Friday, May 29, 2009

AUCTION: JOE ADAMS OUTSIDER & FOLK-ART COLLECTION

Outsider art auctioneer Kimball Sterling is hosting the auction of The Joe Adams Collection of Outsider and Folk-Art tomorrow (5/30) at 11AM est:

My friend Joe 'The Spam' Adams has collected folk-art for about as long as I have been selling art. I met Joe about 19 years ago and when he attended the Howard Smith Collection auction. That was the first major collection offered to the public. Many pieces in this auction are from Joe's private collection. It was exciting getting into his storage and seeing items that have been off the market for many years from various collections that we have sold. He bought the best Willey Masseys from the Smith Collection, art from the Gitter-Yellen Collection, the Oh Appalachia Collection, Warren and Sylvia Lowe Collection, the James Smith Pearce Collection and many more. This will be an in-house and live internet auction. Both phone and absentee bids will also be accepted. Click here for a sneak peak preview of items.

Make your plans now to attend this auction of a lifetime collection of one of the pioneers of the folk-art field. This will be a great event for the art community.

The entire sale catalogue will be on our website about two weeks before the auction. The collection has been moved from Hilton Head S.C. to our gallery here in Johnson City. There will be over 600 pieces of art in the catalogue auction by both major and emerging artists. After the catalogue sale we will auction other art from the collection to in-house bidders. There will be many surprises in the after catalogue auction.

Visit Sterling's site For info on terms, shipping, previews, etc., or email:
elizabethsterling@earthlink.net or kimballsterling@earthlink.net

  • Folk art aficionado and storyteller Joe Adams talks about his famous "Chicken Room" and his love for yard bird.

SCENE/EAT: LSU Crawfish Boil in NYC - May 30


It's that time of year y'all! That's right Crawfish in NYC brought to you by the LSUNY Metro Alumni. 2000 pounds of crawfish, 16 kegs of assorted Abita beers, and jambalaya. "Be sure to tell your friends and come and join us!
"

When: Saturday May 30th - 1-4pm

Where: Pier 66 Maritime - Lightship Frying Pan

------> 26th Street and the Hudson River

What: 2000lbs of Crawfish with the fixins

-----> Jambalaya and 16 Kegs of Abita!

-----> Wine, Soda, Water included

-----> Cash Bar Available


Price: $60 prepay - $80 at the door
-------> Visit lsunymetro.com for tickets

Subway: 23rd St. C, E

Bus: M23 to 12th Ave.

There is no vehicle access to or taxi drop off in Hudson River Park

Live Music:

Maya

J-4-Jennifer


Thursday, May 28, 2009

SCENE/SOUNDS: Willie King's Freedom Creek Festival 5/29 & 30

WILLIE KING'S FREEDOM CREEK FESTIVAL 2009

in honor of the late, great Willie King, will take place on

Friday 29th May and Saturday 30th May

featuring

the Legendary Kenny Neal

Cedric Burnside and Lightenin' Malcolm

the spirit of Willie King

and many more!!!!

Old Memphis, near Aliceville, Alabama





On Sunday, March 8, 2009 the outstanding Alabama blues musician Willie King passed away near his home in Old Memphis, Alabama, following a massive heart attack. His career started on a plantation with a one-string, homemade diddly-bo. Six recordings and a DVD later, along with numerous national and international festival performances, Willie King has gained a substantial national and international reputation.

Ever since he first heard a blues musician play at this grandmother’s juke joint over sixty years ago, Willie King has been consumedby the blues. His life story is about great music but equally it is about care, interest and concern for the community he grew up in - King's own definition of the "blues life."

The loss of this great blues man will be felt by fans and musicians all over the world who have been touched by his unique juke joint blues and uplifting message of peace, love and social justice.

The funeral took place on Sunday, March 15th at 2pm at the City Hall in Aliceville, Alabama. A wake was held the day before on Saturday, March 14, from 1 - 3 pm at Lavender's Funeral Home.

Like many artists, Willie King had little money and made no provisions for his burial costs. The Willie King Memorial Fund has been created for those who wish to help with funeral expenses and to create a historic marker celebrating Willie King's life and works. Please send contributions to "The Willie King Memorial Fund," c/o West Alabama Bank, Attention Tammy, PO Box 406, Aliceville AL 35442 or donate online through PayPal. (source)

Thanks to Jeanie Thompson at Alabama Writer's Forum for first telling me about Willie's passing. She wrote:
"Anne, this is a real loss. He was only 66. He was to receive a big award at the Governor’s Arts Awards in May. Everyone is very sad…"

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

SOUNDS: Standard Deluxe presents Blue Mountain 5/29

...Emerging from the post-punk Americana scene in the late eighties Blue Mountain came roarin' up out of Oxford Mississippi with a sound that practically defined Alt-Country as a genre in American Music. Band members Cary Hudson (guitar), Laurie Stirratt (bass) and Frank Coutch (drums) create beautiful music that consumes listeners with all the passion and grace of the American South. Honest and straightforward, Blue Mountain's scope of musical output has been critically linked to Neil Young and Crazy Horse, the Allman Brothers, Elvis, Tammy Wynette, Robert Johnson, and Alex Chilton among many others. Touring and recording for over a decade, the band called it quits in 2001 only to be re-born better than ever in 2007. (source)

Waverly, Alabama's full custom "real southern vernacular post modern eclectic" design/screen printing outfit Standard Deluxe is proud to host this exciting and important band. "We hope you all can make it...you don't want hear about this show second-hand!"

Friday MAY 29, 2009 at
FRED's Feed & Seed (and pickin' parlor)
6434 Stage Road in Beautiful Downtown LOACHAPOKA, Alabama

Mississippi's Legendary BLUE MOUNTAIN with BLACK DIAMOND HEAVIES

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

SCENE: SEC Happy Hour in NYC! (May 27 @ 6PM)

Southeastern Conference Happy Hour 6:00 PM EST:

Mad Hatter Saloon
360 Third Avenue
Corner of 26th Street
New York, NY 10016
Bar: (212) 696-2122
Time: 6:00 to 11:00 PM

Drink Specials:

$4.00 Drafts includes Bud Light, Lions Head, Pilsner, Miller Lite & World Famous Razorback Red Ale.

$4.00 Bottles includes Bud Light, Miller High Life, Miller Lite & Corona.

Food Specials:

$12.95 Hatter Platter includes Chicken Wings, Chicken Fingers, Cheese Sticks, Potatoes Skins & Jalapeno Poppers.

$12.95 New York Platter includes Vegetable Dumplings, Deep Fried Mushrooms, Onion Rings & Empanadita.

Half Priced Chicken Wings with Three Flavors includes Hot, Barbeque & Thai Chili.

Monday, May 25, 2009

DECORATION DAY

"Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, is a day of remembrance for those who have died in our nation's service. There are many stories as to its actual beginnings, with over two dozen cities and towns laying claim to being the birthplace of Memorial Day. There is also evidence that organized women's groups in the South were decorating graves before the end of the Civil War: a hymn published in 1867, "Kneel Where Our Loves are Sleeping" by Nella L. Sweet carried the dedication "To The Ladies of the South who are Decorating the Graves of the Confederate Dead" (Source: Duke University's Historic American Sheet Music, 1850-1920). While Waterloo N.Y. was officially declared the birthplace of Memorial Day by President Lyndon Johnson in May 1966, it's difficult to prove conclusively the origins of the day. It is more likely that it had many separate beginnings; each of those towns and every planned or spontaneous gathering of people to honor the war dead in the 1860's tapped into the general human need to honor our dead, each contributed honorably to the growing movement that culminated in Gen Logan giving his official proclamation in 1868. It is not important who was the very first, what is important is that Memorial Day was established. Memorial Day is not about division. It is about reconciliation; it is about coming together to honor those who gave their all." (source)

Friday, May 22, 2009

STAGE: Things of Dry Hours @ NY Theatre Workshop


"Set in Depression-era Alabama, Things of Dry Hours tells the story of Tice Hogan (Lindo), an African American out-of-work Sunday school teacher and member of the Communist Party, and his daughter Cali (Ruff) whose lives get turned upside down when they take in a mysterious white factory worker (Dillahunt) on the run.

Naomi Wallace's Things of Dry Hours marks the return to the New York stage of famed stage and screen star Delroy Lindo, who received Tony Award and Drama Desk nominations for his last Broadway appearance in the original Joe Turner's Come and Gone. Lindo is joined on stage by OBIE Award-winner Roslyn Ruff, who just earned rave reviews for her performance in Athol Fugard's Coming Home at Long Wharf and Garret Dillahunt (No Country for Old Men). Tony Award-winning actor,writer and producer Ruben Santiago-Hudson (Lackawanna Blues, Seven Guitars) directs." (source)

Previews begin tonight at New York Theatre Workshop. The play runs 6/8 thru 6/28.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

SOUNDS: Bonnie Prince Billy live @ The Apollo

Post punk/indie rocker/folkie Bonnie "Prince" Billy performs live tonight (5/21) at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, NYC baby! His latest album, Beware, was released by Drag City 3/17.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

HOME IS WHERE THE ART IS: Gary Bowling's House of Art

A million thanks to Douglas Imbrogno from the Charleston Gazette for allowing me to re-post his wonderful story.


BLUEFIELD, W.Va. - This historic West Virginia city has certainly seen better times. As a Preservation Magazine article noted a few years ago: "Bluefield's economic gloom is as oppressive as its heyday once was glorious." Just over a week ago, one side of the Matz Hotel, standing since 1911, simply collapsed onto Princeton Avenue.

But in at least one part of downtown, an artist born and raised here has brought back to life one of the town's old buildings, a wild reinvention that aims to make the place "the heartbeat of the community."

The front door is open on Gary Bowling's House of Art at 701 Bland St.

With partner Pete Sternloff and a small troupe of volunteers, 60-year-old Bowling has crafted an artistic, eccentric, must-be-seen-to-be-believed, go-to place for art, music and culture. "They're amazed when people walk in here," Bowling says.

Word of mouth has brought visitors from as far away as Texas. What visitors encounter is three floors and 15,000-square feet of art, from the whimsical to the intense, from the outrageous to the just plain strange.

The artistry and decoration is packed into every nook and cranny. That's not to mention the ceilings, swimming with fantastic creatures along with what looks like a tropical forest of undergrowth, animated by holiday lights.

Bowling's mission is to create a nationally worthy venue for area artists.

"I would put this place up against anything in Soho, Atlanta or San Francisco. Why not here? Living in West Virginia is not a handicap. We've got wonderful talent."

The House of Art currently represents 30-some artists, he said. "Were trying to emphasize our local talent [and] since we're a border town that does include Virginia. We're trying to keep it within a 300-mile radius.

"You know, I grew up here. This is the town that raised me and at my age this is a way of giving back. Paying it forward, if you will. This is my last hurrah, I can't take anything with me. I want to help young artists because I didn't have that growing up here." (click here to read more)

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

SCENE: Save Dorchester Academy (Midway, GA)

Dorchester Academy in Midway, GA has been named to the National Trust for Historic Preservation's 2009 "11 Most Endangered" list.

"The story of Dorchester Academy, one of the earliest schools for African Americans in the state of Georgia and a National Historic Landmark, is forever linked to the cultural and political forces that shaped our nation's history. Founded in 1871 as a school for freed slaves, Dorchester started humbly in a one-room schoolhouse with a student body ranging in age from eight to 80. As the school grew, boarders joined day students, many of whom walked miles to fulfill their dream of learning how to read. In later years, the school played a pivotal role in voter-registration drives and as a center of activity for the civil rights movement. " (source)

Monday, May 18, 2009

ART/SCENE: Central Green (VA) fundraiser @ Honey Space tonight!

Visions and Sounds

Monday evening, May 18, Honey Space will host its first fundraising event for its next phase. The event, titled Visions and Sounds, will be a joint fundraiser and celebration with friend Tucker Robbins in mutual support of projects here, and Tucker Robbins' Central Green, Tucker's vision for breathing life into an historic community center- Central High School, in Painter Virginia. The event will be built around food and sound- a gourmet buffet dinner accompanied by The Gamelatron, the world's first and only fully robotic Indonesian styled Gamelan Orchestra by Zemi17 and the League of Electronic Musical Urban Robots (LEMUR); a live performance by songwriter Emily Arin, and sculptural sound installations by Thomas Beale and Adam Stanforth. Tickets are available online and at the door on a sliding scale of $35-$100. You can purchase them online at by following the link here.

About Central Green: Tucker Robbins' Central Green, currently in development with a planned opening date of late 2009, is a vision of a sustainable community center in Painter, Virginia, built around the traditional arts and local community and environment. Encompassing 23,000 square feet of historic Central High School, Central Green will include a residency program for both local craftspeople from the Eastern Virginia region and remote cultures abroad, an organic garden and restaurant, educational programs, and meditation and yoga classes, all powered by green energy technologies. You can learn more about Central Green here.

SOUNDS: Allen Toussaint @ Village Vanguard 5/19 - 24

New Orleans R&B legend Allen Toussaint will be performing at the Village Vanguard 5/19 - 24 along with his Bright Mississippi Band.

"Allen Toussaint is one of America's greatest musical treasures. Singer, pianist, songwriter, arranger and producer, the New Orleans native has been making hit records for over forty years. His massive influence on American music reaches deep into the idioms of rhythm and blues, pop, country, musical theater, blues and jazz. Two years ago, Toussaint added yet another credit to his lengthy list of accomplishments, co-founder of NYNO Records with NY partner Joshua Feigenbaum. Toussaint was inducted into the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame in 1998. (source)

Friday, May 15, 2009

STAGE: The High Priestess of Dark Alley


"Set in present-day New Orleans, THE HIGH PRIESTESS OF DARK ALLEY is the story of three creole women, Celeste Thibodaux and her two grown daughters, Claire and Janee Charbonet. Trapped by the conventions of intra-racial divisions within the African-American community, the sisters are pitted against their mother regarding issues of color, class, sexuality and generational differences." (source)

Playing now thru June 28 @ Billie Holiday Theatre in Brooklyn.

SCENE: NOLA's GOT LOADS OF HOPE!


While NYC's off-broadway is repping New Orleans with Tennessee Williams' "Vieux Carre" and Jackie Alexander's "The High Priestess of Dark Alley," Tide's got the real deal covered with its "Loads Of Hope" program which offers free laundry service to the city 5/14 - 16. You can lend your support to the program by purchasing a vintage style t-shirt or a yellow cap bottle of Tide.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

STAGE: Vieux Carre @ Pearl Theatre Company

"Vieux Carré thrusts the audience into the deep shadows of a dilapidated New Orleans boarding house. The play is a raw and vulnerable look into a world of outcasts and their mechanisms for survival. Nowhere does Williams more intimately explore his own sexual identity, his own journey from man to artist than in Vieux Carré. He invokes the beauty and fragility of love, and the wounds it inflicts; the terror of death and the necessity of hope, the importance of memory and the longing to bury the past." (source)

Vieux Carré is in previews now at The Pearl Theatre Company in the East Village. The play runs 5/27 thru 6/14.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

BOOK: Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South

While spreading the gospel around the world through his signature crusades, internationally renowned evangelist Billy Graham maintained a visible and controversial presence in his native South, a region that underwent substantial political and economic change in the latter half of the twentieth century. In this period Graham was alternately a desegregating crusader in Alabama, Sunbelt booster in Atlanta, regional apologist in the national press, and southern strategist in the Nixon administration.

Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South
considers the critical but underappreciated role of the noted evangelist in the creation of the modern American South. (read more here)

Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South by Steven P. Miller is out now via University of Pennsylvania Press.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

ART: Ulysses Davis @ American Folk Art Museum

Now thru September 6 @ American Folk Art Museum: Ulysses Davis (1914 - 1990) was a Savannah, Georgia, barber who created a diverse but unified body of highly refined sculpture that reflects his deep faith, humor, and dignity. His carvings were featured in the seminal 1982 exhibition "Black Folk Art in America, 1930 - 1980" at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., where they were applauded as important examples of African American vernacular art. Because he wanted his work to stay together after he died, Davis rarely sold his sculptures. He said, "They're my treasure. If I sold these, I'd be really poor." As a result, the carvings have had little exposure outside Savannah, particularly since his death, and Davis is little known outside folk art circles. In 1988, Davis received a Georgia Governor's Award in the Arts.

Photo: Peter Harholdt

For the more than three hundred carved wooden figures, furniture pieces, and reliefs he created during his lifetime, Davis used shipyard lumber, pieces donated by his friends, or wood he bought at lumberyards. He almost never made preliminary drawings or models but reduced the mass with a hatchet (and, later, a band saw) before refining the form with a chisel and knives, many of which he fabricated himself. To add textural detail, he sometimes used tools of this barbering trade, such as the blade of his hair clippers. Davis's sculptures, which range in height from six to more than forty inches, can be divided into major categories: portraits of American and African leaders, religious images, patriotism, works influenced by African forms, fantasy, flora and fauna, love, humor, and abstract decorative o
bjects. The exhibition includes the group regarded as the artist's masterwork: a series of carved busts of forty U.S. presidents. (source)

Monday, May 11, 2009

SCENE/SOUNDS: Dexateens Take Manhattan...

Photo: Stanton Newman

"Tomorrow marks the 50th anniversary of the Chitlin Supper at Meek High School in Arley,AL. My mother graduated from Meek High in 1967. She had the distinct pleasure of being named the Chitlin Queen one year. This was an event that she would have to drag us to over the years. My dad graduated from Curry High just over the Walker County line. My sister and I went to Walker High, a city school for god’s sakes! Why would we be caught somewhere they serve hog guts?

I have grown to appreciate the Supper more and more over the years. There’s nothing slick about it except a few of the politicians who take the stage to pander for votes. Entertainment ranges from the awful American Idolesque karaoke to traditional gospel and country. I’ve even seen buck dancing from time to time. This year our very own Lee Bains III will grace the stage for an acoustic set. His first Chitlin Supper was last year and I’m glad it seems to have stuck.


Proceeds from the Supper go to a good cause. Meek High School marching band members are cleaning chitlns at an alarming rate at the moment. 400 or 500 pounds I’m told. After the chitlins are cleaned, they are boiled, pressure cooked and then fried. Experts encourage you to drizzle them with vinegar before taking a bite. The band will bake and fry up about 800 pounds of chicken as well for those of you too chicken to try chitlins." (Dexateens Myspace blog entry for 3/26/09).

The new Dexateens album, Singlewide, is being released tomorrow (5/12) on Skybucket Records. The band FINALLY plays NYC: 5/14 @ Pianos, and 5/17 @ Union Hall.

Friday, May 8, 2009

TODAY is Military Spouse Appreciation Day

By Tara Crooks for Military.com: May is an awesome month for military families. It’s a time when the country pays tribute to our community for Military Appreciation Month — and specifically to military spouses on Military Spouse Appreciation Day. Back in 1984, President Reagan proclaimed the Friday before Mother's Day of each year to be Military Spouse Appreciation Day. (This year it falls on May 8).

Have you ever heard that old expression "if the military wanted you to have a spouse they would have issued you one"? Aren't you glad that's not the way it is now? So am I!

You may not realize it but you’re an important part of your Soldier’s career. You’re an integral part of this military life. What you do makes a difference.

Think about all of the things you do to support your military community: running Family Readiness Groups, planning hail and farewells, hosting the coffee group, organizing fundraisers, teaching Army Family Team Building, paying the bills, running the household, and raising your children. You’re the glue that holds it all together.

Military spouses are amazing creatures, truly a breed of our own. We’re resourceful, multi-talented, and ambitious. We stick together, support each other, and we love even in absence. We are strong. We overcome. We are [or at least we like to think] invincible.

Think about your journey through military life thus far. Whether you’re at the beginning or heavily “seasoned,” you quickly realize that you have become or are becoming a part of something bigger than yourself. You live a life full of tradition, a life full of pride. You live a truly glorious life [notice I did not say glamorous] that most civilians will never understand or ever be strong enough to experience. A life full of loving madly and missing badly, a life full of adventure and change, a life that sometimes makes you wonder how you ever do it.

Can you imagine a military without spouses? I can't. What we do is so very important to the life that we lead and the community that supports it. Our contributions are what make this big operation "tick." We may not have sharp shooting skills or defuse bombs but we do save lives.

Recently, I had a discussion with a Vietnam Vet. Through his tears, he told me “you’re [the spouses] the heroes.” What he said brought me to tears. I couldn’t help but think what life was like for him and his family while he was away at war. My, how times have changed, we now have many resources available to us. We have Internet and e-mail. We have DoD-funded resources such as Military One Source, and the Military Spouse Career Network. But most importantly, we now have the support of the American people.

So here’s to you military spouses! Reach your arms out and then wrap them around yourself for a huge hug! For everything you do — Thank You!

Thursday, May 7, 2009

SCENE: The 22nd Annual Houston (TX) Art Car Parade 5/9

With the 22nd Annual Houston Art Car Weekend fast-approaching (5/8 - 10), parade fixture and Santa Claus Car owner Bryan Taylor reminisces:

Now of course none of this has anything to do with the temperature aspects of Houston, which by the way for New Yorkers itʼs pronounced HU-Ston, not How-ston like you say the name of the street in Manhattan. I am the first one to admit it can get a tad sticky down here with the humidity and all. Shoot, sometimes the humidity is so bad you have to put a screen on your fish tanks or the fish will escape. This piece is entirely about the nifty, keen, eccentric and not as popularly known sides of Houston.

We are not going to talk about the Dome or Johnson Space Center; this is the semi-silly, somewhat sordid underbelly of the city.

Letʼs start with what is still probably my all time favorite place in Houston...The Orange Show. It is humbly located in small neighborhood just south of the main University of Houston Main Campus and only two blocks off the Gulf Freeway.

The Orange Show still stands as not only a testament to what one man can do when he puts his mind to it but its also considered one of the foremost examples of folk art in the nation.

How does one describe the O Show to people? I usually donʼt and just tell them to go see it for themselves. There is no way a person could reasonably describe the place and then have that individual show up and go, "OhYeah, just like I pictured it".

Jeff McKissack a retired Postman began building his monument to the Orange in the 60s and opened it 1979. Dedicated to concepts such as good health and hard work it is also one of those places in Houston that just attracts a certain type of person. Artists, musicians, actors, and activists of all varieties flow in and around and through mixed in the regular Houston visitor who just wants to see whatʼs going on.

The Orange Show Foundation, which oversees the site and manages the upkeep, programs and folk art studies of other sites worldwide, also produces the annual Art Car Parade in Houston which is the first and best and largest of its kind anywhere in the World.

Each year, dozens of altered, sculpted and painted wheeled wonders drive to Houston in May for the largest gathering of art cars anywhere. Over 250 entries will wind their way down the streets of Houston thrilling hundreds of thousands of onlookers and have done so for over 20 years.

I actually recall, 1989, sitting on the hood of my Vega at the corner of Bell and Travis, waiting for my fellow Orange Show staffers to show so we could begin setting up for the very first Parade.
Not much of a success the first year as there was literally fewer viewers than there were in the Parade.

Not so now as it has become a major institution in Houston. Unlike other major cities, our city government supports art cars, the police support art cars, even the local Visitors Bureau promotes art cars.

Oh yeah, I digress, the Orange Show itself. Built out of items Jeff scrounged from demolished building sites and other things he had accumulated, tractor seats, wagon wheels, railroad spikes, tiles and bricks of every shape and size, he began to fashion this amazing multi- level monument extolling the virtues of his favorite food.

There is even a small Museum that shares odd outlooks on the topics of perseverance and determination. "Keep a Kickin', Keep a Kickin' " If you ever make it to Houston you must go see this place. For more information check out their website at www.orangeshow.org

And If you arenʼt doing anything the weekend of May 9th, I really recommend heading our way for the 22nd Annual Art Car Parade. You will be thanking me for the rest of your life.

Thanks for playing,
Rev Bryan Taylor

For more info on the parade check out Houston Art Car Klub and The Orange Show.

(I also just checked Widipedia and yes, Texas is in the South. - Bryan)

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

STAGE: Suddenly Last Summer & The Oath

"Suddenly Last Summer is one of Tennessee William's starkest and most poetic works featuring Catherine Holly, a young woman who seems to go insane after her cousin Sebastian dies on a trip to Europe under mysterious circumstances. The young man's mother tries to cloud the truth about her son's homosexuality and his death, as she wants him to be remembered as a great artist."

Now thru May 9 @ June Havoc Theatre at the Abingdon Theatre Arts Complex.

"In this Southern Gothic tale, a wandering preacher is embroiled in the passions and politics of a swampy Florida outpost ruled with a macabre sense of justice by two rival sisters. The Oath is a darkly comic look at balancing ambition and ideals in a time of crisis."

Now thru May 10 @ ArcLight Theater

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

SOUNDS: South Memphis String Band TONITE @ Joe's Pub


The South Memphis String Band performs tonight @ Joe's Pub in NYC:

The South Memphis String Band is a trio, bound by Memphis and North Mississippi roots, composed of Luther Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars), Alvin “Youngblood” Hart (Grammy-winning bluesman) and Jimbo Mathus (Squirrel Nut Zippers). Although they’ve known each other for years, the trio’s musical spirit gelled last year when they recorded a yet-unreleased album with Luther’s father, legendary producer Jim Dickinson, called New Moon Jellyroll Freedom Rockers. The South Memphis String Band was greatly influenced by the Mississippi Sheiks, Gus Cannon & the Memphis Jug Band and other string bands and jug bands of their ilk, as well as Mississippi Delta and Hill Country blues. They will travel with a passel of guitars, mandolins, banjos, lap steel guitars and harmonicas.

“I break down walls and stereotypes with my music. I confuse people. I use Mississippi music, which is renegade music at heart, as my inspiration and motivation," says Mathus. "I use it as a tool to reach people, to express my own feelings and continue to express those that came before me. I keep the old stories alive while they help keep me alive. Luther, Youngblood Hart and myself have been musical co- conspirators for over a decade. It is only fitting that we should come together with acoustic instruments and perform Mississippi music.”

Monday, May 4, 2009

ART: Francis Cape "Home Front"

Murray Guy presents Francis Cape Home Front thru June 6.

"This exhibition will comprise new sculptures and photographs expanding on a project that Cape developed for Prospect 1 New Orleans, which related the destruction and rebuilding of New Orleans to the Utility Furniture Scheme. This project continues Cape’s consideration of carpentry as a site for investigating functionality and the art object; here he invites an aesthetic reading of furniture that was designed to be almost purely utilitarian. Moreover, he uses this aesthetic space for considering a host of urgent issues relating not just to New Orleans but to a general cycle of American production and consumption, and to the legacy of modernist debates surrounding utility and ornamentation, social idealism and mass consumerism." (more info)

Friday, May 1, 2009

SCENE/SPORT/SCOOP: Derby Day from NYC to KY

Tomorrow brings the running of the 135th Kentucky Derby!


STUCK IN NYC FOR THE BIG DAY? Freelance food writer and New Orleans native Ashley Fryer has celebration tips no matter what your budget:


The Kentucky Derby…it’s the one day of the year that it’s perfectly normal to don an overtly garish bonnet and sip straight Bourbon (with a little sugar and mint thrown in for a bit of flavor). Don’t have thousands of dollars to transport yourself from the streets of the Big Apple to the grandstands of the Big Race? No worries. Here are three options to celebrate quite possibly the best marriage of sport, gambling, and hedonistic celebration ever created:


ONE: If you’re all for dolling it up and living large, Esquire has partnered with Eleven Madison Park to throw a swanky celebration of the race, complete with a cigar lounge, open bar, live Derby coverage, and Chef Daniel Humm’s spin on “Derby cuisine.” Cost is $250 per person all-in (including gratuity). For reservations visit the restaurant's site and for more information, email derby@elevenmadisonpark.com or check out their Facebook page.

TWO: If beer and betting is more your style, you’re in luck. The Playwright Irish Pub on West 35th St. not only serves up Irish fare and stout, but is lucky enough to be the only Manhattan bar sanctioned by NYC OTB. Adorned with more than 70 flat screen TVs (there’s really not a bad seat in the bar), the best part of The Playwright on Derby Day are the 2-person betting windows and electronic kiosks. Want to throw down a last-minute trifecta before post time? No problem! Pick up your pint and saunter over to those who are happy to take your money. There’s no cost to reserve a table, but plan to block out your afternoon if you’d like a guaranteed place to sit. The Playwright is accepting reservations only before 1 PM, and post time is set for just after 6 PM. Five hours of mint julep tailgating = not for the faint of heart! Call 212-268-8868 for reservations or more information.


THREE: Finally, if you’re looking for the recession redux version of a Kentucky Derby party, why not bring the Derby to you? Dig through your closet to find an old hat (or anything you can wear on your head), mix up a batch of mint juleps using the official Churchill Downs recipe, place your bets via Twin Spires (the Derby’s official wagering site) and enjoy front-row viewing from the comfy-ness of your own couch. NBC’s coverage begins at 4 PM Eastern, and post time is set for 6:10 PM on the dot.

WHEN IN KENTUCKY: Now, if you are lucky enough to be in Kentucky tomorrow, local artist Natasha Sud (aka "The Lady of Assemblage") shares the inside scoop what’s really ‘hood in Louisville:

Sweet, sweet Louisville! This weekend is the Kentucky Derby and things are already starting to get crazy. If coming to town now or ever, check out these people, places and things:

STAY

21C

The Seelbach

Galt House

The Brown Hotel

EAT

Ramsi's

Basa

Bourbon's Bistro

Mayan Cafe

El Mundo

Vietnam Kitchen

Havana Rumba

Cumberland Brews

BARS

Nach Bar

The Back Door

Seidefaden's

The Swan Dive: ( Swan St. / no website)

Cumberland Brews

LISTEN - Louisville is obviously known for its music scene. We have had a lot of great bands come out of here: Slint, Will Oldham, MMJ, etc etc. Here are some from the next wave:

Wax Fang

Joe Manning

Health and Happiness Gospel Band

SHOP

Dot Fox

Why Louisville

The Makery

Ear X Tacy

Wild and Wooly

Louisville Antique Mall

YOGA: Eternal Health

GUITARS Guitar Emporium

THEATERS: Baxter Ave and Village 8

"The Lady of Assemblage" is Natasha Sud, a Russian native who grew up in Louisville and recently moved back there after seven years in Los Angeles. The Lady makes collages and loves photography. She has shown her work in many solo and group shows and festivals. She also designed the two album covers for The Watson Twins. Check her out at www.ladyofassemblage.com and http://www.whylouisville.com/natasha.asp.

STAGE: Golden Boy of the Blue Ridge

Golden Boy of the Blue Ridge @ 59E59 thru Sunday 5/3:

An adaptation of J.M. Synge's controversial classic The Playboy of the Western World set in the hills of America's Appalachia. This original bluegrass musical is a tale of an unlikely hero, a backwoods romance, and an slapdash murder... a pitch-dark comedy with a kick of moonshine!

“Intelligent harmonic surprises! (Mills’s) wordplay is customarily witty!” Time Out New York

“Joyous! Tuneful! A barrel of fun! Cleverly crafted, sophisticated fare! Millls and Reichel have talent to burn!” Backstage