WARNING: PAUL McCARTNEY CD PLAYING ALL DAY AT STARBUCKS

If you’re into Paul, you may want to stop into the Seventh Avenue Starbucks. But if you’re not a fan: AVOID STARBUCKS AT ALL COSTS.
They’ll be playing his new CD, Memory Almost Full, out on Starbuck’s Hear Music label, all DAY long.

UPDATE: As of 10 am this morning, the crew at Starbucks was unable to find the song on their corporate radio station. A barista there said they tried and tried. They were also supposed to get a CD of one song they were supposed to play over and over. Maybe this guy was misinformed because that sounds like such a lousy idea. The same song, all day? He said they couldn’t find that either.

Lord have mercy.

I’ll stop in there around 4 pm to see what’s playing.

NEW YORK MAG: TOXIC OOZE IN GREENPOINT

Ten million gallons of toxic gunk is trapped in the Brooklyn aquifer says reporter, Daphine Eviatar, in this week’s New York Magazine.

On a foggy October day in 2002, Basil Seggos first saw the sheen on the surface of the water. He and his colleagues had launched an old wooden-hulled oyster boat from the Dyckman marina in Inwood, and headed south, down the Harlem and East rivers. They were on a mission to document fishing and crabbing spots on the riverfront so that local anglers could be warned not to eat their catch.

When Seggos’s boat reached the mouth of Newtown Creek, the finger of water that separates Brooklyn from Queens, they decided to sail into the creek to check out its unnatural landscape—miles of waste-processing plants, gasoline-storage facilities, and abandoned refineries. The boat passed floating auto parts, crumbling bulkheads, and rusting pipes spewing filthy-looking water. Then, about a mile in, Seggos saw it: oil coating the surface of the water from shore to shore and extending upstream for another half-mile or so. “It was everywhere, all over the shoreline.” Officially, Seggos was running an outreach program for Riverkeeper, RFK Jr.’s environmental organization, and the organization’s protocol in situations like these is to stop and call the state Department of Environmental Conservation hotline. The call is supposed to provoke an immediate reaction, but no one showed up. The next day, Seggos called again. “We’d never even heard of a spill there before,” says Seggos. “But they told me they already had an open case on it and they were handling it.”

What Seggos discovered—or rediscovered—wasn’t an oil spill, exactly. Rather, it was a mix of gasoline, solvents, and associated poisons bubbling up from the very ground: a thin dribble that betrays the presence of a supertanker’s worth of the stuff submerged in the age-old geology of Greenpoint. It’s actually more than a century’s worth of spills, leaks, and waste dumped by oil companies that has pooled into a vast underground lake, more than 55 acres wide and up to 25 feet thick. First discovered by the U.S. Coast Guard in 1978, the Greenpoint spill has been estimated at anywhere between 17 million and 30 million gallons—three times more oil than the Exxon Valdez spill. That makes it the largest known oil spill in American history

.

Read more at New York Magazine

SEEING GREEN WALKS THE WALK

Seeing Green walked the walk at the Atlantic Yards Footprint and came back with this report.

Much as I have seen the footprint, checked out out the written word and examined the photographs of this much-discussed project, there’s nothing like walking the walk to bring home the reality of this monster development and its attendant inequities. A picture may be worth a thousand words; this walk was worth at least several dozen pictures.

I think if only more people were to familiarize themselves with some on-ground knowledge, there surely would be more opposition to this project.

Read more at Seeing Green

OUR MAN SCHUMER CALLS FOR REDUCED GREENHOUSE GAS EMMISSIONS

The New York Times’ reports that New York Senator and Park Slope resident, Charles Schumer, wants to create national energy-saving standards and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions:

“Senator Charles E. Schumer said yesterday that he was introducing a measure that would require cities and states to increase energy efficiency in new buildings by 30 percent in the next five years and by 50 percent before 2022. Under the measure, to be introduced next week as an amendment to the Senate energy bill, cities and states would face penalties unless they adopted a standard nationwide code or their own codes requiring energy-efficient systems and designs. Cities that met the standards would be exempt from the penalties even if their states failed to do so, Mr. Schumer said. The amendment, he said, is meant to bring the country in line with the standards in California and New York City, which recently overhauled its building code to require so-called green-building practices.”

JUNE TIPS FROM OTBKB

You won’t want to miss the following events in June: For more info: Louise_crawford@yahoo.com

June 11: 10th Anniversary Reading of 808 Union Writing Group, which may be the longest running writer’s group in Park Slope with Marian Fontana, Louise Crawford, Wendy Ponte, Rosemary Moore, Mary Crowley, Barbara Ensor and Kevin McPartland at the Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.

June 16: Southside Stories by Louis Rosen performed by Capathia Jenkins and Louis Rosen. Also, songs on Nikki Giovanni poems at The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.

June 21: Brooklyn Reading Works presents: Writers Who Write While Sleeping. Poets Michael Ruby and Nancy Graham do this and much more. You won’t want to miss this show, which will be anything but sleepy. the Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.

June 23: Stoopendous, a Celebration of the Summer Solstice on the streets and sidewalks of Park Slope. For information and how to do it: stoopendous.org.

June 24: First Brooklyn Blogade Roadshow at Vox Pop in Ditmas Park. http://flatbushgardener.blogspot.com/2007/05/event-june-24-brooklyn-blogade-roadshow.html

IT’S NOT A DONE DEAL: BENEFIT FOR DDDB ON JUNE 24

My friend, Karen Zukowski, sent me this missive about a not-to-be-missed benefit for DDDB.  Fun Fact: her book, Creating the Artful Home: The Aesthetic Movement, is the party favor. Unfortunately it’s at the same time as the First Blogade Roadshow at Vox Pop. Hmmmm.

Don’t miss Develop Don’t Destroy
Brooklyn’s benefit on June 24.   It is being held on June 24, 3-6 pm at
the home of Clem Labine, a famous Brooklyn brownstoner.  This benefit
is being called the "It’s not a Done Deal" benefit, because the legal
case DDB to making against Forest City Ratner Companies may prove that
the Atlantic Yards megaproject is NOT a done deal.   The afternoon’s
events including hanging out in Clem’s house and garden, meeting
preservation pioneers like Everett Ortner and current preservationists
hard at work with DDDB, and meeting Karen Zukowski, who wrote Creating the Artful Home: The Aesthetic Movement,
which describes Victorian houses.  (The book is a party favor).
Tickets are $60 ($75 at the door). Because it’s a private home, space
is limited and pre-registration is strongly advised.  To attend, call
718-636-819.
   

DIANA KANE GETS SEVENTH AVENUE

The newish Diana Kane shop on Seventh Avenue is a beautiful variation on her Fifth Avenue store. But with a big difference: instead of lingerie there’s clothing and lots of it. And the selection is beautiful. Lovely fabrics, prints, styles. I’d call it delicate, Boho and feminine. And she’s got sizes — Small, medium, and large.

Enuf of those hipster stores that only have tiny sizes.

Dianna Kane also has her original jewelry, great bags, towels, clogs, candles, and her signature lingerie (of course).

Location: Seventh Avenue on the corner of Berkeley Place in Park Place. The space that used to house Kiwi.

SECOND STREET CAFE REOPENS

The Second Street Cafe, a popular restaurant in Park Slope, has a brand new look. After ten years, they closed for a month and really went to town. And everything inside, including the layout, the kitchen, the floor, the furniture, the bar is NEW!!

The result: a decidedly more upscale look. And it looks roomier. More elegant and quite lovely.

The menu is the same but the entrance is now on Second Street, not Seventh Avenue (yes, the Second Street Cafe…).

A huge, beautiful vase of flowers caught my eye.

I haven’t eaten there yet but plan to soon. Mazel Tov to the owners. One of them told me he’s just thrilled.
“Everything is brand new,” he said. He also said that everything is in but the art work.

That reminds me:

OSFO and I were wondering what they did with all the paper tablecloth art? Are they going to incorporate it in some way into the new place — maybe framed versions of some of them? Or were they destroyed. I can’t imagine how they would have saved the ceiling art.

Did they?

BLOG OF THE DAY: JUDD LEAR SILVERMAN’S BLOG

Judd’s blog is eclectic and he writes about all sorts of things but this week there’s a review of the book he wrote for kids about allergies, a post about the musical Grey Gardens, and Rosie O’Donnell. Here’s the review of Judd’s book by T.F. Rice, publisher, THE OTHER HERALD in Perry, NY.

Helping Allergic Kids (& Others) Feel Better About Their Peculiarities!
19 Apr 2007
by T. F. Rice
Author Judd Lear Silverman offers up encouraging words disguised as fun in the story EDDIE HAS ALLERGIES. Full of rhyming and other wordplay, this is a story the kids will want to finish. Laughter is one of the best medicines! And reading a story about someone else having similar difficulties can make a big difference in a worrisome child’s life.

Allergies are an extremely relevant topic these days. If it is difficult for an adult to “deal with” their allergies, it must be awful for a kid to do so. Help is on the way… Silverman can’t wave a wand and make the allergies go away with mere words… but he’s proved he can make a kid feel better in other ways! Hip- hip- hooray! -T.F.Rice

Now if I can just spread the word . . . !

ORDER YOUR TIX FOR LOUIS AND CAPATHIA AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE

Get your tix for a great show at The Old Stone House.

Last year it was songs based on Maya Angelou. This year, Louis and Capathia will perform Rosen’s song cycle about growing up on the South Side of Chicago during the 1970’s when the neighborhood was experiencing upheaval. This piece deals with love, family, religion and race. And it is AWESOME (I’ve heard it twice at Joe’s Pub and I own the album). Here’s a note from Louis about the show.

DEAR BROOKLYN FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS:

I wanted to let you know that my splendid collaborator, Capathia Jenkins (a 2007 Drama Desk Award nominee), and I are scheduled to perform our second benefit concert on behalf of The Old Stone House on Saturday night, June 16th. The proceeds will go to supporting The Old Stone House’s rapidly growing arts programming, including this summer’s Piper Theatre at OSH’s production of Macbeth, Brooklyn Film Works and the excellent Brooklyn Reading Works.

The performance will mark the Brooklyn concert premiere of the songs from our recently released and highly acclaimed debut recording, South Side Stories, songs of youth, coming of age and experience, inspired by the Chicago neighborhood where I grew up. We’ll also be offering a “sneak preview” of a excerpts from my newest work for Capathia, Giovanni Songs, on words by the renowned poet Nikki Giovanni. Capathia and I will be joined by two splendid musicians, the pianist Kimberly Grigsby, and Dave Phillips on acoustic and electric bass.

The evening is being billed as a “Champagne Cabaret,” which means champagne and dessert will be served at 8 pm, and the concert will begin at 8:30. Last year’s benefit sold out—the room only holds 90 people—so we hope that you make the scene.

The Old Stone House is at J. J. Byrne Park at 3rd Street and 5th Avenue.
Tickets are $40 in advance, $45 at the door.
Advance tickets can be purchased online at www.nycharities.org, or you can RSVP by calling 718 768 3915.

TOUR DE BROOKLYN: SEE THE VIDEO

They said rain or shine. And it rained and shined for the 3rd Annual Tour de Brooklyn. Hundreds of friends and neighbors rode the 18 mile tour through Brooklyn’s southern neighborhoods along the waterfront like Sunset, Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights and Bensonhurst and loops towards the heart of Brooklyn, Kensington and Prospect Park South to end at the Carousel.

The riders, a mix of adults and kids, rode at a leisurely pace, escorted by the police and safety marshals. Streetsfilms has the video:

If you would like to check it out…

http://www.streetfilms.org/archives/tour-de-brooklyn-2007/

BARBES DRUMMER DIES

This from Night After Night Blog:

The downtown New York jazz scene lost one of its busiest, most creative souls last weekend when percussionist Take Toriyama
passed away suddenly and unexpectedly. We received the sad news late
this afternoon in an e-mail from Michaël Attias, curator of the
excellent weekly series "Night of the Ravished Limbs" at Barbès in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

Born in the small town of Chiba, Japan, Takeaki Toriyama found early
success playing in a popular Japanese rock band. In search of something
more musically satisfying, he came to the U.S. in 1993 to study at the
Berklee College of Music. Toriyama arrived in Brooklyn in 2000, and
quickly established himself as one of the scene’s most promising
newcomers. Some weeks it seemed that he was practically the house
drummer at Barbès, one of the city’s most vital music venues.

SMARTMOM RE-JOINS WEIGHT WATCHERS

Smartmom is a Lifetime member or something, which means she once met her goal weight. It was like 8 years ago  but she slowly put it back on. So she’s in the program again — going to meetings at the Montauk Club.

Ah, the Montauk Club. Who knew the meeting was in the pretty ballroom upstairs. Probably the best Weight Watchers location. Anywhere!

Smartmom used to go the American Legion on 9th Street, where the leader was hysterically funny. Worth the meeting just to hear her. But the room left a bit to be desired.

Melainie, the leader at The Montauk Club, lost 60 pounds and seems very inspiring and supportive. And the program is a little different from 8 years ago. For one thing, you can count your food points on-line. And it’s even more health-oriented than ever.

Smartmom is so psyched.

BENEFIT FOR TOBY PANNONE: THURSDAY JUNE 7 at 5:30 P.M.

This from Andy Bachman’s blog:

The Daily News reports on Toby Pannone today, in an article about how an online community has tried to help Mooki, Stephen and Yoni support little Toby through his struggle with cancer.

Two
of the more powerful statements Mooki made in the story include the
fact that many of those who have helped are people she doesn’t even
know–a testimony to people’s innate desire and need to do good. And
second, that there clearly needs to be more research in this field of
pediatric cancer in order to attempt to slow if not stop this
scourge–the second leading cause of death for children under 14.

The article reminds us that there is a benefit concert for Toby held at Bean Sprouts this coming Thursday at 5.30 pm.

Posted in Brooklyn |   

SMARTMOM: TEEN SPIRIT GETS KITTY-CORNERED

In the Smartmom Book of Records, that accounting of everything she’s done wrong and right in her life as a parent, Memorial Day weekend 2007 will be hereby remembered as a breakthrough.

She said “no” to Teen Spirit.

Yeah, yeah. she says “no” to Teen Spirit many times a day — No, you can’t skip school today. No, you can’t go to the Knitting Factory tonight because you have Earth Science homework. No, you can’t play your guitar at 2 am — but there are times when Smartmom has trouble saying it. And that’s not good for Teen Spirit or Smartmom.

Smartmom fondly remembered the time that TS fell in love with a white rabbit at a pet shop when they were going only to look — to look, I tell you! — at guinea pigs.
Naomi Village: In the heart of the Poconos

Teen Spirit got this soulful and sensitive look in his eyes. And that rabbit looked so cute. So next thing she knew, Smartmom was popping out the credit card and nervously paying for the dwarf rabbit that TS had already named Opal.

Smartmom is well aware that the ability to say “no” is a major tenet of good parenting. She knows that it is key to the sanity of the child — and the parent.

It’s not like she wants to spoil her children or anything. It’s just that, well, Teen Spirit is so darn cute when he gets that hang-dog look on his face.

She spent close to $100 once they were done selecting a cage, rabbit bedding, food, toys and vitamins.

But there was no going back. Almost immediately, everyone fell in love with Opal. When she died a year ago, the family felt like it had lost a beloved member.

The one-year “anniversary” didn’t pass unnoticed.

“Mom, come meet me in front of John Jay. There’s an adorable kitten I want,” he told her by phone last Saturday while Smartmom was napping.

As if under a spell, she floated out of the apartment to meet Teen Spirit to talk him out of the kitty. Smartmom lambasted herself all the way up Third Street. She knew she should have just said “no” and hung up the phone. She swore to herself that she would not succumb to the site of Teen Spirit with the kitty.

The Oh So Feisty One, a confirmed dog lover, came along for support.

Under the scaffolding at John Jay High School, Teen Spirit was staring lovingly into the eyes of the 5-week-old kitten. The woman from the Brooklyn Animal Foster Network  handed Smartmom a contract.

“Mom, do you need a pen?” Teen Spirit asked helpfully.

Before she could say, “This is terrible idea,” OSFO wanted the kitten, too — and Smartmom was signing on the dotted line.

Teen Spirit walked home with the kitty attached to his shirt. Smartmom went to Met Food. She found cat food in an area of the store she’d never noticed before.

That’s because Smartmom doesn’t know from pets. Growing up, she wasn’t allowed to have a pet larger than a turtle. Oh, how she longed for a big, hairy sheep dog or even a tiny shih tzu like neighbors had upstairs.

Back home, Teen Spirit and OSFO were taking turns cuddling the kitten, while they tried to come up with a suitable name.

“I’ve always liked the name ‘Supermercado,’ which means ‘supermarket’ in Spanish,” Teen Spirit told Smartmom.

OSFO was thinking more along the lines of Lula or Lulee.

Smartmom had to admit that the kitty really was quite fetching with her fluffy black fur and white paws that make her look like she’s wearing socks.

Parenting is sometimes an attempt to correct the wrongs of one’s childhood. But it’s easy to go overboard.

She went into the kitchen to open a can of cat food — some kind of chicken soufflé, which smelled disgusting. Supermercado-Lulee lapped it up quickly, like she was starving or something. Maybe she was. Someone had found her, poor thing, in a pile of garbage on Fourth Avenue.

When it came time to go to a friend’s BBQ, Teen Spirit decided to stay behind with Supemercado-Lulee. Good, Smartmom thought, he’s showing some responsibility.

A boy needs to bond with his kitten. And Supermercado-Lulee clearly needs a tremendous amount of TLC.

During dinner on a friend’s deck, Hepcat got a call from Teen Spirit asking to go out to see a movie with friends.

Grrr, Smartmom thought, that’s so irresponsible.

“I’m leaving food and water in the box. I think she’s going to sleep,” he told Hepcat.

Smartmom and Hepcat were miffed. Teen Spirit’s bonding with Supermercado-Lulee had lasted until the first social phone call. Then he was off. Was he really mature enough to care for a kitty?

When they got home, Supermercado-Lulee was in her box crying. She’d tipped over her water bowl, and her food (mackerel and something gross) was all over the bottom of the box.

OSFO found a large plastic box and covered the bottom with soft towels, and Supermercado-Lulee finally looked cozy.

Later, Teen Spirit called to say that he was sleeping over at a friend’s house. That irked OSFO.

“He gets a kitten and the first night he doesn’t even want to stay home with her.” OSFO screamed. “I think we should get rid of her.”

OSFO could see the writing on the wall. “I’m going to be the one to take care of her and I really want a dog,” she cried.

Smartmom was furious. Who raised that kid? Who taught him right from wrong? She knew she had only herself to blame. Smartmom slept fitfully that night. She kept waking up to check on the kitten and worry that they’d made a big mistake.

The next morning, she woke up early and called Teen Spirit. He sounded groggy.

“I’ve decided to take the kitty back,” she said.

“You can’t,” he said.

“Why?” she asked.

“Because I love the kitten,” he said.

“But you’re not here,” she said, telling him to come home for a family meeting. There would be a vote, and the family would decide what to do.

When Teen Spirit came home, the family sat around the dining room table and discussed Supermeracado-Lulee in a very democratic way. They even voted. It was 3–1: get rid of the kitty.

“Remember ‘Twelve Angry Men?’” Hepcat said. “We can’t decide until everyone agrees.”

Finally, Teen Spirit came around. Disgruntled. Sad. It seemed that he understood that he wasn’t ready to take on a kitty.

With relief and a feeling of victory, Smartmom and the family returned the kitten to the people from Brooklyn Animal Foster Network who were again sitting underneath the scaffolding at John Jay. Within an hour, someone else adopted Supermercado-Lulee.

And Smartmom was proud. She’d said “no” to Teen Spirit. What a victory. Even with those adorable, “I love this kitty” eyes, she’d turned him down.

It was a small step for Smartmom. And one giant leap for Teen Spirit.

Now that’s one for the record books.

SUMMER CONCERT SCOOP SORT OF

I’ve got the scoop but I’m not allowed to say until early next week. It’s a performer I adore and a real coup for Debby Garcia, Executive Director of the Seaside Summer Concerts and Martin Luther King, Jr. Concert Series.

She asked me to hold off for a couple more days. Sorry to be uncharacteristically tight-lipped. The official schedule comes out in two weeks. Debby Garcia, by the way, was one of 2007’s illustrious Park Slope 100. Stay tuned because…

OTBKB will have it first.

In other big news: The B52s will be returning to Seaside Summer Concerts on a Thursday night in August. I think they were rained out last year.

ACT LOCAL SAYS DON’T DEMO DOMINO SUGAR FACTORY

Residents of Williamsburg want to save the more than 120-year-old Domino Sugar Processing building. It faces demolition.

“While we can’t stop change we want to manage it a little bit,” Mikki Halpin of the concert organizer Act Local told New York 1. “This is a building that really represents the neighborhood to a lot of people.”

The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission will hold a hearing on whether the building should be landmarked.

There’s a benefit concert today, JUNE 3rd, in Grand Ferry Park from 2 p.m until 8 p.m. For more information visit their My Space page. Here’s the line up

All times approximate! Get there early and DONT MISS BLACK TIE PARTY!

5:45 nada surf (accoustic)

5:00 the wau wau sisters

4:15 cheeseburger

3:30 vic thrill and the saturn missile

2:45 the hungry march band

2:00 the black tie party

We’re working on an awesome afterparty with drink specials too!

DANCER IN STREB EXTREME ACTION SERIOUSLY INJURED

The New York Times’ reports that dancer deeAnn Nelson, 28, was injured during a performance of a piece by Streb Extreme Action in Wiliamsburg. The dancer crushed a vertebra, underwent surgery and now has a metal rod permanently embedded in her back. According to the Times’, the dancer did not hurt herself with a particularly daring move. “She was running up a 4-by-8-foot plywood board held at an angle by a fellow dancer and was to jump off about six feet above the ground. But she slipped, caught her ankle on the top and pitched forward in a half-tuck. The dancer left the stage under her own steam as the performance, held at the company’s studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, was halted, and she was taken by ambulance to Bellevue Hospital.”

Streb Extreme Action is known for highly daring, action-oriented dance. The Streb USA web site describes it as “dance, athletics, extreme sports and Hollywood stunt work into a bristling muscle and motion vocabulary that combines daring and strict precision.”

Just this week it was announced that the Streb company is moving into new, larger studio space in one of the new condo developments in Williamsburg.

The company has rallied around Nelson, “who grew up in Idaho Falls and attended the University of Nevada at Las Vegas and the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, said she was moved by the outpouring of support, which included checks from strangers. She welcomed the benefit as a message that performers can help others. “That’s something I’ve always hoped art could do in general,” she said.”

LOUIS AND CAPATHIA SHOW TO BENEFIT THE OLD STONE HOUSE

Last year it was songs based on Maya Angelou. This year, Louis and Capathia will perform Rosen’s song cycle about growing up on the South Side of Chicago during the 1970’s when the neighborhood was experiencing upheaval. This piece deals with love, family, religion and race. And it is AWESOME (I’ve heard it twice at Joe’s Pub and I own the album). Here’s a note from Louis about the show.

DEAR BROOKLYN FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS:

I wanted to let you know that my splendid collaborator, Capathia Jenkins (a 2007 Drama Desk Award nominee), and I are scheduled to perform our second benefit concert on behalf of The Old Stone House on Saturday night, June 16th. The proceeds will go to supporting The Old Stone House’s rapidly growing arts programming, including this summer’s Piper Theatre at OSH’s production of Macbeth, Brooklyn Film Works and the excellent Brooklyn Reading Works.

The performance will mark the Brooklyn concert premiere of the songs from our recently released and highly acclaimed debut recording, South Side Stories, songs of youth, coming of age and experience, inspired by the Chicago neighborhood where I grew up. We’ll also be offering a “sneak preview” of a excerpts from my newest work for Capathia, Giovanni Songs, on words by the renowned poet Nikki Giovanni. Capathia and I will be joined by two splendid musicians, the pianist Kimberly Grigsby, and Dave Phillips on acoustic and electric bass.

The evening is being billed as a “Champagne Cabaret,” which means champagne and dessert will be served at 8 pm, and the concert will begin at 8:30. Last year’s benefit sold out—the room only holds 90 people—so we hope that you make the scene.

The Old Stone House is at J. J. Byrne Park at 3rd Street and 5th Avenue.
Tickets are $40 in advance, $45 at the door.
Advance tickets can be purchased online at www.nycharities.org, or you can RSVP by calling 718 768 3915.

By the way, the South Side Stories CD s now available for downloading at www.itunes.com, www.rhapsody.com and most other online sights, as well as available for purchase at www.cdbaby.com, and in Park Slope at the Community Bookstore on 7th Avenue.

Best Regards,
Louie

P.S. For those who would like to read what critics have had to say, here is a sampling of the press we received when we performed the New York premiere of South Side Stories at The Public Theater’s Joe’s Pub last winter, and its world premiere in Chicago the winter before that at The Steppenwolf Theater.

From Bloomberg News’ Jeremy Gerard, Nov.1, 2006: “Jenkins will knock you flat….I’ve never been so seduced by music completely new to me yet as embraceable as any from the classic American songbook….Don’t miss this show!”

From the Chicago Tribune, Kerry Reid, December 21, 2005: “In South Side Stories, Rosen has created a fine and sometimes somber portrait of heartbreak and survival, joy and its absence, and love that endures even when the objects of that love are long vanished.”
From Cabaret Scenes’ Tesse Fox, October 29, 2006: “Capathia Jenkins is gifted with one of those rare voices that makes pouring out one’s soul into music seem effortless. And when she is singing the music of Louis Rosen, she makes that soul into a thing of rare beauty and power….A wonderfully emotional celebration of life that can appeal to every musical palate.”

From the Chicago Sun-Times, Hedy Weiss, December 20, 2005: “Something quite magical can happen when a composer has a specific voice to serve as his muse. Consider the case of Louis Rosen…and his songbird of choice, Capathia Jenkins…performing Rosen’s nostalgic, romantic, emotionally charged song cycle, ‘South Side Stories’….”

From The Jewish Exponent, Michael Elkin, October 26, 2006: “In a way, Rosen’s collaboration with singer Capathia Jenkins, his musical muse, gives voice to two peoples, blacks and Jews, in a harmony rarely heard offstage.

OnlyTheBlogKnowsBrooklyn, Louise Crawford, November 6, 2006: Here’s what I was thinking after Capathia Jenkins’ and Louis Rosen’s tight, moving, musically glorious show at Joe’s Pub last night: How lucky they are to be working together. And how lucky we are to witness the on-going story of their unbelievably fruitful collaboration….Great, great show….”

This year, it’s a champagne bash. So reserve a ticket and come on down. You won’t want to miss an incredible night of music.

Buy your ticketes here.

SUFJAN STEVENS TO CELEBRATE THE BROOKLYN QUEENS EXPRESSWAY AT BAM

Sufjan Stevens is a big deal in our house. Illinoise, his last album, is one heck of a masterpiece. And now according to Brooklyn Vegan by way of The Gothamist, I hear that Sufjan is going to celebrate the Brooklyn Queens Expressway.

He will be performing a special series of shows at BAM this November at the Next Wave Festival titled “The BQE” and described as “a symphonic and cinematic exploration of one of New York’s least celebrated monuments”. In what sounds like one of he more innovative concert concepts we’ve heard in quite a while, the show will combine Sufjan live, playing both old and new material, with a live orchestra and video projections displaying a “virtual road trip.” Gotta admit, this looks pretty cool.

As evidenced by many of the songs on his Illinois and Michigan “50 states” albums, few are better at finding beauty in the intricacies of everyday urban blight quite like Suf. This should be a real trea

BENEFIT TO SUPPORT FREE SUMMER PROGRAMMING AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE

And you missed it. There were delicious food contributions from local eateries and Old Stone House served dinner and wine to a crowd of locals, who were happy to contribute $40 a head to support great free summer programming there.

But as Kim Maier, director of the Old Stone House, always says: free programming isn’t free to produce. It costs a lot of money to do what she’s doing and she deserves the support of the community for making the Old Stone House and JJ Byrne Park into a vital cultural and historical center.

Especially the Summer Arts Festival in JJ Byrne Park. What a win win for the whole community. Think of it: Shakespeare, Music, Great movie, Something to do on hot summer nights!!! What a contribution.

The funds raised last night raised will go to FREE, high quality Shakespeare performace, fabulous screwball comedies, and blues in the JJ BYrne Park this July. OSH Director, Kim Maier, has a great summer line-up.

July 10
Brooklyn Film Works Presents: Screwball Brooklyn!
The Lady Eve
directed by Preston Sturges, starring Barbara Stanwyck
Introduced by film critic Ty Burr, author of The Best Old Movies for Families
8:30 pm. Free.
July 11
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 12
Summer Concerts in JJ Byrne Park!
Nation Beat
6 pm. Free.
July 13
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 14
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 15
Puppetry Arts Theatre
In a Roundabout Way
A New Musical
4 pm. Free.
July 17
Brooklyn Film Works Presents: Screwball Brooklyn!
I’m No Angel
directed by Wesley Ruggles, starring Mae West
8:30 pm. Free.
July 18
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 19
Summer Concerts in JJ Byrne Park!
Life in a Blender
6 pm. Free.
July 20
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 21
Piper Theatre at OSH
Macbeth
8 pm. Free.
July 22
Puppetry Arts Theatre
In a Roundabout Way
A New Musical
4 pm. Free.
July 24
Brooklyn Film Works Presents Screwball Brooklyn!
What’s Up Doc?
directed by Peter Bogdonavich, starring Barbra Streisand
8:30 pm. Free.
July 25
Piper Theatre Students at OSH
Twelfth Night: 6:00 pm
Hamlet: 7:30 pm
Free.
July 26
Summer Concerts in JJ Byrne Park!
The Mercantillers
6 pm. Free.
July 27
Piper Theatre Students at OSH
Romeo & Juliet: 6:00 pm
Macbeth: 7:30 pm
Free.
July 28
Piper Theatre Students at OSH
Shakespeare Extravaganza!
Twelfth Night: 2:00 pm
Romeo & Juliet: 4:00 pm
Macbeth: 6:00 pm
Hamlet: 8:00 pm
Free.
July 31
Brooklyn Film Works Presents Screwball Brooklyn!
Duck Soup
directed by Leo McCarey, starring The Marx Brothers
8:30 pm. Free.
August 18
Battle Week!
The Revolutionary Era Lives On at OSH
Noon. Free.

GOOD NEWS: If you didn’t make it to last night’s benefit you can still support the Old Stone House AND enjoy the great music of Capathia Jenkins and Louis Rosen on JULY 16th at 8 p.m. The Old Stone House is at J. J. Byrne Park at 3rd Street and 5th Avenue. Champagne bash, great concert, fun.

Tickets are $40 in advance, $45 at the door.
Advance tickets can be purchased online at www.nycharities.org, or you can RSVP by calling 718 768 3915.

THE STORY OF AN ARTIST, HIS SUBJECT, THE PAINTING: IN THE BROOKLYN PAPER

Dinerstinecolor
I wrote an article in today’s Brooklyn Paper about Park Slope painter, Simon Dinnerstein and a masterful drawing of his that is included in a prestigious show at the National Academy Museum on Fifth Avenue near the Guggenheim. This picture, taken by Hugh Crawford, was cropped in the print and web edition. Here it is in its entirety. I include an excerpt from the article. Go here to read more.

Most people say hello to their grocer or smile politely at their
barista — it’s not a relationship that requires much more. Park Sloper
Simon Dinnerstein disagrees, going beyond the usual niceties of these
daily interactions and developing relationships with the people he
meets on Seventh Avenue.

Sometimes, he even sketches them.

Sure,
it takes more time than just waving, but it has paid off — a drawing of
the man from whom he buys cheese is now hanging in a fancy museum.

When
Dinnerstein, who has lived in the neighborhood since the 1960s, was
asked to submit a drawing to the National Academy Museum, a
200-year-old institution modeled after the French Academy in Paris and
the Royal Academy in London, he selected his portrait of Wajih Salem,
an owner of D’Vine Taste, a local gourmet shop.

BROOKLYN RECORD: RIP

I went to Brookyn Record today for one of my daily look/sees and found out that it has been discontinued.

I, for one, am sorry to see it go. I liked it over there. I know that it hadn’t really found it’s own unique voice yet but I thought it was a fun and ambitious idea. An off-shoot of Brownstoner, Brooklyn Record was trying to be an all-Brooklyn (non-real estate) blog. That’s a tall order as this is one BIG borough.

I think this blog business is very nichey — you really have to focus and figure out what you do best. Brooklyn bloggers are carving out various slices of the Brooklyn pie and there’s lots to go around in term of neighborhoods and themes. 

I do respect Brownstoner’s "live and learn" attitude as stated below. He’s decided to stick with Brownstoner and post certain Brooklyn Record-type items there. Here’s what the ever-thoughtful and ambitious Mr. B. had to say. Good bye Brooklyn Record: we’re gonna miss you.

Live and learn. We launched Brooklyn Record almost exactly a year ago
with the idea that there was a whole lot of stuff going on in Brooklyn
that had little to do with real estate and that wasn’t being adequately
covered in any one blog.

We still think it’s a valid concept but we’ve
decided to leave it to someone with deeper pockets to try and to stick
to our knitting here at Brownstoner.

It’s been hard trying to support
two brands and creating artificial boundaries editorially; frankly,
it’s also proven a lot harder to support a general interest blog with
advertising. Going forward, some of the things we’ve been putting in
the Brooklyn Record basket in recent months—like storefront openings
and closings and the more human-interest side of real estate, for
example—will find a home under the Brownstoner umbrella.

Other topics,
like kick-boxing classes and indie rock concerts aren’t going to make
the cut.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond