
Saturday, April 1
Spangenberg Auditorium; 780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto; 650.354.8200; Sat - 8pm; Sun - 3pm; $18
Kim Venaas leads the Peninsula Pops Orchestra in a celebration of music from the Greatest Generation: Count Basie, The Dorseys, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Harry James and Glenn Miller. Dave Gregoric guests on trombone. (TI)
Nakamatsu Plays Grieg
California Theatre; 345 S. First St, San Jose; 408.286.2600; Sat - 8pm; Sun - 2:30pm; $36-$72
For its next-to-last program of the season, Symphony Silicon Valley welcomes guest conductor William Boughton of the English Symphony Orchestra to the podium for performances of Beethoven's Egmont Overture, Greig's Piano Concerto in A Minor and Sibelius' Symphony no. 5. The guest artist for the Grieg is pianist Jon Nakamatsu, winner of a gold medal at the 1997 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition and a familiar figure on the local classical scene. (MSG)
Beatitude Mass
Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph; 80 S. Market St, San Jose; 408.995.3318; Fri-Sat - 8pm; $10
Metro cover star Henry Mollicone unveils his brand-new full-length work, Beatitude Mass, this weekend with help from the Mission Chamber Orchestra and singers Nancy Wait Kromm (soprano) and Paul Murray (bass). The piece takes Latin prayers as its starting point and then adds material that the composer and librettist William Luce gathered in interviews with homeless people. In that spirit, the concert is a benefit to help the homeless in Santa Clara County. (MSG)
Dot You!
West Valley College Theater; 1400 Fruitvale Ave, Saratoga; 510.226.8036; Thu-Sat - 8pm; Sun - 7pm; $20
Saratoga Drama Group presents a musical revue that eviscerates the dotbomb era of 1998-2000. Ted Kopulus wrote 22 songs and three sketches poking fun at life, work and traffic in Silicon Valley. (TI)
Ambivalence, The Randies, Stellar Corpses
In three short years, Ambivalence have crawled to the top of the Santa Cruz punk rock pile with their pummeling yet melodic assault, an accomplishment vindicated by their first-place win in last year's Battle of the Bands at the Catalyst. Coming up on their heels is the psychobilly outfit the Stellar Corpses, definitely one of SC's new bands to watch out for. Sharing a rockabilly lineage with the Chop-Tops, the Stellar Corpses' approach is more death-rock, and if anybody questions their punk cred, the band's impromptu Misfits covers should set the doubters straight. Also performing are the Randies, an all-female punk three-piece out of Los Angeles who owe as much to the sly and jagged melodic dynamics of the Pixies and Pavement as they do to straight-ahead pop-punk. Their subtlety and slightly skewed approach sets them apart from the slew of pop punk acts who name-check the Ramones but lack their inventiveness or hooks. (Paul Davis)
lkn
You've gotta love an artist who can play, bash and pummel all her own instruments while turning out songs that make Patti Smith's album sound just a bit tame. LKN is Lauren Kathryn Newman, Florida punk drummer turned frontwoman whose forthcoming album, (due out April 11 on the Portland-based Greyday label), is one of the best full frontal assault albums since Mission of Burma thundered back into the studio. Live, Newman brings along a full band, may or may not play earlier favorites like "Get Your Hands Off My Crotch," and is reportedly a force to be reckoned with. (BF)
Ladysmith Black Mambazo
Double Grammy winners Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the South African singers who first made it big in the United States by lending their depth and fullness of sound to Paul Simon's Graceland, travel this way to support their new album, Long Walk to Freedom. A re-recording of the group's hits with guest stars Melissa Etheridge, Emmylou Harris and Sarah McLachlan, Freedom delivers better-than-first-class a cappella mbubu music. Hear the profound and layered harmonies on Saturday, April 1, at Analy High School. (Brett Ascarelli)
'The Magician's Nephew'
BEFORE YOU could easily slip into Narnia through a wardrobe, there was a silent wood between the worlds. And green pools of possibility (like sickly green spotlights on the floor) led you to a rather ominous shadow behind a white arched screen that came to life as the witchly Queen Jadis (looking like Heidi Kobara). Well, the green lights, the shadow screen and Heidi Kobara aren't exactly in C.S. Lewis' The Magician's Nephew, but they are part of Tabard Theatre's enchanting production of this creationist prequel to The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.
A cast of children play the talking animals, dressed in fun, thoughtful costumes by Marilyn and Brittany Watts—the joking Jackdaw with black face and thick epaulettes of black feathers (Carolyn DiLoreto), the sniffing bulldog (Nick Iles), the long-horned gazelle (Gabrielle Crandall), the furry black bear (Sarah Vivoli), not to mention strong leads as the magician's nephew Digory (Justin Isaacson) and his friend Polly (Sarah Crandall). When especially fast things happen, like talking/flying horses named Fledge (Ana-Catrina Buchser) soaring beyond the mountains, shadow puppetry gallops across the white screen.
Before you can be lost in Narnia, much traveling occurs between worlds. Director Susannah Greenwood has taken full advantage of the space at Historic Hoover Theatre. The apron in front of the curtain is used for exploring old houses through dark tunnels. Behind the curtain the silent wood awaits. In a catwalk area to the right we can look over at Uncle Andrew's (John Musgrave) dusty, book-filled study (dust actually falls from books as he picks them up) and the sick room of Digory's Mom (Cheryl Vicary). In the floor space that divides the audience (four rows are seated in the pit), characters walk from Uncle Andrew's 1910 Edwardian world, narrating as they go, to arrive in the nascent Narnia. Or they can go the quick way, disappearing from Narnia through the wings and reappearing in 1910 through the stage door. This crafty stage usage makes a clear delineation between worlds, gives a sense of time passing and offers a holistic picture of Narnia, which is spun from the past and from dreams and shadows and then sung to life by Aslan the kingly Lion (Ogidi Obi). Though the Shakespearean soliloquies in this Aurand Harris adaptation demand Shakespearean chops (and probably props) to keep narration from sounding like proclamation, it's best to let your senses, not your mind, carry you to Narnia. In keeping with Aslan's "the song with which I called it into life still hangs in the air," the child creatures mount an especially beautiful silk dance to end Act 1. Set to cosmic sounding music, the black silk of darkness is held and billowed aloft by animals about to "awake, love, think, speak." A blue silk carried by Jackdaw and the iridescent blue-green fairy (Madison Schmidt) creates the undulating sea. This magical show brings Narnia from the inchoate shadows as truly a "land of youth." (Marianne Messina)
Brides of Funkenstein
Convinced by P-Funk king George Clinton to move from backup to center stage, Dawn Silva and Lynn Mabry became the Brides of Funkenstein in 1978, warming audiences up with their urban funk before Clinton's headliner took over. Though the Brides disbanded in 1980, Silva's 2000 release, All My Funky Friends, seduced critics, who hailed it as the only genuine funk of the last two decades. Prepare to say your vows to the Brides when they play on Saturday, April 1, at 19 Broadway Niteclub. Where else? (Brett Ascarelli)
Storytelling Festival
As part of a three-day storytelling festival, the sought-after Chitresh Das Dance Company performs the classical Indian dance form kathak (translation: "the art of storytelling"). Dancers wear eight-pound anklets made of bells, while moving as gracefully as ever. Music and puppetry comprise the other chapters of the festival, which runs from Friday, March 31, through Sunday, April 2. Highlights include Chitresh Das Dance Company on March 31 at 7:30pm; the Russian Chamber Orchestra performing Stravinsky's Soldier's Tale on Saturday, April 1, at 8pm; and the Bear Flag puppet show by Magical Moonshine Theater on Sunday, April 2, at 3pm. (Brett Ascarelli)
'Pearl Necklace' Release Party
The fifth issue of the North Bay's own "gritty but pretty" feminist-minded art and lit zine Pearl Necklace is hot off the presses, jam-packed with utopian and dystopian visions by local creators. Hosted by the Napa Valley College Gallery, the zine's golden-girl editors (including, full disclosure, this one) are throwing one of their famous release parties and encouraging party-goers to dress the part in futuristic costumes à la Blade Runner or Xanadu. Shangri La-inspired bliss takes over wine country with creativity, edibles, drinkables, raffles and dancing on Saturday, April 1, at the Napa Valley College Gallery. (Brett Ascarelli)
Philip Fradkin
The new book by environmental historian and Pulitzer-nominated author Philip Fradkin, The Great Earthquake and Firestorms of 1906: How San Francisco Nearly Destroyed Itself, isn't just about national disaster, but the human response to it as well. Fradkin reads and speaks to the topic on Saturday, April 1, at Sonoma County's Central Library. Third and E streets, Santa Rosa. 2pm. Free. 707.545.0831. (Brett Ascarelli)
Napa Valley Mustard Festival
The Napa Valley Mustard Festival, a three-month-long fandango of everything Napa—both up valley and down—lures tourists and locals alike to the dinners, auctions, art shows, markets and other pleasures promised while the days remain short and gray and . . . yellow. (Gretchen Giles)
Robert Brady Sculpture: 1989-2005
After a long and successful career working in ceramics, Bay Area sculptor Robert Brady switched his primary material in 1989. Entranced by wood in its natural state—striving trunks, columnar branches—Brady creates attenuated figures that evoke Giacometti's skeletal studies. Brady's figures are often caught in aspects of worship or submission—kneeling, praying, bending to higher forces. The wooden surfaces are either stripped down, skinned of bark or painted in glossy colors.
Angel (1991) is a penitential form, resting on one jointed knee. The streamlined torso is armless; the head marked only by two black dots for eyes. Our attention is drawn to the spectacular paddle-shaped red wings, scored with white lines as if they were made of brick. Another Angel, from 1993, boasts a stretched-oval head from a Modigliani painting and green-tinted wings for arms.
Fledgling (1992) is a female figure balancing on her knees like a diver. Her arms are made from swooping curved pieces of wood arching backward. The arms are whiplike, as if about to propel the woman forward with a rush of potential energy. Nash (1995) is a spiderish man-chair resting on the point of his legs and arms, his ribcage lightly delineated with surface carvings.
More explicitly metaphoric, Yolo (1989) consists of a large two-piece headless figure twisting at the waist. The arms are clutched behind, forced to drag a stone weight; the feet are buried in the base. This female Sisyphus is eternally poised between pulling and being pulled.
Brady also favors pod shapes—giant cocoons with blank eyeholes and Celtic tracery carved on their surfaces. Fid (1993) is hermetically sealed, hiding secrets we can't penetrate. The King's Journey (1993) opens with a hinge to reveal a scooped-out yellow gourd filled with a stamen of sorts and three green seeds.
The Brady retrospective is nicely complemented by Deborah Barrett's "Wildlife" show, which runs concurrently. Barrett is a pack-rat artist, happily collaging away with assorted snippets of material and creating pieces that combine the look of great age with disturbing currents of modern madness.
For Man in Profile (2000), Barrett has drawn in gouache and pencil an exquisite portrait bathed in white light. The torso is a simple outline from which a piece of cloth in the shape of a sleeve hangs. Monkey on a Horse (1999-2000) reproduces styles from several eras—a Dürer stag beetle, a Japanese monkey, a Persian horse. Rendered on heavily soiled and creased linen, this drawing looks like a lost volume from a Babylonian library. (MSG)
Heavenly Bodies
In an affront to the static quality of oil painting, the video works in "Heavenly Bodies," in the historic wing upstairs at the San Jose Museum of Art, all embrace notions of time and change. In essence, the pieces in the show are experimental video shorts turned into installations pieces.
In You Called Me Jacky, a four-minute-long video, artist Pipilotti Rist lip-syncs with exaggerated gestures the title song while indistinct images flow and mutate behind her. The work may be a comment on bad music videos or it just may be a bad music video.
In similar fashion, Drew Brandt's Dance, Video, Dance (2002) subverts a battling-warriors video game called Soul Caliber into a disco video. Instead of attacking each other, two armor-plated Voldos with knife-blade hands engage in an intricate dance routine in the halls of some Lara Croft underworld full of columns, vaults and dragons.
Two large installations resonate to much greater effect. In one darkened corner, Ajna Joy Lichau's San Shi (Dispersion) consists of a large, faint wall-mounted photo of Angel Island on the wall; on the floor, a color image of a nude woman floats face down in the water. Subtly, the shifting reflections of light create a rippling surface. Upon closer inspection, it turns out that the video is being projected on a bed of sand, which gives it a 3-D quality. Is this a murder waiting to be solved or the beginning of a transformation? The shimmer in the dark remains a mystery.
Ruth Eckland's Star Fields (2005) casts a six-minute montage of star bursts and silhouettes of persons and landscapes unknown. In time to a an electronica score, the video turns red, blue and yellow. The video is projected on a series of hanging translucent scrims before falling on a wall. The result--fragmented and layered--is like a hologram journey through deep space with flickering memories of Earth.
Local computer artist wiz Jim Campbell offers a Self-Portrait With Disturbances. A small black-and-white TV with its innards exposed broadcasts a grainy shot of the artist's head. As the viewer walks past the screen, a video camera records the movements and adds them to the feed, creating a ghostly trail of pixels, like an animated Etch-a-Sketch.
New media offers lots of possibilities, including the chance to flop. Bjorn Melhus' No Sunshine (1998) is a short video about two yellow-wigged proto-humans conversing in baby-talk gibberish until interupted by a pair of more (supposedly) evolved hairless beings in body suits. It is exactly this kind of avant-garde art-school indulgence that gave rise to the SNL parody Sprockets. As Dieter used to chide, "Your story has become tiresome." (MSG)
'Oh, Seuss! Off to Great Places'
Horton, the Cat in the Hat and a plethora of other Dr. Seuss characters will be the main attraction as the Children's Discovery Museum's newest exhibit, "Oh, Seuss! Off to Great Places.' This hands-on fun zone, borrowed from the Children's Museum of Manhattan, honors the great kids' book author on his Seussentennial.
A Wealth Of Ideas
Liberal it ain't. Stanford's Hoover Institution is the gold standard of conservative think tanks. The well-endowed (with money—despite the phallic symbolism of the Hoover Tower) institution possesses a deep collection of unusual historical documents on the topics of revolution, politics and world leaders. As a prelude to a book about the institution's archives by fellow Bertrand M. Patenaude, the Hoover library is mounting an exhibit of some of its rarest holdings. (MSG)
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Big Band Blast
418 Project; $5; 7:30pm.
The Warehouse; donation; 8pm.
Saturday, April 1, Analy High School. 6950 Analy Ave., Sebastopol. 8pm. $32-$40. 707.829.7067.
Thursday (March 23 at noon, March 30 at 7pm), Friday at 8pm, Saturday at 3 and 7pm and Sunday at 2pm through April 2 at the Historic Hoover Theatre, 1635 Park Ave., San Jose. Tickets are $10-$22. (408.979.0231)
Saturday, April 1, at 19 Broadway Niteclub. 19 Broadway, Fairfax. 9:30pm. $12-$15. 415.459.1091.
Friday, March 31, through Sunday, April 2. Sonoma Community Center, 276 E. Napa St., Sonoma. $10-$13; Sonoma Valley elementary students, free. Call for complete schedule. 707.938.4626, ext. 1.
Saturday, April 1, at the Napa Valley College Gallery. 1360 Menlo Ave., Napa. 6pm to 9pm. $10 donation. 707.527.1200, ext. 106.
Saturday, April 1, at Sonoma County's Central Library. Third and E streets, Santa Rosa. 2pm. Free. 707.545.0831.
January 28 through April 1, 2006. Greystone, 2555 Main St., St. Helena. 7pm. $135-$175. 707.944.1133. For complete activities, rush to www.mustardfestival.org.
Palo Alto Art Center; 1313 Newell Road, Palo Alto; 650.329.2366; The show runs through April 23
San Jose Museum of Art; 110 S. Market St, San Jose; 408.294.2787; Tue - Sun, 11-5pm; show runs through April 9
Oct. 15-May 2006 at the Children's Discovery Museum, 180 Woz Way, San Jose. (408.298.5437)
Hoover Memorial Exhibit Pavilion; Stanford University Campus; 650.723.3563; Runs Jan. 31-May 6; open Tue-Sat, 11am-4pm; free
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