BAM: Eldridge Cleaver Doc and Q&A with Kathleen Cleaver

On the fourth of July at BAM as part as their Contraband Film Series on Sun, Jul 4 at 7:15pm: join Kathleen Cleaver (Emory Law School professor, author, and former Communications Secretary of the Black Panther Party) and curator Kazembe Balagun for a Q&A following a screening of William Klein’s documentary Eldridge Cleaver.

Eldridge Cleaver
Directed by William Klein

Under pressure from FBI’s counterintelligence program, Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver and his wife Kathleen left the United States for Algeria. There, he set up the International Section of the Black Panther Party which quickly became the hangout of revolutionaries from the Vietnamese and African liberation movements. Klein’s moving interview follows up with Cleaver during the Pan-African Cultural Festival in Algiers, where he expounds upon the Vietnam War and Black Power during a time when “revolution was the main theme of the day.”

Gowanus Art Studio Available for July and August

Haven’t you always wanted to rent an art studio in the Gowanus?

A friend is subletting her studio. The rent is $950.00. But the space is big enough to share.  It has great light and a great location-near the Smith/9th street stop on the F/G trains, near Lowe’s in the Park Slope/Gowanus section of Brooklyn.

It is available for all of July and August, but she will consider renting it for all or part of that time. Email me if you are interested: louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com

Starting July 7th: Brooklyn Film Works in Washington Park

Movies alfresco at Brooklyn Film Works on the big turf field behind the Old Stone House. The first show is on Wednesday, July 7th at 8:30 PM:

July 7: Kiss Me Kate (1953) – A witty take-off on Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew, this fabulous Technicolor musical stars Ann Miller, with music by Cole Porter, directed by George Sidney.

July 14: Girl Shy (1924) A comedy classic from under-celebrated silent screen great Harold Lloyd playing a shy tailor attempting to win his girl in this hilarious romance featuring one of the greatest chase scenes of all time.

July 21: The 30th Anniversary Asbury Shorts New York: Short Film Concert — An array of award-winning short films from festivals around the world, including Manolo Celi’s Nueva York; Mike Ehler’s Lunch and Jeremy Kip Walker’s Super Powers.

July 28: Piper Film Workshop Student Films – Live on-screen! More amazing presentations from Piper Theatre Productions summer program by students ages 12 to 16.

All shows start at 8:30 PM

Best Band Ever at Dixon Place: Washboard Jungle

My neighbor, Bob Goldberg, of the Famous Accordion Orchestra says this is the best band ever. Well, he’s in it. But he’s not biased. That’s him pictured on the far right. He invites you to come and see (and hear) what he’s talking about.

A Washboard Jungle Reunion Concert
(to benefit the new Dixon Place!)

with special guest Lee Feldman

Thursday, July 1 at 8pm
Dixon Place
161A Chrystie Street
(between Rivington & Delancy)
NYC, NY 10002
212.219.0736
www.dixonplace.org

$25 ($15 is tax deductible)
$75 includes priority seating and a 7pm cocktail reception
with Washboard Jungle ($65 is tax deductible)

OTBKB Film by Pops Corn: Dogtooth

While most movies provide structural comforts such as resolution, closure and narratives that resist interpretation, Dogtooth, is of a different breed. A winner of the Un Certain Regard Prize at Cannes in 2009, Dogtooth is about a family living within the confines of the high fences that shelter them from the outside world. There are therefore no exterior influences on the children.  Perhaps they should be called offspring, since all three siblings—if we are to exclude the one unseen sibling who everyone believes lives on the other side of the fence—are of a young adult age. This may mean that the children will soon be leaving the compound. The title, in fact, refers to moment when one can do this: when one’s dogtooth falls out, “dogtooth” being one of many made-up or mis-defined words that the father has inserted into the family’s vocabulary. It is part of his cult leader-like methods of control, which also include numerous competitions for prizes and orchestrating the sex lives of those in his home.

If the description is confusing, it is then an apt synopsis for this incredible Greek film currently playing at Cinema Village.  Nearly every scene requires the viewer to piece it together as the action of each scene is either not immediately clear or the motivation is not immediately able to be understood. Unlike most films with unusual conceits, Dogtooth dispenses with exposition creating a mysterious narrative for the audience to work through. In doing so the viewer also feels thrown into this world; the offspring are thrust into games blindfolded and we are also forced to feel our way through. An incredible must-see work from director Yorgos Lanthimos, the film is disturbing and unsettling right down to its final shot which can only be summed up as wonderfully confounding.

Opera at Galapagos

It all happens on Friday, July 9, 8:00pm at Galapagos Art Space 16 Main Street at Water Street, DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY.

Brooklyn Poets: Past and Present
American Opera Projects presents new songs based on works by Brooklyn poets.
Music by Gilda Lyons, Daniel Felsenfeld, and Andrew Staniland
Text by Walt Whitman, Keanu Stowe, Tristan Regist, and Tyler Forsythe
Performed by Adrienne Danrich and Nicole Mitchell.
Kelly Horsted, piano. Hamilton Berry, cello.

Removable Parts
Selections from the music-theatre piece
Music by Corey Dargel
Performed by Corey Dargel and Kathleen Supové

The Bloody Chamber
Opera on Tap presents scenes from the new one-act opera
Music by Daniel Felsenfeld
Libretto by Elizabeth Isadora Gold
Based on the novella “The Bloody Chamber” by Angela Carter
Performed by Indre Viskontas, Ross Benoliel, and Amanda Villegas
Musical Director, Jennifer Peterson
Stage Director, Sarah Stern

P.T. Barnum’s Birthday on Coney Island

The Coney Island Museum is celebrating P.T. Barnum’s 200th birthday. Here are the details:

If P.T. Barnum had lived he would have turned 200 years old on July 5 of this year, which is about the age he once claimed Joice Heth, George Washington’s nurse was.

In observance of the fact, on the Glorious Fourth (one day early) at 4:30pm Trav S.D. will speak a piece at the Coney Island Museum. The topic of his lecture will be the legacy of Barnum and Barnumism (bunkum, hokum, humbug and hooey) in vaudeville and show business in general.

And because, showmanship is the name of the game, he will be joined by the great Lorinne Lampert, a.k.a., Uke-Lola – tap-dancing; song-singing, uke-playing, juggling vaudevillian extraordinaire.

(The host may do a turn or two himself along with other special guests TBA.)

What better place to spend the 4th than Coney Island? Watch the hot dog eating contest! Ride the rides! Go for a dip! And then come see the real dips at our presentation!

And, if you can’t make the show, tune in to the swell Barnum radio documentary by James Rana, featuring Trav S.D., Todd Robbins, and many others. Various NPR affiliates are carrying it, including WFDU-FM, which will run it at 8am on the 4th. (If you don’t get it in your area, ALL radio stations stream online nowadays, ya doofus!)

Trav S.D and Friends – A Barnum Bicentenary: Talk and performance by Trav S.D. and friends in observance of P.T. Barnum’s 200th birthday

When: July 4, 4:30pm
Where: 1208 Surf Avenue (near West 12th Street) (The Coney island Museum is on the 2nd Floor)
Admission: $5 for public, free for members of Coney Island USA
More info: http://www.coneyisland.com/museum.shtml

Current Weather in Park Slope: Heat Advisory Today

Brought to you from the Feldman Family weather tower in Park Slope. Heat Advisory today (see below):

URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
321 AM EDT MON JUN 28 2010

...HOT AND HUMID CONDITIONS CONTINUE TODAY...

.A COLD FRONT WILL SLOWLY APPROACH THE REGION THIS AFTERNOON.
AHEAD OF IT...GUSTY SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL CONTINUE TO PUMP A HOT
AND HUMID AIRMASS INTO THE REGION.

NYZ072>076-281530-
/O.CON.KOKX.HT.Y.0001.100628T1500Z-100628T2300Z/
NEW YORK (MANHATTAN)-BRONX-RICHMOND (STATEN ISLAND)-
KINGS (BROOKLYN)-QUEENS-
321 AM EDT MON JUN 28 2010

...HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO
7 PM EDT THIS EVENING...

A HEAT ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO 7 PM
EDT THIS EVENING.

CONDITIONS WILL BE EVEN MORE OPPRESSIVE TODAY THAN ON SUNDAY...AS
TEMPERATURES RISING INTO THE LOWER 90S AND DEWPOINTS IN THE LOWER
70S WILL RESULT IN HEAT INDICES IN THE MID TO UPPER 90S DEGREES FROM
LATE THIS MORNING INTO EARLY THIS EVENING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A HEAT ADVISORY IS ISSUED WHEN HIGH HUMIDITIES ARE EXPECTED TO
COMBINE WITH HOT TEMPERATURES TO MAKE IT FEEL LIKE IT IS OVER
95 DEGREES FOR TWO CONSECUTIVE DAYS. DRINK PLENTY OF FLUIDS...
STAY IN AN AIR- CONDITIONED ROOM...STAY OUT OF THE SUN...AND
CHECK UP ON RELATIVES AND NEIGHBORS.

OTBKB Music: Emily Zuzik Is Ready for Her Closeup; The Texas Tornados Celebrate Brooklyn

In a Fort Greene Connecticut Muffin, I spoke with Brooklyn’s multi-talented musician/model/voice-over artist Emily Zuzik about her life and music.  The results, along with some photos from her recent show at The Rockwood Music Hall are posted in a closeup of Emily at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

The Texas Tornados came to Brooklyn on Saturday and blew away the audience at Celebrate Brooklyn with their unique blend of Tex-Mex rock ‘n’ roll.  There’s a video (of a different show, unfortunately) and a link to a free track from The Tornados here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

Camp Gowanee for Kids of All Ages at Spoke the Hub.

I was in Spoke the Hub last night at an exhibition of drawings from a recent figure drawing class taught by Russell Floersch. It was an interesting and diverse selection of drawings by adults who have enjoyed this weekly exploration of the body through drawing. The class included people who’ve never drawn before, as well as those who have. Floersch seems comfortable and delighted to work with all experience levels. He is offering this class in July and August. Go to the Spoke website (above) for more details.

The space has been hugely renovated since I was last in Spoke the Hub, when OSFO was 3. Way more space, a huge dance studio that doubles as a space for Floersch’s figure drawing classes with Russell with a live model.

This summer Spoke is running Camp Gowanee, located at Spoke’s other space at 748 Union Street & 295 Douglass Street. Look at the ambitious creative offerings. It might be just the thing for your child this summer for full or half day participation:

Week 1: Circus Arts (July 5-9)
* ages 7-11 / ages 12-15
* Juggling, magic, tumbling, mime, clowning, hula hoops…

Week 2: Street Dance, Culture & Art (July 12-16)

* ages 7-11 / ages 12-15
* Street Dance (hip hop, locking, stepping, breaking), rapping, poetry slams, grafitti (without destroying others’ property) fashion, mtv…

Week 3: Rhythm Week (July 19-23)
* ages 7-11 / ages 12-15
* African drumming, tap dance, poetry, rapping, music composition, visual rhythm composition in art …

Week 4: Tahiti Express (July 26-30)
* ages 7-11 / ages 12-15
* Polynesian dance, culture, language, crafts, music, synchronized swimming…

Continue reading Camp Gowanee for Kids of All Ages at Spoke the Hub.

Park Slope Eatery Set to Open

Par Slope Eatery, a new casual baker/deli is set to open on the fabled corner of Fifth Street and Seventh Avenue, the corner, which used to house La Bagel Delight before its move two blocks south.

Flyers posted on the window say: Apply Now Hiring. And there are menus available outside. The big sign boasts artisan bakery so I’m wondering if they’re going to have great bread.

Maybe.

Tom Martinez, Witness: Signatures For Change in Honduras

Photographer Tom Martinez is in Honduras as part of an  international human rights accompaniment and observation delegation. In this photo, a  member of the National Popular Resistance Front (FNRP) is seen knocking on doors  in an ongoing effort to collect signatures for a national constituent assembly, which was process begun by President Zelaya, which lead to his removal in a military coup on June 28, 2010.

So far Tom’s group has met with representatives from the International Committee of the National Popular Resistance Front (FNRP), the leadership of the FNRP, and Honduran Platform for Human Rights, who gave a general overview of the events leading up to the coup on June 28 of last year, the human rights situation in Honduras since the coup, and their continued work to reconstruct democracy in Honduras under increasing repression.  This violent repression has continued under the government of Porfirio Lobo, who was named president following a campaign and election process held under the auspices of the de facto coup government in the last half of 2009.

For more information about the delegation and the situation in Honduras go here.

Two Brooklyn Census Managers Fired for Faking Surveys

Well, maybe this means that Teen Spirit or Hepcat will finally get a temporary job with the Census Bureau. They aced the test and Hepcat actually did the training but they’ve never been called to do any work.

They hired these bozos instead and look where that got the Census Bureau.

According to the New York Times, about 10,000 census surveys in Brooklyn have to be redone because two managers supposedly filled out many of the household surveys themselves.

The two managers, Alvin Aviles and Sonya Merritt, began using online databases to fill out household surveys instead of collecting the information by knocking on doors. Needless to say, the  two were fired after census officials finally figured out what was going on.

The local census office where they worked was supposed to complete 97,000 household surveys in the neighborhoods of Williamsburg, Bedford-Stuyvesant, Bushwick and Greenpoint by July 10. By June 12, 9,000 surveys were still incomplete.

So to speed thing up, these two managers started faking the surveys.

Echoes of Smartmom’s Life in Toy Story 3

You would have thought they’d be tired. Indeed, the humidity was incredibly high and the family had spent much of the day outside. Smartmom trudged up and down Seventh Avenue for the street fair, the Oh So Feisty One was out with her friends; Hepcat went to see the Red Bull air races in New Jersey.

And Teen Spirit, no fool he, stayed in all day in the air conditioning.

They all came home hot and sweaty: Smartmom took a long nap. OSFO just stood next to the air conditioner and drank a tall glass of cold lemonade.

You would have thought they’d be toast by the time they ate the Smartmom-made Father’s Day dinner: chicken and vegetables in Calcutta Kitchen’s delicious Masala simmering sauce.

You would have thought they’d be ready for bed but someone — Smartmom thinks it was Hepcat — made the suggestion.

And then Smartmom googled it and found out if it was within the realm of possibility.

“It’s playing at 10:05 at the Pavilion,” Smartmom said aloud.

“Let’s go,” OSFO said.

Smartmom and Hepcat eyed each other cautiously. Their 13-year-old daughter, who barely ever wants to be with them, just agreed to do something with them. Silently, they were shocked and thrilled and ever so careful not to mess up this incredible opportunity.

They were about to have a high-quality family experience even if it was 10 o’clock on a school night.

“Let’s call Eastern,” Hepcat said, wasting no time and dialing the ubiquitous car service as Smartmom ordered the tickets online.

Waiting for the car downstairs, Smartmom wondered if she’d make it through the movie. The night air was still thick, and she felt like if she closed her eyes she might fall asleep. She looked at her watch and suddenly felt completely irresponsible. They were taking their 13-year-old to a 10:05 movie on a Sunday.

“This is kind of crazy,” Smartmom told OSFO as they got into the car. OSFO shrugged. She seemed pretty nonchalant about the whole thing. Smartmom wondered if any of her neighbors saw them going out.

Continue reading Echoes of Smartmom’s Life in Toy Story 3

The Sunday List: Postcard Show, Williamsburg Walks, New Play and Northside Fests

Williamsburg Walks and Northside Festival

Today is Day 4 of the  Northside Festival and it’s also Williamsburg Walks: A two day shut-down of Bedford Avenue between N 4 and 9th Sts organized by the Neighbors Allied for Good Growth, the L Magazine and Project for the Public Spaces with the support of the New York City Department of Transportation Weekend Walks Program. Bring the kids and the dogs and the bikes!

Art Benefit in Dumbo

Now through July 18, in Dumbo, A.I.R. Gallery, founded in 1972 as the first artist–run, not–for–profit gallery for women artists in the United States, is having its 9th annual postcard show/benefit: Wish You Were Here 9 includes original works by more than 400 artists. The 4” x 6” artworks, as well as diptychs and triptychs based on this size, are created and donated by A.I.R. Gallery Artists and hundreds of other national and international artists. These cards range widely in style and media and encompass a broad spectrum of themes, including work by Kiki Smith and Mary Frank.

Film

playing all weekend: I Am Love at BAM; Toy Story 3 at the Pavilion

Music

Sunday, June 27th at 9PM at Barbes: French virtuoso Guitarist Stephane Wrembel seems to have channeled both the technique and the fire of Django Reinhardt. He studied for years with the manouche (the French Gypsies) but has also gotten deep into American vernacular musical styles. His weekly sets will mix up the traditional Django repertoire along gypsy swing re-interpretations of standards

Theater

Shows this weekend: Gallery Players: 13th Annual Black Box New Play Festival

Sunday, June 27th at 7PM at Barbes: The Twenty-Five Cent Opera of San Francisco presents theater slash performance slash entertainment brought to you once monthly by the playwriting firm of shulman delaney gassman kosmas and copp. Featuring new works for the tiny stage by landscape artist Erin Courtney, theater architect Yelena Gluzman, & word contstruction worker Kristen Kosmas.

Art

At the Brooklyn Museum: Andy Warhol: The Last Decade is the first U.S. museum survey to examine the late work of American artist Andy Warhol (1928–1987). During this time Warhol produced more works, in a considerable number of series and on a vastly larger scale, than at any other point in his forty-year career.

Food

Sunday, June 27th on Smith Street between Douglas and Degraw: Stink-Fest ‘10 Rocks Smith Street with Fun For the Whole Family Fourth Annual Cheese Eating Contesting.

Sunday, June 27, 12 – 5PM at The Bell House: The 2010 Unfancy Food Show. With dozens of local purveyors including, but definitely not limited to, Brooklyn Brewery, Sullivan Street Bakery, SCRATCHbread, Cut Brooklyn, Sweet Deliverance, Marlow and Sons, McClure’s Pickles, The Brooklyn Kitchen,, People’s Pops, Salvatore Brooklyn Ricotta and Nunu Chocolate, the UnFancy Food Show is the most aggressively awesome gathering of small producers in New York.

Fakelyn: Are you a real Brooklynite?

Some people think that the only real Brooklynites are the one’s who were born here. Other don’t think that matters a bit. In the Complaint Box on the City Room blog, New York  Times readers are having it out. Here’s an excerpt from a “complaint” written by Ellen Leavitt, a teacher at a Brooklyn high school. Where’s Leon Freilich when you need him?

Brooklyn has become a hipster haven, drawing lots of celebrities and artists and quirky entrepreneurs and parents who use surnames for their children’s proper names. Fine. But many of these recent arrivals — from New Jersey, Iowa, the suburbs, France, all over the place — have now been crowned the Face of Brooklyn.

Ahem, hello, media experts, how about us lifelong Brooklynites? Are we the proverbial chopped liver?

In the 2008 anthology “Brooklyn Was Mine” (Riverhead Books), hardly any of the writers included were born and raised in Kings County. Most are transplants. Doesn’t anyone want to hear from those of us who actually went to kindergarten in Brooklyn, who played stoop ball before it was hip, who lived here during the blackout of 1977? Maybe it’s time to start paying attention to us. And I don’t mean trotting us out as the quaintness factor.

Fourth Avenue Nightlife: Persian Poetry, Korean Tacos, Trash Pony Bar

Hepcat and I went to Mission Delores (349 Fourth Avenue near Carroll) last night for beers and we love that bar, which is definitely having its moment. What a cool, cool place it is. A former garage, it’s an indoor/outdoor space with old factory doors,  colorized wanted posters on the walls and a great selection of beer including Hepcat’s favorite: Arrogant Bastard (not a beer I particularly enjoy).

Afterwards we had a late night snack at Oaxaca Tacos, which serves amazing tacos, including a Korean Tacos with Kalbi marinated steak topped with Korean BBQ sauce, kimchee and Asian pear slaw

Amazing. Full disclosure: I hired them to cater Blogfest and they were fantastic.

We also passed the Trash Pony Bar, which is what happens to Root Hill Cafe at night. The owners found a stuffed animal pony in the trash right outside the store about a year ago and when they decided to open a bar they had a concept and a name.

Look for the pink globe lights out front during the hours on Thursdays-Saturdays when Root Hill becomes Trash Pony. It’s a cafe with a double life.

Tonight at Zora Space (315 Fourth Avenue near Third Street) is a sampling of Persian poets, such as Jalāl ad-Dīn Muḥammad Balkhī, Baba Taher, Shams e Maghrebi, and Mohammad-Reza Shafiei Kadkani, among others.

Sara Goudarzi Vocal (poetry)
Aida Shahghasemi Vocal (singing) & Daf
Sinan Gündoğdu Saz & Oud

The Weekend List: Persian Poets, 25-Cent Opera, Gunk Punk

Saturday night at 7:30 at Zora Space (315 Fourth Avenue near Third Street): A sampling of Persian poets, such as Jalāl ad-Dīn Muḥammad Balkhī, Baba Taher, Shams e Maghrebi, and Mohammad-Reza Shafiei Kadkani, among others.

Film

playing all weekend: I Am Love at BAM; Toy Story 3 at the Pavilion

Music

Saturday, June 26 at 4PM at Grand Army Plaza: Don’t miss Brooklyn’s hottest dance party as Felix Hernandez brings his famous Rhythm Revue to Grand Army Plaza in Prospect Park.  Part of Jazz: Brooklyn’s Beat—a series of six events in June that bring world-class jazz to central Brooklyn’s cultural consortium.

Sunday, June 27th at 9PM at Barbes: French virtuoso Guitarist Stephane Wrembel seems to have channeled both the technique and the fire of Django Reinhardt. He studied for years with the manouche (the French Gypsies) but has also gotten deep into American vernacular musical styles. His weekly sets will mix up the traditional Django repertoire along gypsy swing re-interpretations of standards

Saturday, June 26th at 6PM at The Bell House: We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988 – 2001 is the first and only book on the last great wave of down-and-dirty rock’n’roll, one whose hangover can still be felt in bars and clubs across the globe. The book is the next chapter in the Please Kill Me/American Hardcore/Our Band Could Be Your Life succession. Musician and journalist Eric Davidson (Village Voice, CMJ, SF Bay Guardian) was there as this scene unfolded as the frontman for Ohio punks the New Bomb Turks, and he tracks the roots and history of this largely undocumented movement. This is the last generation of punks and rockers to conquer city after city without the diluting force of the Internet.

Theater

Shows this weekend: Gallery Players: 13th Annual Black Box New Play Festival

Sunday, June 27th at 7PM at Barbes: The Twenty-Five Cent Opera of San Francisco presents theater slash performance slash entertainment brought to you once monthly by the playwriting firm of shulman delaney gassman kosmas and copp. Featuring new works for the tiny stage by landscape artist Erin Courtney, theater architect Yelena Gluzman, & word contstruction worker Kristen Kosmas.

Art

At the Brooklyn Museum: Andy Warhol: The Last Decade is the first U.S. museum survey to examine the late work of American artist Andy Warhol (1928–1987). During this time Warhol produced more works, in a considerable number of series and on a vastly larger scale, than at any other point in his forty-year career.

Food

Sunday, June 27th on Smith Street between Douglas and Degraw: Stink-Fest ‘10 Rocks Smith Street with Fun For the Whole Family Fourth Annual Cheese Eating Contesting.

Sunday, June 27, 12 – 5PM at The Bell House: The 2010 Unfancy Food Show. With dozens of local purveyors including, but definitely not limited to, Brooklyn Brewery, Sullivan Street Bakery, SCRATCHbread, Cut Brooklyn, Sweet Deliverance, Marlow and Sons, McClure’s Pickles, The Brooklyn Kitchen,, People’s Pops, Salvatore Brooklyn Ricotta and Nunu Chocolate, the UnFancy Food Show is the most aggressively awesome gathering of small producers in New York.

Brownstone Brooklynites Choose Manhattan for Childbirth

Hospitals in Brownstone Brooklyn have lost patients from neighborhoods like Park Slope, Fort Greene, Boerum Hill, Prospect Heights and Carroll Gardens, according to a statistical analysis by The New York Times of birth trends from 1998 to 2008.

Anecdotally (and from reading Park Slope Parents) I know that for parents in Park Slope OBGYNs and hospitals in Manhattan are the norm not the exception. Yes, plenty of people have their babies at Methodist Hospital but the vast majority of parents choose Manhattan for what are perceived as superior hospitals and doctors. Here’s an excerpt from today’s NY Times:

The four Manhattan hospitals that are increasingly favored by women living in brownstone Brooklyn, especially in Park Slope, are New York University Langone Medical Center, the Roosevelt branch of St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Mount Sinai Medical Center, according to The Times’s analysis.

Statistics show that Brooklynites hardly hesitate to use the local hospitals for routine emergency room care, like during the swine flu scare last year, but when it comes to having a baby, neighborhood allegiances break down.

Hospitals in or close to the affluent Brooklyn neighborhoods are not necessarily hurting. Births at New York Methodist Hospital, in the heart of Park Slope, soared by 40 percent in the 10-year period. It ranked among the city’s five hospitals with the most births in 2008, along with Maimonides (which had more births than any other hospital in the state) and Lutheran Medical Centers in Brooklyn, Roosevelt and Mount Sinai.

Yet, the numbers of births at Methodist to mothers from Park Slope, Boerum Hill and Carroll Gardens dropped over that time as more chose Manhattan; the hospital’s growth came from the black, West Indian and Lubavitcher neighborhoods in Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights; Latino and Satmar neighborhoods in Greenpoint and Williamsburg; and the West Indian, Haitian and blacks neighborhoods in East New York, Flatbush and East Flatbush.

A spokeswoman for Methodist, Lyn S. Hill, said the hospital analyzed its data a little differently, and found that births had remained constant over the last 20 years from the combined neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights, Downtown Brooklyn and Park Slope. “Our patient population ethnicity closely mirrors that of Brooklyn,” Ms. Hill said.

My Summer Soundtracks

Everyone is talking about great summer music (or maybe I listen to the radio too much). So I decided to make my own list of albums I’ve enjoyed in the various summers of my life.

Childhood Summers:

Getz Gilberto (1963) A classic introduced to me by my dad. It was often on the turntable during those hot (and un-air-conditioned) summers on Riverside Drive.

Tapestry by Carol King (1971) We created modern dance to this endlessly at summer camp in 1970.

High School Summers:

The Harder They Come with Jimmy Cliff and others (1973) This was the soundtrack of my summer before college in 1976.

Music From Big Pink: The Band (1968). I remember the day I got this album ( a gift from my dad). We called it Big Pink for short.

The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle: Bruce Springsteen (1975) Summer darkness and light with the E Street band.

The Hissing of Summer Lawns: Joni Mitchell (1975) Smell the grass on those LA lawns.

Tea for the Tillerman: Cat Stevens (19  ) Oh this brings back memories.

Loudon Wainwright (1970): I loved this album and will never forget running into Loudon at Matt Umanov guitars in Greenwich Village. He was wearing a seersucker suit jacket and seersucker shorts and I asked him if this album was still available because I lost my copy. He wrote down an address where I could send away for it on Edsel Records in London.

College Summers:

Hazel and Alice (1979) Tersely emotive singing by the Thelma and Louise of Bluegrass. This was the soundtrack of my summer of 1979 when I was working at IBM in Endicott, New York (and taking dance classes with Bill T Jones).

The Roches (1978) Songwriting sisters who blurred pop, barber shop, folk and fun. This was also my soundtrack of summer ’79.

Fear of Music: Talking Heads (1979) This was the soundtrack during the summer of 1980 when I was living on Beethoven Street in Binghamton, NY.

Spirit in the Dark: Aretha Franklin (1970 ) I remember dancing to this in a dance therapy workshop in Johnson City, NY circa 1978?

Joan Armatrading (1976  ) Oh the feeling, when you’re reeling, you step lightly thinking you’re number 1…

Adult Summers:

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (1998) Hip Hop meets confessional in this virtuosic blend of jazz, rock, soul, gospel, and R&B. My soundtrack running in Prospect Park….

Soul II Soul Club Classics (1989) This was the music blaring out of car windows on Ludlow Street during the summer of 1989.

Inside Betty Carter (1965) A friend and I used to hear her at Fat Tuesdays; once at Celebrate Brooklyn (in the 1980s) and once at BAM (with my father) where she did a master class where all questions had to be sung. Brilliant.

Adrian Hibbs Project EP (2007) A white man who sounds like Stevie Wonder, he plays a mean Wurlitzer. A discovery of mine last summer in Block Island where he performed on Fridays at the Spring House.My summer Soundtrack 2009.

OTBKB Music: Li’l Mo and The Monicats Tonight and Alejandro Escovedo Next Week

Manhattan based Monica Passin, better known as L’il Mo, crosses the river into Brooklyn to lead her band, The Monicats, through a set of country, rockabilly, blues, 60s pop and whatever else she and they may play.  And I’ll add that not only are L’il Mo and The Monicats terrific musically, they are just plain fun to watch.  Details plus a music video are posted over at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

Next week, Alejandro Escovedo, a rock n roll force even if you’ve not heard of him yet, comes into town and plays three shows at City Winery to promote his new CD (on sale Tuesday), Street Songs of Love.  Check out a contest to win tickets to see Al, stream cuts from that new album and see a video by checking out Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

Park Slope Civic Council FAQ About Expanded Landmarking

On the Park Slope Civic Council website there is an interesting and informative FAQ about expanding the Park Slope historic district.

Why expand the Park Slope Historic District?
Landmark designation is the only way to protect the buildings and streetscape that make Park Slope distinctive.  Without this designation, there is nothing to prevent developers or owners from tearing down or drastically altering existing buildings.  Zoning law regulates building height and usage but not exterior appearance or fidelity to the surrounding architectural context. Only historic district designation offers that protection, and only about 25 percent of Park Slope lies within the present district.

Who decides whether the Park Slope Historic District will be expanded?
The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC), with ratification by the City Council, after an extended period of intensive research to document each building in the proposed expansion.

What part of Park Slope is under consideration, and why isn’t it larger?
The LPC has a small staff and can only conduct research into several hundred buildings at a time. In this first phase, the LPC has agreed to survey more than 700 buildings contiguous to the existing Historic District, but the Park Slope Civic Council is laying the groundwork to have all of Park Slope eventually considered.

Will building owners be part of the process?
Yes. The process includes communication with all building owners and a public hearing.

Would landmark designation lower my property value?
On the contrary, landmarking tends to raise property values because people want to live in neighborhoods protected from radical demolition and development.

Would I be required to restore my property to some prior period in its history?
No.

Continue reading Park Slope Civic Council FAQ About Expanded Landmarking

The Weekend List: Unfancy Food, I Am Love, Stink-Fest, Jazz at GAP

FYI: Weekend events are being added all day (see Stink-Fest on Smith Street).

Film

I Am Love at BAM; Toy Story 3 at the Pavilion

Music

Saturday, June 26 at 4PM at Grand Army Plaza: Don’t miss Brooklyn’s hottest dance party as Felix Hernandez brings his famous Rhythm Revue to Grand Army Plaza in Prospect Park.  Part of Jazz: Brooklyn’s Beat—a series of six events in June that bring world-class jazz to central Brooklyn’s cultural consortium.

Sunday, June 27th at 9PM at Barbes: French virtuoso Guitarist Stephane Wrembel seems to have channeled both the technique and the fire of Django Reinhardt. He studied for years with the manouche (the French Gypsies) but has also gotten deep into American vernacular musical styles. His weekly sets will mix up the traditional Django repertoire along gypsy swing re-interpretations of standards

Saturday, June 26th at 6PM at The Bell House: We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988 – 2001 is the first and only book on the last great wave of down-and-dirty rock’n’roll, one whose hangover can still be felt in bars and clubs across the globe. The book is the next chapter in the Please Kill Me/American Hardcore/Our Band Could Be Your Life succession. Musician and journalist Eric Davidson (Village Voice, CMJ, SF Bay Guardian) was there as this scene unfolded as the frontman for Ohio punks the New Bomb Turks, and he tracks the roots and history of this largely undocumented movement. This is the last generation of punks and rockers to conquer city after city without the diluting force of the Internet.

Theater

Gallery Players: 13th Annual Black Box New Play Festival

Sunday, June 27th at 7PM at Barbes: The Twenty-Five Cent Opera of San Francisco presents theater slash performance slash entertainment brought to you once monthly by the playwriting firm of shulman delaney gassman kosmas and copp. Featuring new works for the tiny stage by landscape artist Erin Courtney, theater architect Yelena Gluzman, & word contstruction worker Kristen Kosmas.

Art

At the Brooklyn Museum: Andy Warhol: The Last Decade is the first U.S. museum survey to examine the late work of American artist Andy Warhol (1928–1987). During this time Warhol produced more works, in a considerable number of series and on a vastly larger scale, than at any other point in his forty-year career.

Food

Sunday, June 27th on Smith Street between Douglas and Degraw: Stink-Fest ’10 Rocks Smith Street with Fun For the Whole Family Fourth Annual Cheese Eating Contesting.

Sunday, June 27, 12 – 5PM at The Bell House: The 2010 Unfancy Food Show. With dozens of local purveyors including, but definitely not limited to, Brooklyn Brewery, Sullivan Street Bakery, SCRATCHbread, Cut Brooklyn, Sweet Deliverance, Marlow and Sons, McClure’s Pickles, The Brooklyn Kitchen,, People’s Pops, Salvatore Brooklyn Ricotta and Nunu Chocolate, the UnFancy Food Show is the most aggressively awesome gathering of small producers in New York.