Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Blogger ate this post three times. Time for me to move on. So, a much shortened post:
Spent yesterday (in part) going over the galleys of the first of what I hope will be my many book reviews for one of my favorite mags, DoubleTake . I reviewed Local Treasures: Geocaching across America , and, as they say on Reading Rainbow, if you want to know how the story ends, you'll have to read it yourself.


I also found myself in Oil City yesterday killing half an hour before volunteering at a swim program at their Y. I moseyed (or did I saunter, memory fails) over to the OC Library. Some years ago, someone made me angry there (how's that for an irrational grudge) and I hadn't been back since. I finally decided that was way too old-skool Northwestern PA and was glad I went in.

Using AccessPA , I picked two books that I had been wanting to read for a while, The Lecturer's Tale: A Novel and Night Fisher. The librarian wasn't too pleased to go through the AccessPA process, but I haven't met many who are.

It's a beautiful library with a great fiction collection, so get your card out attatch your AccessPA sticker and start raiding for summer reading. By the way, what is on your summer reading list? Aside from Venago Authors that is. Drop me your reading list or post them in the comments and I'll compile a list of recommend reads for next week.


Speaking of summer books, Venango poet extraordinaire Phil Terman's publisher has released the cover art for Terman's new book Rabbis of the Air , and it's a snappy one:




It's due to be released shortly, so make sure you pre-order.


It's a gigungious music weekend. So let's get this started:

Local band Policy Overkill has released a new MP3, "Failure" .

Jerome Wincek christens the new Patio at Kate's Bar in the Oil City Arlington Hotel Friday from 8-10 pm

Seneca's BroBean plays host to Newmen Saturday 7-9pm. No cover

Remora Deign plays twice this weekend. Friday at The Oil City Relay for Life and Saturday for a $5 multi-band show at the Franklin. Sadly, they didn't forward any more details than that.



Meadville's Union Room(287 1/2 Chestnut St., Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335) hosts Bleeding A Memory, Manokin, First to Fall, Moment of Truth, Vanity of Rage on Saturday for a $6 show.

I know things got lost because of this stupid Blogger, so remind me of what I missed and I'll include it tomorrow.
Off with ya.
I'm trying to sell some ideas today and mow my lawn (not at the same time), so just a quick post today.

Venangoland is updated with a super post about "Venango Mysteries"




2007 History Through Art is a juried exhibition sponsored by the Southerwestern PA Council for the Arts that Venango County residents are eligible to enter.



The Derrick has some shots of the statue dedication ceremony from Saturday's fest. Here's mine:






The Slider Search, the official recruitment tour of USA Luge will stop in McKeesport June 9-10 with a luge course set up on Eden Park Boulevard near the Penn State campus entrance. Boys and girls ages 11-14 can register for one of four, three-hour clinics at http://www.usaluge.org/ or by calling 1-800-872-5843. Cost is $15.



The Post Gazette profiles Klezfest, complete with audio samples.




The Trib Review takes a look at the trinkets left at Warhols's Castle Shannon gravesite:


Sounds of traffic wash over the cemetery, and the view from Warhol's grave takes in the back of a shopping complex, a power substation and a telephone tower. Suburban homes -- one with an above-ground pool -- line up behind a chainlink fence at the cemetery's edge.


I continue to try to find an easy way to organize my comics - everything commercial I've tried has been terrible, but I'll give My Comic Pile a try.

The Pitchfork music festival lineup has been announced and could be worth a roadtrip...


Threadless is having another $10 sale. I'm leaning towards the one called "Summer":



Sunday, May 27, 2007

So, Friday, before everything went south for me, I was leaving the gym when a guy stopped me.
"Hey, he said. Do you know where there are any pick up volleyball games around here?"
It’s a patentedly silly question, because I am short and fat and old, but he must have had some intuition because, I do in fact, know that the Venango Catholic High School gym is sometimes open on the weekends with pickup volleyball games. So, I told him.
"Won't work," he said, 'I'm looking for something local."
Oh, and did I mention we were 8 miles away from the VC gym at that point?

Flash forward now almost exactly 24 hours, my air condition has pissed through my second floor plaster in a stream that would make many a middle aged man enviable. I've spent a sweaty morning in my attic tearing part a pump and a rebuilding a drainage line and then hoping everything will be nice and dry. Now, I'm walking towards Justin Parson's van with him, chatting as he gets his guitar. The crowd for the Oil City Independent Arts and Music fest thinned out after a storm (which had missed Franklin - I was stunned to see puddles on the ground at Justus Park and some moist looking people) and we were placing bets on when people would return (around 4:30 it turned out).

"The thing is," I said, "right now, I know there are, like 100 kids in a 20 mile radius bitching to their friends and parents that there's nothing to do."

Even junkies have to walk to the corner to make a connection. My friends, the moral is, if you wait until a concert or a pickup volleyball game drops into your literal front yard, you will spend a lot of time complaining and missing out on things like this festival which was, without a doubt, the most enjoyable afternoon I have spent in at least a year. And what may have been the most enjoyable time I have ever spent without the presence of booze, firearms, and/or fireworks.

My wife and I showed up to the festival late. We had planned to spend the whole day there hanging out, but the HVAC emergency meant plugging those holes and then fitting the festival in before we continued up to finish purchasing the items needed to fully completed he repairs.

We rolled in towards the end of Jeremy Jack’s set.


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Jack is the proprietor of Meat and Potato Records, an Americana label out of the Johnstown area who sometimes records solo and sometimes Black Coffee Orchestra. Jack is an affable guy – quick witted as they come. Telling the audience, ‘I hope you liked that song…I guess if you don’t…you can….follow me to the parking lot and beat me up.” He’s got a retro sound that conjures up slow cool mornings of thick newspapers and for me, at least, the poetry of Wallace Stevens :
Complacencies of the peignoir, and late
Coffee and oranges in a sunny chair,
And the green freedom of a cockatoo
Upon a rug mingle to dissipate
The holy hush of ancient sacrifice.
She dreams a little, and she feels the dark
Encroachment of that old catastrophe,
As a calm darkens among water-lights.
The pungent oranges and bright, green wings
Seem things in some procession of the dead,
Winding across wide water, without sound.
The day is like wide water, without sound.
Stilled for the passing of her dreaming feet
Over the seas, to silent Palestine,
Dominion of the blood and sepulchre

with a more vernacular crunch.

It was pretty clear that the rain-shrunk crowd was more of a challenge to some than others. Performers like Jack - used to more mellow crowds - were still able to relate. Justin Hoenke however, didn’t seem to be having as much fun.
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His set was great and he was a nice guy to chat with afterwards, but it was pretty clear from his on stage patter that he was bummed that there wasn’t more of a vocal crowd.

Which is true. The crowd was an odd one. My wife whispered to me that perhaps I shouldn’t have told people not to act like jerks, but really, I have to honest – it was a joy. When we showed up, people were still nervous about the rain and so were hanging back under shelter which, as a performer, must have made it insanely difficult when your closest audience member is 20 feet away (hence, I think, some of Justin’s frustration), but as the day progressed, people scooched forward. Everyone was all so…good…

When I left there were around 75 people milling about the park and not one jerk, no loose dogs, the teens all hanging out, no one heckling the bands (my lips bloody from biting them each time the cry "Freebird!" rose in my gullet), no one smoking meth in the bathroom. Babies danced in the dirt drooling great Churchillian ropes of slobber on their clothes, teens dressed in their best freak out the normals milled around the river’s edge smiling politely at the senior citizens, hippies napped between sets on the grass and everyone ate cotton candy and Velveeta stuffed pirogis. When sets were over, musicians came down just to talk with the crowd about their sets, not to hawk their tee-shirts. It was a vibe, the likes of which I have never seen at a music festival.

The audience really did, I think the whole music scene in the area a great justice, by proving that hosting a show, even a huge one like this, doesn’t mean that the venue gets destroyed.

Sunny James took the stage next.
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A long time area singer songwriter, James was a true pro. She had her between song patter set, talking about the rivers and the hills of PA and even, with Memorial Day coming, finished up with a patriotic song. Her music isn’t really my sort of thing, but the younger performers there could pick up a lot from her professionalism. You got he feeling that she would have had the same show with the same energy is she had been in someone’s living room, or playing in front of 15,000 people. And that’s a good thing.

Justin Parsons was up next.


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Justin’s a friend and we had spent some time earlier in the day talking about the difficulty artists with families face – the constant guilt and pull of spending time with the family, doing the morally right thing and being a good father as opposed to carving out the time to do the other right thing and being and artist. Parsons used to be in Big Jack Earl, but his new music, some of it performed for the first time at the festival reflects a new, more somber, even conservative direction. He’s making a move in his work from writing for the sake of writing to working at being a craftsman. He’s well read, and well educated and his lyrics are beginning to reflect that. Like a lot of the performers, he looked up to the sound board to ask, “Is there more time?” the rain had messed up the schedule and with only thirty minutes to each set, the performers were desperate to try to keep things moving. Unlike a lot of performers, his set ended when a string snapped towards the end of his thirty minute allotment and he called it a day.

Kial Hoffman of remora deign took the stage after Parsons, and it could have been coincidence, it could have been the better weather, or it could have been a flash mob set up by wildly txting deign fans, but the crowd swelled by at least 20 people as he was setting up.
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Kial (who also spells his name Kyle on some web sites. Cut him some slack, he’s young) has a nice voice, good range, a decent, but improving stage presence and sells remora deign on stage like no one’s business. A smart guy and a band to catch live as soon as possible. Download his "All I Want" .


As The Oil City Indie MySpace Site said afterwards, “mission accomplished, what’s next”?
Problems? Mmmm? Not really, at least from the audience side it ran smoothly other than the weather. It was great to see that the food concessions were all local. I was bummed because I came with cash ready to buy local band’s CDs, T-shirts, badges, hoodies, big red felt pennants for my wall, but couldn’t find anything. Guys (and girls) you’re playing a free concert bring something to sell – if you don’t know how or who to do short run t-shirts, hats, etc, drop me a line and we can talk. But sell your DIY stuff. You deserve to make a living too.

I would have liked to have seen some of the county commissioner nominees drop by and press the flesh and explain how the arts fit into their vision for our area, but again that’s not a fault of the festival organizers (A representative from the Oil City Schools was there, however. Nice.) I’m a big fan of info booths – it would have been a great set up for the Venango Vegetarian Society for instance, but overall this was an A+ experience. And Jerome, Joann the Arts Czar, and Gypsy Dave deserve tons of kudos along with all the performers as well as Dave Poulin the sculptor and the schoolchildren who helped with the entire statue design project. If it doesn’t happen next year, I’ll miss it. And if does happen next year, Jerome, I promise, I’ll get a pro to fix my HVAC so I can stay for your set.



The Flickr set for the Oil City Indie Arts Festival has quite a few photos.

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While you're there, I've finished uploading my Psalters set too.


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The Venango Vegetarian Society is having a Memorial Day Cookout and Show today (2794 Old Route 8, Polk PA 16323 for you mapquesters out there)with a full free vegan spread, although you are welcome to being a dish to share. Meat eaters are welcome to come and check it out. Artists playing include Kamikabe, Path to Misery, Massacre Outlined, Our Resolve, Full Collapse, Salt the Wound, and Ursus. Food starts at 2 pm, bands at 4 pm. No cover.

Jerome Wincek, IndieFest Mastermind, plays Slippery Rock's North Country Brewing tomorrow at 7 pm. No cover.

Richard Schickel, film critic for Time magazine and a book reviewer for The Los Angeles Times is terrified of losing his job, I mean is terrified that the language of criticism is being cheapened:

Let me put this bluntly, in language even a busy blogger can understand: Criticism — and its humble cousin, reviewing — is not a democratic activity. It is, or should be, an elite enterprise, ideally undertaken by individuals who bring something to the party beyond their hasty, instinctive opinions of a book (or any other cultural object). It is work that requires disciplined taste, historical and theoretical knowledge and a fairly deep sense of the author's (or filmmaker's or painter's) entire body of work, among other qualities.




The Pittsburgh Craft Mafia is having a trunk sale Saturday Jun 02, 2007 at 2:00 PM at Pack Rat (2005 East Carson St., above In the Blood Tattoo.Pittsburgh, PA 15201) If you go, email me and I'll hook you up with a secret code good for swag.


Handmade Arcade won the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council People's Choice Award.


New York Magazine lists 61 of the best novels you've never read.



The Buffalo News takes a look at the cities indie musicians and their strategy for survival.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Well, howdy, News Herald and Derrick readers. Thanks for coming by. If I knew you were coming I would have redd up a little, but you know how it goes... The entry you're looking for is here, but why not stick around a while?

For those of you not coming from today's article, both papers gave some sweet love to this weekend's Oil City Indie Fest, and mentioned my little puppet show as well.



Wondering who you'll see at the festival? A quick look at two artists to help you better plan your day:

Matt Read (onstage at 10:30 am) writes songs almost exclusively about the bridges of Pittsburgh and is working on an album, Still Life With Bridges.

Download his song Postcard at his MySpace page.


LaTrobe (onstage at 2 pm) Was born and raised in Lancaster, PA before moving to Oil City in 1996. "I've always been fascinated and influences by many different types of music. And this is reflected in my style of playing and my writing... My philosophy is that one word can change a person's life...As my lyrics have grown so has my love for the music of the 40s, 50's and 60's particularly Jazz and Blues. To me this was the last great movement in music. My two main influences are Tom Waits and Wes Montgomery. . . .the musical envelope always needs to be pushed. But it needs to be pushed in a way that makes musical sense - not just pushing the envelope and making noise."

"I also enjoy the poetry and writings of the beat generation particular Jack Kerouac. Not the romance that is Kerouac but how he approached writing proses - spontaneous and to duplicate the rhythm of bebop jazz. William Blake is also one of my literary heros. Right now, I play solo for community and university functions but also very enjoy playing with "Thimble" a group comprised of Jermore Wincek - bass , mandolin, and vocals, Lisbet Searle-White - Violin and vocals, David Perry - keyboard and percussions, and Carrie Forden - percussions. We do everything from Thelonious Monk to Jerome Wincek originals."

Take a listen to Latrobe's music here.

I'll finish up the profiles tomorrow, so make sure you come back. Really. Wait, that sounded needy didn't it? Oh man, now you're never going to come back. I don't know what got into me...It's just that, I mean....I love you...


In even more incredible arts news from the OC via The Derrick , The Oil Valley Center for the Arts and Oil City's downtown arts revitalization effort put together the funding to buy an entire established arts center and move it to the city's National Transit Building and its yellow annex along Seneca Street:

The supplies will allow the art center to offer classes in areas including ceramics, fabric dying, weaving and papermaking. Ceramics materials include kick wheels, four kilns, a slab roller, glazes and dozens of tools.
Other items include wooden looms, tables, chairs, shelving, 40 assorted easels, canvasses, oil paints, water color paints, acrylic paints, crock pots, dyes, vats, mirrors, beadwork materials, drawing materials, plastic molding masks, texture tools, and clay - among scores of other items.


I had heard that this was coming, but the scope is just so amazing, and, to use a word that probabaly hasn't been applied to the region since 1912: progressive. It really feels like we might be ready to stop looking backwards and see what we can create now as a region.


The Photomedia Center announced a Call for Artists for their 2007 Open Juried Exhibition. Open to all artists internationally working in any photographic media-including collage, digital, traditional and alternative processes, and new media. There is no restriction on subject matter. Selected works will be exhibited online at the Photomedia Center during the month of September 2007. Five Juror's Awards will be exhibited at Glass Growers Gallery in Erie, Pennsylvania. For additional details and to download the full prospectus and application form, visit their web site. Any questions regarding the show or entry process, please contact mailtp:info@photomediacenter.org.


Look for a statue of Mr Rogers on Pittsburgh's North Shore in 2008.





Pittsburgh rapper Wiz Khalifa, profiled in this very blog months ago, is currently negotiating a major-label deal with Warner Bros. Ah, the sweet siren sound of the major label meat grinder.

Industrial percussion pioneer Z'EV will be in Pittsburgh on Monday.

The Pittsburgh Jewish Music Festival starts this Tuesday and runs until June 4th.

Sure, a trans-atlantic flight is expensive, but what kid will ever forget her visit to a Charles Dickens theme park?

Visitors will find themselves stiffening, in a very English way, at the interactive approaches made by the 60-odd costumed Victorian "characters" who patrol the main courtyard, behaving in typically Dickensian ways. There's a rat-catcher, a schoolmaster and a policeman, but, sadly, no Beadle - presumably because his life would become a nightmare of small boys saying, "Please sir, I want some more."



Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Venangoland has been updated with musing on mortality.


We have an ashram with an internationally known Yoga Instructor? Who knew?


Conneaut Lake Park will not open this year.


Pittsburgh-born jazz musician Tim Eyermann, who led the jazz fusion band East Coast Offering, has died.


The NY Times profiles Dishwasher Pete who is in Pittsburgh tonight.


What's it like to be an extra on "Kill Point", Spike TV's show set in the 'burgh?

The cops and SWAT guys look pretty realistic, with their plastic guns. Rumor has it that a couple of SWAT guys wandered off the set and fooled with their faux guns -- and found themselves looking down the barrels of real guns drawn by real cops. And a woman dressed as a cop tried to get her son out of jail and ended up arrested.



Pittsburgh's Black Moth Super Rainbow "Sun Lips" is NPR's Song of the Day.


Prom Themes of the Damned.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

This Saturday, Oil City will be the arts capital of Northwestern PA. The First Indie Arts and Music Festival will be held in and around Justus Park on May 26.

Five bronze statues created by students from the Seventh Street Elementary School with sculptor Dave Poulin through an Arts-in-Education residency last year will be unveiled. The first statue dedications will happen on the South Side at the Library and near the pavilion along Route8/62, starting at 10:00. An hour later, the three statues in the park will be unveiled.

At the same time, indie singer-songwriters will be performing their own work all day from 10 am to 8 pm in the park. The performers come from all over western Pennsylvania and include:
10:00-Garth Porter
10:30-Matt Reed
11:00-Ryan Evans
11:30-Flatiron
12:00-Nathaniel Custer
12:30-Holey Jeans
1:30 -Jeremy Jack
2:00 -Latrobe Barnitz
2:30 -Dave Dunkle
3:00 -Beldaspore
3:45 -Justin Parson
4:30 -Kial Hoffman
5:15 -Jerome Wincek
6:00 -Burnt River Drifter
6:45 -Dan Litler
7:30 -Gypsy Dave

There will be food vendors and an artisan demonstration by basketmaker Kathy Perrett.

Accordingly, last weekend, although Jerome Wincek and I are both healthy, somewhat well-adjusted young-ish adults, we found ourselves conducting an interview via MySpace on a Saturday night at 9 pm. The stink of shame refuses to wash off my skin, no matter how much I scrub.

Jerome Wincek is, by far, the most prolific singer-songwriter I know in the area. And, really, that would be cool enough. But, along with that, we share a similar vision in scene creation. Like many small arts communities, our area suffocates its young with insularity.
As Richard Florida writes,
Our region runs the danger of being trapped in the past. Places that grow and prosper in one era find it difficult to adopt new organizational and cultural patterns, consequently innovation and growth shift to new places which can adapt to and harness these shifts for their benefit. The cultural and attitudinal norms that drove our success became so powerful that are preventing the new norms and attitudes of the creative class from being generally accepted. This process stamped out much of our creative impulse, causing talented and creative people to seek out congenial and challenging places. Their departure, in turn, removed much of the impetus for change.

Scenes like these are obviously unsustainable - if no one new is ever brought in, or if people are never made to feel welcome, the movement turns incestuous and top heavy and collapses. Wincek understands that it’s not enough to be an artist. Here, we also have to feed the newcomers, nibbling on the edges.

“I've wanted to be involved in something like [the festival] for a while,” Wincek said, “and I've wasted a lot of time waiting around for someone else to do it. . . I am guilty of complaining that there is a huge void of original culture in this area. There is very little to do that would encourage people to pursue independent artistry as a living. I guess that on one hand, it's hard enough just to make ends meet, so why waste time on frivolities? But on the other, life should not be about maintaining, but also enjoying. much about this area is inspiring, but it is often hard to see. Last fall, Gypsy Dave came down from Meadville and we spent a couple afternoons playing, recording, and talking. We started thinking about the surprising number of local, and some who had been local, people we knew who couldn't shake the bug of writing and playing original music. It didn't take much thought to realize that we could fill up at least a day with many different people playing a huge variety of original music.”

“It took me a couple of weeks, but I finally got around to calling Joann Wheeler, the Oil City Arts Czar. I approached her with a vague idea concerning a festival someday somewhere involving independent original musicians. She said, ‘Why don't we make it an independent arts festival?, suggesting that we coordinate the music with a celebration of the unveiling of some local sculptures on Memorial Day weekend. I was shocked that she immediately turned this abstract idea into a pretty realistic event in about two sentences. She, Tom Huston, and I have been doing the planning with the city.”

“This festival is . . . a focused display of what has been going on here, in spite of being generally unrecognized. A full day of original music being played in downtown Oil City is hard to ignore. After playing so many local shows that no one knew about, I knew that anything less would probably get overlooked . . . hopefully, this event will wake up the area's independent community enough to break through the apathy that seems to be overwhelming as of late. . . . a one day festival [is] an obvious sign that there are creative people [making] a statement in this area.”

“One of the most fun things about those involved is that they each express themselves in a different way. Each one is a songwriter, but each one has a unique perspective. There will be styles of songs ranging from old school country to blues to emo to punk to folk to rock and so on. Many of the performers also play and record with full bands where they flesh out their sound a little more. Without the common thread of solo performance, the day would almost be a sensory overload.

"Yes. You will be turned on to something new.”

12 hours is a lot of music, so make sure you bring:

Sunblock
Right now, the NWS is calling for 75 degree and partly sunny. You’re going to need some sunblock. You don't want a sunburn and you don’t want skin cancer. No matter what the fake-bake suburban moms say, the alligator look is not attractive. Remember to reapply every few hours!

Baby Wipes
You’re going to get dirty. And you may need to use a portapotty. Nuff said.

Mini First Aid Kit
Band aids, aspirin, contact lens solution, girlie stuff, whatever, but be prepared.

Camera
I’ve started a Flickr pool for photos taken at the festival. Take some good, or not so good shots, and share the love.

Bottled Water
Gatorade, PowerAde, all of the sports drinks are jokes for most us. Just sitting and circle dancing in the sun is not the same as running a marathon, no matter what the company tells you. If you’re really worried, bring some pickles. You will however want to bring some water and since I missed out on applying for the $7/12 oz bottled water concession you might as well bring your own.

Blanket Or Chairs

Backpack
You’re going to need something to hold all this stuff, right?

What to leave at home.

Booze – I really understand that your best buddy is playing onstage and that you brought your other best buddies with you. But, you’re not passing the bong in your Mom’s basement anymore. No one thinks that it’s cool when you’re drunkenly wrestling and putting each other in headlocks. Save it for the awesome air hockey tourney after the festival. Beyond that, smuggling in your vodka in a Snapple bottle or sparking a fatty at the festival is a great way to spit in the face of the people who have been working to get some respect for the local arts.

Cell phones on speaker – When did it become common to put your cell phone on speaker and then shout into the receiver? I’m still doing the research, but I think there’s an underutilized law that allows you to be pummeled if you start doing this in a public space.

Finally:
Don’t come for your buddy’s band and then leave. A lot of bands have rabid, very closely knit group of fans, but there's not a lot of cross pollination which of course means that they’re doomed from the start.

Keep an eye on your kids. Ill-behaved kids aren't cute (and this goes doubly for dogs by the way. If you're one of those hippies who ties a bandana around your poor humiliated animal's neck and then lets it run loose yelling to everyone, "He's a friendly dog, he won't bite" just stay home and practice your devil sticks. Thanks.) Write your cell phone number on your child's wristband (or a large rubber band) in case they wander off. Keep track of what they're wearing each day, as well, just in case.

Don't bring expensive stuff. Just don't. You don't really need your iPod, Digital SLR or anything else that costs a ton of money anyway. Leave 'em at home, you're going to feel really stupid if they get lost or stolen, and you won't get them back.

Make friends. Chat with the folks sitting next to you. Festivals are a great place to meet people who share your interests and expand your circle a bit.



Looking for an...ahem...adventurous weekend trip? Why not think Gary, IN?



Author Llyod Alexander has died.



What does the area really need? A hot dog cart.



Adult Swim has an album available for free and legal download.


Xlibris is offering a limited time offer: Get 2 books published for the price of 1. Valid until May 31 only.

Monday, May 21, 2007

You've got my art in your business! Your business is around my art! It is, indeed, two great tastes that go great together.


Crawford County Vo-Tech student Ryan Reigner Riegner is going to Parson's. Now if Meadville politicians are smart, they'll stay in touch withthe kid for the next four years and then figure out how to bring him back.


Mark Helprin thinks copyright should last forever. Idiot.

Speaking of idiots, Simon and Schuster wants to eliminate the concept of "out of print" and has begun buying rights, well, forever.

What makes both of these interesting is that they seem to be response to the popularity of Publish on Demand. I'm working on a critical edition of a regional text, now in the public domain, that has been largely forgotten but is highly marketable. So, I contacted a press and, yes, they were interested in the book, but with an advance so small that it would have been like losing money, so I'll probably use lulu.com . Why not? There's still a stigma in some places, but at the Festival of Mystery, everyone I talked to said that if they had the time and the energy, they'd go POD rather than working with the big presses.
Pragmatically, the truth is, I'll make a bigger amount of money going with POD, even after hiring a copyeditor. Scholarly books like this project don't get pushed very hard anyway -- no big tours or lavish receptions. I'll send out some notices, do a lecture in the region and send out some highly targeted review copies. The book will be sold on amazon, B&N, everywhere and I don't have to deal with a middleman. I guess if I were a big slowly moving press or an author dependant on those presses, I'd be nervous and shrill too.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Don't forget that today at 2:00 PM Nancy Simpson will be at DeBence's Music Museum in downtown Franklin playing a a violin made in France in the 1700s and apparently intended as a forgery of a Paolo Maggini violin made in Italy about 1625.


Wait, you're looking for a "very interesting stone head sculpture, which measures approx. 8" top to bottom at the longest points, 4 1/2" wide and 4 3/4" thick. . . found in the 1930's, on the banks of French Creek in Venango County Pennsylvania"?

Me too!




Yankee Zydeco Company's official self-titled album is now available for purchase online



ButlerToday the hyper-local news pub that has the Post Gazette struggling to catch up to the concept of all local all the time ran a nice piece on me, including a photo that I find a little, well, frightening....

The Counting Crows, Live and Collective Soul will play a concert at Jerry Uht Park in Erie, PA on July 31 as part of "The Rock 'n' Roll Triple Play Ballpark Tour." Tickets go on sale June 2 at 10 am. Tickets can be purchased at the SeaWolves box office at Jerry Uht Park and on SeaWolves.com. Children under 12 get in free with each paid adult ticket holder.

Pittsburgh is gearing up for a year long celebration called "Women in the Arts: Founders, Pioneers, Instigators"



The 6-ton Battle of Gettysburg cyclorama is for sale.

With a name like 'Grout", did the guy even consider another career other than mosiac artist? The Derrick profiles Cranberry Elementary School fifth and sixth grade students' mosiac that "depicts an aerial view of the Cranberry area with the school as the centerpiece for the surrounding communities of Franklin, Rocky Grove and Oil City."




Schism director John C. Lyons is looking for extras for a scene to be shot in Erie, PA on Saturday June 2nd from 2-4 pm. There is no pay and no acting experience is necessary. Credit and copy will be given to all participants involved. Requirements: Men and women age 65 or older with no hair or white/gray-colored. For the scene all participants will be asked to sit or stand in place under low light conditions, there will be no dialogue. Contact Lyons at 814-746-8264 or via email.


The Tragically Hip sold out tonight's in Erie, PA show.


We have directions to the First Annual Firefly Music Festival. The festival runs from Fri., July 27 through Sun., July 29, and will be held outside Cambridge Springs on State Route 77 next to Greenhill Cycle.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

An old friend called yesterday afternoon. "Hey!" he said, "I think that old polevaulter" (he didn't actually say "polevaulter", but instead used a different term, not approriarite for a family style blog) "McClusky is on 'Talk of the Nation'". So he was. You can listen to the Venango ex-pat Mark McClusky's discussion of how to consolidate your stuff here.


Lori Schmelz from the PA Council on the Arts will be conducting a State Funding for Working Artists workshop on Monday June 11 2007, at 6:30 pm in the National transit Building's Great Room (206 Senea Street, Oil City PA) Drop Arts Czar Joann Wheeler an email by June 7th if you're going to attend. Yes, I'll be there. Look for the short, dark guy looking uncomfortable in a public setting and say, "hi".

Also, JoAnn is starting an email lsit to notify people of workshops, exhibitions and funding opportunites. Email her to be added.


Robots and Monsters is an effort by artist Joe Alterio to raise money for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. For a donation of $25, you get a 6" x 6" signed piece of art, featuring a monster or robot, or both for $40. Joe bases your piece on three words that you provide, such as "Green, tentacle, airplane."


For only $1,100/month, you can live in the house Kerouacwas born in.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

It's not too late to register for "The Life of an Artist" - a one day workshop to help you start, market, and suceed with your own art business. It's this Saturday from 10am - 3 pm at the Venango Campus. To register, contact Hope Lineman at (814) 676-6591 ext. 1273 or email her.



Clarion First Night is looking for artists. Call (814) 226-9161 or email. But hurry, the deadline is May 21st.


Native son Chris Griswold, blogger and wikikeeper for lots of things Venango, resigns from his site admin position at Wikipedia among some (in my opinion) brou-ha-ha.


The Pittsburgh City Paper lays out your summer plans for you.



Want to be a giant puppet?



Indian mangos will hit our area tomorrow for the first time ever. Yum.



About a decade ago, I corresponded with a guy who called himself Dishwsher Pete - a man whose goal in life was to wash dishes in all 50 states. He collected those stopries into one of the best zines ever - Dishwasher. Now Pete's 40, lives in Europe, but is back in Pittsburgh to sign copies of Dishwasher: One Man's Quest to Wash Dishes in All Fifty States on May 23rd.



The Pittsburgh City Paper reviews Intimate Apparel.



The Tony Award nominations have been announced.



Amazon is going to sell non protected music.



What sort of an advance does a Pulitzer Prize winning poet get? "Around $2000". Ouch.


Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Venangoland has been updated with a great post on Ben Hogan: The Wickedest Man In The World

The Duo Bruce and Sean play at Seneca's Brother Bean Saturday from 7-9. No cover.

The Downtown Edinboro Art and Music Festival is this weekend.

The RickDan Band, who put together a series of local shows, is defunct.

Our Pittsburgh Magazine is calling for writers:
We have gotten lots of requests by aspiring writers who'd like to help out with the mag. So here's your chance. Send 2 samples of published work to us. We're looking for creative interviewers, go getters, and those that aren't afraid to bring to life the issues that nobody else has read about. We are in the process of assigning stories and so forth, so the speedier the better. We know there's a lot of talent out there, now let us see it. Send samples to: hans@ourpittsburghmagazine.com

The Butler Art Center's 2nd Annual Painted Hog Show is quickly approaching and The Art Center seeks artists! The deadline is Friday, June 8th, 2007.

Speaking of Butler the Associated Artists on Main Street (AKA Route 8) hosts an open mic for writers and musicians every Friday called "Spirit Cafe".

Monday, May 14, 2007

Is it my imagination, or does it seem incredibly odd that Franklin would tear up its sidewalks and pour money and personnel into a pet project of a guy who doesn't even live in the city? A project that has no way of measuring if it's successful or not? Oh, it is just me? Sorry. What's that? Why sure I'll drink that Kool-Aid...


The Meadville Trib profiles an Espyville homeowner who's muralizing his Victorian:



The Meadville Cinema building has been sold and will reopen as a bargain theatre.

The Christian Science Monitor profiles the first class to graduate from The Center for Cartoon Studies CCS is one of my favorite places, not only because I'm a comic nerd, but also because it revitalized a sleepy post-industrial small town into an arts haven in five years....

Black Moth Super Rainbow badmouths the hometown scene in Rolling Stone, which seems to take delight in baiting people about the 'burgh. Is there a disgruntled ex-pat still nursing wedgie wounds working in the heart of boomer hipsterism?


Spike TV's Kill Point was filming in Market Square yesterday.

What should libraries be doing with zines?

The Post-Gazette reviews the play I most want see right now, Intimate Apparel.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

The Prometheus Radio Project contacted me yesterday to see if I or a community group I knew of was interested in starting the process of applying for a full-power, noncommercial radio license. Turns out the Federal Communications Commission will open a brief window in October for issuing. There's room on the dial for one in this area, and, yeah, I am interested. Commercial radio makes me feel not so good and I think the area would benefit wildly from an alternative. So, take a look at the Prometheus site and the Radio for the People site, and if you're interested in helping to take on a project that will take around 3 years and cost around $30,000 of money that will need to be raised, drop me an email. I'll put together a list and keep you up to date about where the process stands.


The Pittsburgh Post Gazette visits Harrisville's Silver Wheel Farm:

Restaurants such as Lidia's Pittsburgh in the Strip District and, more recently, Whole Foods are seeking quantities of local greens. Even more surprising, Slippery Rock's North Country Brewing Co. recently added mustard greens as a side-order option to the entrees on its new menu. "It's the edge," says Ms. Sands. "I think it's going to be very trendy for people to eat cooked greens. . . I think they will save civilization."


The New Yorker profiles the graffitti artist Banksy. Free images of his work here.


Still trying to recover from Monday's Festival of Mystery, so a short post today.

The Oil City Indie Fest has announced the schedule for the May 26th show:
10:00-Garth Porter
10:30-Matt Reed
11:00-Ryan Evans
11:30-Flatiron
12:00-Nathaniel Custer
12:30-Holey Jeans
1:30 -Jeremy Jack
2:00 -Latrobe Barnitz
2:30 -Dave Dunkle
3:00 -Beldaspore
3:45 -Justin Parson
4:30 -Kial Hoffman
5:15 -Jerome Wincek
6:00 -Burnt River Drifter
6:45 -Dan Litler
7:30 -Gypsy Dave

Look for an interview with one of the organizers next week.



The NyTimes and the Post Gazette review Pittsburgh native August Wilson's "Radio Golf"


I haven't been to a "big" concert in years. It doesn't look like this is the summer that will break the run.



Pittsburgh's Quantum Theatre continues to have the most challenging and experimental choices in the region.


One of my favorite non-local bands, Matt Pond Pa is looking for new members:

We're looking again -- in search of one or two excellent people to join our band. The positions include the bass, keys, and singing. All in one, or all in two. We have to see what works best.
It would be at least a year committment -- starting in July/August. Maybe longer if it works out for all of us. Jobs, relationships and personalities have gotten in way with prior members. We're looking for someone that we can survive in the best and worst situations -- more than survive. Because really, most of this is driving, hanging out in hotels, hanging out in rock clubs. And we don't like to kill time -- we like to have a good time -- all the time. Or at least rock trying.
Please write to me.
steve@mattpondpa.com


Sunday, May 06, 2007

Yesterday, Sunday, was the Venango Chamber Orchestra (VCO) concert. The program included the La Montaine's "Jubilant Overture", Prokofiev's "March" from The Love for Three Oranges, highlights from Rodger's The Soudn of Music, Verdi's "Triumphial March" from Aida, Berlin's "God Bless America", Mitchell's "Ode For Orchestra", Tchaikovsky's "Introduction" and "Finale" from Romeo and Juliet, Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance, op.39 (No.1) and Sousa's "El Capitan".

The VCO does a lot of things right - they stay closely connected to the community giving them a little of what they want and at the same time, dropping in some new work as well. The Mitchell piece for instance highlights the work of a Butler native and Oil City resident who also happens to be an accomplished composer and musician. The VCO's outreach is impressive too - during Sunday's concert the second grade at St Stephen's presented them with a $275 check that the class had raised (full disclosure; My wife, Amy, teaches that class). At the end of the show, conductor Murcko invited the students on stage to practice their conducting:

Concertmistress Nancy Simpson has been a regular guest of St Stephen classrooms. At the Sunday show, Conductor John Murcko made a special point of highlighting the teens in the orchestra (Theo Dixon, Steve McCoy, and Ben Thurau) who had received State honors. they've done shows at the Cranberry Mall in the past. Concertmistress Simpson will be at DeBence's museum later this month playing a ~300 year old violin. Murcko and Simpson are gems- in the time that I have spoken to them they've always been witty, intelligent and ready to talk about their art on every level from a second grade to fellow musicians - and they aren't dumb - they can see that their audience is literally dying out - the average age had to be over 60 at Sunday's show, but instead of ringing their hands or worse, assuming a "these kids today" attitude, they are proactively recruiting an audience for the next fifteen years.

What would help? A web page, or even a myspace page - a place where people could find out what numbers will be played at upcoming shows , a chance to continue to ask for donations, maybe watch some video clips of rehearsals. But, they're making good progress and are an example for other arts groups in the county.

The next show is the 15th anniversary celebration on October 28, 2007 - also in the Barrow Civic Theatre.



Speaking of DeBence's, don't forget that the DeBence Antique Music World will be doing its part to honor Mothers on Saturday, May 12th. Bring Mom or Grandma to the Museum, and her admission will be free. The rest of the party must pay the full admission price. Questions? Call the museum at (814) 432-8350.

Here’s a quick way to ensure that I won’t go to a show – use adjectives like “Christian”, “hippie” and/or ‘world music” to describe the artists. Christian music brings to mind images of Stryper and of pop songs that replace the word “baby” with “Jesus” and then market the result to home schooled kids and their parents. As far as hippie and world music, I’ve seen too many white guys playing the didgeridoo to ever do so again voluntarily.


And yet, The Psalters, whose show had been described to me with all three of those dirty words, blew me away Saturday night at the Brother Bean show in Seneca. Brother Bean continues to have the most ambitious and varied live music schedule, certainly in Venango County, but I have yet to see a better or wider selection of shows available in Crawford, Mercer, and Erie too. That said, it was my first time to this performance space. It’s comfortable with flaws that are typical to places that are coffeehouses and performance spaces – views are blocked a bit by a large, what I’m assuming is load bearing short wall (shades of the old metropol in Pittsburgh) and a tiny uni-sex bathroom.


Any issues with the space, though, disappeared once the show started. There’s an industrial or crusty punk flavor to the live show – images mixed with text plays on the screen behind them. Bill O’Reily’s voice advising that Muslims should be bombed and bombed again splices in with MLK speeches. Instruments and roles are traded among group members -- banjos are traded for hand drums while a hurdy gurdy drones behind everything and everyone, the guitar builds up Sonic Youth levels of feedback while an ogre of a guy does rhythmic backing vocals that sound a little like Tuvan throat singing. Check out "Amal" to see what I mean.


After the show, the band invited everyone outside and as they played in the yard, two of the female Psalters knelt in the grass and poured what was either lamp oil or kerosene (it looked like lamp oil and didn’t smell like kerosene, but I don’t know if lamp oil would have burned a well as this did) on their contraption built of ball chain and wire and cotton (I immediately wanted to build one for myself), then lit it and started dancing. Fantastic.






Complaints? Sure, no show is perfect. I would have liked a longer set. But, to be honest, the crowd wasn’t giving much back – I mean these guys are fire dancing, can you hang up your cell phone and at least look a little amazed? In fact, overall it was a strange crowd. While I’m used to being the old guy at shows, here I was smack dab in the middle. And although the music pushes one to achieve a sense of religious ecstasy – no one, aside from three sweet hippie girls were dancing – and even they weren’t really hippie dancing, more a grooving sort of thing.

I spent some time talking to the group after the show- it was my litmus test. And they passed. They didn’t try to evangelize me (although I have no doubt that had I brought it up, they could and would have talked about spirituality intelligently and at length - these are guys, after all, who are willing to consider how Christianty and animism have some common ground). Instead, the hurdy gurdy player showed my wife and daughter how the instrument (that he built himself) worked while I spent time talking with Scott about Turkey, diaspora music, Kurdistan, and life on the road. Not once did he ask me, “Have you accepted Christ as your personal savior?” Heck, he didn’t even try to sell me (or anyone) a CD or a patch (although I ended up going home with 2 CDs, a patch and a zine). The psalters understand their faith, their lives, and their music in a dramatically different way – they are living, to coin a phrase, in the world, but they aren’t part of it. However, unlike a trustafarian, they aren’t self-conscious about their difference as a source of their identity. These guys are the real deal. There’s a truth to them and their music that is making me reconsider my musical biases.

Eschewing the contemporary confusion between God and Santa Claus and refusing to allow “Christian music” to only be understood as pabulum like “Jesus Take the Wheel”, the Psalters understand that their art, and their faith is born out of pain, and that pain is useful, as they write in their zine, because it tells the body, and the soul, that something is broken and needs to be fixed.
Download:
Ol' Glory (demo version)
badlands (demo Verion)
You can also check out archived copies of their http://www.psalters.com/Pages/Projects/Patrin.html
Friend the Psalters on MySpace.

Friday, May 04, 2007

Wow, do I wish that The Derrick would post its letters to the editor online, because, my friends, there is a helpful heaping of nuts on the ol' sundae this morning. One of those nuggest is, what seemed to me, to be a not too subtle threat towards columnist and blogger, Peter Greene, because, wait for it, he criticized country music.



The Pittsburgh Trib-Review gives me (and others) some love in their profile of Pittsburgh's upcoming Festival of Mystery where I'll be all day Monday. Attendance is capped at 500, but if you really need a ticket, drop me a line.



The "Tooth Beary" sculpture has been returned to its Clarion home, unscathed. Something tells me photos of its escapades will pop up shortly.



Erie professor and filmmaker Mark Steensland is hoping to sell his film Lovecraft's Pillow at the Cannes Film Festival's Short Film Corner, next week. BTW, did you know there's a HP Lovecraft film fest?


Pittsburgh writer, professor, editor of Creative Nonfiction and mastermind behind the 412 literary festival will be on Comedy Central's The Daily Show on May 7th.


The NYTimes profiles tomorrow, Free Comic Book Day.


Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Heard of Bird Day? Me, either, but it was invented a long, long time ago in Oil City, thus it must be important.


Speaking of birds, you can crush the hopes of some local fourth and fifth grades by voting for someone elses' Oil Region Birding Festival poster design at Franklin's Transit Fine Arts Gallery.



The Venango Vegetarian Society hosts a Vegan BBQ Potluck this Saturday at 2:00 PM at Two Mile Run Park


The Psalters are at Seneca's Brother Bean on Saturday at 7 pm. Brother Bean has also announced that Jerome Wincek will be playing on June 7th for a special midweek show.


The Green Bike movement has come to Slippery Rock.


Twenty-eight students of the Westminster College Mass Communications/Sociology cluster course will present a student documentary showcase, "Addressing Stereotypes, Media, and the Majority and Minority," in the Mueller Theater of the McKelvey Campus Center. The screenings are free and open to the public. Check the schedule for dates and times.


The Pittsburgh City Paper reviews Kristofer Collins' new collection of poetry, King Everything.


The Children's Museum of Pittsburgh on Saturday will celebrate National Cartoonists Day on Saturday.


A new late night TV show from Point Park University is looking for jazz bands. Bands must be available on Wednesday nights at 6:00 in the fall to play for the taping of the show. If interested, email Eric Davidow .

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

The Derrick assesses quilting as an art form . Great work unbylined author! Arts coverage makes us very, very happy.


The region's year long celebration of glass art has its own webpage. I'll be covering parts of the celebration for Pennsylvania magazine this summer.


Pittsburgh's City Theatre has announced its ambitious new season:

It includes:


  • the U.S. premiere of Mother Teresa is Dead (Oct. 4-28)
  • the world premier of The 13th of Paris (Jan. 24-Feb. 17)
  • Comedy Central's Lauren Weedman's one woman show "Bust" (April 3-May 11, 2008)
  • Murderers (Nov. 8-Dec. 16)
  • Flight (March 13-April 6)
  • A Marriage Minuet (May 1-25, 2008)
  • Robert Dubac's one man show The Male Intellect: An Oxymoron?
  • and Sister's Christmas Catechism (Dec. 4-30)


Speaking of the City Theatre, The Trib Review (sigh) interviews Intimate Apparel's costume designer, Pei-Chi Su.


Preemptivly ruining the summer for children everywhere - Scholastic previews the summer's best books for kids.


Fanboy artists continue to ruin DC comics for oh, almost everyone, with their disturbing depictions of women.


Saturday is free comic book day. Bell's Comics in Grove City is your closest and best bet, or if you want to drive, might I recommend the stunning selection of Books Galore on Peach St. in Erie?

Why aren't there any good, living American playwrights?

The NYTimes takes a look at the dearth of book reviewers contracted by major publications.


The National Magazine Awards have been announced.



In honor of the weather last night, why not download the Drive By Trucker's song 'Tornadoes" and Cursive's "Dorothy Dreams of Tornadoes" ? And yes, I did try to find the two most divergent songs I had on severe weather, thank you very much.