Thursday, June 28, 2007

This isn’t a proper review. Let’s just make that clear from the start. I headed to Brother Bean last Saturday explicitly not to review the show there, but to relax and listen to some music. One of the two Bruces (Swartz and Kahler) playing as Bruce2 is not only a nice guy, but the co-owner of Brother Bean, a guy who’s working with me on a community radio station, and basically, I thought that there were just too many conflicts of interest for me to be there acting impartial.

I should have brought my notebook and camera.

I had expected a vanity show – one of the great prerogatives of running a space is to step up to the mic when you feel like it, regardless of talent. If you go to poetry readings, you soon realize that many times organizers become organizers because no one else would listen to their work if they weren’t in charge. But Kahler has a gorgeous voice—his notes were spot on every time – no wavering, no sliding, just a relaxed nailing no matter the progression -- and Swartz, a bassist who plays with a number of local bands made me, a guy who last played bass nearly a decade ago (and even then poorly), think of the instrument in new ways.

The two did some combo numbers and then Swartz did a number of solo numbers with his loop station (patiently but not condescendingly explaining how it worked and what he was trying to do), the Kahler took a solo turn, and then they finished with more combo tunes.
The duo did a lot of covers – the Handsome Family (“My Sister’s Tiny Hands”), some Cat Stevens, even some John Denver mixed in with about five originals. They had the ease on stage of two guys who had been doing this for a long time. My wife was in heaven with the song selections, but I would have liked to have seen some more originals.

Like I said, this is not a proper review, but it was so unexpectedly wonderful that something had to be said. And, as a matter of fact, two other things must be said too.

As the New York Times recently observed, “It Takes a Tough Man to Tell a Bad Joke”:
Johnny Cash carefully cultivated his man-in-black image, but he was also an incorrigible ham; the famous Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison album includes not only “Folsom Prison Blues” and “I Still Miss Someone” but also novelty songs like “Flushed From the Bathroom of Your Heart” and “Dirty Old Egg-Suckin’ Dog.” In an odd way singing a funny song can be a way of projecting both confidence (because you’re not afraid to sound like a lightweight) and humility (because you’re not too proud to do it).

When Kahler started in on his original “Is There Soap in Hippie Heaven?” (which deserves to be covered by every artist currently singing) I found myself doing something that I rarely do at a singer-songwriter show – laughing. So, a note to apprentice performers, don’t forget that you’re putting on a show. And even emo kids laugh. Sometimes. When no one else is looking.

Finally, a last bit of scolding. Bruce2 had a good crowd for the show. But, what (or who) I didn’t see there were other artists. The excuse of course is that folk-y isn’t your thing. Which isn’t an excuse at all – it’s apostasy of the faith of music. If you want to kill a scene – make sure that it’s insular, that you only listen to music that sounds like you, only invite your friends to your shows, and for god’s sake, don’t advertise, network, or even say “good show” to the other local players.

Some of you get passes – if you were playing a show that night, or live a long way from the venue, yet show up for most shows (you know who you are). But, if you were home watching TV, or hanging out with friends, or even practicing, you should have been there for two reasons. The first is respect. BroBean has the most interesting, most vibrant, most imaginative bookings around. Without them, we would be seeing neither the national acts nor the dedication to local artists that the Kahlers are incubating. When someone like that plays a show at his own venue, you show up. It’s respect, plain and simple. A way of saying “thanks”. Thanks for booking my beginning band, thanks for the good coffee and the friendly space, thanks for bringing other artists a place to play.


Speaking of BroBean they have two efficiency apartments for rent:
One is especially small but furnished and has everything you need...$350. the other is a bit bigger, is furnished and again...has everything you need...$400. both come with all utilities including internet. these apartments would be great for students, interns, or non-materialistic-community minded couples.

And Ryan Waterman brings her acoustic show to the Seneca venue on Saturday from 7-9 pm.


The Franklin Club is headed for Sherrif’s Sale.


The Meadville Tribune profiles director Jason B. McCann regionally shot horror short film The Beast in Me.
The short film’s plot. . . is about a relationship, and “the beast severing that relationship — literally. I mean, there’s some severing.”
Locations included the news studios of WSEE-TV in Erie, the Copper Coin Lounge in Edinboro and the Riverside Inn in Cambridge Springs.



Early Bird Tickets for the Firefly Music Festival end this week on Monday July 2nd.


Would a Whomping Willows show at a Venango library be cool? Yes, yes it would. If you want to help petition them, drop me a line.



Greensburg-based builder Tom Papinchak bought Frank Llyod Wright's Duncan House and moved it to a site in Mount Pleasant Township.

The 1957 structure, originally designed for prefabricated construction in larger numbers, was one of only a handful actually built. Its original location was in Lisle, Ill. But when rising land values led developers to threaten the house with demolition, it was put into boxes.


The Pittsburgh City Paper covers the one-act, work-in-progress, the, 90-minute tale of people who dress up in full body fursuits, Furry Tales. The show, timed to coincide with Pittsburgh's second year playing host to Anthrocon, the nation's largest conference of furries scampers onto the scene in a staged reading July 5 at the CLO Cabaret.

Furry Tales was sparked during last year's Anthrocon, when Bill Medica and JC Carter of But Why? Productions were sitting at Tonic, across the street from the David L. Lawrence Convention Center. Like many in the city, they were mystified at seeing people around town in tails, ears and fursuits. As the convention weekend progressed, their thoughts about furries evolved from "preconceived notions" into the realization that "we're all a little furry on the inside."
"They're not afraid to be themselves," says Carter. "When they left, the magic left."
"They were such a force," adds Medica.


Nazik al-Malaika, one of the Arab world’s most famous poets, an early exponent of the free verse movement in Arabic, died last Wednesday in Cairo.
1-
Here am I between the jaws of death
As a heart still throbbing with the love of life
As a couples of eyes athirst
For the enjoyment of the universe;
Making advances to the charms of the evening,
I am still a bud, on the twig of fortune,
Whose dreams and hopes are fresh and new.
It is a shame, O death, that thou shouldst
Bury my youth anon in the world of dead
2
-And I, O life, what fate is meted out for me?
Am I going to be a word devoid of meaning?
Will the nights carry me away
And cast the gloom of oblivion over me?
In the morrow, fortune will extinguish my lamps.
And death will squander the echoes of my tunes,
Then I shall become, amongst other ghosts, a ghost myself
And shall be erased from mortal existence.
Oh, no, I do not want that.
Would fortune have mercy on my tears.
Misery and sadness
Let there be a lasting echo of my melodious, song
Ringing in the hearing of the coming years,
Song ringing in the hearing of the coming years,
nay even centuries
O mercy! do not let my flowing tears
Be an early elegy on my youth.
3-
How did our days pass - how did they?
Between the jaws of eagerness and grief!
Your heart and mine were full of love and anxiety
But we took refuge under the wing of secrecy.
Whenever my eyes speak to you of my love
I punish them by depriving them of you.
O my poet, how did we keep it secret?
Yet of old, no two lovers ever disobeyed Cupid.
O my song, when shall my tunes reach thee,
So that thou wilt listen to the joys of my love?
Why do I spend my days suppressing my eagerness,
When my heart is overflowing with emotions?
Always we meet and always I ignore you,
perplexed,while my sad heart is possessed of the anxiety of the lover!
It is pride possessing the soul
That makes a love appear indifferent
4-
Is then then what they call life?
As lines we continue drawing over the water,
As echoes of a cruel song which does not touch the lips.
Is this then the essence of existence?
Wild scattered nights with no return
and the traces of our feet on the road of the deaf ears of time are gone!
For the storm's hand wipes them kindlesslyand surrenders them to nothingness
5-
Veiled Utopia.
A haven of magic, we were told
It was.Made of nectar and twilight roses,
Of tenderness and gold.
In it, they said, was
The panacea for the wounds of man.
We wanted it, but didn't get it.
Back to our hopes, miserable and unfulfilled.
Where is this land?
Are we to see it oris it to stay enveloped, unattainable
Agitating inside us only
A numbed yearning?
A prayerWithin closed lips?
The millions are a torrent of desire,
Burning desire,
And a dream of flame.
Open the gates for thousandsof exhausted victims are screaming
.6-
They spoke of 'life';
It is the color of a corpse's eye
It is the echoing steps of a stealthy killer:
Its curving daysa poisoned coat diffusing death.
Its dreams the humour of a demon
with paralyzing eyes, death - hiding lips.
7-
Where shall I go?
I'm weary of the ways,
I'm bored with the meadows
And with the persistent, hidden enemy
Following my footsteps.Where can I escape?
The trails and roads that carry
Songs to every strange horizon,
The paths of life,
The corridors in night's total darkness,
The corners of the bare days...
I've wandered along them all,
With my relentless enemy behind me,
Keeping a steady pace, or sitting firmly
Like the mountains of snow
In the far north.


Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Pete Greene reviews Sweet Charity and takes on community involvement as an anti-drug strategy at Venangoland.



Jerome Wincek has announced more shows, including two in Oil City.


The Derrick profiles local lego guy.






Meadville Council on the Arts hosts Coffeehouse this Saturday, June 23rd from 7:00 - 10:00. $4.00 donation. You can call ahead (336-5051) to reserve a table. The tentative schedule is 7:00 - 8:00: solo acoustic artist - Caleb Brennan

8:00 - 9:00: musicians from the band formerly known as Geppetto

9:00 - 10:00: band - Title Me Wrong




I’m trying to figure out how to decorate my office this fall – it’s basically a bare room with a computer right now – So some historic theatre seats from Butler’s Strand Theater at Theater Seat Auction Open House tonight at 6 pm are pretty tempting. The seats are divided in to sets of 1, 2, 3 or 4 seats. Proceeds from the auction will benefit The Strand's ongoing renovation as a performing arts, education and community outreach center. For more information call Ron Carter at (724) 742-0400.



Supporters of The "Local Community Radio Act of 2007" (HR 2802), like, you know, me, are asking you to contact Rep. John Peterson and ask him to support the effort as well.
You might also be interested in:



On Friday June 29th the GLFA will be showing . Grey Gardens at the Roadhouse Theatre (145 West 11th Street, Erie, PA) Doors open at 7:30pm and show time is 8:pm No reservations are needed, seating will be general admission. This event is also BYOB with proper ID.



Erie’s annual free Gallery Night is this Friday.



Dead @ 17, a short film based on the popular series of graphic novels will receive its debut screening at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, on Friday, June 29. I reviewed it here.




The “Made In Pennsylvania: A Folk Art Tradition” show that opens this weekend at the Westmoreland Museum Of American Art includes important examples of fraktur, salt-glazed stoneware, quilts, coverlets and samplers, all having their origins in Pennsylvania.

This weekend kicks off Pittsburgh’s Bikefest.



Celloforte’s battle of the band’s journey came to an end in Cleveland last weekend.


This week, New York Magazine's Vulture blog is excerpting Good As Lily, a m English-language manga written by Derek Kirk Kim and drawn by Jesse Hamm.


Saturday, June 23, 2007

First Eat n Park goes non smoking, next they’re going to be running their trucks on biodiesel made from the oil from the fry vats at their own restaurants and they are increasing the amount of locally grown and produced food in their restaurants recently, through an initiative called FarmSource. I never thought I’d say it, but I’ve got to put my money where my mouth, literally is and eat there now. I’m stunned. Just stunned.


I’m hooked on the Media That Matters online Film Festival. I may never sleep again.


Bruce2 rock Seneca’s Brother Bean tonight 7-9 pm. No cover.


The First Base Reserved Seats at the Erie SeaWolves Jerry Uht Park were ranked 5th best in the minor leagues by ESPN.com.


The PA State Representative of the 35th Legislative District in McKeesport, PA is looking for musicians, magicians, clowns or any other street performers to participate in Kids Festival at Renzie Park under the Blue Top pavilion on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 from 10 Am to 2 PM.. No pay. Call Brian at 412-754-3500.


The Iron Wheel a Pittsburgh-based online literary magazine is looking for poetry, essays, shorts stories, photography, drawings, digital renderings and paintings.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Yesterday, my daughter and I took the long way to Meadville (I mean the realllly long way), stopping for organic shell peas at Oil City’s Farmer Market (Thursday from 12-5. They’re open Monday too, but not as many vendors show up) and then over to Titusville to Brown Stone Studio in Titusville to pick up the Newmen CDs. Both trips are highly recommended. I’m thinking an album review is called for, so look for it in the next 10 days or so…


Congrats to Benjamin Thurau who will be playing his bull fiddle with the Pittsburgh Youth Symphony Orchestra. He also plays with the Venango Chamber Orchestra.


Gypsy Dave got a huge piece of coverage in yesterday’s ETN Showcase section, whilst Jerome Wincek got a pull out noticed from, ahem, Dr. Rock in the same issue.


It’s the weekend, so let there be music. I watched loudQUIETloud yesterday instead of working so in honor of how, um, comfortable Black Francis is with his body in the movie, here’s two from him.

Download "Ten Percenter" (mp3)
Download "Robert Onion" (mp3)
from "93-03"

And, just for fun, why not Download Wilco’s Bonaroo show in MP3.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

The Derrick profiles my former colleague Kathryn Graham and her Victorian Tea project:

[her] home will be open for high tea, a program about the culture of Victorian women, and a house and garden tour beginning at 11 a.m. this Saturday and Sunday and again on Saturday and Sunday, July 7 and 8. Additional information is available by contacting Graham at 724-867-6575.


Remora Deign is having a personnel shuffle.


Jerry Sowden took some snazzy pics at yesterday’s installment of Oil City's Music in the Transit Garden concert series


Don’t you dare ask for beer! Jerome Wincek is playing the strangely named, but oh-so-classy Billie’s Wine and Vodka bar in Erie’s Avalon hotel tomorrow from 9-1am. Cover: $5.


Erie’s GMD Films is looking for extras for their film, Virgin Pockets.


"Bodies ... The Exhibition" featuring 15 full-body human corpses causes controversy every where it goes. Now it’s Pittsburgh’s turn.


Show ticket prices are going up in Pittsburgh.


There’s still time to register for the National Pierogie Eating Contest to be held Saturday at Bethel Park High School.


In the overwhelming and annoying fascination with hipster parents and alterna-dads, Creative Loafing’s “The Seven Deadly Sins of Kid Culture” is a breath of minty fresh air.


The NYTimes profiles freegans.


Lifehacker lists 13 Book Hacks for the Library Crowd.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Dead@17 film review

D17posterA



Mark Steensland’s short film, Dead@17, based on John Howard’s series of graphic novels will receive its debut screening at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, on Friday, June 29. But, thanks to the good people at DreadCentral, I was able to catch a special preview before release.

Let me make it clear that I’m coming to the film as a comic book nerd, not a horror nerd and beyond that a slightly dissatisfied with the status quo comic nerd than an average bag and board geek. That said, Dead@17 is a good fan film.

The story itself is pretty Buffy-fied. The comic tells the story of a 17 year old girl caught up in a supernatural struggle for stakes higher than she can imagine. She wears a lot of mini skirts and kills a lot of zombies. For some people, that’s all that I need to say – they’re making plans for Erie already. But, for the rest of you, I’ll continue.

A girl, Nara, turns up dead, and her friend, Hazy, finds out that she may have been a bit more…unusual than anyone knew. It urns out that her friend was neck deep in the occult a fact that she has kept from all of her friends. Hazy sneaks the diary filled with occult symbols that Nara has kept and finds herself the target of zombies.


D@17_Falconediary


Only to be saved by Nara, her friend who was dead but now has some fancy axe work.

Dead @ 17 was birthed Josh Howard, also responsible for the very fine Lost Books of Eve comic. I’ve always had a quibble with the way Howard draws women (especially now that he's involved with Minx, DC's imprint intended for teen girls) so it was refreshing to see that the actresses are less than perfect Barbies.

D6_Naraaxe

Katelyn Gracy plays Nara, the zombie chopping mini skirted 17 year old who dies in the first three minutes of the movie and is resurrected in the last two minutes of the movie. Jessica Ciccone is Hazy (that’s her character’s name, not a criticism), Nara’s friend who the FBI hauls in for questioning after they find strange occult symbols in Nara’s diary. Ryan Krysiak is Elijah, Nara’s boyfriend who serves up a tasty heap of exposition about Nara’s odd behavior. It’s shot a bit dark and murky and sterile, but the special effects are well done for the budget.



D6_Bradzombie



The fan film movement by itself is a really interesting phenomenon. Digital video production has brought the cost of making one of these dramatically down and I’m surprise we don’t see more work like this – especially locally where there is a lot of talent, a lot of enthusiasm, but no much organized film making (outside of Pittsburgh, of course). Simply put (from our dear unreliably friend Wikipedia, which I know is like asking the opinion of a drunk and then treating it as gospel, but…) A fan film is a film or video inspired by a film, television program, comic book or a similar source, created by fans rather than by the source's copyright holders or creators. Fan films vary tremendously in quality, as well as in length, from short faux-teaser trailers for non-existent motion pictures to rarer full-length motion pictures. One of the most famous ones was done by my college friend Chris Strompolos who did a shot by shot homage of Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Steensland, an independent filmmaker and a lecturer in media production at Penn State Berhend (and a zombie in Day of the Dead), is no new comer to indie film. This is his third horror film. Steensland filmed Dead@17 in Erie using local talent and technical crews, including make-up effects artist “Monster” Mark Kosobucki, a recent Edinboro University graduate. Music for the score was contributed by British film composer Patrick Savage and the bands Fewleftstanding, Impellitteri, and Demon Hunter.

It looks like it was a blast to make which means that the discussion following the film should be a lot of fun as well. There are issues, of course. There’s a roughness to the short to be sure – the acting is creaky at times, specifically the agents who show up 3 minutes into the film who have the whiff of community theater about them. The film doesn’t have the overt Hollywood gloss of some fan movies, but Steensland’s site has lots of goodies like test shots, a pdf of the script and some shots of the props (and the photos that are used here in the post) . My biggest quibble with the film is its form. The comic, Dead @ 17, has a very convoluted story line and I’m not convinced that a 10 minute film did it justice or even worked to distinguish it from a lot of other student film material.

In fact, the film (reflecting the first issue of the comic) ends just as the story starts. Steensland has made it clear in various interviews that he’s hoping that this works as a sort of audition piece to enter into the larger Dead@17 film project that will inevitable be made. But there’s really no time for character development or really even much mood setting. For such a short piece, I can’t help but think that a mock trailer ala the Robin fan film Grayson would have been more effective.


Future plans for Dead@17 include the horror film festival circuit. Steensland also hopes to screen the short at this summer’s NECon and Comic-Con International comics conventions. This first screening for the film’s cast and crew also is open to the public, and co-sponsored by the annual Eerie Horror Film Festival. The screening and follow-up discussion will begin at 7:30 p.m. in 117 Reed Union Building; admission is free. Steensland characterizes the film as PG-13 material


Interested in learning more about fan films? Get yourself some broadband, a big ol’ case of soda, check out FanFilms.net, TheForce.net, BatmanFanFilms.com, Comics2Film.com, iFilm, and MI6.co.uk and revel in what other people are doing whilst you waste time watching TV.



Today’s Transit Garden concert in Oil City runs from 12 -1 and will be the very talented Latrobe Barnitz and David Perry.



Yankee Zydeco Company's music is now available on iTunes.


The NyTimes profiles Dreamtime Village, an intentional southwestern Wisconsin community of artists and anarchists.


Kore Press is seeking submissions for an anthology to be published in early 2008, including poetry, literary fiction, creative non-fiction or memoir written in English by women veterans and active-duty servicemembers, especially but not exclusively those who served in the U.S.-led wars in Iraq or Afghanistan and those who enlisted or continued to serve after September 11, 2001.


Did you say you wanted the whole of Ulysses in MP3 format for download? So be it!


Tuesday, June 19, 2007

The Russian philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin wrote a thick confusing book about the idea of the carnivalesque. For the wily Russian, the carnivalesque are occasions in which rules are turned upside down. During occasions like this, it’s not just the idea of ‘anything goes’, it’s the idea that nothing is available for ridicule – in other words, we’re talking less about Girls Gone Wild and more about Burning Man or Maker’s Faire. This temporary autonomous zone allows ideas to see the light of day, to slowly be accepted into and through the public spirit. A carnivalesque happening, the Russian believed, broke apart the status quo of the mind and cleared the path for the imagination. According to Bakhtin, “[A]ll were considered equal during carnival. Here, in the town square, a special form of free and familiar contact reigned among people who were usually divided by the barriers of caste, property, profession, and age. At carnival time, the unique sense of time and space causes the individual to feel he is a part of the collectivity, at which point he ceases to be himself. It is at this point that, through costume and mask, an individual exchanges bodies and is renewed. At the same time there arises a heightened awareness of one’s sensual, material, bodily unity and community.”

Of course, a carnival can also be a place to eat some cotton candy, do some people watching, meet new people and old friends, check out the freaks and listen to a one man band.

The Jon Felton and his Soulmobile show on Saturday June 16, 2007 at Seneca PA’s Brother Bean Coffeeshop then, was a little from column A and a little from column B. This was a scaled down Soulmobile, (And I should mention this is not Blessed John Felton the 16th century Catholic Martyr who was racked, hung, drawn and quartered, but still “uttered the holy name of Jesus once or twice when the hangman had his heart in his hand.” less you be confused) playing as a power trio rather than a quintet. And it’s stunning to imagine what they must sound like with the whole band together.



IMG_0701


I’ve been listening to the CDs that I picked up at the show, Let’s All Get Together and Not Be Machinery and All Creation Sings and I still can’t put my finger on exactly how to talk about them. There’s so much going on at a JFS show. It’s clear that he’s coming from, as he put it during the show, a “specific faith tradition”, namely Christianity, but its wrong headed to describe or review the show as a type of church service. The voice is so raw the gymnastics switching of instruments so shocking and incredible to see that one truly does feel that the normal laws of show playing and attending have been broken and that anything is possible.

Felton started out the show by breaking through the invisible, but expected audience/performer barrier by walking around and talking to audience members (and continued it later by inviting everyone outside to play Frisbee and bocce between sets.) It served its purpose – it made us nervous, but attentive and put us on notice that this was not going to be a night of sensitive singer/songwriter ness (not that there’s a darn thing wrong with that). Sometimes his patter was fascinating and poetic in itself and sometimes it was off-putting (as in his strange halting question about whether he could talk about his faith without offending anyone. I know that it was a move to show respect for his audience, but we’re there to see you, so if you want to talk about your faith or Darfur or the superiority of fresh lime juice over Rose’s than you can, and should).

IMG_0686


JFS has a great raw sound. A great big sound (a big sound that was plagued that night by buzzy vocals, but a big sound nonetheless). It’s a hard sound to quantify. They had the loud-quiet-loud Pixies things going in some songs and Felton showed off his plaintive Violent Femmes yelp to good effect in several songs. The unusual playing and choice of instruments (It’s a scientific fact that the introduction of a cello makes any song 15% more enjoyable. Cowbell use equals a 36% increase in goodness. I’m serious. I’ve done the research. I can show you the raw data.) and the immediacy of the vocals made the lyrics – stories of the craving to become a better human, of middle school bullies, of transportation beyond the mundane material world – all the more striking. But at other times, they had a distinct Eagles sound to them that seemed to come out of nowhere. “Balm for Gilead” had countrified harmonies that seemed to reference a completely different tradition than many other songs.

The real show, though, is watching them play. John played acoustic guitar and took care of lead vocals as well as working a snare on a footpedal and a kick bass drum as well. BJ Lewis was a wonder to watch switching from guitar to a trumpet with an odd mute the likes of which I’ve never seen before, to harmonica, all the while working a tambourine and cowbell on a foot pedal.


IMG_0693


I’d love to see an EKG of BJ’s brain as, in a single song he played harmonica, conga drums, tambourine, and cowbell and provided backing vocals. Elizabeth Donaldson played cello, back up vocals, and hand percussion.

Freak folk is sort of the flavor of the month. Like any label, it’s reductive in its application, but in a nut shell, we’re talking about a group of musicians who actually live their music - inhabiting an entire world view and expressing an original voice. The instrumentalism is eclectic -- acoustic guitars, cello, harp, violin, banjo, sitar, fuzztone electric guitar, harmonium, organ and bells and lyrics that suggest a heightened coconsciousness. And, whether or not you agree with the label or any label, JFS fulfills those criteria in an unusual new way.

Ed Droste, of Grizzly Bear, told LA Weekly , "Freak-folk comes with an image attached: You have to have a beard and be Jesusy, if you know what I mean....” After seeing Jon Felton and his Soulmobile, I’m not really sure there’s anything much wrong with that.




IMG_0685


Buy Jon Felton and his Soulmobile’s Let's All Get Together and Not Be Machinery










You can add the Oil City YMCA’s triathlon to the causalities of Park Unlimited's scorched earth policy.










Dead@17 by Penn State Behrend prof Mark Steensland will debut on June 29th at 7:30 pm in the campus’s Reed Union Building. Admission is free.









Yankee Zydeco Company has been nominated for an Erie Music Award. Vote here.









Wow. Just as I was preparing a pitch about Punk Planet for BOMB magazine, I get the bad news that it’s a casualty of the distributor crisis of last year.










This week New York magazine's Vulture blog is excerpting my favorite baseball graphic novel, James Sturm's The Golem's Mighty Swing.




Monday, June 18, 2007

I’ll be volunteering at the Franklin Library’s Scholastic Book Sale today. Drop by and say hello. The sale runs all week long.



Brother Bean has updated their live music schedule:
7-2-07 Open Mic (Call for slot)

7-5-07 Jim Tiefer

7-7-07 Dennis McCurdy & The Lonesome No More Band

7-14-07 Royal Army Recording Company

7-21-07 Nate Hall & Friends

7-28-07 Remora Deign

8-4-07 Drug Mules

8-6-07 Open Mic (Call for slot)

8-11-07 Shoheen

8-18-07 Donna Donahue


Venangoland has been updated with a post about the upcoming Sweet Charity show at the Barrow. It’s a good show, but I’m a little worried about draw, since Molly Ringwald’s reprised Sweet Charity played to sold out crowds at Heinz Hall just two months ago with similarly priced tickets….


Two House bills that could head to the state Senate this week would boost incentives for TV and moviemakers, potentially luring $350 million to $500 million in new money for Pennsylvania


TNT’s new medical drama Heartland is set in Pittsburgh.



Hometracked is a home music recording blog.



Saturday, June 16, 2007

About a decade ago, living in NYC, I often found myself leaving the bars and walking through what can only be described as a homeless bazaar. Homeless people would gather the useful junk – old magazines, baby formula, rims – that they had collected during the day and try to sell it at night.

A little tip to the interested parties – the Franklin Farmer’s Market should not be reminiscent of that bazaar.

I went down to the Farmer’s Market this morning to pick up some produce to make a big leisurely lunch, and to check out the Saturdays on the Square which had been promoted as featuring artisans and crafters along with produce. We’ll chalk up the lack of produce to a bad season, but the “crafters”. Oh my.

There was a guy selling (empty) beer bottles and Miller Light mirrors, another table that included a completed paint-by-numbers of a Golden Retriever. Another stand had three seedlings for sale along with a sign that said that they would write family histories “cheap”.
There are about 7 gazillion really talented local crafters out there. Why aren’t they taking part in this?


I sent in my and my daughter’s entry forms for the Oil Heritage Art Show yesterday. It’s still not too late for you to join in the fun. Consider volunteering as well.


Know anyone interested in staging a one act play? A high school violin recital? Want to try some comedy? Meadville Council on the Arts’ Coffeehouse LIVE is a new monthly performance activity involving the live arts of music, acting/ theater, poetry, stand-up comedy, and other art genres, all in a quaint comfortable candlelit coffeehouse setting. Contact the MCA at 336-5051, or mdvmca@alltel.net to schedule a performance time slot.


Desperately trying to cling to your fading youth and vitality? Why not start a garage band?

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Seneca’s Brother Bean hosts John Felton and His Soul Mobile on Saturday at 7pm. No cover

The Pittsburgh City Paper chimes in on the Three Rivers Art Festival Censorship issue.

Is the regional music scene going grey?

The A.V. Club lists 10 wonderfully weird moments from the Fantastic Four comic books.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Seneca’s Brother Bean is looking for some bands to play Thursday nights in the summer

The National Wildlife Federation is hosting a haiku contest

The Butler Art Center is hosting a tattoo contest on Friday, June 22nd as part of their “2nd Annual Painted Hog Show” Additionally, The Associated Artists of Butler County invites anyone who has had experience of breast cancer (directly, with family members, a friend, a relative, etc.) to showcase artwork that is inspired by that experience. The deadline is August 15th, 2007.

Speaking of tattoos, remember when we discussed KISSFM’s tattoo contest? The winner was apparently a woman who got a Mercedes Benz Emblem surrounded by flames tattooed on her hip. Class.


Registration is officially open for Pittsburgh's First Annual 48 Hour Film Project:On the weekend of August 3rd to the 5th 2007, local filmmakers across Pittsburgh will be competing in the 48 Hour Film Project’s tour to find “Pittsburgh's Best 48 Hour Film of 2007.” Local film teams will have just 48 hours to make a film – from writing and shooting to editing and adding music. The films will have their International Premier just 3 days later at several local theatres. Meadville’s Voodoo Brewing is set to open later this month.

Carolina Loyola-Garcia's video installation, "The need to wash the self with milk and honey," was pulled from the Three Rivers Arts Festival "Best of Pittsburgh 2007" exhibition because it includes nudity.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

“If Joe Negri doesn’t stop making eyes at you, I’m going toe to toe with the old man.”

That’s what I whispered to my wife Friday night at Lincoln Hall which takes up the second floor of the Foxburg Public Library. It turned out, we decided later, that he was actually establishing a rapport with the woman who sat directly behind us, who, I’m guessing was the bassist’s girlfriend, so the spectre of my getting beat up by a 77 year old jazz great was not to be seen.

There’s not a lot to review with a show like this. Joe Negri is without a doubt, one of the best jazz guitarists in the country. He’s an old time bandleader who signals his players when to start and end solos, whispering corrections in their ears while they play and congratulating them out loud when they do well. His show, which drew heavily from what he called “The Great American Songbook” was well planned out, and the patter was down, but still seemed spontaneous. He was a consummate showman taking in stride the failure of his mic (or rather than incompetence of the MC to figure out how the mic worked. This guy poured on the shtick so thickly that it seemed like he thought the evening was about him and not Negri. It would behoove them to find a better, more natural spokesman and ditch Schticky Smith or whatever his name was.)

The trio was bassist Paul Thompson ( a great, expressive player who Negri claimed would be the next Ray Brown), Joe (who was playing what I think was a Benedetto – that the heat and humidity quickly brought out tune. “A guitar is like a woman Negri sheepishly said as he tuned it between numbers. You think everything is going fine and then…”) and Max Leake at piano (a beautiful 1911 Steinway Grand that seemed to glow even under the simple lighting of the Hall).

There weren’t any surprises in the show, just a lot of standards played well with a passion
Setlist (from memory – there will be lapses):
“This Will Be My Shining Moment”
Unidentified number from Big River
Cole Porter Medley
Billy Strayhorn Medley
Unidentified solo piano number
Charlie Parker’s “Hothouse”
“Someday my Prince Will Come”
“Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood/Fred Rogers Medley”

How’s that for vague recollection.

What struck me as very interesting was the size of the crowd – no more than 25. Amy and I were the youngest ones there by 20 years. I worry that a series with that sort of draw simply isn’t sustainable. I mean $20 does seem a little high for a 70 minute show, but at the same time, I was close enough to touch the players if I wanted and they did a little meet and great afterwards, so yeah, I would pay it again if it was someone I wanted to see.

The Hall itself is an incredible space. Oil City native Arthur Steffee moved to Foxburg after his retirement from medicine (although in the town, everyone I talked to called him “The Doctor”) and set about single handedly remaking it 9which has been a good thing overall, but when you read of the rest of his project list you start to get the idea that he’s using his considerable finances like the old robber barons – that he gets his own way because of the money. No wonder so many old school Venango-ites love him. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think he has any sinister motives, other than need to be loved and respected, but he’s not a young guy and one has to wonder what will become of all of these eggs that Foxburg has placed in a single, albeit gold plated, basket).

In less than 5 years, he’s built or restored a winery, restaurant, hotel and performance space – Lincoln Hall. It’s the second floor of the Foxburg Library – an intimate spot with room for, I’m guessing around 80 people. I can’t speak to the acoustics because Amy and I sat dead front and to the right – great seats that didn’t require amplification. The stage itself has a restored mural behind it, sconces in front of the footlights (which I would bet money used to be gas), high ceilings and just a generally comfortable feeling space (although not a terrible comfortable space in reality – it must have been 80 degrees with no air conditioning - I was wearing a seersucker suit and was horribly warm and the performers shucked their jackets almost immediately and the straight-backed chairs, though beautiful put my butt to sleep faster than a Xanax and a shot). I’d be remiss as well if I didn’t mention the unisex bathroom down a flight of stairs of stage right filled with stained glass and art with a 12 foot ceiling – rather unsettling, I felt as if I were peeing in someone’s foyer.

A couple of years ago, under circumstances that I can’t remember, I was on the top floor of the Oil City Library – there’s a theatre there too, decrepit, and run down, but if not a twin of Lincoln Hall, then a close relative. At the time, I thought, “My Gosh, I would love to see this place restored.” No, after seeing this guy’s effort, I’m more than ever convinced that the Oil City’s should be restored as well.

Buy Negri’s work:
A Common Sense Approach to Improvisation for Guitar
Afternoon in Rio
Guitars for Christmas


Buy (and stream) Max Leake’s Album Trios






RIF lists summer books for kids classified as to where they take place. Our region’s includes:
I am Regina by Sally Keehn.
Maggie Among the Seneca & The Bread Sister of Sinking Creek by Robin Moore






The PostGazette reviews the Warhol’s climate change show.






Poets.org breaks down the scene state by state.






I’m hoping Father’s Day brings me an Optimash Prime Mr Potato Head Transformer.







Venangoland says goodbye this year’s crop of graduates.






What play would I like to see in Franklin next year? Glad you asked; it’s Lucia’s Chapters of Coming Forth by Day



Saturday, June 09, 2007

Just a quick note here – big post tomorrow.


I was remiss in my Jerome Wincek review not to mention that his CDs including The Old Hats Astral Road, and his previous work with Big Jack Earl are available from Meat & Potato Records


The telefonics show in Oil City has indeed been canceled. Too bad.

Friday, June 08, 2007






“Keep Playing!”
“Thanks Mom!”

So began the Jerome Wincek show last night playing with Nathaniel Custer (nylon string guitar) and Eric Hess (Upright Bass) as Buck, Chuck, and Chet at Seneca’s Brother Bean Coffeehouse. The three had taken the stage fashionably late (although not Guns & Roses late which was too bad, because I had my riot pants on) and had played a brief number when the call for more came.

Sadly, that was the liveliest the crowd was all night. I had expected a smallish crowd for a Thursday night show, but there was actually a pretty full house. It was just a very quiet full house. Which really is too bad. Wincek’s strength has always been his lyrics. He’s quiet and soft spoken in person, but his lyrics reveal a love of puns, wordplay and, as he put it at one point last night creating songs that are both, “weird and silly”. Looking around me though, there were a lot of deadly serious faces, as if they were playing to a room of scholars parsing every word, instead a of a group of all ages listening to songs that involved, beer, muskrats, and puns galore.

That’s not to say that this was a Raffi concert. It wasn’t. Wincek’s talents also include handling stories of domestic abuse and small town ennui. It’s just that the songs never feel overbearing. You aren’t crushed into submission by a Wincek song. It’s there – if you want to go away with it that’s cool. If not, it’ll wait.

Wincek’s lyrics shine the brightest when he lets his wit and love of wordplay to play against the message of the narrative like in “Barry the Hatchet” – the story of a young man (Barry) who commits some mayhem with a hatchet given to him by his mother as a birthday present.

By 7:25, the guys had started to settle in a bit, but there was still hesitancy in the performance. Additionally, because the music often shared a similar style and with Wincek providing all the vocals, there needed to be some cleanser between courses. A little more patter, or one of the other players stepping forward to take lead vocals or a song of their own (A point driven home when Wincek broke a string and Custer stepped in with a nice finger picking number that, unfortunately, just sort of petered out, after Wincek had restrung.)

Even with the sound issues, there were some standout numbers. Unlike Astral Road, Wincek’s album where a lot of the music came from, here the banjo and mandolin parts were transposed to guitar, and while it still sounded good, I sorely missed those non-traditional traditional sounds. “The Giver” featured Wincek’s best guitar work of the night (from Wincek) while Nate’s best work came in “Where the Muskrat” -- as the pace sped up he was doing some yeoman work on the fretboard.






Wincek nodded to his past as well by playing “So Long” from his time spent with the now defunct Big Jack Earl, featuring a nice bass solo from Hess (who, at least last night, bore a striking resemblance to Smashmouth singer Steve Harwell).







No Americana –roots-No Depression-alt country or whatever the heck you want to call it is complete without an old-timey cover and Wincek and the guys did a great cover of “Careless Love”, which, with Wincek’s meditative singing posture with his eyes closed (which, by the way, makes it pretty darn difficult to get a good photo) immediately made think of another chronicler of depressed Americanness, Robert Lowell and his poem “Skunk Hour”:

Nautilus Island's hermit
heiress still lives through winter in her Spartan cottage;
her sheep still graze above the sea.
Her son's a bishop. Her farmer
is first selectman in our village,
she's in her dotage.

Thirsting for
the hierarchic privacy
of Queen Victoria's century,
she buys up all
the eyesores facing her shore,
and lets them fall.

The season's ill--
we've lost our summer millionaire,
who seemed to leap from an L. L. Bean
catalogue. His nine-knot yawl
was auctioned off to lobstermen.
A red fox stain covers Blue Hill.

And now our fairy
decorator brightens his shop for fall,
his fishnet's filled with orange cork,
orange, his cobbler's bench and awl,
there is no money in his work,
he'd rather marry.

One dark night,
my Tudor Ford climbed the hill's skull,
I watched for love-cars. Lights turned down,
they lay together, hull to hull,
where the graveyard shelves on the town. . . .
My mind's not right.

A car radio bleats,
'Love, O careless Love . . . .' I hear
my ill-spirit sob in each blood cell,
as if my hand were at its throat . . . .
I myself am hell,
nobody's here--

only skunks, that search
in the moonlight for a bite to eat.
They march on their soles up Main Street:
white stripes, moonstruck eyes' red fire
under the chalk-dry and spar spire
of the Trinitarian Church.

I stand on top
of our back steps and breathe the rich air--
a mother skunk with her column of kittens swills the garbage pail
She jabs her wedge-head in a cup
of sour cream, drops her ostrich tail,
and will not scare.


Normally, Wincek has a just-plain-folks persona about him. Write dozens of songs, record multiple albums, set up a singer-songwriter festival and play out almost weekly? Aw shucks, ma’am, anybody could do it. It’s definitely a stance that usually brings the audience into his fold. Last night though, too often, that turned into self-depreciation,. It was only the third time the three had played out together, the distortion box caused sound problems, and Wincek found himself making light hearted apologies throughout the night. (Where we were, really, really close to the stage, there weren’t really any acoustical problems. I mean, I could quibble that Wincek’s guitar was too fuzzy, but that’s personal preference, not tech problems. However, at the back of Brother Bean, Wincek’s vocals were a little thick – the more amplification needed , the worse it sounded.) Ironically, what he didn’t realize is that even with the issues, he’s still a better showman, artist, and inspiration than 90% of the other regional acts who Lou Reed-like spend more time trying to convince you of their greatness than playing music.

As the Buck, Chuck and, Chet continue to play together, they’re going to tighten up and lose some of the nervousness. That’ll be good thing because it’s the only piece missing from the puzzle. “Love is a Martyr” provided a glimpse of what these three guys are capable of once they are settled into a show with the bass providing a resonant backbone with the more angry or nervous vibe added by the guitar work. They’ve got great songs, musical chops, and good personalities. They’re well worth seeing, well worth making a drive to see, and well worth buying on CD.

Jerome Wincek and Nate Hess play next June, 22 2007 at Billie's Wine and Vodka Bar (16 west 10th street, Erie, Pennsylvania) from 9 pm -1am

Jim Teifer plays Brother Bean this Saturday from 7-9 pm. No cover.








Can anyone confirm or deny the June 13th telefonics Transit Garden show in Oil City? The mainstream media is now listing Rex Mitchell as the performing artist and the telefonics aren’t returning emails, but are still listing the show on their site.



I know this is strange, but, anyone know a local (~60 miles from Franklin) cheesemaker?




The NYTimes reviews the American Folk Art Museums, “The Great Cover-Up: American Rugs on Beds, Tables and Floors”

It contains the work of dozens of great artists who were also women and usually anonymous, or “unidentified” as labels put it these days. (The makers of 13 works are identified; even in the unlikely event that half of the remaining 50 or so who aren’t are men, that adds up to three dozen women.)




I miss Franklin’s Shakespeare in the Park.




Newmen play a free show at tonight’s Hydetown Festival




Cellofourte a group of, yep cellists, beat 11 local rock bands in the Pittsburgh finals of a worldwide "battle of the bands" competition for unsigned groups.




Hey, PostGazette! Nice way to rip off Overheard in Pittsburgh! Wouldn’t it have been easier just to hire Chris for the day?




The New York art dealers Alberto Magnan and Dara Metz have rescued a Keith Haring mural from the Boys’ Club of New York




Erie’s Roadhouse Theatre is holding auditions this weekend on Saturday June 9th from 2:30 - 4:00 pm

Needed for Bug, 2 women: age range 30 - 50, three men: [1] age range 25 - 35, [2]age range 30 - 50.

For Red Light Winter, 1 woman age range 20 -30. Two men age range 25 - 35.

Have a 30 second monologue prepared. Roadhouse Theatre 145 West 11th Street, Erie. (814) 459.8215 for more info.




Pete Green has a new album. No, not that Pete Greene
Download Pete Green - Everything's Dead Pretty When It Snows


Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Blogger did it to me again. Ate the post everytime I switch from HTML to compose. I'm taking the day off

Monday, June 04, 2007

Don't forget that Big Leg Emma plays Titusville's Schiede Park from 7-9 pm. Free and open to the public.


The telefonics have announced a free June 13th show at noon on Oil City's Transit Building Garden on Seneca St.

The New Yorker profiles Michael Ondaatje


Gordon Ball discusses a life spent photographing Allen Ginsburg. You did remember that it was 50 years ago this week that "Howl" was declared obscene in England, right?


Nicolas Bouvier is the best travel writer that no American has read.


It's a bad week for poets. Sarah Hannah who taught poetry at Emerson College and was a a semi-finalist for the Yale Younger Poets Prize in 2002 committed suicide:

"For the Fog Horn When There Is No Fog"

Still sounding in full sun past the jetty,
While low tide waves lap trinkets at your feet,

And you skip across dried trident trails,
Fling weeds, and do not think of worry.

For the horn that blares although you call it stubborn,
In error, out of place. For the ridicule endured,

And the continuance.
You can count out your beloved—crustaceans—

Winking in spray, still breathing in the wake,
Beneath the hooking flights of gulls,

Through the horn's threnody.
Count them now among the moving. They are.

For weathervane and almanac, ephemeris and augur,
Blameless seer versed in bones, entrails, landed shells.

For everything that tries to counsel vigilance:
The surly sullen bell, before the going,

The warning that reiterates across
The water: there might someday be fog

(They will be lost), there might very well
Be fog someday, and you will have nothing

But remembrance, and you will have to learn
To be grateful.


Sunday, June 03, 2007

Saturday night was one of those great nights when just like it looks like the evening is going to bottom out, there's a stunning change of events and things turn out wonderfully.

It was, as previously noted, a big weekend for local music. The approaching thunderstorms kept me away from Remora Deign at the Relay for Life. Saturday the choice was between the 5 band show at the Y or BroBean. Unwilling to be the creepy old guy with the camera at the Y, I and my posse, identifiable by our conspicuous bling and inconspicuous weapons jumped in the hooptie and headed to Seneca.

Well, at least the venue part was true.

I'm not really that punctual when it comes to shows, but for whatever reason, Saturday night we showed up at exactly 7pm - there was a good sized (~30) crowd made up predominately of teen girls. Never a good sign, but I soldiered on. Robert Morris (not the early American banker and Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania as you might suppose) was on stage as the opener for the headliners, newmen (I should mention now that it takes quite a bit of control not to add the article "the" in front of their name, but, as far as I can tell, there isn't one.)

Morris is a young guy, with some rough edges and was overamped for the space, but had undeniably face appeal for the teen girls. But, in a dramtically un-pretty boy like fashion, he seems pretty dedicated to improving his craft - I overheard him pumping people for honest feedback and discussing his attempts to and frustrations at getting a full band together rather than staying solo. So, while I was really worried if I would be able to sit through a two hour set of his material (in which a lot of the songs sounded alike), his ten minute-ish set was just enough to satisfy his fan base and introduce him to some new peopleat the same time . It's hard, too, for someone his age (I'm guessing sixteen-ish) to find people who are committed to craft as he seemed. The guitarist he brought up on stage for a song or two, for instance, seemed mostly interested in mugging rather than connecting or playing.

There was a smooth transition between Morris and Newmen. The three guys, Jesse Proper(lead guitar and vocals), Kevin Proper (rythym guitar), and Chris Prenatt (bass) who make up the Titusville-area band took the stage and then Jesse turned around, knelt and a taped percussion loop filled the speakers.
Oh boy.


See, they lost their drummer and are in the process of "training" a new one, so for this show they were playing to a pre-recorded percussion. And, here's the deal, while I normally would have turned up my nose and muttered snide Ashlee Simpson remarks at my people, these three guys took what could have been a giant liability and made it work for them (although a foot pedal would have smoothed out the starting and stopping of the tracks).



They played well against the loops and with each other. One of the things that distinguish newmen from a lot of other local acts is their chops. They are tight. I mean James Brown tight (if the greatest showman on Earth had been a white guy with previous military service), clearly the product of practice, practice practice. So while at first I thought it was really odd to hear that they were "training" a new drummer, as soon as they started playing, it became clear why.

These weren't three guys playing together, this was a band. A unit was made stronger through the collective efforts and talents.

It was clear that these guys were having a good time last night. Although they had a friendly familiar crowd, they didn't mug (Kevin, for instance, has a regular guy stage charm that enables him to look goofy and proud at the same time - sort of like Ben Kweller with a headband - after a particularly good number like "Dutch Hill Down" available for preview, but, alas, not download on their myspace page). The bassist was classic for his type - quiet, confident, and proficient, stepping forward at one point to play a solo song that went over well.



Jesse has a shy stage presence which is both an advantage, in that women go for the shy thin emo guy thing (although the Mao cap he had on last night gave him a separated-at-birth vibe with Fyedka from the film version of Fiddler on the Roof), but a disadvantage in that the stage patter sort of drags and wanders as in this clip last night of "Thoughts Unspoken":
Thoughts unspoken



Jesse brought out the harp for "9 to 5 Waltz":




As you can see, he's got a folky kind of singer-songwriter vibe going, but the sound is rounded out by the other two players. What will be interesting is to see how newmen will be able to explore their sound once they re-add live percussion - they don't groove that much right now, but a drummer with some jazz chops would really add a depth that would push the band into a new more mature sounding place.

No merch table again - local bands, what do I have to do to give you my money, to plaster my gut with your t-shirts, to attach your badges to my messenger? I beseech you, take my money! That may change though. Newmen plays the Hydetown Festival June 8th and then huddles up this summer to put together a CD. I'm looking forward to buying it. And so should you.

Finally, to those of you who brought your own drinks into a coffeehouse show? Tacky, tacky, tacky. If I had been the owners, I would have given you the boot. But of course, like most people, they're nicer than I.




Jerome Wincek plays Seneca's Brother Bean this Thursday from 7-9.




Huzzah and kudos to the Franklin Public Library's Monday Evening Book Club whcih will be discussing native born author's Hildegarde Dolson's The Great Oildoradoon June 25th from 6:45-8 pm. The group is open to all and copies of the book are available at the desk.



A commercial shoot near New Castle needs an experienced set decorator for June 21& 22. Send your resume with a few photographs of previous work.




The Pittsburgh area metal fest Sincerity Fest needs a film crew:
I'd really like for someone to step up and film this fest for the DVD I plan on releasing. I have a live sound board recording set up and I'd really like for some decent to high quality footage to put along with it. We can discuss money or equipment or whatever we gotta do to make this happen.





The Alleghenies has launched an outdoor digital photo contest to highlight the scenery of the 1.8 million-acre region (Johnstown, Altoona, Raystown, Laurel Highlands, Bedford/Breezewood, McConnellsburg and State College regions).

Photos can be submitted through Oct. 21.






In a sweet Long Tail move, The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra has embraced the present and has begun offering burn-on-demand CDs of their performances:

. . .the seven restored PSO discs are just "the tip of the iceberg . . . [f]or the Pittsburgh Symphony. . . I am sure there are 30 or 40 discs coming."





Alexandra Bauer was crowned the marbles queen of Allegheny County and will be heading to Nationals in Wildwood NJ. I love marbles. I'm such a nerd.






French artist Lucette de Rugy and her company, Artlumiere will use the exterior of four downtown Pittsburgh buildings for her light based installations starting on Wedensay.






The NYTimes profiles summer travel books and graphic novels.






Salon interviews one of my wife's favorite authors, Berkeley Breathed






Poet William Meredtih has died:

"In Loving Memory of the Late Author of Dream Songs"

Friends making off ahead of time
on their own, I call that willful, John,
but that's not judgement, only argument
such as we've had before.
I watch a shaky man climb
a cast-iron railing in my head, on
a Mississippi bluff, though I had meant
to dissuade him. I call out, and he doesn't hear.
'Fantastic! Fantastic! Thank thee, dear Lord'
is what you said we were to write on your stone,
but you go down without so much as a note.
Did you wave jauntily, like the German ace
in a silent film, to a passerby, as the paper said?
We have to understand how you got
from here to there, a hundred feet straight down.
Though you had told us and told us,
and how it would be underground
and how it would be for us left here,
who could have plotted that swift chute
from the late height of your prizes?
For all your indignation, your voice
was part howl only, part of it was caress.
Adorable was a word you threw around,
fastidious John of the gross disguises,
and despair was another: 'this work of almost despair.'
Morale is what I think about all the time
now, what hopeful men and women can say and do.
But having to speak for you, I can't
lie. 'Let his giant faults appear, as sent
together with his virtues down,' the song says.
It says suicide is a crime
and that wives and children deserve better than this.
None of us deserved, of course, you.
Do we wave back now, or what do we do?
You were never reluctant to instruct.
I do what's in character, I look for things
to praise on the riverbanks and I praise them.
We are all relicts, of some great joy, wearing black,
but this book is full of marvelous songs.
Don't let us contract your dread recidivism
and start falling from our own iron railings.
Wave from the fat book again, make us wave back.



Friday, June 01, 2007

Got the update. Saturday, the Franklin Y (111 W Park St, Franklin) hosts a $5 show featuring The Marching Order, Kick Old Man, Dirt Mcgurtt, the Telefonics, and Big Leg Emma kicks off Titusville's Summer Concert in the Park from 7-9 pm Monday. The show is in Scheide Park, is free, and food will be sold.


The Local Color photography exhibit opens at the Meadville Council on the Arts this evening


Meadville will once again host a Juneteenth celebration.


Joe Negri will be playing two shows in Foxburg's Lincoln Hall June 8 & 9. Tickets are $20 and available at the Foxburg Winery.


Former Venango resident and mini-Martha Jennifer Antkowiak continues to find new ways to market herself.


Eat N Park is smoke free. Finally. Also, I noticed yesterday that Leonardo's in Franklin is smokefree after 3 pm. Since I don't go to restaurants anymore that have smoking, no matter how much I enjoy the food, I'm hoping this is a trend.


The PovertyNeck Hillbillies will headline the Clarion County Fair (July 22-28).


Forest County's Festival in the Forest has issued a call for artists.


Pittsburgh's Troy Hill, one of the few neighborhoods I know of where one could buy drugs and see a huge collection of Catholic relics in a single block, could be getting a facelift.