All posts by louise crawford

OTBKB Music: Friday’s Dilemma

It's time to start thinking about Friday.  There are three very good
shows all in different parts of town and all at about the same time,
which means you only get to choose one.  But when you have three good
choices, whatever choice you make will be a good one.

Or_The_Whale_In_Ivy_72ppi_Small Or, The Whale:  I first saw this seven member San Francisco based group
in Austin about six months ago.  They have a wonderful new album out
with the easy to remember title of Or, The Whale.  Call their sound
high energy alt country and rock with great harmonies.

Or, The Whale, Pianos, 158 Ludlow Street (F Train to Second Avenue,
take the First Avenue exit, walk three blocks to Ludlow and Stanton),
10 pm, $10

Main Sister Sparrow and The Dirty Birds: A large band (nine pieces) with a
horn section and they've been packing them into The Rockwood Music Hall
all summer.  SS&TDB play blues, soul and whatever else comes their
way with energy.

Sister Sparrow and The Dirty Birds, The Canal Room, 285 West Broadway
at Canal Street (A or C Train to Canal Street), 9pm, $10

Winterpills-roof Winterpills: This Northampton-based band plays ambient rock often
called chamber pop, probably the reason their last album was called
Central Chambers.  But the Winterpills rock out as well, especially on
their song Broken Arm.  But since this show is being held at The
Calhoun School, expect to hear the PG rated version of that song.

Winterpills, Mary Lea Johnson Performing Arts Center, 433
West End Avenue at 81st Street (1 Train to 79th Street), 8pm, $10

 –Eliot Wagner

Saturday Oct 18: Open House for Greenpoint, Williamsburg and Bushwick Parents

Schoolfest an open house for Greenpoint, Williamsburg and Bushwick parents is on Sunday, October 18th (11 am to 3 pm) at 325 Bushwick Avenue, home to PS 147 and The Brooklyn Latin School.

Almost 80 schools, day care centers, and other service providers for our children in these
neighborhoods, all at a single venue.   This year they've even added a college component.


In addition,  20 colleges will be represented, including all 17 CUNY schools, Columbia, NYU, and Yale!

Along with informational tables manned by each school there will be workshops to  to help parents understand their K-12 educational choices in our neighborhood, college choices, the application process, key deadlines, and more.

Organizers call it "an unparalleled opportunity to learn about neighborhood schools and services, and considerations for higher education."

For schools, it’s an invaluable promotional platform and networking opportunity. And let’s not forget about the great performances planned by students and service providers to showcase arts & other programs and free raffle prizes..

Organizers say that "if your school or organization has not yet confirmed your participation, please do so quickly. We have almost 80 organizations confirmed and acceptances are rolling in every day." 

In Memoriam: Suzanne Fiol (1960 – 2009), Founder of Issue Project Room

2916_i1_suzanne_fiol
I just got this email and I am absolutely shocked and saddened by the passing of this beautiful and amazing woman who devoted her life to supporting artists and creating a space for adventurous audiences.

ISSUE Project Room, currently located on Third Street in the American Can Factory in Park Slope (and soon to be at 110 Livingston Street in downtown Brooklyn), was the fruit of Fiol's life work; it was a labor of love that reflected her passion for experimental music, film, video and poetry. I send my condolences to her family and many friends.This is a true loss to the Brooklyn—and the international—arts community.

In the Brooklyn Paper, Borough President Marty Markowitz  called Fiol “the heart and soul and
extraordinary visionary behind Issue Project Room, a symbol of the
forward-thinking culture that makes Brooklyn the creative capital of
New York City.”

He said that the 110 Livingston St. theater would become the “Carnegie Hall of the avant garde.”

It is with great heartbreak and remorse that ISSUE Project Room
announces the passing of our founder, artistic director, and driving
force, Suzanne
Fiol
.
Born on May 9, 1960, Suzanne died at 1:05 pm on Monday, October 5,
2009, after fighting a courageous and inspiring battle against
cancer. 
Suzanne passed peacefully surrounded by loved ones at New York
Presbyterian Hospital. Our hearts go out to her daughter Sarah, her
sister Nancy, and
her parents Lawrence and Arlene Perlstein.

Anyone who has met Suzanne knows that she devoted her life to creating
and sustaining a space where artists — acclaimed and emerging,
local and international — could develop and perform new, challenging,
and exciting works. Regardless of the different venues we've inhabited
since
our inception in 2003, ISSUE has always been Suzanne's labor of love, a
space that housed and reflected her restless intellect, fiery spirit,
and
great heart. She would often jokingly refer to herself as "Mama Issue,"
a fitting moniker considering the unconditional love she unabashedly
showed
her friends, family, and the steadily growing audiences that have been
coming to ISSUE over the years.

We are grief-stricken by Suzanne's passing, yet inspired by her
vision and strength, and will devote ourselves to fulfilling her vision
with the
strength we draw from our memories of her. Programming will continue
this week in honor of Suzanne, and we welcome you all to come to ISSUE
and share
your memories.

A memorial is currently being planned.
Please stay tuned for information on its time, date and
location.

 
We would like to extend our most heartfelt thanks to all of you for supporting Suzanne and ISSUE's mission.
 
Sincerest regards,

Steve Wax, Board Chair

On behalf of Zach, Michelle, Lawrence, and all of us at ISSUE

Photo of Suzanne by Joseph Holmes

Suzanne Fiol: A Force of Nature Who Guided Issue Project Room

Suzanne-2009-bench-5-166-300x199
Neil Feldman of Not Only Brooklyn (NOB) sent out this remembrance of Suzanne Fiol, founder of ISSUE Project Room. She died on October 5th.

…you will share my sadness at the news that Suzanne Fiol, the
striking and intense force of nature who founded and guided ISSUE Project Room, succumbed to
her battle with cancer on October 5.

Not only enthusiasts of avant-garde
music and other new performance appreciated and learned from her edgy and
provocative programming. Now housed in the atmospheric ambiance of the
historic Old American Can Factory, Suzanne recently
secured financing to move into an excellent permanent facility in downtown
Brooklyn: Click here: Issue Project Room, an Avant-Garde Arts Group,
Bites Off a Lot to Chew – NYTimes.com
. Not only the Brooklyn arts community has lost a
visionary champion.

Photo of Suzanne Fiol by Joseph Holmes

Halloween Shocker: The Parade Route Has Changed!

Whoa. I almost fell off my seat. The route of the Park Slope Halloween Parade, a Park Slope tradition for decades, has changed! Yes, you heard me. I nearly did a spit take with the Diet Coke I was drinking. This is, er, big news.

I can see why they did it. Now that there's a huge filed behind the Old Stone House, the nabe has a great football field sized gathering place for a large crowd.

In the past, the parade just sort of peetered out when it reached Lincoln Place on Seventh Avenue. Now the revelry can continue until 9 p.m.

Also, I like the way the parade will now have a Fifth Avenue component.  That's cool, too. So I'm okay with this big change. It won't be easy for everyone to adjust. But I'm okay. So here are the 'tails from the Park Slope Civic Council, one of the organizers of the parade.

    THE PARADE ROUTE HAS CHANGED! The main event—the Annual Park Slope Civic Council Children’s Halloween Parade—kicks off at 6:30 pm. The parade route will begin at the corner of 7th Avenue and 14th Street, continue north on 7th Avenue, turn left on 3rd Street, cross 5th Avenue and end at the Old Stone House on the Washington Park field where the revelry will continue until 9 pm.

In addition to that big change, there's more Halloween innovation to know about. On Halloween, the festivities begin with the very first Friends of Washington Park “Howl-a-Ween” Pet Parade from 12pm – 3pm.

At 4pm the Park Slope Civic Council Halloween Costume Contest will take place in front of the Secondary School for Law, Journalism, and Research (formerlyJohn Jay High School).  “It’s amazing how creative and clever people can be,”says Melinda Morris, owner of Lion in the Sun and one of this year’s judges. After the contest there will be a musical performance of Ethan’s Motley Rockin’ Show.

Even before October 31, there's stuff to do:

The kick-off to the Halloween festivities, the Annual Harvest Festival, will take place on Sunday, October 18, at the Old Stone House in Washington Park from 11am to 3:00pm.
    •    Mr. Ray, last year's popular musical act, will perform at 11:30am
    •    Jon Samson and Co-Creative Music will perform at 1:30pm
    •    A puppet performance of "Witch Bungle" featuring puppeteer Theresa Linnihan will take place at 3:00pm. Theresa says, “We’re excited to work with the local schools as part of their afterschool curriculum and bring the fantasy that these puppets create to this parade."  
    •    A professional costume designer will be on hand to help create costumes that fit with the parade theme, "Spooky Seas."

A Halloween Haunted House Tour will take place from October 27th-October 31st. Please visit parkslopeciviccouncil.org for more information.


Wed: Homelessness Study Session with Park Slope’s Rabbi/Pastor in Sukkah

This Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. Rev Meeter and Rabbi Andy Bachman will lead an interfaith study session about homelessness in the Beth Elohim's Sukkah, a temporary dwelling built out branches and agriculture. Jews are expected to eat and sleep in their Sukkah during the holiday, which lasts a week or so.

According to Judaism 101, Sukkot is a joyous holiday that comes right on the heels of Yom Kippur (The Day of Atonement) one of the most solemn. It commemorates the forty-year period during which the Jews were wandering in the desert, living in temporary shelters.
Agriculturally, Sukkot is a harvest holiday.

The Beth Elohim sukkah was designed and built by Gia Wolf and John Hartmann, with heartfelt assistance from Adam Iarussi and Dan Silverstein.

"It's an original and a deep expression of creativity and generosity of spirit in perfect keeping with the Festival." says Bachman.

A discussion of homelessness sounds like a very appropriate activity durig Sukkot. Sounds like an interesting night. I will definitely try to be there

September 18 Was the Fifth Anniversary of OTBKB: Read The Very First Post

Welsh-love-spoon
I knew the fifth anniversary of OTBKB was coming up. I thought I would have my new, improved site by then. THEN I realized that the site makeover was delayed. Then I forgot about the anniversary altogether.

But then I remembered and I looked it up this morning. And September 18th, 2004 was the day that OTBKB started. That was the day of my very first post on blogspot.com

Happy Anniversary OTBKB! The traditional fifth anniversary gift is made of wood. Pictured is a Welsh Lovespoon.

Here's how it happened: I was meditating in my office and when I got up I thought:  By golly, I want to start a blog (and what is a blog anyway?).

My son Henry, who was 12-years-old at the time, had a blog on blogspot and I went to his blog and found out that in three easy steps I could start my very own blog.

Within minutes I came up with the name: Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn, a play on the title of Thomas Wolfe's famous story originally published in The New Yorker, "Only the Dead know Brooklyn." And then the names of my autobiographical characters: Smartmom, Hepcat (though back then it was Hepcat-Daddy-O,) The Oh-So-Feisty-One and Teen Spirit. 

Then I sat at my desk: What do I do now and what do I want this to be? Here's the very first post.

BUSY SATURDAY IN THE SLOPE

This morning, Smartmom took care of some recent "kitchen problems." The
old man who fixes stoves came by to fix the oven which hasn't been
working in weeks. Later, the cheerful exterminator stopped by. Smartmom
told him about the wheat moth problem but he said there's nothing he
can do about it — he specializes in roaches and mice. "You got to go
to the sauce," he said. Smartmom thought he meant that there was some
sauce that is especially delicious to wheat moths. Actually, he was
saying THE SOURCE in thick Brooklynese and pointed to a box of rice,
and other boxes of grains. "If you see nests in there, they gotta go in
the garbage," he said. Note: Smartmom had already thrown out ALL open
boxes of grain and had emptied and scrubbed the cabinet. She's also
using Pantry Pest traps bought at the PARK SLOPE FOOD COOP.

Speaking of unpleasant insects, a downstairs neighbor came up to
say that his son has Lice and that the 7-year-old Oh So Feisty One, may
have it too because she played with his son the other day. Oh Joy.
"Have you been physical with X downstairs?" Smartmom asked the Oh So
Feisty One. "Not really," she answered, "But he did put his fingers
through my hair." Yeesh.

Smartmom and the Oh So Feisty One may be
takin' EASTERN CAR SERVICE to see the go-to Orthodox Jewish lady in
Boro Park with 10 children who is NYC's de-facto lice expert—she's even
been profiled in THE NEW YORKER. Now how's that for credentials?

The Oh So Feisty One and 13 year old Teen Spirit (TS), managed to
get along so well today that Teen Spirit actually invited her to join
him on a trip to 7th Avenue. That meant big fun: reading Manja books at
Barnes and Noble, eating glazed donuts at the MOJO CAFE, browsing video
games at Game Stop and looking for the latest Bare Naked Ladies at
SOUND TRACK (only local stores get all caps. Not mega brands.)

Meanwhile, Smartmom raced to get her eyes checked at VISIONS on
Lincoln Place. The optometrist thinks her middle vision is going a bit.
But he's not sure if she needs to start wearing corrective lenses and
told her to think about it. Huh? Smartmom had a quick lunch at OSHIMA,
the tasty sushi place on 7th Avenue between Berkeley and Lincoln that
used to be a Zen Palette type of place. The new owners are super
friendly—they have an adorable little boy who hangs out there most days
when he is not at school.

Hepcat Daddy-O met Smartmom at OSHIMA on his way to VISIONS,
thoughtfully schlepping out in the rain to get TS's broken eye glasses
fixed (because Smartmom forgot to bring them and TS says he's blind
without them.) Hepcat Daddy-O didn't bother to tell Smartmom that her
eyes had huge brown and yellow circles around them from the eye drops
the optometrist put in there. Oh well. The nice Japanese people didn't
say anything either. More on that later.

After VISIONS, Smartmom and Hepcat Daddy-o stopped at the COMMUNITY
BOOKSTORE which smelled of clove incense. Hepcat Daddy-o skimmed Art
Spiegelman's new "In the Shawdow of No Towers," and Smartmom bought a a
book by poet Louise Gluck. She stepped on the owner's dog, who was
sleeping in the fiction aisle. Love the homey feeling in that
bookstore. CYNTHIA OZICK will be doing a reading there on October 19th.

Smartmom picked up a bottle of Merlot at SHAWNS, the liquor store
on 7th between Garfield and Carroll. The blue haired girl who works
behind the counter wasn't there today. Smartmom ran into a neighbor
from the building next store who said, "What did you do to your eyes?'
The neighbor looked truly alarmed.

Smartmom explained.

The Oh So Feisty One (OSFO) and TS were already back from their 7th
Avenue sojourn when Smartmom got him home. He: finishing the Ramen
noodle soup he prepared for himself (and spilled all over the kitchen)
She: listening to a CD of her favorite music that Teen Spirit created
for her this morning. B-52's Rock Lobster, Simon and Garfunkel's Mrs.
Robinson, and the Ramones are the high points. Dance Dance Revolution
and Hilary Duff are there too. After a bit, OSFO and TS decided to hit
Seventh Avenue again which gave Smartmom time to read her first
subscription copy of THE NATION. She also had the wherewithal to take a
nap.

She ain't Smartmom for nothing.

TS, OSFO, and Best Buddy (TF's best friend) are in TS's tiny
bedroom being rambuctious. Grumpy Hepcat Daddy-o is cooking up some
Italian turkey sausage from the COOP and making a delicious spaghetti
dinner (recipe to come). Hepcat Daddy-o has never gotten used to the
elevated sound level of children. Just a minute ago, TS went out again
to PARK SLOPE BOOKS around the corner looking for a used art book with
a picture of "The Last Supper" in it—he's reading "The Da Vinci Code."
We should have a picture of "The Last Supper" around here. Yeesh.

Oct 15: Fun Poetry Party at Brooklyn Reading Works

New Picture (1)
So what is Poetry Punch?

It's BRW's annual fun poetry party curated by Michele Madigan Somerville. She's put together a GREAT line-up. And I'm gonna read, too. My only regret is that  Michele won't be reading but I hope she reads something by way of her introduction. 

How about a nice poetry punch?

When is it?

On
Thursday October 15th at 8 p.m. Come hear Edmund Berrigan, Louise Crawford, Bill Evans Sharon Mesmer, Wanda Phipps, Joanna Sit, Michael
Sweeney
and Jeffrey C. Wright. It's an awesome group.

How about a nice poetry punch?

Where?

At
the Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue and 3rd Street in Park
Slope. Suggested donation of $5. includes punch, wine and snacks.
718-768-3195

How about a nice poetry punch?

This is ALWAYS a fun, festive reading. A fun night out. These poets write smart, interesting, juicy, and entertaining poetry. It's good stuff and there will, of course, be good punch.

I’m Going To See Amy Sohn Read at The Richard Meier This Thursday Night

Wouldn't miss it for the world. Richard Meier. Amy Sohn. I am so psyched.

Momasphere will host author Amy Sohn for a reading of her latest novel Prospect Park West (Simon & Schuster; September 1, 2009; $25.00) on October 8th, 2009 from 7-9pm at the Richard Meier On Prospect Park.

I've got my ticket and I am triply excited to see inside the RIchard Meier building, hear Amy Sohn read from her book and to support my friend and fellow Blogfest organizer the beautiful Melissa Lopata.

I won't be bringing an olive branch—or maybe I should. But I would really like to put this Smartmom vs. Amy Sohn thing behind me.

Yesterday Gothamist ran an interview with Amy Sohn. She was asked about some comment I made on my blog. Here's FIPS:

Sohn did a great interview with Gothamist,
in which we learn that despite the fact that she gives great BJ's, she
considers herself an "uncool mom" (unless, of course, that's part of
the whole "I think you have an act; and that not having an act is your
act" thing–I'm bad with quotes, but I've met her and she *does* seem
kinda cool). Also, she talks a bit about Smartmom.

Tickets are $10 in advance, $15 at the door. Book Court will offer
discounted copies of the book for $20. A portion of the proceeds from
this event will benefit www.childrenofthecity.com.

See you there! Should be fun.

Large Turnout at Singles “Meat Up” at The Bell House

FIPS, Brokelyn and Brooklyn Based sponsored the recent Meat Up, a singles event, at the Bell House and apparently it was a great success. Here's Erica at FIPS on the event. Yesterday I heard there were 400 people there.

 1. HOLY FUCKING CHRIST there are a lot of you single bros-n-bitches
out there! Rawk the fuck on witch your bad ass selves. We *almost* shut
the Bell House DOWN TO CHINATOWN with that crowd.

2. Who the fuck were the lame ass people in line who did NOT want a
glow-in-the-dark bracelet!? I was handing those mofos out to everyone,
and 98% of all y'all were lovin em. But a small faction of singles were
resisting the bracelets and I was just wondering: WHAT THE HOLY HELL IS
WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE?

3. While I was not able to follow through on my promise that EVERYONE was gonna get laid, these two
were sucking face out front for like the entire 5 mins we were waiting
for our Arecibo car to arrive. And I heard a rumor that some dude got
fucked in the women's bathroom.  Also, there was an S&M threesome
in the Makout photo booth…jus sayin.

4. Speaking of getting action, I would have literally fucked a La Cense
burger if I could have. Goddammit those things were good! Hey La Cense
guys: can you just come park outside my apartment? Like e-v-e-r-y day?

5. Wet t-shirt contest: BEST. IDEA. EVER.

Letter of Thanks from Congregation Beth Elohim

Here is a letter of thanks from Rabbi Andy Bachman, Elana Paru, executive director and David Kasakove, president of Congregation Beth Elohim.

Dear Friends:

These past few days have been some of the most
significant days in the history of our Congregation, making this past
Yom Kippur one of the most meaningful ever.

When a section of
our Sanctuary ceiling fell, in the same week that we were visited by
the Westboro Baptist Church hate group, one had to wonder what tests
God truly had in store for Congregation Beth Elohim!

And
perhaps, through these experiences, we were meant to learn that our
Congregation is truly blessed by extraordinary leaders, a generous and
loving community, and faithful and stalwart neighbors who stand by us
in times of trouble.

Thank you first of all to Reverend Daniel
Meeter and the leadership at Old First Reformed Church. Opening up
their worship space to us on Sunday and Monday was an enormous act of
faith and generosity that we will never forget. True practitioners of
God's command to "love your neighbor as yourself," Reverend Meeter and
the Old First community demonstrated a powerful act of friendship.
Thank you.

Thanks are also in order to our lay leaders,
professional staff, and numerous volunteers who made the transition to
Old First and back again as smooth as possible and as result made for a
warm and meaningful worship experience. As one part of our physical
structure was rendered unusable, we were reminded of how vital, deep
and precious our human infrastructure is. We are truly a community of
members and each and every one of you made this Yom Kippur so special.
Participants in all our services: Main Sanctuary, Yachad Family
Service, Tots and Brooklyn Jews–more than 2000 people were able to
worship on this holiest day of the year and each was able to do so with
a depth of intent and experience that will be felt for months to come.

We wanted to bring you up to date on the state of the situation with our Main Sanctuary.

As
you know, a large piece of the Main Sanctuary ceiling above the middle
of the Balcony fell on Wednesday evening, revealing what will surely be
a long process of repair and restoration. Our Congregation's Executive
Committee will be meeting in Emergency Session on Thursday evening to
develop a plan for immediate next steps. The Congregation's Board of
Trustees will be meeting on October 5th to further discuss our steps
going forward.

As we begin this process, we do so buoyed by the
overwhelming support of our membership, our neighbors, the broader New
York City civic and religious community, and by phone calls and emails
from across the country. This is an incalculable blessing. As we begin
to move toward celebrating our 150th Anniversary as a Congregation, we
do so with the eyes of the city upon us and we are determined to make
our celebration and restoration a source of pride for each and every
one
of you.

We look forward to traveling on this journey
of celebration and restoration together. At this time, we urge you to
take action by making your generous donation today to the Yom Kippur
Appeal, which will enable us to move quickly to take our first steps
towards our Sanctuary's restoration. To donate online, please click here.

May each of you be blessed in the year ahead with abundant goodness, well-being and peace.

Sincerely,
Rabbi Andy Bachman
Elana Paru, Executive Director
David Kasakove, President

Move Over Park Slope: Bay Ridge is the New Family Nabe Says Time Out

Move over, Park Slope—there’s a new family-friendly ‘hood on Brooklyn’s horizon. Time Out Kids (the monthly parents magazine) takes a trip to the end of the R train to discover what’s hot for tots in Bay Ridge.
 
The Bay Ridge branch of the Children’s Place keep your kids fashionable, while the stuff-a-bear station at Kaleidoscope lets your kids create their own cuddly companions. Taste of nature beyond Prospect Park at Narrows Botanical Garden,
featuring a butterfly garden and lily garden. Still feeling pangs for
that other neighborhood? Sit down for some Italian food at the original
Bay Ridge-area Peppino’s.
 
For more to explore in Bay Ridge, check out the complete article here: http://newyorkkids.timeout.com/articles/neighborhoods/78668/neighborhood-report-bay-ridge

Tonight at 7 pm at the Old Stone House: From Career to Family and Back Again

Monday, October 5th at 7:00 PM
Park Slope Parents and DoubleX Magazine present: The Comeback. Whether you're thinking of going back to work, you never quit or you been there and  motherhood changes everything.

Come hear Emma Gilbey Keller, author of "The Comeback: Seven Stories of Women Who Went from
Career to Family and Back Again." http://www.thecomebackbook.com/

Some questions we'll consider:

–Is it good for women to work – above and beyond the economic necessity to?

–How does the rhythm of your day compare to paid employment before children
– is it really possible to get anything done?

–Where did all my confidence go?

–What do you see as your next life/career transition?

–Can a non-working woman and a working woman stay close friends?

Come along and share your thoughts and stories about this life-altering
transition so unique to women today.

Date: Monday, October 5th 7-9 pm
Place: The Old Stone House at
Fifth Avenue and 3rd Street
www.oldstonehouse.org

Admission:
–Park Slope Parent FREE (with membership card)
–Non-members: $5.00

Pardon Me For Asking: Biggest Atlantic Antic Ever?

IMG_0646
Katia Kelly at Pardon Me For Asking asks: Was that the biggest Atlantic Antic ever? See her blog for great pix of the big Brooklyn block party. She writes:

It is the best street fair in town, isn't it?
The people
the food,
the unique arts and crafts
the cool Tees…

Where else but Brooklyn would one find such variety?
But pardon me for asking! Was it more crowded this time than ever before?
My favorite part is still Eddie the Sheik's orchestra.
What was yours?

ACME To Play Music from 2009, 1972, 1969 & 1740 at Galapagos

Imgallery-acmedirectbylizlinder
ACME presents music by Andrew Hamilton, Frederic Rzewski,
Louis Andriessen … and J.S. Bach*
(yeah, that's right, Bach)

Thursday, October 8, 2009 at 8pm
Galapagos Art Space | 16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY

The
music selected for this concert is unusual because the performers get
to choose the number and type of instruments, instead of the composer.
ACME's selection features a terrific group of players — violinist Ben
Russell, violist Nadia Sirota, cellists Brian Snow
and Clarice Jensen, percussionists Chris Thompson and John
Ostrowski, and pianist Eric Huebner.

The concert includes Andrew Hamilton's Product No. 1
(premiered in New York as part of the 2009 MATA Festival, it calls for
players to sing a Rastafari hymn while playing – selections online
here: www.myspace.com/andyfrankhamilton), Frederic
Rzewski's Les Moutons de Panurge of 1969 (written for any
number of musicians playing melody instruments, and any number of
non-musicians playing anything) and Louis Andriessen's Workers
Union from 1972 (written for an unspecified number and type of
instruments, with the instruction from the composer, "only in the
case that every player plays with such an intention that his part is an
essential one, the work will succeed").

ACME will intersperse selections from J.S. Bach's timeless The
Art of the Fugue throughout the concert . . . an innovation from
way back in the 1740s that still astounds.

Tickets are $15 at 718-222-8500 or www.galapagosartspace.com/events.html#100809

New Schedule on WNYC Radio

This is worth noting since I and many other neighbors and friends are incessant listeners to WNYC and NPR. So a change on WNYC: That's a change to the soundtrack of my life. This is the info from wnyc.org

We know you’ve heard about the new program schedules for WNYC and
WQXR. As the launch date nears, there remain a few final pieces to put
in place on WQXR, but we can tell you that our goal is to build a WQXR
schedule that features more music and fewer interruptions and we hope
that, if you join us next week on 105.9FM, you’ll hear that music is,
indeed, the priority.

First, here’s a a preview of the new program schedules for WNYC
AM820 and 93.9FM, which will go into full effect Friday, October 9th.
You can see the schedule here:

As part of this migration you’ll continue to hear Terrance McKnight
and David Garland hosting in the evenings on 105.9FM. Non-classical
music programs such as New Sounds, Spinning on Air, and The Jonathan
Schwartz Show will remain on WNYC 93.9FM.

Consolidating classical music programming on WQXR allows us to
expand the News, Information and Cultural programming on 93.9FM during
the evening and overnight hours. Starting October 9th, All Things
Considered will be heard for an additional hour weekdays from 7-8pm
following Marketplace and providing listeners with news of the day from
NPR and the WNYC Newsroom. Current AM820 weeknight programs On Point
and Tell Me More will move to 93.9FM, allowing us to introduce a few
often-requested favorites, The Diane Rehm Show and To The Point, to the
AM820 line-up at 9pm and 10pm, respectively. Evening listeners will
have an opportunity to catch WNYC’s afternoon daily talk show about
music, Soundcheck with John Schaefer, weeknights at 10pm on 93.9FM.

WNYC weekend listeners will also hear a new lineup starting October
10th. Some returning public radio favorites include Michael Feldman’s
Whad’Ya Know?, The Splendid Table, and Harry Shearer’s Le Show. We’ve
reworked the placement of our existing weekend programs to create
schedules that will, we hope, give you more opportunities to catch your
own favorite shows.
Download the schedule here (PDF)

Another piece in the puzzle: our second full-time music outlet, Q2,
which will be available as a web stream and via HD radio. This 24/7
channel for contemporary and adventurous music will feature large-scale
festival programming and live concerts from venues around New York
(including our own Jerome L. Greene Performance Space). Limor Tomer,
our executive producer for music, likes to describe this stream as “500
years of New Music.” After all, on Q2 you’ll be able to hear everything
from Adams to Zorn, from Gesualdo to Golijov.

We look forward to hearing your thoughts about the new schedule. As
you’ve probably noticed if you’ve listened for a while, our programming
is constantly evolving, and your feedback is part of that process. So
stay tuned!

OTBKB Music: The Author, The Musician and The Park Slope Stoop Library

George Pelecanos is a writer, who among other things (including writing
the HBO series The Wire), has written a series of mystery novels set in
the Washington DC area.  In those books, people are frequently
discussing music.  One of those music discussions revolved
around the 1984 album Medicine Show by The Dream Syndicate.

Steve Wynn is a musician who from 1982-1989 was the leader of The Dream
Syndicate
(since 2000, he has led Steve Wynn and The Miracle 3 and is
also a member of The Baseball Project).  Steve started hearing from his
friends that Medicine Show played a role in one of George's books.  So
Steve got in touch with George, and they hit it off.

They first collaborated on a song, Cindy, It Was Always You, which
appeared on the album …tick…tick…tick in early 2006.  Later that year, when George's book, The Night
Gardner
, was published, George, Steve and The Miracle 3 all came out to
Magnetic Field, a bar/club no longer in existence on Atlantic Avenue
near Long Island College Hospital.  This video is from that
reading/performance.

Although I am not usually a reader of novels, what I heard of "The Night
Gardner" piqued my interest.  But I did not get around to getting hold
of it and as time passed I forgot about it. 

Until last week, that is.  As I was walking down my block I passed one
of the many branches of the Park Slope Stoop Library, which had on
display "The Night Gardner."  I took the book home and finished it in a
few days.  It was quite good, as I thought it would be from the
reading/performance.

 –Eliot Wagner

Oct 15 at 8 pm: Brooklyn Reading Works Presents: Poetry Punch

New Picture (1)
So what is Poetry Punch?

It's BRW's annual poetry party curated by Michele Madigan Somerville.

How about a nice poetry punch?

When is it?

On Thursday October 15th at 8 p.m. come hear Edmund Berrigan, Louise Crawford, Bill Evans Sharon Mesmer, Wanda Phipps, Joanna Sit, Michael Sweeney and Jeffrey C. Wright.

How about a nice poetry punch?

Where?

At the Old Stone House. 3rd Street between 3rd and 4th Streets in Park Slope. Suggested donation of $5. includes punch, wine and snacks. 718-768-3195

How about a nice poetry punch?

Tonight 7-9 pm: Democracy Forum at Old First Church

City
Council District 39 candidates David Pechefsky, Brad Lander, and Joe Nardiello
will lead a discussion on democracy following a screening of the documentary "Please Vote for Me," a film
about an election for class monitor in a third grade classroom in China,
complete with
intimidation, bribery, and vote rigging! 

The film will
be the jumping off point for examining democracy in New York City and a chance
to see and hear the candidates together.

Monday, October 5th from 7 -9 p.m. at Old First Church. Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street.

Smartmom: Couch Chronicles II

Smartmom_big8
Here's this week's Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper:

So Smartmom spent a long weekend in Michigan with her friend,
Divorce Diva. The time away gave her lots of time to think about her
life.

There’s nothing like sitting on a porch facing a really big lake
like Lake Michigan to help you think long and hard about the state of
your marriage.

And the meaning of the green leather IKEA couch that is so cherished by Hepcat, as she wrote about last week.

Why wouldn’t Hepcat agree to buy a new couch? Why was he so attached
to the old one? What was wrong with the Andre, the couch Smartmom
picked out at Room & Board? And why is this such a source of
conflict between them?

And that’s when she realized that a couch is a perfect metaphor for marriage:

• A couch is where you sit for years and years — like a marriage.

• A couch can be a source of comfort and relaxation — like a marriage.

• A couch can get worn out and dirty; it can even be dangerous and
hazardous like when its springs start to stick out — like a marriage.

• A couch can be recovered — like a marriage (if you choose to work on it and accept that it might need the work, that is).

• And a couch could simply be replaced — like, well, you get the idea.

So Smartmom really worked the metaphor of the couch/marriage in her
head sitting in a wicker chair on the porch of a beautiful old cottage
facing Lake Michigan.

And then another metaphor appeared. From the porch, Smartmom had a
clear view of the famous Mackinac Bridge, that five-mile span across
the straits of Mackinac. It’s the longest suspension bridge in the
Western Hemisphere, and it connects the lower and upper peninsula of
Michigan, our weirdest geographical state.

Before the bridge, the only way for people and goods to get from one
peninsula to the other was by ferry. Traffic sometimes stretched 16
miles — and to make matters worse, there was no year-round boat service
because the straits often freeze in the winter.

Interestingly, it was the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883
that inspired Michigan locals to dream about connecting their state’s
disparate parts. It took decades, but they did it: On November 1, 1957, the Mackinac Bridge opened.

Fifty-two years later, the engineering achievement of uniting Michigan inspired Smartmom.

For Buddha’s sake, she thought, there has to be a way to bridge the gap between her own and Hepcat’s vision of the living room.

If the lower and upper peninsula can form one Michigan, surely
Smartmom and Hepcat can figure out what to do with their green leather
IKEA couch — and all the other “issues” that ail their marriage.

Getting away from Brooklyn really was a good thing. The anger she
felt toward Hepcat about the couch definitely receded after a few days
of bike riding, long walks and talks by the lake, fossil hunts and
beach fires.

Indeed, the living room — and the leather couch — seemed very far
away when she and Divorce Diva spent an idyllic day on Mackinac Island,
a Victorian summer resort without cars.

By the time Smartmom had flown from Traverse City to Chicago and
then from Chicago to LaGuardia, she barely remembered that she and
Hepcat had had such an ugly argument about the couch.

But as soon as she walked into the living room she saw the couch and she felt the rage well up inside of her. Again.

She resorted to her metaphors. A couch is like a marriage. Certainly there’s a way to bridge their difference.

And then something mysterious happened. She sat down on the couch as
she has done for 18 years (luckily, she didn’t get stabbed by the inner
springs). The Oh So Feisty One came into the living room and sat beside
her. They hugged. Hepcat sat next to her, too, and she told them about
her weekend in Michigan.

Smartmom knew that it was going to be OK. This couch was not a
referendum on the state of their marriage. It was a metaphor. It needed
work, it needed TLC and it probably needed to be replaced. But that
didn’t mean all was lost.

Somehow, like the engineers who built the Mackinac Bridge, they would find a way. Smartmom was sure of it.

Atlantic Antic, TChoup Shop BBQ in Williamsburg (Lima Beans and Cherry Tomatoes)

Tchop_shop_email_01
If you like street fairs, this is a good one: Atlantic Antic. All day. Crowds, food, stuff to buy at great local shops, etc. Have fun.

Later: try dinner or a late lunch at the TChoup Shop at DBA, Sunday only restaurant in Williamsburg (is it a pop-up restaurant?).

I've been in touch with chef Simon Glenn and plan to talk to him soon (sorry Simon). So alll questions will be answered. In the meantime, the food sounds SO GOOD, prices great and Oh- So-New Orleans. Check this out: Char BQ oysters, New Orleans styles shrimp, cajun spiced burger, spiced lima beans and cherry tomatoes and roasted beets with sliced pecans…

You can tell that I'm hungry and that food sounds GOOD.

at DBA: 113 North 7th Street in Williamsburg! 2 p.m. until? 

Rev Billy and the Life After Shopping Gospel Choir Rocked the Brooklyn Lyceum

So often I post events on this blog but can't make it to them. But last night I made a point of getting over to the Brooklyn Lyceum's Benefit for a Garden Grown from Katrina with mayoral candidate Rev Billy to find  out for myself what this Rev Billy thing is all about.

I know he's running for mayor on the Green Party ticket. And I've heard that he's an activist and performance artist with a powerful political message against war and consumerism.

Friends have told me that he's an amazing performer. And recently a friend said that they'd heard him on the Brian Lehrer Show and that he was incredible. Still, I didn't really know if it was schtick or the real thing.

The evening began with a screening of "Mama Sue's Garden," a very promising work-in-progress by documentary filmmaker Susan Hamovitch about a feisty and watchable woman in St. Bernard's Parish in New Orleans who is coming back from the devastation and loss of Hurricane Katrina by creating a community garden.

Then it was time for Rev Billy and the Life After Shopping Gospel Choir and they rocked the house. The energy, the music, the humor of this group can not be understated.

And their message about democracy, consumerism and peace. A flyer that I got at the door states Rev Billy's reasons for running for mayor:

"It's called Democracy. My opponent Mike Bloomberg is buying his 3rd term, and now talks of a 4th. He's an old-fashioned strong man of the type we didn't think exicsted in America. His $300,000 a day keeps us consuming his little video performances about jobs, schools, the MATA or the Yankees—whatever ad is in rotation. But he is changing the subject The only issue is Democracy and all the other issue beomce importabot after we've talked out our facts and our positions in a democratic ways. That's because we are citizens, not consumer."

The Stop Shopping Gospel Choir was really at the heart of Rev Billy's Lyceum appearance. They are an all-ages choir comprised of a very appealing, talented and energetic group of people who make soaring gospel music. They make you want to clap along, sing, and stomp your feet. The music moves you to move as it moves you. And they're really fun to watch. As they say on the about page of rev Billy's website:

We are
moms, activists, cyclists, worshippers, pagans, bakers, park-lovers,
tech-geeks, tinkerers, campers, gardeners, nerds, actors, athletes,
executives, hairdressers, designers, angels, devlis, and more.
In between songs, Rev Billy delivered  his message of peace and his core belief  that our neighborhoods, commons, stoops, parks, streets
and libraries, are disappearing into the corporatized world of big
boxes and chain stores. This is from his website:

We like independent shops where you know the person behind the counter
or at least –you like them enough to share a story.We ask that local
activists who are defending themselves against supermalls, nuke plants,
gentrification – call us and we'll come and put on our "Fabulous
Worship!"

His sermon for the night was about his experience at an "unpermitted" peace march at the G20 in Pittsburgh. "The only permit we had was the First Amendment," he said and the choir then broke into a singing of those 35 words.

Rev Billy then resumed his story about a group of approximately 700 peace activists ("and some 30-40 kids who wanted to get arrested," he said), who were surrounded by what he called DarthRoboCopVaders, in special riot gear, who created a menacing wall around them.

These "inscrutable" walls (cops at a demonstration, big box stores in a smal town), says Rev Billy,  are creating a new theory of social control called emptiness. " Reflected in those LA sunglasses there is the power of emptiness."

He came away from the demonstration thinking that consumerism and militarism—and even activism—are the same thing as he felt the activists imitate the Robocops "because we felt their tension and we forgot that we were arguing for peace."

While in Pittsburg, Rev Billy said he saw something he wasn't supposed to see: behind a a van he saw a group of Robocops getting into their bullet proof vests. "Toto pulled away the curtain and there were the cops looking like local young people, not too beefy, getting into their armour. They were stepping into that attitude, that ektoskelatal thing. And I realized if they can put it on, it can be reversed."

He went on to say: "We can return to softness," he said. "That is possible. We can stay soft, complex, articulate, sensual and interesting. Not like that wall."

This is complex, thoughtful stuff and I was very impressed by his way of speaking and the things he had to say. He's interesting and surprising and nuanced and smart. He is a very appealing guy who is, at heart, a performer and an artist who has devised an incredible way to get his message across.

After the show, I ran into a fellow blogger on Fifth Avenue. He told me that he'd never seen Rev Billy.

"So is it schtick or is it real?" he asked.

"It's schtick and it's for real. It's very sincere schtick," I told him. But I know that's only part of the story. That's why I will be doing a Breakfast-of-Candidates interview with Rev Billy so we can really go behind the scenes and find out what makes him tick. Stay Tuned.

Sunday: Check Out Metaphor Gallery at Atlantic Antic

Slip_Batu
Rain or shine, Sunday is the Atlantic Antic, one of the biggest street fairs in the country metaphor contemporary art is a gallery on Atlantic Avenue and they have a show, appropriately enough, called Slippery When Wet.

Needless to say, water is the theme of this show at the gallery, which is located on 382 Atlantic Avenue between Hoyt and Bond Streets in downtown Brooklyn.

For humans water has a timeless fascination. Covering 2/3
the surface of our planet, water nourishes, cools, cleans, entertains, and
inspires us. And no wonder, as is commonly known, 96% of our bodies is
comprised of water, we are literally made of the stuff. In our embryonic state
we develop while floating in a sort of inland sea, sporting the gills that
suggest our own distant evolution from the enveloping oceans. As a subject for
artists, water is an endlessly fluid metaphor presenting an ever-changing
surface of reflection, complex color, and translucent mystery.
Its' varied nature can be seen as a mirror to our own mercurial moods. Rain can
be soothing or pelting, a stream can murmur gently or roar with destructive
force. Water is the only element that we know well in all its' different states
frozen, liquid, and gas, but it is the liquid state flowing, turbulent, or
still that most attracts us. In Slippery When Wet, 5 painters and 2
photographers explore this liquid realm bringing the stillness of art and a
variety of sensibilities to bear on the the restless motion of this most common
yet still elusive element.
 

Suzan Batu, from Istanbul, makes paintings that present a sharply; focused and
highly contemporary take on the ancient Turkish art of calligraphy. Her
compositions evoke water or wisping steam with a crisp, sinuous line that reels
and puddles as it moves over and across the canvas. Her use of high keyed pop
colors locate her paintings squarely in the present while the eloquent beauty
of her line exhibits the timeless flow of dance

Susan Homer makes delicious paintings with lush painterly surfaces that
are rich in romanticism. In her new painting for this exhibition, her
protagonist, as in so many of her works, is a small bird, here caught amongst fantastic blossoms in a
downpour of juicy grisaille. Homer references pioneering naturalists like
Audubon, and the stylized flatness of Japanese prints and the decorative arts,
merging such disparate sources into giddily organic paintings that present
intriguing avian fables.

Nancy Manter is a photographer and also an accomplished painter. Here
she uses her camera to document  a
series of water drawings made by pulling her fingers through dew that has
gathered on windowpanes. With a nod to the dominant window configurations of
contemporary architecture, her impromptu marks drip and slide across the pane's
slick surface, playfully echoing the grid of the outside screens while clearing
our view to sunlit exteriors.

Joanne Mattera's paintings employ flowing layers of near transparent encaustic which
build into rich and subtle color experiences that reveal hidden depths. Her
group of square paintings from the Silk Road Series shimmer within their
carefully crafted, softly textured surfaces like so many small ponds. In her
painting Vicolo 52,  she carves
through these layers giving a hint of her process in a painting that is bright
with flickering lights.

 
Andrew Mockler creates precise and complex abstractions that here seem to
capture in one place all of the colors that might be seen over the ocean during
a day at the beach from pale mid-day blues and muddied greens to late afternoon
violets and pinks. Mockler alternates passages of impasto with transparent
glazes calling attention to the paints' physicality while constructing
insistent horizontals that lead our eye deep into the matrix of his carefully
calibrated and refreshing color studies.

 
Don Muchow makes intense and quiet photographs that are filled with a
rich sense of place. Working in black and white or near monochrome he invests
his landscape studies with the carefully edited simplicity of Chinese brush
painting. These are elemental landscapes that reward patient viewing with their
pared down, subtly balanced composition and elegant tonalities. Suggesting
settings for an existentialist film these haunting images draw us into their
contemplative moods and provide stages for daydreams.

Peter Schroth is a painter with a strong affinity to the traditions of
plein-air painting. His group of ocean studies were painted on site near the
Atlantic Ocean and retain the immediacy and accurate color made possible by his
proximity to his subject. The viewpoint in these paintings hovers just above
these turbulent surfaces and seems to have us standing beside the painter in the middle
of the rush near the shore. On close viewing the images dissolve into skeins of
calligraphic marks and the bravura brushwork of pure painting.