Category Archives: arts and culture

Vital Vox: The Myriad Power of the Human Voice

This Thursday through Saturday  at ISSUE Project Room, Vital Vox presents and explores the power of the human voice in its solo and ensemble forms across many genres.

See/hear Joan LaBarbara, Jen Shyu, Nat Baldwin, Sabrina Lastman and others at the festival on November 11, 12, and 13, 2010 at 8:30pm at the ISSUE Project Room at the Old American Can Factory, 232 3rd Street, in Brooklyn, NY. (F/G Subway to Carroll St or F/M/R to 9th St./4th Ave.) Tickets are $10 ($9 in advance) and can be purchased at www.issueprojectroom.org or by calling 718-330-0313.

With international influences springing from such countries and regions as Taiwan, East Timor, Slovakia, Africa, South India, and more; genres ranging from jazz, experimental, contemporary, free improvisation, “noise” music, and abstract solo opera; and themes ranging from “maintaining one’s composure”, to cinematographic music theater inspired by the life, films and death of the German filmmaker Rainer Werner Fassbinder, VITAL VOX has wide ranging scope and appeal.

Click on read more to see the individual programs…

OTBKB Music: Lots of Shows Worth Your While This Week

You have musical choices almost every day this week: I count 13 worthwhile shows.  If you just want to stay in Park Slope, you can see Chuck Prophet and Stephanie Finch on Wednesday and When Giants Walked The Earth: A Musical Memior By Andy Shernoff (Dictators) plus Paul Collins on Thursday, both at Union Hall.  So click here to get the listing of this weeks show at Now I’ve Heard Everything.  Then get out your calendar and figure out what you are going to do in this much too bountiful week.

–Eliot Wagner

OTBKB’s Weekend List: Nov 6-7!

It’s an action packed weekend in Brooklyn town. As usual there’s too much to do and too little time. My mother-in-law is visiting, which means I will probably catch more of what’s going on than usual. Oh yeah and it’s Target First Saturday at the Brooklyn Museum,which is FREE.

Also: The ING New York City Marathon is on Nov. 7, 2010 and it’s so much fun to watch. Catch it somewhere along the route.

Continue reading OTBKB’s Weekend List: Nov 6-7!

This Thursday: Fiction & Memoir by Vets

On Veteran’s Day, November 11 at 8PM: Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House presents Writing War: Fiction and Memoir by Veterans of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan with Matt Gallagher, author of Kaboom, Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War, Juri Jurjevics, Roy Scranton, Philip Klay and Jacob Siegel.

The Old Stone House, the site of the Battle of Brooklyn, one of the bloodiest battles of the Revolutionary War, is an appropriate setting for this literary event, which will highlight writing by those who know war first hand. All of these writers have transformed their experience of the violence, the chaos, the devastation, pain, fear and even hilarity of war—in Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan—into honest and searing prose. As Roy Scranton writes in an essay published in the New York Times that chronicles his path from youth to soldier to civilian writer in New York City  “The prior four years of my life hung over my days like the eerie and unshakable tingle of a half-remembered dream — “my time in the Army” — and the sense of chronic disconnection was getting to me. I walked between two worlds: the New York around me and the Army in my head.”

Writing War begins at 8PM and there will be a Q&A following the readings. A $5 suggested donation includes refreshments and wine.

The Old Stone House is located at Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn. 718-768-3195. Click on read more to see the author’s bios.

Continue reading This Thursday: Fiction & Memoir by Vets

Tonight: Ut at No Wave, New Music at ISSUE

Tonight at ISSUE Project Room is the  last night to catch “Theoretical Music: No Wave, New Music, and the New York Art Scene, 1978-1983”, a series which examines the intersections as well as the failed encounters of art, music, and cinema in downtown Manhattan from 1978-1983.

The series which started on Wednesday night concludes with a concert performance headlined by the first New York appearance in years by the fearless, crucial downtown band, Ut (Friday, Nov. 5).

UT_02

Ut

Ut returns for its first U.S. concert since 1991.  Sprung from the downtown No Wave scene, Ut (Nina Canal, Jacqui Ham, Sally Young) originated in New York City in December 1978.  They were joined by filmmaker Karen Achenbach in February 1979 before resuming as a three-piece with the original members in May 1980.  Migrating to London in ’81, they released records on their own label, Out Records, and then on Blast First/Mute.  Ut played what was thought to be their last gig in Paris in March 1990; their next performance was an announced set in London in July 2010. “The raw power and sheer drive of Ut is quite straightforward and unmistakable. This is a true threatening guitar band.” (New York Rocker)

OTBKB’s Weekend List: Nov 5-7

Here are the best picks for the weekend of November 5-7. As usual there’s too much to do and too little time. But hopefully you’ll take advantage of the fact that you live in one of the most culturally active cities in the world. I for one am going to try. My mother-in-law is in town which means I will probably catch more of what’s going on than usual. Oh yeah and it’s Target First Saturday at the Brooklyn Museum,which is FREE.

Also: The ING New York City Marathon Nov. 7, 2010: is so much fun to watch. Catch it somewhere along the route.

Continue reading OTBKB’s Weekend List: Nov 5-7

OTBKB Music: A Double Feature from Austin and Boston Tonight, Laura Cantrell at The Brooklyn Museum on Saturday

There are two very good shows tonight waiting for you.  First up at 8pm is Charlie Faye, who released one of my favorite records of 2009, Wilson St.   Charlie’s music consists of rock, blues, country and folk blended into each other and she has a rich, melodious voice.  Then at 10pm, Boston’s Hey Mama will be playing.  A mostly electric blues-based act, Hey Mama features the amazing and powerful vocals of Celia Woodsmith, who you may also find playing washboard on a song or two.  Get the details on these two excellent shows here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

This just in: Laura Cantrell, New York’s wonderful real country singer will be playing a free show tomorrow (Saturday) at The Brooklyn Museum as part of Target’s First Saturday there.  Laura will be joined by Jeremy Chatzky, Mark Spencer and Skye Steele and will go on at 6pm.  And since this show is part of First Saturday, it’s free.

–Eliot Wagner

War Stories at the Old Stone House on Vet’s Day

Thanks to the Brooklyn Paper for running a story about Writing War, the November 11th Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House. It should be an excellent event:

Parades are nice on Veteran’s Day, but commemorate the day in Park Slope-style by attending a reading from five authors who know war best.

The veterans-turned-writers will present their prose and answer questions at the Old Stone House on Nov. 11 at 8 pm.

“These authors can help us understand war in a way that we may not see in the news, or on TV,” said organizer Louise Crawford. “They’ve come back, and are going to tell us something we don’t know.”

“But are Park Slope residents ready to listen?

The neighborhood didn’t support America’s recent wars, but Crawford hopes that the community can set politics aside and look at the conflicts through the soldiers’ eyes.

“They have a lot to say about a war that’s been on our consciences,” Crawford said. “And I think a good writer may make you understand points of view that you can’t even imagine.”

“And the vets will do that by personalizing battles that are usually talked about on a scale of troops and battalions, according to Matt Gallagher, author of “KABOOM: Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War.”

““It’s a personal story about me and 20 other guys trying to do the best we could in a pretty s—ty situation,” he said.

• Juris Jurjevics, the founder of Soho Press and a Vietnam vet.

• Phil Klay, an Afghanistan vet.

• Roy Scranton, an Iraq war vet who has written for the New York Times Opinionator blog.

• Jacob Siegel, an Iraq War vet.

“It’s not going to be pretentious,” Crawford said. “But the question-and-answer session should be the best part.”

“Writing War: Fiction and Memoir by Vets of Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan” at Old Stone House [336 Third St. between Fourth and Fifth avenues in Park Slope, (718) 768-3195], Nov. 11 at 8 pm. Tickets are $5 (suggested). For info, visit theoldstonehouse.org.

Short Short Stories by Fanny Allié at Park Slope Shop

Yesterday, fortuitously, I happened upon the opening of Somewhere Else, the latest show curated by Krista Saunders and Jill Benson of  G-Train Salon at Urban Alchemist, a Fifth Avenue shop that sells artisan  jewelry, clothing and objects d’art.

Fanny Allié, a young French artist who now makes her home in Brooklyn, was assembling clay alphabet letters into a sentence for display in the front window of the store. She has created five sentences that tell a very short story, which will appear during the course of this, the latest G-Train Salon exhibition.

I was intrigued.

As pictured above, the letter are clustered in an interesting looking pile that could be the artwork itself. That the artist arranges them into an ambiguous narrative is even more compelling.

Allié told me that she likes to use language in her work though she is not a writer.  “I write for myself, notes, journals. I like words and I think in English now,” the native-French speaker told me. In her artist statement she writes: “I explore the notion of trace 
that indicates the existence of others and my own. 

Trace also shows the passing of time. Many of my projects suggest the course
 of time as they examine memories, past actions or incidents, and events that 
happened at a specific and recorded time.”

Although the artist doesn’t live in Park Slope she pointed at that she used Park Slope locations in the story (Fifth Avenue. Ginger’s Bar. Stone Park Cafe): “I want people who walk by to connect to the story,” she told me.

The story now on display in the window of Urban Alchemist begins: “The stranger was walking on Fifth Avenue in my direction when he got close enough he started talking to me.” Stop by the Park Slope shop to see what happens next.

The G-train salon made its debut in a living room on Flatbush Avenue and it is committed to showing the work of emerging artists from Brooklyn and Queens (hence the name G-train) in intimate and unusual settings. A discussion with the artist is an important part of the concept and adds immeasurably to the experience, the curator told me.

OTBKB Music: Melody Kills, The New Leslie Mendelson Project, Plays Tonight

Leslie Mendelson is one of my favorite local musicians.  In years past you could find Leslie playing her original piano-based songs (including a great one about Coney Island) and some inspired covers around town often.  But she took much of this year off and tonight emerges from woodshedding for only the second time in 2010.  This time she’s calling her band Melody Kills.   Get all the details on tonight’s show here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

OTBKB Music: Norah Jones’ Busy Weekend, Some Good Shows in The Nabe, and A Video from Deni Bonet

If you wanted to see Norah Jones, the past few days were the time to do it.  Norah was part of last Thursday’s Petty Fest tribute to Tom Petty (on the occasion of Tom’s 60th birthday), and on Saturday, Norah was one of the performers who took part in Radio Happy Hour.  More details and a photo await you here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

The next 14 days are chock full of live music.  If you don’t want to leave Park Slope there are three standout shows: Tuesday November 2 (tomorrow!) you’ll find  Jonathan Richman at The Bell House; on Sunday, November 7 you can witness the Bloodshot Records Fall Pageant with The Bottle Rockets, Graham Parker, Scotland Yard Gospel Choir, Cordero, Lydia Loveless, and special Guests to be announced at The Bell House; and on November 10 San Francisco’s not to be missed Chuck Prophet and Stephanie Finch play Union Hall.  Check the frequently updated November Music Calendar at Now I’ve Heard Everything for more live music.

Deni Bonet is a singer songwriter who plays electric violin with attitude (both rock ‘n’ roll and New York).  She’s also recently taken up the ukulele.  Deni has played along with folks you probably know: Cyndi Lauper, R.E.M., Sarah McLachlan, Robyn Hitchcock and Richard Barone.  She is finishing up her new record, It’s All Good.  Here is a clip of Deni playing her song, Alone.

–Eliot Wagner

OTBKB’s Weekend List: Halloween All The Time!

How about a Spook Walk in Prospect Park with your kids (or borrow your sister’s kid like I will)? Think it might be fun to dress like Don or Betty Draper and go to the Mad Men Halloween Party at Sheep Station? In the mood for a gypsy re-telling of Macbeth at the Old Stone House.  All that and more of the best and brightest activities for OTBKB readers. Click on read more to see the huge list that’s still growing.

Continue reading OTBKB’s Weekend List: Halloween All The Time!

Shop Camel Girl at the Brooklyn Flea for Your Halloween Party

This Saturday, the day before Halloween parties like the Mad Men Halloween party at Sheep Station, shop Camel Girl at the outdoor Fort Greene Brooklyn Flea.

Perhaps you’re looking to get your Betty Draper on or indulge your inner R&B diva this Halloween? Toddle over to the Brooklyn Flea’s Saturday outpost in Fort Greene this weekend and ask for Camel Girl (Booth W19), Marion Hart’s vintage clothing and accessories collection specializing in on-trend retro items. Don’t get me wrong, Camel Girl’s racks are chock-full of wearable capes (velvet for evening, pink check for apple-picking), tie silk blouses, jodhpurs, and, of course, a few lovely camel items that will have you looking soignée and smart for snagging unique vintage versions of today’s runway cuts. But there are also more than a few period gems, which styled properly, will have you ready for your Halloween close-up.

And if you’re looking for something to keep you warm this winter how about a 1970’s Pierre Cardin fur coat for $250:

OTBKB Music: Jim’s Big Ego Tonight

A bunch of years back I was going through a box of CDs at the WFMU Record and CD Fair when one very unusual one caught my eye.  The CD cover was mostly yellow and drawn like a super hero comic.  It was the album They’re Everywhere from Jim’s Big Ego, which is comprised of guitarist Jim Infantino, percussionist Dan Cantor and bassist Jesse Flack.  Inside were songs about bars, paranoids, math professors, mix tapes and The Flash.  And JBE is as musically astute as they are lyrically astute.  Because they haven’t played New York City in a while (they are based in the Boston area), take this opportunity to see what Jim’s Big Ego has up their collective sleeves.  Get the details of tonight’s JBE show over at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

Philip Klay: Death, Memory and Photos from a Trauma Ward

Philip Klay, one of the writers who will be reading at Brooklyn Reading Works’ Veterans Day event, Writing War: Fiction and Memoir by Veterans of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, has an essay in the Opinionator blog of the New York Times. Here’s an excerpt from Death and Memory, how photos from a trauma ward in Iraq brought home the impact of the death of a fellow Marine:

When I tell stories about Iraq, the ones people react to are always the stories of violence. This is strange for me. As a public affairs officer in 2007 and 2008, I never saw combat, only its aftermath. I saw women and children wounded or dying in trauma centers. Ruins left by explosives in towns and cities across Anbar province. I saw surgeons who could do no more because the body they were trying to repair was too badly destroyed. I stood in formations as the bodies were taken away.

And when I try to describe that death, the telling tends to decay into a kind of pornographic, voyeuristic experience. I feel I do disservice to the enormity of my subject by making it a subject of conversation. And yet I know that keeping a hushed silence is a failure, too, because by not telling these stories we fail to process them.

Most of the suffering I have seen has not affected me as it should have. While I was in Iraq I never cried over the bloody children I helped carry to the Navy doctors, or the two men who’d been tortured with drills through their ankles. Only one death out of the many gave me pause. It was of a Marine who died, not in front of me, but near me. Near enough for me to see it happen, had I been paying attention…

On Veteran’s Day, November 11 at 8PM: Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House presents Writing War: Fiction and Memoir by Veterans of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan with Matt Gallagher, author of Kaboom, Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War, Juri Jurjevics, Roy Scranton, Philip Klay and Jacob Siegel.

The Old Stone House, the site of the Battle of Brooklyn, one of the bloodiest battles of the Revolutionary War, is an appropriate setting for this literary event, which will highlight writing by those who know war first hand. All of these writers have transformed their experience of the violence, the chaos, the devastation, pain, fear and even hilarity of war—in Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan—into honest and searing prose. As Roy Scranton writes in an essay published in the New York Times that chronicles his path from youth to soldier to civilian writer in New York City  “The prior four years of my life hung over my days like the eerie and unshakable tingle of a half-remembered dream — “my time in the Army” — and the sense of chronic disconnection was getting to me. I walked between two worlds: the New York around me and the Army in my head.”

Writing War begins at 8PM and there will be a Q&A following the readings. A $5 suggested donation includes refreshments and wine.

The Old Stone House is located at Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn. 718-768-3195. Click on read more to read the author’s biographies.

Continue reading Philip Klay: Death, Memory and Photos from a Trauma Ward

More Details on Effed Disappearance

Hepcat and I just did a little research at Who Is, an Internet function that allows you to search domain name registration. We found information about Fucked in Park Slope and it looks like the domain name was created by Erica Reitman, who runs Fucked in Park Slope, on October 26, 2008 but it expired on October 26, 2010 because Reitman forgot (or decided not to) renew the registration.

A company by the name of Enom, a domain registrar, which has a subsidiary called Acquire this Name, scooped up the domain today. They’re the one’s who put up the porn site in place of Reitman’s site. According to Who Is, they’ll have it until October 26, 2011.

It seems that the domain name Effed in Park Slope was registered with Enom and there have been warnings about that domain service. In a sense, they’re holding Effed in Park Slope hostage. For the right price, Reitman can probably get her domain name back. The following is  information from DNXpert, the domain news blog.

If you have an Enom retailer account or sub-account then you need to be aware that you run a risk of losing your expiring domains.

Most domainers set their domains on auto renew, in order to not risk forgetting the domain expiration date and losing that domain. If your payment method is via credit card you might run into problems with your auto renewal at Enom.

Enom is not allowed to store the credit card CVV ( last three digits on the back of your credit card ) so on random occassions when Enom attempts auto renewal of your domain, the credit card provider ( your bank ) rejects the attempt. Your auto renewal fails, and you lose your domain. The only plausible way to avoid this is to login into Enom every month and enter the CVV… which means you might as well track your expiration date and renew manually.

So, make sure you double check your expirations if you have domains at Enom.

Stay tuned for more information…

Effed in Park Slope is Effed

At 3:50 PM today I got a call from a Brooklyn Paper reporter looking for Erica Reitman’s phone number. He asked me if I knew that the popular Park Slope blog, Effed in Park Slope, had been hacked and turned into a porn site.

“Take a look,” he said then laughed. “Do you have her number?”

“Of course I don’t have her number she writes terrible things about me,” I told him.

“Really, I didn’t know that,” he said.

Still, I was interested to see what happened to Erica’s site. Sure enough a picture of this “naughty French maid” was on the site, which is kind of porn site though it’s more like a directory to other porn sites. It looks like one of those temporary sites waiting for someone to buy the domain name.

So Effed in Park Slope is gone for the moment. Hopefully it will be up and running by tomorrow morning.

Brooklyn Author of John Lennon Book to Read—In Manhattan

My friend, Keith Greenberg, author of The Day John Lennon Died from Backbeat Books, will be reading at the Barnes and Noble on 86th Street in Manhattan.

Manhattan? But we Brooklynites rarely go there.

Yeah, yeah. I also wish he was reading at the Park Slope Barnes & Noble. Still, it’s pretty exciting that he’s getting a Barnes and Noble reading. Way to go Keith. Way to go!

Greenberg’s book is a  breathtaking, minute-by-minute account of the events leading to the horrible moment when Mark David Chapman calmly fired his Charter Arms .38 Special into the rock icon John Lennon.

Tuesday November 02, 2010 7:00 PM

86th & Lexington Ave
150 East 86th Street, New York, NY 10028, 212-369-2180

Soldiers of War, Soldiers of Words at the Old Stone House

On Veteran’s Day, November 11 at 8PM: Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House presents Writing War: Fiction and Memoir by Veterans of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan with Matt Gallagher, author of Kaboom, Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War, Juri Jurjevics, Roy Scranton, Philip Klay and Jacob Siegel.

The Old Stone House, the site of the Battle of Brooklyn, one of the bloodiest battles of the Revolutionary War, is an appropriate setting for this literary event, which will highlight writing by those who know war first hand. All of these writers have transformed their experience of the violence, the chaos, the devastation, pain, fear and even hilarity of war—in Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan—into honest and searing prose. As Roy Scranton writes in an essay published in the New York Times that chronicles his path from youth to soldier to civilian writer in New York City  “The prior four years of my life hung over my days like the eerie and unshakable tingle of a half-remembered dream — “my time in the Army” — and the sense of chronic disconnection was getting to me. I walked between two worlds: the New York around me and the Army in my head.”

Writing War begins at 8PM and there will be a Q&A following the readings. A $5 suggested donation includes refreshments and wine.

The Old Stone House is located at Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn. 718-768-3195. Click on read more to see the author’s bios.

Continue reading Soldiers of War, Soldiers of Words at the Old Stone House

DIY Utopias: Growing Against All Odds at the Old Stone House

As part of its Brooklyn Utopias: Farm City exhibition, the Old Stone House of Park Slope presents “DIY Utopias: Growing Against All Odds,” on Monday, November 1st from 7-9PM, an evening of hands-on skillshare with the exhibition’s activist-artists in an intimate gallery setting.

The array of urban farming strategies will be MC’d by artist Mary Mattingly, who had to explore and enact each one of these approaches for her project, The Waterpod (2009), a floating farm and artists’ live-work vessel. Click on read more for a list of the workshops and the details…

OTBKB Music: Freebies from Steve Wynn and Harper Blynn and November Music Calendar

Two very good but very different acts have each released a track off of their new records for you to download for free.

First up is Resolution, the lead track off of Northern Aggression, the record by Steve Wynn and The Miracle 3 scheduled to be released on November 30.  The other freebie today comes from Harper Blynn, and the soon to be released EP with the same name.  The freebie off of the Harper Blynn EP is titled Every Impulse.  Get your free and legal copies of these songs here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

For those of you who want or need to plan your music going in advance, the November Music calendar is available today here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.  And don’t just look once; I do update this calendar often, and any updates are marked.

–Eliot Wagner