ISMAILY / PUSHA T / MESHUGGAH / POLIÇA DAKHABRAKHA / GOAT / ZZ WARD / SEUN KUTI & EGYPT 80 / BLACKBERRY SMOKE MS MR / FIRST AID KIT / RUDIMENTAL / A TRIBE CALLED RED / OMAR SOULEYMAN THE BOUNCING SOULS / GREENSKY BLUEGRASS / TY SEGALL / SARAH JAROSZ VINTAGE TROUBLE / OKKERVIL RIVER / WHITE DENIM / JONATHAN WILSON J. RODDY WALSTON & THE BUSINESS / ROBERT DELONG / CLOUD NOTHINGS TYPHOON / THAO & THE GET DOWN STAY DOWN / VALERIE JUNE / KING KHAN & THE SHRINES / CHERUB / BANKS / BREAK SCIENCE / THE BLACK LILLIES THE LONE BELLOW / CAVEMAN / BIG SAM'S FUNKY NATION / JON BATISTE AND STAY HUMAN / LA SANTA CECILIA / CLASSIXX / ALLAH-LAS / CASS MCCOMBS VANCE JOY / HAERTS / THOSE DARLINS / DEAFHEAVEN / LAKE STREET DIVE ST. PAUL & THE BROKEN BONES / THE WILD FEATHERS / THE PREATURES AM & SHAWN LEE / ANIMALS AS LEADERS / ÁSGEIR / THE BLACK CADILLACS BLANK RANGE / THE BOTS / BRONZE RADIO RETURN / CAYUCAS / DESERT NOISES DIARRHEA PLANET / DONALD CUMMING / THE DUNWELLS / ELEL / EMPIRES FLY GOLDEN EAGLE / THE FUTURES LEAGUE / THE GRISWOLDS / HIGH AND MIGHTY BRASS BAND / HUNTER HUNTED / JAMESTOWN REVIVAL / JEREMY MESSERSMITH JOHN & JACOB / KANSAS BIBLE COMPANY / KEVIN DEVINE / KINS / LILY & THE PARLOUR TRICKS / THE LONELY BISCUITS / MONSTER TRUCK / THE ORWELLS PARADE OF LIGHTS / ROADKILL GHOST CHOIR / ROYAL CANOE / THE SAINT JOHNS SAM HUNT / SKINNY LISTER / SPEEDY ORTIZ / STREETS OF LAREDO SYD ARTHUR / THE UNLIKELY CANDIDATES / WILD CHILD / WILLY MASON

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4 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

with

Venue Watch

Michael James sent back to prison

So long, Slainte

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James a psychopath, saying he had threatened to kill him. Psychologist Arthur DiRocco said James was a master of “coercive behavior and control,” adding, “He has trained the staff very well.” James’s attorney, Harold Hainke, dryly observed: “You’d think the staff would be more successful in running [the hospital] than the patients.” In his decision, Marden relied on the law defining the insanity defense. James’s mental condition now, he said, shows he “does have substantial capacity to appreciate [the] wrongfulness” of his conduct. A guard quickly put handcuffs on a forlorn-looking James and led him away. He may be held in the prison’s new Intensive Mental Health Unit. Hainke expected an appeal. Disclosure: During years of writing about James I befriended him, and I briefly testified on his behalf, describing how Riverview had changed him for the better, but saying he needed a lot more care. I expressed disbelief that he controlled the hospital staff. If he did, I asked, “What kind of staff is that?”

_Lance Tapley

#USmFuture

USM president restores layoffs Critics of the budget cuts at University of Southern Maine celebrated a major victory on Friday, as President Theodora Kalikow announced, rather unexpectedly, during a faculty senate meeting that all 12 planned faculty retrenchments at the USM campus would be restored and “off the table” — at least until the school’s 2014-15 year. The rescindment reverses announcements made last month, but would not presently include the USM programs recommended to be eliminated — American and New England Studies, Geosciences, Recreation and Leisure, and the Arts and Humanities program on the Lewiston-Auburn campus. According to USM spokesperson Bob Caswell, the Recreation and Leisure Studies department will still be folded into the Nursing program, a decision announced on March 27. But while they’re celebrating

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the reversal of the individual cuts, the faculty senate believe there’s still hope to save the other three programs. Caswell says the process for determining their future is “still in effect,” while the Academic Program Review Committee, working with faculty from the departments proposed for elimination, is expected to submit proposals to save the departments to Kalikow by May 5. Then the faculty senate has until May 31 to present a list of financial alternatives to the 12 faculty layoffs that were restored on Friday, before the final decisions are announced by the Board of Trustees at a meeting scheduled for July 21 in Bangor. Caswell said he wasn’t certain whether a draft of a list containing 27 cost-saving strategies, written by the faculty senate and circulated last week, would be different from their official proposal due in more than a month, and expects more

ideas to emerge from a collaborative process between the faculty senate and Kalikow. In the meantime, the #usmfuture coalition of students, faculty, and community members who opposed the austerity measures at USM are relishing the victory. “This reversal was a direct result of students putting pressure on the administration, the Board of Trustees, and the legislature,” said USM English professor Eve Raimon, whose job was not among those slated for elimination. “They are owed all the credit.” Caswell, in part, agrees. “Theo said (on Friday) that they weren’t a great influence; she was really swayed by faculty discussions,” he said. “But I’m sure the student protests had to play some part in her thinking. And I think she was generally pleased to see students out there making their views known.”

_Nick Schroeder

News went out last week via press release that Slainte, the small bar on Preble Street in Portland across from the old Portland Public Market building, would be closing at the end of April. It was no surprise. The gnashing of teeth had already begun online — secrets don’t keep in Portland’s music scene. Why would so many lament a little venue with sightlines that make Fenway Park look wide open? “If we’re talking about actual venues, and not DIY spaces,” says Nick Poulin, frontman for Tall Horse, “I am hard pressed to find another room like it…When we play there, there are people right in front of us and it’s the most exciting thing ever.” Slainte is a place where a band can cut their teeth. There’s an axiom in the music world that it’s not the number of people at a show that defines its success, but rather how packed the place feels. Putting a mere 20 people into Slainte was not only enough to fill the room, but a hell of a lot of fun. “Anyone who wanted to be booked at Slainte could,” Poulin adds. “Some people might have had to prove themselves on a Tuesday or a Wednesday, but they said yes to everyone and I think that’s hugely important.” Owner Ian Farnsworth wanted Slainte be a place for upand-comers or those just starting out. “There are countless bands who got their start here,” he says, “Dead Man’s Clothes, Anna’s Ghost, even Lady Lamb the Beekeeper. The first place Aly Spaltro ever played was here. We just had a show with Mouth Washington and I was thinking how we were the first place he ever played.” So why, after eight years, is Slainte closing? “The landlord decided not to renew my lease,” Farnsworth says. Stephen Goodrich, owner of the building, along with the PowerPlay building across the street and a number of other properties locally, “found tenants who would renovate the space and pay a higher rent,” Farnsworth says. Simply put, Slainte couldn’t match the price. It’s hard not to draw parallels with Ken Bell’s experience at the Big Easy, and a number of local musicians have rallied to the cry of gentrification. It’s true that a new restaurant will be moving into the old Portland Public Market space across the street and that the surrounding neighborhood is rapidly improving. In Slainte’s place will be Arcadia National Bar, a proposed “barcade,” which is (ironically) now in the midst of a $25,000 Kickstarter campaign to raise the funds for that renovation. Maybe in some ways Farnsworth is a victim of his own success. “For the last eight years, I’ve been the only light on the street,” he says. “I’ve been the only place open. But I’ve learned to adjust...and become a destination spot. It’s a place for musicians and artists to hang their work — we’ve done everything, from theater to poetry, to every type of music you can imagine.” Poulin says he used Slainte’s weekly open mic to get over his own stage fright and find the courage to start a band with other musicians who showed up. Dustin Saucier used the open mic similarly, to build up a stage presence and a unique sound that resulted in the Sad Bastards’ excellent recent EP. It’s fair to wonder what will rise up to take the venue’s place. Farnsworth says he’s out of the nightclub biz for at least a little while. In the meantime, Poulin has booked a farewell show worthy of the venue’s storied history. On April 26, starting at 6 pm, Slainte will host Dan Knudsen, Erik Neilson (Rural Ghosts), Lisa/Liza, Dustin Saucier and the Sad Bastards, Worried Well, Tall Horse, GinLab, and ShaShaSha (and maybe some other friends and family — you never know). Oh, and the liquor will be priced to move, too.

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Untreatable?

sent to prison. Agreeing with a daylong parade of psychiatrists and psychologists, the judge decided it was not. James, 31, has nine years still to serve on robbery and assault convictions. In 2006 Marden committed him to Riverview when a Rockland jury found him “not criminally responsible” because of insanity for assaults on prison guards. James had spent years in solitary confinement, which caused him to revert to “almost an animalistic state,” Marden noted at the Augusta hearing. A Maine Supreme Judicial Court decision said James could be returned to prison if the state convinced a judge he was no longer dangerous to himself or others because of his mental illness or “not amenable to treatment.” The state’s witnesses didn’t talk much about dangerousness and admitted that treatment had improved his behavior. But one after another they said Riverview had taken him as far as it could. They described his ongoing head-banging, self-cutting, threats, and “manipulation” of patients and staff. With ill-suppressed emotion, psychiatrist Alexandar Raev called

y a D s ’ r e h t o M

unwelcome at state psychiatric hospital Riverview officials say they can’t do anything else for Michael James.

this Just in The state’s lack of money for mental-health care was the elephant in the courtroom during an April 10 Augusta hearing in which a judge decided Riverview Psychiatric Center patient Michael James should be sent back to the Maine State Prison. (James was the subject of a Phoenix cover story, “Locking up the mentally ill,” on April 4.) Riverview chief psychiatrist Brendan Kirby told Superior Court justice Donald Marden that the institution was looking closely at which patients should be there. The hearing made clear the state’s main mental hospital wanted to rid itself of patients with difficult “personality disorders” such as James. Last year Riverview lost $20 million annually in federal funds because of treatment and safety deficiencies involving aggressive patients, who tend to have personality disorders requiring lengthy psychotherapy. And the state says it needs Riverview beds for countyjail inmates awaiting treatment. The hearing’s topic was whether James’s “antisocial personality disorder” was enough of a mental disease to keep him from being

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6 Month XX, 2014 | the portland phoeniX | portland.thephoeniX.coM

_BY A L D I AM O N

one Cent’s Worth

politics + other Mistakes

_BY zA cK Anch o rS

It’s the money that matters The average Maine voter, defined for purposes of this column as someone closely resembling me, has concluded that the current legislative session has been a disaster. Mostly for Democrats. There’s no question Republicans have had their share of screw-ups. For instance, Governor Paul LePage’s frequent ridiculous comments. The GOP’s outdated stands on women’s issues. LePage, again. Also, a misguided effort to cut revenue sharing to cities and towns, thereby raising property taxes. Oh, and did I mention LePage? Bad as all that’s been, it’s nothing compared to where Democrats have gone wrong. It’s true the Dems have no buffoon-in-chief like LePage to focus negative attention. Their leaders — Senate President Justin Alfond, House Speaker Mark Eves, court jester Troy Jackson — may be inept, but they don’t have the governor’s talent for attracting the spotlight. As a result, the Democrats’ most serious failings have been, in keeping with their leftist leanings, communal efforts. Let’s start with welfare. For months, the donkey party was opposed to any law limiting those on the dole to using public money for stuff like food and medicine. Such a restriction, said the Dems, would be an insult to the integrity of the poverty stricken. Then, after a massive public backlash, Democrats decided a little restricting might be manageable — so long as there were no serious penalties for violators. Or maybe they’d just study the issue. While the LePage administration has documented the use of Maineissued Electronic Benefit Transfer cards in places like Orlando, Florida and Las Vegas, Democratic legislators continue to claim that doesn’t

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_BY D AV ID KIS h

prove abuse. Perhaps not, but in the real world, there are probably not more than a dozen people in the state who believe that. I’m planning to sell each of them a nice oceanfront plot in Lewiston. For once, Mary Mayhew, LePage’s incompetent commissioner of the Department of Health and Human Services, got it right when she told reporters, “Maine taxpayers are outraged with their hard-earned tax dollars being used this way — and they should be.” If Mayhew — who’s seen enough outrage over DHHS’s squandered cash, shredding scandals, and general mismanagement to recognize when voter contempt has reached dangerous levels — can grasp this concept, why can’t the Dems? LePage’s proposal to prohibit welfare money from being used for alcohol, tobacco, bail, gambling, and transactions involving meth resonates with the average person (me, for instance) in ways that the Democrats’ whining about not vilifying the noble poor doesn’t. Someone (probably a horrified campaign consultant) called this to the Dems’ attention, resulting in a sudden “compromise” that would make it look as if Democrats supported reform, without actually accomplishing anything. Then there’s Medicaid expansion, which the Dems have made a do-ordie issue. Let’s set aside the question of whether extending health-care benefits to 60,000 or so semi-impoverished folks by using federal funding is good public policy. Let’s just look at whether the average schlub (hi, it’s me, again) cares one way or the other. My research indicates the aforementioned individual doesn’t really give a damn, because he or she (mostly he, in this case) has his or her own problems. Calls for more Medicaid will not,

as the Dems insist, rally voters to oust hardhearted members of the GOP. In all likelihood, quite the opposite. Finally, there’s state borrowing. The arguments for and against more debt can get complicated, but it boils down to this: Democrats want to spend a lot on bonds, while Republicans want to spend a little. Those with Ds after their names will argue that investing $73 million in economic development (translation: free cash for companies) will create new jobs. They conveniently ignore reports that found no evidence that similar giveaways in the past have boosted employment. The R-affiliated counter that the state should be cautious in taking on more debt, since interest on bonds already eats up a significant chunk of the budget. But even the GOP is willing to support some borrowing because a majority of voters (although, in this particular case, not me) have traditionally approved almost any silly bond issue (financing for meth labs, chartered trips to Disney World for welfare cheats) by significant margins. No reason to alienate those potential supporters over a mere matter of principle. If the GOP goes into this campaign with a clear focus on fiscal issues (note to Republicans: abortion, gun control, and your party’s antiquated views on homosexuality are not — repeat, not — fiscal issues), it stands an excellent chance of retaking control of the state Senate and closing the gap in the House. If it wanders off-message (see “LePage, Paul”), it could just as easily lose ground in both chambers. The average Maine voter is watching. And this time, I don’t mean just me. ^

Your average Maine responses can be emailed to me at aldiamon@herniahill.net.

z a c k.a n c h o r s@ g m a i l .c o m

Clean eleCtions on the line earlier this month, the US Supreme court took the latest in a series of big steps towards empowering the wealthiest americans to spend unlimited money in elections. Before the court’s decision, donors were limited to influencing elections with no more than $123,200 in contributions to candidates, parties, and political committees every two years. now they can spend as much as they like, as long as they spread it out widely enough among different candidates who support their interests. caps on donations to individual candidates remain, but the court ruled the aggregate limits unconstitutional. it’s easy to grasp the implications of Mccutcheon v. Fec, and other recent rulings like the infamous 2010 citizens United decision, if you consider the role of money in the 2012 congressional races. the best-financed candidate won in 91 percent of the 467 races that year and the winning candidates outspent their opponents by roughly 20 to 1. Make no mistake: Money controls the outcome of elections. and when a small number of wealthy donors front the money that determines who controls the levers of government, that’s the definition of oligarchy – not democracy. Maine’s pioneering clean election act proves that another way is possible. Since the law was implemented in 2000, candidates in state elections have had the option of using public funds to run their campaigns. all that’s required is raising a set number of $5 donations to demonstrate significant support. the law’s impact has been dramatic, filling our legislature with lawmakers who can attribute their campaign victories to support from voters rather than from rich donors who paid their bills. roughly 80 percent of Maine’s legislative candidates used the clean election program between 2002 to 2010. these candidates did not need to spend their time courting big-money donations and once elected they were not under pressure to support policies that please the wealthiest of their supporters. advocates of federal campaign finance reform, such as harvard law professor lawrence lessig, often cite Maine’s public financing system as providing one of the best models. lessig, speaking at the University of Southern Maine last month, pointed to polls showing broad national bipartisan support for a clean elections system like ours, and he called for activists on the right and the left to band together against mainstream politicians who benefit from the status quo. if Maine’s clean elections act was applied to federal elections, and thoroughly funded and strengthened, it’s a safe bet that congressional priorities would shift profoundly, with a lot less emphasis on policies that happen to align with the nation’s plutocrats. it might also spell an end to an era in which half of the members of congress are millionaires. there’s one major problem, though, with looking to Maine’s system for solutions: it’s broken. in 2011 the US Supreme court dealt another blow to campaign finance law when it struck down the “matching funds” provisions of state campaign finance laws as unconstitutional; now, when privately-funded candidates raise more money than their clean elections opponents, those opponents cannot receive additional “matching” funds to level the playing field. the loss of matching funds means that public financing no longer offers enough money for many candidates to compete effectively. that’s why participation in the clean elections program fell sharply in 2012. (the Maine legislature passed a law in 2012 that would have addressed the money gap, but the law was never funded.) it’s essential for legislators give another shot at fixing and strengthening Maine’s system, both for purposes of keeping money from corrupting our own system and to provide the rest of the nation a workable model for campaign finance reform. US Senator angus King responded to the Mccutcheon ruling by introducing the real time transparency act of 2014, which would require public disclosure of contributions of $1,000 or more within 48 hours. King deserves credit for pushing for transparency that can help expose corruption. But even complete and instantaneous transparency won’t do much to prevent the rich from using money to control elections. that requires an ambitious overhaul of our campaign finance system and a viable alternative to the out-of-control fundraising horserace. if we can fix our own clean elections system, Maine is well-positioned to lead the nation in that direction. ^

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8 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

fertile ground pro-pot sentiment keeps growing in maine

WITH MURC

_By d eir dre f ul t o n “Our Maine Legislature has been hijacked by pro-dope enthusiasts,” an impassioned commenter wrote on the As Maine Goes online forum earlier this month, “the 126th Maine Legislature has been transformed, unannounced, into the Maine Marijuana Legislature.” Is it true? Have our esteemed elected officials been turned into weed-bots? Let’s take a look. To be sure, Maine’s medical marijuana activists celebrated several victories over the last couple of legislative sessions, and they’re (mostly) looking forward to local and statewide legalization campaigns coming over the next two years. Earlier this month, Governor Paul LePage signed into law a substantive change to Maine’s medical marijuana law: Certified nurse practitioners are now considered “medical providers” able to recommend marijuana for medical use. Advocates say this will increase access and affordability. That bill, created at the request of the Department of Health and Human Services to clarify certain aspects of the state’s medi-mari program,initially contained bans on kief (THC crystals from the cannabis plant), hash, and resins; the original language also would have allowed the DHHS to contract with the Drug Enforcement Agency to inspect caregivers and dispensaries, according to Hillary Lister of Medical Marijuana Caregivers of Maine (MMCM). After a group of moms showed up at the State House to argue against outlawing kief, the final bill struck all references to that substance as well as hash (though advocates expect these issues will return next session). As for the inspection issue, the bill ordered the DHHS to develop a framework for processing and investigating complaints within the medical marijuana program. Those recommendations are due to the Legislature by December 1, 2014. The state House and Senate also passed a bill that would allow hospice and nursing facilities to access medical cannabis; that law was enacted without the governor’s signature on April 5. Last session, the addition of post-traumatic stress disorder as a qualifying condition was an

f

diane russell this state rep from portland is a potlegalization crusader.

important triumph, as was another bill giving caregivers permission to donate excess marijuana to patients in need (previously they were expected to destroy it). “I think the fact that we’ve been a constant presence [in Augusta] for the past three years has really shifted” any perception that marijuana activists are just a bunch of stoners, Lister says. That and the fact that multiple legislators are patients themselves and at least two have family members who are registered caregivers, she adds, declining to give any names. Still, it’s not all smooth sailing. At the end of March, MMCM got a letter from Northeast Bank, informing the organization that its account with the financial institution would be closed as of May 1, 2014. “Your account has been identified as one associated with a medical marijuana business or a medical marijuana caregiver,” the letter reads. “While the medical cultivation and use of marijuana is legal under the laws of the State of Maine, the cultivation, sale, or use of marijuana remains illegal under US federal law.” This came on the heels of a not-particularly-reassuring US Treasury Department memo that attempted to clarify what financial services banks could legally offer marijuana businesses. Continued on p 8

Nurse practicioners are now allowed to recommend pot for medical use.

IELAGO

State pot laws overrule city ordinance

Saturday, April 19th at the Spectacular Events Center, 395 Griffin Rd, Bangor (on the Community Connector bus route).

But do citY police cAre?

pot activists rejoiced last december when an ordinance to legalize up to 2.5 oz. of marijuana in the city of portland passed by a wide margin. Yet those good feelings were harshed almost immediately, as portland police chief michael Sauschuck issued the sobering proviso that police would still observe federal and state laws preempting the ordinance, and which make marijuana possession a prosecutable offense. though no longer a crime, the sale, use, and possession of a small amount of marijuana (less than 2.5 oz) is a civil violation in maine (excepting medically authorized use) and punishable by a $350-1000 fine. But in the four months since the ordinance was passed, in spite of Sauschuck’s rejoinder, there is some indication that the portland police force are enforcing it less than they previously were. on march 11, in a press conference on an act that would allocate more state funds and resources to investigating, prosecuting, and punishing those committing drug crimes, Governor lepage was unequivocal in his stance on marijuana, regurgitating the age-old warning that it was a “gateway drug.” And Stephanie Anderson, cumberland county district Attorney, was even more blunt. “i think (legalizing marijuana) is a huge mistake; i’m gonna shout it from the rooftops,” she said. “And i’m going to do everything i can to make sure that the experience in portland isn’t repeated,” possibly alluding to pot-activists’ rumored efforts to legalize the drug on a statewide level in 2016. Anderson went on to issue warnings about marijuana’s adverse effects on lung health and, nebulously, “our children,” at one point referencing a 2012 study funded by the national institute on drug Abuse which claimed that prolonged marijuana use decreased iQ by 10 points (the study, popular with weed prohibitionists, has also been heavily challenged by researchers such as the Frisch center for economic research in oslo, which contends that the drop in question is too strongly correlated with socioeconomic factors to be conclusive). But as her admonishments concluded, she mentioned a “positive” outcome to the city ordinance — specifically that the dA’s office had been seeing “a reduced caseload (in charges of marijuana possessions) since december.” According to an office spokesperson, the cumberland county district Attorney’s office had “only logged in 14 charges for civil possession of marijuana” since the ordinance went into effect, a figure which does not include the number of cases settled on or before the arraignment date. that doesn’t give us an accurate reflection of the total number of tickets (the portland police department did not respond to multiple attempts on monday and tuesday to learn the total number of summonses on civil possession of marijuana issued during that time), but it does seem to indicate that marijuana possession is a relatively low law enforcement priority. “the portland ordinance has had no impact on our handling of those civil offenses,” Anderson told the Phoenix in an email. that appears true on the prosecutor’s level. But in the small window of time since the ordinance passed — and despite Anderson’s public anti-pot stance — there may be growing evidence that portland police officers are putting less energy toward busting casual pot smokers. _nick schroeder

f

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10 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

Everybody vape

“robert stopped smoking weed,” we learn in the Marijuana Valley afterword, “and switched to vaporizing the herb instead and is now a vocal vaporization advocate.” robert’s not alone. described as the “latest health craze” on mashable, vaporization is the process of heating a substance (in this case, marijuana — leaves, flowers, extracts, waxes) to the point where the active ingredients and flavors are released but without reaching the point of combustion, thereby avoiding many harmful byproducts. in addition to being healthier, vaping is also more efficient than smoking, and it works faster than edibles, according to the well-designed website Vape nation (vape-nation.com), which allows you to compare portable and plug-in vaporizers side-by-side. From the award-winning, ergonomically designed Vapexhale cloud evo ($449.99) to the popular, pocketsized Firefly ($269) to cute and rechargeable magic-Flight launch Box (starting at $119to stealthy vape pens ($50+; check out the High TImes “2014 Vape pen Buyer’s Guide” for a definitive run-down), battery- and electricity-run vaporizers are experiencing a boom. USA Today recently reported that High Times had expanded to its largest size ever (152 pages) “to make room for vaporizers ads.” _df

f

Magic-Flight launch Box

Continued from p 8

Picking uP steam

Three Maine cities — Lewiston, South Portland, and York — could see pot-legalization initiatives on their ballots this fall, says David Boyer, Maine’s political director for the national Marijuana Policy Project. “We have the most momentum that we’ve ever had,” he says, and success on a local level (especially in politically enigmatic Lewiston) could bode well for the statewide initiative that’s coming in 2016. It could have come even sooner, had one proposal been successful. Piggybacking off Portland Democratic representative Diane Russell’s February memo to the state Appropriations and Financial Affairs Committee, in which she urged legislators to consider tax revenue from legalized marijuana as a way to help make up the budget shortfall, state senator David Dutremble (D-Arundel) and state representative Corey Wilson (R-Augusta) attempted to link a pot-legalization initiative to LePage’s so-called War on Drugs bill last month. Their amendment would have put the legalization question on next year’s ballot, and made the establishment of new positions “related to the enforcement and prosecution of drug crimes contingent on the availability of sufficient funding received from tax revenues on the sale of marijuana.” While the drug war bill that passed the House last week was a modified version of LePage’s initial proposal (most notably, it adds funding for substance-abuse treatment), it did not include the marijuana-taxation scheme; several legislators said they’d prefer to see that matter discussed as stand-alone legislation. But Boyer believes that Maine is missing out on an opportunity to get ahead of this issue, and to serve as a model for other states. He points to a Pew Research Center poll showing that by a wide margin, the American public views alcohol as more harmful than marijuana to both personal health and society; the same report shows that 54 percent of Americans believe marijuana should be legal. Of course, the legalization debate sparks discord even within the pro-marijuana community, with some caregivers fearing that legalizing recreational use will lead to a big-money takeover of what has been a lovingly developed local industry. We’ll see this aspect

of the discussion come to the forefront as legalization becomes a more legitimate option.

grow sesh

Given all this enthusiasm, it should come as no surprise that this Saturday’s third annual Homegrown Maine event in Bangor, an MMCM-organized trade show and expo, is going to be bigger and better than ever. Scheduled speakers will address the many uses of hemp, local and state legalization efforts, the latest cannabis research, and more. The day-long gathering will also feature music and dance performances, designated vaping and smoking tents outside the facility (for qualified patients), more than 70 exhibitors, and workshops in areas such as seed-saving, cooking with weed, and greenhouse-building. ^

hoMeGrown Maine 2014 | saturday, april 19 from 9 am-6 pm | at spectacular events Center, 395 Griffin rd., Bangor | $10 regular admission; $5 MMCM members | mmcmonline.org

It’s not all peace and love in Marijuana Valley “please get high and listen to my great including the poor hippies “hired” (on promises plan,” Jeff asks his girlfriend, Gayle, early on alone) to help on the farm. the dialogue is realisin Marijuana Valley, a book-length work of nontic and expletive-ridden; the day-to-day stresses fiction narrative by crash Barry that celebrated its are constant. Spoiler alert: copious amounts of launch earlier this month. weed are smoked. Why the clunky descriptor? Because the book presented as one flowing narrative, without is the product of journalism, chapters, this is both a celebraof memory, of creativity. it’s a tion and an exposé of what it true story, for sure, and yet it means to be a pot farmer in reads like a novel. it’s based off maine, where marijuana is one hundreds of hours of interviews of the largest cash crops. or with people who were supermaybe only of what it means to stoned during both the events be these particular pot farmers, themselves and the interviews. because one gets the sense it’s like a version of the truth that perhaps every band of that’s fun to read — but diffigrowers, on every farm, would cult to categorize. be as eccentric, unreliable, and, And what’s Jeff’s plan? like, ridiculous. it’s early 2010 and he wants nothing about the project to take advantage of the comes easy, not installing the recently passed medical marifence nor adjusting to commujuana law. he wants to grow nal living. Jeff fucks shit up reweed — for use and sale as lentlessly, and is just as dogged medicine — and lots of it. he about defending his mistakes wants to get a crew together as he is in making them. this on his farm in the rolling hills of almost aggressive cluelessness Marijuana ‘marijuana Valley’ in Western stands in stark contrast with Valley | by Crash maine, where they’ll all register the methodical approach of Barry | Published by Maine as caregivers and grow primo robert, a professional grower Misadventures | 256 pages ganja, out in the open. “thanks who plays a strong supporting | $18 to the change in the law, the role in Marijuana Valley. Barry market for legal marijuana was clearly relishes the juxtaposition about to explode,” we learn of these men, as evidenced in from Jeff’s perspective. “For once in his life, he this passage, at a music festival: was poised to make money.” “most noticeable was robert. never would’ve What follows is the madcap tale of the grow guessed the dude was a dancer. rooster season, told through the eyes of Jeff, Gayle, and watched, gape-mouthed, as the marijuana several others who bounce through their orbit, farmer leaped, his heels kicked up and back, then

f

dropped low to the floor and flipped onto his back, spinning like an oldschool breakdancer. “then rooster spotted Jeff. in contrast to the fluid crowd around him, Jeff’s dancing was robotic, especially when Crash Barry moving his rabblerouser and writer. arms. With eyes squinted shut, a big grin on his face and his head slowly rolling back and forth, rooster would’ve thought the dude was retarded if he didn’t know otherwise.” rooster himself is a piece of work, of course; he comes aboard with the clothes on his back (shirt, “kilt,” boots, coat), a sleeping bag, a tarp, and some heirloom seeds, plus a seemingly indefatigable energy and a connection with a girl named dawn. rooster rides an interesting arc in Barry’s hands, from sunny and naive to nervous and cocky, but it’s difficult to ever totally lose faith in him, as the reader does with Jeff. Because Jeff, unfortunately, is unredeemable; even before a climactic scene in which he actually endangers human lives, his tunnel-vision borders on unbearable. Adding to the absurdity: the object of his single-mindedness isn’t even the marijuana he’s growing, it’s the girl he wants to sleep

with — his hot new band mate, Ginny. Jeff’s objectification of Ginny aside, most of the female characters in Barry’s book get respectful, almost awe-struck treatment. they are sexy, strong, charged creatures, who — despite their realistic, generous flaws — have their shit much more together than the majority of their male counterparts. (this book doesn’t shy away from sex, either; while the erotic passages are brief, they are also bold.) Still, this is a book about men, and two men in particular: Jeff and robert. By placing these two protagonists side by side, Barry tells us a lot about where his own sympathies lie — with the serious over the frivolous, with the reverential over the raucous. So much for being a notorious raconteur. it is in robert’s scenes that Barry reveals his deep admiration for both the plant itself, and the talent and work ethic required to grow good weed: “his mad scientist-like dedication to soil science research, with occasional forays into plant biology, along with serious geology and government-conspiracy hobbies, all contributed to his ability to grow high-yielding plants of delicious, super-potent reefer.” And in the end, this book is an ode to that “delicious, super-potent reefer” more than anything else; the descriptions of marijuana are as lovingly drawn (if not more so) as any of Barry’s human characters. We come away from Marijuana Valley having read a great story — and probably craving another hit off the bowl. _df

Crash Barry + dave Gutter will celebrate 420 at 4:20 pm on sunday, april 20 at Bull Moose, 151 Middle st., Portland | crashbarry.com


12 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

portlAnd.thephoenix.com | the portlAnd phoenix | April 18, 2014 13

SEE MORE AT STATETHEATREPORTLAND.COM

K E E W a s y a 8d

609 CONGRESS ST. PORTLAND, ME (207) 956-6000 STATETHEATREPORTLAND.COM

gs in n e p p A h e l b A t o n f A round-up o d n o y e b d n A d n A l in port

ON SALE FRIDAY at 10am

JULY 8

a CO rb et t _C Om pil ed by al in

saturday 19 WE LoVE | Weaving together

an original blend of dance styles including Flamenco, B’Inganzo, and West African, tonight’s Bakunda performance at the Portland High School auditorium is a celebration of rhythm, nature, music, and multiculturalism. Featuring local dancers Alicia Yip, Lydia Bakunda, Marita Kennedy-Castro, Bianca Abdalla, and Lindsey Bourassa, the show incorporates poetry and spoken word, West African drumming, and guitar, palmas, and vocals from members of Olas, the beloved acoustic music and dance group. Tickets, available at bakunda.brownpapertickets. com, are $10 in advance or $12 at the door; children are $6. 284 Cumberland Ave., Portland.

WHAT’S THE FREQUEnCY, MIKE? | Ah, that lovely time

f bakunda, at Portland High School, in Portland, on April 19 thursday 17 PIRATE RAP | One of the first

things that pops up when you Google the rap collective Turquoise Jeep is the question “Is Turquoise Jeep serious?” — which turns out to be a fair inquiry after you listen to tracks like “Did I Mention I Like to Dance?” or “Treat Me Like a Pirate.” Personally, I’m going to refrain from making a solid judgment on that one. You can decide for yourself tonight at their show at Empire with local hip hop performer Flannabis. $12. 9:30 pm. 575 Congress St. 207.747.5063. FREAKS, no gEEKS | The feel-good, country-tinged rock sounds of the New Jersey-based

alex bleeker & The Freaks

come to SPACE Gallery tonight. The band’s last album, How Far Away, was described as a mix of the Grateful Dead’s American Beauty and Neil Young’s Old Ways. Co-headlining is the talented psych rock quintet out of Bar Harbor, Coke Weed, who just released their third LP Back to Soft. The psychedelic garage

rock band s.s. CreTins opens. $10. Doors at 8; show at 8:30 pm. 538 Congress St., Portland. 207.828.5600. SoUTHWESTERn SoUL | If your tastes run a bit softer, check out Mexican-American singer-songwriter aleJandro esCovedo, who plays the Tupelo Music Hall in Londonderry, NH tonight with his band The sensiTive boys. Over the years, Escovedo has built a strong following across the country, blending lyrical emotional depth with roots-rock energy. Opening for Escovedo will be fellow Texan musician and singer-songwriter amy Cook. $30. 8 pm. 603.437.5100.

friday 18 PUnK PARTY | Local punk-rock

underground professional noisemakers video nasTies slam on some chords at Mayo Street Arts tonight. Joining them will be the punk pop group margy pepper from Olympia, Washington; the Boston-based anarcho-pop band parasol; and local favorite

of year has come again. I’m not talking about spring; I’m talking about Bull Moose’s annual celebration of music fans and brick-and-mortar record stores: reCord sTore day! This year’s event marks the release of, among many other limited editions, R.E.M.’s Unplugged: The Complete 1991 and 2001 Sessions; celebrated bassist and founding member of R.E.M. mike mills will be signing autographs at the Scarborough location. There will also be free live music by local fa-

vorites like norTh oF nashville (Mill Creek), amy allen (North Windham), and sTandard issue (Mill Creek; see Sam Pfeifle’s review of their new CD on page 18). All day. At participating Bull Moose locations. For more info, check out bullmoosemusic.com. | Hailing from the great city of Wells, Maine’s most famous (and awesome) rapper spose takes the Port City stage tonight, joined by a bunch of party animals who’ll pack the dance floor, including the funk-soul-R&B outfit sly-Chi, fellow Maine emcee Cam groves, old-school duo oCk CousTeau, solo artist shane reis, and lady rapper essenCe. $12-$15. Show starts at 9 pm. Port City Music Hall, 504 Congress St., Portland. 207.956.6000.

sunday 20 BongS oVER BRoADWAY

| After years of working in the Maine marijuana industry, Jonathan Leavitt turned his experiences into “someWhere

maine: The mariJuana musiCal,”

which, as you may have guessed, is a musical about weed. In an interview with the Phoenix this February, Leavitt described the show as a “bluegrass opera” about the “rascals and resisters, visionaries, healers, thieves, prophets, greedy businessmen, heretics, hillbillies, and hill

Fur, whose latest offering was

recently described in Wax Tablet as “hummable, danceable, playalongable basement-pop songs riding a post-irony vibe.” All this for just $7, at 7 pm, at 10 Mayo St., Portland. 207.615.3609. HIDDEn TALEnTS | It’s old news that Maine College of Art produces renowned visual artists. But did you know that the school is home to some pretty talented musicians as well? At the FirsT annual maine

JULY 18

f ayeleT Waldman, at Longfellow Books, in Portland, on April 22 cats” who populate the potfarming world. Local acts TriCky briTChes, skosh, and azzland Family band all contribute tunes. Sounds like a wicked good time. $29. 4:15 pm. 504 Congress St., Portland. 207.956.6000. RELAXED RUSH HoUR | The

KooL KoRA | With seven shows

f big men, at SPACE Gallery, in Portland, on April 21

and profit from African oil fields. The film will be followed by a discussion led by Kathleen Wininger, professor of philosophy at the University of Southern Maine and a frequent visitor to Africa. $8; 7:30 pm; 538 Congress St.

deCompression Chamber musiC

series, now in its sixth season at One Longfellow Square, presents “The Mediterranean Diet” tonight. The series, made up of bite-sized “rush hour” concerts timed to coincide with the end of your work day, is aimed at demonstrating that “classical chamber music is as profound and uplifting today as ever.” The fun and dedicated quartet goes on at 6 pm. $15-20. 181 State St., Portland. 207.761.1757.

monday 21

College oF arT spring musiC FesTival you’ll get the chance to

sample what local art students have in the way of musical talent. On the stage will be Thighs and Friends (contemporary pop classics), bumbling Woohas (acoustic rock & roll with bluespunk undertones), maCheTe (progressive experimental metal), WaCo sparkler (audio & visual meditative stimulus package), born under a bad sign (hardcore/thrash), superorder (instrumental sci-fi metal opera), and ConTrapposTo (electric duo who wowed at last year’s Phoenix BMP awards). $10 suggested donation. 6 pm. 522 Congress St., Portland. 207.775.3052.

ON SALE FRIDAY at 10am

PETER SPARKER & FRIEnDS

over the course of three days, you’ll have ample opportunity to catch the 61sT annual kora Temple shriners CirCus at the newly renovated Civic Center this week. The Kora Shrine Circus has been entertaining children and adults alike in Portland, Lewiston, and August since 1953. The show includes a 2-ring circus with the famous Kora Klowns who will be greeting, taking pictures with, and signing autographs for anyone who asks. $10 adults, $5 kids. Today at 2 & 7 pm. Cumberland County Civic Center, 48 Free St. 207.775.3458 or theciviccenter.com. BLooD AnD oIL | Boasting unprecedented access to “the highpowered world of African oil deals,” big men screens at SPACE Gallery tonight. The film’s story follows oil executives and heavily armed militant gang members as both groups attempt to exploit

tuEsday 22 BAD MoM | Author, essayist, and Twitter star Ayelet Waldman reads tonight from her latest novel, Love and Treasure, historical fiction that explores tragic love and the “unexpected legacies of forgotten crimes.” Waldman is well known for her 2009 nonfiction book: Bad Mother: A Chronicle of Maternal Crimes, Minor Calamities, and Occasional Moments of Grace, an unflinching take on modern motherhood. 7 pm. Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland. 207.772.4045.

WEdnEsday 23 RAIn CHECK | Last month,

we ran interviews with former UMass-Amherst economics professor Richard Wolff and his wife, psychotherapist and journalist Harriet Fraad, in advance of their scheduled talks at the University of Southern Maine (see “Demonizing the Truthtellers,” by Deirdre Fulton, March 14). Those events were postponed due to weather (remember winter?), but they’re back on this week. Tonight at 6:30 pm in the Talbot Lecture Hall of Luther Bonney Auditorium, hear Wolff’s talk: “CapiTalism hiT The Fan, so noW WhaT?” in which he’ll discuss his vision of workerowned enterprises and economic democracy. Tomorrow at noon on

THIS THURSDAY APRIL 17

the seventh floor of the Glickman Library, hear Fraad’s assessment of “The greaT reCession’s

hurriCane sWaTh Through inTimaTe liFe” — her perspectives on

how our social and personal lives have been affected by economic turbulence. These energetic and passionate speakers give socialism a good name. Learn more at usm.maine.edu/eco. SMooTH TUnES | One of the more sought after jazz acts in town, kelly laurenCe & Flash allen will be making the ladies swoon at Gingko Blue tonight. This duo, comprised of a lounge singer and synthesizer wizard, cover a wide array of Sinatra-era classics that everyone knows and loves. 7-10pm. Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St, Portland. 207.541.9190.

APRIL 25

8PM SOLD OUT

thursday 24 CoMEDY FoR SQUARES | Next

week, Comedy on The square is back! Head over to Spire 29 in Gorham to get all warm and giggly inside from the likes of comedians Justin Drew, Bryce Hanson, Erin Cyr, Troy Pennell, and host Brian Brinegar. $5. Spire 29, 29 School St., Gorham. 207.222.2068. PLASTIC STYLE | And the annual blue Wrap proJeCT runWay returns to the University of Southern Maine next week to help Partners for World Health raise funds for shipping medical supplies to Southeast Asia, Syria, and Africa. The fashion show is unique in that each of the participating designers showcases pieces made from recycled blue medical-wrap material that would otherwise end up in a landfill. $50. 6 pm. University of Southern Maine - Portland, Hannaford Hall, 88 Bedford St., Portland.

APRIL 26

10:30PM ON SALE NOW

APR 28

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14 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

WORKSHOPS and LONG TERM PROGRAMS IN FILMMAKING,

Art contemporarY artists sneak mischief into victoria mansion _BY mar iah Ber ger on mushrooms on Voltaire, shrubbery atop OfThe sedimentary layers of snow and fenbach. Pigeons scatter aloft from Goethe’s ice are finally thawing in Portland, rehead in the parlor, as if visitors entering the vealing a sandy excavation of last fall’s burroom startled the resting flock. Schubert ied coins and lost keys. It’s a passive archefares worse, with two turtle doves marring ology, with grateful interruptions from this his forehead with droppings. Richel bases year’s new plant life nudging in. At Victoria these sculptures on his painting series Big Mansion, the city’s Victorian time capsule Wigs. The beautifully crafted sculptures are of upper-class domesticity, restoration and funny and foreboding, serving as a warning conservation beat back the silt of passing that history can decompose if efforts aren’t seasons to maintain an illusion of time frotaken to keep nature at bay. zen. However, in the smartly curated ManLike Mowbray’s sideboard, the intension as Muse: Contemporary Art at Victoria Mansion, tionally out-of-place furnishings of Amy the cutting-edge sprouts up around the anYoes exist to highlight the authentic artique with an invasion of five contemporary ticle. Her four Reflector pieces are art objects artists’ clever site-specific installations. Touring historic buildings generally operating as mansion visitors — wooden suggests the speed of a venerative stroll. contraptions bearing arms of lenses, mirrors, and view-finders to better see hidThe almost prank-like curation of the manden corners and details from behind each sion-wide exhibit drives the pace to the clip room’s velvet rope barrier. The matte wood of a delicious scavenger hunt. Each room surfaces of these hulks look as if pieces of a bears foreign or absurd objects attempting Louise Nevelson reworked themselves into to be absorbed by the house, like strangers a giant robot sextant, waiting patiently to masquerading at a family reunion. That assist with the voyeur’s experience. air of confusion causes a pause, creating Mansion as Muse is a study in mutual the space to linger and question the relaadmiration. Modern art is necessarily reftionship of these implants in the othererential of it’s lauded history, while antiqwise pristine décor. Discovering the rogue uities thought beyond reproach gain new installations is like sharing a tacit, 21stshades of wonder when set against the century wink with the artists. The preserved 19th-century Italianate buzz of a more digital time. What works so brownstone on Danforth Street oozes opuwell here is that the ages are not in competition. It’s a coalescence over contrast. The lence, from the trompe-l’œil ceiling murals alienness of the exhibit blossoms the endown to the brocaded foot stools. The entire space anew. Even more, the Victorians trance is a hush of proper wealth. To the could use a good smirk. ^ right, in the reception room, the quiet is startled by a giant ghost of furniture past in Andrew Mowbray’s glowing white plastic “Mansion as Muse: ConteMporary art Victorian cabinet sideboard. The smooth at ViCtoria Mansion” | through May 21 | whiteness beams supernatural, an electriat the Victoria Mansion, 109 Danforth st, cally lit futuristic playhouse piece, that portland | 207.772.4841 or victoriamansion.org displays on its shelves actual remnants of tassels and filigrees from the mansion’s Mariah Bergeron can be reached at decor trimmings. There’s a sense of a wellmariahbergeron@gmail.com. intentioned mistake of science, a spaceship’s failed camouflage, or simply a charming fraud. Rounding the corner to the dining room, the more legitimate sideboards hold a confusion of confection for dessert. At first blush, Mark Dion and Dana Sherwood’s display of many dozens of glittering gelatin molds look more Tiffany than tasty, with the natural window light illuminating the jewelcolored jellies like cut glass. But move in closer and the molds get morbid, having trapped insects to their sticky surfaces. And these molds will mold — a time-lapse property of Sherwood’s many other decay-based food works. The participating artists themselves were not haphazardly chosen, as their varied concentrations often tackle the subversion or elevation of artifact, display, decay, and archive. Each in effect straddle museum practices; one foot in art, one in natural history. Justin Richel combines two of his strengths, history and humor, in a series of stone-white, plaster-cast parodies of historic men of reverence. ClasGHost oF Furniture past a modern take on sic stoic busts become strange with natan antique sideboard by andrew mowbray. ural festoons: antlers on Verdi, fungal J. DaviD Bohl

f

Symbol of Faith Easter Sunday, April 20th

CROSS PENDANT IN 14KT YELLOW GOLD AND STERLING SILVER $129

PHOTO © CHRISTIAN RANDOLPH

INTENSE. CREATIVE. INSPIRING WEEKEND PROGRAMS 2-DAY ADOBE INDESIGN Peter Koons

This hands-on weekend workshop teaches students to create dynamic, professional layouts of text and imagery for print and digital publishing. APR 24 - APR 25 | $375

2-DAY INTRO TO eBOOKS WITH INDESIGN Peter Koons

This class explores eBook creation with Adobe InDesign which is vying to become “the” hub toolset for composing all forms of eBooks. APR 26 - APR 27 | $375

2-DAY INTRODUCTION TO PHOTOSHOP Matt Smolinsky

2-DAY INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL PRINTING Jim Nickelson

Bring your creative ideas to life with Adobe Photoshop, the professional digital imaging standard, used by photographers and designers who want to perfect their digital images.

Learn techniques essential for generating high quality digital prints by exploring the relationship between Adobe Lightroom and your printer.

APR 26 - APR 27 | $375

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16 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

Illustration by Marty Braun

April 22May 18 Theology and sharp-tongued quips intersect when aging sisters Mary and Margaret find themselves defending their Catholic beliefs to a young evangelist who knocks at their door. Faced with persistent cheerfulness, the two women call in their parish priest for back-up and the debate takes off. Smith’s thoughtprovoking comedy asks how far our cares and creeds will carry us before we start asking questions.

LL.Bean, Maine Home+Design, maine., Mainebiz, Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram

PORTLANDSTAGE Tickets: 774.0465 where great theater lives

www.portlandstage.org

theater The elephanT in The room SnoWlion getS daRk WitH a MuSiCal tRagedY _BY Megan gR u MBling

Vote for the thrift store that creates jobs. Vote for the thrift store that reduces landfills. Vote for the thrift store that puts clothes on your neighbor’s back. Vote for Goodwill - Portland’s Best Thrift Store. Sure, we have lots of great finds at amazingly low prices, but with your support, we’re also creating a healthy, sustainable community where nothing goes to waste. Not a shirt. Not a shoe. Not a person. trapping the ringleader Mr. Bones and the rest of the We Hack Minstrel Show crew employ unnerving physicality in Snowlion Repertory Company’s The Elephant Piece. How will we — that is, humanity — tell the story of how we fucked up everything? Of the air and waters we befouled, the climate we skewed, the species we killed off? Speculative literature is ever more concerned with human-wrought environmental catastrophe (e.g., the sub-genre of “cli-fi”), and another example of such a humanity-incriminating narrative is onstage now in Portland: The Elephant Piece, by Darryl Curry, is a speculative musical fiction about one minstrel show troupe seeking the last elephant on earth. Snowlion Repertory Company presents this riotous circus of a dystopia, with Al D’Andrea directing a stellar ensemble cast in a disorienting, absurdist production that’s sometimes puckish, sometimes horrifying. On a set of low platforms arranged three-ring style, with a festive swath of red, yellow, and purple above, floundering ringmaster Mr. Bones (David Arthur Bachrach) is harangued by the other members of the We Hack Minstrel Show. They are loud, childish, and impatient. They want a story. And they don’t want to hear Mr. Bones’s sweet tales about how an elephant has a heart-shaped brain or an India-shaped ear. Meanwhile, in a second story line, a regular old non-circus middle-aged widower named Paul (Alan Forrest McLucas, with affecting Everyman befuddlement and sorrow) is trying to help his young son deal with his mother’s death by taking him to various amusements. The stories slowly converge as this excellent ensemble, accompanied by Jim Colby’s simple, expressive keyboard, careens through a range of human attitudes toward the last of the elephants. Snowlion’s colorful ensemble includes a punk carney wearing chains (Bartley Mullin), a cheeky vamp in leopard-print (Autumn Pound), and a blue-faced prig in flowing scarves (Kara Haupt), among others (Angelica Phipps, Gabriel Walker, Jim Colby, Janie Downey Maxwell, John Kreutzberger, Margit Ahlin, and Timothy Hartel). In their quirky get-ups — patchwork madras, studded boots, a necklace of silver high-heels — they’re a circus crew that veers readily into Clockwork Orange territory, and they perform some unusual, unnerving vocal play and physical movements. “We

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hack away from day to day,” they belt out, then riff on the line ominously: “Hackahacka-hacka.” They chant the word “meat” fast and low like a racing heartbeat. Their whispers veer suddenly into loud singing punctuated by plastic bats whacking the floor. They ritualistically encircle and then hold back Mr. Bones in an orange net. Such funhouse texture reflects a script that Snowlion developed collaboratively through workshops and exercises, and that was then focused and shaped by Curry. The expressionistic result is both liberatingly playful and devastatingly, sometimes chillingly taut. Over the build of the ensemble’s deceptively game-like songs and sequences — the Hackers create an ideal human in a magic hat; they bid on and then rape a “shapely little country” — the script satirizes anthropocentrism as a sort of kooky fascist imperialism. Think Brecht crossed with Margaret Atwood, with the Paul sequences striking an odd dissonance with their “Back to School Special” earnestness. But make no mistake: this is dark stuff. In fact, the extent of the dark-comedy seems a bit of a departure for Snowlion, whose previous shows — including The Freaks Club, a neat little allegory about a bullied girl with fish-scales — have usually ended in feel-good redemption. In The Elephant Piece, while the characters do come to realize the error of their ways, it’s kind of like Lear with Cordelia by the time they do. We — that is, humanity — can go on to improve ourselves as a race, but for the characters in the show, The Elephant Piece is a musical tragedy. Perhaps most interesting about the virulent humans portrayed in this strange, fascinating show is what they most aggressively demand of Mr. Bones: stories, which they also call “the meat,” and which they only want bloody and lurid. The suggestion seems to be that the people have developed an appetite for the wrong kinds of stories, and that our redemption rests on finding better ones to tell and hear. ^

THE ELEPHANT PIECE | By darryl Curry | directed by al d’andrea; Musical direction by Jim Colby | presented by Snowlion repertory Company, at the portland Stage Studio theater, through april 20 | 207.518.9305 or snowlionrep.org

Goodwill. Work that works for you.

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18 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

if le _b y S a m P fe

portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | apriL 18, 2014 19

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Sam_PfeIfLe

LfCAL MUSIC

There must be an inclination to really powerhouse some of these songs, but the trio are truly reserved.

Listings CLUBS GREATER PORTLAND THURSDAY 17

51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Heather Pierson

Me And My grAndMA

ASYLUM | Portland | “Retro Night,” with DJ King Alberto | 9 pm

BLUE | Portland | Heaven Steppers | 7

Standard iSSue know how to Party

Full disclosure: I hired Standard Issue to play my grandmother’s 80th birthday party. Gram and the gang loved them. So did I. Of course, Jo Stafford’s cut of Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke’s “It Could Happen to You,” which appears on Standard Issue’s brand-new The Very Thought of You, was a top 10 hit in 1944, the year both my grandparents graduated college. I’ll have to ask Gram sometime if that song is more equivalent to “Macarena” or “Ironic,” the 1996 hits that helped me usher out the university years (I had to look that up — I remember nothing of either tune, for a variety of reasons). There’s no question that Rob Schreiber’s Standard Issue play the hits. A classic jazz trio in the Bill Evans mold, piano/bass/ drums, they call to mind smoky, dark bars with candle-lit tables and servers who bring drinks on plastic circular trays. And Standard Issue join the ranks of Sinatra, Miles Davis, Rosemary Clooney, Nat King Cole, and Dave Brubeck in laying down a version of “It Could Happen to You.” (This song is everywhere. Heck, it made the Walking Dead soundtrack.) With no singer, though, and with the barest of arrangements and subtlest of dalliance with melody, the trio don’t necessarily bowl you over with recognizable tunes. You know that hook in “It Could Happen to You.” You could sing it right now. But you don’t ever hear it in the Standard Issue version. Pianist Emmett Harrity is a cagey player. While dominating the overall direction of each song, he remains unpredictable

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FWAX TABLeT

and slippery. His phrasings are playful and bouncy, generally upbeat even in sugary songs, and with a light touch. Nick Merriam picks his spots on the bass, often taking deep breaths and then bounding back in with a flurry of notes. Schreiber seeps in around them like fog, with lots of circling brushes on the snare and a delicate hand on the cymbals. What’s maybe most impressive is how relaxed they are in their efforts. There must be an inclination to really powerhouse some of these songs, but the trio are truly reserved. It’s sort of like no one’s ever in charge of the melody. Each instrument sketches out phrases like stencils you paint through in succession, and they line up to create a picture you couldn’t have predicted from any of the three in isolation. Still, there’s plenty familiar here if you’re a fan, like Gram, of the American Songbook. Diana Krall has a pretty famous version of Brooks’ Bowman’s “East of the Sun,” more sultry than Standard Issue’s take, where Harrity and Merriam elbow each other aside a few times and Schreiber mostly stays out of the way. There aren’t too many listeners who won’t recognize Henry Mancini’s “Moon River,” here elegant and charming, just like Audrey Hepburn in the movie that made it most famous, Breakfast at Tiffany’s. That movie version was full of strings and sappy oboe and clarinet; this take is crisp and full of divergent improvisations. For “Gloria’s Step,” in contrast, they mimic exactly the instrumentation from

WAXtAblet@phX.com

Your wild days have returned

F A whole lot of amazing old BiG Blood albums previously only available on cd-r have been uploaded to bandcamp. the cathartically experimental group sprouted as a two-piece from the waning days of legendary post-rock band cerberus Shoal, and have issued wave after wave of the fearless and mystifying songs that make up their saga, from hypnotic swamp-blues to weird indian folk to rally-round-the-firepit post-punk. newly interested parties will have a lot of ground to cover; we recommend starting with Sew Your Wild Days Tour Vol. 1, which has a legitimate cover of can’s “Vitamin c” and the total stunner “Spit Shine.” the project has been filled out with other personnel in recent years, but these two remain a serious inspiration for those wishing to make vital, life-affirming music

beyond their 20s. originally issued on their own imprint dontruSttheruin, physical copies of most albums seem still available, and come dressed in gorgeous handdesigned covers crafted by colleen Kinsella, a preternaturally talented visual artist. Visit dontrusttheruin.bandcamp.com to hear. F While we’re wandering through these particular woods, we might also note that outsider-folk group (and Big Blood kinspeople) VillaGe of SpaceS announced a new album coming in June. titled Welcome In, it spans three years of collaboration between core players Amy moon and daniel Beckman, who also run the imprint of untamed musick turned Word recordS up in Belfast. the record’s also got guest appearances

pm | Lincoln Allen Trio | 9 pm

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Portland | Dapper Gents | 8 pm EMPIRE | Portland | Flannabis + Tur-

Standard iSSue the piano-bass-drums trio features emmett harrity, nick merriam, and rob Schreiber. the Bill Evans Trio’s landmark live recording of the song on Sunday at the Village Vanguard. Bassist Scott LeFaro wrote it, and he teamed up on that recording with drummer Paul Motian for an insistent, driving rhythm. Standard Issue are quick and joyful, with Merriam at the forefront for the closest thing he has on the album to a true solo and Harrity dancing with the right hand. Recording this song this way is like Spencer Albee last year releasing a version of Gordon Lightfoot’s “Sundown.” It’s not an ironic take, it’s an homage, and you pretty much have to nail it. Standard Issue are as successful as Albee was, which is to say: very. There is only one original here, named simply “Rob’s Peace.” It’s a two-minute solo on the drums, with a foundation built on a pair of cymbal hits. Schreiber gallops

lightly on the toms, building a call and response, before joining hands in double hits and rolling off the splash cymbal in the finish. How many original solo drum compositions have you heard this year? It’s funny to laud a trio for originality in their playing of oldies that most people have heard, but no one’s really recording music like this in Portland and it’s refreshing to hear instrumentalism at this level in phrases that are outside the rock and roots fare. Standard Issue are part of a whisper of jazz renaissance locally. Let’s hope it grows to more of a conversational tone. ^

The Very ThoughT of you | released by rob Schreiber’s Standard issue | with north of nashville | at Bull Moose Mill creek, in South portland | april 19 | www.standardissue.me

Sew Your Wild Days Tour Vol. 1, by big blood

from Big Blood’s caleb mulkerin and Kinsella, plus maine folk explorers/lifelivers Micah Blue SMaldone and aSa ironS. While they’re a little hard to pin, Village of Spaces records generally offer glimpses of the life of the pastoral artist, practicing the delicate task of growing authentic subculture in areas dominated by tourist commerce and mainstream media forces. Formally, they generally play that out in the language of spooky, meditative folk. Visit villageofspaces.bandcamp. com for their early work and turnedword.com to sniff out the whole operation. F Back above sea level, the musician and producer Spencer alBee is the principal architect behind a new web platform for local musicians called Live at

the Studio, Portland, a series fusing the talents of tim tierney (and his staff at the Studio on casco Street), filmmakers no uMBrella Media, and the Freezing process, a podcast airing in-depth, informal discussions about the local music scene between guest musicians and some dudes with opinions. What Brooklyn’s Serious Business on Breakthru radio has done for indie-rock bands (including several of ours), Live at the Studio, Portland aims to do for local pop artists, compiling videos of instudio renditions of songs recorded at the Studio with Grammy-nominated producer Steve drown. Albee’s slated the electronic pop group other BoneS, Sara hallie richardSon, bluegrassfolk group the GhoSt of paul revere, and his own self for the first few episodes. Visit liveatthestudioportland.com to see it unfold.

quoise Jeep | 9:30 pm | $12 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | karaoke with DJ Cougar | 9 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Birdland Jazz Quartet | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Sue Sheriff MAMA’S CROWBAR | Portland | bluegrass night & open mic MARK’S PLACE | Portland | DJ Tinydancer OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PEARL | Portland | DJ Braulio | 9 pm | $5 PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | karaoke | 6 pm RI RA/PORTLAND | Portland | Kilcollins | 7 pm

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FRIDAY 18

51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Prof Tones

ASYLUM | Portland | “Hall & Oates

Tribute Show,” with Anna Lombard + Kyle Gervais + Kenya Hall, et al. | 9 pm | $8 | Dehuman8 + Johnny Noise + Znuh | 9:30 pm | $2-$5 BAYSIDE BOWL | Portland | Gamma Goochies + Beachcombovers + Bart Joy + DJ Matt Little | 8 pm BLUE | Portland | Shanna Underwood | 6 pm | Four Legged Faithful | 8 pm | Gunther Brown | 10 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “’80s Night,” with DJ Jon | 7 pm | $5 BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/PORTLAND | Portland | “acoustic night,” performers TBA | 4 pm BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | Kilcollins | 9:30 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 5 pm EMPIRE | Portland | Chaos Sauce + Shut Down Brown | 10:30 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Friction Friday,” drum & bass night with Red Shift + Bit Crusher + Josiah Scribes | 9 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Rick Miller & His Band | 9 pm GINZA TOWN | Portland | karaoke | 8:30 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Swaggering Swing Billies | 7 pm MAYO STREET ARTS | Portland | Video Nasties + Margy Pepper + Parasol + Fur | 7 pm | $7 OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | Portland | David Wax Museum + Kingsley Flood | 9 pm | $10-12

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PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | Chris

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Chuck Igo | 5 pm | Midnight Rose | 8:30 pm SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland | karaoke | 9 pm SLAINTE | Portland | Dustin Saucier | 9 pm SPACE GALLERY | Portland | Old Soul + Jose Ayerve | 8 pm | by donation STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Cherry Lemonade | 9 pm | front room: DJ Tony B | 9 pm UNION STATION BILLIARDS | Portland | karaoke with TJ the DJ | 9 pm ZACKERY’S | Portland | Delta Knights | 8:30 pm | $5

SATURDAY 19

51 WHARF | Portland | lounge: DJ

Tony B | 9 pm | main floor: DJ Jay-C | 9 pm ACOUSTIC ARTISANS | Portland | Matt & Shannon Heaton | 8 pm ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Tombstone PD ASYLUM | Portland | Blue Oyster Cult + Murcielago | 9 pm | $40 BLUE | Portland | Tammy Lynn & Myles High | 6 pm | Sean Mencher & His Rhythm Kings | 8 pm | Batch | 10 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “Everything Dance Party,” with DJ Jon | 7 pm CREMA COFFEE COMPANY | Portland | Dave Bullard | 11 am DOBRA TEA | Portland | Okbari | 8 pm EMPIRE | Portland | North of Nashville + Burners + Muddy Ruckus + Forts/ Gainsville | 9 pm | $10 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Apocryphonic + I, Barbarian + Temple Destroyer | 9 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Travis James Humphrey & the RetroRockets | 9 pm GINZA TOWN | Portland | karaoke | 8:30 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Tom Whitehead | 5:30 pm MARK’S PLACE | Portland | Ya Favorite Homie JR | 10 pm OASIS | Portland | upstairs: DJ Lenza | 9 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | Portland | Spose + Sly Chi + Cam Groves + Ock Cousteau + Shane Reis + Essence | 9 pm | $12-15 PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | Jeff Rockwell | 7 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | DJ Jim Fahey | 9 pm SALVAGE BBQ & SMOKEHOUSE | Portland | “American Music Night,” performers TBA | 10 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | karaoke with Long Island Larry | 8:30 pm | Midnight Rose | 8:30 pm SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland | karaoke | 9 pm SKYBOX BAR AND GRILL | Westbrook | DJ Kerry | 9 pm SPARE TIME | Portland | “Karaoke Idol,” competition | 7 pm STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Chris O | 9 pm | front room: DJ Duran | 9 pm

SUNDAY 20

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Mike Krapovicky

BRIAN BORU | Portland | Irish session

| 3 pm

DOBRA TEA | Portland | “Rhythmic

Cypher,” poetry open mic | 6:30 pm

| 6 pm

| DJ Kerry | 9 pm STYXX | Portland | karaoke with Cherry Lemonade | 7 pm

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Dave Schaffer

BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | Castlebay |

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TUESDAY 22

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Brian Patricks

BLUE | Portland | Becca Reed | 7 pm | acoustic jam session | 8:30 pm

GENO’S ROCK CLUB | Portland | Never

Nudes + Murder Weapon + Koffin Kats | 9 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 10 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm MAMA’S CROWBAR | Portland | “Piano Night,” with Jimmy Dority | 9 pm MARK’S PLACE | Portland | DJ Roy OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm SLAINTE | Portland | karaoke with DJ Ponyfarm | 9 pm THE THIRSTY PIG | Portland | open mic

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WEDNESDAY 23

51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Ryan Deelon | 9 pm

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland

| David Beam & the Custom House Gang ASYLUM | Portland | karaoke with DJ Johnny Red | 9 pm | “Rap Night,” with Shupe & Ill By Instinct | 9 pm | $0-3 BIG EASY | Portland | blues jam BLUE | Portland | Ron Cody & Friends | 7:30 pm | Irish Seisún | 9 pm BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | Squid Jiggers | 8 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Sam Chase | 7 pm EMPIRE | Portland | “Clash of the Titans: Spice Girls vs Backstreet Boys,” cover night | 10 pm | $6 FLASK | Portland | Mang [Ween tribute] | 8 pm FROG AND TURTLE | Westbrook | open mic | 8 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Flash Allen & Kelly Laurence | 7 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | open fiddle jam | 10 am | Calen Perkins | 6:30 pm MAMA’S CROWBAR | Portland | “Local Lady Singer Songwriters,” performers TBA MARK’S PLACE | Portland | DJ Kevin Duran | 9 pm MATHEW’S PUB | Portland | Sweet Teeth + Criminal Code + High Spirits + Brother Terry | 8 pm | $3 OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Marc Beatham | 9 pm PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | Portland | Koan Sound + Minnesota | 9 pm | $18-25 PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | karaoke with Lil’ Man Music | 9 pm SLAINTE | Portland | open mic with Nick Poulin | 8 pm

THURSDAY 24

11 am

ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland |

OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | Portland | “Somewhere Maine: The Marijuana Musical,” with Tricky Britches + Skosh + Azzlan Family Band | 4:15 pm | $29

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the Dirty Gems + White Pine + Tall Horse | 8 pm | “Retro Night,” with DJ King Alberto | 9 pm

Continued on p 20

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portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | apriL 18, 2014 21

Northern Lights

Listings Continued from p 19 BLUE | Portland | Samuel James +

Dana Gross | 9 pm BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | Hello Newman | 9 pm EMPIRE | Portland | Alan Evans Trio | 9:30 pm | $10 GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Octane | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Tom Gizzi | 6:30 pm MAMA’S CROWBAR | Portland | bluegrass night & open mic MARK’S PLACE | Portland | DJ Tinydancer OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PEARL | Portland | DJ Braulio | 9 pm | $5 PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | karaoke | 6 pm RI RA/PORTLAND | Portland | Kilcollins | 7 pm

MUST BE 18 TO PURCHASE TOBACCO PRODUCTS. PHOTO ID REqUIRED.

SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10

pm

SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | DJ Colin | 7 pm

SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland |

Conveniently Located “On The Way” North or South

karaoke | 9 pm

STOCKHOUSE | Westbrook | Now is Now | 6 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Tubbz | 9 pm

Check out the World Famous Maine Diner!

with DJ Billy Adams | 9:30 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK |

Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm THE CAGE | Lewiston | open blues jam

CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm

CAPTAIN DANIEL STONE INN |

Brunswick | open mic | 6 pm CASA DEL LUNA | Lewiston | open mic | 7 pm

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid-

deford | karaoke with DJ Caleb Biggers | 9:30 pm

CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | DJ B-Set |

9:30 pm

GFB SCOTTISH PUB | Old Orchard Beach | Robert Johnson Project

HIGHLANDS COFFEE HOUSE | Thomaston | open mic | 6 pm

THE KAVE | Bucksport | Malfunction

Open 7 Days • Route 1 North, Wells • 207 646 4441 • Maine Diner.com

WARNING HOT GUYS! FREE to listen & reply to ads!

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(207) 828.0000

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BENCHWARMERS | Brunswick | DJ

Luckypenny | 9 pm

BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Paddy

Mills

BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Now is

Now | 9:30 pm

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Stolen

Mojo | 8:30 pm

BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | Dexter | Deejay Relykz

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | Bath | karaoke with DJ Joe | 8:30 pm

CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield

| karaoke

CARMEN VERANDAH | Bar Harbor | DJ Jeff Buffington | 9 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | DJ Caleb Biggers CHAPS SALOON | Buxton | DJ Marky Mark EASY STREET LOUNGE | Hallowell | Whitefields | 9 pm ELEMENTS: BOOKS COFFEE BEER | Biddeford | October Road | 8 pm FATBOY’S SALOON | Biddeford | karaoke with Dennis the Lil’ Musicman | 9 pm FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | Wells | karaoke | 8 pm THE GREEN ROOM | Sanford | DJ

Dueling Pianos | 7 pm

BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | karaoke

Over 50 Ite m Under $10 s

croft | Prairie Dog

| karaoke

burg | open mic | 8:30 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft

| 7 pm

TO LISTEN & REPLY TO ADS!

AMERICAN LEGION POST 56 | York

302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Frye-

THURSDAY 17

As Seen On

207.253.5200

nebunkport | karaoke | 8:30 pm

Bounce | 9 pm GUTHRIE’S | Lewiston | Juke Joint Devils HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Kayla Wass Trio | 9 pm IRON TAILS SALOON | Acton | Heartbreaker | $5

MAINE

Celebrating 30 Years in Business!

Portland

HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Kayla

BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox-

Shop 24/7 at northernlightspipes.com 1140 Brighton Ave, Portland ME (207) 772-9045 Mon-Thurs 10am-9pm / Fri-Sat 10am-10pm / Sun 12pm-8pm

made

karaoke

ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | Ken| karaoke | 8 pm

•The BEST selection of hookahs & accessories including Fantasia Shisha •THE LARGEST selection of vaporizers (including parts and accessories) •Open early and open late every night, here for any smoking emergency •Up to date on all smoking accessories •Something for everybody, wide price ranges and variety of products •Local hand blown glass and glass by well known artists •Water pipes by Illadelph, toro, left coast, and David Goldstein •Concert t-hirts, posters, tapestrys

Dating Easy

THE GREEN ROOM | Sanford | DJ

ADAMS STREET PUB | Biddeford |

PORTlAnD’S lARgEST SMOkE SHOP wITH THE BIggEST SElECTIOn

Maine Diner

FRIDAY 18

+ Bent Life + Will to Die + Holy Filth + Nik Curtis | 6 pm | $12 LOMPOC CAFE | Bar Harbor | open mic MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | karaoke | 9 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | Steve Jones | noon NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | Auburn | open mic with Johnny Rock | 8 pm NEWCASTLE PUBLICK HOUSE | Newcastle | Paul Mellyn NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | DJ Baby Bok Choy + DJ T-Coz | 8 pm OLD GOAT | Richmond | open mic | 8 pm OLD MILL PUB | Skowhegan | Old Liberty String Band THE RACK | Carabassett | Travis Cyr | 6 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Steve Jones RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Now is Now | 8 pm SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Michael Krapovicky SKIP’S LOUNGE | Buxton | open mic | 7 pm SPEAKEASY | Rockland | Ol’ Blues Kats SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau | 9 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic | 8 pm TORCHES GRILL HOUSE | Kennebunk | open mic | 7 pm TRAIN’S TAVERN | Lebanon | karaoke with DJ Dick WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins

JIMMY THE GREEK’S/OLD ORCHARD BEACH | Old Orchard Beach |

THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | Happy Hour Band | 5:30 pm KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Hurricanes LAST CALL | Old Orchard Beach | DJ Jimmy D LION’S PRIDE | Brunswick | Max Garcia Conover | 9 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | DJ Aga | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Tricky Britches | 9:30 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | Barn Fire MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | John Hasnip MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Chris Ross | 8:30 pm MR. GOODBAR | Old Orchard Beach | Riot Act | 9 pm MYRTLE STREET TAVERN | Rockland | karaoke | 9 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Shy Boy THE RACK | Carabassett | Turner Templeton | 9 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Steve Vellani SHEEPSCOT GENERAL | Whitefield | Simons & Goodwin | 7 pm | $5 SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Tina Kelley Band SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Mike Morrison SUDS PUB | Bethel | Paul Mellyn | 8 pm TIME OUT PUB | Rockland | open mic | 9 pm TOWNHOUSE PUB | Saco | karaoke | 8:30 pm TUCKER’S PUB | Norway | open mic | 7 pm TUG’S PUB | Southport | Holy Mackerels | 5:30 pm WILLY’S ALE ROOM | Acton | Walkenhorse | 9 pm

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | Red Sky Mary LILAC CITY GRILLE | Rochester | Dan

Tish | 9 pm

Wass Band | 9 pm

Walker

KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Lower East

MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth |

Side | 8 pm

Brandon Lapere | 9 pm

MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | DJ Ken

MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | Nor-

MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Rus-

PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | “Beat

| 9 pm

man Bishop

tic Overtones | 10 pm | $15

Night,” music & poetry | 7 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Gorgon + Teacher Mother Secret Lover + Fucko RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Mike Stockbridge | 6 pm SERENITY MARKET & CAFE | Rye | drumming circle | 7 pm | $8 STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Jordan Tirrell Wysocki & Jim Predergast | 6 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Lynguistic Civilians + Educate the Anecdote | 8 pm

MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL |

Standish | Back in Black [AC/DC

Tribute]

MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | Married With Chitlins

MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Sharon

Buck + Dixon Road | 9 pm MR. GOODBAR | Old Orchard Beach | Riot Act | 9 pm OLD MILL PUB | Skowhegan | David Mello PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Shy Boy ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Bob Colwell RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Galley Rats SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | karaoke with DJ Stormin Norman | 10 pm SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Pat Libby & Shilo Creek SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Michael Reny SUDS PUB | Bethel | Jim Gallant | 8 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | karaoke with TJ the DJ WILLY’S ALE ROOM | Acton | Emerald Sky | 9 pm

SUNDAY 20

302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | Tom Rebmann | 11 am

BLOOMFIELD’S CAFE AND BAR |

Skowhegan | open mic jam | 5 pm BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | jam session | 8 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | Bath |

Irish-American sing-along | 5 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | karaoke with DJ Don Corman | 9:30 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | karaoke | 6 pm THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | open jam with Chris Poulson | 5 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | Auburn | open mic with Johnny Rock | 8 pm THE OLDE MILL TAVERN | Harrison | open mic | 5 pm THE RACK | Carabassett | Steves | 6 pm RAVEN’S ROOST | Brunswick | open mic with Yankee Wailer | 3 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic blues jam | 4 pm

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | open mic

9:30 pm

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd-

HIGHLANDS COFFEE HOUSE | Thom-

mic with John Hasnip | 7:30 pm

LOMPOC CAFE | Bar Harbor | open mic MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | kara-

Dave Nappi | 5 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | Tigerlily DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Portsmouth | karaoke DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Velvis Underground | 9:30 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Aaron Zimmer | 9 pm HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | Ol’ Factory | $8 THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Dr. Pepper | 8:30 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Livin’ the Dream | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth | Rob & Jody | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Dub Apocalypse | 9 pm | $7 RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Rob Gerry + Tom Robinson | 6 pm SAVORY SQUARE BISTRO | Hampton | Joe Rillo THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | Dover | DJ Jett | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Blacklight Ruckus + Harsh Armadillo | $8 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Bearfight | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Last Laugh | 9 pm

MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool-

SATURDAY 19

Helen Peppe’s Pigs Can’t Swim PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | open mic | 9:30 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Christine Poulson & Steve Jones RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | open mic | 8 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | karaoke TRAIN’S TAVERN | Lebanon | open mic | 7 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | open mic

WEDNESDAY 23

BLUE MOON LOUNGE | Skowhegan | karaoke | 8 pm

| 7 pm

eford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm CHARLAMAGNE’S | Augusta | open

| 9 pm

THURSDAY 24

Dennis the Lil’ Musicman FUSION | Lewiston | DJ Kool V | 9 pm

Mello | 6 pm | open blues jam | 9 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | open mic | 7 pm

BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Tickle CHARLAMAGNE’S | Augusta | Now FATBOY’S SALOON | Biddeford | DJ

AMERICAN LEGION POST 56 | York | open mic | 6 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | Irish session | 7 pm

CAPTAIN & PATTY’S RESTAURANT | Kittery Point | open mic | 7 pm

CARMEN VERANDAH | Bar Harbor |

open mic | 9 pm CLUB 737 | Bath | open mic with Yankee Wailer | 9 pm DOWN UNDER CLUB | Bangor | karaoke | 7:30 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | open mic | 7 pm Plaid Daddy

LION’S PRIDE | Brunswick | open MAIN TAVERN | Bangor | open mic MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Dave

| 7 pm

CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm

CAPTAIN DANIEL STONE INN |

Brunswick | open mic | 6 pm CASA DEL LUNA | Lewiston | open mic | 7 pm

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid-

deford | karaoke with DJ Caleb Biggers | 9:30 pm

CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | DJ B-Set | GFB SCOTTISH PUB | Old Orchard Beach | Robert Johnson Project

aston | open mic | 6 pm

NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA |

is Now | 7:30 pm

BLUE MOON LOUNGE | Skowhegan |

DJ Montana Green

TUESDAY 22

Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm THE CAGE | Lewiston | open blues jam

FATBOY’S SALOON | Biddeford |

open mic | 8 pm

mic | 7 pm

Caswell

pm | $15

with DJ Billy Adams | 9:30 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK |

oke | 9 pm

| 8:30 pm

croft | DJ Knotty Bear

BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Jud

SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAKERY | Hallowell | Val Bennet | 8:15

BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | karaoke

COLE FARMS | Gray | open mic EASY STREET LOUNGE | Hallowell |

Grumps | 9:30 pm

BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox-

PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON

| Lewiston | open mic with Mike Krapovicky | 6:30 pm

Whether you’re starting out or have been playing for years, Craig Wing Guitar School is the place to learn guitar! With over 16 years of teaching experience, Craig offers lessons for kids, teens and adults. First consultation is FREE.

207.423.5642 www.Guitarlikearockstar.Com

Craig Wing Guitar School | 525 Forest Ave, Portland

CARTELLI’S BAR AND GRILL | Dover |

JIMMY THE GREEK’S/OLD ORCHARD BEACH | Old Orchard Beach |

SATURDAY 19

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | Bath | Irish session | 7 pm FOG BAR & CAFE | Rockland | open mic | 8 pm KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | open mic | 7 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | open mic with Mike Rodrigue | 9 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | karaoke | 9:30 pm

Learn Guitar now!

Email craigwwing@gmail.com to enter to win a FREE MONTH of guitar lessons. One winner will be chosen and notified May 1st!

FRIDAY 18

acoustic open mic | 8 pm FREEDOM CAFE | Naples | karaoke FRONT STREET PUBLIC HOUSE | Bath | open mic FRONTIER CAFE | Brunswick | Tyler and Emma Stanley | 8 pm FUSION | Lewiston | open mic & karaoke GFB SCOTTISH PUB | Old Orchard Beach | karaoke THE GIN MILL | Augusta | open mic | 7:30 pm THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | open jam with Yikes It’s Josh | 9 pm NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | Auburn | open mic blues jam | 7 pm NEWCASTLE PUBLICK HOUSE | Newcastle | Paddy Mills THE OAK AND THE AX | Biddeford | Robert Sarazin Blake + Reverie Machine | 8 pm | $8 THE RACK | Carabassett | open mic | 6 pm READFIELD EMPORIUM | Readfield | open mic | 6 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Scott & Rick SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | open mic | 9:30 pm SEA40 | Lewiston | open mic with Nick Racioppi | 7 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | open mic SPEAKEASY | Rockland | open mic | 8 pm TANTRUM | Bangor | karaoke UNION HOUSE PUB & PIZZA | Biddeford | open mic | 6 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins WOODMAN’S BAR & GRILL | Orono | open mic | 10 pm

MONDAY 21

thephoenix.com

20 apriL 18, 2014 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com

302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Frye-

burg | open mic | 8:30 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft | karaoke

wich | Mike Rodrigue

Auburn | open mic with Johnny Rock

CAFE NOSTIMO | Portsmouth | Black Agnes | 7 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama

| 8 pm

Squad DJs

castle | Tom Rota & Friends

ing Melvin

DJ Baby Bok Choy + DJ T-Coz | 8 pm OLD GOAT | Richmond | open mic | 8 pm OLD MILL PUB | Skowhegan | Tomorrow Morning | 6 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Mike Krapovicky RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Robert Johnson Project SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Jim Pryor SKIP’S LOUNGE | Buxton | open mic | 7 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau | 9 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic | 8 pm TORCHES GRILL HOUSE | Kennebunk | open mic | 7 pm TRAIN’S TAVERN | Lebanon | karaoke with DJ Dick WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins

mouth | karaoke

NEWCASTLE PUBLICK HOUSE | NewNOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor |

CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | StompDANIEL STREET TAVERN | PortsDOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Amorphous Band | 9:30 pm

DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | A

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes

Minor Revolution + People Skills + Volcano Rabbit + When Particles Collide | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Grivooga | 9 pm HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | Travis Colby Band | $8 THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Julie Dougherty | 8:30 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | SoulMate | 9:30 pm MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth | Tim Theriault Trio | 9 pm THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Don Severance | 7 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Federator #1 | 9 pm | $10 RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Sal Hughes | 6 pm SAVORY SQUARE BISTRO | Hampton | Wendy Nottonson SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Nate Laban + Sam Hill w/ The Landladys THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | Dover | DJ Shawny O & DJ MK3 | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Jauntee + Aqueous | $8 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Sweatpants in Public | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Fortune | 9 pm

CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | karaoke

SUNDAY 20

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Mi-

Dover | Irish session | 5 pm

NEW HAMPSHIRE THURSDAY 17

BRITISH BEER COMPANY | Portsmouth | Jackson Wetherbee | 9 pm

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT |

Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm

Trio

| 8 pm

chael Troy & Craig Tramack | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Preciphist | 9 pm

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT | DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports-

mouth | karaoke

Continued on p 22

Portland location 865 Forest avenue 207.747.5068 And in Biddeford 500 MAriners WAy 207.282.6324

Special Occasions at Bonobo Family, friends, local craft beer, good wine, locally sourced food, cheerful staff *Make

your event wildly delicious Birthdays, Graduations, Promotions 46 pine st @ brackett • in the west end 3 4 7 - 8 2 6 7 bonobopizza.com

’11


22 apriL 18, 2014 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Pete

Listings Continued from p 21 DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Kenlaw Neilson | 7 pm

DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Jim

Dozet Trio | 10 am | karaoke with DJ Erich Kruger | 10 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Green Lion Crew | 8 pm RI RA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Irish session | 5 pm | Oran Mor | 7 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Sharon Jones | 10 am STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open mic with Dave Ogden | 7 pm

Peterson & Derek Thompkins | 8 pm

FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim

Theriault | 9 pm

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | karaoke | 7 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke

PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | jazz jam

with Larry Garland | 6 pm SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Soggy Po Boys | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | bluegrass jam | 9 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm

WEDNESDAY 23

BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | open mic | 8:30 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports-

MONDAY 21

mouth | open mic | 8 pm DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth |

Dover | karaoke

FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover |

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT |

George Belli | 8 pm

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth |

People Skills

ORCHARD STREET CHOP SHOP |

mic | 8 pm

| 8 pm

Pines | 9 pm | $5

Old School | 9 pm

Dover | open mic with Dave Ogden

PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Chris

HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | open PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Woody THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | EvaRI RA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth |

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT | | 9 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT |

Trio

| 7 pm

| 8 pm

Dover | Celtic bluegrass open session

Don Campbell | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | Norman Bishop THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Queen Elephantine + Green Bastard + Northern Curs RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Rob Gerry & Kelly Muse | 6 pm SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Koffin Kats | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Jordan Tirrell Wysocki & Jim Predergast | 6 pm | Turkuaz | 9:30 pm | $10 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Ace Reporter | 7:30 pm

CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | karaoke

OPEN MIC | 9 pm | Mama’s Crow-

SUNDAY 20

WEDNESDAY 23

fellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $15-20 | 207.761.1757

bar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230

”COMEDY NIGHT,” WITH JAY GROVE | 9 pm | Cara Irish Pub &

Restaurant, 11 Fourth St, Dover, NH | 603.343.4390

COMEDY SHOWCASE: LAUGH THERAPY IN THE OLD PORT | 8 pm

| Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | $5 | 207.773.7210 OPEN MIC | 6 pm | Union House Pub & Pizza, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, 18-230, Biddeford | 207.590.4825

”PORTLAND COMEDY SHOWCASE,” PERFORMERS TBA | 8 pm |

Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | $5 | 207.773.7210

THURSDAY 24

JUSTIN DREW + BRYCE HANSON + ERIN CYR + TROY PENNELL + BRIAN BRINEGAR | 7:30 pm |

Spire 29, 29 School St, Gorham | $5 | 207.222.2068

COMEDY CONCERTS

FRIDAY 18

SUNDAY 20

Great Bay Sailor | 7 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Dimitri Yiannicopulus | 6 pm SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Green Bastard | 9 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Tommy & the Rats + Jupiter Two + Pity Whores | 8:30 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | DJ Provo | 7 pm

“Honky Tonk Night,” with Seldom Playwrights BRAMBER VALLEY BAR-B-BAR | Greenland | open mic | 7 pm

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | Classic Invasion MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth |

Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy

Manus | 8 pm | $25 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Bethel Steele + Eli Conley SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Jazzputin | punk/metal DJ night | 10 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Old School | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open blues jam | 7 pm

BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth |

Tore Down + Jim Dozet + Dan Walker Band | 8 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Jake Davis | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Erin’s Guild

THURSDAY 24

redy | 9 pm

TUESDAY 22

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth |

COREY RODRIGUES + TONY V | 8 pm | The Portsmouth Pearl, 45 Pearl St, Portsmouth, NH | $15 | 603.431.0148 or portsmouthpearl.com DAVE RUSSO | Gold Room, 510 Warren Ave, Portland | 207.221.2343 KATE GHILONI | 8 pm | Frontier Cafe, Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | $12 | 207.725.5222 or www.explorefrontier.com RICH VOS + ROB STEEN | 9 pm | Smitty’s Sanford Cinema & Pub, 1364 Main St, Route 109 - Center for Shopping, Sanford | $8.50 | 207.490.0000 or www.smittyscinema.com

Klaxton | 8 pm

RED & SHORTY’S | Dover | Tony Mc-

portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | apriL 18, 2014 23

”COMEDYPALOOZA SHOWCASE” WITH TIM HOFMANN, ET AL. | 8 pm | Big Easy, 55 Market St, Portland | $3 | 207.894.0633 or www.bigeasyportland.com

.

CLASSICAL FRIDAY 18

JESSE FEINBERG + GARY WITTNER | 6:30 pm | Solo Bistro, 128 Front St, Bath | 207.443.3378

PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA | 9:30 am&10:30 am&11:30 am

| Fryeburg Academy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | $3 | 207.935.9232 or fryeburgacademy.org

SATURDAY 19

GEORGE LOPEZ, PIANO | 4 pm | Bowdoin College, Studzinski Recital Hall, Kanbar Auditorium, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.798.4141 JIMMY BRIERE | 7:30 pm | FrancoAmerican Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | 207.689.2000

.

restaurant brewery distillery

Casco FCU wants to give YOU

“DECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES” | 6 pm | One Long-

MONDAY 21

CAVATINA DUO | 7 pm | University of New Hampshire Celebrity Series, Paul Creative Arts Center, 30 Academic Way, Durham, NH | call for tickets | 603.862.2290 or unh. edu/pcac

POPULAR THURSDAY 17

ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO & THE SENSITIVE BOYS | 8 pm | Tupelo

Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com NELLY | 8 pm | University of New Hampshire, Whittemore Center Arena, 128 Main St, Durham, NH | 603.862.4000 PORTLAND JAZZ ORCHESTRA | 8 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $9 | 207.761.1757

TAKING BACK SUNDAY + TONIGHT ALIVE + SLEEPWAVE | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $25-30 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreportland.com

”TURNSTILE THURSDAY,” FREEFORM OPEN MIC | Thurs 7 pm |

Community Television Network Theater, 516 Congress St, Portland | 207.775.2900

FRIDAY 18

BALLROOM THIEVES | 8 pm | Music

Hall, 131 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | $10 | 603.436.2400 or themusichall.org/tickets/index.asp DOM COLIZZI | 7:30 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $12-15 | 207.439.0114

THE FIRST ANNUAL MAINE COLLEGE OF ART SPRING MUSIC FESTIVAL | 6 pm | Maine College of

Art, 522 Congress St, Portland | $10 suggested donation | 207.775.3052 or meca.edu

JASON ANDERSON + MARA FLYNN |

7 pm | Moffatt-Ladd House, 154 Market St, Portsmouth, NH | $7 | 603.436.8221 JOAN OSBORNE TRIO | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com MARY FAHL | 8 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $25-28 | 207.761.1757

MEHUMAN JOHNSON & HER TRIO

| 7:30 pm | Chocolate Church Arts Center, 804 Washington St, Bath | $10 | 207.442.8455 or chocolatechurcharts. org

ZEMYA + SPOONMAKER’S DIAMOND | 7:30 pm | St Lawrence Arts

& Community Center, 76 Congress St, Portland | $12-15 | 207.775.5568 or stlawrencearts.org

SATURDAY 19

BOX TIGER | 4 pm | Bull Moose Music/

Portland, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.780.6424 DON CAMPBELL | 8 pm | Jonathan’s, 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit | $25 | 207.646.4777 or jonathansrestaurant. com FIFTH FREEDOM | 4 pm | Bull Moose Music/Waterville, 14 Elm Plaza, Waterville | 207.861.5884 GALLEY RATS | 4 pm | Bull Moose Music/Sanford, 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.324.5786 GHOST OF PAUL REVERE | 3 pm | Bull Moose Music/Brunswick, 151 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.1289 GUNTHER BROWN | 3 pm | Bull Moose Music/Portsmouth, 82 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | 603.422.9525 KGFREEZE | 2 pm | Bull Moose Music/ Portland, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.347.2400

LEPPARDMANIA [DEF LEPPARD TRIBUTE] | 5 pm | Bull Moose Music/

Lewiston, 20 East Ave, Lewiston | 207.784.6463

MAINE FIDDLE CAMP BENEFIT CONCERT | 7 pm | Center Theatre, 20 East Main St, Dover Foxcroft | $10 adults, $5 kids | 207.564.8943 or centertheatre.org

We understand no one wants to think about their death any sooner than they must, but planning your funeral services in advance is a caring act that can reduce stress for your grieving loved ones.

www.cascofcu.com (207) 839-5588 or (888) 395-5588 375 Main Street, Gorham 35 Cumberland Street, Westbrook 3987 Ossipee Trail, West Gorham

Walker St, Kittery | $20 | 207.439.0114

MARY FAHL | 8 pm | Tupelo Music

Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com NORTH OF NASHVILLE | 4 pm | Bull Moose Music/South Portland, Mill Creek Plaza, 219 Waterman Dr, South Portland | 207.347.2400 PIERRE BENSUSAN | 8 am | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $20-25 | 207.761.1757 STANDARD ISSUE | 11 am | Bull Moose Music/South Portland, Mill Creek Plaza, 219 Waterman Dr, South Portland | 207.347.2400 TONY BENNETT | 6 pm | Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | $73-133 | 207.842.0800 TRAVIS CYR | 7 pm | KMH Music, 412 Main St, Presque Isle | 207.764.3651

TUESDAY 22

MICROMASSE + SEA LEVEL | 8:30

pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $5 | 207.761.1757

WEDNESDAY 23

JON ANDERSON | Wed-Thurs Wed-

Thurs 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $50$55 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com

THURSDAY 24

CONNOR GARVEY TRIO + SORCHA + JENEE HALSTEAD | 8 pm | One

Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $15 | 207.761.1757 JON ANDERSON | See listing for Wed MILK CARTON KIDS | 8 pm | Stone Mountain Arts Center, 695 Dug Way Rd, Brownfield | 207.935.7292 NOVEL JAZZ SEPTET | 7 pm | Skidompha Public Library, 184 Main St, Damariscotta | $14 adults, $12 seniors, $6 kids | 207.563.5513 or skidompha.org

”TURNSTILE THURSDAY,” FREEFORM OPEN MIC | See listing for Thurs

USM JAZZ ENSEMBLE | 8 pm | Uni-

versity of Southern Maine - Gorham, Corthell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gorham | 207.780.5256

DANCE PARTICIPATORY THURSDAY 17

SALSA DANCING WITH DJ BRAULIO | 8 pm | Pearl, 444 Fore St, Portland | $5 | 207.653.8486

FRIDAY 18

$60!

We’re celebrating 60 years with $60 giveaways. Open a new checking account with direct deposit today and Casco FCU will reward you by depositing $60 into your account. No fees, no minimum balance, no gimmicks; everything you need in a checking account and nothing you don’t. Stop by a branch to get your $60 today!

MAKANDA PROJECT + MICKEY DAVIDSON | 7:30 pm | The Dance Hall, 7

SALSA DANCING WITH DJ BRAULIO | See listing for Thurs

250 commercial st. www.infinitimaine.com

PERFORMANCE THURSDAY 17

SPRING DANCE PERFORMANCE |

Thurs-Sat 8 pm | Bowdoin College, Pickard Theater, Bath Rd, Brunswick | 207.725.3103 | www.msmt.org

FRIDAY 18

SPRING DANCE PERFORMANCE | See listing for Thurs

AdvAntAge FunerAl & CremAtion 899-4605 www.AdvAntAgeportlAnd.Com

KORA SHRINERS CIRCUS | Fri 8 pm;

Sat 7 pm | Androscoggin Bank Colisée, 190 Birch St, Lewiston | 207.783.2009

SATURDAY 19

CENTRAL MAINE ROLLER DERBY |

6 pm | Cross Insurance Center, 74 Gilman Rd, Bangor | $14.35 | 207.947.7345 KORA SHRINERS CIRCUS | See listing for Fri

SATURDAY 19

AROUND THE WORLD WITH FLAT STANLEY: THE CASE OF THE RED SHOES | Portland Ballet Company,

Westbrook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St, Westbrook | call for tickets | 207.772.9671 BAKUNDA (WE LOVE) | 6:30 pm | Portland High School, 284 Cumberland Ave, Portland | $6-10 | 207.772.9671

“GOODNIGHT, NURSE: THE MOST EXCELLENT AND LAMENTABLE TRAGEDY OF ROMEO AND JULIET

POETRY READING

| with Maine poets Stuart Kestenbaum, Peter Harris & David Sloan | 7 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks.com

FRIDAY 18

WESLEY MCNAIR: “THE WORDS I CHOSE” | poetry reading & dis-

cussion | noon | Lewiston Public Library, 200 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.784.0135 or lplonline.org

SATURDAY 19 HELEN PEPPE

| reads from her book Pigs Can’t Swim | 11 am | Nonesuch Books/South Portland, 50 Market St, South Portland | 207.799.2659 or nonesuchbooks.com

SUNDAY 20

OPEN MIC POETRY NIGHT | 6:30 pm

ern Maine - Portland, Hannaford Hall, 88 Bedford St, Portland | $50 | 207.780.4270 PMA FAMILY DAY | 11 am | Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 or | portlandmuseum.org

FAIRS & FESTIVALS THE FIRST ANNUAL MAINE COLLEGE OF ART SPRING MUSIC FESTIVAL | 6 pm | Maine College of

FOOD SATURDAY 19

SACO RIVER MARKET | 9 am | Mills at Saco Island, Saco Island, 110 Main St, Saco | 207.229.3560 or sacorivermarket.com WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET | 9 am | Urban Farm Fermentory, 200 Anderson St, Bay 1, Portland | 207.773.8331 or urbanfarmfermentory.com

WEDNESDAY 23

PORTLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 7

am | Monument Square, Congress St, Portland | 207.774.9979

POETRY & PROSE

Nuno | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Moulton Union, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3000

“ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLANNING” | 10 am | Portland Career“TREASURE FROM THE ISLES OF SHOALS: HOW NEW ARCHAEOLOGY IS CHANGING OLD HISTORY”

TUESDAY 22

WEDNESDAY 23

ANDRE DUBUS III + RICHARD RUSSO | discuss their novels | 7:30

JAMES HAYMAN | reads & discusses

TALKS THURSDAY 17

“50,000 BOOKS BUT ONLY SIX STORIES: A MICROANALYSIS OF PLOT” | with Matthew Jockers | 7 pm

| University of Southern Maine - Portland, Luther Bonney Hall, Bedford St, Portland | 207.780.4200

ARCHITALX LECTURE BY JENNY E. SABIN | 5:30 pm | Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Square, Portland | $15 | 207.775.6148 or portlandmuseum.org

“CRIMINAL BIRTHS: INFANTICIDE, STILLBIRTH, & THE RIO DE JANEIRO POLICE, 1890-1940” | with

Cassia Roth | 4 pm | Bowdoin College, Edward Pols House, Brunswick

“THE GENOMICS REVOLUTION & PERSONALIZED MEDICINE -- THE SCIENCE & THE HYPE” | with Daniel

Brazeau | 7 pm | University of Southern Maine - Portland, Southworth Planetarium, 96 Falmouth St, Portland | 207.780.4249

“HOW GREEN IS YOUR GROCER?” WITH PETER COOKE AND KASEY HARRIS | 5:30 pm | Frontier Cafe,

Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222 or explorefrontier. com

“CAPITALISM HITS THE FAN: THE PERSONAL & SOCIETAL EFFECTS OF THE 2008 ECONOMIC CRISIS” |

with Richard Wolff | 7 pm | University of Southern Maine - Portland, Masterson Hall, Bedford St, Portland | 207.780.4416

“ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLANNING” | 10 am | Lewiston Career-

Center, 5 Mollison Way, Lewiston | 207.753.9000 or mainecareercenter. com/careercenters/lewiston.shtml

“THE GRASSROOTS GANG: POLITICS, VIOLENCE, & DEVELOPMENT IN A HAITIAN GHETTO” | with

Chelsey Kivand | 5 pm | Bowdoin College, Visual Arts Center, Beam Classroom, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3000

THURSDAY 24

“THE GREAT RECESSION’S HURRICANE SWATH THROUGH INTIMATE LIFE: SOCIAL & PERSONAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE US SINCE THE ECONOMIC CRISIS” | with Harriet Fraad | noon | University of Southern Maine - Portland, Glickman Family Library, 5th Floor, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | 207.780.4270

“MUST MEDITERRANEAN MEN BE MASCULINE?: REFLECTIONS ON A STEREOTYPE” | with Michael Her-

zfeld | 7 pm | Bowdoin College, Searles Science Building, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3567

“PRESENTATION ON GREEN CHEMISTRY” | with John C. Warner | 3:30

pm | University of Southern Maine - Portland, Luther Bonney Hall, Bedford St, Portland | 207.780.4200

“SANITARY CONCERNS: HARRIET EATON, STATE RELIEF WORK, & THE FIGHT OVER FEDERAL BENEVOLENCE DURING THE CIVIL WAR”

| with Jane Schultz | 7 pm | Maine Historical Society, 489 Congress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org

“SPRING FLOWERS: ANDY WARHOL & JAMES ROSENQUIST” | with Sarah Montross + Joachim Homann | 7 pm | Bowdoin College Museum of Art, 245 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.3275 or bowdoin.edu/artmuseum

FRIDAY 18

“THE FUTURE OF THE CAR” | 12:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Visual Arts Center, Beam Classroom, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3253 ”VISIONS OF REALITY: SCIENCE & OTHER MEANS OF SEEKING KNOWLEDGE” | 9 am | Bowdoin Col-

lege, Moulton Union, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3000

THURSDAY 17

SATURDAY 19

pm | Press Room, 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH | 603.431.5186 ELIZABETH STROUT | discusses her novel The Burgess Boys | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.775.3321

pm | Bull Moose Music/Portland, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.780.6424

“BEAT NIGHT,” MUSIC & POETRY | 7

“SPANISH FASCISM & THE SPECTACLE OF GARCIA LORCA’S MISSING CORPSE” | with Carmen Moreno

| 5:30 pm | Pontine Theatre, West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St, Portsmouth, NH | 603.436.6660 or pontine.org

THURSDAY 24

BLUE WRAP PROJECT RUNWAY 2014 | 6 pm | University of South-

| Bowdoin College, Massachusetts Hall, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3000

| Serenity Market & Cafe, 25 Sagamore Rd, Rye, NH | 603.319.1671 “POETRY ON TAP” | open mic & featured poets | 9 pm | Mama’s Crowbar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230

Darkness First | 7 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks.com

61ST ANNUAL KORA TEMPLE SHRINERS CIRCUS | See listing for Mon

“ON AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE” | with Ken Warren | 5:30 pm

Center, 185 Lancaster St, Portland | 207.775.5891

THURSDAY 24

TUESDAY 22

vid Stork | 4:15 pm | Bowdoin College, Visual Arts Center, Beam Classroom, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3000

MONDAY 21

WEDNESDAY 23

| Cumberland County Civic Center, 48 Free St, 1st Floor, Portland | $10 adults, $5 kids | 207.775.3458 or | theciviccenter.com

“COMPUTER VISION IN THE STUDY OF ART: NEW RIGOROUS APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF PAINTING & DRAWINGS” | with Da-

TUESDAY 22

| 6:30 pm | Dobra Tea, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.370.1890

61ST ANNUAL KORA TEMPLE SHRINERS CIRCUS | See listing for Mon

61ST ANNUAL KORA TEMPLE SHRINERS CIRCUS | Mon-Wed 2 pm

3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.725.3567

”RHYTHMIC CYPHER,” POETRY OPEN MIC | with Rhythm & Regalia

pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | $15-20 | 207.828.5600 or space538.org AYELET WALDMAN | reads & discusses Love and Treasure | 7 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks.com OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with Port Veritas & featured poets | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | $2.50-3 | 207.773.7210

MONDAY 21

WEDNESDAY 23

THURSDAY 24

207-221-8889

FRIDAY 18

Art, 522 Congress St, Portland | $10 suggested donation | 207.775.3052 | www.meca.edu

pm | Acoustic Artisans, 594 Congress St, Portland | $5-10 sugg. donation | 207.671.6029 | acousticartisans.com

Find out how to plan for your inevitable needs and ask about all those things you’ve always wanted to know. Ask about our upcoming seminars on April 11th and April 16th.

EVENTS

FRIDAY 18

WEDNESDAY NIGHT STOMP WITH PORTLAND SWING PROJECT | 7:30

Sponsored by Advantage, your pocket friendly provider:

Opera House, Burnt Cove Church, 17 Airport Rd, Stonington | 207.367.2788 | operahousearts.org SPRING DANCE PERFORMANCE | See listing for Thurs STARS ON ICE | 7:30 pm | Cumberland County Civic Center, 48 Free St, 1st Floor, Portland | $132, $77, $47, $27 | 508. 875.5218 | www.theciviccenter. com STRIPWRECKED BURLESQUE | 7:30 pm | St Lawrence Arts & Community Center, 76 Congress St, Portland | $15 | 207.775.5568 | www.stlawrencearts. org SWAN LAKE | 7:30 pm | Music Hall, 131 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | $50.25, $38.25 | 603.436.2400 | www. themusichall.org/tickets/index.asp

INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE |

6:30 pm | People Plus/Brunswick, 35 Union St, Brunswick | $8, $5 seniors/ students | 207.700.7577

CINCO DE MAYO

AS TOLD BY SOMEONE WHO WAS THERE” | cabaret | 7 pm | Stonington

MIKE MILLS OF R.E.M. | signing | 2

MONDAY 21

”ART & PROTEST IN THE FORMER EASTERN BLOC” | 6:30 pm | Bow-

doin College, Druckenmiller Hall,

THEATER ACORN PRODUCTIONS |

207.854.0065 | St Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St, Portland | April 23: Maine Playwrights Festival: “The Monologathon” | 7:30 pm | $10 BELFAST MASKERS | 207.930.7090 |

First Baptist Church, 95 High St, Belfast | April 19: Fiddler on the Roof | 1 pm

JOHNSON HALL PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | 207.582.7144 | johnsonhall.

org | 280 Water St, Gardiner | April 19: Amanda Huotari: “The Soiree” | 7:30 pm | $16, $14 seniors/students, $12 youth 12 & under

Continued on p 25

Love the city? Own a piece of it! Buying or Selling, there is NO substitute for experience!

Marc Chadbourne 20 Years Experience 100’s of Homes Sold

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portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | apriL 18, 2014 25

CLUB DIRECTORY 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | 207.935.3021 | 636 Main St, Fryeburg

317 MAIN ST MUSIC CENTER CAFE | 207.846.9559 | 317 Main

St, Yarmouth 51 WHARF | 207.774.1151 | 51 Wharf St, Portland ACOUSTIC ARTISANS | 207.671.6029 | 594 Congress St, Portland ADAMS STREET PUB | 207.283.4992 | 5 Adams St, Biddeford

ALISSON’S RESTAURANT

| 207.967.4841 | 5 Dock Sq, Kennebunkport ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | 207.874.2639 | 94 Commercial St, Portland ANNIE’S IRISH PUB | 207.251.4335 | 369 Main St, Ogunquit ASYLUM | 207.772.8274 | 121 Center St, Portland BASSLINES | 207.699.4263 | Binga’s Stadium, 23 Brown St, Portland BAYSIDE BOWL | 207.791.2695 | 58 Alder St, Portland BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | 207.564.8733 | 73 North St, Dover Foxcroft BENCHWARMERS | 207.729.4800 | 212 Maine St, Brunswick BIG EASY | 207.894.0633 | 55 Market St, Portland BILLY’S TAVERN | 207.354.1177 | 1 Starr St, Thomaston BINGA’S STADIUM | 207.347.6072 | 77 Free St, Portland BLACK BEAR CAFE | 207.693.4770 | 215 Roosevelt Trail, Naples

BLOOMFIELD’S CAFE AND BAR

| 207.474.8844 | 40 Water St, Skowhegan BLUE | 207.774.4111 | 650A Congress St, Portland BLUE MERMAID | 603.427.2583 | 409 The Hill, Portsmouth, NH BLUE MOON LOUNGE | 207.858.5849 | 24 Court St, Skowhegan

BRAMBER VALLEY BAR-B-BAR

| 603.430.7713 | 75 Bramber Valley Dr, Greenland, NH BRAY’S BREWPUB | 207.693.6806 | Rte 302 and Rte 35, Naples BRIAN BORU | 207.780.1506 | 57 Center St, Portland BRITISH BEER COMPANY | 603.501.0515 | 2 Portwalk Place, Portsmouth, NH

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | 207.934.2171 | 39 West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach

BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE |

207.828.0549 | 92 Portland St, Portland

BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/ FREEPORT | 207.865.0600 | 581

Rte 1, Freeport

BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/ PORTLAND | | 50 Wharf St,

Portland

BULL FEENEY’S | 207.773.7210 | 375 Fore St, Portland BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | 207.443.6776 | 98 Center St, Bath BYRNES IRISH PUB/ BRUNSWICK | 207.729.9400 | 16

Station Ave, Brunswick CAFE NOSTIMO | 603.436.3100 | Madison Village, 72 Mirona Rd, Portsmouth, NH THE CAGE | 207.783.0668 | 97 Ash St, Lewiston CAMPFIRE GRILLE | 207.803.2255 | 656 North High St, Bridgton

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR |

207.282.7900 | 15 Thornton St, Biddeford CHAPS SALOON | 207.347.1101 | 1301 Long Plains Rd, Buxton CHARLAMAGNE’S | 207.242.2711 | 228 Water St, Augusta CHOP SHOP PUB | 603.760.7706 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH CHUMMIES PUB | 207.667.0080 | 49 Water St, Ellsworth CLUB 737 | 207.442.0748 | 737 Washington St, Bath CLUB TEXAS | 207.784.7785 | 150 Center St, Auburn COLE FARMS | 207.657.4714 | 64 Lewiston Rd, Gray CREMA COFFEE COMPANY | | 9 Commercial St, Portland DANIEL STREET TAVERN | 603.430.1011 | 111 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland DOGFISH CAFE | 207.253.5400 | 953 Congress St, Portland DOLPHIN STRIKER | 603.431.5222 | 15 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH DOVER BRICK HOUSE | 603.749.3838 | 2 Orchard St, Dover, NH EASY STREET LOUNGE | 207.622.3360 | 7 Front St, Hallowell

ELEMENTS: BOOKS COFFEE BEER | 207.710.2011 | 265 Main St,

Biddeford EMPIRE | 207.879.8988 | 575 Congress St, Portland FAST BREAKS | 207.782.3305 | 1465 Lisbon St, Lewiston FAT BELLY’S | 603.610.4227 | 2 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH FATBOY’S SALOON | 207.766.8862 | 65 Main St, Biddeford FEDERAL JACK’S | 207.967.4322 | 8 Western Ave, Kennebunk

FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | 207.251.4065 | 1619 Post Rd,

Wells

FLASK LOUNGE | 207.772.3122 | 117

Spring St, Portland FREEDOM CAFE | 207.693.3700 | 923 Roosevelt Trail, Naples FROG AND TURTLE | 207.591.4185 | 3 Bridge St, Westbrook FRONT STREET PUBLIC HOUSE | 207.442.6700 | 102 Front St, Bath FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | 603.617.3633 | 1 Washington St, Dover, NH FUSION | 207.330.3775 | 490 Pleasant St, Lewiston

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | 603.335.4279 | 38 Milton

Rd, Rochester, NH GATHER | 207.847.3250 | 189 Main St, Yarmouth GENO’S ROCK CLUB | 207.221.2382 | 625 Congress St, Portland GFB SCOTTISH PUB | 207.934.8432 | 32 Old Orchard St, Old Orchard Beach THE GIN MILL | 207.620.9200 | 302 Water St, Augusta GINGKO BLUE | 207.541.9190 | 455 Fore St, Portland GINZA TOWN | 207.878.9993 | 1053 Forest Ave, Portland THE GREEN ROOM | 207.490.5798 | 898 Main St, Sanford GRILL 28 | 603.766.6466 | Pease Golf Course, 200 Grafton Rd, Portsmouth, NH GRITTY MCDUFF’S | 207.772.2739 | 396 Fore St, Portland GRITTY MCDUFF’S/AUBURN | 207.782.7228 | 68 Main St, Auburn GUTHRIE’S | 207.376.3344 | 115 Middle St, Lewiston HARLOW’S PUB | 603.924.6365 | 3 School St, Peterborough, NH

CAPTAIN & PATTY’S RESTAURANT | 207.439.3655 | 90 HIGHER GROUNDS COFFEEHOUSE Pepperrell Rd, Kittery Point AND TAVERN | 207.621.1234 | 119 Water St, Hallowell CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | 207.336.2126 | 371 Turner St, IRISH TWINS PUB | 207.376.3088 | Buckfield

743 Main St, Lewiston

| 207.373.1824 | 10 Water St, Brunswick CASA DEL LUNA | 207.241.0711 | Lewiston Mall, Lewiston CENTRAL WAVE | 603.742.9283 | 368 Central Ave, Dover, NH

215 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach KELLEY’S ROW | 603.750.7081 | 421 Central Ave, Dover, NH THE KENNEBEC WHARF | 207.622.9290 | 1 Wharf St, Hallowell

CAPTAIN DANIEL STONE INN

JIMMY THE GREEK’S/OLD ORCHARD BEACH | 207.934.7499 |

KERRYMEN PUB | 207.282.7425 | 512

ROOSTER’S | 207.622.2625 | 110

Main St, Saco

Community Dr, Augusta

North Main St, Newmarket, NH

207.677.2354 | Round Top Farm, Main St, Damariscotta RUDI’S | 603.430.7834 | 20 High St, Portsmouth, NH RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | 207.571.9648 | 100 Main St, Saco Island, Saco SALVAGE BBQ & SMOKEHOUSE | | 919 Congress St, Portland

KJ’S SPORTS BAR | 603.659.2329 | LAST CALL | 207.934.9082 | 4 1st St,

Old Orchard Beach LFK | 207.899.3277 | 188A State St, Portland THE LIBERAL CUP | 207.623.2739 | 115 Water St, Hallowell LILAC CITY GRILLE | 603.332.3984 | 45 N Main St, Rochester, NH LION’S PRIDE | 207.373.1840 | 112 Pleasant St, Brunswick LISA’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE | 207.621.0599 | 15 Bangor St, Augusta LITTLE TAP HOUSE | 207.518.9283 | 106 High St, Portland LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland

LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE

| 207.899.3529 | 649 Congress St, Portland MAINE STREET | 207.646.5101 | 195 Maine St, Ogunquit MAINELY BREWS | 207.873.2457 | 1 Post Office Sq, Waterville MAMA’S CROWBAR | 207.773.9230 | 189 Congress St, Portland MARK’S PLACE | 207.899.3333 | 416 Fore St, Portland MARTINGALE WHARF | 603.431.0091 | 99 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH MATHEW’S PUB | 207.253.1812 | 133 Free St, Portland MAXWELL’S PUB | 207.646.2345 | 243 Main St, Ogunquit MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | 207.642.3363 | 35 Blake Rd, Standish MJ’S WINE BAR | 207.653.6278 | 1 City Center, Portland MR. GOODBAR | 207.934.9100 | 8B West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | 207.344.3201 | 34 Court St, Auburn NEWCASTLE PUBLICK HOUSE | 207.563.3434 | 52 Main St, Newcastle THE OAK AND THE AX | | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford THE OAR HOUSE | 603.436.4025 | 55 Ceres St, Portsmouth, NH OASIS | 207.370.9048 | 42 Wharf St, Portland OLD GOAT | 207.737.4628 | 33 Main St, Richmond OLD MILL PUB | 207.474.6627 | 39 Water St, Skowhegan OLD PORT TAVERN | 207.774.0444 | 11 Moulton St, Portland ORCHARD STREET CHOP SHOP | 603.749.0006 | 1 Orchard St, Dover, NH OTTO | 207.773.7099 | 574-6 Congress St, Portland PADDY MURPHY’S | 207.945.6800 | 26 Main St, Bangor PEARL | 207.653.8486 | 444 Fore St, Portland PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | 207.783.6200 | 134 Main St, Lewiston PEDRO’S | 207.967.5544 | 181 Port Rd, Kennebunk PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | 207.824.2222 | 9 Timberline Dr, Newry PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | 207.899.4990 | 504 Congress St, Portland PORTHOLE RESTAURANT | 207.773.4653 | 20 Custom House Wharf, Portland PORTLAND EAGLES | 207.773.9448 | 184 Saint John St, Portland PORTLAND LOBSTER CO | 207.775.2112 | 180 Commercial St, Portland

PORTSMOUTH BOOK AND BAR

| 617.908.8277 | 40 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, NH PRESS ROOM | 603.431.5186 | 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH PROFENNO’S | 207.856.0011 | 934 Main St, Westbrook THE RACK | 207.237.2211 | 5016 Access Rd, Carabassett RAVEN’S ROOST | 207.406.2359 | 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick RED & SHORTY’S | 603.776.3305 | 4 Paul St, Dover, NH THE RED DOOR | 603.373.6827 | 107 State St, Portsmouth, NH RI RA/PORTLAND | 207.761.4446 | 72 Commercial St, Portland RI RA/PORTSMOUTH | 603.319.1680 | 22 Market St, Portsmouth, NH

ROUND TOP COFFEEHOUSE |

SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.871.7000 | 125

Listings Continued from p 23 LYRIC MUSIC THEATER | 207.799.1421

| lyricmusictheater.com | 176 Sawyer St, South Portland | April 17-May 4: Young Frankenstein | Thurs 7:30 pm; Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 2:30 pm | $18-22

PENOBSCOT THEATRE COMPANY

207.725.0162 | 1 Maine St, Great Mill Island, Topsham SEA40 | 207.795.6888 | 40 East Ave, Lewiston SEASONS GRILLE | 207.775.6538 | 155 Riverside St, Portland SERENITY MARKET & CAFE | 603.319.1671 | 25 Sagamore Rd, Rye, NH SHEEPSCOT GENERAL | 207.549.5185 | 98 Townhouse Rd, Whitefield SHENANIGANS | 207.213.4105 | 349 Water St, Augusta SIDE STREET CAFE | 207.801.2591 | 49 Rodick St, Bar Harbor SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | 207.772.9885 | 123 Commercial St, Portland SILVER SPUR | 207.345.3211 | 272 Lewiston St, Mechanic Falls SKIP’S LOUNGE | 207.929.9985 | 299 Narragansett Trail, Buxton SKYBOX BAR AND GRILL | 207.854.9012 | 212 Brown St, Westbrook SLAINTE | 207.828.0900 | 24 Preble St, Portland

| 207.942.3333 | penobscottheatre. org | Bangor Opera House, 131 Main St, Bangor | April 24-May 11: Our Town | 7 pm | $24-37 PLAYERS’ RING | 603.436.8123 | playersring.org | 105 Marcy St, Portsmouth, NH | April 18-May 4: August: Osage County | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 7 pm | $12, $10 seniors PONTINE THEATRE | 603.436.6660 | pontine.org | West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St, Portsmouth, NH | April 17-20: Shakespeare’s Will | Thurs-Fri 8 pm; Sat 4 pm; Sun 2 pm | $24 PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | 207.899.4990 | portcitymusichall.com | 504 Congress St, Portland | April 20: “Somewhere Maine: The Marijuana Musical,” with Tricky Britches + Skosh + Azzlan Family Band | 4:15 pm | $29 PORTLAND STAGE COMPANY | 207.774.0465 | portlandstage.com | 25A Forest Ave, Portland | April 22-May 18: The Savannah Disputation | TuesThurs 7:30 pm | $35-45 ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE | 603.335.1992 | 31 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | April 17-27: The Wizard of Oz | Thurs-Sat 7 pm | $22/$18

St, Hallowell

| 603.433.4472 | seacoastrep.org | 125 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH | April 18-19:

Western Ave, South Portland

SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM |

SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAKERY | 207.622.4104 | 169 Water SMILIN’ MOOSE PUBLYK HOUSE AND TAVERN | 207.739.6006 | 10 Market Sq, South Paris

SOLO BISTRO | 207.443.3378 | 128

Front St, Bath SONNY’S | 207.772.7774 | 83 Exchange St, Portland SONNY’S TAVERN | 603.343.4332 | 328 Central Ave, Dover, NH SOUTHSIDE TAVERN | 207.474.6073 | 1 Waterville Rd, Skowhegan SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | 603.343.5257 | 421 Central Ave, Dover, NH SPARE TIME | 207.878.2695 | City Sports Grille, 867 Riverside St, Portland SPEAKEASY | 207.596.6661 | 2 Park Dr, Rockland SPRING POINT TAVERN | 207.733.2245 | 175 Pickett St, South Portland STOCKHOUSE | 207.854.5600 | 506 Main St, Westbrook STONE CHURCH | 603.659.6321 | 5 Granite St, Newmarket, NH STYXX | 207.828.0822 | 3 Spring St, Portland SUDS PUB | 207.824.6558 | Sudbury Inn Main St, Bethel TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | 207.657.7973 | 61 Portland Rd, Gray TANTRUM | 207.404.4300 | 193 Broad St, Bangor

THATCHER’S PUB/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.253.1808 | 35

Foden Rd, South Portland

THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE

| 603.427.8645 | 21 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH THE THIRSTY PIG | 207.773.2469 | 37 Exchange St, Portland TORCHES GRILL HOUSE | 207.467.3288 | 102 York St, Kennebunk TOWNHOUSE PUB | 207.284.7411 | 5 Storer St, Saco TUCKER’S PUB | 207.739.2200 | 290 Main St, Norway UNION HOUSE PUB & PIZZA | 207.590.4825 | North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, 18-230, Biddeford

UNION STATION BILLIARDS

| 207.899.3693 | 272 St John St, Portland ZACKERY’S | 207.774.5601 | Fireside Inn & Suites, 81 Riverside St, Portland

SEACOAST REPERTORY THEATRE

Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical | Fri 7:30 pm; Sat 8 pm | $22-30

SNOWLION REPERTORY COMPANY | 207.518.9305 | snowlionrep.org | Portland Stage Company Studio Theater, 25A Forest Ave, Portland | Through April 20: The Elephant Piece | Sat 2 & 7:30 pm; Sun 7:30 pm | $17

ST LAWRENCE ARTS & COMMUNITY CENTER | 207.775.5568 | stlaw-

rencearts.org | 76 Congress St, Portland

| April 24-26: Maine Playwrights Festival: “The Alpha Show,” local short plays | 7:30 pm | $15 STONINGTON OPERA HOUSE | 207.367.2788 | operahousearts.org |

Burnt Cove Church, 17 Airport Rd, Stonington | April 19: “Goodnight, Nurse:

The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet as Told by Someone Who Was There” | 7 pm STUDIO THEATRE OF BATH | 207.358.0031 | Orion Performing Arts Center, 66 Republic Ave, Topsham |

April 18-19: Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical | Fri 7:30 pm; Sat 2 & 7:30 pm | $12, $10 seniors/students THE FOOTLIGHTS IN FALMOUTH | 207.756.0252 | 190 US Rte 1, Falmouth | April 19: The Adventures of Peter Rabbit | 10 am & 1 pm | $10 UNITY COLLEGE | 207.948.6549 | Cen-

tre For the Performing Arts, 42 Depot St, Unity | April 17: “Can’t Scare Me... The Story of Mother Jones” | 7:30 pm | $20-25

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - GORHAM | 207.780.4141 | usm.maine.

edu | Russell Hall, 37 College Avenue, Gorham | April 18-27: In the Under-

world | Fri-Sat + Thurs 7:30 pm; Sun + Wed 5 pm; Tues 10 am | $15, $11 seniors, $8 students

ART GALLERIES 3 FISH GALLERY | 207.773.4773 | 377

Cumberland Ave, Portland | 3fishgallery. com | Thurs-Sat 1-4 pm & by appoint-

ment | Through April 30: “Elements,” exhibit by Portland High School Photography Club AARHUS GALLERY | 207.338.0001 | 50 Main St, Belfast | aarhusgallery.com | Tues-Sun 11 am-5:30 pm | Through April 27: “Paper,” mixed media group exhibition

ARTSTREAM STUDIO GALLERY

| 603.330.0333 | 56 North Main St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Fri noon-6 pm; Sat 10 am-2 pm | Through April 30: “Something About Spring,” paintings, monotypes, & ceramics by Susan Schwake AUCOCISCO GALLERIES | 207.775.2222 | 89 Exchange St, Portland | aucocisco. com | Thurs-Sat 9 am-5 pm | Through April 26: “Still Life Paintings,” by Gail Spaien + “Charcoal Drawings,” by Dozier Bell | reception April 11 5-8 pm BUOY GALLERY | 207.450.2402 | 2 Government St, Kittery | Tues-Sat 5-10 pm | Through April 30: “ArtPM,” mixed media group exhibition

CENTER FOR MAINE CONTEMPORARY ART | 207.236.2875 | 162

Russell Ave, Rockport | artsmaine.org

| Through April 27: “Articipation!: Community Celebration of Student Art,” mixed media COMMON STREET ARTS | 207.749.4368 | 20 Common St, Waterville | commonstreetarts.com | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm | Through April 26: “Colby on Common,” mixed media group exhibition CONSTELLATION ART GALLERY | 207.409.6617 | 511 Congress St, Portland | constellationgallery.webs.com | MonThurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-4 pm & 6-8 pm; Sat 2-8 pm | Through May 28: “Vivacity,” works by David Marshall + Geeta Ramni + Wayne Ross +

Anastasia Weigle

EDWARD T. POLLACK FINE ARTS | 617.610.7173 | 25 Forest Ave, Portland

| Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through May 15: “American Modernism -- Works on Paper” | Through May 27: “AD 20/21 Boston Print Fair” | Through May 30: “Boston Print Fair Highlights” | Through May 30: “Posters” | Through May 30: “Will Barnet at 100,” paintings | Through May 31: “Autum 2012 Exhibition,” mixed media | Through June 9: “The Woodcut Show,” group exhibition | Through June 30: “Recent Acquisitions,” mixed media ENGINE | 207.229.3560 | 265 Main St, Biddeford | feedtheengine.org | TuesFri 1-6 pm; Sat 11 am-4 pm | Through April 19: “New Ink: Recent Work from Peregrine Press” FORE RIVER GALLERY | 207.791.2723 | 87 Market St, Portland | forerivergallery.com | Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through April 30: “Refreshed,” mixed media exhibition

GLEASON FINE ART/BOOTHBAY HARBOR | 207.633.6849 | 31

Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | gleasonfineart.com | Mon-Sat 10 am-5

pm; Sun 11 am-4 pm | Through May 3: “Robert Clark: Color Woodblock Prints” GREEN HAND BOOKSHOP | 207.450.6695 | 661 Congress St, Portland | greenhandbooks.blogspot.com | Tues-Fri 11 am-6 pm; Sat 11 am-7 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Through April 30: “Hamsters & Popcorn,” oil paintings by Elise Smorczewski GREENHUT GALLERIES | 207.772.2693 | 146 Middle St, Portland | greenhutgalleries.com | Mon-Fri 10 am-5:30 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through April 26: “The Portland Show,” mixed media group exhibition HARLOW GALLERY | 207.622.3813 | 160 Water St, Hallowell | harlowgallery. org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun-Tues by appointment | Through April 26: “A Body of Work,” mixed media group exhibition HUBBARD FREE LIBRARY | 207.622.6582 | 115 Second St, Hallowell | Through April 30: group sewing exhibit

JUNE FITZPATRICK GALLERY

| 207.699.5083 | 522 Congress St, Portland | junefitzpatrickgallery.com | Wed-Sat noon-5 pm | Through April 26: “Drawn From the Earth,” drawings & paintings by Abbott Meader + Nancy Meader JUST US CHICKENS GALLERY | 207.439.4209 | 16A Shapleigh Rd, Kittery | call for hours | Through April 30: works by Bob Goudreau KENNEDY GALLERY | 603.436.7007 | 41 Market St, Portsmouth, NH | MonTues 9:30 am-6 pm; Wed-Thurs 9:30 am-6:30 pm; Fri-Sat 9:30 am-7 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through April 30: “Food, Glorious Food!”, paintings by Mary Byrom

KITTERY ART ASSOCIATION |

207.967.0049 | 8 Coleman Ave, Kittery | kitteryartassociation.org | Sat noon-6

pm; Sun noon-5 pm | April 24-May 18: “Clear as Rain,” mixed media group exhibition | Through April 20: “Recycle, Refurbish, Reclaim,” mixed media group exhibition MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland | call for hours | Through April 30: “Dr. Goodweather’s Dreaming Attic,” mixed media group exhibition MONKITREE GALLERY | 207.512.4679 | 263 Water St, Gardiner | Tues-Fri 10 am-6 pm;Sat noon-6 pm | Through June 7: “Working Through,” works by Jamie Ribisi-Braley NAHCOTTA | 603.433.1705 | 110 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | nahcotta. com | Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm; ThursSat 10 am-8 pm; Sun 11 am-5 pm | Through April 27: works by Ned Evans + Carly Glovinski + Liza Sylvestre OAK STREET LOFTS GALLERY | 207.553.7780 | 72 Oak St, Portland | call for hours | Through April 30: “Running With Scissors Small Group Show,” mixed media PERIMETER GALLERY | 207.338.0968 | 96 Main St, Belfast | Tues-Sat 7 am-5 pm; Sun 8 am-2 pm | Through May 18: “From the Wrack Line,” scultpure, drawings, & prints by Simon van der Ven PHOPA GALLERY | 207.317.6721 | 132 Washington Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat noon-5 pm | Through May 31: “Beneath the Surface,” works on paper by Avy Claire + Anne-Claude Cotty + Nancy Manter | reception April 17 5-7 pm | artists’ talk May 31 2 pm PORTLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.871.1700 | Lewis Art Gallery, 5 Monument Sq, Portland | portland-

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library.com/programs/LewisGallery. htm | Mon-Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Fri 10

am-7 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through April 30: “Bound Together: USM Book Arts,” group show RICHARD BOYD GALLERY | 207.792.1097 | Island Ave & Epps St, Peaks Island | Thurs-Sun 10 am-5 pm | Through April 30: “It’s Not So Black & White IV,” acrylic & ink works by Jane Herbert + Pam Cabanas + Wyatt Bar + Petrea Noyes RIVER TREE ARTS | 207.967.9120 | 35 Western Ave, Kennebunk | rivertreearts. org | Mon-Fri 10 am-6 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm | Through May 3: “Print. Paper. Ink.”, group works on paper show | reception April 11 5-7 pm

SANCTUARY TATTOO & ART GALLERY | 207.828.8866 | 31 Forest Ave,

Portland | sanctuarytattoo.com | Tues-

Sat 11 am-7 pm | Through April 30: “Phantasmagoric,” works by Eric Pomorski + Elisabeth Heller + Clayton Cameron + Glenn Chadbourne

SEACOAST ARTIST ASSOCIATION GALLERY | 603.778.8856 | 225 Water

St, Exeter, NH | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm

Continued on p 26

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26 apriL 18, 2014 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com

portland.thephoenix.com | the portland phoenix | april 18, 2014 27

Mary Fahl

Listings Sexy club clotheS, ShoeS and acceSSorieS you can’t find anywhere elSe! ASK ABOUT OUR REFERRAL PROGRAM TO EARN FREE DRESSES!

449 Forest Avenue, PortlAnd | 207.797.3366

local beer live music comedy storytelling poetry pub quiz

Continued from p 25 | Through April 26: “The Tame Ones,” mixed media group exhibition | reception April 12 2-4 pm SHALOM HOUSE, INC. | 207.874.1080 | 106 Gilman St, Portland | Through April 25: “Cabin Fever Traveling Art Show,” mixed media group exhibition SLAINTE | 207.828.0900 | 24 Preble St, Portland | call for hours | Through April 30: works by Emily Martin SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland | space538.org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm | Through April 25: “Last Place Ever,” mixed media works by Pat Falco | Through May 2: “Let Our Love Guide You From This World to the Next,” window installation by Cooper Holoweski | Through June 6: “Long Distance,” collage works by Jenny Odell SUSAN MAASCH FINE ART | 207.478.4087 | 4 City Center, Portland | susanmaaschfineart.com | Tues-Sat 11 am-5 pm | Through April 30: “Translucent,” photography by Leah McDonald + “Current Paintings,” by Sheep Jones THE OLD WHITE CHURCH | 207.642.4219 | 15 Salmon Falls Rd, Buxton | Through May 25: “My Maine: The Paintings of Michael McDonald” | reception April 11 5-9 pm WATERFALL ARTS | 207.388.2222 | 256 High St, Belfast | Tues-Fri 10 am-5 pm; by appointment | Through May 30: “Print,” group printmaking show

MUSEUMS BATES COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART |

207.786.6158 | 75 Russell St, Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | bates.edu/museumabout.xml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm |

Through May 24: “Polish Posters: Art & Illusion” | Through May 24: “Senior Thesis Exhibition 2014,” mixed media student exhibition

BOWDOIN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.725.3275 | 245 Maine St,

Brunswick | bowdoin.edu/art-museum

Sunday - Friday 4 - 7p: All Drafts $3 All Whiskies 20% off Thursday & Friday 5 - 6p: BACON & CHEESE Happy Hour Thursday 9:30p:

Hello Newman Kilcollins upstairs

$1.50 PBR & Bud 16oz Cans

Friday 9:30p:

Jake McCurdy downstairs

Saturday 9:30p: Sunday 2-5p: Monday 8p: Monday 8p: Tuesday 7p: Tuesday 9:30p: Wednesday 8-10p: Wednesday 8-11p:

Zealous Bellus upstairs Dave Rowe downstairs

Bluegrass Session Seanachie Nights Geeks Who Drink

Poetry Slam Open Mic Comedy Squid Jiggers

portland’s pub 375 Fore Street in the heart oF the old Port 773.7210 Facebook.com/bullFeeneyS @bullFeeneyS

| Tues-Wed + Fri-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Thurs 10 am-8:30 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Free admission; donations welcome | Through June 1: “Surrealism in Motion,” short films | Through June 1: “The Object Show: Discoveries in Bowdoin Collections” | Through June 1: “Under the Surface: Surrealist Photography” | Ongoing: “American Artists at Work, 1840-1950” + “Contemporary Masters, 1950 to the Present” + “Lovers & Saints: Art of the Italian Renaissance” COLBY COLLEGE | 207.859.5600 |

Museum of Art, 5600 Mayflower Hill Dr, Waterville | colby.edu/museum | Tues-

Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Free admission | Through June 8: “American Weathervanes from a Distinguished Maine Collection” | Through June 8: “Histories of Now: Six Artists from Cairo,” video works | Through June 8: “Julianne Swartz: Affirmation,” sound installation | Through June 8: “Spaces & Places: Chinese Art from the Lunder-Colville Collection & the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston” | Through June 8: “The Lunder Collection: A Gift of Art to Colby College” | Through June 29: “Alex Katz: Assembly II,” paintings, cutouts, & works on paper | Ongoing: “Process & Place: Exploring the Design Evolution of the Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion” + “Alex Katz Collection” DYER LIBRARY/SACO MUSEUM | 207.283.3861 | 371 Main St, Saco | sacomuseum.org | Tues-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-8 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through May 3: “From the Elegant to the Everyday: 200 Years of Fashion in Northern New England” FARNSWORTH ART MUSEUM | 207.596.6457 | 16 Museum St, Rockland | farnsworthmuseum.org | 10 am-5 pm, open until 8 pm with free admission Wed | $12, seniors & students $10; under 17 free & Rockland residents free | Admission $12; $10 seniors and students; free for youth under 17 and Rockland residents | Through April 27: “19th Century Perspectives: People & the Land,” paintings | Through Sept 28: “Coloring Vision: From Impres-

18: Fire Safety Friday 10:15am; Meet a Princess 11:30am; Cinderella: The World’s Favorite Fairy Tale 4pm | April 19: MIT Concert Band 10:30am; The Eyeball Show 11am; Cinderella: The World’s Favorite Fairy Tale 1pm; Open Art Studio 2-3pm; Smooshy Smelly Science 3:30pm; Cinderella: The World’s Favorite Fairy Tale 4pm | April 21: Lead Free Kids 11am; Sparks Ark Live Animal Show 12pm; Wacky Play-Doh Sculptures 2:30pm; Young Engineers: Tall Towers 3:30pm | April 22: Earth Day 10:30am-4:30pm; Incredible Insects 11am; Earth Day Story Time: The Tiny Seed 2pm | April 23: Open Art Studio 11am-12pm; Cinderella: The World’s Favorite Fairy Tale 11:30am + 3pm; Color Play: Complimentary Colors 3:30pm | Tiny Tots: Play-Doh Sculptures 10:30am; Cinderella: The World’s Favorite Fairy Tale 11:30am + 3pm + 4pmm; Star Show 11:30am; Tide Pool Touch Tank 3:30pm

CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.742.2002 | 6

sionism to Modernism,” paintings | Through Dec 31: “Ideals of Beauty: The Nude,” mixed media ICA AT MECA | 207.879.5742 | 522 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sun 11 am-5 pm; Thurs 11 am-7 pm | Through March 31: “We Are What We Hide,” long-running exhibit in& outside gallery walls MAINE COLLEGE OF ART | 207.775.3052 | Project Window, 522 Congress St, Portland | Through April 18: “Melt,” window installation by Reenie Charriere | Through June 4: paintings by Anne Ireland MAINE JEWISH MUSEUM | 207.329.9854 | 267 Congress St, Portland | treeoflifemuseum.org | Mon-Fri 10 am-2 pm | Through April 21: “Josefina Auslander: Departures & Arrivals,” drawings & acrylic paintings PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY | 603.777.3461 | Lamont Gallery, Freder-

ick R Mayer Art Center, Tan Ln, Exeter, NH | exeter.edu/art/visit_Lamont. html | Mon 1-5 pm; Tues-Sat 9 am-5

pm | Free admission | Through May 3: “A Whole New Game: Sports & Games in Art,” mixed media group exhibition PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART | 207.775.6148 | 7 Congress Square, Portland | portlandmuseum.org | Tues-Thurs + Sat-Sun 10 am-5 pm; Fri 10 am-9 pm | Admission $12; $10 students/seniors; $6 youth 13-17; free for youth 12 & under and for all Fri 5-9 pm | April 24: PMA Family Day | Through April 27: “Fine Lines: American Drawings from the Brooklyn Museum” | Through June 15: “Preserving Creative Spaces: The Historic Artists’ Homes & Studios Program,” documentary installation | Through July 27: “PMA Family Space: Clint Fulkerson,” drawings | Through Aug 3: “George Daniell: Picturing Monhegan Island,” photographs & drawings

SALT INSTITUTE FOR DOCUMENTARY STUDIES | 207.761.0660 | 561

Congress St, Portland | salt.edu | TuesFri noon-4:30 pm | Through May 2: “The Battle We Didn’t Choose,” photography by Angelo Merendino UNITY COLLEGE | 207.948.7469 | Leonard R. Craig Gallery, 42 Depot St, Unity | call for hours | Through April 25: “Space & Waves & Tendencies,” works by Heather Lyon | reception April 18 4 pm

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE - AUGUSTA | 207.621.3000 | Gannett Building, 331 Water St, Augusta | Through April 26: “1st Annual Maine Statewide High School Ceramic Arts Show”

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.561.3350 | Norumbega

Hall, 40 Harlow St, Bangor | umma. umaine.edu | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm

| Free admission | Through June 7: “Amy Beeler: Passion & Adornment,” sculpture & jewelry works | Through June 7: “Joe Kelly: Works from 2007-2014,” sculptures & drawings | Through June 7: “Looking Back Six Years -- Part One: Selected New Acquisitions,” mixed media | Ongoing: “Selections from the Permanent Collection”

UNIVERSITY OF NEW ENGLAND - PORTLAND | 207.221.4499 | Art Gal-

lery, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | une. edu/artgallery | Wed 1-4 pm; Thurs

1-7 pm; Fri-Sun 1-4 pm | Through June 14: “The Painting of John Calvin Stevens” | Through June 15: “Recent Acquisitions & Selections from the Permanent Collection,” mixed media | Ongoing: paintings & photography by Maine artists + labyrinth installation

UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSEUM OF ART | 603.862.3712 |

Paul Creative Arts Center, Durham, NH | unh.edu/moa | Mon-Wed 10 am-4 pm; Thurs 10 am-8 pm; Sat-Sun 1-5 pm | Free admission | Through May 16: “2014 M.F.A. Thesis Exhibition,” mixed media | reception April 11 6-8 pm | Through May 16: “2014 Senior B.A. & B.F.A. Exhibition,” mixed media

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - GORHAM | 207.780.5008 | Art Gal-

lery, USM Campus, Gorham | usm. maine.edu/~gallery | Tues-Fri 11 am-4

pm; Sat-Sun 1-5 pm | April 18-May 2: “2014 BFA & BA Exhibition,” mixed media student show | reception April 18 6-8 pm

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - LEWISTON | 207.753.6500 | Atrium

Gallery, 51 Westminster St, Lewiston | usm.maine.edu/lac/art/exhibits.html |

Mon-Thurs 8 am-8 pm; Fri 8 am-4:30 pm | Free admission | Through May 3: “Ant Farm: At the Nexus of Art & Science,” installation by Colleen Kinsella + Vivien Russe + Rebecca Goodale + Dorothy Schwartz

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - PORTLAND | 207.780.4270 | Kate

Cheney Chappell Center for Book Arts, Great Reading Room, 7th Floor, Glickman Library, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | usm.maine.edu/bookarts | Mon-Thurs 7:45 am-11 pm; Fri 7:45 am-8 pm; Sat 10 am-8 pm; Sun 10 am-11 pm | Through May 1: “Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here,” traveling exhibition | Through May 31: “Rescued, Redeemed, Revived,” book arts | Through Aug 14: “Charting an Empire: The Atlantic Neptune,” cartographic exhibition

OTHER MUSEUMS ABBE MUSEUM | 207.288.3519 | 26

Mount Desert St, Bar Harbor | abbemuseum.org | Thurs-Sat 10 am-4 pm |

Through April 30: “N’tolonapmenk: Our Relatives’ Place” | Through Dec 31: “Twisted Path III: Questions of Balance” | Ongoing: “Layers of Time: Archaeology at the Abbe Museum” + “Dr. Abbe’s Museum”

CHILDREN’S MUSEUM & THEATRE OF MAINE | 207.828.1234 | 142 Free

St, Portland | kitetails.com | Tues-Sat

10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm; Mon during school vacations | $10, $9 seniors, $7 youth under 17, free under 6; first Friday of the month is free 5-8 pm | April 17: Tiny Tots: Fingerpainted Eggs 10:30am; Star Show 11:20am; Baba Yaga Storytime 3pm; Tide Pool Touch Tank 3:30pm April

Washington St, Dover, NH | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Admission $7, seniors $6 | Through May 26: “Through the Lens: A Look at Our Diverse World,” photography MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY | 207.774.1822 | 489 Congress St, Portland | mainehistory.org | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | $8, $7 seniors/students, $2 children, kids under 6 free | Through May 26: “This Rebellion: Maine & the Civil War” MAINE MARITIME MUSEUM | 207.443.1316 | 243 Washington St, Bath | mainemaritimemuseum.org | Daily 9:30 am-5 pm | Admission $10, $9 seniors, $7 for children seven through 17, free for children six and under | Through June 1: “Going Coastal: Humor, Parody, & Amusement of a Maritime Nature” | Through June 1: “Those Contrary Winds: Weather & its Effects on Ships, Mariners, & Maritime History” | Ongoing: “A Maritime History of Maine” + “A Shipyard in Maine: Percy & Small & the Great Schooners” + “Snow Squall: Last of the American Clipper Ships” MAINE STATE MUSEUM | 207.287.2301 | 83 State House Stn, Augusta | mainestatemuseum.org | Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Admission $2, $1 for seniors and children ages 6-18, under 6 free | Through April 30: “Maine Voices from the Civil War” | Ongoing: 12,000-plus years of Maine’s history, in homes, nature, shops, mills, ships, & factories

PEARY-MACMILLAN ARCTIC MUSEUM | 207.725.3416 | Bowdoin College, Hubbard Hall, 5 College St, Brunswick

| bowdoin.edu/arctic-museum/index. shtml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Free | Through April 27: “Scrimshaw: Selections from the Peter C. Barnard Collection” | Through May 31: “Animal Allies: Inuit Views of the Natural World” | Through Dec 31: “Robert E. Peary & His Northern World” PORTSMOUTH ATHENAEUM | 603.431.2538 | 9 Market Sq, Portsmouth, NH | Tues, Thurs, & Sat 1-4 pm | Through May 17: “The 1749 Model of the HMS America, the Athenaeum’s First Object -- 1820” SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM | 207.780.4249 | Science Building, 70

Falmouth St, University of Southern Maine - Portland, | usm.maine.edu/ planet | call for hours | free | April

18: Laser Mania 6pm + 7pm | April 19: Laser Mania 1pm + 3pm + 6pm + 7pm | April 20: Laser Mania 1pm + 3pm | April 21: Rusty Rocket 11am; Laser Mania 12pm + 2pm + 3pm + 6pm + 7pm; Dinosaurs at Dusk 1pm | April 22: The Little Star that Could 11am; Laser Mania 12pm + 2pm + 3pm + 6pm + 7pm; Eight Planets and Counting 1pm | April 23: Rusty Rocket 11am; Laser Mania 12pm + 2pm + 3pm + 6pm + 7pm; Dinosaurs at Dusk 1pm | The Little Star that Could 11am; Laser Mania 12pm + 2pm + 3pm + 6pm + 7pm; Eight Planets and Counting 1pm VICTORIA MANSION | 207.772.4841 | 109 Danforth St, Portland | victoriamansion.org | Through May 21: “Mansion as Muse,” installation by Amy Yoes + Andrew Mowbray + Mark Dion + Dana Sherwood + Justin Richel

Our Ratings

dinner + movie

MOvie Review

Dining Review

outstanding excellent good average poor

$ = $15 or less $$ = $16-$22 $$$ = $23-$30 $$$$ = $31 and up

xxxx xxx xx x z

Based on average entrée price

dive bar alternatives upscale drinks, high and low _By Bria n duf f Since the city council wants to shut down Sangillo’s Tavern, it might only be a matter of time before we’re required to start drinking in a manner dictated by our elected representatives. The point of a dive bar is cheap drinking for drinking’s sake, and perhaps some unpredictable conversation. One side effect, apparently, is an occasional bout of spontaneous violence. What the council members prefer, one begins to suspect, are drinking establishments that fit into a more upscale and corporate-friendly mold, catering to the folks who harm society in ways more refined and better calculated. I visited two such establishments, recently opened or reopened, to try to get into the spirit of things. Dive bars are a crucial component of any urban bohemian’s personal mix of high and low culture. Within the paradigm of upscale drinking, however, we considered a different type of high/low juxtaposition: MJ’s Wine Bar at the bottom of One City Center, and the Top of the East Lounge, located on the top floor of what is now the Westin Portland Harborview hotel. The former allows you to drink under 13 stories of home-grown bankers and lawyers; at the other, you’re lounging above a dozen floors of business travelers and tourists. MJ’s has some things in common with Sangillo’s, and in many of the best ways. The drinks (wine in this case) are not too

f

FShort Takes xW DRaft Day 109 minUtes | pG-13 | westbrook cinemaGic + clarks pond + saco cinemaGic & imax + smitty’s biddeford + smitty’s windham + nordica + reGal brUnswick + aUbUrn Essentially a giant promo for the annual NFL Draft, this rote drama appeals to fans by liberally employing all the familiar trademarks, team logos, and broadcast personalities. A first-year general manager (Kevin Costner), stressed by the responsibility of landing the best players for his team, grapples with issues both professional (difficult coworkers, pompous draftees) and personal (bitter girlfriend, overbearing mother — women, right?). Screenwriters Scott Rothman and Rajiv Joseph seem to have modeled their script on Moneyball (2011), but here the

expensive, the service is pleasant and unpretentious, and the focus is squarely on imbibing rather than eating. The space is appealing, with large front windows, a long bar, a comfy lounge area, and lots of wood. In summer there will be tables out front. The wine list is a rare mix of reasonable and interesting, with most bottles under $40, and several under $30. Glasses and half glasses are available for every wine. The Charles and Charles cabernet blend from Washington was pleasantly dry and full with a hint of licorice. A French Malbec called Les Fiefs D’Anglars was understated and pleasant, exhibiting hints of raspberry without being sweet. The Stemmari Nero D’Avola tasted of raisin and plum. MJ’s forgoes a full kitchen, and serves only cheese, nuts, olives, and chocolate. The cheese plates are thoughtful, each pairing a cheese and little toasts with some sort of fruit and a sauce or paste. The buratta looked like a large egg, especially when cut open so its creamy interior could mix with a pile of super-sweet roasted corn and a tart raspberry syrup. A Geitost goat cheese had an unusual fudge-like look and texture, and slightly caramel flavor. So MJ’s is quite pleasant, though when the white-shirted bankers strut in through the back door — which means straight from the office — you do shudder a bit. At Top of the East you squeeze into the elevator with the polo-shirt and sweater

crowd, and try to outmaneuver them for a window table. The renovation is impressive: the room more spacious, the windows larger, and the appointments more attractive. Servers wear bridesmaid kEEPINg IT SIMPlE simple snacks complement MJ’s interesting wine list. style dresses in black. The view It’s a shame our city’s council’s preferis still nice. ence for fiscal over physical violence has to While MJ’s owner has a true passion for affect our drinking habits. Sure, the guy wine (chatting up patrons about hectares, next to you is less likely to throw a punch (or yields, and thicker textures), at Top of the say something unexpected), but he’s more East the dressy servers have a passion for likely to have just trimmed a 2 percent fee something else, helpfully listed on their on a bunch of iffy trades, or found a worknametag (“My passion is…”). Indeed, around for a pesky environmental regulapassions do seem to be elsewhere at TotE, tion. You tell me who’s causing more harm. and as you gaze into the distance you sip Still, spots like MJ’s, and views like cocktails that are nice enough but not parthe one above the Westin, make corpoticularly special. In a green tea and honey rate-style drinking more than bearable — mojito the flavors got lost in each other. bullish, even. ^ A cucumber Collins was crisper and more refreshing. The apps are rather pricey, and one with lobster wrapped in lettuce was un$ MJ’S WINE BAR | One City Center, derwhelming. The panini are cheaper and Portland | 207.772.1400 perfectly fine; the smoked chicken version, made with a nice pesto, came with a wel$$ TOP OF THE EAST | 157 High St., Portcome ramekin of extra sauce. land | 207.775.5411

movie reviews in brief

mixture of pathos and business dealings falls flat, mostly because the film asks us to sympathize with people who don’t have any actual problems. Ivan Reitman directed, routinely as ever; with Denis Leary, Frank Langella, and Jennifer Garner.

_drew hunt

xxxx DOM heMingway 93 minUtes | r | railroad sqUare (cominG soon) “Jude Law is Dom Hemingway,” reads the poster for this British comedy — just in case you needed some persuading that the poised, delicately handsome actor could pull off his role as a brutal, randy, flamboyant, explosively angry ex-con. He does, but the real star here is writer-director Richard Shepard (The Matador), who pumps

enough comic juice into the story to revive its shopworn premise of a career criminal hitting the streets again after years in the can. (Typical of Shepard’s sly wit, and Law’s deft handling of it, is the scene in which Dom tracks down the guy who slept with his wife while he was away, beats him bloody, then relaxes into some nostalgic banter with the man’s coworker as if nothing has happened.) Richard E. Grant, a wonderfully baleful character actor too seldom seen on these shores, costars as Dom’s safecracking accomplice, whose prosthetic hand tends to fly off in stressful situations.

_J.r. Jones

Dom Hemingway

xxx finDing vivian MaieR 83 minUtes | cominG in may to: nickelodeon + railroad sqUare + lincoln theater Chicago street photographer Vivian Maier was almost completely unknown at the time of her death in 2009, but since then there’s been an explosion of interest in her work—thanks mainly to John Maloof, who acquired some 30,000 of her

prints and negatives at auction and began posting them online. As codirector of this documentary (with Charlie Siskel), Maloof recounts his great discovery and interviews people who knew the reclusive artist; she spent most of her adult life working as a nanny (for Phil Donahue, among others), and her former charges recall her as a prickly character who jealously guarded her photography from the outside world. Like Henry Darger, another Chicagoan whose gift went unrecognized in his lifetime, Maier was an eccentric and a hoarder, and the portrait Maloof and Siskel assemble here from the scant information available suggests that her fanatical privacy was the darkroom in which her distinctive artistic personality was developed.

_J.r. Jones


32 month xx, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com

Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday April 18 through Thursday April 24. Times often change with little notice, so please call the theater before heading out. For complete film-schedule information, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at www.thephoenix.com.

dinner + movie Portland CInEMaGIC Grand

333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 12:30 am, 3:30, 6:45, 9:45 dIVErGEnt | 12:25, 6:45, 9:40 draFt daY | Fri-Sun: 11:15 am, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 | Mon-Thu: 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | Fri-Sun: 11:30 am, 2, 4:20, 7, 9:20 | Mon-Thu: 2, 4:20, 7, 9:20 a HaUntEd HoUSE 2 | Fri-Sun: 11:20 am, 1:40, 4:15, 7:20, 9:30 | Mon-Thu: 1:40, 4:15, 7:20, 9:30 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | Fri-Sun: 11:15 am, 1:45, 4:15, 7:10, 9:40 | MonThu: 1:45, 4:15, 7:10, 9:40 noaH | 3:30 oCUlUS | Fri-Sun: 11:30 am, 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 | Mon-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 rIo 2 | Fri: 11:20 am, 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 | Sat: 10 am, 11:20 am, 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 | Sun: 11:20 am, 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 | Mon-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 tranSCEndEnCE | 1, 3:45, 7:10, 9:50

tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | 3:50, 6:45

a HaUntEd HoUSE 2 | 12:20, 2:30,

4:45, 7:20, 9:25 noaH | 12:30, 3:30, 7:30 oCUlUS | 1:30, 4:20, 7:25, 9:50 rIo 2 | noon, 2:20, 6:55 rIo 2 3d | 4:40, 9:15 tranSCEndEnCE | 1, 4, 6:50, 9:30

ColonIal tHEatrE

163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times.

EVEnInGStar CInEMa

Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.729.5486

tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl |

Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 8:45 | Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30

FrontIEr CInEMa

14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222

ErnESt & CElEStInE | Sun: noon, 2, 6, 8

rEBElS WItH a CaUSE | Tue: 2 |

Wed: 2, 6 | Thu: 2

rEVIVInG tHE FrEEdoM MIll | Tue: 6

tHE UnKnoWn KnoWn | Fri-Sat: 2

nICKElodEon CInEMaS

lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10

dIVErGEnt | 12:40, 3:30 ErnESt & CElEStInE | 12:50, 2:50,

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 12:45, 3:50, 7:10 dIVErGEnt | 12:30, 3:40, 6:45 tHE lEGo MoVIE | 12:50, 3:30, 7:30 Mr. PEaBodY & SHErMan | 1:30,

1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.4022

4:50, 7, 9:30

tHE Grant BUdaPESt HotEl |

12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:20, 9:40 noaH | 6:40 tHE raId 2 | 9 tranSCEndEnCE | 1:15, 4, 6:50, 9:20 UndEr tHE SKIn | 1:30, 4:15, 7:10, 9:35 lE WEEK-End | 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:45

PMa MoVIES

855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010

4:35, 7:15

MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 1, 4:05, 6:55

nEEd For SPEEd | 12:35, 3:35, 6:40 non-StoP | 1:35, 4:20, 7:45 rIo 2 | 1:05, 4, 7 300: rISE oF an EMPIrE | 1:20, 4:30, 7:40

tranSCEndEnCE | 1:15, 4:15, 7:25

lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater St, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424

non-StoP | Fri-Sun: 2, 7 | Wed-Thu: 2, 7

tHE MaGIC lantErn

9 Depot St, Bridgton | 207.647.5065 Call for shows & times.

narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | Fri-Sat: 12:40, 3:30, 6:40, 9:30 | Sun-Mon: 12:40, 3:30, 6:40 | Tue-Thu: 12:40, 3:30, 6:40, 9:30 dIVErGEnt | Fri-Sat: 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 | Sun-Mon: 12:50, 3:40, 6:30 | Tue-Thu: 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 God’S not dEad | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 4, 7, 9:30 | Sun-Mon: 1:10, 4, 7 | Tue-Thu: 1:10, 4, 7, 9:30 tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | FriSat: 1:20, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40 | Sun-Mon: 1:20, 4:10, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 1:20, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 12:15, 2:30 noaH | 4:45, 7:30 rIo 2 | 2:45, 5, 7:20 rIo 2 3d | 12:30 tranSCEndEnCE | Fri-Sat: 1, 3:50,

6:50, 9:20 | Sun-Mon: 1, 3:50, 6:50 | Tue-Thu: 1, 3:50, 6:50, 9:20

nordICa tHEatrE

1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 3:30, 6:35 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr 3d | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 9:40 |

Sun-Thu: 12:30 dIVErGEnt | Fri-Sat: 3:35, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 3:35, 6:30 draFt daY | Fri-Sat: 1, 4:20, 7:05, 9:35 | Sun-Thu: 1, 4:20, 7:05 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 1 noaH | Fri-Sat: 12:20, 3:20, 6:25, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 12:20, 3:20, 6:25 rIo 2 | Fri-Sat: 12:45, 4, 6:30, 8:45 | Sun-Thu: 12:45, 4, 6:30 tranSCEndEnCE | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 3:55, 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 1:10, 3:55, 7

oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 Call for shows & times.

raIlroad SQUarE CInEMa 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526

CESar CHaVEZ | Thu: 8 ErnESt & CElEStInE | 12:35 tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | FriSat: 12:25, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:05 | Sun-Thu: 12:25, 2:30, 4:45, 7 tHE lUnCHBoX | Fri-Wed: 2:20, 4:35, 6:50 | Thu: 2:20, 4:35 rEd dESErt | Mon: 7 rEPo Man | Sat: 9:30

UndEr tHE SKIn | Fri-Sat: 12:25, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 12:25, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10

SMIttY’S CInEMaBIddEFord

rEEl PIZZa CInEraMa

420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224 Call for shows & times.

JoUrnEY to tHE WESt | Tue-Thu:

SMIttY’S CInEMaSanFord

33 Kennebec Place, Bar Harbor | 207.288.3828

6, 8:30

VEronICa MarS | Fri-Mon: 6, 8:30

rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times.

SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX

783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234

BEarS | 12:30, 2:40, 4:40, 7, 9:20 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | noon, 3, 6:50, 9:50 dIVErGEnt | 1, 4, 8 draFt daY | 12:30, 3, 7, 9:30 tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:40 a HaUntEd HoUSE 2 | 12:20, 2:30, 4:40, 7:10, 9:20 HEaVEn IS For rEal | 12:20, 3, 7:30, 10 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 1 noaH | 8 non-StoP | 3:50 oCUlUS | 12:10, 2:40, 5, 7:30, 9:50 rIo 2 | noon, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10 rIo 2 3d | 12:30, 3, 7, 9:30 tranSCEndEnCE | 12:30, 3:30, 7:20, 10 tranSCEndEnCE - IMaX | noon, 3, 7:05, 9:40

1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000

Sun-Thu: noon, 3:30, 7 dIVErGEnt | Fri-Sat: 9:45 draFt daY | Fri: noon, 4 | Sat: noon, 4, 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: noon, 4, 7 HoP | Wed: 11:30 am tHE lEGo MoVIE | 12:30, 4 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | noon, 3:30 noaH | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7:30 | Mon-Thu: 12:30, 4, 7 rIo 2 | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 roCKY IV | Wed: 7 tranSCEndEnCE | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun-Thu: 12:30, 4, 7:15

SMIttY’S CInEMaWIndHaM

795 Roosevelt Trail, Windham | 207.892.7000 Call for shows & times.

SPotlIGHt CInEMaS

WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC

183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456

Bad WordS | 7:20, 9:40 BEarS | 12:20, 2:30, 4:40, 7:10, 9:15 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | noon, 12:15, 3:10, 3:30, 6:45, 7, 9:40, 9:50

dIVErGEnt | 12:10, 3:20, 6:40, 9:40 draFt daY | 11:50 am, 2:15, 4:45, 7:20, 9:50

God’S not dEad | 12:10, 3, 6:50, 9:30 a HaUntEd HoUSE 2 | 12:10, 2:15,

NEW HAPPY HOUR

The best doesn’t have to be expensive. Stop in and let us help you find the glasses you love at a price you can afford!

J UST G OT H APPIER

M ON .– S AT. 4 PM – 8 PM cascobayeye.com

Michael Anastasio, OD • Robert Banglmaier, OD Kyle Benner, OD • Steven Goldstein, OD Timothy Kearins, OD • Sian Liem, OD Francis Robbins, OD • Timothy Tolford, OD 152 Middle St. Portland 773-2020

770 Congress St. Portland 772-8384

256 US Route One Falmouth 781-5580

Ten Q St. South Portland 799-3877

7 Portland Farms Rd. Scarborough 883-2809

thephoenix.com

Strand tHEatrE

345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070

lE WEEK-End | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sat: 3, 5:30, 8 | Sun: 3, 5:30 | Mon: 7 | Tue: 1, 7 | Wed-Thu: 7

9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times.

nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall

28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900

Psychic Medium and Author

dIrtY WarS | Sat: 3, 7 | Thu: 7 lE WEEK-End | Sun: 3, 7 | Tue: 7 | Thu: 7

rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15 45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times.

4:20, 7:20, 9:30

HEaVEn IS For rEal | 12:30, 3:30, 7, 9:30

tHE lEGo MoVIE | 11:50 am, 2:10, 4:30

Mr. PEaBodY & SHErMan | 11:50 am, 2:10, 4:30, 7, 9:20

MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 12:30, 3:20

noaH | 12:20, 3:30, 6:40, 9:40 non-StoP | 6:50, 9:20 oCUlUS | 12:20, 3:10, 6:50, 9:15 rIo 2 | 11:50 am, 2:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45 rIo 2 3d | 11:55 am, 2:20, 4:45, 7:25,

FIlM SPECIalS BoWdoIn CollEGE

Sills Hall, Smith Auditorium, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.469.0924

VanISHInG PoInt | Thu: 7

MaInE aUdUBon

9:50

20 Gilsland Farm Rd, Falmouth | 207.781.2330

9:50

| Tue: 6:30

tranSCEndEnCE | 12:30, 3:20, 7:10,

MaInE aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10

746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605

BEarS | 12:10, 2:10, 4:30, 7:05, 9:05 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 12:40, 7 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr 3d | 3:40, 9:45 draFt daY | 1:10, 4:05, 7:10, 9:35 God’S not dEad | 12:50, 9:10

S UNDAY 11 PM –1 AM

Healthy, Fun Adult Entertainment | 207.772.8033 | 200 Riverside St. | PTsShowclub.com MODELS USED FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY

6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 Call for shows & times.

7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148

tHE PaSt | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2

But, we also have a full range of eyeglasses—frames and lenses— perfect for all budgets.

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:30, 7, 10 |

tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10 Draft Day

Yes, we carry the top designer eyeglass frames.

0314

movie Th e a Te r lisT ing s

Our eyeglasses are fashionable... and affordable!

“MaInE oUtdoor FIlM FEStIVal”

SPaCE GallErY

538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600

BIG MEn | Mon: 7:30 Flood tIdE | Sat: 7:30

UnIVErSItY oF SoUtHErn MaInE - Portland Talbot Auditorium, Luther Bonney Hall, Portland | 207.780.4141

GrEaSE | Fri: 8 GrEaSE 2 | Fri: 10 traSHEd | Tue: 7

EvENtAs DAtE HgED! CHAN

JOHN EDWARD Dec. 3rd 2014 - 7pm Holiday Inn by the Bay 88 Spring St Portland, ME 04101

For Tickets: www.ETix.com or www.Johnedward.net Reading Not Guaranteed


30 April 18, 2014 | the portlAnd phoenix | portlAnd.thephoenix.com

Back page Jonesin’

_ by m a t t J o n eS

“Ron foR youR lives!” — that’s all you can do ©2014 JoneSin’ croSSworDS | eDitor@JoneSincroSSworDS.com

Across 1 Ski lodge drinks 7 put up for display 11 “danny and the dinosaur” author ___ hoff

14 Show off 15 cookie with its name stamped on it 16 Actress mendes 17 Furniture wheel 18 club for shorter shots

F

20 “What’s that d.c. university, hon?” response (from a director and former pitcher)? 22 Fish hook 24 through 25 controversial director riefenstahl 26 Affect adversely 27 dubliner’s dance 28 Affirmation at the altar 31 Adjust a clock 32 Become more liked by 34 like day-old bread 36 premium-class tV dinner brand (from a fictional boss and an actor)? 40 oldest of the “Animaniacs” siblings 41 Strainers 43 miguel’s “more” 46 part of ioS 47 easter egg coloring 48 put away 49 Volcano that erupted in 2002 51 Al and peggy Bundy’s son 52 “Srsly?!” 53 Wine that can’t decide what it is

58 59 62 63 64 65 66 67

19 down with something 21 18-wheeler 22 prank 23 Goes on tV 27 the ___ Brothers 28 “___ Always Sunny in philadelphia” 29 Short, short shorts 30 Skate park maneuver 33 method 34 Snoopy ___-cone machine 35 the night before 37 Allows 38 common 39 “Are you for ___?” 42 hog’s haven 43 Whimpered 44 Favorite daughter of Zeus 45 Whimper 47 Burrowed 50 Fed on 51 AKc category 52 “this is weird, but...” 54 First name of the “First lady of Song” 55 Feral pig 56 “...___ dust shalt thou return” 57 columbus vessel 60 Food preserver 61 Suffix with employ

(from a stand-up comedian and a fictional newsman)? Video game starting point ___ car (child’s ride) compass dir. Advanced interlock the mavericks, on scoreboards ‘90s mariners star Agree (to)

Down 1 Freon letters 2 rock-___ (jukebox manufacturer) 3 movement of money 4 Words before bounds or breath 5 over again 6 “the Firebird” composer 7 Accord creator 8 like death Valley 9 “99 luftballons” singer 10 movie or party attachment 11 Sitcom, e.g. 12 miss ___ (“peeWee’s playhouse” character) 13 “heck!”

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_w r i te u S at p o r tl a n D -F e e D back @p hx . com

the cost oF clean energy

In his April 4th column, “Folly of Youth,” Al Diamon writes that Governor LePage is “dead right” about “his belief that wind power is driving up electricity costs in the state….” The governor and other anti-wind-power zealots assert this unfounded claim often, and they also say this about the state’s renewable energy standard. Like Mr. Diamon, they fail to cite any credible sources for this assertion. There is, however, reputable evidence that wind power lowers and stabilizes electricity prices region-wide and creates major economic development. Two recent studies from ISONew England, for example, found that 14 percent wind energy reduced electricity prices by around 10 percent, while 24 percent wind energy reduced electricity prices by 15 percent, and that the New England region’s proposed wind projects would reduce electricity market expenses by $1.074 billion per year, or $119 in savings per each MWh of wind energy. (Specific citations for these and numerous other similar studies can be found at: tinyurl/windenergycost.) In addition, according to a recent Maine PUC-commissioned report, “the addition of a large amount of low cost renewables, like wind, in New

England may also result in lowering electricity prices as wind displaces existing higher cost generation, which can also create indirect and induced economic benefits.” In Maine PUC’s recent approval of Downeast Wind’s 20-year term contract, the Commission found that the contract was in the ratepayers’ interest, provided a measure of protection to ratepayers against volatility in the wholesale market, and will have an “estimated price suppression benefit to ratepayers with a net present value of $6 to $8 million.” Obviously, electricity prices are only one part of the story. A comprehensive analysis of the costs of dirty vs. clean energy would account for the enormous subsidies for fossil fuels and the very costly harmful environmental, health, and economic impacts of global and local climate disruption from burning fossil fuels to generate electricity.

Glen brand | Director, Sierra club maine

creative calling

“Nude Muses” (by Matt Dodge, April 11) might share something meaningful about artist models but has deceptive trap doors, including claims that professors don’t protect models’ safety and inaccurate depictions of what we models do, which trivialize this work.

_by Symbo line Da i Some very important religious holidays occur this week, which will prompt deep reflection for some. Others will just be happy that Spring Is Here. It’s highly unlikely (but not unheard of) to get snow this time of year, but it can happen. Late snow is known as “poor man’s fertilizer” since it adds free nitrogen to the soil. The sun switches gears into security-minded Taurus, so those who are prone to possessiveness will definitely get amped up this week through late May. Others, will be giddily relieved that Mercury retrograde has ceased. That’s always a threeweek transit, so if you lost your keys, your codes, your directions, your paperwork, clear communication with a loved one, bear in mind the pressure eases up.

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The tee-hee undertones throughout border on ticklish prurience I find demeaning to the modeling profession. Artist models, like professors, are professionals who generally know the etiquette and how to protect themselves in the setting. Models are not victims, and artists drawing are not perpetrators. The author stereotypes us with a self-loathing “collective fear” of nakedness, and labels modeling as a form of “legalized exhibitionism.” Even R. Crumb would be appalled, and wow, can he draw the model! Posing requires endurance, exertion, depth, and inner strength. The seeing that comes from studying a figure model builds unprecedented awarenesses and drawing skills. Modeling is often a calling for the model; the relationship between model and artist is symbiotic, profound, nonthreatening, focused, and cherished. In defense of my colleagues, fellow artists, and the students, I feel it is unfair to condemn them. Models set boundaries, remain covered during breaks, and work with the professor to ensure their safety. The professor is present and vigilant at all times, and her professional tone and actions monitor students while they draw. 1

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Waning moon in capricorn, moon void-of-course 7:21 pm until 12:18 am tuesday. Stick to the rules or “the protocol,” because if you deviate (and you’re an Aries, libra, leo, Gemini, or cancer), your wrists could get slapped. capricorn, taurus, Aquarius, pisces, Scorpio, Sagittarius, and Virgo should deal with money matters or structures. 23

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Waning moon in Aquarius, earth day. Air sign moons favor those who think big and dream extravagantly. So you may hear plans that are impractical or unfeasible. (or is that you making those plans?) But it’s a good day for tossing things out and starting over. leo, taurus, Virgo, cancer, and Scorpio could be (unintentionally) difficult with loved ones. Aquarius, libra, Gemini, pisces, Aries, capricorn, and Sagittarius: work on being nimble, and look for a candlestick to jump over. 24

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Waning moon in Aquarius, moon void-of-course 12:10 pm until 2:55 am thursday. An all-day void-of-course moon tests your patience. if you don’t look for consistency, you won’t be disappointed. Schedules are completely out of synch. Aquarius, libra, Gemini, Aries and Sagittarius can go with this. taurus, leo, and Scorpio will resist, and Virgo, cancer, pisces, and capricorn will find the humor. 22

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Waning moon in capricorn; easter. You say you want a resurrection? Well all right — here you are. With the sun in capricorn, we’re all going to be more practical, although Aries, libra, Gemini, leo, and cancer may be blithely blunt. capricorn, Virgo, taurus, Aquarius, pisces, Scorpio, and Sagittarius: find the fun in frugality. 22

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Waning moon in Sagittarius, moon void-of-course 9:17 pm until 9:28 pm when it moves into capricorn. Sun moves into taurus. Another good day for travel. Aries, Sagittarius, leo, capricorn, and Aquarius, take action on “unfinished business.” Virgo, pisces, cancer, taurus, and Gemini should be talked out of whatever foolishness they’re hell bent on achieving. libra and Scorpio: spend time with your wilder friends. 21

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Waning moon in Sagittarius, Good Friday. travel is a theme, and it’s a good day for frankness if you’re libra, Aries, leo, Sagittarius, Scorpio, Aquarius, and capricorn. You folks will be able to express yourselves with skill and style. however, Sadge moons are also accident-prone, so pisces, Virgo, Gemini, cancer, taurus could trip over concealed obstructions, or “sign up” for a program you have no interest in.

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Waning moon in Scorpio, moon void-of-course 3:09 am until 5:44 pm when it moves into Sagittarius. excellent for weeding or doing a project that involves cutting or culling. look for plants that need to be hacked. Speaking of hacking, Scorpio, pisces, cancer, Virgo and capricorn could find they’re more attractive to others than usual. conversely, Aquarius, leo, and taurus may be unaware of how they’re coming off to others.

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puzzle solution at ooM thephoenix.coM/recr

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This horoscope traces the passage of the moon, not the sun. Simply read from day to day to watch the moon’s influence as it moves through the signs of the zodiac. | When the moon is in your sun sign, you are beginning a new 28-day emotional cycle, and you can expect increased insight and emotionality. When the moon moves into the sun sign opposite yours (see below), expect to have difficulties dealing with the opposite sex, family, or authority figures; social or romantic activities will not be at their best. | When the moon is in Aries, it opposes Libra, and vice versa. Other oppositions are Taurus/Scorpio, Gemini/Sagittarius, Cancer/Capricorn, Leo/Aquarius, and Virgo/Pisces. The moon stays in each sign approximately two and a half days. | As the moon moves between signs, it will sometimes become “void of course,” making no major angles to planets. Consider this a null time and try to avoid making or implementing decisions if you can. But it’s great for brainstorming. | For Symboline Dai’s sun-sign horoscopes and advice column, visit our Web site at thePhoenix.com. Symboline Dai can be reached at sally@moonsigns.net.

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