January 3, 2013
Vol. 10 • No. 1
Chattanooga’s Weekly Alternative
Lawof
Dance
For Ann Law of Barking Legs Theater, dancing is like breathing • By Rich Bailey
THE BOWL THE PULSE AT 10 walk of life buzzard luck Music afro’s SHEEN
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2 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
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THE PULSE »JANUARY 3-9, 2013 » vol. 10 no. 1
BUZZARD LUCK
WALK OF LIFE • When Chattanooga illustrator David Helton created “The Buzzard” for Cleveland, Ohio, rock radio station WMMSFM in 1974, he figured the initial assignment would be his last (he was paid in albums and concert tickets). Little did he know that the bird was to become a Cleveland icon that has hovered over his career for 40 years. » P6
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On the cover » Ann Law • Photographed by Lauren Anastasia Holmes • lahfoto.smugmug.com ADVERTISING
Director of Sales Mike Baskin Account Executives Julie Brown • Eric Foster • Rhonda Gay • John Holland Rick Leavell • Jerry Ware • Josh Williams
CONTACT
Phone 423.265.9494 Fax 423.266.2335 Snail Mail 1305 Carter St. • Chattanooga, TN 37402 Email info@chattanoogapulse.com Calendar calendar@chattanoogapulse.com
the fine print EDITORIAL
Editor & Creative Director Bill Ramsey Operations & Website Mike McJunkin Contributors Rich Bailey • Rob Brezsny • Chuck Crowder John DeVore • Janis Hashe • Matt Jones Chris Kelly • Mike McJunkin • Ernie Paik Sarah Skates • Alex Teach • Richard Winham Photographers Kim Hunter • Josh Lang Cartoonists Max Cannon • Richard Rice • Tom Tomorrow
The Pulse is published weekly by Brewer Media and is distributed throughout the city of Chattanooga and surrounding communities. The Pulse covers a broad range of topics concentrating on culture, the arts, entertainment and local news. The Pulse is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. No person without written permission from the publishers may take more than one copy per weekly issue. We’re watching. The Pulse may be distributed only by authorized distributors. © 2013 Brewer Media
BREWER MEDIA GROUP Publisher & President Jim Brewer II
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chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 3
BOWL
THE
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milestones
The Pulse at 10: Change is the only constant By Bill Ramsey
I
have this odd habit of showing up or leaving newspapers around anniversaries. I left the San Antonio Current on its 10th anniversary in 1996 after five years as art director and staff writer. In 1999, I joined C-Ville Weekly in Charlottesville, Va., another alt-weekly, as it turned 10 years old. This year, The Pulse celebrates its 10th anniversary, and it seems as if we’ve been staring at this particular birthday since I joined the paper in the summer of 2011. But as proud as we are of achieving this milestone, it is also a sad time. As this issue went to press, I learned that Zachary Cooper—the paper’s co-founder, its publisher, my co-editor and good friend—is leaving. The details are not as important as the impact this will have on The Pulse, and me. When I returned to Chattanooga in 2011 after almost 30 years away, I was just about done with the newspaper business and it seemed done with me. Like many journalists, editors and designers, I had been laid off as the recession took hold and daily newspapers began a sharp decline as advertising revenues plummeted to new lows. Some 30,000 newspaper professionals lost their jobs in the 2008-10 purge and I, like many, found myself wondering what I’d do. Newspapers weren’t just a job for me, they were a calling and more than a career. Journalism was something I’d imagined myself doing since junior high school when I joined the school paper staff in the seventh grade. I’ve spent every year since then working for one paper or another, dailies and weeklies, across the country and around the world. I never imagined a day when they would simply cease to exist. Thankfully, I’m old enough to believe that day will not come while I am alive. But that’s cold comfort these days. After the layoff, I considered offers from far-flung small dailies and weeklies, but after living in Southern California for so long the thought of relocating to a small town in Wyoming or Illinois didn’t have much appeal. On a lark, I accepted a contract position in Bei-
A Letter from Zachary Cooper Dear Friends and Colleagues, As many of you know, this December marks the 10th anniversary of The Pulse. As one of the founders of this publication, I can truly say I have enjoyed my work with the people and fellow collaborators who have contributed over the years. I particularly want to thank Michael Kull, who was my business partner in the venture from it’s inception. I thank Bill Colrus, our first editor, and Eric Jackson our intrepid first art director. Hell, I think we were all the definition of intrepid. You’d have to be into risky behavior to join an upstart alternative weekly in a mid-size southern town. That’s just nuts. I thank Jim Brewer for making The Pulse part of Brewer Media and the chance to work with the wonderful people here. I have acquired skills and knowledge that I have been able to apply in my work. I am sure they will be applied in the future. Carter Street is a great place to be. Jim’s knowledge, energy and enthusiasm is to be admired. My more recent work over the past year and a half with art director and co-editor Bill Ramsey is one of the highlights of my media career. He’s a professional unmatched in all my days. He’s a badass. And now, it’s time for me to move on from this chapter in my life. In many ways, my life is inextricable from The Pulse. That is certainly something I will have to adjust to in the coming days. Separation anxiety will abound. But I take this opportunity and begin a new chapter. I have ideas, I have excellent skills. But equally important to those is that I have relationships with some of the best and brightest people in this city. I look forward to working with them in the near future. Thanks to everyone for their encouragement and talents over the years while working with The Pulse. I offer my sincere appreciation. Now, let’s make good things happen.
4 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
Cheers, Zachary Cooper
jing of all places, where the Chinese government was hiring Western journalists to coach their reporters in running China Daily, China’s largest English-language newspaper. I enjoyed the diversion, found the experience fascinating, and returned home with a pile of cash and hopes that the recession had lifted. It had not. When a friend in Chattanooga I had known since childhood suggested I visit and check out my revitalized hometown, I took him up on the offer. Timing has always been my friend and within months of arriving, I’d met Zach and joined the paper as art director. There was something magical about returning to my hometown after so long and joining its alternative weekly. The job wasn’t on my bucket list, but then again, I’d never bothered to put one together. If I had, it would have been No. 1. I can’t express the renewed respect I have for my hometown since returning—it’s become a wonderful place to live and work. Along with finding my dream job, I also found a kindred soul and great friend in Zach. Although not a journalist, Zach has all the qualities of the best publishers I’ve known in my more than 25 years in this business, and he should really be the mold for future founders of alternative newsweeklies. As the paper enters its 10th year, I am grateful I’ve had these past two years to tap his encyclopedic knowledge of Chattanooga, especially with regard to the music and arts he knows so well, and his many friendships with musicians, artists, writers and businesspeople in the creative community. I would be lost without those insights and contacts. I’m not certain what 2013 will bring, but I do know The Pulse will be a very different paper without Zach. There’s not enough space here to express my admiration for him or to say all I’d like about how much I value our friendship. I’m not fond of clichés at times like this, but I do believe this is simply a new chapter for Zach. He’s a man of many talents and great character. While I expect the The Pulse to move forward and grow, it won’t be near as much fun without him, and I’ll be jealous of those who work with him wherever he lands. Thanks, my friend.
WHO WANTS TO BE
MAYOR?
Comix
YEAR-IN-REVIEW SPECIAL
“This Modern World” cartoonist Tom Tomorrow looks back at the past 12 months and captures the highlights of 2012 in all their idiotic glory in a special double shot of his weekly comic. Relive the madness and enjoy!
MAYORAL AND CITY COUNCIL Election DAY • MARCH 5, 2013 Meet Your Mayor • Even with Rob Healy out of the race, Andy Berke says he’ll continue to campaign hard, but the election seems a fait accompli. Our upcoming Election Guide will examine this and other issues. The Other Guys • Ex-city employee Guy Satterfield. • Perennial candidate Chester Heathington Jr.
COUNCIL-GO-ROUND
With the mayor’s race a shoo-in for Andy Berke, the focus now shifts to the nine Chattanooga City Council seats, all up for election with all but two incumbents—Deborah Scott and Sally Robinson— vying for re-election. The final list of candidates qualifying for the March 5 elections are listed below. We’ll profile the candidates in The Pulse 203 Election Handicapping Guide coming soon. District 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 6 7 7 7 7 8 8 9 9
Candidate Pat Hagen Chip Henderson Jim Folkner Tom McCullough Jerry Mitchell Priscilla Simmons Roger Truder Pam Ladd (I) Ken Smith Jack Benson (I) Larry Grohn Ryan King Scott McColphin Tom Tomiseck Russell Gilbert Jr. (I) Carol Bertz (I) Chris Anderson Karl Epperson Tramble Stephens Manny Rico (I) Moses Freeman Andraé McGary (I) Yusef Hakeem Peter Murphy (I)
(I) incumbent
chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 5
Walk of Life
Buzzard Luck Iconic radio mascot still hovers over career of Chattanooga illustrator David Helton. By Bill Ramsey When illustrator David Helton first sketched “The Buzzard,” the now-iconic cartoon mascot for Cleveland’s famed rock radio station WMMS-FM almost 40 years ago, he never thought the bird would still be hovering over his career. But the character’s marketing star-power continues unabated and has become so ingrained in Cleveland lore, it has become synonymous with the city’s claim as “The Rock ‘n’ Roll Capitol of the World” and continues as a symbol of the station.
“I just thought it would be a oneoff deal,” Helton said recently over coffee at Starbucks in Brainerd, where, incidentally, his talented lettering skills adorn the store’s chalkboard menus. “I remember getting paid in concert tickets and albums, which was cool with me.” Helton, a Chattanooga native and Lakeview High alumnus, found himself in Cleveland after graduating from the Ringling College of Art and Design in Sarasota, Fla. An instructor advised him to apply to American Greetings, the Hallmark Cards competitor, and Helton was hired in 1973. “I was making $125 a week to draw furry bunnies,” Helton recalled with a laugh. “I thought I’d hit the jackpot.”
But Helton’s true jackpot began with a drawing he did for free— and in protest. In the early 1970s, the “National Lampoon Radio Hour”—which featured many future “Saturday Night Live” stars, John Belushi among them—was syndicated on free-form rock stations like WMMS. When the show cut its format from an hour by 30 minutes, Helton figured the station was cheating him out of his favorite program (although it was National Lampoon’s decision) and he protested the only way he knew how— with a cartoon criticizing the move that he sent to WMMS. When program director John Gorman saw the drawing, he called Helton to explain the situation and invited him to the station to discuss creating an cartoon mascot for the station. “Times were bleak in Cleveland,” Helton said. “People were looking for something to rally around, and Gorman felt WMMS and The Buzzard would, well, create a buzz and fill that void.” Gorman’s vision was spot on. After convincing management to adopt the cartoon buzzard as its mascot, Helton sketched the first incarnation (shown on Page 3) of The Buzzard chewing up pieces of paper with the call letters of rival radio stations under the headline “The Wrath of The Buzzard.” The rest, as they say, is history. The Buzzard was an immediate hit and the station developed its entire identity around character. As WMMS skyrocketed in the ratings during its 1970s heyday as the prototypical free-form rock radio station, Helton’s own career took flight, eventually leaving his greeting card job to work almost full time for WMMS. For the next 20
years, he would update The Buzzard for print and television ads promoting the station and some of rock’s biggest names, bands such as Rush, one of many groups the station first introduced to American rock fans. “I would go out on personal appearances just like the station’s onair personalities,” Helton said. For as much as $100 an hour, Helton sketched The Buzzard for fans at record stores and malls and met many of his own musical heroes along the way. But when WMMS was purchased by a corporate chain and homogenized in the 1980s, the gig was up, said Helton. For the past 20 years since moving back to Chattanooga, Helton has carved out a successful career as a children’s book illustrator and a prolific contributor to Highlights, the well-known children’s magazine found in schools and doctors offices across the country. But The Buzzard remains a Cleveland icon and continues to perch on Helton’s drawing board. The character can still be seen on the station’s website and starred on the cover of “The Buzzard: Inside the Glory Days of WMMS and Cleveland Rock Radio,” a 2008 memoir by Gorman. That same year, Helton produced a set of commemorative notecards for a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame exhibit honoring the station’s contributions and influence in the history of FM radio. Helton also sells T-shirts and other merchandise adorned with the character on his own website, davidheltonillustration.com. “It couldn’t happen again,” Helton said, “but those years were like a dream come true for a young artist and rock ‘n’ roll fan.”
“I keep pedaling until it reads Smoking Hot.” Yoga • Indoor Cycling • Personal Training Fitness Classes • Nutrition Convenient Drop-In Plans Thrive Studio • Healthy Bodies, Happy Minds Thrive Studio • 191 River St. • 423.800.0676 • In Coolidge Park • thrivestudio.net • Facebook/ThriveStudio • Twitter: @thrivestudio1 6 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
LIST
ARTSPICK
THE
» pulse PICKS
THU01.03 MUSIC Open Mic with Hap Henninger • Weekly open mic at The Office. 9 p.m. • The Office 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191
EVENT “Downton Abbey” Screening Event •WTCI-TV hosts bridal dessert tea and screening of the popular PBS series at its studios. 1-3 p.m. • WTCI-TV • 7540 Bonnyshire Dr. (423) 702-7815 • wtcitv.org
FRI01.04 MUSIC Afro with Dank Sinatra •Jazz and jam spread through the night. 10 p.m. • Rhythm & Brews • 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com
EVENT Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show and Reception • AVA hosts art from K-town. 5:30-8 p.m. • Ava Gallery • 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282 • avarts.org
DANcE WORKSHOPS • Barking Legs Theater will host two dance workshops beginning this week. For more on instructor Ann Law, see Page 10. • Re-Visioning Dance Education Workshop Jan. 4-6 • Dance@Barking Legs Program Jan. 7-Feb. 28 Barking Legs Theater 1307 Dodds Ave. • (423) 624-5347 barkinglegs.org
» pulse PICKS
» pulse PICK of the litter
SAT01.05
A King is Born
MUSIC Soul Mechanic, Neverwils, Subway to Mars • A triple threat of rock at JJ’s. 8 p.m. • JJ’s Bohemia • 231 E. MLK Blvd. (423) 266-1400 • jjsbohemia.com
• In celebration of Elvis Presley’s 78th birthday, T-Bones is throwing an Elvis Pub Crawl, inviting all to dress up like Elvis or just gaze in awe at a bar full of others decked out as the King from all stages of his life and career. The big celebration is, of course, in Memphis at Presley’s Graceland mansion from Saturday through Tuesday, Jan. 8 (Presley’s birthday).
EVENT January Wine Sale • Georgia Winery uncorks its best local wines. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Georgia Winery 6469 Battlefield Pkwy.• georgiawines.com
SUN01.06 MUSIC
Elvis Pub Crawl
Winter Jam
SAT 01.05 9 p.m. • T-Bones 1419 Chestnut St. (423) 266-4240 tboneschattanooga.com
• Top Christian music acts and ministry. 6 p.m. • UTC McKenzie Arena 720 E. 4th St. • (423) 266-6627 jamtour.com
EVENT
Elvis Birthday Celebration
Free First Sunday
sat-tue 01.05-08 Graceland • Memphis elvis.com
• Visit the Hunter for free today. Noon-4:30 p.m. • Hunter Museum 10 Bluff View Ave. • (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org
“___________ ______________ ___________ ___________ ____.” Thrive Caption Contest: Write the wittiest caption and win!
Bring in this ad with your caption, have a free cup of coffee on us and enter to win a free class pass! Yoga • Indoor Cycling • Personal Training Fitness Classes • Nutrition Convenient Drop-In Plans Thrive Studio • Healthy Bodies, Happy Minds
Thrive Studio • 191 River St. • 423.800.0676 • In Coolidge Park • thrivestudio.net • Facebook/ThriveStudio • Twitter: @thrivestudio1 chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 7
901 Carter St (Inside Days Inn) 423-634-9191 Thursday, Jan. 3 Open Mic with Hap Henninger Friday, Jan. 4: 9pm Aja Meers • Troy Underwood Saturday, Jan. 5: 10pm Kara-Ory-Oke Monday, Jan. 7: 10pm Comedy Night with Tony Levi Tuesday, Jan. 8: 7pm
AFRO’s Sheen MTSU music program grads update jazz-rock fusion for the 21st century.
Server/Hotel Appreciation Night $5 Pitchers $2 Wells $1.50 Domestics All shows are free with dinner or 2 drinks! Stop by & check out our daily specials! ●
Happy Hour: Mon-Fri: 4-7pm $1 10oz drafts, $3 32oz drafts, $2 Wells, $1.50 Domestics, Free Appetizers
Facebook.com/theofficechatt
By Richard Winham Music majors may be good players, but they’re not always good musicians. Even the best music school can’t instill the intuition that makes musicians capable of transcending their training. Of the two bands scheduled to play at Rhythm & Brews on Friday, at least one has that potential. AFRO, a group of newly minted graduates from Middle Tennessee State University music program, may well be one of the few bands to make it on their own terms. Like Steely Dan, their music is as intellectual as it is emotional—always a problem
RAW
for a band looking for commercial as well as artistic success. AFRO’s roots long pre-date the formation of the current band. The founding members— keyboardist Kaitlyn Connor, bassist Chris Conrad and guitarist Adam Mullis—first met
at Sandy Springs High School in suburban Atlanta. They formed a cover band one of their friends jokingly suggested they call Afro America. It stuck. Following graduation they went their separate ways. Connor began studying classical piano at Vanderbilt, bassist Conrad went to MTSU in Murfreesboro for the Recording Industry Management program, while guitarist Mullis moved to Statesboro, Ga., and began taking classes at Georgia Southern University. But by the fall of 2011 both Mullis and Connor had transferred to MTSU. In the interim Conrad met guitarist Blake Gallant, who’d moved from Chattanooga to major in music business management at MTSU. He and Conrad began playing with Connor and Mullis, still calling the band Afro America. Later Gallant invited his friend, Jeff McSpadden, a percussionist from Soddy Daisy, to join them and eventually he too moved to Murfreesboro last fall. This past spring, Conrad left the band, Gallant moved over to bass and drummer Michael Toman joined (replacing original drummer Silas Jackson) and the name was shortened simply to AFRO (in caps, connoting their newfound confidence).
Anyone listening to the band’s just-released album Meat & III might be surprised to read about all of the upheavals because they already play like a seasoned band. Available on bandcamp.com, the six-song collection opens with the rousing “Strife In Stride.” A showcase for their individual chops, it opens with a galvanizing burst of rapid-fire piano and percussion coming to an abrupt halt within a minute. Gallant begins singing after a pause and the band locks in behind him picking up steam as Mullis and Connor begin trading choruses like John McLaughlin jamming with McCoy Tyner. Driven by McSpadden’s and Toman’s furious percussion and drumming, it moves through a series of dynamic shifts in a thunderously melodic madcap dash. Nothing else on the album reaches the level of that first tune, but the addition of saxophonist David Williford and trombonist Tanner Antonetti on the rest of the album adds to their range and lets them punch like the bands whose fusion of rock and jazz in the 1970s they’ve clearly studied and internalized. AFRO with Dank Sinatra 10 p.m. • Friday, Jan. 4 Rhythm & Brews 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Richard Winham is the producer and host of WUTC-FM’s afternoon music program and has observed the Chattanooga music scene for more than 25 years.
LIVE MUSIC THIS WEEKEND
2.0 PARTY, REDEFINED.
FRI » 01.04.13 STEVIE MONCE SAT » 01.05.13 CONTRABAND
oPEN 7 DAYs A wEEk » Full mENu uNTIl 2Am » 21+ » smokINg AllowED
TWO FLOORS • One big paRTy • Live MuSic • Dancing • 409 MaRkeT ST • 423.756.1919
8 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
Chattanooga Live Thu 01.03 Summer Hullender, Tim Starnes 7 p.m. Sugar’s Ribs, 507 Broad St. (423) 508-8956, sugarsribs.com Open Mic with Hap Henninger 9 p.m. The Office, 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191 Sinner of Attention 9 p.m. Rhythm & Brews, 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Two Cent Stamps, Dan Nissenbaum 9 p.m. The Honest Pint, 35 Patten Pkwy. (423) 468-4192 thehonestpint.com
fri 01.04 Matt Downer 5:30 p.m. Rock City, 1400 Patten Road, Lookout Mountain, Ga. seerockcity.com Gentleman’s Jazz Quartet 7 p.m. The Foundry, 1201 Broad St. (423) 756-3400 chattanooganhotel.com JT Woodruff, Mark Rose, AJ Cheek, Ry Glover 7:30 p.m. The Camp House, 1427 Williams St. (423) 702-8081 thecamphouse.com The Water Brothers 8 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia, 231 E. MLK Blvd. (423) 266-1400 jjsbohemia.com Monkey Shine
honest music
8:30 p.m. SkyZoo, 5709 Lee Hwy. (423) 468-4533 skyzoochattanooga.com Aja Meers and Troy Underwood 9 p.m. The Office, 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191 The Micks 9:30 p.m. Sugar’s Ribs, 507 Broad St. (423) 508-8956, sugarsribs.com Afro, Dank Sinatra 10 p.m. Rhythm & Brews, 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Husky Burnette 10 p.m. T-Bones, 1419 Chestnut St. (423) 266-4240 tboneschattanooga.com
sat 01.05 Matt Downer 5:30 p.m. Rock City, 1400 Patten Road, Lookout Mountain, Ga. seerockcity.com Gentleman’s Jazz Quartet 7 p.m. The Foundry, 1201 Broad St. (423) 756-3400 chattanooganhotel.com Rachel Mann 7:30 p.m. The Camp House, 1427 Williams St. (423) 702-8081 thecamphouse.com Soul Mechanic, Neverwills, Subway to Mars 8 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia, 231 E. MLK Blvd. (423) 266-1400 jjsbohemia.com
LIVE MUSIC Marlowe Drive 8:30 p.m. SkyZoo, 5709 Lee Hwy. (423) 468-4533 skyzoochattanooga.com The Micks 9:30 p.m. Sugar’s Ribs, 507 Broad St. (423) 508-8956 sugarsribs.com Appetite for Destruction, Poison’d, Red White & Crew 9:30 p.m. Rhythm & Brews, 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Kara-Ory-Oke 10 p.m. The Office, 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191
sun 01.06 Winter Jam 6 p.m. McKenzie Arena, 720 E. 4th St. (423) 266-6627 jamtour.com John Lathim 7:30 p.m. The Honest Pint, 35 Patten Pkwy. (423) 468-4192 thehonestpint.com
CHATTANOOGA JAN
3 AFRO & DANK SINATRA FRI. 10p 4 APPETITE FOR DESTRUCTION SAT. POISON’D • RED WHITE & CREW 9:30p 5 WED. LORD BUFFALO 9:30p 9 JOHN & THE CONNORS THU. 9:30p10 SINNER OF ATTENTION ROCK & ROLL
THU. 9p
FUNK & JAM
MINDBLOWING BAND FROM AUSTIN
A DAMN FINE BAND
Thursday • January 3
Old Soul • Unspoken Triumph Red Necklace
Friday • January 4
Water Brothers • satme
Saturday • January 5
Soul Mechanic • Neverwills Subway to Mars
Saturday • January 12
Autism Benefit Show Behold the Brave • Milktooth Butch Ross & More
Thursday • January 17 Loves It
1.11: CHERUB 1.12: THE MACHINE: PINK FLOYD 1.16: JESSTA JAMES 1.17: THE DELTA SAINTS
Friday • January 18
ALL SHOWS 21+ UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED • NON-SMOKING VENUE
Saturday • January 19
HOT MUSIC • FINE BEER • GREAT FOOD BUY TICKETS ONLINE • RHYTHM-BREWS.COM
JJ’s Bohemia • 231 E MLK Blvd 423.266.1400 • jjsbohemia.com
221 MARKET STREET
Arpetrio
Col. Bruce Hampton
wed 01.09 Lord Buffalo 9 p.m. Rhythm & Brews, 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Summer More Than Others, Boardwalk Carnival 9 p.m. The Honest Pint, 35 Patten Pkwy. (423) 468-4192 thehonestpint.com
local and regional shows
SteveNKim with Josh Gilbert and Ten Bartram ($3) Two Cent Stamps with Dan Nissenbaum ($3) Summer More Than Others with Boardwalk Carnival ($3) The Magic Math with The Recruits &Woodford Sessions ($5)
Wed, Jan 2 Thu, Jan 3 Wed, Jan 9 Thu, Jan 10
Special Shows
Tess Brunet (of Au Ras Au Ras) • Sun, Jan 20 • 9 pm • Free Show! Sundays: Live Trivia 4-6pm • Free Live Irish Music at 7pm Jan 6: John Lathim & Co. • Jan 13: Olta • Jan 27 Molly Maguires
9pm 9pm 9pm 9pm
Full food menu serving lunch and dinner. 11am-2am, 7 days a week. 35 Patten Parkway * 423.468.4192 thehonestpint.com * Facebook.com/thehonestpint
chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 9
Ann Law rehearses at Barking Legs Theater. Photo • Lauren Anastasia Holmes
Law of Dance For Ann Law of Barking Legs Theater, dancing is like breathing. By Rich Bailey Before Chattanooga’s renaissance officially embraced the arts, long before ArtsMove incentives drew artists to help repopulate the Southside, Ann Law brought contemporary dance to Chattanooga. She founded CoPAC (Contemporary Performing Arts of Chattanooga) in 1992 and, with husband Bruce Kaplan, opened Barking Legs Theater in 1993. This weekend, Law leads a three-day “Re-Visioning Dance Education” workshop for teachers followed by the kickoff of the Dance@Barking Legs Program the following week. What follows are highlights from a longer email conversation I had with Ann about dance, movement and everyday life. The all-ages dance program has classes for children, teens and adults, but it’s not your grandmother’s pirouette fac-
tory. By using the workshop to jump-start the class series, Law wants to stimulate dance teachers—including Barking Legs faculty and others—to find new ways of connecting with students and connecting dance to the rest of life. In the eight-week class series, says Law, “We will encourage our classes to reach into the depths of our art form to bring a fresh new connection to how we move in our daily lives, the important role imagination
Arts
10 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
and inspiration plays daily, and perhaps encourage a different perspective and appreciation to reach beyond.” She says the dance program “embraces everyone”—ages 4 and older, with or without previous dance training. Because it is a dance class, teachers will “translate” students’ interests into the language of dance. “I want to feel more comfortable in my body” might become “You would like to develop a stronger kinesthetic intelligence with the support of somatic understanding,” for example. But the focus is less on preparing for performance than on expressing emotions to transform others. “Every time I perform, that’s exactly what I strive for … surprise, happiness and self-reflection that can reach out and affect all of us,” Law says. “Every day is a performance,” she adds. “When I get out of my car at Niedlov’s, walk my dogs, hang out at Barking Legs, clean the kitchen, wrestle with my daughter, I hope you can see my dance. My dance is a reflection of my life, my somatic practice,
and my teachings. It is wrapped in everything I do. It is a lifelong practice that involves everything.” That somatic practice is primarily Pilates and Kinetic Awareness, two bodywork modalities that combine physical conditioning with more subtle education of a person’s sensation of the body in space. In addition to choreographing, dancing and teaching dance, Law teaches movement education through her Pilates in Motion studio. For her, any distinction between the art of dance, movement, education and daily life is not only illusory but harmful. “Dance is to me, like breathing, I do it constantly in motion and in thought,” she says. “It is my art that keeps me always on the edge, never assuming too much, staying humble and sensible. It is through this art that I am constantly in the balance of all things, fighting as much to stay off balance as to stay on balance!” “I believe that everything feeds everything,” she adds. “I suppose it is just human nature to segregate, to separate ourselves from ourselves and from others. As a dance artist, I participate in receiving bodywork or movement education to enhance my life. It is this education of my mind and body that feeds the creative process, and the act of sharing it with others is what I call dance.” For Law, reintegrating those separated pieces is the focus of her art and especially of her teaching. “Because we make physical, emotional, mental and spiritual room for you to come into dance, I feel that we are teaching a much more organic sense of dance,” she says. Re-Visioning Dance Education Workshop Jan. 4-6; $275 for three-day workshop Dance@Barking Legs Program Jan. 7-Feb. 28: ,$120 per eight-week dance course Barking Legs Theater 1307 Dodds Ave. (423) 624-5347 barkinglegs.org
Arts&Entertainment Thu 01.03 The Regional Art Alliance’s Winter Show 9 a.m.-5 p.m. The Colonnade Center, Benton Place Campus, Ringgold, Ga. (423) 718-4682 colonnadecenter.org New Artist Spotlight: Evan Wilson 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Shuptrine’s Gold Leaf Designs, 2646 Broad St. (423) 266-4453 shuptrines.com Kids’ Day Out! 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Creative Discovery Museum, 321 Chestnut St. (423) 756-2738 cdmfun.org January Sale at Georgia Winery 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Georgia Winery, 6469 Battlefield Pkwy. Ringgold, Ga. (706) 937-WINE georgiawines.com “Lucky 13” Exhibit 11 a.m.-6 p.m. In-Town Gallery, 26A Frazier Ave. (423) 267-9214 intowngallery.com Bridal Dessert Tea and Preview Screening of “Downton Abbey” 1-3 p.m. WTCI-TV, 7540 Bonnyshire Dr. (423) 702-7815 wtcitv.org Ambi Artists Craft N’ Crop Til You Drop 6-9 p.m. Heritage House, 1428 Jenkins Road (423) 855-9474 Big Ed Caylor 7:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Road (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com
fri 01.04 Holidays Under the Peaks (Thru Sunday) 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tennessee Aquarium Plaza, 1 Broad St. (423) 402-9960 tnaqua.org Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show Opening Reception 5:30-8 p.m. Ava Gallery, 30 Frazier Ave.
(423) 265-4282 avarts.org Enchanted Garden of Lights 6-9 p.m. Rock City, 1400 Patten Road, Lookout Mountain, Ga. (706) 820-2531 seerockcity.com Big Ed Caylor 7/9:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Road (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com Wide Open Floor 8 p.m. Barking Legs Theater, 1307 Dodds Ave. (423) 624-5347 barkinglegs.org Dave Stone 9:30 p.m. Vaudeville Café, 138 Market St. (423) 517-1839 funnydinner.com
sat 01.05 Learn to Snorkel 9 a.m./1 p.m. Tennessee Aquarium Plaza, 1 Broad St. (423) 402-9960 tnaqua.org January Sale at Georgia Winery 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Georgia Winery, 6469 Battlefield Pkwy. Ringgold, Ga. (706) 937-WINE georgiawines.com Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. Ava Gallery, 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282 avarts.org “Lucky 13” Exhibit 11 a.m.-6 p.m. In-Town Gallery, 26A Frazier Ave. (423) 267-9214 intowngallery.com Enchanted Garden of Lights 6-9 p.m. Rock City, 1400 Patten Road, Lookout Mountain, Ga. (706) 820-2531 seerockcity.com Big Ed Caylor 7 & 9:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Road (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com Elvis Pub Crawl 9 p.m. T-Bones, 1419 Chestnut St. (423) 266-4240 tboneschattanooga.com
Dave Stone 10:30 p.m. Vaudeville Café, 138 Market St. (423) 517-1839 funnydinner.com
sun 01.06 Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. Ava Gallery, 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282 avarts.org Chattanooga Pink Bridal Show 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Chattanooga Convention Center, 1100 Carter St. (423) 649-2496 Free First Sunday 12-4:30 p.m. Hunter Museum, 10 Bluff View Ave. (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org Potluck Pickin’ Party with the Barefoot Movement 1 p.m. Folk School of Chattanooga, 1800 Rossville Ave. (423) 827-8906 chattanoogafolk.com Mocs Wrestling vs. Illinois 2-4 p.m. UTC Maclellan Gym, 720 E. 4th St. (423) 266-6627 gomocs.com Big Ed Caylor 7:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Road (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com
mon 01.07 Kids’ Day Out! 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Creative Discovery Museum, 321 Chestnut St. (423) 756-2738 cdmfun.org January Sale at Georgia Winery 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Georgia Winery, 6469 Battlefield Pkwy. Ringgold, Ga. (706) 937-WINE georgiawines.com Comedy Night with Tony Levi 10 p.m. The Office, 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191
tue 01.08 Kids’ Day Out!
9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Creative Discovery Museum, 321 Chestnut St. (423) 756-2738 cdmfun.org January Sale at Georgia Winery 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Georgia Winery, 6469 Battlefield Pkwy. Ringgold, Ga. (706) 937-WINE georgiawines.com “Quiet Spaces” 10 a.m.-5 p.m. River Gallery, 400 E. Second St. (423) 265-5033 river-gallery.com “Lucky 13” Exhibit 11 a.m.-6 p.m. In-Town Gallery, 26A Frazier Ave. (423) 267-9214i intowngallery.com Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. Ava Gallery, 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282 avarts.org
wed 01.09 January Sale at Georgia Winery 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Georgia Winery, 6469 Battlefield Pkwy. Ringgold, Ga. (706) 937-WINE georgiawines.com “Quiet Spaces” 10 a.m.-5 p.m. River Gallery, 400 E. Second St. (423) 265-5033 river-gallery.com Knoxville Arts & Culture Alliance Member Show 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. Ava Gallery, 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282 avarts.org “Lucky 13” Exhibit 11 a.m.-6 p.m. In-Town Gallery, 26A Frazier Ave. (423) 267-9214 intowngallery.com
Map these locations at chattanoogapulse.com. Send calendar listings at least 10 days in advance to: calendar@ chattanoogapulse.com. chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 11
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Account Executive Account Executive (Chattanooga) Position Available at Brewer Media Permanent Full-Time
Brewer Media wants YOU! We’re seeking talented Sales Account Executives to join our high-performing team in print and online media sales. You will be responsible for hunting out new leads, making fancy presentations, managing existing accounts and selling new business. The ideal candidate has been a successful sales person, loves Chattanooga, and excels in cultivating relationships with area businesses. Qualified candidates will possess: Excellent written and verbal command of the English language; Organization of time with a laser-focus attention to detail, plus amazing follow through; audience- and needsbased selling approach (and knowing what that means); Outgoing and influential personality with a positive attitude (save your drama for your momma); Ability to generate your own business and to think creatively for clients. The position offers you product training, a base salary plus commission on all sales, bonuses, and the ability to get free passes to events! We also have a few radio stations you can represent as well. To be considered, please email a cover letter, resume, and salary history to : Mike Baskin: mikebaskin@brewermediagroup.com Subject: “Sales Job” The Pulse Advantage: With the most comprehensive news, arts and entertainment coverage in Chattanooga, The Pulse has become the most reliable media resource for an extremely diverse readership. Each and every week, more than 30,000 active, educated, affluent and highly influential consumers make many of their purchasing decisions based on advertisements they see on the pages of The Pulse.
Brewer Media is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
12 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
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Jonesin’ Crossword
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“The World Didn’t End”—but some other things happened in 2012. Across
1. Did some hoof work 5. Acoustic guitarist’s lack 8. Reasons for some performance anxiety 13. “___ but known....” 14. Go head to head 15. Words intoned 16. With “The,” hit summer movie with Robert Downey, Jr. 18. Imply 19. “Rah!” 20. Nervous movement 22. Wayside taverns 23. Cruise ship that capsized off Italy’s coast in January 2012 26. Zeus’s sister (and lover) 27. Ctrl-S function 28. “Yuck!” 31. Devilish sort 33. Beth preceder 37. If it had happened, you wouldn’t be reading this 42. Org. with a shelter outreach program 43. Group of cubicles 44. Thesaurus wd.
45. It’s just a little bit 48. Paint hastily 51. Where Michael Phelps won even more medals 57. R&B’s india.___ 58. “This is ___ boring” 59. “OK, sir, I gotcha” 61. “___ Dearest” 63. Snacks snapped up after its manufacturer went bankrupt 65. Apply oil ritually 66. “Tickety ___” (animated Nick Jr. show) 67. Folk singer Burl 68. Last name in British automakers 69. “What a display!” 70. Jane’s Addiction album “Ritual ___ Habitual” Down 1. Fuzzy carpet 2. Devastation 3. “___ Billie Joe” (Bobbie Gentry song) 4. Best-selling author D’Souza 5. Schubert song played at weddings 6. Salyut 7 successor
7. Green sauce 8. Drab crayon hue 9. 100% 10. Get up 11. Singer/guitarist Lopez 12. Taco salad ingredient 15. Center of activity 17. Airport terminal area 21. The newly-elected 24. Rough it 25. Mirror shape 28. Thurman who killed Bill on-screen 29. Natural ___ (subject of “fracking” in 2012) 30. Prefix meaning “less than normal” 32. Go boom 34. Pre-album releases, for short 35. He unleashed “Gangnam Style” on YouTube in 2012 36. “Chicken Run” extra 38. Like the scholarly world 39. Org. once involved with Kosovo 40. “Agent ___ Banks” 41. He played the youngest son on “Eight Is Enough”
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46. Very beginning 47. Dairy noise 49. Getting all ___ your face 50. What a toddler aspires to be 51. 1996 presidential race dropout Alexander 52. University of Maine town 53. Leonard who wrote “I Am Not Spock” 54. Powerball, e.g. 55. Sour cream and ___ (dip flavor) 56. Girder material 60. ___ buco (veal dish) 62. Suffix for “opal” 64. Court
Jonesin’ Crossword created By Matt Jones. © 2013 Jonesin’ Crosswords. For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+ to call. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle No. 0604.
Visit chattanoogajobpost.com or call 423.242.7671 chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 13
Free Will Astrology CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
In Tom Robbins’ book “Skinny Legs and All,” one of the characters, Ellen Cherry, has a conversation with a voice in her head. The voice gives her a piece of advice: “The trick is this: keep your eye on the ball. Even when you can’t see the ball.” I think that happens to be excellent counsel for you to heed during the next six months, Capricorn. You may not always be able to figure out what the hell is going on, but that shouldn’t affect your commitment to doing the right thing. Your job is to keep your own karma clean and pure -- and not worry about anyone else’s karma.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I’ll be bold and predict that 2013 will be a time when you’ll discover more about the art of happiness than you have in years. Here are some clues to get you started.“It is not easy to find happiness in ourselves, and it is not possible to find it elsewhere.” –Agnes Repplier. “There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things that are beyond the power of our will.” –Epictetus. “For the rational, healthy person, the desire for pleasure is the desire to celebrate his control over reality. For the neurotic, the desire for pleasure is the desire to escape from reality.” –Nathaniel Branden. “Our happiness springs mainly from moderate troubles, which afford the mind a healthful stimulus, and are followed by a reaction which produces a cheerful flow of spirits.” –E. Wigglesworth.
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20): In 2013, I pledge to help you feel at peace and in love with your body; I will do everything in my power to encourage you to triumph over media-induced delusions that tempt you to wish you were different from who you actually are. My goal is to be one of your resourceful supporters in the coming months. And I will be working with you to ensure that this team grows to just the right size and provides you with just the right foundation. If all goes well, your extra help will ensure that you finish almost everything you start in the coming year. You will regularly conquer everyday chaos and be a master of artful resolutions.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): In 2013, I pledge to conspire with you to increase your mastery of the art of friendship. Together we will concentrate on making you an even stronger ally than you already are. We will upgrade your skill at expressing your feelings with openhearted clarity, and in ways that don’t make people defensive. We will also inspire you to help others 14 • The Pulse • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • chattanoogapulse.com
rob brezsny
communicate effectively in your presence. I hope you understand that doing this work will empower you to accomplish feats that were never before possible for you.
TAURUS
(April 20-May 20): Chickens and alligators share a common ancestor. Seventy million years ago, they were both archosaurs. That’s why chickens possess a gene that has the ability to grow teeth. A few years ago, a biological researcher at the University of Wisconsin managed to activate this capacity, inducing a few mutant chickens to sprout alligator teeth. I predict there will be a metaphorically comparable event happening for you in 2013, Taurus. The “chicken” part of you will acquire some of the gravitas of an alligator.
GEMINI
(May 21-June 20): “People wish to learn to swim and at the same time to keep one foot on the ground,” said French novelist Marcel Proust. An attitude like that is always a barrier to growth, of course, but in 2013 it would be especially ill-advised for you Geminis. In order to win full possession of the many blessings that will be offering themselves to you, you will have to give up your solid footing and dive into the depths over and over again. That may sometimes be a bit nerve-racking. But it should also generate the most fun you’ve had in years.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Here’s the horoscope I hope to be able to write for you a year from now: You escaped the chains that kept you enslaved to your primary source of suffering. You broke the trance it kept you in, and you freed yourself from its demoralizing curse. Now you have forged a resilient new relationship with your primary source of suffering—a relationship that allows you to deal with it only when it’s healthy for you to do so and only when you feel strong enough to do it. Very nicely done! Congratulations! Excellent work! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “In this world,” said Oscar Wilde, “there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it.” I’m counting on you to refute the last part of that questionable assertion, Leo. According to my analysis of the long-term astrological omens, you will definitely be getting what you want in the next six months. You will receive your prize ... you will earn your badge ... you will win a big game or claim your birthright or find your treasure. When that happens, I trust you will make sure it is an enduring blessing. There
will be no sadness involved!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): English poet Alfred Tennyson wrote so many memorable lines that he is among the top ten most frequently cited authors in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. One of his most famous passages was “’Tis better to have loved and lost / Than never to have loved at all.” When he was on his death bed at age 83, his enigmatic last words were, “I have opened it.” Let’s make that declaration your mantra for the coming year, Virgo. In your case, it will have nothing to do with death, but just the opposite. It will be your way of announcing your entrance into a brighter, lustier, more fertile phase of your life. Try saying it right now: “I have opened it!” LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Back in 1830, it was expensive to stay up and do things in your room after dark. To earn enough money to pay for the whale oil that would light your lamp for an hour, you had to work for 5.4 hours. And today? It’s cheaper. You have to put in less than a second of hard labor to afford an hour’s worth of light. I suspect that in 2013 there will be a similar boost in your ease at getting the light you need to illuminate your journey. I’m speaking metaphorically here, as in the insight that arises from your intuition, the emotional energy that comes from those you care about, and the grace of the Divine Wow. All that good stuff will be increasing. SCORPIO
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I’ve been absolutely terrified every moment of my life,” said Scorpio painter Georgia O’Keeffe, “and I’ve never let it keep me from doing a single thing I wanted to do.” I think her declaration is excellent medicine for you. In 2013, you will have great potential for upgrading your relationship with your fears— not necessarily suppressing them or smashing them, but rather using them more consistently as a springboard, capitalizing on the emotions they unleash, and riding the power they motivate you to summon.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Ambition can creep as well as soar,” said Irish philosopher Edmund Burke. That will be good for you to remember throughout 2013, Sagittarius. Later this year, the time may come for your ambition to soar—in the month of April, for example, and again in the month of August. But for the foreseeable future, I think your ambition will operate best if you keep it contained and intense, moving slowly and gradually, attending to the gritty details with supreme focus.
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Great people. Great jobs. chattanoogajobpost.com Chattanooga’s newest and best job search site. Visit chattanoogajobpost.com or call 423.242.7671 to place an ad chattanoogapulse.com • JANUARY 3-9, 2013 • The Pulse • 15